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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Children's Book of Christmas Stories, by Various
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Children's Book of Christmas Stories, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Children's Book of Christmas Stories
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+
+Release Date: March 25, 2009 [EBook #5061]
+Last Updated: January 8, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTMAS STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF CHRISTMAS STORIES
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Various
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Edited by Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Many librarians have felt the need and expressed the desire for a select
+ collection of children's Christmas stories in one volume. This books
+ claims to be just that and nothing more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of the stories has already won the approval of thousands of children,
+ and each is fraught with the true Christmas spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hoped that the collection will prove equally acceptable to parents,
+ teachers, and librarians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Asa Don Dickinson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_TOC"> (DETAILED) CONTENTS </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0002"> I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTMAS AT FEZZIWIG'S
+ WAREHOUSE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ FIR-TREE* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SHEPHERDS AND THE ANGELS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ TELLTALE TILE* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LITTLE
+ GIRL'S CHRISTMAS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;"A
+ CHRISTMAS MATINEE"* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;TOINETTE
+ AND THE ELVES* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ VOYAGE OF THE WEE RED CAP <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ STORY OF THE CHRIST-CHILD* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;JIMMY
+ SCARECROW'S CHRISTMAS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;WHY
+ THE CHIMES RANG* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ BIRDS' CHRISTMAS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ LITTLE SISTER'S VACATION* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LITTLE
+ WOLFF'S WOODEN SHOES <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTMAS
+ IN THE ALLEY* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ CHRISTMAS STAR* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ QUEEREST CHRISTMAS* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;OLD
+ FATHER CHRISTMAS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ CHRISTMAS CAROL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW
+ CHRISTMAS CAME TO THE SANTA MARIA FLATS* <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0023"> XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE LEGEND OF BABOUSCKA*
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTMAS IN
+ THE BARN* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ PHILANTHROPIST'S CHRISTMAS* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXV.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FIRST CHRISTMAS-TREE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0027"> XXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE FIRST NEW ENGLAND
+ CHRISTMAS* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> XXVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CRATCHITS' CHRISTMAS DINNER <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> XXVIII.
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTMAS IN SEVENTEEN SEVENTY-SIX*
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> XXIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTMAS
+ UNDER THE SNOW* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> XXX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MR.
+ BLUFF'S EXPERIENCES OF HOLIDAYS* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0032">
+ XXXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MASTER SANDY'S SNAPDRAGON* <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0033"> XXXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A CHRISTMAS FAIRY* <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> XXXIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE GREATEST OF THESE*
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> XXXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LITTLE
+ GRETCHEN AND THE WOODEN SHOE* <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> XXXV.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CHRISTMAS ON BIG RATTLE* <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ (DETAILED) CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ (Note.&mdash;The stories marked with a star (*) will be most enjoyed by
+ <br /> younger children; those marked with a two stars (**) are better
+ suited <br /> to older children.) <br /> Christmas at Fezziwig's
+ Warehouse. By Charles Dickens <br /> * The Fir-Tree. By Hans Christian
+ Andersen <br /> The Christmas Masquerade. By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
+ <br /> * The Shepherds and the Angels. Adapted from the Bills <br /> **
+ The Telltale Tile. By Olive Thorne Miller <br /> * Little Girl's
+ Christmas. By Winnifred E. Lincoln <br /> ** A Christmas Matinee. By
+ M.A.L. Lane <br /> * Toinette and the Elves. By Susan Coolidge <br /> The
+ Voyage of the Wee Red Cap. By Ruth Sawyer Durand <br /> * A Story of the
+ Christ-Child (a German Legend for Christmas Eve). As <br /> told by <br />
+ Elizabeth Harrison <br /> * Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas. By Mary E.
+ Wilkins Freeman <br /> Why the Chimes Rang. By Raymond McAlden <br /> The
+ Birds' Christmas (founded on fact). By F.E. Mann <br /> ** The Little
+ Sister's Vacation. By Winifred M. Kirkland <br /> * Little Wolff's Wooden
+ Shoes. By Francois Coppee, adapted and <br /> translated by <br /> Alma J.
+ Foster <br /> ** Christmas in the Alley. By Olive Thorne Miller <br /> * A
+ Christmas Star. By Katherine Pyle <br /> ** The Queerest Christmas. By
+ Grace Margaret Gallaher <br /> Old Father Christmas. By J.H. Ewing <br />
+ A Christmas Carol. By Charles Dickens <br /> How Christmas Came to the
+ Santa Maria Flats. By Elia W. Peattie <br /> The Legend of Babouscka.
+ From the Russian Folk Tale <br /> * Christmas in the Barn. By F. Arnstein
+ <br /> The Philanthropist's Christmas. By James Weber Linn <br /> * The
+ First Christmas-Tree. By Lucy Wheelock <br /> The First New England
+ Christmas. By G.L. Stone and M.G. Fickett <br /> The Cratchits' Christmas
+ Dinner. By Charles Dickens <br /> Christmas in Seventeen Seventy-Six. By
+ Anne Hollingsworth Wharton <br /> * Christmas Under the Snow. By Olive
+ Thorne Miller <br /> Mr. Bluff's Experience of Holidays. By Oliver Bell
+ Bunce <br /> ** Master Sandy's Snapdragon. By Elbridge S. Brooks <br /> A
+ Christmas Fairy. By John Strange Winter <br /> The Greatest of These. By
+ Joseph Mills Hanson <br /> * Little Gretchen and the Wooden Shoe. By
+ Elizabeth Harrison <br /> ** Big Rattle. By Theodore Goodridge Roberts
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ I. CHRISTMAS AT FEZZIWIG'S WAREHOUSE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHARLES DICKENS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "Yo Ho! my boys," said Fezziwig. "No more work to-night! Christmas Eve,
+ Dick! Christmas, Ebenezer! Let's have the shutters up!" cried old Fezziwig
+ with a sharp clap of his hands, "before a man can say Jack Robinson...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hilli-ho!" cried old Fezziwig, skipping down from the high desk with
+ wonderful agility. "Clear away, my lads, and let's have lots of room here!
+ Hilli-ho, Dick! Cheer-up, Ebenezer!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clear away! There was nothing they wouldn't have cleared away, or couldn't
+ have cleared away with old Fezziwig looking on. It was done in a minute.
+ Every movable was packed off, as if it were dismissed from public life
+ forevermore; the floor was swept and watered, the lamps were trimmed, fuel
+ was heaped upon the fire; and the warehouse was as snug, and warm, and
+ dry, and bright a ballroom as you would desire to see on a winter's night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In came a fiddler with a music book, and went up to the lofty desk and
+ made an orchestra of it and tuned like fifty stomach-aches. In came Mrs.
+ Fezziwig, one vast substantial smile. In came the three Misses Fezziwig,
+ beaming and lovable. In came the six followers whose hearts they broke. In
+ came all the young men and women employed in the business. In came the
+ housemaid with her cousin the baker. In came the cook with her brother's
+ particular friend the milkman. In came the boy from over the way, who was
+ suspected of not having board enough from his master, trying to hide
+ himself behind the girl from next door but one who was proved to have had
+ her ears pulled by her mistress; in they all came, anyhow and everyhow.
+ Away they all went, twenty couple at once; hands half round and back again
+ the other way; down the middle and up again; round and round in various
+ stages of affectionate grouping, old top couple always turning up in the
+ wrong place; new top couple starting off again, as soon as they got there;
+ all top couples at last, and not a bottom one to help them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When this result was brought about the fiddler struck up "Sir Roger de
+ Coverley." Then old Fezziwig stood out to dance with Mrs. Fezziwig. Top
+ couple, too, with a good stiff piece of work cut out for them; three or
+ four and twenty pairs of partners; people who were not to be trifled with;
+ people who would dance and had no notion of walking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if they had been thrice as many&mdash;oh, four times as many&mdash;old
+ Fezziwig would have been a match for them, and so would Mrs. Fezziwig. As
+ to her, she was worthy to be his partner in every sense of the term. If
+ that's not high praise, tell me higher and I'll use it. A positive light
+ appeared to issue from Fezziwig's calves. They shone in every part of the
+ dance like moons. You couldn't have predicted at any given time what would
+ become of them next. And when old Fezziwig and Mrs. Fezziwig had gone all
+ through the dance, advance and retire; both hands to your partner, bow and
+ courtesy, corkscrew, thread the needle, and back again to your place;
+ Fezziwig "cut"&mdash;cut so deftly that he appeared to wink with his legs,
+ and came upon his feet again with a stagger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the clock struck eleven the domestic ball broke up. Mr. and Mrs.
+ Fezziwig took their stations, one on either side of the door, and shaking
+ hands with every person individually, as he or she went out, wished him or
+ her a Merry Christmas!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. THE FIR-TREE*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ *Reprinted by permission of the Houghton-Mifflin Company.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out in the woods stood a nice little Fir-tree. The place he had was a very
+ good one; the sun shone on him; as to fresh air, there was enough of that,
+ and round him grew many large-sized comrades, pines as well as firs. But
+ the little Fir wanted so very much to be a grown-up tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not think of the warm sun and of the fresh air; he did not care for
+ the little cottage children that ran about and prattled when they were in
+ the woods looking for wild strawberries. The children often came with a
+ whole pitcher full of berries, or a long row of them threaded on a straw,
+ and sat down near the young tree and said, "Oh, how pretty he is! what a
+ nice little fir!" But this was what the Tree could not bear to hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of a year he had shot up a good deal, and after another year he
+ was another long bit taller; for with fir-trees one can always tell by the
+ shoots how many years old they are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, were I but such a high tree as the others are!" sighed he. "Then I
+ should be able to spread out my branches, and with the tops to look into
+ the wide world! Then would the birds build nests among my branches; and
+ when there was a breeze, I could bend with as much stateliness as the
+ others!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither the sunbeams, nor the birds, nor the red clouds, which morning and
+ evening sailed above them, gave the little Tree any pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In winter, when the snow lay glittering on the ground, a hare would often
+ come leaping along, and jump right over the little Tree. Oh, that made him
+ so angry! But two winters were past, and in the third the tree was so
+ large that the hare was obliged to go round it. "To grow and grow, to get
+ older and be tall," thought the Tree&mdash;"that, after all, is the most
+ delightful thing in the world!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In autumn the wood-cutters always came and felled some of the largest
+ trees. This happened every year; and the young Fir-tree, that had now
+ grown to a very comely size, trembled at the sight; for the magnificent
+ great trees fell to the earth with noise and cracking, the branches were
+ lopped off, and the trees looked long and bare; they were hardly to be
+ recognized; and then they were laid in carts, and the horses dragged them
+ out of the woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where did they go to? What became of them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spring, when the Swallows and the Storks came, the Tree asked them,
+ "Don't you know where they have been taken? Have you not met them
+ anywhere?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Swallows did not know anything about it; but the Stork looked musing,
+ nodded his head, and said: "Yes, I think I know; I met many ships as I was
+ flying hither from Egypt; on the ships were magnificent masts, and I
+ venture to assert that it was they that smelt so of fir. I may
+ congratulate you, for they lifted themselves on high most majestically!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, were I but old enough to fly across the sea! But how does the sea
+ look in reality? What is it like?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would take a long time to explain," said the Stork, and with these
+ words off he went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rejoice in thy growth!" said the Sunbeams, "rejoice in thy vigorous
+ growth, and in the fresh life that moveth within thee!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the Wind kissed the Tree, and the Dew wept tears over him; but the Fir
+ understood it not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Christmas came, quite young trees were cut down; trees which often
+ were not even as large or of the same age as this Fir-tree, who could
+ never rest, but always wanted to be off. These young trees, and they were
+ always the finest looking, retained their branches; they were laid on
+ carts, and the horses drew them out of the woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where are they going to?" asked the Fir. "They are not taller than I;
+ there was one indeed that was considerably shorter; and why do they retain
+ all their branches? Whither are they taken?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We know! we know!" chirped the Sparrows. "We have peeped in at the
+ windows in the town below! We know whither they are taken! The greatest
+ splendour and the greatest magnificence one can imagine await them. We
+ peeped through the windows, and saw them planted in the middle of the warm
+ room, and ornamented with the most splendid things&mdash;with gilded
+ apples, with gingerbread, with toys, and many hundred lights!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And then?" asked the Fir-tree, trembling in every bough. "And then? What
+ happens then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We did not see anything more: it was incomparably beautiful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would fain know if I am destined for so glorious a career," cried the
+ Tree, rejoicing. "That is still better than to cross the sea! What a
+ longing do I suffer! Were Christmas but come! I am now tall, and my
+ branches spread like the others that were carried off last year! Oh, were
+ I but already on the cart. Were I in the warm room with all the splendour
+ and magnificence! Yes; then something better, something still grander,
+ will surely follow, or wherefore should they thus ornament me? Something
+ better, something still grander, MUST follow&mdash;but what? Oh, how I
+ long, how I suffer! I do not know myself what is the matter with me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rejoice in our presence!" said the Air and the Sunlight; "rejoice in thy
+ own fresh youth!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Tree did not rejoice at all; he grew and grew, and was green both
+ winter and summer. People that saw him said, "What a fine tree!" and
+ toward Christmas he was one of the first that was cut down. The axe struck
+ deep into the very pith; the tree fell to the earth with a sigh: he felt a
+ pang&mdash;it was like a swoon; he could not think of happiness, for he
+ was sorrowful at being separated from his home, from the place where he
+ had sprung up. He knew well that he should never see his dear old
+ comrades, the little bushes and flowers around him, any more; perhaps not
+ even the birds! The departure was not at all agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tree only came to himself when he was unloaded in a courtyard with the
+ other trees, and heard a man say, "That one is splendid! we don't want the
+ others." Then two servants came in rich livery and carried the Fir-tree
+ into a large and splendid drawing-room. Portraits were hanging on the
+ walls, and near the white porcelain stove stood two large Chinese vases
+ with lions on the covers. There, too, were large easy chairs, silken
+ sofas, large tables full of picture-books, and full of toys worth hundreds
+ and hundreds of crowns&mdash;at least the children said so. And the
+ Fir-tree was stuck upright in a cask that was filled with sand: but no one
+ could see that it was a cask, for green cloth was hung all around it, and
+ it stood on a large gayly coloured carpet. Oh, how the Tree quivered! What
+ was to happen? The servants, as well as the young ladies, decorated it. On
+ one branch there hung little nets cut out of coloured paper, and each net
+ was filled with sugar-plums; and among the other boughs gilded apples and
+ walnuts were suspended, looking as though they had grown there, and little
+ blue and white tapers were placed among the leaves. Dolls that looked for
+ all the world like men&mdash;the Tree had never beheld such before&mdash;were
+ seen among the foliage, and at the very top a large star of gold tinsel
+ was fixed. It was really splendid&mdash;beyond description splendid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This evening!" said they all; "how it will shine this evening!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh," thought the Tree, "if the evening were but come! If the tapers were
+ but lighted! And then I wonder what will happen! Perhaps the other trees
+ from the forest will come to look at me! Perhaps the sparrows will beat
+ against the window-panes! I wonder if I shall take root here, and winter
+ and summer stand covered with ornaments!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew very much about the matter! but he was so impatient that for sheer
+ longing he got a pain in his back, and this with trees is the same thing
+ as a headache with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The candles were now lighted. What brightness! What splendour! The Tree
+ trembled so in every bough that one of the tapers set fire to the foliage.
+ It blazed up splendidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Help! Help!" cried the young ladies, and they quickly put out the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Tree did not even dare tremble. What a state he was in! He was so
+ uneasy lest he should lose something of his splendour, that he was quite
+ bewildered amidst the glare and brightness; when suddenly both
+ folding-doors opened, and a troop of children rushed in as if they would
+ upset the Tree. The older persons followed quietly; the little ones stood
+ quite still. But it was only for a moment; then they shouted so that the
+ whole place reechoed with their rejoicing; they danced round the tree, and
+ one present after the other was pulled off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are they about?" thought the Tree. "What is to happen now?" And the
+ lights burned down to the very branches, and as they burned down they were
+ put out, one after the other, and then the children had permission to
+ plunder the tree. So they fell upon it with such violence that all its
+ branches cracked; if it had not been fixed firmly in the cask, it would
+ certainly have tumbled down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children danced about with their beautiful playthings: no one looked
+ at the Tree except the old nurse, who peeped between the branches; but it
+ was only to see if there was a fig or an apple left that had been
+ forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A story! a story!" cried the children, drawing a little fat man toward
+ the tree. He seated himself under it, and said: "Now we are in the shade,
+ and the Tree can listen, too. But I shall tell only one story. Now which
+ will you have: that about Ivedy-Avedy, or about Klumpy-Dumpy who tumbled
+ downstairs, and yet after all came to the throne and married the
+ princess?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ivedy-Avedy!" cried some; "Klumpy-Dumpy" cried the others. There was such
+ a bawling and screaming&mdash;the Fir-tree alone was silent, and he
+ thought to himself, "Am I not to bawl with the rest?&mdash;am I to do
+ nothing whatever?" for he was one of the company, and had done what he had
+ to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the man told about Klumpy-Dumpy that tumbled down, who notwithstanding
+ came to the throne, and at last married the princess. And the children
+ clapped their hands, and cried out, "Oh, go on! Do go on!" They wanted to
+ hear about Ivedy-Avedy, too, but the little man only told them about
+ Klumpy-Dumpy. The Fir-tree stood quite still and absorbed in thought; the
+ birds in the woods had never related the like of this. "Klumpy-Dumpy fell
+ downstairs, and yet he married the princess! Yes! Yes! that's the way of
+ the world!" thought the Fir-tree, and believed it all, because the man who
+ told the story was so good-looking. "Well, well! who knows, perhaps I may
+ fall downstairs, too, and get a princess as wife!" And he looked forward
+ with joy to the morrow, when he hoped to be decked out again with lights,
+ playthings, fruits, and tinsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I won't tremble to-morrow," thought the Fir-tree. "I will enjoy to the
+ full all my splendour. To-morrow I shall hear again the story of
+ Klumpy-Dumpy, and perhaps that of Ivedy-Avedy, too." And the whole night
+ the Tree stood still and in deep thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the morning the servant and the housemaid came in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, then, the splendour will begin again," thought the Fir. But they
+ dragged him out of the room, and up the stairs into the loft; and here in
+ a dark corner, where no daylight could enter, they left him. "What's the
+ meaning of this?" thought the Tree. "What am I to do here? What shall I
+ hear now, I wonder?" And he leaned against the wall, lost in reverie. Time
+ enough had he, too, for his reflections; for days and nights passed on,
+ and nobody came up; and when at last somebody did come, it was only to put
+ some great trunks in a corner out of the way. There stood the Tree quite
+ hidden; it seemed as if he had been entirely forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis now winter out of doors!" thought the Tree. "The earth is hard and
+ covered with snow; men cannot plant me now, and therefore I have been put
+ up here under shelter till the springtime comes! How thoughtful that is!
+ How kind man is, after all! If it only were not so dark here, and so
+ terribly lonely! Not even a hare. And out in the woods it was so pleasant,
+ when the snow was on the ground, and the hare leaped by; yes&mdash;even
+ when he jumped over me; but I did not like it then. It is really terribly
+ lonely here!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Squeak! squeak!" said a little Mouse at the same moment, peeping out of
+ his hole. And then another little one came. They sniffed about the
+ Fir-tree, and rustled among the branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is dreadfully cold," said the Mouse. "But for that, it would be
+ delightful here, old Fir, wouldn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am by no means old," said the Fir-tree. "There's many a one
+ considerably older than I am."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where do you come from," asked the Mice; "and what can you do?" They were
+ so extremely curious. "Tell us about the most beautiful spot on the earth.
+ Have you never been there? Were you never in the larder, where cheeses lie
+ on the shelves, and hams hang from above; where one dances about on
+ tallow-candles; that place where one enters lean, and comes out again fat
+ and portly?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know no such place," said the Tree, "but I know the woods, where the
+ sun shines, and where the little birds sing." And then he told all about
+ his youth; and the little Mice had never heard the like before; and they
+ listened and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, to be sure! How much you have seen! How happy you must have been!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?" said the Fir-tree, thinking over what he had himself related. "Yes,
+ in reality those were happy times." And then he told about Christmas Eve,
+ when he was decked out with cakes and candles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh," said the little Mice, "how fortunate you have been, old Fir-tree!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am by no means old," said he. "I came from the woods this winter; I am
+ in my prime, and am only rather short for my age."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What delightful stories you know!" said the Mice: and the next night they
+ came with four other little Mice, who were to hear what the tree
+ recounted; and the more he related, the more plainly he remembered all
+ himself; and it appeared as if those times had really been happy times.
+ "But they may still come&mdash;they may still come. Klumpy-Dumpy fell
+ downstairs and yet he got a princess," and he thought at the moment of a
+ nice little Birch-tree growing out in the woods; to the Fir, that would be
+ a real charming princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who is Klumpy-Dumpy?" asked the Mice. So then the Fir-tree told the whole
+ fairy tale, for he could remember every single word of it; and the little
+ Mice jumped for joy up to the very top of the Tree. Next night two more
+ Mice came, and on Sunday two Rats, even; but they said the stories were
+ not interesting, which vexed the little Mice; and they, too, now began to
+ think them not so very amusing either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know only one story?" asked the Rats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only that one," answered the Tree. "I heard it on my happiest evening;
+ but I did not then know how happy I was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a very stupid story. Don't you know one about bacon and tallow
+ candles? Can't you tell any larder stories?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said the Tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then good-bye," said the Rats; and they went home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the little Mice stayed away also; and the Tree sighed: "After all,
+ it was very pleasant when the sleek little Mice sat around me and listened
+ to what I told them. Now that too is over. But I will take good care to
+ enjoy myself when I am brought out again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when was that to be? Why, one morning there came a quantity of people
+ and set to work in the loft. The trunks were moved, the Tree was pulled
+ out and thrown&mdash;rather hard, it is true&mdash;down on the floor, but
+ a man drew him toward the stairs, where the daylight shone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now a merry life will begin again," thought the Tree. He felt the fresh
+ air, the first sunbeam&mdash;and now he was out in the courtyard. All
+ passed so quickly, there was so much going on around him, that the Tree
+ quite forgot to look to himself. The court adjoined a garden, and all was
+ in flower; the roses hung so fresh and odorous over the balustrade, the
+ lindens were in blossom, the Swallows flew by, and said, "Quirre-vit! my
+ husband is come!" but it was not the Fir-tree that they meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, then, I shall really enjoy life," said he, exultingly, and spread
+ out his branches; but, alas! they were all withered and yellow. It was in
+ a corner that he lay, among weeds and nettles. The golden star of tinsel
+ was still on the top of the Tree, and glittered in the sunshine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the courtyard some of the merry children were playing who had danced at
+ Christmas round the Fir-tree, and were so glad at the sight of him. One of
+ the youngest ran and tore off the golden star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only look what is still on the ugly old Christmas tree!" said he,
+ trampling on the branches, so that they all cracked beneath his feet. And
+ the Tree beheld all the beauty of the flowers, and the freshness in the
+ garden; he beheld himself, and wished he had remained in his dark corner
+ in the loft; he thought of his first youth in the woods, of the merry
+ Christmas Eve, and of the little Mice who had listened with so much
+ pleasure to the story of Klumpy-Dumpy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis over&mdash;'tis past!" said the poor Tree. "Had I but rejoiced when
+ I had reason to do so! But now 'tis past, 'tis past!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the gardener's boy chopped the Tree into small pieces; there was a
+ whole heap lying there. The wood flamed up splendidly under the large
+ brewing copper, and it sighed so deeply! Each sigh was like a shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys played about in the court, and the youngest wore the gold star on
+ his breast which the Tree had had on the happiest evening of his life.
+ However, that was over now&mdash;the Tree gone, the story at an end. All,
+ all was over; every tale must end at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. THE CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * From "The Pot of Gold", copyright by Lothrop, Lee &amp; Shepherd Co.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Christmas Eve the Mayor's stately mansion presented a beautiful
+ appearance. There were rows of different coloured wax candles burning in
+ every window, and beyond them one could see the chandeliers of gold and
+ crystal blazing with light. The fiddles were squeaking merrily, and lovely
+ little forms flew past the windows in time to the music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were gorgeous carpets laid from the door to the street, and
+ carriages were constantly arriving and fresh guests tripping over them.
+ They were all children. The Mayor was giving a Christmas Masquerade
+ tonight to all the children in the city, the poor as well as the rich. The
+ preparation for this ball had been making an immense sensation for the
+ last three months. Placards had been up in the most conspicuous points in
+ the city, and all the daily newspapers had at least a column devoted to
+ it, headed with "THE MAYOR'S CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE," in very large letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mayor had promised to defray the expenses of all the poor children
+ whose parents were unable to do so, and the bills for their costumes were
+ directed to be sent in to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there was great excitement among the regular costumers of the
+ city, and they all resolved to vie with one another in being the most
+ popular, and the best patronized on this gala occasion. But the placards
+ and the notices had not been out a week before a new Costumer appeared who
+ cast all the others into the shade directly. He set up his shop on the
+ corner of one of the principal streets, and hung up his beautiful costumes
+ in the windows. He was a little fellow, not much bigger than a boy of ten.
+ His cheeks were as red as roses, and he had on a long curling wig as white
+ as snow. He wore a suit of crimson velvet knee-breeches, and a little
+ swallow-tailed coat with beautiful golden buttons. Deep lace ruffles fell
+ over his slender white hands, and he wore elegant knee buckles of
+ glittering stones. He sat on a high stool behind his counter and served
+ his customers himself; he kept no clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not take the children long to discover what beautiful things he
+ had, and how superior he was to the other costumers, and they begun to
+ flock to his shop immediately, from the Mayor's daughter to the poor
+ ragpicker's. The children were to select their own costumes; the Mayor had
+ stipulated that. It was to be a children's ball in every sense of the
+ word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they decided to be fairies and shepherdesses, and princesses according
+ to their own fancies; and this new Costumer had charming costumes to suit
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was noticeable that, for the most part, the children of the rich, who
+ had always had everything they desired, would choose the parts of
+ goose-girls and peasants and such like; and the poor children jumped
+ eagerly at the chance of being princesses or fairies for a few hours in
+ their miserable lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Christmas Eve came and the children flocked into the Mayor's mansion,
+ whether it was owing to the Costumer's art, or their own adaptation to the
+ characters they had chosen, it was wonderful how lifelike their
+ representations were. Those little fairies in their short skirts of silken
+ gauze, in which golden sparkles appeared as they moved with their little
+ funny gossamer wings, like butterflies, looked like real fairies. It did
+ not seem possible, when they floated around to the music, half supported
+ on the tips of their dainty toes, half by their filmy purple wings, their
+ delicate bodies swaying in time, that they could be anything but fairies.
+ It seemed absurd to imagine that they were Johnny Mullens, the
+ washerwoman's son, and Polly Flinders, the charwoman's little girl, and so
+ on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mayor's daughter, who had chosen the character of a goose-girl, looked
+ so like a true one that one could hardly dream she ever was anything else.
+ She was, ordinarily, a slender, dainty little lady rather tall for her
+ age. She now looked very short and stubbed and brown, just as if she had
+ been accustomed to tend geese in all sorts of weather. It was so with all
+ the others&mdash;the Red Riding-hoods, the princesses, the Bo-Peeps and
+ with every one of the characters who came to the Mayor's ball; Red
+ Riding-hood looked round, with big, frightened eyes, all ready to spy the
+ wolf, and carried her little pat of butter and pot of honey gingerly in
+ her basket; Bo-Peep's eyes looked red with weeping for the loss of her
+ sheep; and the princesses swept about so grandly in their splendid
+ brocaded trains, and held their crowned heads so high that people
+ half-believed them to be true princesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there never was anything like the fun at the Mayor's Christmas ball.
+ The fiddlers fiddled and fiddled, and the children danced and danced on
+ the beautiful waxed floors. The Mayor, with his family and a few grand
+ guests, sat on a dais covered with blue velvet at one end of the dancing
+ hall, and watched the sport. They were all delighted. The Mayor's eldest
+ daughter sat in front and clapped her little soft white hands. She was a
+ tall, beautiful young maiden, and wore a white dress, and a little cap
+ woven of blue violets on her yellow hair. Her name was Violetta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The supper was served at midnight&mdash;and such a supper! The mountains
+ of pink and white ices, and the cakes with sugar castles and flower
+ gardens on the tops of them, and the charming shapes of gold and
+ ruby-coloured jellies. There were wonderful bonbons which even the Mayor's
+ daughter did not have every day; and all sorts of fruits, fresh and
+ candied. They had cowslip wine in green glasses, and elderberry wine in
+ red, and they drank each other's health. The glasses held a thimbleful
+ each; the Mayor's wife thought that was all the wine they ought to have.
