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T'was the Night Before Christmas by Kevin Diehl



It has been called “arguably the best-known verses ever written by an American.”

It has been reproduced and re-imagined in countless newspapers, magazines, films, radio and television shows. Its popularity and influence are undeniable. And its iconic

opening line is instantly recognizable to virtually everyone in the English-speaking world – “T’was the night before Christmas…”


Despite its fame, the poem’s author – Clement Clarke Moore – is hardly a

household name. Born in New York City on July 15, 1779 – in the middle of the

Revolutionary War – Moore was the only child of Bishop Benjamin Moore and Charity

Clarke Moore.



Clement’s maternal grandfather – Major Thomas Clarke – owned a large

Manhattan estate in the days before the city overwhelmed the island. Clement would

later inherit the estate, which his grandfather had named “Chelsea.” Today, Manhattan’s large West Side neighborhood still bears that name.


In 1798, Clement graduated first in his class from Columbia. After earning a

master’s degree from Columbia, Moore taught Oriental and Greek Literature, and

eventually became a professor of Divinity and Biblical Learning at the General

Theological Seminary of the Protestant Episcopal Church.


In 1813, when Clement was 34, he married 19-year-old Catharine Elizabeth

Taylor. It was, apparently, a happy marriage – they had 9 children – but not a long one.

Sadly, Catharine died in 1830; Clement never remarried.


Throughout his career, Moore published many scholarly works, including a two

volume Hebrew dictionary. He wrote poetry, including the poem that gave him

lasting fame.


The legend concerning the poem’s origins goes something like this: On Christmas

Eve of 1822, during a sleigh-ride home from a shopping trip into town, Moore was

inspired by the sleigh bells to write a poem for his children. He decided to make the

story about a visit from St. Nicholas. It’s said that he modeled his version of St. Nick on

the old Dutchman who did odd jobs around Chelsea.


When he read the poem to his children after dinner that night, they were

spellbound. And there it might have ended – a happy little verse written by a loving

father for the delight of his children. Moore had no intention of publishing the poem.


But a visiting family member was as enthralled as the children, and took a copy

that she later gave to a friend from Troy, New York. The next year, the friend submitted

the poem to the editor of the Troy Sentinel.


The editor, recognizing a gem, printed it – anonymously – as “Account of a Visit

from St. Nicholas” on December 23, 1823. After that, the poem took off like Santa’s

reindeer clearing the treetops, and it never stopped.


It was so instantly popular, four other papers published it within a few weeks –

after Christmas. In succeeding years, the poem began appearing in newspapers and

magazines everywhere.


When Moore learned of the poem’s publication, it “caused him chagrin and

regret.” He had intended it for his family, and felt that the poem was a “mere trifle,”

beneath his dignity as a scholar.


Although various publishers began attributing the poem to Moore around 1837, he

didn’t acknowledge authorship for 22 years after he’d first read it to his family on

Christmas Eve. In 1844, he finally claimed it when he included the poem in a collection

of his poetry at the insistence of his then-grown children.


Regardless of Moore’s critical view, his little poem had an impact on our culture

that went well beyond some rhyming words in a newspaper. It wasn’t just instantly

popular; it changed the way that people celebrated Christmas.


Historian Stephen Nissenbaum says that “A Visit from St. Nicholas” appeared at

a time “when the focus of Christmas was moving from adult revelry to domestic

contentment.” Moore’s poem “reinforced this movement.” It played a formative role in

shaping the modern American Christmas, and helped recast St. Nicholas as a jovial elf

and turned Christmas into a time for giving gifts to children.


The earliest stories about St. Nicholas depicted him as a rather stern fellow, who

arrived – typically on Christmas Day – with gifts, but also to dispense punishment to

naughty children. The old St. Nick was skinny, wore a bishop’s miter and robes, and

only had one, unnamed reindeer to pull his sleigh.


Moore, in a single – unplanned – stroke, created a new model for Christmas. He

gave Santa eight flying reindeer and gave them all names. Moore’s Santa bounds down

the chimney on Christmas Eve – not Christmas Day – carrying a sack filled with toys,

“dressed all in fur, from his head to his foot,” his beard “white as the snow.” And “he

had a broad face and a little round belly/ That shook when he laughed, like a bowlful of

jelly.”


Late in life, Moore produced four handwritten copies of the poem. Despite what

he believed about his “little trifle,” the copies are among the most valuable documents in American history. In 1997, one of them sold at auction for $211,000.


Through the years the poem has been parodied in pop culture in a multitude of

ways. One of my favorites came from a classic 1968 Peanuts comic strip. Sally Brown –

Charlie Brown’s little sister who never quite knew what was going on – attempted to

recite the poem from memory. She hadn’t gotten very far when she said, “The stockings

were hung by the chimney with care, in hopes that Jack Nicklaus soon would be there.”


On July 10, 1863 – in the middle of the Civil War – Clement Moore died at

Newport, Rhode Island. He was just days away from his 84th birthday. He was

eventually buried at Trinity Cemetery, in New York City. Each December people gather

at the chapel to read “A Visit from St. Nicholas” and march in a lantern-lit procession to

lay a wreath at his grave.





The little poem with such humble beginnings indeed occupies a lofty perch. And

it ends with the unforgettable line: “But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight/

‘Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night.’”


By Kevin Diehl


Merry Christmas!

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