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2008 Convention
Timmy the Teapot

 

The Story of Timmy The Teapot
by Bill Rist
Long, long ago in a shop in a town.
Was a store full of treasures,
Some lost and some found.
 
If you walked in that shop,
You’d see old things galore.
Stacked up on tables, on shelves and the floor.
 
You’d see cabinets and chairs,
Old toys and old games.
Old tools and old pans, and some things you can’t name.
 
The store was packed full,
With stuff piled on the floor,
Why I bet if you tried, you couldn't fit more!
 
And people, yes people the old and the young,
Came to dig through these treasures.
Now isn’t that fun?
 
They’d come to this shop and wander around,
And exclaim with delight, when a treasure was found.
To the counter they’d take it,
To be wrapped with care
And away it would fly to a new home somewhere.
 
In the back of this shop, on a shelf slightly rotten,
Sat stuff so it seemed, that most folks had forgotten.
If it had a dent, or a scratch or was cracked just a bit,
To this shelf it was taken, to sit, sit, sit, sit.
 
And high on this shelf that smelled slightly musty,
Sat Timmy the Teapot and boy was he dusty!
He's a good teapot but he'd had a bad break,
For you see he was placed on this shelf by mistake!
 
And he’d been there for years on that shelf all alone.
No owner he had,
No house and no home.
 
If Timmy could talk I bet he would say,
That he dreamed of having an owner someday.
For a teapot can never be happy you see,
Unless loved by a person like you or like me.
 
One day in December in that store, in that town,
Came a little old man, quite jolly and round.
He looked at the treasures all over the shop,
Joy filled his face, from bottom to top.
With a grin on his lips, he ran round and he bought,
Just about everything, or so Timmy thought.
 
Timmy could see the small man,
He could see his wide grin.
Oh why couldn’t that man turn around and see him?
 
Then the little man turned as quick as an elf,
He turned and he walked back towards Timmy’s shelf.
And straight as an arrow flies when it is shot,
He looked right at Timmy and then, you know what?
 
He picked Timmy up, and not making a sound,
But holding Timmy's lid tightly, turned Timmy top side down.
With his finger, the man rubbed off layers of dust.
He did this with care, he was a man you could trust.
 
When he'd looked Timmy over, from handle to spout,
The man shocked poor little Timmy by giving a shout!
"Oh my!" said the man, "Imagine my luck!"
"A Genuine Hall, ....and for only a buck!"
 
The man held Timmy up, and then what did he do?
He said to the shopkeeper, “I’ll take this too!”
 
Timmy was wrapped, and placed in the little man's sack,
Which was carried with ease on the little man's back.
Outside Timmy went, for the first time in years,
If Timmy had eyes, they would've filled up with tears.
 
And later that day, or should I say night,
Timmy was treated to a wonderful sight.
When out of the little mans sack Timmy came,
and the little man smiled, and called Timmy by name!
 
(The little man, if you don’t already know,
Was Santa... the man with the sleigh and the snow!)
 
He washed Timmy carefully, and shined him up bright.
and spoke to his elves with whole hearted delight.
With a smile in his voice, and his eyes filled with joy,
“It’s just like the one I had when I was a boy!”
 
A new place for Timmy, and this isn’t a fable,
Timmy's new home was upon Santa’s table.
Not to just sit, on a shelf all alone,
But to be loved by someone, Timmy finally had a home!
 
But what really filled Timmy with happiness and glee.
Was later than night, Santa filled him with tea!
 
Merry Christmas Everyone!
Bill


 


 


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