+ Under each child's plate there was a pretty present and every one had a
+ basket of bonbons and cake to carry home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At four o'clock the fiddlers put up their fiddles and the children went
+ home; fairies and shepherdesses and pages and princesses all jabbering
+ gleefully about the splendid time they had had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in a short time what consternation there was throughout the city. When
+ the proud and fond parents attempted to unbutton their children's dresses,
+ in order to prepare them for bed, not a single costume would come off. The
+ buttons buttoned again as fast as they were unbuttoned; even if they
+ pulled out a pin, in it would slip again in a twinkling; and when a string
+ was untied it tied itself up again into a bowknot. The parents were
+ dreadfully frightened. But the children were so tired out they finally let
+ them go to bed in their fancy costumes and thought perhaps they would come
+ off better in the morning. So Red Riding-hood went to bed in her little
+ red cloak holding fast to her basket full of dainties for her grandmother,
+ and Bo-Peep slept with her crook in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children all went to bed readily enough, they were so very tired, even
+ though they had to go in this strange array. All but the fairies&mdash;they
+ danced and pirouetted and would not be still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We want to swing on the blades of grass," they kept saying, "and play
+ hide and seek in the lily cups, and take a nap between the leaves of the
+ roses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor charwomen and coal-heavers, whose children the fairies were for
+ the most part, stared at them in great distress. They did not know what to
+ do with these radiant, frisky little creatures into which their Johnnys
+ and their Pollys and Betseys were so suddenly transformed. But the fairies
+ went to bed quietly enough when daylight came, and were soon fast asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no further trouble till twelve o'clock, when all the children
+ woke up. Then a great wave of alarm spread over the city. Not one of the
+ costumes would come off then. The buttons buttoned as fast as they were
+ unbuttoned; the pins quilted themselves in as fast as they were pulled
+ out; and the strings flew round like lightning and twisted themselves into
+ bow-knots as fast as they were untied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that was not the worst of it; every one of the children seemed to have
+ become, in reality, the character which he or she had assumed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mayor's daughter declared she was going to tend her geese out in the
+ pasture, and the shepherdesses sprang out of their little beds of down,
+ throwing aside their silken quilts, and cried that they must go out and
+ watch their sheep. The princesses jumped up from their straw pallets, and
+ wanted to go to court; and all the rest of them likewise. Poor little Red
+ Riding-hood sobbed and sobbed because she couldn't go and carry her basket
+ to her grandmother, and as she didn't have any grandmother she couldn't
+ go, of course, and her parents were very much doubled. It was all so
+ mysterious and dreadful. The news spread very rapidly over the city, and
+ soon a great crowd gathered around the new Costumer's shop for every one
+ thought he must be responsible for all this mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shop door was locked; but they soon battered it down with stones. When
+ they rushed in the Costumer was not there; he had disappeared with all his
+ wares. Then they did not know what to do. But it was evident that they
+ must do something before long for the state of affairs was growing worse
+ and worse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mayor's little daughter braced her back up against the tapestried
+ wall, and planted her two feet in their thick shoes firmly. "I will go and
+ tend my geese," she kept crying. "I won't eat my breakfast. I won't go out
+ in the park. I won't go to school. I'm going to tend my geese&mdash;I
+ will, I will, I will!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the princesses trailed their rich trains over the rough unpainted
+ floors in their parents' poor little huts, and held their crowned heads
+ very high and demanded to be taken to court. The princesses were mostly
+ geese-girls when they were their proper selves, and their geese were
+ suffering, and their poor parents did not know what they were going to do
+ and they wrung their hands and wept as they gazed on their gorgeously
+ apparelled children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally the Mayor called a meeting of the Aldermen, and they all assembled
+ in the City Hall. Nearly every one of them had a son or a daughter who was
+ a chimney-sweep, or a little watch-girl, or a shepherdess. They appointed
+ a chairman and they took a great many votes and contrary votes but they
+ did not agree on anything, until every one proposed that they consult the
+ Wise Woman. Then they all held up their hands, and voted to, unanimously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the whole board of Aldermen set out, walking by twos, with the Mayor at
+ their head, to consult the Wise Woman. The Aldermen were all very fleshy,
+ and carried gold-headed canes which they swung very high at every step.
+ They held their heads well back, and their chins stiff, and whenever they
+ met common people they sniffed gently. They were very imposing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Wise Woman lived in a little hut on the outskirts of the city. She
+ kept a Black Cat, except for her, she was all alone. She was very old, and
+ had brought up a great many children, and she was considered remarkably
+ wise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the Aldermen reached her hut and found her seated by the fire,
+ holding her Black Cat, a new difficulty presented itself. She had always
+ been quite deaf and people had been obliged to scream as loud as they
+ could in order to make her hear; but lately she had grown much deafer, and
+ when the Aldermen attempted to lay the case before her she could not hear
+ a word. In fact, she was so very deaf that she could not distinguish a
+ tone below G-sharp. The Aldermen screamed till they were quite red in the
+ faces, but all to no purpose: none of them could get up to G-sharp of
+ course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Aldermen all went back, swinging their gold-headed canes, and they
+ had another meeting in the City Hall. Then they decided to send the
+ highest Soprano Singer in the church choir to the Wise Woman; she could
+ sing up to G-sharp just as easy as not. So the high Soprano Singer set out
+ for the Wise Woman's in the Mayor's coach, and the Aldermen marched
+ behind, swinging their gold-headed canes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The High Soprano Singer put her head down close to the Wise Woman's ear,
+ and sung all about the Christmas Masquerade and the dreadful dilemma
+ everybody was in, in G-sharp&mdash;she even went higher, sometimes, and
+ the Wise Woman heard every word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded three times, and every time she nodded she looked wiser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go home, and give 'em a spoonful of castor-oil, all 'round," she piped
+ up; then she took a pinch of snuff, and wouldn't say any more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Aldermen went home, and every one took a district and marched
+ through it, with a servant carrying an immense bowl and spoon, and every
+ child had to take a dose of castor-oil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it didn't do a bit of good. The children cried and struggled when they
+ were forced to take the castor-oil; but, two minutes afterward, the
+ chimney-sweeps were crying for their brooms, and the princesses screaming
+ because they couldn't go to court, and the Mayor's daughter, who had been
+ given a double dose, cried louder and more sturdily: "I want to go and
+ tend my geese. I will go and tend my geese."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Aldermen took the high Soprano Singer, and they consulted the Wise
+ Woman again. She was taking a nap this time, and the Singer had to sing up
+ to B-flat before she could wake her. Then she was very cross and the Black
+ Cat put up his back and spit at the Aldermen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give 'em a spanking all 'round," she snapped out, "and if that don't work
+ put 'em to bed without their supper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Aldermen marched back to try that; and all the children in the
+ city were spanked, and when that didn't do any good they were put to bed
+ without any supper. But the next morning when they woke up they were worse
+ than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mayor and Aldermen were very indignant, and considered that they had
+ been imposed upon and insulted. So they set out for the Wise Woman again,
+ with the high Soprano Singer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sang in G-sharp how the Aldermen and the Mayor considered her an
+ impostor, and did not think she was wise at all, and they wished her to
+ take her Black Cat and move beyond the limits of the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sang it beautifully; it sounded like the very finest Italian opera
+ music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Deary me," piped the Wise Woman, when she had finished, "how very grand
+ these gentlemen are." Her Black Cat put up his back and spit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Five times one Black Cat are five Black Cats," said the Wise Woman. And
+ directly there were five Black Cats spitting and miauling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Five times five Black Cats are twenty-five Black Cats." And then there
+ were twenty-five of the angry little beasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Five times twenty-five Black Cats are one hundred and twenty-five Black
+ Cats," added the Wise Woman with a chuckle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Mayor and the Aldermen and the high Soprano Singer fled
+ precipitately out the door and back to the city. One hundred and
+ twenty-five Black Cats had seemed to fill the Wise Woman's hut full, and
+ when they all spit and miauled together it was dreadful. The visitors
+ could not wait for her to multiply Black Cats any longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As winter wore on and spring came, the condition of things grew more
+ intolerable. Physicians had been consulted, who advised that the children
+ should be allowed to follow their own bents, for fear of injury to their
+ constitutions. So the rich Aldermen's daughters were actually out in the
+ fields herding sheep, and their sons sweeping chimneys or carrying
+ newspapers; and while the poor charwomen's and coal-heavers, children
+ spent their time like princesses and fairies. Such a topsy-turvy state of
+ society was shocking. While the Mayor's little daughter was tending geese
+ out in the meadow like any common goose-girl, her pretty elder sister,
+ Violetta, felt very sad about it and used often to cast about in her mind
+ for some way of relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When cherries were ripe in spring, Violetta thought she would ask the
+ Cherry-man about it. She thought the Cherry-man quite wise. He was a very
+ pretty young fellow, and he brought cherries to sell in graceful little
+ straw baskets lined with moss. So she stood in the kitchen door one
+ morning and told him all about the great trouble that had come upon the
+ city. He listened in great astonishment; he had never heard of it before.
+ He lived several miles out in the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How did the Costumer look?" he asked respectfully; he thought Violetta
+ the most beautiful lady on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Violetta described the Costumer, and told him of the unavailing
+ attempts that had been made to find him. There were a great many
+ detectives out, constantly at work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know where he is!" said the Cherry-man. "He's up in one of my
+ cherry-trees. He's been living there ever since cherries were ripe, and he
+ won't come down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Violetta ran and told her father in great excitement, and he at once
+ called a meeting of the Aldermen, and in a few hours half the city was on
+ the road to the Cherry-man's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had a beautiful orchard of cherry-trees all laden with fruit. And, sure
+ enough in one of the largest, way up amongst the topmost branches, sat the
+ Costumer in his red velvet and short clothes and his diamond knee-buckles.
+ He looked down between the green boughs. "Good-morning, friends!" he
+ shouted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Aldermen shook their gold-headed canes at him, and the people danced
+ round the tree in a rage. Then they began to climb. But they soon found
+ that to be impossible. As fast as they touched a hand or foot to a tree,
+ back it flew with a jerk exactly as if the tree pushed it. They tried a
+ ladder, but the ladder fell back the moment it touched the tree, and lay
+ sprawling upon the ground. Finally, they brought axes and thought they
+ could chop the tree down, Costumer and all; but the wood resisted the axes
+ as if it were iron, and only dented them, receiving no impression itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the Costumer sat up in the tree, eating cherries and throwing
+ the stones down. Finally he stood up on a stout branch, and, looking down,
+ addressed the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's of no use, your trying to accomplish anything in this way," said he;
+ "you'd better parley. I'm willing to come to terms with you, and make
+ everything right on two conditions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people grew quiet then, and the Mayor stepped forward as spokesman,
+ "Name your two conditions," said he rather testily. "You own, tacitly,
+ that you are the cause of all this trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well" said the Costumer, reaching out for a handful of cherries, "this
+ Christmas Masquerade of yours was a beautiful idea; but you wouldn't do it
+ every year, and your successors might not do it at all. I want those poor
+ children to have a Christmas every year. My first condition is that every
+ poor child in the city hangs its stocking for gifts in the City Hall on
+ every Christmas Eve, and gets it filled, too. I want the resolution filed
+ and put away in the city archives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We agree to the first condition!" cried the people with one voice,
+ without waiting for the Mayor and Aldermen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The second condition," said the Costumer, "is that this good young
+ Cherry-man here has the Mayor's daughter, Violetta, for his wife. He has
+ been kind to me, letting me live in his cherry-tree and eat his cherries
+ and I want to reward him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We consent," cried all the people; but the Mayor, though he was so
+ generous, was a proud man. "I will not consent to the second condition,"
+ he cried angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well," replied the Costumer, picking some more cherries, "then your
+ youngest daughter tends geese the rest of her life, that's all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mayor was in great distress; but the thought of his youngest daughter
+ being a goose-girl all her life was too much for him. He gave in at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now go home and take the costumes off your children," said the Costumer,
+ "and leave me in peace to eat cherries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the people hastened back to the city, and found, to their great
+ delight, that the costumes would come off. The pins stayed out, the
+ buttons stayed unbuttoned, and the strings stayed untied. The children
+ were dressed in their own proper clothes and were their own proper selves
+ once more. The shepherdesses and the chimney-sweeps came home, and were
+ washed and dressed in silks and velvets, and went to embroidering and
+ playing lawn-tennis. And the princesses and the fairies put on their own
+ suitable dresses, and went about their useful employments. There was great
+ rejoicing in every home. Violetta thought she had never been so happy, now
+ that her dear little sister was no longer a goose-girl, but her own dainty
+ little lady-self.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The resolution to provide every poor child in the city with a stocking
+ full of gifts on Christmas was solemnly filed, and deposited in the city
+ archives, and was never broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Violetta was married to the Cherry-man, and all the children came to the
+ wedding, and strewed flowers in her path till her feet were quite hidden
+ in them. The Costumer had mysteriously disappeared from the cherry-tree
+ the night before, but he left at the foot some beautiful wedding presents
+ for the bride&mdash;a silver service with a pattern of cherries engraved
+ on it, and a set of china with cherries on it, in hand painting, and a
+ white satin robe, embroidered with cherries down the front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE SHEPHERDS AND THE ANGELS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ ADAPTED FROM THE BIBLE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ And there were shepherds in the same country abiding in the field, and
+ keeping watch by night over their flock. And an angel of the Lord stood by
+ them and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore
+ afraid. And the angel said unto them, Be not afraid; for, behold, I bring
+ you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all the people: for there
+ is born to you this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ
+ the Lord. And this is the sign unto you; ye shall find a babe wrapped in
+ swaddling clothes, and lying in a manger. And suddenly there was with the
+ angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Glory to God in the highest,
+ And on earth peace,
+ Good will toward men.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And it came to pass, when the angels went away from them into heaven, the
+ shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see
+ this thing that is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto us.
+ And they came with haste, and found Mary and Joseph and the babe lying in
+ the manger. And when they saw it, they made known concerning the saying
+ which was spoken to them about this child. And all that heard it wondered
+ at the things which were spoken unto them by the shepherds. But Mary kept
+ all these sayings, pondering them in her heart. And the shepherds returned
+ glorifying and praising God for all the things that they had heard and
+ seen, even as it was spoken unto them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when eight days were fulfilled his name was called
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ JESUS
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE TELLTALE TILE*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co., 1904.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It begins with a bit of gossip of a neighbour who had come in to see Miss
+ Bennett, and was telling her about a family who had lately moved into the
+ place and were in serious trouble. "And they do say she'll have to go to
+ the poorhouse," she ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the poorhouse! how dreadful! And the children, too?" and Miss Bennett
+ shuddered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; unless somebody'll adopt them, and that's not very likely. Well, I
+ must go," the visitor went on, rising. "I wish I could do something for
+ her, but, with my houseful of children, I've got use for every penny I can
+ rake and scrape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm sure I have, with only myself," said Miss Bennett, as she closed the
+ door. "I'm sure I have," she repeated to herself as she resumed her
+ knitting; "it's as much as I can do to make ends meet, scrimping as I do,
+ not to speak of laying up a cent for sickness and old age."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the poorhouse!" she said again. "I wish I could help her!" and the
+ needles flew in and out, in and out, faster than ever, as she turned this
+ over in her mind. "I might give up something," she said at last, "though I
+ don't know what, unless&mdash;unless," she said slowly, thinking of her
+ one luxury, "unless I give up my tea, and it don't seem as if I COULD do
+ that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time the thought worked in her mind, and finally she resolved to make
+ the sacrifice of her only indulgence for six months, and send the money to
+ her suffering neighbour, Mrs. Stanley, though she had never seen her, and
+ she had only heard she was in want.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much of a sacrifice that was you can hardly guess, you, Kristy, who
+ have so many luxuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening Mrs. Stanley was surprised by a small gift of money "from a
+ friend," as was said on the envelope containing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who sent it?" she asked, from the bed where she was lying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Bennett told me not to tell," said the boy, unconscious that he had
+ already told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day Miss Bennett sat at the window knitting, as usual&mdash;for
+ her constant contribution to the poor fund of the church was a certain
+ number of stockings and mittens&mdash;when she saw a young girl coming up
+ to the door of the cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who can that be?" she said to herself. "I never saw her before. Come in!"
+ she called; in answer to a knock. The girl entered, and walked up to Miss
+ Bennett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you Miss Bennett?" she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Miss Bennett with an amused smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I'm Hetty Stanley."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Bennett started, and her colour grew a little brighter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm glad to see you, Hetty." she said, "won't you sit down?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, if you please," said Hetty, taking a chair near her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I came to tell you how much we love you for&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, don't! don't say any more!" interrupted Miss Bennett; "never mind
+ that! Tell me about your mother and your baby brother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was an interesting subject, and they talked earnestly about it. The
+ time passed so quickly that, before she knew it, she had been in the house
+ an hour. When she went away Miss Bennett asked her to come again, a thing
+ she had never been known to do before, for she was not fond of young
+ people in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, then, Hetty's different," she said to herself, when wondering at her
+ own interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you thank kind Miss Bennett?" was her mother's question as Hetty
+ opened the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hetty stopped as if struck, "Why, no! I don't think I did."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And stayed so long, too? Whatever did you do? I've heard she isn't fond
+ of people generally."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We talked; and&mdash;I think she's ever so nice. She asked me to come
+ again; may I?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course you may, if she cares to have you. I should be glad to do
+ something to please her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That visit of Hetty's was the first of a long series. Almost every day she
+ found her way to the lonely cottage, where a visitor rarely came, and a
+ strange intimacy grew up between the old and the young. Hetty learned of
+ her friend to knit, and many an hour they spent knitting while Miss
+ Bennett ransacked her memory for stories to tell. And then, one day, she
+ brought down from a big chest in the garret two of the books she used to
+ have when she was young, and let Hetty look at them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One was "Thaddeus of Warsaw," and the other "Scottish Chiefs." Poor Hetty
+ had not the dozens of books you have, and these were treasures indeed. She
+ read them to herself, and she read them aloud to Miss Bennett, who, much
+ to her own surprise, found her interest almost as eager as Hetty's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time Christmas was drawing near, and strange, unusual feelings
+ began to stir in Miss Bennett's heart, though generally she did not think
+ much about that happy time. She wanted to make Hetty a happy day. Money
+ she had none, so she went into the garret, where her youthful treasures
+ had long been hidden. From the chest from which she had taken the books
+ she now took a small box of light-coloured wood, with a transferred
+ engraving on the cover. With a sigh&mdash;for the sight of it brought up
+ old memories&mdash;Miss Bennett lifted the cover by its loop of ribbon,
+ took out a package of old letters, and went downstairs with the box,
+ taking also a few bits of bright silk from a bundle in the chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can fit it up for a workbox," she said, "and I'm sure Hetty will like
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many days after this Miss Bennett had her secret work, which she
+ carefully hid when she saw Hetty coming. Slowly, in this way, she made a
+ pretty needle-book, a tiny pincushion, and an emery bag like a big
+ strawberry. Then from her own scanty stock she added needles, pins,
+ thread, and her only pair of small scissors, scoured to the last extreme
+ of brightness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One thing only she had to buy&mdash;a thimble, and that she bought for a
+ penny, of brass so bright it was quite as handsome as gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very pretty the little box looked when full; in the bottom lay a quilted
+ lining, which had always been there, and upon this the fittings she had
+ made. Besides this, Miss Bennett knit a pair of mittens for each of
+ Hetty's brothers and sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The happiest girl in town on Christmas morning was Hetty Stanley. To begin
+ with, she had the delight of giving the mittens to the children, and when
+ she ran over to tell Miss Bennett how pleased they were, she was surprised
+ by the present of the odd little workbox and its pretty contents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christmas was over all too soon, and New Year's, and it was about the
+ middle of January that the time came which, all her life, Miss Bennett had
+ dreaded&mdash;the time when she should be helpless. She had not money
+ enough to hire a girl, and so the only thing she could imagine when that
+ day should come was her special horror&mdash;the poorhouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that good deed of hers had already borne fruit, and was still bearing.
+ When Hetty came over one day, and found her dear friend lying on the floor
+ as if dead, she was dreadfully frightened, of course, but she ran after
+ the neighbours and the doctor, and bustled about the house as if she
+ belonged to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Bennett was not dead&mdash;she had a slight stroke of paralysis; and
+ though she was soon better, and would be able to talk, and probably to
+ knit, and possibly to get about the house, she would never be able to live
+ alone and do everything for herself, as she had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the doctor told the neighbours who came in to help, and so Hetty heard,
+ as she listened eagerly for news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course she can't live here any longer; she'll have to go to a
+ hospital," said one woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or to the poorhouse, more likely," said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She'll hate that," said the first speaker. "I've heard her shudder over
+ the poorhouse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She shall never go there!" declared Hetty, with blazing eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hoity-toity! who's to prevent?" asked the second speaker, turning a look
+ of disdain on Hetty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am," was the fearless answer. "I know all Miss Bennett's ways, and I
+ can take care of her, and I will," went on Hetty indignantly; and turning
+ suddenly, she was surprised to find Miss Bennett's eyes fixed on her with
+ an eager, questioning look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There! she understands! she's better!" cried Hetty. "Mayn't I stay and
+ take care of you, dear Miss Bennett?" she asked, running up to the bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, you may," interrupted the doctor, seeing the look in his patient's
+ face; "but you mustn't agitate her now. And now, my good women"&mdash;turning
+ to the others&mdash;"I think she can get along with her young friend here,
+ whom I happen to know is a womanly young girl, and will be attentive and
+ careful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They took the hint and went away, and the doctor gave directions to Hetty
+ what to do, telling her she must not leave Miss Bennett. So she was now
+ regularly installed as nurse and housekeeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Days and weeks rolled by. Miss Bennett was able to be up in her chair, to
+ talk and knit, and to walk about the house, but was not able to be left
+ alone. Indeed, she had a horror of being left alone; she could not bear
+ Hetty out of her sight, and Hetty's mother was very willing to spare her,
+ for she had many mouths to fill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To provide food for two out of what had been scrimping for one was a
+ problem; but Miss Bennett ate very little, and she did not resume her tea
+ so they managed to get along and not really suffer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day Hetty sat by the fire with her precious box on her knee, which she
+ was putting to rights for the twentieth time. The box was empty, and her
+ sharp young eyes noticed a little dust on the silk lining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think I'll take this out and dust it," she said to Miss Bennett, "if
+ you don't mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do as you like with it," answered Miss Bennett; "it is yours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she carefully lifted the silk, which stuck a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, here's something under it," she said&mdash;"an old paper, and it has
+ writing on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bring it to me," said Miss Bennett; "perhaps it's a letter I have
+ forgotten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hetty brought it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, it's father's writing!" said Miss Bennett, looking closely at the
+ faded paper; "and what can it mean? I never saw it before. It says, 'Look,
+ and ye shall find'&mdash;that's a Bible text. And what is this under it?
+ 'A word to the wise is sufficient.' I don't understand&mdash;he must have
+ put it there himself, for I never took that lining out&mdash;I thought it
+ was fastened. What can it mean?" and she pondered over it long, and all
+ day seemed absent-minded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After tea, when they sat before the kitchen fire, as they always did, with
+ only the firelight flickering and dancing on the walls while they knitted,
+ or told stories, or talked, she told Hetty about her father: that they had
+ lived comfortably in this house, which he built, and that everybody
+ supposed that he had plenty of money, and would leave enough to take care
+ of his only child, but that when he died suddenly nothing had been found,
+ and nothing ever had been, from that day to this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Part of the place I let to John Thompson, Hetty, and that rent is all I
+ have to live on. I don't know what makes me think of old times so
+ to-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know," said Hetty; "it's that paper, and I know what it reminds me of,"
+ she suddenly shouted, in a way very unusual with her. "It's that tile over
+ there," and she jumped up and ran to the side of the fireplace, and put
+ her hand on the tile she meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On each side of the fireplace was a row of tiles. They were Bible
+ subjects, and Miss Bennett had often told Hetty the story of each one, and
+ also the stories she used to make up about them when she was young. The
+ one Hetty had her hand on now bore the picture of a woman standing before
+ a closed door, and below her the words of the yellow bit of paper: "Look,
+ and ye shall find."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I always felt there was something different about that," said Hetty
+ eagerly, "and you know you told me your father talked to you about it&mdash;about
+ what to seek in the world when he was gone away, and other things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, so he did," said Miss Bennett thoughtfully; "come to think of it, he
+ said a great deal about it, and in a meaning way. I don't understand it,"
+ she said slowly, turning it over in her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do!" cried Hetty, enthusiastically. "I believe you are to seek here! I
+ believe it's loose!" and she tried to shake it. "It IS loose!" she cried
+ excitedly. "Oh, Miss Bennett, may I take it out?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Bennett had turned deadly pale. "Yes," she gasped, hardly knowing
+ what she expected, or dared to hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden push from Hetty's strong fingers, and the tile slipped out at one
+ side and fell to the floor. Behind it was an opening into the brickwork.
+ Hetty thrust in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's something in there!" she said in an awed tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A light!" said Miss Bennett hoarsely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not a candle in the house, but Hetty seized a brand from the
+ fire, and held it up and looked in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It looks like bags&mdash;tied up," she cried. "Oh, come here yourself!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old woman hobbled over and thrust her hand into the hole, bringing out
+ what was once a bag, but which crumpled to pieces in her hands, and with
+ it&mdash;oh, wonder!&mdash;a handful of gold pieces, which fell with a
+ jingle on the hearth, and rolled every way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father's money! Oh, Hetty!" was all she could say, and she seized a
+ chair to keep from falling, while Hetty was nearly wild, and talked like a
+ crazy person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, goody! goody! now you can have things to eat! and we can have a
+ candle! and you won't have to go to the poorhouse!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, indeed, you dear child!" cried Miss Bennett who had found her voice.
+ "Thanks to you&mdash;you blessing!&mdash;I shall be comfortable now the
+ rest of my days. And you! oh! I shall never forget you! Through you has
+ everything good come to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, but you have been so good to me, dear Miss Bennett!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should never have guessed it, you precious child! If it had not been
+ for your quickness I should have died and never found it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if you hadn't given me the box, it might have rusted away in that
+ chest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank God for everything, child! Take money out of my purse and go buy a
+ candle. We need not save it for bread now. Oh, child!" she interrupted
+ herself, "do you know, we shall have everything we want to-morrow. Go! Go!
+ I want to see how much there is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The candle bought, the gold was taken out and counted, and proved to be
+ more than enough to give Miss Bennett a comfortable income without
+ touching the principal. It was put back, and the tile replaced, as the
+ safest place to keep it till morning, when Miss Bennett intended to put it
+ into a bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though they went to bed, there was not a wink of sleep for Miss
+ Bennett, for planning what she would do. There were a thousand things she
+ wanted to do first. To get clothes for Hetty, to brighten up the old
+ house, to hire a girl to relieve Hetty, so that the dear child should go
+ to school, to train her into a noble woman&mdash;all her old ambitions and
+ wishes for herself sprang into life for Hetty. For not a thought of her
+ future life was separate from Hetty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a very short time everything was changed in Miss Bennett's cottage. She
+ had publicly adopted Hetty, and announced her as her heir. A girl had been
+ installed in the kitchen, and Hetty, in pretty new clothes, had begun
+ school. Fresh paint inside and out, with many new comforts, made the old
+ house charming and bright. But nothing could change the pleasant and happy
+ relations between the two friends, and a more contented and cheerful
+ household could not be found anywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happiness is a wonderful doctor and Miss Bennett grew so much better, that
+ she could travel, and when Hetty had finished school days, they saw a
+ little of the world before they settled down to a quiet, useful life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every comfort on earth I owe to you," said Hetty, one day, when Miss
+ Bennett had proposed some new thing to add to her enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, dear Hetty! how much do I owe to you! But for you, I should, no
+ doubt, be at this moment a shivering pauper in that terrible poorhouse,
+ while some one else would be living in this dear old house. And it all
+ comes," she added softly, "of that one unselfish thought, of that one
+ self-denial for others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. LITTLE GIRL'S CHRISTMAS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ WINNIFRED E. LINCOLN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It was Christmas Eve, and Little Girl had just hung up her stocking by the
+ fireplace&mdash;right where it would be all ready for Santa when he
+ slipped down the chimney. She knew he was coming, because&mdash;well,
+ because it was Christmas Eve, and because he always had come to leave
+ gifts for her on all the other Christmas Eves that she could remember, and
+ because she had seen his pictures everywhere down town that afternoon when
+ she was out with Mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, she wasn't JUST satisfied. 'Way down in her heart she was a little
+ uncertain&mdash;you see, when you have never really and truly seen a
+ person with your very own eyes, it's hard to feel as if you exactly
+ believed in him&mdash;even though that person always has left beautiful
+ gifts for you every time he has come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, he'll come," said Little Girl; "I just know he will be here before
+ morning, but somehow I wish&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, what do you wish?" said a Tiny Voice close by her&mdash;so close
+ that Little Girl fairly jumped when she heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, I wish I could SEE Santa myself. I'd just like to go and see his
+ house and his workshop, and ride in his sleigh, and know Mrs. Santa&mdash;'twould
+ be such fun, and then I'd KNOW for sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why don't you go, then?" said Tiny Voice. "It's easy enough. Just try on
+ these Shoes, and take this Light in your hand, and you'll find your way
+ all right."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Little Girl looked down on the hearth, and there were two cunning
+ little Shoes side by side, and a little Spark of a Light close to them&mdash;just
+ as if they were all made out of one of the glowing coals of the wood-fire.
