Holiday parties often have their shticks, like karaoke carol-singing, ugly Christmas sweater contests, or dressing up as your favorite 鈥淩udolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer鈥 character. But for its end-of-semester social, the English Association of 艾可直播 College revisited a classic Yuletide tale, only with a twist: Invitees were encouraged to submit an A Christmas Carol-themed piece, whether poetry or prose, to be read at the event.
The result was as heartening as a Christmas Day feast, according to vice president Celia Smithmier 鈥20. 鈥淎 few of our submissions were very Dickensian 鈥 formal, old-fashioned language 鈥 which were really fun. Otherwise, we had a range, from to lyrical to casual.鈥
Philip Verdirame 鈥20 was chosen as the winner, with this entry:
Counting the diminishing coin pile of my meal plan
In the chilled halls of frozen dorms
Up the icy stairs
And down the stack of books
Three silly ghosts visit me one sleepless night in the dimly lit library
They moan and warn me of essays past, present, and worst of all: future
Here he lies, killed by the pen, the paper, and the footnotes
Will someone give me half a crown
To get on the next train to New York
So I can shout 鈥淚t鈥檚 Christmas Day!鈥
鈥淚 personally love A Christmas Carol and do not mind the clich茅s because I think, like 鈥業t鈥檚 a Wonderful Life,鈥 it is a much needed and classic piece of art that allows people to take a step back from their modern and busy lives and appreciate Christmas each year,鈥 said Verdirame, who recounted once attending a Christmas Carol reading in a historically preserved house 鈥 鈥渓ike entering the 19th century,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 genuinely wonderful experience.鈥
Verdirame said he consciously steered away from composing anything 鈥渄eep鈥 or too derivative of Dickens. 鈥淚 wrote the poem with an ironic tone about how final exams at BC don鈥檛 let you appreciate Christmas and how much I couldn鈥檛 wait to go home and shout 鈥業t鈥檚 Christmas Day!鈥 鈥 referencing Scrooge鈥檚 鈥楢ha!鈥 moment.鈥
For Smithmier and her EABC colleagues, the social represented a welcome return to activity for the organization, which had been on hiatus.聽
鈥淥ur goal is to foster a sense of community among English students at BC and allow them a space to sharpen their writing skills, study, and communicate with other similarly minded students,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o we鈥檙e just trying to raise awareness and get people involved as we re-establish our presence on campus.鈥
鈥揝ean Smith/ University Communications