#christmasstoriestobesharedbythefire — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #christmasstoriestobesharedbythefire, aggregated by home.social.
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I have included the Vanessa Williams version as my song choice to accompany this post, fyi. As well, if you know this carol then you obviously know it tells part of The Nativity story. But did you know that there is soooo much more than that going on with the story of how this carol came to be? Click away and discover why. Enjoy the historical journey.
Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: What Child Is This? by William Chatterton Dix https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/08/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-what-child-is-this-by-william-chatterton-dix/ ##ChristmasCarols, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##VanessaWilliams, ##WhatChildIsThis?, ##WilliamChattertonDix
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I have included the Vanessa Williams version as my song choice to accompany this post, fyi. As well, if you know this carol then you obviously know it tells part of The Nativity story. But did you know that there is soooo much more than that going on with the story of how this carol came to be? Click away and discover why. Enjoy the historical journey.
Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: What Child Is This? by William Chatterton Dix https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/08/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-what-child-is-this-by-william-chatterton-dix/ ##ChristmasCarols, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##VanessaWilliams, ##WhatChildIsThis?, ##WilliamChattertonDix
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I have included the Vanessa Williams version as my song choice to accompany this post, fyi. As well, if you know this carol then you obviously know it tells part of The Nativity story. But did you know that there is soooo much more than that going on with the story of how this carol came to be? Click away and discover why. Enjoy the historical journey.
Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: What Child Is This? by William Chatterton Dix https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/08/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-what-child-is-this-by-william-chatterton-dix/ ##ChristmasCarols, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##VanessaWilliams, ##WhatChildIsThis?, ##WilliamChattertonDix
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I have included the Vanessa Williams version as my song choice to accompany this post, fyi. As well, if you know this carol then you obviously know it tells part of The Nativity story. But did you know that there is soooo much more than that going on with the story of how this carol came to be? Click away and discover why. Enjoy the historical journey.
Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: What Child Is This? by William Chatterton Dix https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/08/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-what-child-is-this-by-william-chatterton-dix/ ##ChristmasCarols, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##VanessaWilliams, ##WhatChildIsThis?, ##WilliamChattertonDix
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Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: What Child Is This? by William Chatterton Dix
“What Child Is This?” is a traditional Christmas carol that was written by a man named William Chatterton Dix in 1865. It describes, from the point of view of the shepherds, the scene in the stable in Bethlehem after the Baby Jesus had been born. In 1871, it was paired with the musical score for the folk song known as “Greensleeves”, giving us the full carol that we have come to know called “What Child Is This?”
I could stop there and leave you with those basic facts and the world would continue to spin and the sun would continue to shine. But, in good conscience, I cannot leave the story of “What Child Is This?” with those few scant facts when, in fact, the story behind this carol is so much more. The true story behind how this carol came to be contains snippets from some of the major events in modern history, including one of the world’s greatest inventions, along with madness, sheep, minstrels, children with special needs, nudity and on and on it goes. The scope of this story is vast and its sweep is grand! In order to do the story of this carol justice, we must travel back to 1440 to Germany and meet a goldsmith named Johannes Gutenberg who changed the world forever with his invention.
Our story begins with a brief look at the history of the printed word, for it is this very history from which the genesis of the carol “What Child Is This?” came to be. For almost as long as humans have existed on this planet, they have sought ways to record their history, offer instructive lessons and to inspire each other with songs, poems and stories. The forms that these records have taken are varied and have included everything from cave paintings, carved stone tablets and colourful hieroglyphics. Eventually, paper became to medium upon which words were recorded. Between 300AD and 1400AD, the world was introduced to the idea of collating pages of writing onto scrolls and later, into bound volumes that became known as books. Initially, books were created by hand in monasteries. Their subject matter revolved around religious texts. In time, scholarly books began to appear in universities throughout Europe but, even then, these books were created one at a time or in very small numbers by teams of scribes dedicated to their precise creation or recreation. In general, access to books containing art or history or religious guidance were limited to those in the Church or in aristocratic circles or to scholars in universities. As such, access to the written word was elitist by nature. Then in 1490, a goldsmith from Germany named Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press and that changed the whole way in which the great mass of the earth’s humanity interacted with each other. It is also where the story of “What Child Is This?” begins.