+ Such cunning Shoes as they were&mdash;Little Girl could hardly wait to
+ pull off her slippers and try them on. They looked as if they were too
+ small, but they weren't&mdash;they fitted exactly right, and just as
+ Little Girl had put them both on and had taken the Light in her hand,
+ along came a little Breath of Wind, and away she went up the chimney,
+ along with ever so many other little Sparks, past the Soot Fairies, and
+ out into the Open Air, where Jack Frost and the Star Beams were all busy
+ at work making the world look pretty for Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away went Little Girl&mdash;Two Shoes, Bright Light, and all&mdash;higher
+ and higher, until she looked like a wee bit of a star up in the sky. It
+ was the funniest thing, but she seemed to know the way perfectly, and
+ didn't have to stop to make inquiries anywhere. You see it was a straight
+ road all the way, and when one doesn't have to think about turning to the
+ right or the left, it makes things very much easier. Pretty soon Little
+ Girl noticed that there was a bright light all around her&mdash;oh, a very
+ bright light&mdash;and right away something down in her heart began to
+ make her feel very happy indeed. She didn't know that the Christmas
+ spirits and little Christmas fairies were all around her and even right
+ inside her, because she couldn't see a single one of them, even though her
+ eyes were very bright and could usually see a great deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that was just it, and Little Girl felt as if she wanted to laugh and
+ sing and be glad. It made her remember the Sick Boy who lived next door,
+ and she said to herself that she would carry him one of her prettiest
+ picture-books in the morning, so that he could have something to make him
+ happy all day. By and by, when the bright light all around her had grown
+ very, very much brighter, Little Girl saw a path right in front of her,
+ all straight and trim, leading up a hill to a big, big house with ever and
+ ever so many windows in it. When she had gone just a bit nearer, she saw
+ candles in every window, red and green and yellow ones, and every one
+ burning brightly, so Little Girl knew right away that these were Christmas
+ candles to light her on her journey, and make the way dear for her, and
+ something told her that this was Santa's house, and that pretty soon she
+ would perhaps see Santa himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as she neared the steps and before she could possibly have had time
+ to ring the bell, the door opened&mdash;opened of itself as wide as could
+ be&mdash;and there stood&mdash;not Santa himself&mdash;don't think it&mdash;but
+ a funny Little Man with slender little legs and a roly-poly stomach which
+ shook every now and then when he laughed. You would have known right away,
+ just as Little Girl knew, that he was a very happy little man, and you
+ would have guessed right away, too, that the reason he was so roly-poly
+ was because he laughed and chuckled and smiled all the time&mdash;for it's
+ only sour, cross folks who are thin and skimpy. Quick as a wink, he pulled
+ off his little peaked red cap, smiled the broadest kind of a smile, and
+ said, "Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas! Come in! Come in!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So in went Little Girl, holding fast to Little Man's hand, and when she
+ was really inside there was the jolliest, reddest fire all glowing and
+ snapping, and there were Little Man and all his brothers and sisters, who
+ said their names were "Merry Christmas," and "Good Cheer," and ever so
+ many other jolly-sounding things, and there were such a lot of them that
+ Little Girl just knew she never could count them, no matter how long she
+ tried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All around her were bundles and boxes and piles of toys and games, and
+ Little Girl knew that these were all ready and waiting to be loaded into
+ Santa's big sleigh for his reindeer to whirl them away over cloudtops and
+ snowdrifts to the little people down below who had left their stockings
+ all ready for him. Pretty soon all the little Good Cheer Brothers began to
+ hurry and bustle and carry out the bundles as fast as they could to the
+ steps where Little Girl could hear the jingling bells and the stamping of
+ hoofs. So Little Girl picked up some bundles and skipped along too, for
+ she wanted to help a bit herself&mdash;it's no fun whatever at Christmas
+ unless you can help, you know&mdash;and there in the yard stood the
+ BIGGEST sleigh that Little Girl had ever seen, and the reindeer were all
+ stamping and prancing and jingling the bells on their harnesses, because
+ they were so eager to be on their way to the Earth once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could hardly wait for Santa to come, and just as she had begun to
+ wonder where he was, the door opened again and out came a whole forest of
+ Christmas trees, at least it looked just as if a whole forest had started
+ out for a walk somewhere, but a second glance showed Little Girl that
+ there were thousands of Christmas sprites, and that each one carried a
+ tree or a big Christmas wreath on his back. Behind them all, she could
+ hear some one laughing loudly, and talking in a big, jovial voice that
+ sounded as if he were good friends with the whole world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And straightway she knew that Santa himself was coming. Little Girl's
+ heart went pit-a-pat for a minute while she wondered if Santa would notice
+ her, but she didn't have to wonder long, for he spied her at once and
+ said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless my soul! who's this? and where did you come from?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little Girl thought perhaps she might be afraid to answer him, but she
+ wasn't one bit afraid. You see he had such a kind little twinkle in his
+ eyes that she felt happy right away as she replied, "Oh, I'm Little Girl,
+ and I wanted so much to see Santa that I just came, and here I am!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho!" laughed Santa, "and here you are! Wanted to see
+ Santa, did you, and so you came! Now that's very nice, and it's too bad
+ I'm in such a hurry, for we should like nothing better than to show you
+ about and give you a real good time. But you see it is quarter of twelve
+ now, and I must be on my way at once, else I'll never reach that first
+ chimney-top by midnight. I'd call Mrs. Santa and ask her to get you some
+ supper, but she is busy finishing dolls' clothes which must be done before
+ morning, and I guess we'd better not bother her. Is there anything that
+ you would like, Little Girl?" and good old Santa put his big warm hand on
+ Little Girl's curls and she felt its warmth and kindness clear down to her
+ very heart. You see, my dears, that even though Santa was in such a great
+ hurry, he wasn't too busy to stop and make some one happy for a minute,
+ even if it was some one no bigger than Little Girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she smiled back into Santa's face and said: "Oh, Santa, if I could ONLY
+ ride down to Earth with you behind those splendid reindeer! I'd love to
+ go; won't you PLEASE take me? I'm so small that I won't take up much room
+ on the seat, and I'll keep very still and not bother one bit!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Santa laughed, SUCH a laugh, big and loud and rollicking, and he
+ said, "Wants a ride, does she? Well, well, shall we take her, Little
+ Elves? Shall we take her, Little Fairies? Shall we take her, Good
+ Reindeer?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all the Little Elves hopped and skipped and brought Little Girl a
+ sprig of holly; and all the Little Fairies bowed and smiled and brought
+ her a bit of mistletoe; and all the Good Reindeer jingled their bells
+ loudly, which meant, "Oh, yes! let's take her! She's a good Little Girl!
+ Let her ride!" And before Little Girl could even think, she found herself
+ all tucked up in the big fur robes beside Santa, and away they went, right
+ out into the air, over the clouds, through the Milky Way, and right under
+ the very handle of the Big Dipper, on, on, toward the Earthland, whose
+ lights Little Girl began to see twinkling away down below her. Presently
+ she felt the runners scrape upon something, and she knew they must be on
+ some one's roof, and that Santa would slip down some one's chimney in a
+ minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How she wanted to go, too! You see if you had never been down a chimney
+ and seen Santa fill up the stockings, you would want to go quite as much
+ as Little Girl did, now, wouldn't you? So, just as Little Girl was wishing
+ as hard as ever she could wish, she heard a Tiny Voice say, "Hold tight to
+ his arm! Hold tight to his arm!" So she held Santa's arm tight and close,
+ and he shouldered his pack, never thinking that it was heavier than usual,
+ and with a bound and a slide, there they were, Santa, Little Girl, pack
+ and all, right in the middle of a room where there was a fireplace and
+ stockings all hung up for Santa to fill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then Santa noticed Little Girl. He had forgotten all about her for a
+ minute, and he was very much surprised to find that she had come, too.
+ "Bless my soul!" he said, "where did you come from, Little Girl? and how
+ in the world can we both get back up that chimney again? It's easy enough
+ to slide down, but it's quite another matter to climb up again!" and Santa
+ looked real worried. But Little Girl was beginning to feel very tired by
+ this time, for she had had a very exciting evening, so she said, "Oh,
+ never mind me, Santa. I've had such a good time, and I'd just as soon stay
+ here a while as not. I believe I'll curl up on his hearth-rug a few
+ minutes and have a little nap, for it looks as warm and cozy as our own
+ hearth-rug at home, and&mdash;why, it is our own hearth and it's my own
+ nursery, for there is Teddy Bear in his chair where I leave him every
+ night, and there's Bunny Cat curled up on his cushion in the corner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Little Girl turned to thank Santa and say goodbye to him, but either
+ he had gone very quickly, or else she had fallen asleep very quickly&mdash;she
+ never could tell which&mdash;for the next thing she knew, Daddy was
+ holding her in his arms and was saying, "What is my Little Girl doing
+ here? She must go to bed, for it's Christmas Eve, and old Santa won't come
+ if he thinks there are any little folks about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Little Girl knew better than that, and when she began to tell him all
+ about it, and how the Christmas fairies had welcomed her, and how Santa
+ had given her such a fine ride, Daddy laughed and laughed, and said,
+ "You've been dreaming, Little Girl, you've been dreaming."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Little Girl knew better than that, too, for there on the hearth was
+ the little Black Coal, which had given her Two Shoes and Bright Light, and
+ tight in her hand she held a holly berry which one of the Christmas
+ Sprites had placed there. More than all that, there she was on the
+ hearth-rug herself, just as Santa had left her, and that was the best
+ proof of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trouble was, Daddy himself had never been a Little Girl, so he
+ couldn't tell anything about it, but we know she hadn't been dreaming,
+ now, don't we, my dears?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. "A CHRISTMAS MATINEE"*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ *This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 74.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ MRS. M.A.L. LANE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the day before Christmas in the year 189-. Snow was falling heavily
+ in the streets of Boston, but the crowd of shoppers seemed undiminished.
+ As the storm increased, groups gathered at the corners and in sheltering
+ doorways to wait for belated cars; but the holiday cheer was in the air,
+ and there was no grumbling. Mothers dragging tired children through the
+ slush of the streets; pretty girls hurrying home for the holidays; here
+ and there a harassed-looking man with perhaps a single package which he
+ had taken a whole morning to select&mdash;all had the same spirit of
+ tolerant good-humor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "School Street! School Street!" called the conductor of an electric car. A
+ group of young people at the farther end of the car started to their feet.
+ One of them, a young man wearing a heavy fur-trimmed coat, addressed the
+ conductor angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I said, 'Music Hall,' didn't I?" he demanded. "Now we've got to walk back
+ in the snow because of your stupidity!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, never mind, Frank!" one of the girls interposed. "We ought to have
+ been looking out ourselves! Six of us, and we went by without a thought!
+ It is all Mrs. Tirrell's fault! She shouldn't have been so entertaining!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young matron dimpled and blushed. "That's charming of you, Maidie,"
+ she said, gathering up her silk skirts as she prepared to step down into
+ the pond before her. "The compliment makes up for the blame. But how it
+ snows!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It doesn't matter. We all have gaiters on," returned Maidie Williams,
+ undisturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fares, please!" said the conductor stolidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frank Armstrong thrust his gloved hand deep into his pocket with angry
+ vehemence. "There's your money," he said, "and be quick about the change,
+ will you? We've lost time enough!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man counted out the change with stiff, red fingers, closed his lips
+ firmly as if to keep back an obvious rejoinder, rang up the six fares with
+ careful accuracy, and gave the signal to go ahead. The car went on into
+ the drifting storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Armstrong laughed shortly as he rapidly counted the bits of silver lying
+ in his open palm. He turned instinctively, but two or three cars were
+ already between him and the one he was looking for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fellow must be an imbecile," he said, rejoining the group on the
+ crossing. "He's given me back a dollar and twenty cents, and I handed him
+ a dollar bill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, can't you stop him?" cried Maidie Williams, with a backward step into
+ the wet street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Harvard junior, who was carrying her umbrella, protested: "What's the
+ use. Miss Williams? He'll make it up before he gets to Scollay Square, you
+ may be sure. Those chaps don't lose anything. Why, the other day, I gave
+ one a quarter and he went off as cool as you please. 'Where's my change?'
+ said I. 'You gave me a nickel,' said he. And there wasn't anybody to swear
+ that I didn't except myself, and I didn't count."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But that doesn't make any difference," insisted the girl warmly. "Because
+ one conductor was dishonest, we needn't be. I beg your pardon, Frank, but
+ it does seem to me just stealing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, come along!" said her cousin, with an easy laugh. "I guess the West
+ End Corporation won't go without their dinners to-morrow. Here, Maidie,
+ here's the ill-gotten fifty cents. <i>I</i> think you ought to treat us
+ all after the concert; still, I won't urge you. I wash my hands of all
+ responsibility. But I do wish you hadn't such an unpleasant conscience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maidie flushed under the sting of his cousinly rudeness, but she went on
+ quietly with the rest. It was evident that any attempt to overtake the car
+ was out of the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you notice his number, Frank?" she asked, suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I never thought of it" said Frank, stopping short. "However, I
+ probably shouldn't make any complaint if I had. I shall forget all about
+ it tomorrow. I find it's never safe to let the sun go down on my wrath.
+ It's very likely not to be there the next day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wasn't thinking of making a complaint," said Maidie; but the two young
+ men were enjoying the small joke too much to notice what she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great doorway of Music Hall was just ahead. In a moment the party were
+ within its friendly shelter, stamping off the snow. The girls were
+ adjusting veils and hats with adroit feminine touches; the pretty chaperon
+ was beaming approval upon them, and the young men were taking off their
+ wet overcoats, when Maidie turned again in sudden desperation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Harris," she said, rather faintly, for she did not like to make
+ herself disagreeable, "do you suppose that car comes right back from
+ Scollay Square?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What car?" asked Walter Harris, blankly. "Oh, the one we came in? Yes, I
+ suppose it does. They're running all the time, anyway. Why, you are not
+ sick, are you, Miss Williams?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was genuine concern in his tone. This girl, with her sweet, vibrant
+ voice, her clear gray eyes, seemed very charming to him. She wasn't
+ beautiful, perhaps, but she was the kind of girl he liked. There was a
+ steady earnestness in the gray eyes that made him think of his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said Maidie, slowly. "I'm all right, thank you. But I wish I could
+ find that man again. I know sometimes they have to make it up if their
+ accounts are wrong, and I couldn't&mdash;we couldn't feel very comfortable&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frank Armstrong interrupted her. "Maidie," he said, with the studied
+ calmness with which one speaks to an unreasonable child, "you are
+ perfectly absurd. Here it is within five minutes of the tune for the
+ concert to begin. It is impossible to tell when that car is coming back.
+ You are making us all very uncomfortable. Mrs. Tirrell, won't you please
+ tell her not to spoil our afternoon?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think he's right, Maidie," said Mrs. Tirrell. "It's very nice of you to
+ feel so sorry for the poor man, but he really was very careless. It was
+ all his own fault. And just think how far he made us walk! My feet are
+ quite damp. We ought to go in directly or we shall all take cold, and I'm
+ sure you wouldn't like that, my dear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She led the way as she spoke, the two girls and young Armstrong following.
+ Maidie hesitated. It was so easy to go in, to forget everything in the
+ light and warmth and excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said she, very firmly, and as much to herself as to the young man
+ who stood waiting for her. "I must go back and try to make it right. I'm
+ so sorry, Mr. Harris, but if you will tell them&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, I'm going with you, of course" said the young fellow, impulsively.
+ "If I'd only looked once at the man I'd go alone, but I shouldn't know him
+ from Adam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maidie laughed. "Oh, I don't want to lose the whole concert, Mr. Harris,
+ and Frank, has all the tickets. You must go after them and try to make my
+ peace. I'll come just as soon as I can. Don't wait for me, please. If
+ you'll come and look for me here the first number, and not let them scold
+ me too much&mdash;" She ended with an imploring little catch in her breath
+ that was almost a sob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They sha'n't say a word, Miss Williams!" cried Walter Harris, with honest
+ admiration in his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she was gone already, and conscious that further delay was only making
+ matters worse, he went on into the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the car swung heavily along the wet rails on its way to the
+ turning-point. It was nearly empty now. An old gentleman and his nurse
+ were the only occupants. Jim Stevens, the conductor, had stepped inside
+ the car.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Too bad I forgot those young people wanted to get off at Music Hall," he
+ was thinking to himself. "I don't see how I came to do it. That chap
+ looked as if he wanted to complain of me, and I don't know as I blame him.
+ I'd have said I was sorry if he hadn't been so sharp with his tongue. I
+ hope he won't complain just now. 'Twould be a pretty bad time for me to
+ get into trouble, with Mary and the baby both sick. I'm too sleepy to be
+ good for much, that's a fact. Sitting up three nights running takes hold
+ of a fellow somehow when he's at work all day. The rent's paid, that's one
+ thing, if it hasn't left me but half a dollar to my name. Hullo!" He was
+ struck by a sudden distinct recollection of the coins he had returned.
+ "Why, I gave him fifty cents too much!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He glanced up at the dial which indicated the fares and began to count the
+ change in his pocket. He knew exactly how much money he had had at the
+ beginning of the trip. He counted carefully. Then he plunged his hand into
+ the heavy canvas pocket of his coat. Perhaps he had half a dollar there.
+ No, it was empty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He faced the fact reluctantly. Fifty cents short, ten fares! Gone into the
+ pocket of the young gentleman with the fur collar! The conductor's hand
+ shook as he put the money back in his pocket. It meant&mdash;what did it
+ mean? He drew a long breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christmas Eve! A dark dreary little room upstairs in a noisy tenement
+ house. A pale, thin woman on a shabby lounge vainly trying to quiet a
+ fretful child. The child is thin and pale, too, with a hard, racking
+ cough. There is a small fire in the stove, a very small fire; coal is so
+ high. The medicine stands on the shelf. "Medicine won't do much good," the
+ doctor had said; "he needs beef and cream."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jim's heart sank at the thought. He could almost hear the baby asking;
+ "Isn't papa coming soon? Isn't he, mamma?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor little kid!" Jim said, softly, under his breath. "And I shan't have
+ a thing to take home to him; nor Mary's violets, either. It'll be the
+ first Christmas that ever happened. I suppose that chap would think it was
+ ridiculous for me to be buying violets. He wouldn't understand what the
+ flowers mean to Mary. Perhaps he didn't notice I gave him too much. That
+ kind don't know how much they have. They just pull it out as if it was
+ newspaper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conductor went out into the snow to help the nurse, who was assisting
+ the old gentleman to the ground. Then the car swung on again. Jim turned
+ up the collar of his coat about his ears and stamped his feet. There was
+ the florist's shop where he had meant to buy the violets, and the toy-shop
+ was just around the corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A thought flashed across his tired brain. "Plenty of men would do it; they
+ do it every day. Nobody ever would be the poorer for it. This car will be
+ crowded going home. I needn't ring in every fare; nobody could tell. But
+ Mary! She wouldn't touch those violets if she knew. And she'd know. I'd
+ have to tell her. I couldn't keep it from her, she's that quick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He jumped off to adjust the trolley with a curious sense of unreality. It
+ couldn't be that he was really going home this Christmas Eve with empty
+ hands. Well, they must all suffer together for his carelessness. It was
+ his own fault, but it was hard. And he was so tired!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his amazement he found his eyes were blurred as he watched the people
+ crowding into the car. What? Was he going to cry like a baby&mdash;he, a
+ great burly man of thirty years?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's no use," he thought. "I couldn't do it. The first time I gave Mary
+ violets was the night she said she'd marry me. I told her then I'd do my
+ best to make her proud of me. I guess she wouldn't be very proud of a man
+ who could cheat. She'd rather starve than have a ribbon she couldn't pay
+ for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rang up a dozen fares with a steady hand. The temptation was over. Six
+ more strokes&mdash;then nine without a falter. He even imagined the bell
+ rang more distinctly than usual, even encouragingly. The car stopped. Jim
+ flung the door open with a triumphant sweep of his arm. He felt ready to
+ face the world. But the baby&mdash;his arm dropped. It was hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned to help the young girl who was waiting at the step. Through the
+ whirling snow he saw her eager face, with a quick recognition lighting the
+ steady eyes, and wondered dimly, as he stood with his hand on the
+ signal-strap, where he could have seen her before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a mistake," she said, with a shy tremor in her voice. "You gave
+ us too much change and here it is." She held out to Jim the piece of
+ silver which had given him such an unhappy quarter of an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took it like one dazed. Would the young lady think he was crazy to care
+ so much about so small a coin? He must say something. "Thank you, miss,"
+ he stammered as well as he could. "You see, I thought it was gone&mdash;and
+ there's the baby&mdash;and it's Christmas Eve&mdash;and my wife's sick&mdash;and
+ you can't understand&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It certainly was not remarkable that she couldn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I do," she said, simply. "I was afraid of that. And I thought perhaps
+ there was a baby, so I brought my Christmas present for her," and
+ something else dropped into Jim's cold hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What you waiting for?" shouted the motorman from the front platform. The
+ girl had disappeared in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jim rang the bell to go ahead, and gazed again at the two shining half
+ dollars in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't have a chance to tell her," he explained to his wife late in the
+ evening, as he sat in a tiny rocking-chair several sizes too small for
+ him, "that the baby wasn't a her at all, though if I thought he'd grow up
+ into such a lovely one as she is, I don't know but I almost wish he was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Jim!" said Mary, with a little laugh as she put up her hand to
+ stroke his rough cheek. "I guess you're tired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I should say," he added, stretching out his long legs toward the few
+ red sparks in the bottom of the grate, "I should say she had tears in her
+ eyes, too, but I was that near crying myself I couldn't be sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little room was sweet with the odour of English violets. Asleep in the
+ bed lay the boy, a toy horse clasped close to his breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless her heart!" said Mary, softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Miss Williams," said Walter Harris, as he sprang to meet a
+ snow-covered figure coming swiftly along the sidewalk. "I can see that you
+ found him. You've lost the first number, but they won't scold you&mdash;not
+ this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl turned a radiant face upon him. "Thank you," she said, shaking
+ the snowy crystals from her skirt. "I don't care now if they do. I should
+ have lost more than that if I had stayed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. TOINETTE AND THE ELVES*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * Published by arrangement with Little, Brown &amp; Co.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ SUSAN COOLIDGE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter's sun was nearing the horizon's edge. Each moment the tree
+ shadows grew longer in the forest; each moment the crimson light on the
+ upper boughs became more red and bright. It was Christmas Eve, or would be
+ in half an hour, when the sun should be fairly set; but it did not feel
+ like Christmas, for the afternoon was mild and sweet, and the wind in the
+ leafless boughs sang, as it moved about, as though to imitate the vanished
+ birds. Soft trills and whistles, odd little shakes and twitters&mdash;it
+ was astonishing what pretty noises the wind made, for it was in good
+ humor, as winds should be on the Blessed Night; all its storm-tones and
+ bass-notes were for the moment laid aside, and gently as though hushing a
+ baby to sleep, it cooed and rustled and brushed to and fro in the leafless
+ woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toinette stood, pitcher in hand, beside the well. "Wishing Well," the
+ people called it, for they believed that if any one standing there bowed
+ to the East, repeated a certain rhyme and wished a wish, the wish would
+ certainly come true. Unluckily, nobody knew exactly what the rhyme should
+ be. Toinette did not; she was wishing that she did, as she stood with her
+ eyes fixed on the bubbling water. How nice it would be! she thought. What
+ beautiful things should be hers, if it were only to wish and to have. She
+ would be beautiful, rich, good&mdash;oh, so good. The children should love
+ her dearly, and never be disagreeable. Mother should not work so hard&mdash;they
+ should all go back to France&mdash;which mother said was si belle. Oh,
+ dear, how nice it would be. Meantime, the sun sank lower, and mother at
+ home was waiting for the water, but Toinette forgot that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she started. A low sound of crying met her ear, and something
+ like a tiny moan. It seemed close by but she saw nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hastily she filled her pitcher and turned to go. But again the sound came,
+ an unmistakable sob, right under her feet. Toinette stopped short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is the matter?" she called out bravely. "Is anybody there? and if
+ there is, why don't I see you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third sob&mdash;and all at once, down on the ground beside her, a tiny
+ figure became visible, so small that Toinette had to kneel and stoop her
+ head to see it plainly. The figure was that of an odd little man. He wore
+ a garb of green bright and glancing as the scales of a beetle. In his mite
+ of a hand was a cap, out of which stuck a long pointed feather. Two specks
+ of tears stood on his cheeks and he fixed on Toinette a glance so sharp
+ and so sad that it made her feel sorry and frightened and confused all at
+ once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why how funny this is!" she said, speaking to herself out loud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all," replied the little man, in a voice as dry and crisp as the
+ chirr of a grasshopper. "Anything but funny. I wish you wouldn't use such
+ words. It hurts my feelings, Toinette."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know my name, then?" cried Toinette, astonished. "That's strange.
+ But what is the matter? Why are you crying so, little man?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm not a little man. I'm an elf," responded the dry voice; "and I think
+ you'd cry if you had an engagement out to tea, and found yourself spiked
+ on a great bayonet, so that you couldn't move an inch. Look!" He turned a
+ little as he spoke and Toinette saw a long rose-thorn sticking through the
+ back of the green robe. The little man could by no means reach the thorn,
+ and it held him fast prisoner to the place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is that all? I'll take it out for you," she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be careful&mdash;oh, be careful," entreated the little man. "This is my
+ new dress, you know&mdash;my Christmas suit, and it's got to last a year.
+ If there is a hole in it, Peascod will tickle me and Bean Blossom tease,
+ till I shall wish myself dead." He stamped with vexation at the thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, you mustn't do that," said Toinette, in a motherly tone, "else
+ you'll tear it yourself, you know." She broke off the thorn as she spoke,
+ and gently drew it out. The elf anxiously examined the stuff. A tiny
+ puncture only was visible and his face brightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're a good child," he said. "I'll do as much for you some day,
+ perhaps."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would have come before if I had seen you," remarked Toinette, timidly.
+ "But I didn't see you a bit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, because I had my cap on," cried the elf. He placed it on his head as
+ he spoke, and hey, presto! nobody was there, only a voice which laughed
+ and said: "Well&mdash;don't stare so. Lay your finger on me now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh," said Toinette, with a gasp. "How wonderful. What fun it must be to
+ do that. The children wouldn't see me. I should steal in and surprise
+ them; they would go on talking, and never guess that I was there. I should
+ so like it. Do elves ever lend their caps to anybody? I wish you'd lend me
+ yours. It must be so nice to be invisible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ho," cried the elf, appearing suddenly again. "Lend my cap, indeed! Why
+ it wouldn't stay on the very tip of your ear, it's so small. As for nice,
+ that depends. Sometimes it is, and sometimes it isn't. No, the only way
+ for mortal people to be invisible is to gather the fern-seed and put it in
+ their shoes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gather it? Where? I never saw any seed to the ferns," said Toinette,
+ staring about her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course not&mdash;we elves take care of that," replied the little man.
+ "Nobody finds the fern-seed but ourselves. I'll tell you what, though. You
+ were such a nice child to take out the thorn so cleverly, that I'll give
+ you a little of the seed. Then you can try the fun of being invisible, to
+ your heart's content."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you really? How delightful. May I have it now?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless me. Do you think I carry my pockets stuffed with it?" said the elf.
+ "Not at all. Go home, say not a word to any one, but leave your bedroom
+ window open to night, and you'll see what you'll see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laid his finger on his nose as he spoke, gave a jump like a
+ grasshopper, clapping on his cap as he went, and vanished. Toinette
+ lingered a moment, in hopes that he might come back, then took her pitcher
+ and hurried home. The woods were very dusky by this time; but full of her
+ strange adventures, she did not remember to feel afraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How long you have been," said her mother. "It's late for a little maid
+ like you to be up. You must make better speed another time, my child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toinette pouted as she was apt to do when reproved. The children clamoured
+ to know what had kept her, and she spoke pettishly and crossly; so that
+ they too became cross, and presently went away into the outer kitchen to
+ play by themselves. The children were apt to creep away when Toinette
+ came. It made her angry and unhappy at times that they should do so, but
+ she did not realize that it was in great part her own fault, and so did
+ not set herself to mend it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell me a 'tory," said baby Jeanneton, creeping to her knee a little
+ later. But Toinette's head was full of the elf; she had no time to spare
+ for Jeanneton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, not to-night," she replied. "Ask mother to tell you one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother's busy," said Jeanneton wistfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toinette took no notice and the little one crept away disconsolately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bedtime at last. Toinette set the casement open, and lay a long time
+ waiting and watching; then she fell asleep. She waked with a sneeze and
+ jump and sat up in bed. Behold, on the coverlet stood her elfin friend,
+ with a long train of other elves beside him, all clad in the beetle-wing
+ green, and wearing little pointed caps. More were coming in at the window;
+ outside a few were drifting about in the moon rays, which lit their
+ sparkling robes till they glittered like so many fireflies. The odd thing
+ was, that though the caps were on, Toinette could see the elves distinctly
+ and this surprised her so much, that again she thought out loud and said,
+ "How funny."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean about the caps," replied her special elf, who seemed to have the
+ power of reading thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, you can see us to-night, caps and all. Spells lose their value on
+ Christmas Eve, always. Peascod, where is the box? Do you still wish to try
+ the experiment of being invisible, Toinette?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes&mdash;indeed I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well; so let it be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he beckoned, and two elves puffing and panting like little men
+ with a heavy load, dragged forward a droll little box about the size of a
+ pumpkin-seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of them lifted the cover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pay the porter, please, ma'am," he said giving Toinette's ear a
+ mischievous tweak with his sharp fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hands off, you bad Peascod!" cried Toinette's elf. "This is my girl. She
+ shan't be pinched!" He dealt Peascod a blow with his tiny hand as he spoke
+ and looked so brave and warlike that he seemed at least an inch taller
+ than he had before. Toinette admired him very much; and Peascod slunk away
+ with an abashed giggle muttering that Thistle needn't be so ready with his
+ fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thistle&mdash;for thus, it seemed, Toinette's friend was named&mdash;dipped
+ his fingers in the box, which was full of fine brown seeds, and shook a
+ handful into each of Toinette's shoes, as they stood, toes together by the
+ bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now you have your wish," he said, "and can go about and do what you like,
+ no one seeing. The charm will end at sunset. Make the most of it while you
+ can; but if you want to end it sooner, shake the seeds from the shoes and
+ then you are just as usual."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I shan't want to," protested Toinette; "I'm sure I shan't."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-bye," said Thistle, with a mocking little laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-bye, and thank you ever so much," replied Toinette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-bye, good-bye," replied the other elves, in shrill chorus. They
+ clustered together, as if in consultation; then straight out of the window
+ they flew like a swarm of gauzy-winged bees, and melted into the
+ moonlight. Toinette jumped up and ran to watch them but the little men
+ were gone&mdash;not a trace of them was to be seen; so she shut the
+ window, went back to bed and presently in the midst of her amazed and
+ excited thoughts fell asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She waked in the morning, with a queer, doubtful feeling. Had she dreamed,
+ or had it really happened? She put on her best petticoat and laced her
+ blue bodice; for she thought the mother would perhaps take them across the
+ wood to the little chapel for the Christmas service. Her long hair
+ smoothed and tied, her shoes trimly fastened, downstairs she ran. The
+ mother was stirring porridge over the fire. Toinette went close to her,
+ but she did not move or turn her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How late the children are," she said at last, lifting the boiling pot on
+ the hob. Then she went to the stair-foot and called, "Marc, Jeanneton,
+ Pierre, Marie. Breakfast is ready, my children. Toinette&mdash;but where,
+ then, is Toinette? She is used to be down long before this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Toinette isn't upstairs," said Marie from above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her door is wide open, and she isn't there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is strange," said the mother. "I have been here an hour, and she has
+ not passed this way since." She went to the outer door and called,
+ "Toinette! Toinette!" passing close to Toinette as she did so. And looking
+ straight at her with unseeing eyes. Toinette, half frightened, half
+ pleased, giggled low to herself. She really was invisible, then. How
+ strange it seemed and what fun it was going to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children sat down to breakfast, little Jeanneton, as the youngest,
+ saying grace. The mother distributed the porridge and gave each a spoon
+ but she looked anxious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where can Toinette have gone?" she said to herself. Toinette was
+ conscious-pricked. She was half inclined to dispel the charm on the spot.
