(photo credit: Stockxpert) |
"Perhaps nothing has fixed the image of Santa Claus
so firmly in the American mind as a poem entitled A Visit from
St. Nicholas written by Clement Moore in 1822. Moore, a professor
of biblical languages at New York's Episcopal Theological Seminary,
drew upon Pintard's thinking about the early New Amsterdam traditions
and added some elements from German and Norse legends. These stories
held that a happy little elf-like man presided over midwinter
pagan festivals. In the poem, Moore depicts the Saint as a tiny
man with a sleigh drawn by eight miniature reindeer. They fly
him from house to house and at each residence he comes down the
chimney to fill stockings hung by the fireplace with gifts.
Moore had written the poem for the enjoyment of
his own family, but in 1823 it was published anonymously in the
Troy Sentinel. It became very popular and has been reprinted
countless times under the more familiar title, The Night Before Christmas.
Where did Moore get the reindeer? The Saami people
of northern Scandinavia and Finland often used reindeer to pull
their sledges around and this found its way into the poem. Reindeer,
which are much sturdier animals than North American deer,are well
adapted to cold climates with their heavy fur coats and broad,
flat hooves for walking on snow." ~UnMuseum
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~Jeanine