The invention of the printing press made the mass production of the printed word possible for the first time in recorded history. There were many important implications of this change but, for the sake of this story, I will limit myself to two: first of all, it now became financially feasible to mass produce books. Because of the financial possibilities that now existed, the idea that books could be published and then sold to buyers for a profit came to be. Secondly, and far more importantly, the proliferation of books meant that access to the written word was now open to anyone who could pay the price being charged. This meant that members of the general public now had access to the world’s great ideas and the thinkers who came up with them. Furthermore, it provided those same common people with access to publishing their own thoughts, feelings and ideas. Thus, the invention of the printing press gave rise to the idea of political grievances being recorded and shared, of people advertising their skills in return for employment opportunities and it also allowed for the popularization of poems, storywriting, dramatic plays and music by way of recording the words and selling the pages of these artistic endeavours to anyone who enjoyed the entertainment and wanted to relive the experience in their own homes or town squares. You may recall in posts for well known songs such as “Scarborough Fair” by Simon and Garfunkel *(that you can read here), that minstrel shows at local fairs became one of the most popular ways that common folks gathered to hear the news of the day and to enjoy the latest stories, plays and songs. Well, the invention of the printing press meant that performers at these minstrel shows could sell crudely printed copies of their poetry, plays or music to anyone who was interested. It was via minstrel shows and the act of printing off copies of songs on paper that an instrumental tune called “Greensleeves” first came to public prominence.
“Greensleeves” is a tune that sprang to life as a broadside ballad. The crude paper copies that were printed off and sold at these fairs became known as broadsides. Broadsides were, in many ways, the precursors to modern newspapers. In any case, the tune for “Greensleeves” was a hit right from the very first time it was performed. You know it, even if you think you don’t. If you were to hum the tune that accompanies the lyrics to “What Child Is This?” then you are humming “Greensleeves”. No one is certain who exactly composed “Greensleeves”. It is one of those tunes that seems to have just always existed and, as such, it categorized as simply an old English folk song. It has been covered by thousands of performers and orchestras in the centuries that have followed its premiere. One of the reasons attributed for the instant success of “Greensleeves” was the potentially bawdy nature of its inspirational source. The song was first trademarked or registered in 1580 by a man named Richard Jones. He called this first (of six) pieces “A Newe Northen Dittye of ye Ladye Greene Sleves”. What made this composition seemingly salacious was the fact that in those days only certain types of women were said to wear the colour green (or had green grass stains on their clothes). Those women were generally referred to as prostitutes. Thus, it is believed by many that the lovely tune we know as “Greensleeves” was inspired by ladies of the night. To each his own, I suppose. “Greensleeves” would probably have remained a lovely little tune that was relegated to the footnotes of musical history had it not been for a man named William Chatterton Dix, a writer of hymns, who would enter our story a few hundred years later.
A painting by Dante Rossetti entitled My Lady Greensleeves.William Chatterton Dix was a British writer and businessman. He was raised in a family that included poets and writers and, as such, Dix was blessed with the ability to use words to paint pictures for others to enjoy. However, Dix was also raised by a father who did not see the Arts as a stable or secure way for a man to make his fortune. Thus, William was encouraged to study bookkeeping and accounting. As a young man, Dix gained employment as a manager in an insurance company in Glasgow, Scotland. As fate would have it, Dix would be struck down by a serious illness in his late 20s and would find himself bedridden, drawing ever closer to death. While in this state, Dix lapsed in depression but also had an epiphany. If he was to die then he wanted to be on the best terms possible with God. From his deathbed, Dix returned to his natural gift of writing and began to create a series of hymns. One of those hymns included a poem entitled “The Manger Throne”, the words to which would eventually become, “What Child Is This?”, which he completed in 1865.
As you may know, the subject matter of “What Child Is This?” revolves around the birth of the Baby Jesus during that time known in Biblical circles as The Nativity. The story that Dix chose to focus on was a section of the Nativity story officially known as the Adoration of the Shepherds. This portion of the story describes what happened after the shepherds had arrived at the stable at the behest of the angel who appeared in the sky before them as they tended their sheep. The carol describes the awe with which they are marvelling at what they are witnessing within. Needless to say, Dix was inspired to create the words for his hymn based on one of the foundational elements in Christian history. By doing so, he hoped to curry favour in the eyes of the Lord if, and when, he passed on, as he assumed he would soon do.
*As a footnote, William Chatterton Dix lived for another thirty-three years.