+ But just then she caught a whisper from Pierre to Marc which so surprised
+ her as to put the idea out of her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps a wolf has eaten her up&mdash;a great big wolf like the 'Capuchon
+ Rouge,' you know." This was what Pierre said; and Marc answered
+ unfeelingly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he has, I shall ask mother to let me have her room for my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Toinette, her cheeks burned and her eyes filled with tears at this.
+ Didn't the boys love her a bit then? Next she grew angry, and longed to
+ box Marc's ears, only she recollected in time that she was invisible. What
+ a bad boy he was, she thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The smoking porridge reminded her that she was hungry; so brushing away
+ the tears she slipped a spoon off the table and whenever she found the
+ chance, dipped it into the bowl for a mouthful. The porridge disappeared
+ rapidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want some more," said Jeanneton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless me, how fast you have eaten," said the mother, turning to the bowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This made Toinette laugh, which shook her spoon, and a drop of the hot
+ mixture fell right on the tip of Marie's nose as she sat with upturned
+ face waiting her turn for a second helping. Marie gave a little scream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it?" said the mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hot water! Right in my face!" sputtered Marie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Water!" cried Marc. "It's porridge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You spattered with your spoon. Eat more carefully, my child," said the
+ mother, and Toinette laughed again as she heard her. After all, there was
+ some fun in being invisible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning went by. Constantly the mother went to the door, and, shading
+ her eyes with her hand, looked out, in hopes of seeing a little figure
+ come down the wood-path, for she thought perhaps the child went to the
+ spring after water, and fell asleep there. The children played happily,
+ meanwhile. They were used to doing without Toinette and did not seem to
+ miss her, except that now and then baby Jeanneton said: "Poor Toinette
+ gone&mdash;not here&mdash;all gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, what if she has?" said Marc at last looking up from the wooden cup
+ he was carving for Marie's doll. "We can play all the better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marc was a bold, outspoken boy, who always told his whole mind about
+ things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If she were here," he went on," she'd only scold and interfere. Toinette
+ almost always scolds. I like to have her go away. It makes it pleasanter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is rather pleasanter," admitted Marie, "only I'd like her to be having
+ a nice time somewhere else."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bother about Toinette," cried Pierre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let's play 'My godmother has cabbage to sell.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I don't think Toinette had ever felt so unhappy in her life, as when she
+ stood by unseen, and heard the children say these words. She had never
+ meant to be unkind to them, but she was quick-tempered, dreamy, wrapped up
+ in herself. She did not like being interrupted by them, it put her out,
+ and she spoke sharply and was cross. She had taken it for granted that the
+ others must love her, by a sort of right, and the knowledge that they did
+ not grieved over very much. Creeping away, she hid herself in the woods.
+ It was a sparkling day, but the sun did not look so bright as usual.
+ Cuddled down under a rosebush, Toinette sat sobbing as if her heart would
+ break at the recollection of the speeches she had overheard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by a little voice within her woke up and began to make itself
+ audible. All of us know this little voice. We call it conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jeanneton missed me," she thought. "And, oh, dear! I pushed her away only
+ last night and wouldn't tell her a story. And Marie hoped I was having a
+ pleasant time somewhere. I wish I hadn't slapped Marie last Friday. And I
+ wish I hadn't thrown Marc's ball into the fire that day I was angry with
+ him. How unkind he was to say that&mdash;but I wasn't always kind to him.
+ And once I said that I wished a bear would eat Pierre up. That was because
+ he broke my cup. Oh, dear, oh, dear. What a bad girl I've been to them
+ all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you could be better and kinder if you tried, couldn't you?" said the
+ inward voice. "I think you could."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Toinette clasped her hands tight and said out loud: "I could. Yes&mdash;and
+ I will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing to be done was to get rid of the fern-seed which she now
+ regarded as a hateful thing. She untied her shoes and shook it out in the
+ grass. It dropped and seemed to melt into the air, for it instantly
+ vanished. A mischievous laugh sounded close behind, and a beetle-green
+ coat-tail was visible whisking under a tuft of rushes. But Toinette had
+ had enough of the elves, and, tying her shoes, took the road toward home,
+ running with all her might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where have you been all day, Toinette?" cried the children, as,
+ breathless and panting, she flew in at the gate. But Toinette could not
+ speak. She made slowly for her mother, who stood in the doorway, flung
+ herself into her arms and burst into a passion of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ma cherie, what is it, whence hast thou come?" asked the good mother
+ alarmed. She lifted Toinette into her arms as she spoke, and hastened
+ indoors. The other children followed, whispering and peeping, but the
+ mother sent them away, and sitting down by the fire with Toinette in her
+ lap, she rocked and hushed and comforted, as though Toinette had been
+ again a little baby. Gradually the sobs ceased. For a while Toinette lay
+ quiet, with her head on her mother's breast. Then she wiped her wet eyes,
+ put her arms around her mother's neck, and told her all from the very
+ beginning, keeping not a single thing back. The dame listened with alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Saints protect us," she muttered. Then feeling Toinette's hands and head,
+ "Thou hast a fever," she said. "I will make thee a tisane, my darling, and
+ thou must at once go to bed." Toinette vainly protested; to bed she went
+ and perhaps it was the wisest thing, for the warm drink threw her into a
+ long sound sleep and when she woke she was herself again, bright and well,
+ hungry for dinner, and ready to do her usual tasks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herself&mdash;but not quite the same Toinette that she had been before.
+ Nobody changes from bad to better in a minute. It takes time for that,
+ time and effort, and a long struggle with evil habits and tempers. But
+ there is sometimes a certain minute or day in which people begin to
+ change, and thus it was with Toinette. The fairy lesson was not lost upon
+ her. She began to fight with herself, to watch her faults and try to
+ conquer them. It was hard work; often she felt discouraged, but she kept
+ on. Week after week and month after month she grew less selfish, kinder,
+ more obliging than she used to be. When she failed and her old fractious
+ temper got the better of her, she was sorry and begged every one's pardon
+ so humbly that they could not but forgive. The mother began to think that
+ the elves really had bewitched her child. As for the children they learned
+ to love Toinette as never before, and came to her with all their pains and
+ pleasures, as children should to a kind older sister. Each fresh proof of
+ this, every kiss from Jeanneton, every confidence from Marc, was a comfort
+ to Toinette, for she never forgot Christmas Day, and felt that no trouble
+ was too much to wipe out that unhappy recollection. "I think they like me
+ better than they did then," she would say; but then the thought came,
+ "Perhaps if I were invisible again, if they did not know I was there, I
+ might hear something to make me feel as badly as I did that morning."
+ These sad thoughts were part of the bitter fruit of the fairy fern-seed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So with doubts and fears the year went by, and again it was Christmas Eve.
+ Toinette had been asleep some hours when she was roused by a sharp tapping
+ at the window pane. Startled, and only half awake, she sat up in bed and
+ saw by the moonlight a tiny figure outside which she recognized. It was
+ Thistle drumming with his knuckles on the glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me in," cried the dry little voice. So Toinette opened the casement,
+ and Thistle flew in and perched as before on the coverlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry Christmas, my girl." he said, "and a Happy New Year when it comes.
+ I've brought you a present;" and, dipping into a pouch tied round his
+ waist, he pulled out a handful of something brown. Toinette knew what it
+ was in a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no," she cried shrinking back. "Don't give me any fern-seeds. They
+ frighten me. I don't like them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't be silly," said Thistle, his voice sounding kind this time, and
+ earnest. "It wasn't pleasant being invisible last year, but perhaps this
+ year it will be. Take my advice, and try it. You'll not be sorry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sha'n't I?" said Toinette, brightening. "Very well, then, I will." She
+ leaned out of bed, and watched Thistle strew the fine dustlike grains in
+ each shoe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll drop in to-morrow night, and just see how you like it," he said.
+ Then, with a nod, he was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old fear came back when she woke in the morning, and she tied on her
+ shoes with a tremble at her heart. Downstairs she stole. The first thing
+ she saw was a wooden ship standing on her plate. Marc had made the ship,
+ but Toinette had no idea it was for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little ones sat round the table with their eyes on the door, watching
+ till Toinette should come in and be surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish she'd hurry," said Pierre, drumming on his bowl with a spoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We all want Toinette, don't we?" said the mother, smiling as she poured
+ the hot porridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will be fun to see her stare," declared Marc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Toinette is jolly when she stares. Her eyes look big and her cheeks grow
+ pink. Andre Brugen thinks his sister Aline is prettiest, but I don't. Our
+ Toinette is ever so pretty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is ever so nice, too," said Pierre. "She's as good to play with as&mdash;as&mdash;a
+ boy," finished triumphantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I wish my Toinette would come," said Jeanneton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toinette waited no longer, but sped upstairs with glad tears in her eyes.
+ Two minutes, and down she came again visible this time. Her heart was
+ light as a feather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry Christmas!" clamoured the children. The ship was presented,
+ Toinette was duly surprised, and so the happy day began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night Toinette left the window open, and lay down in her clothes; for
+ she felt, as Thistle had been so kind, she ought to receive him politely.
+ He came at midnight, and with him all the other little men in green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, how was it?" asked Thistle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I liked it this time," declared Toinette, with shining eyes, "and I
+ thank you so much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm glad you did," said the elf. "And I'm glad you are thankful, for we
+ want you to do something for us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What can it be?" inquired Toinette, wondering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must know," went on Thistle, "that there is no dainty in the world
+ which we elves enjoy like a bowl of fern-seed broth. But it has to be
+ cooked over a real fire, and we dare not go near fire, you know, lest our
+ wings scorch. So we seldom get any fern-seed broth. Now, Toinette, will
+ you make us some?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, I will!" cried Toinette, "only you must tell me how."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is very simple," said Peascod; "only seed and honey dew, stirred from
+ left to right with a sprig of fennel. Here's the seed and the fennel, and
+ here's the dew. Be sure and stir from the left; if you don't, it curdles,
+ and the flavour will be spoiled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down into the kitchen they went, and Toinette, moving very softly,
+ quickened the fire, set on the smallest bowl she could find, and spread
+ the doll's table with the wooden saucers which Marc had made for Jeanneton
+ to play with. Then she mixed and stirred as the elves bade, and when the
+ soup was done, served it to them smoking hot. How they feasted! No
+ bumblebee, dipping into a flower-cup, ever sipped and twinkled more
+ rapturously than they.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the last drop was eaten, they made ready to go. Each in turn kissed
+ Toinette's hand, and said a word of farewell. Thistle brushed his
+ feathered cap over the doorpost as he passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be lucky, house," he said, "for you have received and entertained the
+ luck-bringers. And be lucky, Toinette. Good temper is good luck, and sweet
+ words and kind looks and peace in the heart are the fairest of fortunes.
+ See that you never lose them again, my girl." With this, he, too, kissed
+ Toinette's hand, waved his feathered cap, and&mdash;whir! they all were
+ gone, while Toinette, covering the fire with ashes and putting aside the
+ little cups, stole up to her bed a happy child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. THE VOYAGE OF THE WEE RED CAP
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ *Published originally in the Outlook. Reprinted here by arrangement with
+ the author.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUTH SAWYER DURAND
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the night of St. Stephen, and Teig sat alone by his fire with
+ naught in his cupboard but a pinch of tea and a bare mixing of meal, and a
+ heart inside of him as soft and warm as the ice on the water-bucket
+ outside the door. The tuft was near burnt on the hearth&mdash;a handful of
+ golden cinders left, just; and Teig took to counting them greedily on his
+ fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's one, two, three, an' four an' five," he laughed. "Faith, there be
+ more bits o' real gold hid undther the loose clay in the corner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the truth; and it was the scraping and scrooching for the last
+ piece that had left Teig's cupboard bare of a Christmas dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gold is betther nor eatin' an' dthrinkin'. An' if ye have naught to give,
+ there'll be naught asked of ye;" and he laughed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was thinking of the neighbours, and the doles of food and piggins of
+ milk that would pass over their thresholds that night to the vagabonds and
+ paupers who were sure to come begging. And on the heels of that thought
+ followed another: who would be giving old Barney his dinner? Barney lived
+ a stone's throw from Teig, alone, in a wee tumbled-in cabin; and for a
+ score of years past Teig had stood on the doorstep every Christmas Eve,
+ and, making a hollow of his two hands, had called across the road:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hey, there, Barney, will ye come over for a sup?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Barney had reached for his crutches&mdash;there being but one leg to
+ him&mdash;and had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Faith," said Teig, trying another laugh, "Barney can fast for the once;
+ 'twill be all the same in a month's time." And he fell to thinking of the
+ gold again. A knock came at the door. Teig pulled himself down in his
+ chair where the shadow would cover him, and held his tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Teig, Teig!" It was the widow O'Donnelly's voice. "If ye are there, open
+ your door. I have not got the pay for the spriggin' this month, an' the
+ childher are needin' food."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Teig put the leash on his tongue, and never stirred till he heard the
+ tramp of her feet going on to the next cabin. Then he saw to it that the
+ door was tight-barred. Another knock came, and it was a stranger's voice
+ this time:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The other cabins are filled; not one but has its hearth crowded; will ye
+ take us in&mdash;the two of us? The wind bites mortal sharp, not a morsel
+ o' food have ne tasted this day. Masther, will ye take us in?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Teig sat on, a-holding his tongue; and the tramp of the strangers'
+ feet passed down the road. Others took their place&mdash;small feet,
+ running. It was the miller's wee Cassie, and she called out as she ran by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old Barney's watchin' for ye. Ye'll not be forgettin' him, will ye,
+ Teig?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the child broke into a song, sweet and clear, as she passed down
+ the road:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Listen all ye, 'tis the Feast o' St. Stephen,
+ Mind that ye keep it, this holy even.
+ Open your door an' greet ye the stranger&mdash;
+ For ye mind that the wee Lord had naught but a manger.
+ Mhuire as truagh!
+
+ "Feed ye the hungry an' rest ye the weary,
+ This ye must do for the sake of Our Mary.
+ 'Tis well that ye mind&mdash;ye who sit by the fire&mdash;
+ That the Lord he was born in a dark and cold byre.
+ Mhuire as truagh!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Teig put his fingers deep in his ears. "A million murdthering curses on
+ them that won't let me be! Can't a man try to keep what is his without
+ bein' pesthered by them that has only idled an' wasted their days?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the strange thing happened: hundreds and hundreds of wee lights
+ began dancing outside the window, making the room bright; the hands of the
+ clock began chasing each other round the dial, and the bolt of the door
+ drew itself out. Slowly, without a creak or a cringe, the door opened, and
+ in there trooped a crowd of the Good People. Their wee green cloaks were
+ folded close about them, and each carried a rush candle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teig was filled with a great wonderment, entirely, when he saw the
+ fairies, but when they saw him they laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are takin' the loan o' your cabin this night, Teig," said they. "Ye
+ are the only man hereabout with an empty hearth, an' we're needin' one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without saying more, they bustled about the room making ready. They
+ lengthened out the table and spread and set it; more of the Good People
+ trooped in, bringing stools and food and drink. The pipers came last, and
+ they sat themselves around the chimney-piece a-blowing their chanters and
+ trying the drones. The feasting began and the pipers played and never had
+ Teig seen such a sight in his life. Suddenly a wee man sang out:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Clip, clap, clip, clap, I wish I had my wee red cap!" And out of the air
+ there tumbled the neatest cap Teig ever laid his two eyes on. The wee man
+ clapped it on his head, crying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish I was in Spain!" and&mdash;whist&mdash;up the chimney he went, and
+ away out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened just as I am telling it. Another wee man called for his cap,
+ and away he went after the first. And then another and another until the
+ room was empty and Teig sat alone again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my soul," said Teig, "I'd like to thravel that way myself! It's a
+ grand savin' of tickets an' baggage; an' ye get to a place before ye've
+ had time to change your mind. Faith there is no harm done if I thry it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he sang the fairies' rhyme and out of the air dropped a wee cap for
+ him. For a moment the wonder had him, but the next he was clapping the cap
+ on his head and crying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spain!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then&mdash;whist&mdash;up the chimney he went after the fairies, and
+ before he had time to let out his breath he was standing in the middle of
+ Spain, and strangeness all about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in a great city. The doorways of the houses were hung with flowers
+ and the air was warm and sweet with the smell of them. Torches burned
+ along the streets, sweetmeat-sellers went about crying their wares, and on
+ the steps of the cathedral crouched a crowd of beggars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the meanin' o' that?" asked Teig of one of the fairies. "They are
+ waiting for those that are hearing mass. When they come out, they give
+ half of what they have to those that have nothing, so on this night of all
+ the year there shall be no hunger and no cold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then far down the street came the sound of a child's voice, singing:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Listen all ye, 'tis the Feast o' St. Stephen,
+ Mind that ye keep it, this holy even".
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Curse it!" said Teig; "can a song fly afther ye?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then he heard the fairies cry "Holland!" and cried "Holland!" too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one leap he was over France, and another over Belgium; and with the
+ third he was standing by long ditches of water frozen fast, and over them
+ glided hundreds upon hundreds of lads and maids. Outside each door stood a
+ wee wooden shoe empty. Teig saw scores of them as he looked down the ditch
+ of a street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is the meanin' o' those shoes? " he asked the fairies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ye poor lad!" answered the wee man next to him; "are ye not knowing
+ anything? This is the Gift Night of the year, when every man gives to his
+ neighbour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A child came to the window of one of the houses, and in her hand was a
+ lighted candle. She was singing as she put the light down close to the
+ glass, and Teig caught the words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Open your door an' greet ye the stranger&mdash;
+ For ye mind that the wee Lord had naught but a manger.
+ Mhuire as truagh!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis the de'il's work!" cried Teig, and he set the red cap more firmly on
+ his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm for another country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot be telling you a half of the adventures Teig had that night, nor
+ half the sights that he saw. But he passed by fields that held sheaves of
+ grain for the birds and doorsteps that held bowls of porridge for the wee
+ creatures. He saw lighted trees, sparkling and heavy with gifts; and he
+ stood outside the churches and watched the crowds pass in, bearing gifts
+ to the Holy Mother and Child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the fairies straightened their caps and cried, "Now for the great
+ hall in the King of England's palace!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whist&mdash;and away they went, and Teig after them; and the first thing
+ he knew he was in London, not an arm's length from the King's throne. It
+ was a grander sight than he had seen in any other country. The hall was
+ filled entirely with lords and ladies; and the great doors were open for
+ the poor and the homeless to come in and warm themselves by the King's
+ fire and feast from the King's table. And many a hungry soul did the King
+ serve with his own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those that had anything to give gave it in return. It might be a bit of
+ music played on a harp or a pipe, or it might be a dance or a song; but
+ more often it was a wish, just, for good luck and safekeeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teig was so taken up with the watching that he never heard the fairies
+ when they wished themselves on; moreover, he never saw the wee girl that
+ was fed, and went laughing away. But he heard a bit of her song as she
+ passed through the door:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Feed ye the hungry an' rest ye the weary, This ye must do for the sake of
+ Our Mary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the anger had Teig. "I'll stop your pestherin' tongue, once an' for
+ all time!" and, catching the cap from his head, he threw it after her. No
+ sooner was the cap gone than every soul in the hall saw him. The next
+ moment they were about him, catching at his coat and crying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is he from, what does he here? Bring him before the King!" And Teig
+ was dragged along by a hundred hands to the throne where the King sat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was stealing food," cried one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was robbing the King's jewels," cried another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He looks evil," cried a third. "Kill him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in a moment all the voices took it up and the hall rang with: "Aye,
+ kill him, kill him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teig's legs took to trembling, and fear put the leash on his tongue; but
+ after a long silence he managed to whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have done evil to no one&mdash;no one!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maybe," said the King; "but have ye done good? Come, tell us, have ye
+ given aught to any one this night? If ye have, we will pardon ye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a word could Teig say&mdash;fear tightened the leash&mdash;for he was
+ knowing full well there was no good to him that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then ye must die," said the King. "Will ye try hanging or beheading?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hanging, please, your Majesty," said Teig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guards came rushing up and carried him off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as he was crossing the threshold of the hall a thought sprang at him
+ and held him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty," he called after him, "will ye grant me a last request?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will," said the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank ye. There's a wee red cap that I'm mortal fond of, and I lost it a
+ while ago; if I could be hung with it on, I would hang a deal more
+ comfortable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cap was found and brought to Teig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Clip, clap, clip, clap, for my wee red cap, I wish I was home," he sang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up and over the heads of the dumfounded guard he flew, and&mdash;whist&mdash;and
+ away out of sight. When he opened his eyes again, he was sitting dose by
+ his own hearth, with the fire burnt low. The hands of the clock were
+ still, the bolt was fixed firm in the door. The fairies' lights were gone,
+ and the only bright thing was the candle burning in old Barney's cabin
+ across the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A running of feet sounded outside, and then the snatch of a song
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Tis well that ye mind&mdash;ye who sit by the fire&mdash;
+ That the Lord he was born in a dark and cold byre.
+ Mhuire as traugh!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Wait ye, whoever ye are!" and Teig was away to the corner, digging fast
+ at the loose clay, as a terrier digs at a bone. He filled his hands full
+ of the shining gold, then hurried to the door, unbarring it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miller's wee Cassie stood there, peering at him out of the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take those to the widow O'Donnelly, do ye hear? And take the rest to the
+ store. Ye tell Jamie to bring up all that he has that is eatable an'
+ dhrinkable; and to the neighbours ye say, 'Teig's keepin' the feast this
+ night.' Hurry now!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teig stopped a moment on the threshold until the tramp of her feet had
+ died away; then he made a hollow of his two hands and called across the
+ road:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hey there, Barney, will ye come over for a sup?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. A STORY OF THE CHRIST-CHILD*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ *Reprinted by permission of the author from her collection,
+ "Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A German legend for Christmas Eve as told by
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ELIZABETH HARKISON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once upon a time, a long, long time ago, on the night before Christmas, a
+ little child was wandering all alone through the streets of a great city.
+ There were many people on the street, fathers and mothers, sisters and
+ brothers, uncles and aunts, and even gray-haired grandfathers and
+ grandmothers, all of whom were hurrying home with bundles of presents for
+ each other and for their little ones. Fine carriages rolled by, express
+ wagons rattled past, even old carts were pressed into service, and all
+ things seemed in a hurry and glad with expectation of the coming Christmas
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From some of the windows bright lights were already beginning to stream
+ until it was almost as bright as day. But the little child seemed to have
+ no home, and wandered about listlessly from street to street. No one took
+ any notice of him except perhaps Jack Frost, who bit his bare toes and
+ made the ends of his fingers tingle. The north wind, too, seemed to notice
+ the child, for it blew against him and pierced his ragged garments through
+ and through, causing him to shiver with cold. Home after home he passed,
+ looking with longing eyes through the windows, in upon the glad, happy
+ children, most of whom were helping to trim the Christmas trees for the
+ coming morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely," said the child to himself, "where there is so must gladness and
+ happiness, some of it may be for me." So with timid steps he approached a
+ large and handsome house. Through the windows, he could see a tall and
+ stately Christmas tree already lighted. Many presents hung upon it. Its
+ green boughs were trimmed with gold and silver ornaments. Slowly he
+ climbed up the broad steps and gently rapped at the door. It was opened by
+ a large man-servant. He had a kindly face, although his voice was deep and
+ gruff. He looked at the little child for a moment, then sadly shook his
+ head and said, "Go down off the steps. There is no room here for such as
+ you." He looked sorry as he spoke; possibly he remembered his own little
+ ones at home, and was glad that they were not out in this cold and bitter
+ night. Through the open door a bright light shone, and the warm air,
+ filled with fragrance of the Christmas pine, rushed out from the inner
+ room and greeted the little wanderer with a kiss. As the child turned back
+ into the cold and darkness, he wondered why the footman had spoken thus,
+ for surely, thought he, those little children would love to have another
+ companion join them in their joyous Christmas festival. But the little
+ children inside did not even know that he had knocked at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The street grew colder and darker as the child passed on. He went sadly
+ forward, saying to himself, "Is there no one in all this great city who
+ will share the Christmas with me?" Farther and farther down the street he
+ wandered, to where the homes were not so large and beautiful. There seemed
+ to be little children inside of nearly all the houses. They were dancing
+ and frolicking about. Christmas trees could be seen in nearly every
+ window, with beautiful dolls and trumpets and picture-books and balls and
+ tops and other dainty toys hung upon them. In one window the child noticed
+ a little lamb made of soft white wool. Around its neck was tied a red
+ ribbon. It had evidently been hung on the tree for one of the children.
+ The little stranger stopped before this window and looked long and
+ earnestly at the beautiful things inside, but most of all was he drawn
+ toward the white lamb. At last creeping up to the window-pane, he gently
+ tapped upon it. A little girl came to the window and looked out into the
+ dark street where the snow had now begun to fall. She saw the child, but
+ she only frowned and shook her head and said, "Go away and come some other
+ time. We are too busy to take care of you now." Back into the dark, cold
+ streets he turned again. The wind was whirling past him and seemed to say,
+ "Hurry on, hurry on, we have no time to stop. 'Tis Christmas Eve and
+ everybody is in a hurry to-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again and again the little child rapped softly at door or window-pane. At
+ each place he was refused admission. One mother feared he might have some
+ ugly disease which her darlings would catch; another father said he had
+ only enough for his own children and none to spare for beggars. Still
+ another told him to go home where he belonged, and not to trouble other
+ folks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hours passed; later grew the night, and colder grew the wind, and
+ darker seemed the street. Farther and farther the little one wandered.
+ There was scarcely any one left upon the street by this time, and the few
+ who remained did not seem to see the child, when suddenly ahead of him
+ there appeared a bright, single ray of light. It shone through the
+ darkness into the child's eyes. He looked up smilingly and said, "I will
+ go where the small light beckons, perhaps they will share their Christmas
+ with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hurrying past all the other houses, he soon reached the end of the street
+ and went straight up to the window from which the light was streaming. It
+ was a poor, little, low house, but the child cared not for that. The light
+ seemed still to call him in. From what do you suppose the light came?
+ Nothing but a tallow candle which had been placed in an old cup with a
+ broken handle, in the window, as a glad token of Christmas Eve. There was
+ neither curtain nor shade to the small, square window and as the little
+ child looked in he saw standing upon a neat wooden table a branch of a
+ Christmas tree. The room was plainly furnished but it was very clean. Near
+ the fireplace sat a lovely faced mother with a little two-year-old on her
+ knee and an older child beside her. The two children were looking into
+ their mother's face and listening to a story. She must have been telling
+ them a Christmas story, I think. A few bright coals were burning in the
+ fireplace, and all seemed light and warm within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little wanderer crept closer and closer to the window-pane. So sweet
+ was the mother's face, so loving seemed the little children, that at last
+ he took courage and tapped gently, very gently on the door. The mother
+ stopped talking, the little children looked up. "What was that, mother?"
+ asked the little girl at her side. "I think it was some one tapping on the
+ door," replied the mother. "Run as quickly as you can and open it, dear,
+ for it is a bitter cold night to keep any one waiting in this storm." "Oh,
+ mother, I think it was the bough of the tree tapping against the
+ window-pane," said the little girl. "Do please go on with our story."
