It’s Nikolaus Abend!

That’s German for St. Nicolas’ Eve, and in my memory I can hear the children I took care of singing “Lustig, lustig, tra la la la la! Heute ist Nikolaus Abend da!” (Merry, merry, tra la la…today is Nikolaus Eve).

The Count had arranged for St. Nikolaus to actually come to the castle and ask the children to convince him they’d been good enough. I remember watching out the upstairs wiindows of the nursery as we all saw him walk through the entry arch of the castle, followed by Knecht Ruprecht, his rather scary helper, who was said to carry away misbehaving children and to leave them in the forest overnight.

Heilige Nikolaus had a long white beard, wore a white bishop’s gown with a pointed mitre on his head, and carried a long wooden staff. Knecht Ruprecht’s face was blackened with coal dust, and he was bent over, carrying chains, a bundle of twigs, and a bulky burlap bag with something sticking out the top.

The Count let them in. They came upstairs, and as they entered the nursery, the children greeted him; “Guten Abend, Heilige Nikolaus.” The saint pulled a scroll from his robes and addressed the oldest child, reading his misdeeds; pulling his sisters’ hair, being naughty at the table, etc. Ruprecht shook his chains, and then we noticed that feet were sticking out of his sack, and the boots belonged to a known troublemaker. But the saint went on to read of the boy’s good deeds, then asked what he had to say. The child sang a hymn for him.

Each child went through this, then saying a poem or a short prayer. When he got to the toddler, she ignored him, and kept calling out to me….”Ann!” in a perfectly American accent.

When the Count escorted them out again, he found a basket of cookies and a box of small presents had appeared on the doorstep. When those were passed around, I got a nice pair of warm mittens.

You can read the story of my stay in my book, American Governess. Below, the current Count, Carl von Soden-Frauenhofen, holds my book in front of the castle.

Musings

When I published my first memoir, it was during the height of COVID, and I never followed through with setting up a website. So here I am, five years later, figuring out how to do all this technology stuff.

Not without assistance, though. My Computer Guru, Lindsay, who helped with the first book while she was still in high school, is now helping out during her last semester of college. And Paul and Eugene Linzey, whose company, P & L Publishing & Literary Services, published my last book, are always ready to consult with me as we get the second book under way.

A haiku I wrote on my morning walk:

Graceful cypresses

sparkle with dawn-lit diamonds

gifts of midnight rain

A note about the graphics on the website:

The horizontal decorative elements you see have a complicated story. My husband Bill is a photographer, and we used to do lots of outdoor art shows around the country selling his work. At one time, I began to sell silk scarves at the same shows. To make them, I went out taking photographs of trees and plants, then manipulated them in PhotoShop, abstracting the subjects and changing colors.

Then I had the designs printed on 100% silk scarves, 18″ x 60.” When we retired a few years ago, I retained the designs in my files, and when setting up this site, decided to use them to add a bit of color to the pages.

For example, the top one on the Blog page is recognizable as a split-leaf philodendron that’s been stretched a bit and had the color desaturated. The second one was done from a photo of a dragon fruit, so that image was manipulated a good deal more. The image on the Connect page was of a dry palm frond lying beside the road, and the one on the About page is quite recognizable if only I could remember its name. Maybe someone can tell me!

Although I’m no longer making the scarves, which originally sold for $65, I still have some that I need to find homes for. Maybe I’ll put one on the Blog from time to time, at a reduced price.