The man, himself, William Chatterton Dix.In the years that followed the completion of his hymn, Dix sought to have music put to it so that it could be performed in public. Six years later, his hymn was published in a book called Christmas Carols New and Old. His hymn had been edited by a man named Henry Ramsden Bramley, from the words to Dix’s poem “The Manger Throne” and “harmonized” by a man named John Stainer. In his act of harmonization, Stainer is said to have paired Dix’s hymn/poem with the music from “Greensleeves”, giving the world the carol that we know today. However, if you have been reading this piece carefully, you will probably see a problem with what Stainer had done in pairing the words Dix wrote about the Nativity with a broadside ballad about prostitution. The truth of the matter is that “Greensleeves” existed for several centuries before the words to “What Child Is This?” were ever considered, let alone written. Prior to this musical marriage, no less an authority than William Shakespeare involved himself by offering an opinion on the artistic merits of “Greensleeves” based on its tawdry origins. In his play, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Shakespeare wrote the following lines, as spoken by a character called Mistress Ford:
“I shall think the worse of fat men, as long as I have an eye to make difference of men’s liking: and yet he would not swear; praised women’s modesty; and gave such orderly and well-behaved reproof to all uncomeliness, that I would have sworn his disposition would have gone to the truth of his words; but they do no more adhere and keep place together than the Hundredth Psalm to the tune of ‘Green Sleeves.'”
In other words, centuries earlier it would have been sacrilege to have paired a beloved piece of Biblical scripture with a tune inspired by such a “sinful” backstory. It had always been my understanding that in the 1800s, a more puritanical form of morality may have been held by society but, just the same, it was in those very same 1800s (1871) that “What Child Is This?” was published in a respected Christian songbook and has become a standard when it comes to classic Christmas carols ever since. Go figure.
For a piece of music borne of moral stigma, it seems only fitting that the piece I am choosing to accompany this post is the version sung by Vanessa Williams from the landmark series of charity albums from the 1980s and 90s known as A Very Special Christmas. This series consisted of three separate albums, each released five years apart, that featured many modern day singers covering famous carols and other Christmas songs. A great many of the modern Christmas songs we hear on the radio today can be traced back to their appearance on one of these three CDs. Initially, the idea for these charity albums was to benefit athletes with special needs who were training to be in the Special Olympics. Part of the rationale behind doing this was to help change the social narrative involving those who were intellectually and/or physically challenged. There were many A-list calibre singers and bands who stepped up and volunteered to contribute to these three albums. One of those who did was a singer/actress named Vanessa Williams.
Vanessa Williams has enjoyed a very successful career in the entertainment world as a Grammy-nominated singer, a Tony-nominated actress on Broadway and an Emmy-nominated actress on television. She first came into the public spotlight in her early twenties when she became the first black woman ever to win the Miss America pageant. Unfortunately, as was the case with the subject matter of the tune “Greensleeves”, Vanessa Williams was judged for how she chose to use her body. She would end up being disqualified from the Miss America Pageant when it came to light that she had done some nude modeling a few years prior to entering the contest. Those photos were published in a “men’s magazine”, igniting a moralistic uproar that caused pageant organizers to strip Williams of her crown. *(Again, just like how things changed over time with regard to the public’s opinion of “What Child Is This?” being paired with “Greensleeves”, after Y2K, the times changed again when it came to how society viewed women and how they sought to use their bodies in public. 32 years later after having first won the crown in 1984, the organizers of the Miss America Beauty Pageant formally apologized to Vanessa Williams.) In many ways, her inclusion on the A Very Special Christmas 2 album a mere five years after first losing her crown was a public endorsement by the producers of the charity records of her and the undeniable talent which Williams possessed. In the end, it was determined that her skill as a singer was more important than being all judgey about what she did with her body as a young woman. Consequently, I don’t think there could have been a more appropriate or perfect choice of singer to perform “What Child Is This?” in the end than Vanessa Williams. *Note: for what it is worth, Williams’ smooth, jazzy version of “What Child Is This?” has always been my favourite cover.
Vanessa Williams, as she appeared on stage after initially winning the Miss America Pageant.For a carol that speaks of the awe held by humble shepherds who witnessed the Baby Jesus swaddled in a manger shortly after His birth, the story of “What Child Is This?” sure is chalk-full of twists and turns. I doubt that as William Chatterton Dix lay on his deathbed composing words of praise in order to gain favour with his Maker, he thought that his hymn would be inextricably linked with such big picture concepts as access to information for all, feminism, freedom from religious persecution and the systemic stratification of the classes in society but it was. For the most part, when I hear this song, the images that come to mind are the warmth of that stable and the wonder that those in attendance all were holding. I feel as though the smell of the hay is real. However, now that I am more aware of the many historical connections that this carol possesses that extend beyond the story of the Nativity, the more I view this song differently. It may be a song about a Baby but it is also a song about women. There is a long and documented tendency to downplay and/or denigrate the role of women in the annals of history. The story of “What Child Is This?” demonstrates this very well. This includes everything from how society looked down upon the women depicted in “Greensleeves”, to how society so harshly judged Vanessa Williams centuries later for how she chose to display her body as a model, to the Meer fact that a “common” woman named Mary was denied access to to shelter and was forced to give birth in a barn, surrounded by livestock. I never used to view “What Child Is This?” as a feminist tune but I am more inclined to do so now that I know what I know. Whether this carol makes you think of Christmas, the Nativity scene or of how women are treated in society is up to you, obviously. In the end, it is still a lovely song and, as far as I am concerned, the Vanessa Williams version is particularly pleasing. Feel free to let me know your thoughts in the comments below. Thanks for reading my words and coming along on this musical and historical journey.
