As Christmas is coming, there are presents to be bought, cards to be sent, and rooms to be cleaned. Parents are (6) with difficult jobs of hiding presents from curious young children. If the gifts are large, this is sometimes a real (7). On Christmas Eve, young children find the excitement almost unbearable. They are torn between the wish to go to bed early so that Father Christmas will bring their presents quickly and the wish to stay up late so that they will not miss the fun. The wish for gifts usually proves stronger. But though children go to bed early, they often lie awake for a long time, hoping to get a short (8) at Father Christmas.Last Christmas, my wife and I successfully hid a few large presents in the storeroom. I (9) the moment when my son, Jimmy, would ask me where that new bike had come from, but (10) he did not see it.On Christmas Eve, it took the children hours to go to sleep. It must have been nearly (11) when my wife and I went quietly into their room and began filling stockings. Then I pushed in the (12) I bought for Jimmy and left it beside the Christmas tree. We knew we would not get much sleep that night, for the children were (13) to get up early. At about five o’clock the next morning, we were woken by loud sounds coming from the children’s room — they were shouting excitedly! Before I had time to get out of bed, young Jimmy came riding into the room on his new bike, and his sister, Mary, followed close behind pushing her new baby carriage. Even the baby arrived. He moved (14) the hands and knees into the room dragging a large balloon behind him. Suddenly it burst. That woke us up (15). The day had really begun with a band!