Analysis of Santa to the Rescue
By Christmas eve of eighty-six
we were used to Dad’s yule-tide tricks.
With rockets and nets, so went the plan,
Dad figured to snag the kindly ol’ man.
We knew the garage must have some role
in keeping Santa from the North Pole.
And so it did—but wait, what’s this?
It seems something is a little amiss.
What is that out there, it isn’t a sleigh.
Oh, no! A helicopter got in the way.
And not just any, this Christmas Eve night,
this had to be a military flight.
Quick as a wink, the yard is ablaze,
with lights and shouting and Dad in a daze.
Suddenly more lights appeared in the sky.
What were they saying? CIA? FBI?
We started wondering if they would set bail.
If not Dad would spend Christmas in jail.
And then on the scene, so lively and quick,
who comes to the rescue but good ol’ Saint Nick.
What a sight was he, so jolly and round,
and everyone laughed as he jumped to the ground.
“Now I want you to know,” Santa said with a smile.
“Dad and I've known one another quite a while.”
“It’s a long story, and it goes way back.
In fact, the whole tale is right here in my pack.”
He handed Dad a box, wrapped with ribbon and bow,
Saying, “Sorry I’m late, got caught in the snow.”
Nothing was said as Santa jumped to his sleigh,
and called to his team to be on their way.
We were all staring and in total awe.
No doubt disbelieving what we just saw.
Finally, the General asked, “Is this some trick?”
And Dad said, “No, that was really Saint Nick.”
The General thought, then asked with a grin,
“So why did you let him get away then?”
“Well,” Dad told him, “what else could I do?”
My rockets and nets are were what brought down you.”
The General nodded, then said with a wink,
“Dad, let me tell you just what I think.”
“We heard you were trying to catch the ol’ guy,
and that was the reason this fight came by.
We thought we’d see just how things went,
once you’d caught the jolly ol’ gent.”
“But now I would venture to change what I thought,
and suggest that Santa shall not be caught.
I’d bet catching Saint Nick is only a ploy.
It’s really the chase that you both enjoy.”
Dad just smiled and said, “You never can tell.
I’m beginning to know the ol’ guy pretty well.
One of these days, ol’ Saint Nick he may slip.
Then I’ll be making that Christmas Eve trip.
Scheme | AABB CCDD EEFF GGHI JJKK LLMM NNIX EEXX KKXX OOPP HHQQ XXRR SSTT |
---|---|
Poetic Form | Quatrain (62%) |
Metre | 11011101 10111111 110011101 1101101011 110011111 010101011 01111101 1110101001 111111101 1101001001 0111011011 111101001 110101101 1101001001 1001101001 101101111 11010011111 111111001 0110111001 11101011111 1011111001 0101111101 111111101101 10111010101 1011001111 01011111011 110101111001 10101111001 10111101111 0111111111 1011000101 1100101111 100010011111 0111111011 0100111101 1111111011 111111111 11001101111 01001011101 111111111 11101011011 0110101111 11111111 11101011 11111011111 0011101111 11101111001 1100111101 1110111011 101011011101 1111111111 1111011011 |
Closest metre | Iambic pentameter |
Characters | 2,359 |
Words | 505 |
Sentences | 41 |
Stanzas | 13 |
Stanza Lengths | 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4 |
Lines Amount | 52 |
Letters per line (avg) | 33 |
Words per line (avg) | 8 |
Letters per stanza (avg) | 130 |
Words per stanza (avg) | 34 |
About this poem
For all but one year between 1978 and 1992 I wrote a Christmas poem for my Dad about him and Santa—because for years he teased us kids and his grandkids that one day he would catch Santa and there would be no more Christmas. But what started as Dad’s schemes to catch Santa ended in him and Santa being friends.
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"Santa to the Rescue" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 11 Jun 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/175526/santa-to-the-rescue>.
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