+ Again the little wanderer tapped upon the door. "My child, my child,"
+ exclaimed the mother, rising, "that certainly was a rap on the door. Run
+ quickly and open it. No one must be left out in the cold on our beautiful
+ Christmas Eve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The child ran to the door and threw it wide open. The mother saw the
+ ragged stranger standing without, cold and shivering, with bare head and
+ almost bare feet. She held out both hands and drew him into the warm,
+ bright room. "You poor, dear child," was all she said, and putting her
+ arms around him, she drew him close to her breast. "He is very cold, my
+ children," she exclaimed. "We must warm him." "And," added the little
+ girl, "we must love him and give him some of our Christmas, too." "Yes,"
+ said the mother, "but first let us warm him&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother sat down by the fire with the little child on her lap, and her
+ own little ones warmed his half-frozen hands in theirs. The mother
+ smoothed his tangled curls, and, bending low over his head, kissed the
+ child's face. She gathered the three little ones in her arms and the
+ candle and the fire light shone over them. For a moment the room was very
+ still. By and by the little girl said softly, to her mother, "May we not
+ light the Christmas tree, and let him see how beautiful it looks?" "Yes,"
+ said the mother. With that she seated the child on a low stool beside the
+ fire, and went herself to fetch the few simple ornaments which from year
+ to year she had saved for her children's Christmas tree. They were soon so
+ busy that they did not notice the room had filled with a strange and
+ brilliant light. They turned and looked at the spot where the little
+ wanderer sat. His ragged clothes had changed to garments white and
+ beautiful; his tangled curls seemed like a halo of golden light about his
+ head; but most glorious of all was his face, which shone with a light so
+ dazzling that they could scarcely look upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In silent wonder they gazed at the child. Their little room seemed to grow
+ larger and larger, until it was as wide as the whole world, the roof of
+ their low house seemed to expand and rise, until it reached to the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sweet and gentle smile the wonderful child looked upon them for a
+ moment, and then slowly rose and floated through the air, above the
+ treetops, beyond the church spire, higher even than the clouds themselves,
+ until he appeared to them to be a shining star in the sky above. At last
+ he disappeared from sight. The astonished children turned in hushed awe to
+ their mother, and said in a whisper, "Oh, mother, it was the Christ-Child,
+ was it not?" And the mother answered in a low tone, "Yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it is said, dear children, that each Christmas Eve the little
+ Christ-Child wanders through some town or village, and those who receive
+ him and take him into their homes and hearts have given to them this
+ marvellous vision which is denied to others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. JIMMY SCARECROW'S CHRISTMAS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Jimmy Scarecrow led a sad life in the winter. Jimmy's greatest grief was
+ his lack of occupation. He liked to be useful, and in winter he was
+ absolutely of no use at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wondered how many such miserable winters he would have to endure. He
+ was a young Scarecrow, and this was his first one. He was strongly made,
+ and although his wooden joints creaked a little when the wind blew he did
+ not grow in the least rickety. Every morning, when the wintry sun peered
+ like a hard yellow eye across the dry corn-stubble, Jimmy felt sad, but at
+ Christmas time his heart nearly broke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Christmas Eve Santa Claus came in his sledge heaped high with presents,
+ urging his team of reindeer across the field. He was on his way to the
+ farmhouse where Betsey lived with her Aunt Hannah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betsey was a very good little girl with very smooth yellow curls, and she
+ had a great many presents. Santa Claus had a large wax doll-baby for her
+ on his arm, tucked up against the fur collar of his coat. He was afraid to
+ trust it in the pack, lest it get broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When poor Jimmy Scarecrow saw Santa Claus his heart gave a great leap.
+ "Santa Claus! Here I am!" he cried out, but Santa Claus did not hear him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Santa Claus, please give me a little present. I was good all summer and
+ kept the crows out of the corn," pleaded the poor Scarecrow in his choking
+ voice, but Santa Claus passed by with a merry halloo and a great clamour
+ of bells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Jimmy Scarecrow stood in the corn-stubble and shook with sobs until
+ his joints creaked. "I am of no use in the world, and everybody has
+ forgotten me," he moaned. But he was mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning Betsey sat at the window holding her Christmas doll-baby,
+ and she looked out at Jimmy Scarecrow standing alone in the field amidst
+ the corn-stubble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aunt Hannah?" said she. Aunt Hannah was making a crazy patchwork quilt,
+ and she frowned hard at a triangular piece of red silk and circular piece
+ of pink, wondering how to fit them together. "Well?" said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did Santa Claus bring the Scarecrow any Christmas present?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, of course he didn't."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because he's a Scarecrow. Don't ask silly questions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wouldn't like to be treated so, if I was a Scarecrow," said Betsey, but
+ her Aunt Hannah did not hear her. She was busy cutting a triangular snip
+ out of the round piece of pink silk so the piece of red silk could be
+ feather-stitched into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was snowing hard out of doors, and the north wind blew. The Scarecrow's
+ poor old coat got whiter and whiter with snow. Sometimes he almost
+ vanished in the thick white storm. Aunt Hannah worked until the middle of
+ the afternoon on her crazy quilt. Then she got up and spread it out over
+ the sofa with an air of pride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There," said she, "that's done, and that makes the eighth. I've got one
+ for every bed in the house, and I've given four away. I'd give this away
+ if I knew of anybody that wanted it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aunt Hannah put on her hood and shawl, and drew some blue yarn stockings
+ on over her shoes, and set out through the snow to carry a slice of
+ plum-pudding to her sister Susan, who lived down the road. Half an hour
+ after Aunt Hannah had gone Betsey put her little red plaid shawl over her
+ head, and ran across the field to Jimmy Scarecrow. She carried her new
+ doll-baby smuggled up under her shawl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wish you Merry Christmas!" she said to Jimmy Scarecrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wish you the same," said Jimmy, but his voice was choked with sobs, and
+ was also muffled, for his old hat had slipped down to his chin. Betsey
+ looked pitifully at the old hat fringed with icicles, like frozen tears,
+ and the old snow-laden coat. "I've brought you a Christmas present," said
+ she, and with that she tucked her doll-baby inside Jimmy Scarecrow's coat,
+ sticking its tiny feet into a pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," said Jimmy Scarecrow faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're welcome," said she. "Keep her under your overcoat, so the snow
+ won't wet her, and she won't catch cold, she's delicate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I will," said Jimmy Scarecrow, and he tried hard to bring one of his
+ stiff, outstretched arms around to clasp the doll-baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you feel cold in that old summer coat?" asked Betsey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I bad a little exercise, I should be warm," he replied. But he
+ shivered, and the wind whistled through his rags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You wait a minute," said Betsey, and was off across the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jimmy Scarecrow stood in the corn-stubble, with the doll-baby under his
+ coat and waited, and soon Betsey was back again with Aunt Hannah's crazy
+ quilt trailing in the snow behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here," said she, "here is something to keep you warm," and she folded the
+ crazy quilt around the Scarecrow and pinned it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aunt Hannah wants to give it away if anybody wants it," she explained.
+ "She's got so many crazy quilts in the house now she doesn't know what to
+ do with them. Good-bye&mdash;be sure you keep the doll-baby covered up."
+ And with that she ran cross the field, and left Jimmy Scarecrow alone with
+ the crazy quilt and the doll-baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bright flash of colours under Jimmy's hat-brim dazzled his eyes, and
+ he felt a little alarmed. "I hope this quilt is harmless if it IS crazy,"
+ he said. But the quilt was warm, and he dismissed his fears. Soon the
+ doll-baby whimpered, but he creaked his joints a little, and that amused
+ it, and he heard it cooing inside his coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jimmy Scarecrow had never felt so happy in his life as he did for an hour
+ or so. But after that the snow began to turn to rain, and the crazy quilt
+ was soaked through and through: and not only that, but his coat and the
+ poor doll-baby. It cried pitifully for a while, and then it was still, and
+ he was afraid it was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It grew very dark, and the rain fell in sheets, the snow melted, and Jimmy
+ Scarecrow stood halfway up his old boots in water. He was saying to
+ himself that the saddest hour of his life had come, when suddenly he again
+ heard Santa Claus' sleigh-bells and his merry voice talking to his
+ reindeer. It was after midnight, Christmas was over, and Santa was
+ hastening home to the North Pole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Santa Claus! dear Santa Claus!" cried Jimmy Scarecrow with a great sob,
+ and that time Santa Claus heard him and drew rein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who's there?" he shouted out of the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's only me," replied the Scarecrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who's me?" shouted Santa Claus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jimmy Scarecrow!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Santa got out of his sledge and waded up. "Have you been standing here
+ ever since corn was ripe?" he asked pityingly, and Jimmy replied that he
+ had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's that over your shoulders?" Santa Claus continued, holding up his
+ lantern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a crazy quilt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what are you holding under your coat?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The doll-baby that Betsey gave me, and I'm afraid it's dead," poor Jimmy
+ Scarecrow sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense!" cried Santa Claus. "Let me see it!" And with that he pulled
+ the doll-baby out from under the Scarecrow's coat, and patted its back,
+ and shook it a little, and it began to cry, and then to crow. "It's all
+ right," said Santa Claus. "This is the doll-baby I gave Betsey, and it is
+ not at all delicate. It went through the measles, and the chicken-pox, and
+ the mumps, and the whooping-cough, before it left the North Pole. Now get
+ into the sledge, Jimmy Scarecrow, and bring the doll-baby and the crazy
+ quilt. I have never had any quilts that weren't in their right minds at
+ the North Pole, but maybe I can cure this one. Get in!" Santa chirruped to
+ his reindeer, and they drew the sledge up close in a beautiful curve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Get in, Jimmy Scarecrow, and come with me to the North Pole!" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please, how long shall I stay?" asked Jimmy Scarecrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, you are going to live with me," replied Santa Claus. "I've been
+ looking for a person like you for a long time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are there any crows to scare away at the North Pole? I want to be
+ useful," Jimmy Scarecrow said, anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," answered Santa Claus, "but I don't want you to scare away crows. I
+ want you to scare away Arctic Explorers. I can keep you in work for a
+ thousand years, and scaring away Arctic Explorers from the North Pole is
+ much more important than scaring away crows from corn. Why, if they found
+ the Pole, there wouldn't be a piece an inch long left in a week's time,
+ and the earth would cave in like an apple without a core! They would
+ whittle it all to pieces, and carry it away in their pockets for
+ souvenirs. Come along; I am in a hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will go on two conditions," said Jimmy. "First, I want to make a
+ present to Aunt Hannah and Betsey, next Christmas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall make them any present you choose. What else?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want some way provided to scare the crows out of the corn next summer,
+ while I am away," said Jimmy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is easily managed," said Santa Claus. "Just wait a minute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Santa took his stylographic pen out of his pocket, went with his lantern
+ close to one of the fence-posts, and wrote these words upon it:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ NOTICE TO CROWS
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whichever crow shall hereafter hop, fly, or flop into this field during
+ the absence of Jimmy Scarecrow, and therefrom purloin, steal, or abstract
+ corn, shall be instantly, in a twinkling and a trice, turned snow-white,
+ and be ever after a disgrace, a byword and a reproach to his whole race.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Per order of Santa Claus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "The corn will be safe now," said Santa Claus, "get in." Jimmy got into
+ the sledge and they flew away over the fields, out of sight, with merry
+ halloos and a great clamour of bells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning there was much surprise at the farmhouse, when Aunt
+ Hannah and Betsey looked out of the window and the Scarecrow was not in
+ the field holding out his stiff arms over the corn stubble. Betsey had
+ told Aunt Hannah she had given away the crazy quilt and the doll-baby, but
+ had been scolded very little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must not give away anything of yours again without asking
+ permission," said Aunt Hannah. "And you have no right to give anything of
+ mine, even if you know I don't want it. Now both my pretty quilt and your
+ beautiful doll-baby are spoiled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was all Aunt Hannah had said. She thought she would send John after
+ the quilt and the doll-baby next morning as soon as it was light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Jimmy Scarecrow was gone, and the crazy quilt and the doll-baby with
+ him. John, the servant-man, searched everywhere, but not a trace of them
+ could he find. "They must have all blown away, mum," he said to Aunt
+ Hannah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall have to have another scarecrow next summer," said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the next summer there was no need of a scarecrow, for not a crow came
+ past the fence-post on which Santa Claus had written his notice to crows.
+ The cornfield was never so beautiful, and not a single grain was stolen by
+ a crow, and everybody wondered at it, for they could not read the
+ crow-language in which Santa had written.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a great mystery to me why the crows don't come into our cornfield,
+ when there is no scarecrow," said Aunt Hannah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she had a still greater mystery to solve when Christmas came round
+ again. Then she and Betsey had each a strange present. They found them in
+ the sitting-room on Christmas morning. Aunt Hannah's present was her old
+ crazy quilt, remodelled, with every piece cut square and true, and matched
+ exactly to its neighbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, it's my old crazy quilt, but it isn't crazy now!" cried Aunt Hannah,
+ and her very spectacles seemed to glisten with amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betsey's present was her doll-baby of the Christmas before; but the doll
+ was a year older. She had grown an inch, and could walk and say, "mamma,"
+ and "how do?" She was changed a good deal, but Betsey knew her at once.
+ "It's my doll-baby!" she cried, and snatched her up and kissed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But neither Aunt Hannah nor Betsey ever knew that the quilt and the doll
+ were Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas presents to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. WHY THE CHIMES RANG*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * Copyright, 1906. Used by special permission of the publishers, the
+ Bobbs-Merrill Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RAYMOND MC ALDEN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was once in a faraway country where few people have ever travelled,
+ a wonderful church. It stood on a high hill in the midst of a great city;
+ and every Sunday, as well as on sacred days like Christmas, thousands of
+ people climbed the hill to its great archways, looking like lines of ants
+ all moving in the same direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you came to the building itself, you found stone columns and dark
+ passages, and a grand entrance leading to the main room of the church.
+ This room was so long that one standing at the doorway could scarcely see
+ to the other end, where the choir stood by the marble altar. In the
+ farthest corner was the organ; and this organ was so loud, that sometimes
+ when it played, the people for miles around would close their shutters and
+ prepare for a great thunderstorm. Altogether, no such church as this was
+ ever seen before, especially when it was lighted up for some festival, and
+ crowded with people, young and old. But the strangest thing about the
+ whole building was the wonderful chime of bells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one corner of the church was a great gray tower, with ivy growing over
+ it as far up as one could see. I say as far as one could see, because the
+ tower was quite great enough to fit the great church, and it rose so far
+ into the sky that it was only in very fair weather that any one claimed to
+ be able to see the top. Even then one could not be certain that it was in
+ sight. Up, and up, and up climbed the stones and the ivy; and as the men
+ who built the church had been dead for hundreds of years, every one had
+ forgotten how high the tower was supposed to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all the people knew that at the top of the tower was a chime of
+ Christmas bells. They had hung there ever since the church had been built,
+ and were the most beautiful bells in the world. Some thought it was
+ because a great musician had cast them and arranged them in their place;
+ others said it was because of the great height, which reached up where the
+ air was clearest and purest; however that might be no one who had ever
+ heard the chimes denied that they were the sweetest in the world. Some
+ described them as sounding like angels far up in the sky; others as
+ sounding like strange winds singing through the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fact was that no one had heard them for years and years. There was
+ an old man living not far from the church who said that his mother had
+ spoken of hearing them when she was a little girl, and he was the only one
+ who was sure of as much as that. They were Christmas chimes, you see, and
+ were not meant to be played by men or on common days. It was the custom on
+ Christmas Eve for all the people to bring to the church their offerings to
+ the Christ-Child; and when the greatest and best offering was laid on the
+ altar there used to come sounding through the music of the choir the
+ Christmas chimes far up in the tower. Some said that the wind rang them,
+ and others, that they were so high that the angels could set them
+ swinging. But for many long years they had never been heard. It was said
+ that people had been growing less careful of their gifts for the
+ Christ-Child, and that no offering was brought great enough to deserve the
+ music of the chimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every Christmas Eve the rich people still crowded to the altar, each one
+ trying to bring some better gift than any other, without giving anything
+ that he wanted for himself, and the church was crowded with those who
+ thought that perhaps the wonderful bells might be heard again. But
+ although the service was splendid, and the offerings plenty, only the roar
+ of the wind could be heard, far up in the stone tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, a number of miles from the city, in a little country village, where
+ nothing could be seen of the great church but glimpses of the tower when
+ the weather was fine, lived a boy named Pedro, and his little brother.
+ They knew very little about the Christmas chimes, but they had heard of
+ the service in the church on Christmas Eve, and had a secret plan which
+ they had often talked over when by themselves, to go to see the beautiful
+ celebration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobody can guess, Little Brother," Pedro would say; "all the fine things
+ there are to see and hear; and I have even heard it said that the
+ Christ-Child sometimes comes down to bless the service. What if we could
+ see Him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day before Christmas was bitterly cold, with a few lonely snowflakes
+ flying in the air, and a hard white crust on the ground. Sure enough Pedro
+ and Little Brother were able to slip quietly away early in the afternoon;
+ and although the walking was hard in the frosty air, before nightfall they
+ had trudged so far, hand in hand, that they saw the lights of the big city
+ just ahead of them. Indeed they were about to enter one of the great gates
+ in the wall that surrounded it, when they saw something dark on the snow
+ near their path, and stepped aside to look at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a poor woman, who had fallen just outside the city, too sick and
+ tired to get in where she might have found shelter. The soft snow made of
+ a drift a sort of pillow for her, and she would soon be so sound asleep,
+ in the wintry air, that no one could ever waken her again. All this Pedro
+ saw in a moment and he knelt down beside her and tried to rouse her, even
+ tugging at her arm a little, as though he would have tried to carry her
+ away. He turned her face toward him, so that he could rub some of the snow
+ on it, and when he had looked at her silently a moment he stood up again,
+ and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's no use, Little Brother. You will have to go on alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alone?" cried Little Brother. "And you not see the Christmas festival?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said Pedro, and he could not keep back a bit of a choking sound in
+ his throat. "See this poor woman. Her face looks like the Madonna in the
+ chapel window, and she will freeze to death if nobody cares for her. Every
+ one has gone to the church now, but when you come back you can bring some
+ one to help her. I will rub her to keep her from freezing, and perhaps get
+ her to eat the bun that is left in my pocket."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I cannot bear to leave you, and go on alone," said Little Brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Both of us need not miss the service," said Pedro, "and it had better be
+ I than you. You can easily find your way to church; and you must see and
+ hear everything twice, Little Brother&mdash;once for you and once for me.
+ I am sure the Christ-Child must know how I should love to come with you
+ and worship Him; and oh! if you get a chance, Little Brother, to slip up
+ to the altar without getting in any one's way, take this little silver
+ piece of mine, and lay it down for my offering, when no one is looking. Do
+ not forget where you have left me, and forgive me for not going with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way he hurried Little Brother off to the city and winked hard to
+ keep back the tears, as he heard the crunching footsteps sounding farther
+ and farther away in the twilight. It was pretty hard to lose the music and
+ splendour of the Christmas celebration that he had been planning for so
+ long, and spend the time instead in that lonely place in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great church was a wonderful place that night. Every one said that it
+ had never looked so bright and beautiful before. When the organ played and
+ the thousands of people sang, the walls shook with the sound, and little
+ Pedro, away outside the city wall, felt the earth tremble around them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the close of the service came the procession with the offerings to be
+ laid on the altar. Rich men and great men marched proudly up to lay down
+ their gifts to the Christ-Child. Some brought wonderful jewels, some
+ baskets of gold so heavy that they could scarcely carry them down the
+ aisle. A great writer laid down a book that he had been making for years
+ and years. And last of all walked the king of the country, hoping with all
+ the rest to win for himself the chime of the Christmas bells. There went a
+ great murmur through the church as the people saw the king take from his
+ head the royal crown, all set with precious stones, and lay it gleaming on
+ the altar, as his offering to the Holy Child. "Surely," every one said,
+ "we shall hear the bells now, for nothing like this has ever happened
+ before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But still only the cold old wind was heard in the tower and the people
+ shook their heads; and some of them said, as they had before, that they
+ never really believed the story of the chimes, and doubted if they ever
+ rang at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The procession was over, and the choir began the closing hymn. Suddenly
+ the organist stopped playing; and every one looked at the old minister,
+ who was standing by the altar, holding up his hand for silence. Not a
+ sound could be heard from any one in the church, but as all the people
+ strained their ears to listen, there came softly, but distinctly, swinging
+ through the air, the sound of the chimes in the tower. So far away, and
+ yet so clear the music seemed&mdash;so much sweeter were the notes than
+ anything that had been heard before, rising and falling away up there in
+ the sky, that the people in the church sat for a moment as still as though
+ something held each of them by the shoulders. Then they all stood up
+ together and stared straight at the altar, to see what great gift had
+ awakened the long silent bells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all that the nearest of them saw was the childish figure of Little
+ Brother, who had crept softly down the aisle when no one was looking, and
+ had laid Pedro's little piece of silver on the altar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. THE BIRDS' CHRISTMAS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From "In the Child's World," by Emilie Poulssen, Milton Bradley Co.
+ Publishers. Used by permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ F. E. MANN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Founded on fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chickadee-dee-dee-dee! Chickadee-dee-dee-dee! Chicka&mdash;" "Cheerup,
+ cheerup, chee-chee! Cheerup, cheerup, chee-chee!" "Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee,
+ ter-ra-lee!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rap-atap-atap-atap!" went the woodpecker; "Mrs. Chickadee may speak
+ first."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friends," began Mrs. Chickadee, "why do you suppose I called you
+ together?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because it's the day before Christmas," twittered Snow Bunting. "And
+ you're going to give a Christmas party," chirped the Robin. "And you want
+ us all to come!" said Downy Woodpecker. "Hurrah! Three cheers for Mrs.
+ Chickadee!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush!" said Mrs. Chickadee, "and I'll tell you all about it. To-morrow IS
+ Christmas Day, but I don't want to give a party."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chee, chee, chee!" cried Robin Rusty-breast; "chee, chee, chee!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just listen to my little plan," said Mrs. Chickadee, "for, indeed, I want
+ you all to help. How many remember Thistle Goldfinch&mdash;the happy
+ little fellow who floated over the meadows through the summer and fall?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cheerup, chee-chee, cheerup, chee-chee, I do," sang the Robin; "how he
+ loved to sway on thistletops!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Downy Woodpecker, "and didn't he sing? All about blue skies,
+ and sunshine and happy days, with his 'Swee-e-et sweet-sweet-sweet-a-
+ twitter-witter-witter-witter-wee-twea!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee," said Snow Bunting. "We've all heard of Thistle
+ Goldfinch, but what can he have to do with your Christmas party? He's away
+ down South now, and wouldn't care if you gave a dozen parties."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, but he isn't; he's right in these very woods!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, you don't mean&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed I do mean it, every single word. Yesterday I was flitting about
+ among the trees, peeking at a dead branch here, and a bit of moss there,
+ and before I knew it I found myself away over at the other side of the
+ woods! 'Chickadee-dee-dee, chickadee-dee-dee!' I sang, as I turned my bill
+ toward home. Just then I heard the saddest little voice pipe out: 'Dear-ie
+ me! Dear-ie me!' and there on the sunny side of a branch perched a
+ lonesome bit of yellowish down. I went up to see what it was, and found
+ dear little Thistle Goldfinch! He was very glad to see me, and soon told
+ his short story. Through the summer Papa and Mamma Goldfinch and all the
+ brothers and sisters had a fine time, singing together, fluttering over
+ thistletops, or floating through the balmy air. But when 'little Jack
+ Frost walked through the trees,' Papa Goldfinch said: 'It is high time we
+ went South!' All were ready but Thistle; he wanted to stay through the
+ winter, and begged so hard that Papa Goldfinch soberly said: 'Try it, my
+ son, but do find a warm place to stay in at night.' Then off they flew,
+ and Thistle was alone. For a while he was happy. The sun shone warm
+ through the middle of the day, and there were fields and meadows full of
+ seeds. You all remember how sweetly he sang for us then. But by and by the
+ cold North Wind came whistling through the trees, and chilly Thistle woke
+ up one gray morning to find the air full of whirling snowflakes He didn't
+ mind the light snows, golden-rod and some high grasses were too tall to be
+ easily covered, and he got seeds from them. But now that the heavy snows
+ have come, the poor little fellow is almost starved, and if he doesn't
+ have a warm place to sleep in these cold nights, he'll surely die!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Chickadee paused a minute. The birds were so still one could hear the
+ pine trees whisper. Then she went on: "I comforted the poor little fellow
+ as best I could, and showed him where to find a few seeds; then I flew
+ home, for it was bedtime. I tucked my head under my wing to keep it warm,
+ and thought, and thought, and thought; and here's my plan:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We Chickadees have a nice warm home here in the spruce trees, with their
+ thick, heavy boughs to shut out the snow and cold. There is plenty of
+ room, so Thistle could sleep here all winter. We would let him perch on a
+ branch, when we Chickadees would nestle around him until he was as warm as
+ in the lovely summer tine. These cones are so full of seeds that we could
+ spare him a good many; and I think that you Robins might let him come over
+ to your pines some day and share your seeds. Downy Woodpecker must keep
+ his eyes open as he hammers the trees, and if he spies a supply of seeds
+ he will let us know at once. Snow Bunting is only a visitor, so I don't
+ expect him to help, but I wanted him to hear my plan with the rest of you.
+ Now you WILL try, won't you, EVERY ONE?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cheerup, cheerup, ter-ra-lee! Indeed we'll try; let's begin right away!
+ Don't wait until to-morrow; who'll go and find Thistle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will," chirped Robin Rusty-breast, and off he flew to the place which
+ Mrs. Chickadee had told of, at the other side of the wood. There, sure
+ enough, he found Thistle Goldfinch sighing: "Dear-ie me! dear-ie me! The
+ winter is so cold and I'm here all alone!" "Cheerup, chee-chee!" piped the
+ Robin:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Cheerup, cheerup, I'm here!
+ I'm here and I mean to stay.
+ What if the winter is drear&mdash;
+ Cheerup, cheerup, anyway!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "But the snow is so deep," said Thistle, and the Robin replied:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Soon the snows'll be over and gone,
+ Run and rippled away;
+ What's the use of looking forlorn?
+ Cheerup, cheerup, I say!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then he told Thistle all their plans, and wasn't Thistle surprised? Why,
+ he just couldn't believe a word of it till they reached Mrs. Chickadee's
+ and she said it was all true. They fed him and warmed him, then settled
+ themselves for a good night's rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christmas morning they were chirping gaily, and Thistle was trying to
+ remember the happy song he sang in the summer time, when there came a
+ whirr of wings as Snow Bunting flew down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee," said he, "can you fly a little way?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," replied Thistle. "I THINK I could fly a LONG way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come on, then," said Snow Bunting. "Every one who wants a Christmas
+ dinner, follow me!" That was every word he would say, so what could they
+ do but follow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon they came to the edge of the wood, and then to a farmhouse. Snow
+ Bunting flew straight up to the piazza, and there stood a dear little girl
+ in a warm hood and cloak, with a pail of bird-seed on her arm, and a dish
+ of bread crumbs in her hand. As they flew down, she said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And here are some more birdies who have come for a Christmas dinner. Of
+ course you shall have some, you dear little things!" and she laughed
+ merrily to see them dive for the crumbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After they had finished eating, Elsie (that was the little girl's name)
+ said: "Now, little birds, it is going to be a cold winter, you would
+ better come here every day to get your dinner. I'll always be glad to see
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cheerup chee-chee, cheerup chee-chee! thank you, thank you," cried the
+ Robins. "Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee! thank you, thank you!"
+ twittered Snow Bunting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee, chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee,
+ chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee-dee! how kind you are!" sang the Chickadees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Thistle Goldfinch? Yes, he remembered his summer song, for he sang as
+ they flew away:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Swee-e-et-sweet-sweet-sweet-a-twitter-witter-witter-witter&mdash;wee-twea!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ notes.&mdash;l. The Robin's song is from "Bird Talks," by Mrs. A.D.T.
+ Whitney. 2. The fact upon which this story is based&mdash;that is of the
+ other birds adopting and warming the solitary Thistle Goldfinch&mdash;was
+ observed near Northampton, Mass., where robins and other migratory birds
+ sometimes spend the winter in the thick pine woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. THE LITTLE SISTER'S VACATION*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 77.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ WINIFRED M. KIRKLAND
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was to be a glorious Christmas at Doctor Brower's. All "the children"&mdash;little
+ Peggy and her mother always spoke of the grown-up ones as "the children"&mdash;were
+ coming home. Mabel was coming from Ohio with her big husband and her two
+ babies, Minna and little Robin, the year-old grandson whom the home family
+ had never seen; Hazen was coming all the way from the Johns Hopkins
+ Medical School, and Arna was coming home from her teaching in New York. It
+ was a trial to Peggy that vacation did not begin until the very day before
+ Christmas, and then continued only one niggardly week. After school hours
+ she had helped her mother in the Christmas preparations every day until
+ she crept into bed at night with aching arms and tired feet, to lie there
+ tossing about, whether from weariness or glad excitement she did not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so hard, daughter," the doctor said to her once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, papa," protested her mother, "when we're so busy, and Peggy is so
+ handy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so hard," he repeated, with his eyes on fifteen-year-old Peggy's
+ delicate face, as, wearing her braids pinned up on her head and a pinafore
+ down to her toes, she stoned raisins and blanched almonds, rolled bread
+ crumbs and beat eggs, dusted and polished and made ready for the children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, after a day of flying about, helping with the many last thing,
+ Peggy let down her braids and put on her new crimson shirtwaist, and stood
+ with her mother in the front doorway, for it was Christmas Eve at last,
+ and the station 'bus was rattling up with the first homecomers, Arna and
+ Hazen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there were voices ringing up and down the dark street, and there were
+ happy tears in the mother's eyes, and Arna had taken Peggy's face in her
+ two soft-gloved hands and lifted it up and kissed it, and Hazen had swung
+ his little sister up in the air just as of old. Peggy's tired feet were
+ dancing for joy. She was helping Arna take off her things, was carrying
+ her bag upstairs&mdash;would have carried Hazen's heavy grip, too, only
+ her father took it from her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Set the kettle to boil, Peggy," directed her mother; "then run upstairs
+ and see if Arna wants anything. We'll wait supper till the rest come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest came on the nine o'clock train, such a load of them&mdash;the
+ big, bluff brother-in-law, Mabel, plump and laughing, as always, Minna,
+ elfin and bright-eyed, and sleepy Baby Robin. Such hugging, such a hubbub
+ of baby talk! How many things there seemed to be to do for those precious
+ babies right away!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peggy was here and there and everywhere. Everything was in joyous
+ confusion. Supper was to be set on, too. While the rest ate, Peggy sat by,
+ holding Robin, her own little nephew, and managing at the same time to
+ pick up the things&mdash;napkin, knife, spoon, bread&mdash;that Minna,
+ hilarious with the late hour, flung from her high chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed as if they would never be all stowed away for the night. Some of
+ them wanted pitchers of warm water, some of them pitchers of cold, and the
+ alcohol stove must be brought up for heating the baby's milk at night. The
+ house was crowded, too. Peggy had given up her room to Hazen, and slept on
+ a cot in the sewing room with Minna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cot had been enlarged by having three chairs piled with pillows, set
+ along the side. But Minna preferred to sleep in the middle of the cot, or
+ else across it, her restless little feet pounding at Peggy's ribs; and
+ Peggy was unused to any bedfellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lay long awake thinking proudly of the children; of Hazen, the tall
+ brother, with his twinkling eyes, his drolleries, his teasing; of graceful
+ Arna who dressed so daintily, talked so cleverly, and had been to college.