The link to the video for the song “What Child Is This?” by Vanessa Williams can be found here. ***The lyrics version is here.
The link to the official website for Vanessa Williams can be found here.
The link to the official website for William Chatterton Dix can be found here.
***As always, all original content contained within this post remains the sole property of the author. No portion of this post shall be reblogged, copied or shared in any manner without the express written consent of the author. ©2025 http://www.tommacinneswriter.com
#ChristmasCarols #ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire #Music #VanessaWilliams #WhatChildIsThis #WilliamChattertonDix
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Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: The Prayer by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to the Film Quest For Camelot https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/01/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-the-prayer-by-andrea-bocelli-and-celine-dion-from-the-original-motion-picture-soundtrack-to-the-film-quest-for-camelot/ ##AndreaBocelli, ##CelineDion, ##Christmas, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##QuestForCamelot, ##ThePrayer
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Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: The Prayer by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to the Film Quest For Camelot https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/01/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-the-prayer-by-andrea-bocelli-and-celine-dion-from-the-original-motion-picture-soundtrack-to-the-film-quest-for-camelot/ ##AndreaBocelli, ##CelineDion, ##Christmas, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##QuestForCamelot, ##ThePrayer
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Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: The Prayer by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to the Film Quest For Camelot https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/01/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-the-prayer-by-andrea-bocelli-and-celine-dion-from-the-original-motion-picture-soundtrack-to-the-film-quest-for-camelot/ ##AndreaBocelli, ##CelineDion, ##Christmas, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##QuestForCamelot, ##ThePrayer
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Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: The Prayer by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to the Film Quest For Camelot https://tommacinneswriter.com/2025/12/01/christmas-stories-to-be-shared-by-the-fire-the-prayer-by-andrea-bocelli-and-celine-dion-from-the-original-motion-picture-soundtrack-to-the-film-quest-for-camelot/ ##AndreaBocelli, ##CelineDion, ##Christmas, ##ChristmasStoriesToBeSharedByTheFire, ##Music, ##QuestForCamelot, ##ThePrayer
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Christmas Stories To Be Shared By The Fire: The Prayer by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to the Film Quest For Camelot
As I write these words today, the calendar page has flipped from November to December. When I was a child this meant that it would soon be time for Santa Claus to visit my home. It also meant that my family and I would be spending a lot of time in church where we would learn all about the Nativity that brought to the world a miraculous baby that came to be known as Jesus. That these two parallel aspects of my childhood co-existed seamlessly was something that I never questioned at the time. Somewhere in the back of my mind I always associated the birth of Jesus with the celebratory nature of what went on in my home with my family and my friends. It just was how it was. Jesus was born thus Santa Claus came to my house and brought me presents. The math added up. It continued to add up for many years until….SPOILER ALERT…I discovered, as all children eventually do, that Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus were my parents and that Santa’s workshop was my parent’s bedroom and the back corners of our basement and anywhere else presents could remain safely hidden until wrapped after my sister and I were safely tucked into our beds for the night. Even after that sense of belief in the magic of Santa went away, there was still the wonder of waking to find empty stockings stuffed and a barren tree skirt buried with a mountain of presents. The breathless anticipation that I always held as a child with regard to the magic of Christmas evolved into a form of familial gratitude that remained as meaningful as flying reindeer ever had before. Such is the cycle of life.
Now I find myself at the other end of the spectrum. I am the elder parent cobbling together as warm and safe an atmosphere in our home as is possible for my family, none of whom are children themselves anymore. In these times, the meaning of Christmas is nebulous and ever changing it appears. The world of the interweb, where so many of us spend so much of our day, seemingly wants me to believe that Santa’s workshop resides in an Amazon fulfillment center and that the secret to happiness is to shop, shop, shop! From the pulpits of many who call themselves christians, the message is that the season is meant only for people who look and act just like us. My favourite Christmas memories from my childhood all revolve around a feeling of warmth and of safety and of being loved by those around me. It isn’t as easy today to find that feeling of safety and welcome if you are poor or if you come from somewhere else where your cultural upbringing may have been different and the colour of your skin is something other than white. So, as the calendar page flips from November to December in a world where the words “Black Friday” have come to replace peace on earth and goodwill to all men, I find myself questioning my role in it all. What do I believe the spirit of Christmas to be anymore?
