A Visit from a Leprechaun

A Visit from a Leprechaun

This is a re-print of a St. Pat’s Day post I wrote a few years back. It’s still a good memory for me. Kindergarteners are eager to learn, have good imaginations, and the neat thing is, they love a game of make-believe. I’ll always remember this leprechaun episode and smile.

“God needed laughter in the world, So he made the Irish race, For they can meet life with a smile And turn a happy face.” –from The Book of Irish Blessings, author unknown.

A green mist seemed to shimmer in the sunlight that streamed through the window as I walked into my kindergarten classroom one St. Patrick’s Day morning  many years ago. A little green hat and jacket lay on a book. Tiny green footprints on the floor and across a few desks left mute evidence that a  wee person had danced through the room during the night– a very wee person.

Then the first kindergarteners arrived. Their eyes grew big. “Oh, look! Mrs. Manos! Was a leprechaun in our room?”

“A leprechaun? Hmm. I hadn’t thought of that.”

“Well, where is he now, Mrs. Manos? Is he hiding?”

So began an exciting hunt. Little ones searched high and low, looking for that mischievous leprechaun who had dared invade our kindergarten space. Behind bookshelves, in cubbies, under tables they peered…but no little fellow from Ireland.

One little boy declared  he saw him slipping around the corner of the room. Another just knew she had seen a green mist. Some third-graders sauntered down the hall and heard the commotion going on in the kindergarten room (this was before the 8 o’clock bell rang for more serious stuff.) A kindergartener pulled him in. Soon third graders were helping the kindergarteners look. but no one found that elusive leprechaun.

“It was you, wasn’t it, Mrs. Manos?” asked a little girl at last, her eyes shining.

“Could be,” I admitted. “But it’s fun to pretend, isn’t it?”

“So, was he here or wasn’t he?” someone else asked.

“I confess that I am the big leprechaun who left a pretend bunch of clues that looked like we had an elfin visitor. Actually, it was all make-believe.”

 

That was fine with the kindergarteners.  They were a super bunch of children with active imaginations. They knew their teacher did whacky things like setting up a scene to look as if an imaginary visitor from Ireland had dropped by an Oklahoma classroom. They took it all in stride but it was a lively start to a St. Pat’s Day.

As we went through the lunchroom later, one little girl told our cooks about the adventure. “It looked like a leprechaun had come through our room.” Then she remembered the hat and jacket. “And when he left, he wasn’t wearing a stitch of clothes!”

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