+ Arna was going to send Peggy to college, too&mdash;it was so good of Arna!
+ But for all Peggy's admiration for Arna, it was Mabel, the eldest sister,
+ who was the more approachable. Mabel did not pretend even to as much
+ learning as Peggy had herself; she was happy-go-lucky and sweet-tempered.
+ Then her husband was a great jolly fellow, with whom it was impossible to
+ be shy, and the babies&mdash;there never were such cunning babies, Peggy
+ thought. Just here her niece gave her a particularly vicious kick, and
+ Peggy opposed to her train of admiring thoughts, "But I'm so tired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not seem to Peggy that she had been asleep at all when she was
+ waked with a vigorous pounding on her chest and a shrill little voice in
+ her ear:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus! It's mornin'! It's Ch'is'mus!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no, it isn't, Minna!" pleaded Peggy, struggling with sleepiness.
+ "It's all dark still."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus!" reiterated Minna continuing to pound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush, dear! You'll wake Aunt Arna, and she's feed after being all day on
+ the chou-chou cars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry Ch'is'mus, Aunty Arna!" shouted the irrepressible Minna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, darling, be quiet! We'll play little pig goes to market. I'll tell
+ you a story, only be quiet a little while."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took Peggy's utmost effort to keep the little wriggler still for the
+ hour from five to six. Then, however, her shrill, "Merry Ch'is'mus!"
+ roused the household. Protests were of no avail. Minna was the only
+ granddaughter. Dark as it was, people must get up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peggy must dress Minna and then hurry down to help get breakfast&mdash;not
+ so easy a task with Minna ever at one's heels. The quick-moving sprite
+ seemed to be everywhere&mdash;into the sugar-bowl, the cooky jar, the
+ steaming teakettle&mdash;before one could turn about. Urged on by the
+ impatient little girl, the grown-ups made short work of breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the meal, according to time-honoured Brower custom, they formed in
+ procession, single file, Minna first, then Ben with Baby Robin. They each
+ held aloft a sprig of holly, and they all kept time as they sang, "God
+ rest you, merry gentlemen," in their march from the dining-room to the
+ office. And there they must form in circle about the tree, and dance three
+ times round, singing "The Christmas-tree is an evergreen," before they
+ could touch a single present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The presents are done up according to custom, packages of every shape and
+ size, but all in white paper and tied with red ribbon, and all marked for
+ somebody with somebody else's best love. They all fall to opening, and the
+ babies' shouts are not the only ones to be heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passers-by smile indulgently at the racket, remembering that all the
+ Browers are home for Christmas, and the Browers were ever a jovial
+ company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peggy gazes at her gifts quietly, but with shining eyes&mdash;little gold
+ cuff pins from Hazen, just like Arna's; a set of furs from Mabel and Ben;
+ but she likes Arna's gift best of all, a complete set of her favourite
+ author.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But much as they would like to linger about the Christmas tree, Peggy and
+ her mother, at least, must remember that the dishes must be washed and the
+ beds made, and that the family must get ready for church. Peggy does not
+ go to church, and nobody dreams how much she wants to go. She loves the
+ Christmas music. No hymn rings so with joy as:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jerusalem triumphs, Messiah is king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The choir sings it only once a year, on the Christmas morning. Besides,
+ her chum Esther will be at church, and Peggy has been too busy to go to
+ see her since she came home from boarding-school for the holidays. But
+ somebody must stay at home, and that somebody who but Peggy? Somebody must
+ baste the turkey and prepare the vegetables and take care of the babies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peggy is surprised to find how difficult it is to combine dinner-getting
+ with baby-tending. When she opens the oven-door, there is Minna's head
+ thrust up under her arm, the inquisitive little nose in great danger by
+ reason of sputtering gravy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Minna," protests Peggy, "you mustn't eat another bit of candy!" and Minna
+ opens her mouth in a howl, prolonged, but without tears and without change
+ of colour. Robin joins in, he does not know why. Peggy is a doting aunt,
+ but an honest one. She is vexed by a growing conviction that Mabel's
+ babies are sadly spoiled. Peggy is ashamed of herself; surely she ought to
+ be perfectly happy playing with Minna and Robin. Instead, she finds that
+ the thing she would like best of all to be doing at this moment, next to
+ going to church, would be to be lying on her father's couch in the office,
+ all by herself, reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dinner is a savoury triumph for Peggy and her mother. The gravy and
+ the mashed potato are entirely of Peggy's workmanship, and Peggy has had a
+ hand in most of the other dishes, too, as the mother proudly tells. How
+ that merry party can eat! Peggy is waitress, and it is long before the
+ passing is over, and she can sit down in her own place. She is just as
+ fond of the unusual Christmas good things as are the rest, but somehow,
+ before she is well started at her turkey, it is time for changing plates
+ for dessert, and before she has tasted her nuts and raisins the babies
+ have succumbed to sleepiness, and it is Peggy who must carry them upstairs
+ for their nap&mdash;just in the middle of one of Hazen's funniest stories,
+ too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all the time the little sister is so ready, so quickly serviceable,
+ that somehow nobody notices&mdash;nobody but the doctor. It is he who
+ finds Peggy, half as hour later, all alone in the kitchen. The mother and
+ the older daughters are gathered about the sitting-room hearth, engaged in
+ the dear, delicious talk about the little things that are always left out
+ of letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor interrupts them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peggy is all alone," he says.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we're having such a good talk," the mother pleads, "and Peggy will be
+ done in no time! Peggy is so handy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, girls?" is all the doctor says, with quiet command in his eyes, and
+ Peggy is not left to wash the Christmas dishes all alone. Because she is
+ smiling and her cheeks are bright, her sisters do not notice that her eyes
+ are wet, for Peggy is hotly ashamed of certain thoughts and feelings that
+ she cannot down. She forgets them for a while, however, sitting on the
+ hearth-rug, snuggled against her father's knee in the Christmas twilight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the troublesome thoughts came back in the evening, when Peggy sat
+ upstairs in the dark with Minna, vainly trying to induce the excited
+ little girl to go to sleep, while bursts of merriment from the family
+ below were always breaking in upon the two in their banishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was another restless night of it with the little niece, and another
+ too early waking. Everybody but Minna was sleepy enough, and breakfast was
+ a protracted meal, to which the "children" came down slowly one by one.
+ Arna did not appear at all, and Peggy carried up to her the daintiest of
+ trays, all of her own preparing. Arna's kiss of thanks was great reward.
+ It was dinner-time before Peggy realized it, and she had hoped to find a
+ quiet hour for her Latin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dreadful regent's examination was to come the next week, and Peggy
+ wanted to study for it. She had once thought of asking Arna to help her,
+ but Arna seemed so tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon Esther came to see her chum, and to take her home with
+ her to spend the night. The babies, fretful with
+ after-Christmas-crossness, were tumbling over their aunt, and sadly
+ interrupting confidences, while Peggy explained that she could not go out
+ that evening. All the family were going to the church sociable, and she
+ must put the babies to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it's mean," Esther broke in. "Isn't it your vacation as well as
+ theirs? Do make that child stop pulling your hair!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Esther's words had only not echoed through Peggy's head as they did
+ that night! "But it is so mean of me, so mean of me, to want my own
+ vacation!" sobbed Peggy in the darkness. "I ought just to be glad they're
+ all at home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her self-reproach made her readier than ever to wait on them all the next
+ morning. Nobody could make such buckwheat cakes as could Mrs. Brower;
+ nobody could turn them as could Peggy. They were worth coming from New
+ York and Baltimore and Ohio to eat. Peggy stood at the griddle half an
+ hour, an hour, two hours. Her head was aching. Hazen, the latest riser,
+ was joyously calling for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At eleven o'clock Peggy realized that she had had no breakfast herself,
+ and that her mother was hurrying her off to investigate the lateness of
+ the butcher. Her head ached more and more, and she seemed strangely slow
+ in her dinner-getting and dish-washing. Her father was away, and there was
+ no one to help in the clearing-up. It was three before she had finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside the sleigh-bells sounded enticing. It was the first sleighing of
+ the season. Mabel and Ben had been off for a ride, and Arna and Hazen,
+ too. How Peggy longed to be skimming over the snow instead of polishing
+ knives all alone in the kitchen. Sue Cummings came that afternoon to
+ invite Peggy to her party, given in Esther's honour. Sue enumerated six
+ other gatherings that were being given that week in honour of Esther's
+ visit home. Sue seemed to dwell much on the subject. Presently Peggy, with
+ hot cheeks, understood why. Everybody was giving Esther a party, everybody
+ but Peggy herself. Esther's own chum, and all the other girls, were
+ talking about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peggy stood at the door to see Sue out, and watched the sleighs fly by.
+ Out in the sitting-room she heard her mother saying, "Yes, of course we
+ can have waffles for supper. Where's Peggy?" Then Peggy ran away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the wintry dusk the doctor came stamping in, shaking the snow from his
+ bearskins. As always, "Where's Peggy?" was his first question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peggy was not to be found, they told him. They had been all over the
+ house, calling her. They thought she must have gone out with Sue. The
+ doctor seemed to doubt this. He went through the upstairs rooms, calling
+ her softly. But Peggy was not in any of the bedrooms, or in any of the
+ closets, either. There was still the kitchen attic to be tried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came a husky little moan out of its depths, as he whispered,
+ "Daughter!" He groped his way to her, and sitting down on a trunk, folded
+ her into his bearskin coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now tell father all about it," he said. And it all came out with many
+ sobs&mdash;the nights and dawns with Minna, the Latin, the sleighing,
+ Esther's party, breakfast, the weariness, the headache; and last the
+ waffles, which had moved the one unbearable thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And it is so mean of me, so mean of me!" sobbed Peggy. "But, oh, daddy, I
+ do want a vacation!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you shall have one," he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He carried her straight into her own room, laid her down on her own bed,
+ and tumbled Hazen's things into the hall. Then he went downstairs and
+ talked to his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the mother came stealing in, bearing a glass of medicine the
+ doctor-father had sent. Then she undressed Peggy and put her to bed as if
+ she had been a baby, and sat by, smoothing her hair, until she fell
+ asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to Peggy that she had slept a long, long time. The sun was
+ shining bright. Her door opened a crack and Arna peeped in, and seeing her
+ awake, came to the bed and kissed her good morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm so sorry, little sister!" she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sorry for what?" asked the wondering Peggy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because I didn't see," said Arna. "But now I'm going to bring up your
+ breakfast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no!" cried Peggy, sitting up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes!" said Arna, with quiet authority. It was as dainty cooking as
+ Peggy's own, and Arna sat by to watch her eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're so good to me, Arna!" said Peggy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not very," answered Arna, dryly. "When you've finished this you must lie
+ up here away from the children and read."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But who will take care of Minna?" questioned Peggy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Minna's mamma," answered a voice from the next room, where Mabel was
+ pounding pillows. She came to the door to look in on Peggy in all her
+ luxury of orange marmalade to eat, Christmas books to read, and Arna to
+ wait upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think mothers, not aunts, were meant to look after babies," said Mabel.
+ "I'm so sorry, dear!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I wish you two wouldn't talk like that!" cried Peggy. "I'm so
+ ashamed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, we'll stop talking," said Mabel quickly, "but we'll remember."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They would not let Peggy lift her hand to any of the work that day. Mabel
+ managed the babies masterfully. Arna moved quietly about, accomplishing
+ wonders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But aren't you tired, Arna?" queried Peggy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a bit of it, and I'll have time to help you with your Caesar before&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before what?" asked Peggy, but got no answer. They had been translating
+ famously, when, in the late afternoon, there came a ring of the doorbell.
+ Peggy found Hazen bowing low, and craving "Mistress Peggy's company." A
+ sleigh and two prancing horses stood at the gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a glorious drive. Peggy's eyes danced and her laugh rang out at
+ Hazen's drolleries. The world stretched white all about them, and their
+ horses flew on and on like the wind. They rode till dark, then turned back
+ to the village, twinkling with lights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Brower house was alight in every window, and there was the sound of
+ many voices in the hall. The door flew open upon a laughing crowd of boys
+ and girls. Peggy, all glowing and rosy with the wind, stood utterly
+ bewildered until Esther rushed forward and hugged and shook her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a party!" she exclaimed. "One of your mother's waffle suppers! We're
+ all here! Isn't it splendid?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, but, but&mdash;" stammered Peggy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But, but, but,'" mimicked Esther. "But this is your vacation, don't you
+ see?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. LITTLE WOLFF'S WOODEN SHOES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A CHRISTMAS STORY BY FRANCOIS COPPEE; ADAPTED AND TRANSLATED BY ALMA J.
+ FOSTER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once upon a time&mdash;so long ago that everybody has forgotten the date&mdash;in
+ a city in the north of Europe&mdash;with such a hard name that nobody can
+ ever remember it&mdash;there was a little seven-year-old boy named Wolff,
+ whose parents were dead, who lived with a cross and stingy old aunt, who
+ never thought of kissing him more than once a year and who sighed deeply
+ whenever she gave him a bowlful of soup.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the poor little fellow had such a sweet nature that in spite of
+ everything, he loved the old woman, although he was terribly afraid of her
+ and could never look at her ugly old face without shivering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this aunt of little Wolff was known to have a house of her own and an
+ old woollen stocking full of gold, she had not dared to send the boy to a
+ charity school; but, in order to get a reduction in the price, she had so
+ wrangled with the master of the school, to which little Wolff finally
+ went, that this bad man, vexed at having a pupil so poorly dressed and
+ paying so little, often punished him unjustly, and even prejudiced his
+ companions against him, so that the three boys, all sons of rich parents,
+ made a drudge and laughing stock of the little fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor little one was thus as wretched as a child could be and used to
+ hide himself in corners to weep whenever Christmas time came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the schoolmaster's custom to take all his pupils to the midnight
+ mass on Christmas Eve, and to bring them home again afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as the winter this year was very bitter, and as heavy snow had been
+ falling for several days, all the boys came well bundled up in warm
+ clothes, with fur caps pulled over their ears, padded jackets, gloves and
+ knitted mittens, and strong, thick-soled boots. Only little Wolff
+ presented himself shivering in the poor clothes he used to wear both
+ weekdays and Sundays and having on his feet only thin socks in heavy
+ wooden shoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His naughty companions noticing his sad face and awkward appearance, made
+ many jokes at his expense; but the little fellow was so busy blowing on
+ his fingers, and was suffering so much with chilblains, that he took no
+ notice of them. So the band of youngsters, walking two and two behind the
+ master, started for the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was pleasant in the church which was brilliant with lighted candles;
+ and the boys excited by the warmth took advantage of the music of the
+ choir and the organ to chatter among themselves in low tones. They bragged
+ about the fun that was awaiting them at home. The mayor's son had seen,
+ just before starting off, an immense goose ready stuffed and dressed for
+ cooking. At the alderman's home there was a little pine-tree with branches
+ laden down with oranges, sweets, and toys. And the lawyer's cook had put
+ on her cap with such care as she never thought of taking unless she was
+ expecting something very good!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they talked, too, of all that the Christ-Child was going to bring
+ them, of all he was going to put in their shoes which, you might be sure,
+ they would take good care to leave in the chimney place before going to
+ bed; and the eyes of these little urchins, as lively as a cage of mice,
+ were sparkling in advance over the joy they would have when they awoke in
+ the morning and saw the pink bag full of sugar-plums, the little lead
+ soldiers ranged in companies in their boxes, the menageries smelling of
+ varnished wood, and the magnificent jumping-jacks in purple and tinsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas! Little Wolff knew by experience that his old miser of an aunt would
+ send him to bed supperless, but, with childlike faith and certain of
+ having been, all the year, as good and industrious as possible, he hoped
+ that the Christ-Child would not forget him, and so he, too, planned to
+ place his wooden shoes in good time in the fireplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midnight mass over, the worshippers departed, eager for their fun, and the
+ band of pupils always walking two and two, and following the teacher, left
+ the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, in the porch and seated on a stone bench set in the niche of a
+ painted arch, a child was sleeping&mdash;a child in a white woollen
+ garment, but with his little feet bare, in spite of the cold. He was not a
+ beggar, for his garment was white and new, and near him on the floor was a
+ bundle of carpenter's tools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the clear light of the stars, his face, with its closed eyes, shone
+ with an expression of divine sweetness, and his long, curling, blond locks
+ seemed to form a halo about his brow. But his little child's feet, made
+ blue by the cold of this bitter December night, were pitiful to see!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys so well clothed for the winter weather passed by quite
+ indifferent to the unknown child; several of them, sons of the notables of
+ the town, however, cast on the vagabond looks in which could be read all
+ the scorn of the rich for the poor, of the well-fed for the hungry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But little Wolff, coming last out of the church, stopped, deeply touched,
+ before the beautiful sleeping child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, dear!" said the little fellow to himself, "this is frightful! This
+ poor little one has no shoes and stockings in this bad weather&mdash;and,
+ what is still worse, he has not even a wooden shoe to leave near him
+ to-night while he sleeps, into which the little Christ-Child can put
+ something good to soothe his misery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And carried away by his loving heart, Wolff drew the wooden shoe from his
+ right foot, laid it down before the sleeping child, and, as best he could,
+ sometimes hopping, sometimes limping with his sock wet by the snow, he
+ went home to his aunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look at the good-for-nothing!" cried the old woman, full of wrath at the
+ sight of the shoeless boy. "What have you done with your shoe, you little
+ villain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little Wolff did not know how to lie, so, although trembling with terror
+ when he saw the rage of the old shrew, he tried to relate his adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the miserly old creature only burst into a frightful fit of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aha! So my young gentleman strips himself for the beggars. Aha! My young
+ gentleman breaks his pair of shoes for a bare-foot! Here is something new,
+ forsooth. Very well, since it is this way, I shall put the only shoe that
+ is left into the chimney-place, and I'll answer for it that the
+ Christ-Child will put in something to-night to beat you with in the
+ morning! And you will have only a crust of bread and water to-morrow. And
+ we shall see if the next time, you will be giving your shoes to the first
+ vagabond that happens along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the wicked woman having boxed the ears of the poor little fellow, made
+ him climb up into the loft where he had his wretched cubbyhole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Desolate, the child went to bed in the dark and soon fell asleep, but his
+ pillow was wet with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But behold! the next morning when the old woman, awakened early by the
+ cold, went downstairs&mdash;oh, wonder of wonders&mdash;she saw the big
+ chimney filled with shining toys, bags of magnificent bonbons, and riches
+ of every sort, and standing out in front of all this treasure, was the
+ right wooden shoe which the boy had given to the little vagabond, yes, and
+ beside it, the one which she had placed in the chimney to hold the bunch
+ of switches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As little Wolff, attracted by the cries of his aunt, stood in an ecstasy
+ of childish delight before the splendid Christmas gifts, shouts of
+ laughter were heard outside. The woman and child ran out to see what all
+ this meant, and behold! all the gossips of the town were standing around
+ the public fountain. What could have happened? Oh, a most ridiculous and
+ extraordinary thing! The children of the richest men in the town, whom
+ their parents had planned to surprise with the most beautiful presents had
+ found only switches in their shoes!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the old woman and the child thinking of all the riches in their
+ chimney were filled with fear. But suddenly they saw the priest appear,
+ his countenance full of astonishment. Just above the bench placed near the
+ door of the church, in the very spot where, the night before, a child in a
+ white garment and with bare feet, in spite of the cold, had rested his
+ lovely head, the priest had found a circlet of gold imbedded in the old
+ stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, they all crossed themselves devoutly, perceiving that this beautiful
+ sleeping child with the carpenter's tools had been Jesus of Nazareth
+ himself, who had come back for one hour just as he had been when he used
+ to work in the home of his parents; and reverently they bowed before this
+ miracle, which the good God had done to reward the faith and the love of a
+ little child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI. CHRISTMAS IN THE ALLEY*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co., 1904.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I declare for 't, to-morrow is Christmas Day an' I clean forgot all about
+ it," said old Ann, the washerwoman, pausing in her work and holding the
+ flatiron suspended in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Much good it'll do us," growled a discontented voice from the coarse bed
+ in the corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We haven't much extra, to be sure," answered Ann cheerfully, bringing the
+ iron down onto the shirt-bosom before her, "but at least we've enough to
+ eat, and a good fire, and that's more'n some have, not a thousand miles
+ from here either."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We might have plenty more," said the fretful voice, "if you didn't think
+ so much more of strangers than you do of your own folk's comfort, keeping
+ a houseful of beggars, as if you was a lady!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, John," replied Ann, taking another iron from the fire, "you're not
+ half so bad as you pretend. You wouldn't have me turn them poor creatures
+ into the streets to freeze, now, would you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's none of our business to pay rent for them," grumbled John. "Every
+ one for himself, I say, these hard times. If they can't pay you'd ought to
+ send 'em off; there's plenty as can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They'd pay quick enough if they could get work," said Ann. "They're good
+ honest fellows, every one, and paid me regular as long as they had a cent.
+ But when hundreds are out o' work in the city, what can they do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's none o' your business, you can turn 'em out!" growled John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And leave the poor children to freeze as well as starve?" said Ann.
+ "Who'd ever take 'em in without money, I'd like to know? No, John,"
+ bringing her iron down as though she meant it, "I'm glad I'm well enough
+ to wash and iron, and pay my rent, and so long as I can do that, and keep
+ the hunger away from you and the child, I'll never turn the poor souls
+ out, leastways, not in this freezing winter weather."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An' here's Christmas," the old man went on whiningly, "an' not a penny to
+ spend, an' I needin' another blanket so bad, with my rhumatiz, an' haven't
+ had a drop of tea for I don't know how long!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know it," said Ann, never mentioning that she too had been without tea,
+ and not only that, but with small allowance of food of any kind, "and I'm
+ desperate sorry I can't get a bit of something for Katey. The child never
+ missed a little something in her stocking before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," John struck in, "much you care for your flesh an' blood. The child
+ ha'n't had a thing this winter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's true enough," said Ann, with a sigh, "an' it's the hardest thing
+ of all that I've had to keep her out o' school when she was doing so
+ beautiful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An' her feet all on the ground," growled John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know her shoes is bad," said Ann, hanging the shirt up on a line that
+ stretched across the room, and was already nearly full of freshly ironed
+ clothes, "but they're better than the Parker children's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's that to us?" almost shouted the weak old man, shaking his fist at
+ her in his rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, keep your temper, old man," said Ann. "I'm sorry it goes so hard
+ with you, but as long as I can stand on my feet, I sha'n't turn anybody
+ out to freeze, that's certain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How much'll you get for them?" said the miserable old man, after a few
+ moments' silence, indicating by his hand the clean clothes on the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Two dollars," said Ann, "and half of it must go to help make up next
+ month's rent. I've got a good bit to make up yet, and only a week to do it
+ in, and I sha'n't have another cent till day after to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I wish you'd manage to buy me a little tea," whined the old man;
+ "seems as if that would go right to the spot, and warm up my old bones a
+ bit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll try," said Ann, revolving in her mind how she could save a few
+ pennies from her indispensable purchases to get tea and sugar, for without
+ sugar he would not touch it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wearied with his unusual exertion, the old man now dropped off to sleep,
+ and Ann went softly about, folding and piling the clothes into a big
+ basket already half full. When they were all packed in, and nicely covered
+ with a piece of clean muslin, she took an old shawl and hood from a nail
+ in the corner, put them on, blew out the candle, for it must not burn one
+ moment unnecessarily, and, taking up her basket, went out into the cold
+ winter night, softly closing the door behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house was on an alley, but as soon as she turned the corner she was in
+ the bright streets, glittering with lamps and gay people. The shop windows
+ were brilliant with Christmas displays, and thousands of warmly dressed
+ buyers were lingering before them, laughing and chatting, and selecting
+ their purchases. Surely it seemed as if there could be no want here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As quickly as her burden would let her, the old washerwoman passed through
+ the crowd into a broad street and rang the basement bell of a large, showy
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it's the washerwoman!" said a flashy-looking servant who answered the
+ bell; "set the basket right m here. Mrs. Keithe can't look them over
+ to-night. There's company in the parlour&mdash;Miss Carry's Christmas
+ party."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ask her to please pay me&mdash;at least a part," said old Ann hastily. "I
+ don't see how I can do without the money. I counted on it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll ask her," said the pert young woman, turning to go upstairs; "but
+ it's no use."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning in a moment, she delivered the message. "She has no change
+ to-night; you're to come in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear me!" thought Ann, as she plodded back through the streets, "it'll be
+ even worse than I expected, for there's not a morsel to eat in the house,
+ and not a penny to buy one with. Well&mdash;well&mdash;the Lord will
+ provide, the Good Book says, but it's mighty dark days, and it's hard to
+ believe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Entering the house, Ann sat down silently before the expiring fire. She
+ was tired, her bones ached, and she was faint for want of food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wearily she rested her head on her hands, and tried to think of some way
+ to get a few cents. She had nothing she could sell or pawn, everything she
+ could do without had gone before, in similar emergencies. After sitting
+ there some time, and revolving plan after plan, only to find them all
+ impossible, she was forced to conclude that they must go supperless to
+ bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband grumbled, and Katey&mdash;who came in from a neighbour's&mdash;cried
+ with hunger, and after they were asleep old Ann crept into bed to keep
+ warm, more disheartened than she had been all winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we could only see a little way ahead! All this time&mdash;the darkest
+ the house on the alley had seen&mdash;help was on the way to them. A
+ kind-hearted city missionary, visiting one of the unfortunate families
+ living in the upper rooms of old Ann's house, had learned from them of the
+ noble charity of the humble old washerwoman. It was more than princely
+ charity, for she not only denied herself nearly every comfort, but she
+ endured the reproaches of her husband, and the tears of her child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Telling the story to a party of his friends this Christmas Eve, their
+ hearts were troubled, and they at once emptied their purses into his hands
+ for her. And the gift was at that very moment in the pocket of the
+ missionary, waiting for morning to make her Christmas happy. Christmas
+ morning broke clear and cold. Ann was up early, as usual, made her fire,
+ with the last of her coal, cleared up her two rooms, and, leaving her
+ husband and Katey in bed, was about starting out to try and get her money
+ to provide a breakfast for them. At the door she met the missionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-morning, Ann," said he. "I wish you a Merry Christmas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, sir," said Ann cheerfully; "the same to yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you been to breakfast already?" asked the missionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir," said Ann. "I was just going out for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I haven't either," said he, "but I couldn't bear to wait until I had
+ eaten breakfast before I brought you your Christmas present&mdash;I
+ suspect you haven't had any yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ann smiled. "Indeed, sir, I haven't had one since I can remember."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I have one for you. Come in, and I'll tell you about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too much amazed for words, Ann led him into the room. The missionary
+ opened his purse, and handed her a roll of bills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why&mdash;what!" she gasped, taking it mechanically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some friends of mine heard of your generous treatment of the poor
+ families upstairs," he went on, "and they send you this, with their
+ respects and best wishes for Christmas. Do just what you please with it&mdash;it
+ is wholly yours. No thanks," he went on, as she struggled to speak. "It's
+ not from me. Just enjoy it&mdash;that's all. It has done them more good to
+ give than it can you to receive," and before she could speak a word he was
+ gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What did the old washerwoman do?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, first she fell on her knees and buried her agitated face in the
+ bedclothes. After a while she became aware of a storm of words from her
+ husband, and she got up, subdued as much as possible her agitation, and
+ tried to answer his frantic questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How much did he give you, old stupid?" he screamed; "can't you speak, or
+ are you struck dumb? Wake up! I just wish I could reach you! I'd shake you
+ till your teeth rattled!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His vicious looks were a sign, it was evident that he only lacked the
+ strength to be as good as his word. Ann roused herself from her stupour
+ and spoke at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know. I'll count it." She unrolled the bills and began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O Lord!" she exclaimed excitedly, "here's ten-dollar bills! One, two,
+ three, and a twenty-that makes five&mdash;and five are fifty-five&mdash;sixty&mdash;seventy&mdash;eighty&mdash;eighty-five&mdash;ninety&mdash;one
+ hundred&mdash;and two and five are seven, and two and one are ten, twenty&mdash;twenty-five&mdash;one
+ hundred and twenty-five! Why, I'm rich!" she shouted. "Bless the Lord! Oh,
+ this is the glorious Christmas Day! I knew He'd provide. Katey! Katey!"
+ she screamed at the door of the other room, where the child lay asleep.
+ "Merry Christmas to you, darlin'! Now you can have some shoes! and a new
+ dress! and&mdash;and&mdash;breakfast, and a regular Christmas dinner! Oh!
+ I believe I shall go crazy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she did not. Joy seldom hurts people, and she was brought back to
+ everyday affairs by the querulous voice of her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now I will have my tea, an' a new blanket, an' some tobacco&mdash;how I
+ have wanted a pipe!" and he went on enumerating his wants while Ann
+ bustled about, putting away most of her money, and once more getting ready
+ to go out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll run out and get some breakfast," she said, "but don't you tell a
+ soul about the money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! they'll rob us!" shrieked the old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense! I'll hide it well, but I want to keep it a secret for another
+ reason. Mind, Katey, don't you tell?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No!" said Katey, with wide eyes. "But can I truly have a new frock,
+ Mammy, and new shoes&mdash;and is it really Christmas?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's really Christmas, darlin'," said Ann, "and you'll see what mammy'll
+ bring home to you, after breakfast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The luxurious meal of sausages, potatoes, and hot tea was soon smoking on
+ the table, and was eagerly devoured by Katey and her father. But Ann could
+ not eat much. She was absent-minded, and only drank a cup of tea. As soon
+ as breakfast was over, she left Katey to wash the dishes, and started out
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She walked slowly down the street, revolving a great plan in her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me see," she said to herself. "They shall have a happy day for once.