Ironically enough, the search for the answer to that question has brought me to a poorly received animated children’s movie from the 1990s entitled Quest For Camelot. Like many movies made by adults for children, the themes of Quest For Camelot revolved around courage and friendship and loyalty and that willingness to keep going no matter what the obstacles were that life placed before you. The critics savaged the movie, claiming it was nothing that hadn’t been created multiple times before. They dismissed the movie outright and audiences seemed to agree. Quest For Camelot seemed to be the type of movie that was destined to go straight into the bargain bins at your local dollar store. So how could the modern day meaning of the Christmas season be found in a movie apparently so forgettable? Well for me, the answer is found in the inclusion on the movie soundtrack of a song that, at first blush, seems wildly out of place. The song is called “The Prayer”. It was written by two of the world’s most successful songwriters in history, David Foster and Carole Bayer Sager. It was sung by two of the world’s most respected and accomplished singers, tenor Andrea Bocelli and Canadian chanteuse Celine Dion. It is a soaring plea for a world in which everyone can find wisdom and safety and love. It won the Golden Globe for Best Original Song that year and was also nominated for an Academy Award. Some people find Celine Dion and any of the male tenors to be a little much when it comes to the vocal histrionics that often accompany their songs. But for me, I find “The Prayer” to be a beautiful song because it asks for nothing more than compassion and kindness for others. I love how Dion and Bocelli weave words of Italian and English effortlessly throughout the song so as to say that, in any language, love and empathy are always the answer.
In the film, the main characters find themselves on a journey filled with hardships as they seek to save the mythical sword Excalibur from the covetous hands of a seemingly omnipotent evildoer. The odds are stacked high against our heroes but in the end the sword is saved, the villain vanquished and our heroes find love and redemption and welcome via their shared sense of courage and sacrifice and love for each other. Funnily enough, as repetitive a storyline as The Quest For Camelot may possess, the idea of the downtrodden gaining safe harbour through the goodness of their being was one I first became aware of as a child many years ago when I would go to Sunday school to hear the story of how a young couple named Mary and Joseph went on a difficult journey and found shelter in the warmth of a stable. Hmmm?! A story of kindnesses granted to those souls lost and in need of help seems rather important in Christian circles, no?
I am not a religious man by nature but there is something about the message of The Nativity that resonates more within my heart than the siren song of big box retailers. “The Prayer” is a song that exemplifies this in a lovely sounding way. Oddly enough, there is not a single word in this whole of “The Prayer” that mentions the Baby Jesus or the word Christmas and yet, it is one of the songs that best captures the essence of potential for good that exists within the Christmas season. Sometimes love is a feeling or an atmosphere that manifests itself when people are accepted unconditionally and welcomed for who they are. As a child I was always given a seat at the table. It was an unquestioned fact. I was loved unconditionally. That was always the greatest gift I was ever given. For me, even today as I watch my own children heading off into the world, the greatest gift I can give to them and to my wife is for them to know that they are cared for and loved and safe without conditions. When I try to put this desire on my part to provide a safe haven for my family and our friends and neighbours and those I encounter during the month of December, it is the words of “The Prayer” that I hear playing in my mind.
“Lead us to a place
Guide us with your grace
Give us faith so we′ll be safe”
- “The Prayer” by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion
As December begins, let us all fill our hearts with the joy that comes from goodness and from unconditional acts of kindness to others. That is what Christmas means to me as my life continues to unfold. Let us be accepting of others and the journeys they may be on and welcome them kindly regardless. I hope that the warmth and safety of your world and the world of those you love most forms the centre of all you do during the Christmas season. May that foundation allow you to do the very same for others so that they may feel as blessed and safe as you do. Happy Christmas month to you all. Hopefully I will be able to publish some more holiday-themed posts in the weeks to come. For now, have a wonderful rest of your day. Thanks for coming along on my journey in music and in words. Your presence here is most welcome.
The link to the video for the song “The Prayer” by Andrea Bocelli and Celine Dion can be found here.
The link to the trailer for the movie Quest For Camelot can be found here.
The link to the official website for Celine Dion can be found here.
The link to the official website for Andrea Bocelli can be found here.
***As always, all original content contained within this post remains the sole property of the author. No portion of this post shall be reblogged, copied or shared in any form with the express written consent of the author. ©2025 http://www.tommacinneswriter.com
#andreabocelli #celinedion #christmas2 #christmasstoriestobesharedbythefire #music #questforcamelot #theprayer