+ I suppose John'll grumble, but the Lord has sent me this money, and I mean
+ to use part of it to make one good day for them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having settled this in her mind, she walked on more quickly, and visited
+ various shops in the neighbourhood. When at last she went home, her big
+ basket was stuffed as full as it could hold, and she carried a bundle
+ besides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's your tea, John," she said cheerfully, as she unpacked the basket,
+ "a whole pound of it, and sugar, and tobacco, and a new pipe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me some now," said the old man eagerly; "don't wait to take out the
+ rest of the things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And here's a new frock for you, Katey," old Ann went on, after making
+ John happy with his treasures, "a real bright one, and a pair of shoes,
+ and some real woollen stockings; oh! how warm you'll be!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, how nice, Mammy!" cried Katey, jumping about. "When will you make my
+ frock?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow," answered the mother, "and you can go to school again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, goody!" she began, but her face fell. "If only Molly Parker could go
+ too!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You wait and see," answered Ann, with a knowing look. "Who knows what
+ Christmas will bring to Molly Parker?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now here's a nice big roast," the happy woman went on, still unpacking,
+ "and potatoes and turnips and cabbage and bread and butter and coffee and&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What in the world! You goin' to give a party?" asked the old man between
+ the puffs, staring at her in wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll tell you just what I am going to do," said Ann firmly, bracing
+ herself for opposition, "and it's as good as done, so you needn't say a
+ word about it. I'm going to have a Christmas dinner, and I'm going to
+ invite every blessed soul in this house to come. They shall be warm and
+ full for once in their lives, please God! And, Katey," she went on
+ breathlessly, before the old man had sufficiently recovered from his
+ astonishment to speak, "go right upstairs now, and invite every one of 'em
+ from the fathers down to Mrs. Parker's baby to come to dinner at three
+ o'clock; we'll have to keep fashionable hours, it's so late now; and mind,
+ Katey, not a word about the money. And hurry back, child, I want you to
+ help me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To her surprise, the opposition from her husband was less than she
+ expected. The genial tobacco seemed to have quieted his nerves, and even
+ opened his heart. Grateful for this, Ann resolved that his pipe should
+ never lack tobacco while she could work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now the cares of dinner absorbed her. The meat and vegetables were
+ prepared, the pudding made, and the long table spread, though she had to
+ borrow every table in the house, and every dish to have enough to go
+ around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At three o'clock when the guests came in, it was really a very pleasant
+ sight. The bright warm fire, the long table, covered with a substantial,
+ and, to them, a luxurious meal, all smoking hot. John, in his neatly
+ brushed suit, in an armchair at the foot of the table, Ann in a bustle of
+ hurry and welcome, and a plate and a seat for every one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the half-starved creatures enjoyed it; how the children stuffed and
+ the parents looked on with a happiness that was very near to tears; how
+ old John actually smiled and urged them to send back their plates again
+ and again, and how Ann, the washerwoman, was the life and soul of it all,
+ I can't half tell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner, when the poor women lodgers insisted on clearing up, and the
+ poor men sat down by the fire to smoke, for old John actually passed
+ around his beloved tobacco, Ann quietly slipped out for a few minutes,
+ took four large bundles from a closet under the stairs, and disappeared
+ upstairs. She was scarcely missed before she was back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, of course it was a great day in the house on the alley, and the
+ guests sat long into the twilight before the warm fire, talking of their
+ old homes in the fatherland, the hard winter, and prospects for work in
+ the spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at last they returned to the chilly discomfort of their own rooms,
+ each family found a package containing a new warm dress and pair of shoes
+ for every woman and child in the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I have enough left,"' said Ann the washerwoman, to herself, when she
+ was reckoning up the expenses of the day, "to buy my coal and pay my rent
+ till spring, so I can save my old bones a bit. And sure John can't grumble
+ at their staying now, for it's all along of keeping them that I had such a
+ blessed Christmas day at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII. A CHRISTMAS STAR*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * Published by permission of the American Book Co.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ KATHERINE PYLE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come now, my dear little stars," said Mother Moon, "and I will tell you
+ the Christmas story."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every morning for a week before Christmas, Mother Moon used to call all
+ the little stars around her and tell them a story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was always the same story, but the stars never wearied of it. It was
+ the story of the Christmas star&mdash;the Star of Bethlehem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Mother Moon had finished the story the little stars always said: "And
+ the star is shining still, isn't it, Mother Moon, even if we can't see
+ it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Mother Moon would answer: "Yes, my dears, only now it shines for men's
+ hearts instead of their eyes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the stars would bid the Mother Moon good-night and put on their
+ little blue nightcaps and go to bed in the sky chamber; for the stars'
+ bedtime is when people down on the earth are beginning to waken and see
+ that it is morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that particular morning when the little stars said good-night and went
+ quietly away, one golden star still lingered beside Mother Moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is the matter, my little star?" asked the Mother Moon. "Why don't
+ you go with your little sisters?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mother Moon," said the golden star. "I am so sad! I wish I could
+ shine for some one's heart like that star of wonder that you tell us
+ about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, aren't you happy up here in the sky country?" asked Mother Moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I have been very happy," said the star; "but to-night it seems just
+ as if I must find some heart to shine for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then if that is so," said Mother Moon, "the time has come, my little
+ star, for you to go through the Wonder Entry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Wonder Entry? What is that?" asked the star. But the Mother Moon made
+ no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rising, she took the little star by the hand and led it to a door that it
+ had never seen before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mother Moon opened the door, and there was a long dark entry; at the
+ far end was shining a little speck of light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is this?" asked the star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is the Wonder Entry; and it is through this that you must go to find
+ the heart where you belong," said the Mother Moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the little star was afraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It longed to go through the entry as it had never longed for anything
+ before; and yet it was afraid and clung to the Mother Moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But very gently, almost sadly, the Mother Moon drew her hand away. "Go, my
+ child," she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, wondering and trembling, the little star stepped into the Wonder
+ Entry, and the door of the sky house closed behind it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next thing the star knew it was hanging in a toy shop with a whole row
+ of other stars blue and red and silver. It itself was gold. The shop
+ smelled of evergreen, and was full of Christmas shoppers, men and women
+ and children; but of them all, the star looked at no one but a little boy
+ standing in front of the counter; for as soon as the star saw the child it
+ knew that he was the one to whom it belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little boy was standing beside a sweet-faced woman in a long black
+ veil and he was not looking at anything in particular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The star shook and trembled on the string that held it, because it was
+ afraid lest the child would not see it, or lest, if he did, he would not
+ know it as his star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady had a number of toys on the counter before her, and she was
+ saying: "Now I think we have presents for every one: There's the doll for
+ Lou, and the game for Ned, and the music box for May; and then the rocking
+ horse and the sled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the little boy caught her by the arm. "Oh, mother," he said. He
+ had seen the star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, what is it, darling?" asked the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, mother, just see that star up there! I wish&mdash;oh, I do wish I had
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, my dear, we have so many things for the Christmas-tree," said the
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know, but I do want the star," said the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well," said the mother, smiling; "then we will take that, too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the star was taken down from the place where it hung and wrapped up in
+ a piece of paper, and all the while it thrilled with joy, for now it
+ belonged to the little boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until the afternoon before Christmas, when the tree was being
+ decorated, that the golden star was unwrapped and taken out from the
+ paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is something else," said the sweet-faced lady. "We must hang this on
+ the tree. Paul took such a fancy to it that I had to get it for him. He
+ will never be satisfied unless we hang it on too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," said some one else who was helping to decorate the tree; "we
+ will hang it here on the very top."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the little star hung on the highest branch of the Christmas-tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening all the candles were lighted on the Christmas-tree, and there
+ were so many that they fairly dazzled the eyes; and the gold and silver
+ balls, the fairies and the glass fruits, shone and twinkled in the light;
+ and high above them all shone the golden star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At seven o'clock a bell was rung, and then the folding doors of the room
+ where the Christmas-tree stood were thrown open, and a crowd of children
+ came trooping in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They laughed and shouted and pointed, and all talked together, and after a
+ while there was music, and presents were taken from the tree and given to
+ the children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How different it all was from the great wide, still sky house!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the star had never been so happy in all its life; for the little boy
+ was there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood apart from the other children, looking up at the star, with his
+ hands clasped behind him, and he did not seem to care for the toys and the
+ games.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last it was all over. The lights were put out, the children went home,
+ and the house grew still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the ornaments on the tree began to talk among themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So that is all over," said a silver ball. "It was very gay this evening&mdash;the
+ gayest Christmas I remember."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said a glass bunch of grapes; "the best of it is over. Of course
+ people will come to look at us for several days yet, but it won't be like
+ this evening."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And then I suppose we'll be laid away for another year," said a paper
+ fairy. "Really it seems hardly worth while. Such a few days out of the
+ year and then to be shut up in the dark box again. I almost wish I were a
+ paper doll."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bunch of grapes was wrong in saying that people would come to look at
+ the Christmas-tree the next few days, for it stood neglected in the
+ library and nobody came near it. Everybody in the house went about very
+ quietly, with anxious faces; for the little boy was ill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, one evening, a woman came into the room with a servant. The woman
+ wore the cap and apron of a nurse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is it," she said, pointing to the golden star. The servant climbed
+ up on some steps and took down the star and put it in the nurse's hand,
+ and she carried it out into the hall and upstairs to a room where the
+ little boy lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sweet-faced lady was sitting by the bed, and as the nurse came in she
+ held out her hand for the star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is this what you wanted, my darling?" she asked, bending over the little
+ boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The child nodded and held out his hands for the star; and as he clasped it
+ a wonderful, shining smile came over his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the little boy's room was very still and dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The golden piece of paper that had been the star lay on a table beside the
+ bed, its five points very sharp and bright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not the real star, any more than a person's body is the real
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The real star was living and shining now in the little boy's heart, and it
+ had gone out with him into a new and more beautiful sky country than it
+ had ever known before&mdash;the sky country where the little child angels
+ live, each one carrying in its heart its own particular star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII. THE QUEEREST CHRISTMAS*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 83.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ GRACE MARGARET GALLAHER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty stood at her door, gazing drearily down the long, empty corridor in
+ which the breakfast gong echoed mournfully. All the usual brisk scenes of
+ that hour, groups of girls in Peter Thomson suits or starched
+ shirt-waists, or a pair of energetic ones, red-cheeked and shining-eyed
+ from a run in the snow, had vanished as by the hand of some evil magician.
+ Silent and lonely was the corridor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And it's the day before Christmas!" groaned Betty. Two chill little tears
+ hung on her eyelashes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night before, in the excitement of getting the girls off with all
+ their trunks and packages intact, she had not realized the homesickness of
+ the deserted school. Now it seemed to pierce her very bones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, dear, why did father have to lose his money? 'Twas easy enough last
+ September to decide I wouldn't take the expensive journey home these
+ holidays, and for all of us to promise we wouldn't give each other as much
+ as a Christmas card. But now!" The two chill tears slipped over the edge
+ of her eyelashes. "Well, I know how I'll spend this whole day; I'll come
+ right up here after breakfast and cry and cry and cry!" Somewhat fortified
+ by this cheering resolve, Betty went to breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever the material joys of that meal might be, it certainly was not "a
+ feast of reason and a flow of soul." Betty, whose sense of humour never
+ perished, even in such a frost, looked round the table at the eight
+ grim-faced girls doomed to a Christmas in school, and quoted mischievously
+ to herself: "On with the dance, let joy be unconfined."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Breakfast bolted, she lagged back to her room, stopping to stare out of
+ the corridor windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She saw nothing of the snowy landscape, however. Instead, a picture, the
+ gayest medley of many colours and figures, danced before her eyes:
+ Christmas-trees thumping in through the door, mysterious bundles scurried
+ into dark corners, little brothers and sisters flying about with festoons
+ of mistletoe, scarlet ribbon and holly, everywhere sound and laughter and
+ excitement. The motto of Betty's family was: "Never do to-day what you can
+ put off till to-morrow"; therefore the preparations of a fortnight were
+ always crowded into a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year before, Betty had rushed till her nerves were taut and her temper
+ snapped, had shaken the twins, raged at the housemaid, and had gone to bed
+ at midnight weeping with weariness. But in memory only the joy of the day
+ remained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think I could endure this jail of a school, and not getting one single
+ present, but it breaks my heart not to give one least little thing to any
+ one! Why, who ever heard of such a Christmas!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Won't you hunt for that blue&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Broken my thread again!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me those scissors!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty jumped out of her day-dream. She had wandered into "Cork" and the
+ three O'Neills surrounded her, staring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I beg your pardon&mdash;I heard you&mdash;and it was so like home the day
+ before Christmas&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you hear the heathen rage?" cried Katherine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dolls for Aunt Anne's mission," explained Constance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're so forehanded that all your presents went a week ago, I suppose,"
+ Eleanor swept clear a chair. "The clan O'Neill is never forehanded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'd think I was from the number of thumbs I've grown this morning. Oh,
+ misery!" Eleanor jerked a snarl of thread out on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty had never cared for "Cork" but now the hot worried faces of its
+ girls appealed to her. "Let me help. I'm a regular silkworm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The O'Neills assented with eagerness, and Betty began to sew in a capable,
+ swift way that made the others stare and sigh with relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dolls were many, the O'Neills slow. Betty worked till her feet
+ twitched on the floor; yet she enjoyed the morning, for it held an
+ entirely new sensation, that of helping some one else get ready for
+ Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Done!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We never should have finished if you hadn't helped! Thank you, Betty
+ Luther, very, VERY much! You're a duck! Let's run to luncheon together,
+ quick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow the big corridors did not seem half so bleak echoing to those warm
+ O'Neill voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This morning's just spun by, but, oh, this long, dreary afternoon!"
+ sighed Betty, as she wandered into the library. "Oh, me, there goes Alice
+ Johns with her arms loaded with presents to mail, and I can't give a
+ single soul anything!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know where 'Quotations for Occasions' has gone?" Betty turned to
+ face pretty Rosamond Howitt, the only senior left behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gone to be rebound. I heard Miss Dyce say so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, dear, I needed it so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Could I help? I know a lot of rhymes and tags of proverbs and things like
+ that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, if you would help me, I'd be so grateful! Won't you come to my room?
+ You see, I promised a friend in town, who is to have a Christmas dinner,
+ and who's been very kind to me, that I'd paint the place cards and write
+ some quotation appropriate to each guest. I'm shamefully late over it, my
+ own gifts took such a time; but the painting, at least, is done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rosamond led the way to her room, and there displayed the cards which she
+ had painted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can't think of my helplessness! If it were a Greek verb now, or a
+ lost and strayed angle&mdash;but poetry!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty trotted back and forth between the room and the library, delved into
+ books, and even evolved a verse which she audaciously tagged "old play,"
+ in imitation of Sir Walter Scott.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think they are really and truly very bright, and I know Mrs. Fernell
+ will be delighted." Rosamond wrapped up the cards carefully. "I can't
+ begin to tell you how you've helped me. It was sweet in you to give me
+ your whole afternoon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dinner-bell rang at that moment, and the two went down together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come for a little run; I haven't been out all day," whispered Rosamond,
+ slipping her hand into Betty's as they left the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great round moon swung cold and bright over the pines by the lodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Down the road a bit&mdash;just a little way&mdash;to the church,"
+ suggested Betty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stepped out into the silent country road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, the little mission is as gay as&mdash;as Christmas! I wonder why?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty glanced at the bright windows of the small plain church. "Oh, some
+ Christmas-eve doings," she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some one stepped quickly out from the church door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Miss Vernon, I am relieved! I had begun to fear you could not come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girls saw it was the tall old rector, his white hair shining silver
+ bright in the moonbeams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We're just two girls from the school, sir," said Rosamond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear, dear!" His voice was both impatient and distressed. "I hoped you
+ were my organist. We are all ready for our Christmas-eve service, but we
+ can do nothing without the music."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can play the organ a little," said Betty. "I'd be glad to help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can? My dear child, how fortunate! But&mdash;do you know the
+ service?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir, it's my church."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No vested choir stood ready to march triumphantly chanting into the choir
+ stalls. Only a few boys and girls waited in the dim old choir loft, where
+ Rosamond seated herself quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty's fingers trembled so at first that the music sounded dull and far
+ away; but her courage crept back to her in the silence of the church, and
+ the organ seemed to help her with a brave power of its own. In the dark
+ church only the altar and a great gold star above it shone bright. Through
+ an open window somewhere behind her she could hear the winter wind
+ rattling the ivy leaves and bending the trees. Yet, somehow, she did not
+ feel lonesome and forsaken this Christmas eve, far away from home, but
+ safe and comforted and sheltered. The voice of the old rector reached her
+ faintly in pauses; habit led her along the service, and the star at the
+ altar held her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange new ideas and emotions flowed in upon her brain. Tears stole
+ softly into her eyes, yet she felt in her heart a sweet glow. Slowly the
+ Christmas picture that had flamed and danced before her all day, painted
+ in the glory of holly and mistletoe and tinsel, faded out, and another
+ shaped itself, solemn and beautiful in the altar light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear child, I thank you very much!" The old rector held Betty's hand
+ in both his. "I cannot have a Christmas morning service&mdash;our people
+ have too much to do to come then&mdash;but I was especially anxious that
+ our evening service should have some message, some inspiration for them,
+ and your music has made it so. You have given me great aid. May your
+ Christmas be a blessed one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was glad to play, sir. Thank you!" answered Betty, simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let's run!" she cried to Rosamond, and they raced back to school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She fell asleep that night without one smallest tear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning Betty dressed hastily, and catching up her mandolin, set
+ out into the corridor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something swung against her hand as she opened the door. It was a great
+ bunch of holly, glossy green leaves and glowing berries, and hidden in the
+ leaves a card: "Betty, Merry Christmas," was all, but only one girl wrote
+ that dainty hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A winter rose," whispered Betty, happily, and stuck the bunch into the
+ ribbon of her mandolin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down the corridor she ran until she faced a closed door. Then, twanging
+ her mandolin, she burst out with all her power into a gay Christmas carol.
+ High and sweet sang her voice in the silent corridor all through the gay
+ carol. Then, sweeter still, it changed into a Christmas hymn. Then from
+ behind the closed doors sounded voices:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry Christmas, Betty Luther!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Constance O'Neill's deep, smooth alto flowed into Betty's soprano;
+ and at the last all nine girls joined in "Adeste Fideles." Christmas
+ morning began with music and laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is your place, Betty. You are lord of Christmas morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty stood, blushing, red as the holly in her hand, before the breakfast
+ table. Miss Hyle, the teacher at the head of the table, had given up her
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The breakfast was a merry one. After it somebody suggested that they all
+ go skating on the pond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty hesitated and glanced at Miss Hyle and Miss Thrasher, the two
+ sad-looking teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She approached them and said, "Won't you come skating, too?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Thrasher, hardly older than Betty herself, and pretty in a white
+ frightened way, refused, but almost cheerfully. "I have a Christmas box to
+ open and Christmas letters to write. Thank you very much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty's heart sank as she saw Miss Hyle's face. "Goodness, she's coming!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Hyle was the most unpopular teacher in school. Neither ill-tempered
+ nor harsh, she was so cold, remote and rigid in face, voice, and manner
+ that the warmest blooded shivered away from her, the least sensitive
+ shrank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no skates, but I should like to borrow a pair to learn, if I may.
+ I have never tried," she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tragedies of a beginner on skates are to the observers, especially if
+ such be school-girls, subjects for unalloyed mirth. The nine girls choked
+ and turned their backs and even giggled aloud as Miss Hyle went prone, now
+ backward with a whack, now forward in a limp crumple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But amusement became admiration. Miss Hyle stumbled, fell, laughed
+ merrily, scrambled up, struck out, and skated. Presently she was swinging
+ up the pond in stroke with Betty and Eleanor O'Neill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Hyle, you're great!" cried Betty, at the end of the morning. "I've
+ taught dozens and scores to skate, but never anybody like you. You've a
+ genius for skating."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Hyle's blue eyes shot a sudden flash at Betty that made her whole
+ severe face light up. "I've never had a chance to learn&mdash;at home
+ there never is any ice&mdash;but I have always been athletic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is your home, Miss Hyle?" asked Betty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cawnpore, India."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "India?" gasped Eleanor. "How delightful! Oh, won't you tell us about it,
+ Miss Hyle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was that Miss Hyle found herself talking about something besides
+ triangles to girls who really wanted to hear, and so it was that the flash
+ came often into her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have had a happy morning, thank you, Betty&mdash;and all." She said it
+ very simply, yet a quick throb of pity and liking beat in Betty's heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How stupid we are about judging people!" she thought. Yet Betty had
+ always prided herself on her character-reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hurrah, the mail and express are in!" The girls ran excitedly to their
+ rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty alone went to hers without interest. "Why, Hilma, what's happened?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little round-faced Swedish maid mopped the big tears with her duster,
+ and choked out:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothings, ma'am!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course there is! You're crying like everything."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilma wept aloud. "Christmas Day it is, and mine family and mine friends
+ have party, now, all day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilma jerked her head toward the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, you mean in town? Why can't you go?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I work. And never before am I from home Christmas day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty shivered. "Never before am <i>I</i> from home Christmas day," she
+ whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went close to the girl, very tall and slim and bright beside the
+ dumpy, flaxen Hilma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What work do you do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cook, he cooks the dinner and the supper; I put it on and wait it on
+ the young ladies and wash the dishes. The others all are gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty laughed suddenly. "Hilma, go put on your best clothes, quick, and go
+ down to your party. I'm going to do your work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilma's eyes rounded with amazement. "The cook, he be mad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, he won't. He won't care whether it's Hilma or Betty, if things get
+ done all right. I know how to wait on table and wash dishes. There's no
+ housekeeper here to object. Run along, Hilma; be back by nine o'clock&mdash;and&mdash;Merry
+ Christmas!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilma's face beamed through her tears. She was speechless with joy, but
+ she seized Betty's slim brown hand and kissed it loudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What larks!" "Is it a joke?" "Betty, you're the handsomest butler!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty, in a white shirt-waist suit, a jolly red bow pinned on her white
+ apron, and a little cap cocked on her dark hair, waved them to their seats
+ at the holly-decked table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobody is ill, Betty?" Rosamond asked, anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had three guesses, I should use every one that our maid wanted to go
+ into town for the day, and Betty took her place." It was Miss Hyle's calm
+ voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty blushed. It was her turn now to flash back a glance; and those two
+ sparks kindled the fire of friendship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a jolly Christmas dinner, with the "butler" eating with the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now the dishes!" thought Betty. It must be admitted the "washing up"
+ after a Christmas dinner of twelve is not a subject for much joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I propose we all help Betty wash the dishes!" cried Rosamond Howitt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out in the kitchen every one laughed and talked and got in the way, and
+ had a good time; and if the milk pitcher was knocked on the floor and the
+ pudding bowl emptied in Betty's lap&mdash;why, it was all "Merry
+ Christmas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that they all skated again. When they came in, little Miss Thrasher,
+ looking almost gay in a rose-red gown, met them in the corridor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought it would be fun," she said, shyly, "to have supper in my room.
+ I have a big box from home. I couldn't possible eat all the things myself,
+ and if you'll bring chafing-dishes and spoons, and those things, I'll cook
+ it, and we can sit round my open fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Thrasher's room was homelike, with its fire of white-birch and its
+ easy chairs, and Miss Thrasher herself proved to be a pleasant hostess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After supper Miss Hyle told a tale of India, Miss Thrasher gave a Rocky
+ Mountain adventure, and the girls contributed ghost and burglar stories
+ till each guest was in a thrill of delightful horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We've had really a fine day!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I expected to die of homesickness, but it's been jolly!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So did I, but I have actually been happy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the girls commented as they started for bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have enjoyed my day," said little Miss Thrasher, "very much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, indeed, it's been a merry Christmas." Miss Hyle spoke almost
+ eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Betty gave a little jump; she realized each one of them was holding her
+ hand and pressing it a little. "Thank you, it's been a lovely evening.
+ Goodnight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rosamond had invited Betty to share her roommate's bed, but both girls
+ were too tired and sleepy for any confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's been the queerest Christmas!" thought Betty, as she drifted toward
+ sleep. "Why, I haven't given one single soul one single present!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet she smiled, drowsily happy, and then the room seemed to fill with a
+ bright, warm light, and round the bed there danced a great Christmas
+ wreath, made up of the faces of the three O'Neills, and the thin old
+ rector, with his white hair, and pretty Rosamond, and frightened Miss
+ Thrasher and the homesick girls, and lonely Miss Hyle, and tear-dimmed
+ Hilma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all the faces smiled and nodded, and called, "Merry Christmas, Betty,
+ Merry Christmas!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX. OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ J.H. EWING
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "The custom of Christmas-trees came from Germany. I can remember when they
+ were first introduced into England, and what wonderful things we thought
+ them. Now, every village school has its tree, and the scholars openly
+ discuss whether the presents have been 'good,' or 'mean,' as compared with
+ other trees in former years. The first one that I ever saw I believed to
+ have come from Good Father Christmas himself; but little boys have grown
+ too wise now to be taken in for their own amusement. They are not excited
+ by secret and mysterious preparations in the back drawing-room; they
+ hardly confess to the thrill&mdash;which I feel to this day&mdash;when the
+ folding doors are thrown open, and amid the blaze of tapers, mamma, like a
+ Fate, advances with her scissors to give every one what falls to his lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, young people, when I was eight years old I had not seen a
+ Christmas-tree, and the first picture of one I ever saw was the picture of
+ that held by Old Father Christmas in my godmother's picture-book."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"What are those things on the tree?' I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Candles,' said my father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No, father, not the candles; the other things?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Those are toys, my son.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Are they ever taken off?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes, they are taken off, and given to the children who stand around the
+ tree.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patty and I grasped each other by the hand, and with one voice murmured;
+ 'How kind of Old Father Christmas!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By and by I asked, 'How old is Father Christmas?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father laughed, and said, 'One thousand eight hundred and thirty
+ years, child,' which was then the year of our Lord, and thus one thousand
+ eight hundred and thirty years since the first great Christmas Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'He LOOKS very old,' whispered Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I, who was, for my age, what Kitty called 'Bible-learned,' said
+ thoughtfully, and with some puzzledness of mind, 'Then he's older than
+ Methuselah.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But my father had left the room, and did not hear my difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "November and December went by, and still the picture-book kept all its
+ charm for Patty and me; and we pondered on and loved Old Father Christmas
+ as children can love and realize a fancy friend. To those who remember the
+ fancies of their childhood I need say no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christmas week came, Christmas Eve came. My father and mother were
+ mysteriously and unaccountably busy in the parlour (we had only one
+ parlour), and Patty and I were not allowed to go in. We went into the
+ kitchen, but even here was no place of rest for us. Kitty was 'all over
+ the place,' as she phrased it, and cakes, mince pies, and puddings were
+ with her. As she justly observed, 'There was no place there for children
+ and books to sit with their toes in the fire, when a body wanted to be at
+ the oven all along. The cat was enough for HER temper,' she added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to puss, who obstinately refused to take a hint which drove her out
+ into the Christmas frost, she returned again and again with soft steps,
+ and a stupidity that was, I think, affected, to the warm hearth, only to
+ fly at intervals, like a football, before Kitty's hasty slipper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had more sense, or less courage. We bowed to Kitty's behests, and went
+ to the back door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patty and I were hardy children, and accustomed to 'run out' in all
+ weathers, without much extra wrapping up. We put Kitty's shawl over our
+ two heads, and went outside. I rather hoped to see something of Dick, for
+ it was holiday time; but no Dick passed. He was busy helping his father to
+ bore holes in the carved seats of the church, which were to hold sprigs of
+ holly for the morrow&mdash;that was the idea of church decoration in my
+ young days. You have improved on your elders there, young people, and I am
+ candid enough to allow it. Still, the sprigs of red and green were better
+ than nothing, and, like your lovely wreaths and pious devices, they made
+ one feel as if the old black wood were bursting into life and leaf again
+ for very Christmas joy; and, if only one knelt carefully, they did not
+ scratch his nose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Dick was busy, and not to be seen. We ran across the little yard
+ and looked over the wall at the end to see if we could see anything or
+ anybody. From this point there was a pleasant meadow field sloping
+ prettily away to a little hill about three quarters of a mile distant;
+ which, catching some fine breezes from the moors beyond, was held to be a
+ place of cure for whooping-cough, or kincough, as it was vulgarly called.
+ Up to the top of this Kitty had dragged me, and carried Patty, when we
+ were recovering from the complaint, as I well remember. It was the only
+ 'change of air' we could afford, and I dare say it did as well as if we
+ had gone into badly drained lodgings at the seaside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This hill was now covered with snow and stood off against the gray sky.
+ The white fields looked vast and dreary in the dusk. The only gay things
+ to be seen were the berries on the holly hedge, in the little lane&mdash;which,
+ running by the end of our back-yard, led up to the Hall&mdash;and the fat
+ robin, that was staring at me. I was looking at the robin, when Patty, who
+ had been peering out of her corner of Kitty's shawl, gave a great jump
+ that dragged the shawl from our heads, and cried:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Look!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I looked. An old man was coming along the lane. His hair and beard were
+ as white as cotton-wool. He had a face like the sort of apple that keeps
+ well in winter; his coat was old and brown. There was snow about him in
+ patches, and he carried a small fir-tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The same conviction seized upon us both. With one breath, we exclaimed,
+ 'IT'S OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know now that it was only an old man of the place, with whom we did not
+ happen to be acquainted and that he was taking a little fir-tree up to the
+ Hall, to be made into a Christmas-tree. He was a very good-humoured old
+ fellow, and rather deaf, for which he made up by smiling and nodding his
+ head a good deal, and saying, 'aye, aye, to be sure!' at likely intervals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As he passed us and met our earnest gaze, he smiled and nodded so
+ earnestly that I was bold enough to cry, 'Good-evening, Father Christmas!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Same to you!' said he, in a high-pitched voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Then you ARE Father Christmas?' said Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And a happy New Year,' was Father Christmas's reply, which rather put me
+ out. But he smiled in such a satisfactory manner that Patty went on,
+ 'You're very old, aren't you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'So I be, miss, so I be,' said Father Christmas, nodding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Father says you're eighteen hundred and thirty years old,' I muttered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Aye, aye, to be sure,' said Father Christmas. 'I'm a long age.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A VERY long age, thought I, and I added, 'You're nearly twice as old as
+ Methuselah, you know,' thinking that this might have struck him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Aye, aye,' said Father Christmas; but he did not seem to think anything
+ of it. After a pause he held up the tree, and cried, 'D'ye know what this
+ is, little miss?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'A Christmas-tree,' said Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the old man smiled and nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I leant over the wall, and shouted, 'But there are no candles.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'By and by,' said Father Christmas, nodding as before. 'When it's dark
+ they'll all be lighted up. That'll be a fine sight!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Toys, too,there'll be, won't there?' said Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Father Christmas nodded his head. 'And sweeties,' he added, expressively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could feel Patty trembling, and my own heart beat fast. The thought
+ which agitated us both was this: 'Was Father Christmas bringing the tree
+ to us?' But very anxiety, and some modesty also, kept us from asking
+ outright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only when the old man shouldered his tree, and prepared to move on, I
+ cried in despair, 'Oh, are you going?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I'm coming back by and by,' said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'How soon?' cried Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'About four o'clock,' said the old man smiling. 'I'm only going up
+ yonder.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Up yonder!' This puzzled us. Father Christmas had pointed, but so
+ indefinitely that he might have been pointing to the sky, or the fields,
+ or the little wood at the end of the Squire's grounds. I thought the
+ latter, and suggested to Patty that perhaps he had some place underground
+ like Aladdin's cave, where he got the candles, and all the pretty things
+ for the tree. This idea pleased us both, and we amused ourselves by
+ wondering what Old Father Christmas would choose for us from his stores in
+ that wonderful hole where he dressed his Christmas-trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I wonder, Patty,' said I, 'why there's no picture of Father Christmas's
+ dog in the book.' For at the old man's heels in the lane there crept a
+ little brown and white spaniel looking very dirty in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Perhaps it's a new dog that he's got to take care of his cave,' said
+ Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we went indoors we examined the picture afresh by the dim light from
+ the passage window, but there was no dog there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father passed us at this moment, and patted my head. 'Father,' said I,
+ 'I don't know, but I do think Old Father Christmas is going to bring us a
+ Christmas-tree to-night.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Who's been telling you that?' said my father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he passed on before I could explain that we had seen Father Christmas
+ himself, and had had his word for it that he would return at four o'clock,
+ and that the candles on his tree would be lighted as soon as it was dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We hovered on the outskirts of the rooms till four o'clock came. We sat
+ on the stairs and watched the big clock, which I was just learning to
+ read; and Patty made herself giddy with constantly looking up and counting
+ the four strokes, toward which the hour hand slowly moved. We put our
+ noses into the kitchen now and then, to smell the cakes and get warm, and
+ anon we hung about the parlour door, and were most unjustly accused of
+ trying to peep. What did we care what our mother was doing in the parlour?&mdash;we,
+ who had seen Old Father Christmas himself, and were expecting him back
+ again every moment!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last the church clock struck. The sounds boomed heavily through the
+ frost, and Patty thought there were four of them. Then, after due choking
+ and whirring, our own clock struck, and we counted the strokes quite
+ clearly&mdash;one! two! three! four! Then we got Kitty's shawl once more,
+ and stole out into the backyard. We ran to our old place, and peeped, but
+ could see nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We'd better get up on to the wall,' I said; and with some difficulty and
+ distress from rubbing her bare knees against the cold stone, and getting
+ the snow up her sleeves, Patty got on to the coping of the little wall. I
+ was just struggling after her, when something warm and something cold
+ coming suddenly against the bare calves of my legs made me shriek with
+ fright. I came down 'with a run' and bruised my knees, my elbows, and my
+ chin; and the snow that hadn't gone up Patty's sleeves went down my neck.
+ Then I found that the cold thing was a dog's nose and the warm thing was
+ his tongue; and Patty cried from her post of observation, 'It's Father
+ Christmas's dog and he's licking your legs.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It really was the dirty little brown and white spaniel, and he persisted
+ in licking me, and jumping on me, and making curious little noises, that
+ must have meant something if one had known his language. I was rather
+ harassed at the moment. My legs were sore, I was a little afraid of the
+ dog, and Patty was very much afraid of sitting on the wall without me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You won't fall,' I said to her. 'Get down, will you?' I said to the dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Humpty Dumpty fell off a wall,' said Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Bow! wow!' said the dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pulled Patty down, and the dog tried to pull me down; but when my
+ little sister was on her feet, to my relief, he transferred his attentions
+ to her. When he had jumped at her, and licked her several times, he turned
+ around and ran away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'He's gone,' said I; 'I'm so glad.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But even as I spoke he was back again, crouching at Patty's feet, and
+ glaring at her with eyes the colour of his ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Patty was very fond of animals, and when the dog looked at her she
+ looked at the dog, and then she said to me, 'He wants us to go with him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On which (as if he understood our language, though we were ignorant of
+ his) the spaniel sprang away, and went off as hard as he could; and Patty
+ and I went after him, a dim hope crossing my mind&mdash;'Perhaps Father
+ Christmas has sent him for us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The idea was rather favoured by the fact he led us up the lane. Only a
+ little way; then he stopped by something lying in the ditch&mdash;and once
+ more we cried in the same breath, 'It's Old Father Christmas!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Returning from the Hall, the old man had slipped upon a bit of ice, and
+ lay stunned in the snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patty began to cry. 'I think he's dead!' she sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'He is so very old, I don't wonder,' I murmured; 'but perhaps he's not.
+ I'll fetch father.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father and Kitty were soon on the spot. Kitty was as strong as a man;
+ and they carried Father Christmas between them into the kitchen. There he
+ quickly revived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must do Kitty the justice to say that she did not utter a word of
+ complaint at the disturbance of her labours; and that she drew the old
+ man's chair close up to the oven with her own hand. She was so much
+ affected by the behaviour of his dog that she admitted him even to the
+ hearth; on which puss, being acute enough to see how matters stood, lay
+ down with her back so close to the spaniel's that Kitty could not expel
+ one without kicking both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For our parts, we felt sadly anxious about the tree; otherwise we could
+ have wished for no better treat than to sit at Kitty's round table taking
+ tea with Father Christmas. Our usual fare of thick bread and treacle was
+ to-night exchanged for a delicious variety of cakes, which were none the
+ worse to us for being 'tasters and wasters'&mdash;that is, little bits of
+ dough, or shortbread, put in to try the state of the oven, and certain
+ cakes that had got broken or burnt in the baking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, there we sat, helping Old Father Christmas to tea and cake, and
+ wondering in our hearts what could have become of the tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patty and I felt a delicacy in asking Old Father Christmas about the
+ tree. It was not until we had had tea three times round, with tasters and
+ wasters to match, that Patty said very gently: 'It's quite dark now.' And
+ then she heaved a deep sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Burning anxiety overcame me. I leaned toward Father Christmas, and
+ shouted&mdash;I had found out that it was needful to shout&mdash;"'I
+ suppose the candles are on the tree now?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Just about putting of 'em on,' said Father Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And the presents, too?' said Patty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Aye, aye, TO be sure,' said Father Christmas, and he smiled
+ delightfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was thinking what further questions I might venture upon, when he
+ pushed his cup toward Patty saying, 'Since you are so pressing, miss, I'll
+ take another dish.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Kitty, swooping on us from the oven, cried, 'Make yourself at home,
+ sir; there's more where these came from. Make a long arm, Miss Patty, and
+ hand them cakes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So we had to devote ourselves to the duties of the table; and Patty,
+ holding the lid with one hand and pouring with the other, supplied Father
+ Christmas's wants with a heavy heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last he was satisfied. I said grace, during which he stood, and,
+ indeed, he stood for some time afterward with his eyes shut&mdash;I fancy
+ under the impression that I was still speaking. He had just said a fervent
+ 'amen,' and reseated himself, when my father put his head into the
+ kitchen, and made this remarkable statement:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Old Father Christmas has sent a tree to the young people.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patty and I uttered a cry of delight, and we forthwith danced round the
+ old man, saying, 'How nice; Oh, how kind of you!' which I think must have
+ bewildered him, but he only smiled and nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Come along,' said my father. 'Come, children. Come, Reuben. Come,
+ Kitty.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And he went into the parlour, and we all followed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My godmother's picture of a Christmas-tree was very pretty; and the
+ flames of the candles were so naturally done in red and yellow that I
+ always wondered that they did not shine at night. But the picture was
+ nothing to the reality. We had been sitting almost in the dark, for, as
+ Kitty said, 'Firelight was quite enough to burn at meal-times.' And when
+ the parlour door was thrown open, and the tree, with lighted tapers on all
+ the branches, burst upon our view, the blaze was dazzling, and threw such
+ a glory round the little gifts, and the bags of coloured muslin, with acid
+ drops and pink rose drops and comfits inside, as I shall never forget. We
+ all got something; and Patty and I, at any rate, believed that the things
+ came from the stores of Old Father Christmas. We were not undeceived even
+ by his gratefully accepting a bundle of old clothes which had been hastily
+ put together to form his present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We were all very happy; even Kitty, I think, though she kept her sleeves
+ rolled up, and seemed rather to grudge enjoying herself (a weak point in
+ some energetic characters). She went back to her oven before the lights
+ were out and the angel on the top of the tree taken down. She locked up
+ her present (a little work-box) at once. She often showed it off
+ afterward, but it was kept in the same bit of tissue paper till she died.
+ Our presents certainly did not last so long!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The old man died about a week afterward, so we never made his
+ acquaintance as a common personage. When he was buried, his little dog
+ came to us. I suppose he remembered the hospitality he had received. Patty
+ adopted him, and he was very faithful. Puss always looked on him with
+ favour. I hoped during our rambles together in the following summer that
+ he would lead us at last to the cave where Christmas-trees are dressed.
+ But he never did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our parents often spoke of his late master as 'old Reuben,' but children
+ are not easily disabused of a favourite fancy, and in Patty's thoughts and
+ in mine the old man was long gratefully remembered as Old Father
+ Christmas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX. A CHRISTMAS CAROL
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHARLES DICKENS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Master Peter, and the two ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the
+ goose, with which they soon returned in high procession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of all
+ birds; a feathered phenomenon, to which a black swan was a matter of
+ course&mdash;and in truth it was something very like it in that house.
+ Mrs. Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little saucepan)
+ hissing hot; Master Peter mashed the potatoes with incredible vigour; Miss
+ Belinda sweetened up the apple-sauce; Martha dusted the hot plates; Bob
+ took Tiny Tim beside him in a tiny corner at the table; the two young
+ Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting themselves, and
+ mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into their mouths, lest
+ they should shriek for goose before their turn came to be helped. At last
+ the dishes were set on, and grace was said. It was succeeded by a
+ breathless pause, as Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly all along the
+ carving-knife, prepared to plunge it in the breast; but when she did, and
+ when the long expected gush of stuffing issued forth, one murmur of
+ delight arose all round the board, and even Tiny Tim, excited by the two
+ young Cratchits, beat on the table with the handle of his knife, and
+ feebly cried Hurrah!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There never was such a goose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was
+ such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness, were
+ the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by the apple-sauce and mashed
+ potatoes, it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family; indeed, as Mrs.
+ Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small atom of a bone upon
+ the dish), they hadn't ate it all at last! Yet every one had had enough,
+ and the youngest Cratchits in particular, were steeped in sage and onion
+ to the eyebrows! But now, the plates being changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs.
+ Cratchit left the room alone&mdash;too nervous to bear witnesses&mdash;to
+ take the pudding up and bring it in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose it should not be done enough! Suppose it should break in turning
+ out. Suppose somebody should have got over the wall of the back-yard and
+ stolen it, while they were merry with the goose&mdash;a supposition at
+ which the two young Cratchits became livid! All sorts of horrors were
+ supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hallo! A great deal of steam! The pudding was out of the copper. A smell
+ like a washing-day! That was the cloth. A smell like an eating-house and a
+ pastrycook's next door to each other, with a laundress's next door to
+ that! That was the pudding! In half a minute Mrs. Cratchit entered&mdash;flushed,
+ but smiling proudly&mdash;with the pudding, like a speckled cannon-ball,
+ so hard and firm, blazing in half of half-a-quartern of ignited brandy,
+ and bedight with Christmas holly stuck into the top.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, a wonderful pudding! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly too, that he
+ regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since their
+ marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that now the weight was off her mind, she
+ would confess she had had her doubts about the quantity of flour.
+ Everybody had something to say about it, but nobody said or thought it was
+ at all a small pudding for a large family. It would have been, flat heresy
+ to do so. Any Cratchit would have blushed to hint at such a thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the hearth swept,
+ and the fire made up. The compound in the jug being tasted, and considered
+ perfect, apples and oranges were put upon the table, and a shovel-full of
+ chestnuts on the fire. Then all the Cratchit family drew round the hearth,
+ in what Bob Cratchit called a circle, meaning half a one; and at Bob
+ Cratchit's elbow stood the family display of glasses. Two tumblers, and a
+ custard-cup without a handle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as golden goblets
+ would have done; and Bob served it out with beaming looks, while the
+ chestnuts on the fire sputtered and cracked noisily. Then Bob proposed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which all the family re-echoed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim, the last of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI. HOW CHRISTMAS CAME TO THE SANTA MARIA FLATS*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * From "Ickery Ann and Other Girls and Boys," by Elia W. Peattie.
+ Copyright, 1898, by Herbert S. Stone &amp; Co., Duffield &amp; Co.,
+ successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ELIA W. PEATTIE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were twenty-six flat children, and none of them had ever been flat
+ children until that year. Previously they had all been home children. and
+ as such had, of course, had beautiful Christmases, in which their
+ relations with Santa Claus had been of the most intimate and personal
+ nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, owing to their residence in the Santa Maria flats, and the Lease, all
+ was changed. The Lease was a strange forbiddance, a ukase issued by a
+ tyrant, which took from children their natural liberties and rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though, to be sure&mdash;as every one of the flat children knew&mdash;they
+ were in the greatest kind of luck to be allowed to live at all, and
+ especially were they fortunate past the lot of children to be permitted to
+ live in a flat. There were many flats in the great city, so polished and
+ carved and burnished and be-lackeyed that children were not allowed to
+ enter within the portals, save on visits of ceremony in charge of parents
+ or governesses. And in one flat, where Cecil de Koven le Baron was born&mdash;just
+ by accident and without intending any harm&mdash;he was evicted, along
+ with his parents, by the time he reached the age where he seemed likely to
+ be graduated from the go-cart. And yet that flat had not nearly so
+ imposing a name as the Santa Maria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twenty-six children of the Santa Maria flats belonged to twenty
+ families. All of these twenty families were peculiar, as you might learn
+ any day by interviewing the families concerning one another. But they bore
+ with each other's peculiarities quite cheerfully and spoke in the hall
+ when they met. Sometimes this tolerance would even extend to conversation
+ about the janitor, a thin creature who did the work of five men. The
+ ladies complained that he never smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wouldn't so much mind the hot water pipes leaking now and then," the
+ ladies would remark in the vestibule, rustling their skirts to show that
+ they wore silk petticoats, "if only the janitor would smile. But he looks
+ like a cemetery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know it," would be the response. "I told Mr. Wilberforce last night
+ that if he would only get a cheerful janitor I wouldn't mind our having
+ rubber instead of Axminster on the stairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know we were promised Axminster when we moved in," would be the
+ plaintive response. The ladies would stand together for a moment wrapped
+ in gloomy reflection, and then part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The kitchen and nurse maids felt on the subject, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Carl Carlsen would only smile," they used to exclaim in sibilant
+ whispers, as they passed on the way to the laundry. "If he'd come in an'
+ joke while we wus washin'!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only Kara Johnson never said anything on the subject because she knew why
+ Carlsen didn't smile, and was sorry for it, and would have made it all
+ right&mdash;if it hadn't been for Lars Larsen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear, dear, but this is a digression from the subject of the Lease. That
+ terrible document was held over the heads of the children as the Herodian
+ pronunciamento concerning small boys was over the heads of the Israelites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the Lease not to run&mdash;not to jump&mdash;not to yell. It was
+ in the Lease not to sing in the halls, not to call from story to story,
+ not to slide down the banisters. And there were blocks of banisters so
+ smooth and wide and beautiful that the attraction between them and the
+ seats of the little boy's trousers was like the attraction of a magnet for
+ a nail. Yet not a leg, crooked or straight, fat or thin, was ever to be
+ thrown over these polished surfaces!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the Lease, too, that no peddler or agent, or suspicious stranger
+ was to enter the Santa Maria, neither by the front door nor the back. The
+ janitor stood in his uniform at the rear, and the lackey in his uniform at
+ the front, to prevent any such intrusion upon the privacy of the
+ aristocratic Santa Marias. The lackey, who politely directed people, and
+ summoned elevators, and whistled up tubes and rang bells, thus conducting
+ the complex social life of those favoured apartments, was not one to make
+ a mistake, and admit any person not calculated to ornament the front
+ parlours of the flatters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this that worried the children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For how could such a dear, disorderly, democratic rascal as the children's
+ saint ever hope to gain a pass to that exclusive entrance and get up to
+ the rooms of the flat children?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can see for yourself," said Ernest, who lived on the first floor, to
+ Roderick who lived on the fourth, "that if Santa Claus can't get up the
+ front stairs, and can't get up the back stairs, that all he can do is to
+ come down the chimney. And he can't come down the chimney&mdash;at least,
+ he can't get out of the fireplace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not?" asked Roderick, who was busy with an "all-day sucker" and not
+ inclined to take a gloomy view of anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Goosey!" cried Ernest, in great disdain. "I'll show you!" and he led
+ Roderick, with his sucker, right into the best parlour, where the
+ fireplace was, and showed him an awful thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, to the ordinary observer, there was nothing awful about the
+ fireplace. Everything in the way of bric-a-brac possessed by the Santa
+ Maria flatters was artistic. It may have been in the Lease that only
+ people with esthetic tastes were to be admitted to the apartments. However
+ that may be, the fireplace, with its vases and pictures and trinkets, was
+ something quite wonderful. Indian incense burned in a mysterious little
+ dish, pictures of purple ladies were hung in odd corners, calendars in
+ letters nobody could read, served to decorate, if not to educate, and
+ glass vases of strange colours and extraordinary shapes stood about filled
+ with roses. None of these things were awful. At least no one would have
+ dared say they were. But what was awful was the formation of the grate. It
+ was not a hospitable place with andirons, where noble logs of wood could
+ be laid for the burning, nor did it have a generous iron basket where
+ honest anthracite could glow away into the nights. Not a bit of it. It
+ held a vertical plate of stuff that looked like dirty cotton wool, on
+ which a tiny blue flame leaped when the gas was turned on and ignited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can see for yourself!" said Ernest tragically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Roderick could see for himself. There was an inch-wide opening down which
+ the Friend of the Children could squeeze himself, and, as everybody knows,
+ he needs a good deal of room now, for he has grown portly with age, and
+ his pack every year becomes bigger, owing to the ever-increasing number of
+ girls and boys he has to supply
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gimini!" said Roderick, and dropped his all-day sucker on the old Bokara
+ rug that Ernest's mamma had bought the week before at a fashionable
+ furnishing shop, and which had given the sore throat to all the family,
+ owing to some cunning little germs that had come over with the rug to see
+ what American throats were like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, me, yes! but Roderick could see! Anybody could see! And a boy could
+ see better than anybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let's go see the Telephone Boy," said Roderick. This seemed the wisest
+ thing to do. When in doubt, all the children went to the Telephone Boy,
+ who was the most fascinating person, with knowledge of the most wonderful
+ kind and of a nature to throw that of Mrs. Scheherazade quite, quite in
+ the shade&mdash;which, considering how long that loquacious lady had been
+ a Shade, is perhaps not surprising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Telephone Boy knew the answers to all the conundrums in the world, and
+ a way out of nearly all troubles such as are likely to overtake boys and
+ girls. But now he had no suggestions to offer and could speak no
+ comfortable words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He can't git inter de front, an' he can't git inter de back, an' he can't
+ come down no chimney in dis here house, an' I tell yer dose," he said, and
+ shut his mouth grimly, while cold apprehension crept around Ernest's heart
+ and took the sweetness out of Roderick's sucker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, hope springs eternal, and the boys each and individually
+ asked their fathers&mdash;tremendously wise and good men&mdash;if they
+ thought there was any hope that Santa Claus would get into the Santa Maria
+ flats, and each of the fathers looked up from his paper and said he'd be
+ blessed if he did!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the words sunk deep and deep and drew the tears when the doors were
+ closed and the soft black was all about and nobody could laugh because a
+ boy was found crying! The girls cried too&mdash;for the awful news was
+ whistled up tubes and whistled down tubes, till all the twenty-six flat
+ children knew about it. The next day it was talked over in the brick
+ court, where the children used to go to shout and race. But on this day
+ there was neither shouting nor racing. There was, instead, a shaking of
+ heads, a surreptitious dropping of tears, a guessing and protesting and
+ lamenting. All the flat mothers congratulated themselves on the fact that
+ their children were becoming so quiet and orderly, and wondered what could
+ have come over them when they noted that they neglected to run after the
+ patrol wagon as it whizzed round the block.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided, after a solemn talk, that every child should go to its own
+ fireplace and investigate. In the event of any fireplace being found with
+ an opening big enough to admit Santa Claus, a note could be left directing
+ him along the halls to the other apartments. A spirit of universal
+ brotherhood had taken possession of the Santa Maria flatters. Misery bound
+ them together. But the investigation proved to be disheartening. The cruel
+ asbestos grates were everywhere. Hope lay strangled!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As time went on, melancholy settled upon the flat children. The parents
+ noted it, and wondered if there could be sewer gas in the apartments. One
+ over-anxious mother called in a physician, who gave the poor little child
+ some medicine which made it quite ill. No one suspected the truth, though
+ the children were often heard to say that it was evident that there was to
+ be no Christmas for them! But then, what more natural for a child to say,
+ thus hoping to win protestations&mdash;so the mothers reasoned, and let
+ the remark pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day before Christmas was gray and dismal. There was no wind&mdash;indeed,
+ there was a sort of tightness in the air, as if the supply of freshness
+ had given out. People had headaches&mdash;even the Telephone Boy was cross&mdash;and
+ none of the spirit of the time appeared to enliven the flat children.
+ There appeared to be no stir&mdash;no mystery. No whisperings went on in
+ the corners&mdash;or at least, so it seemed to the sad babies of the Santa
+ Maria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's as plain as a monkey on a hand-organ," said the Telephone Boy to the
+ attendants at his salon in the basement, "that there ain't to be no
+ Christmas for we&mdash;no, not for we!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had not Dorothy produced, at this junction, from the folds of her fluffy
+ silken skirts several substantial sticks of gum, there is no saying to
+ what depths of discouragement the flat children would have fallen!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About six o'clock it seemed as if the children would smother for lack of
+ air! It was very peculiar. Even the janitor noticed it. He spoke about it
+ to Kara at the head of the back stairs, and she held her hand so as to let
+ him see the new silver ring on her fourth finger, and he let go of the
+ rope on the elevator on which he was standing and dropped to the bottom of
+ the shaft, so that Kara sent up a wild hallo of alarm. But the janitor
+ emerged as melancholy and unruffled as ever, only looking at his watch to
+ see if it had been stopped by the concussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Telephone Boy, who usually got a bit of something hot sent down to him
+ from one of the tables, owing to the fact that he never ate any meal save
+ breakfast at home, was quite forgotten on this day, and dined off two
+ russet apples, and drew up his belt to stop the ache&mdash;for the
+ Telephone Boy was growing very fast indeed, in spite of his poverty, and
+ couldn't seem to stop growing somehow, although he said to himself every
+ day that it was perfectly brutal of him to keep on that way when his
+ mother had so many mouths to feed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, well, the tightness of the air got worse. Every one was cross at
+ dinner and complained of feeling tired afterward, and of wanting to go to
+ bed. For all of that it was not to get to sleep, and the children tossed
+ and tumbled for a long time before they put their little hands in the big,
+ soft shadowy clasp of the Sandman, and trooped away after him to the happy
+ town of sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to the flat children that they had been asleep but a few moments
+ when there came a terrible burst of wind that shook even that great house
+ to its foundations. Actually, as they sat up in bed and called to their
+ parents or their nurses, their voices seemed smothered with roar. Could it
+ be that the wind was a great wild beast with a hundred tongues which
+ licked at the roof of the building? And how many voices must it have to
+ bellow as it did?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sounds of falling glass, of breaking shutters, of crashing chimneys
+ greeted their ears&mdash;not that they knew what all these sounds meant.
+ They only knew that it seemed as if the end of the world had come. Ernest,
+ miserable as he was, wondered if the Telephone Boy had gotten safely home,
+ or if he were alone in the draughty room in the basement; and Roderick
+ hugged his big brother, who slept with him and said, "Now I lay me," three
+ times running, as fast as ever his tongue would say it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a terrible time the wind settled down into a steady howl like a
+ hungry wolf, and the children went to sleep, worn out with fright and
+ conscious that the bedclothes could not keep out the cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dawn came. The children awoke, shivering. They sat up in bed and looked
+ about them&mdash;yes, they did, the whole twenty-six of them in their
+ different apartments and their different homes. And what do you suppose
+ they saw&mdash;what do you suppose the twenty-six flat children saw as
+ they looked about them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why, stockings, stuffed full, and trees hung full, and boxes packed full!
+ Yes, they did! It was Christmas morning, and the bells were ringing, and
+ all the little flat children were laughing, for Santa Claus had come! He
+ had really come! In the wind and wild weather, while the tongues of the
+ wind licked hungrily at the roof, while the wind howled like a hungry
+ wolf, he had crept in somehow and laughing, no doubt, and chuckling,
+ without question, he had filled the stockings and the trees and the boxes!
+ Dear me, dear me, but it was a happy time! It makes me out of breath to
+ think what a happy time it was, and how surprised the flat children were,
+ and how they wondered how it could ever have happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they found out, of course! It happened in the simplest way! Every
+ skylight in the place was blown off and away, and that was how the wind
+ howled so, and how the bedclothes would not keep the children warm, and
+ how Santa Claus got in. The wind corkscrewed down into these holes, and
+ the reckless children with their drums and dolls, their guns and toy
+ dishes, danced around in the maelstrom and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Here's where Santa Claus came!
+ This is how he got in&mdash;
+ We should count it a sin
+ Yes, count it a shame,
+ If it hurt when he fell on the floor."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Roderick's sister, who was clever for a child of her age, and who had read
+ Monte Cristo ten times, though she was only eleven, wrote this poem, which
+ every one thought very fine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And of course all the parents thought and said that Santa Claus must have
+ jumped down the skylights. By noon there were other skylights put in, and
+ not a sign left of the way he made his entrance&mdash;not that the way
+ mattered a bit, no, not a bit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps you think the Telephone Boy didn't get anything! Maybe you imagine
+ that Santa Claus didn't get down that far. But you are mistaken. The shaft
+ below one of the skylights went away to the bottom of the building, and it
+ stands to reason that the old fellow must have fallen way through. At any
+ rate there was a copy of "Tom Sawyer," and a whole plum pudding, and a
+ number of other things, more useful but not so interesting, found down in
+ the chilly basement room. There were, indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In closing it is only proper to mention that Kara Johnson crocheted a
+ white silk four-in-hand necktie for Carl Carlsen, the janitor&mdash;and
+ the janitor smiled!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII. THE LEGEND OF BABOUSCKA*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ *From "The Children's Hour," published by the Milton Bradley Co.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ ADAPTED FROM THE RUSSIAN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the night the dear Christ-Child came to Bethlehem. In a country far
+ away from Him, an old, old woman named Babouscka sat in her snug little
+ house by her warm fire. The wind was drifting the snow outside and howling
+ down the chimney, but it only made Babouscka's fire burn more brightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How glad I am that I may stay indoors," said Babouscka, holding her hands
+ out to the bright blaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But suddenly she heard a loud rap at her door. She opened it and her
+ candle shone on three old men standing outside in the snow. Their beards
+ were as white as the snow, and so long that they reached the ground. Their
+ eyes shone kindly in the light of Babouscka's candle, and their arms were
+ full of precious things&mdash;boxes of jewels, and sweet-smelling oils,
+ and ointments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have travelled far, Babouscka," they said, "and we stop to tell you of
+ the Baby Prince born this night in Bethlehem. He comes to rule the world
+ and teach all men to be loving and true. We carry Him gifts. Come with us,
+ Babouscka."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Babouscka looked at the drifting snow, and then inside at her cozy
+ room and the crackling fire. "It is too late for me to go with you, good
+ sirs," she said, "the weather is too cold." She went inside again and shut
+ the door, and the old men journeyed on to Bethlehem without her. But as
+ Babouscka sat by her fire, rocking, she began to think about the Little
+ Christ-Child, for she loved all babies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow I will go to find Him," she said; "to-morrow, when it is light,
+ and I will carry Him some toys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when it was morning Babouscka put on her long cloak and took her staff,
+ and filled her basket with the pretty things a baby would like&mdash;gold
+ balls, and wooden toys, and strings of silver cobwebs&mdash;and she set
+ out to find the Christ-Child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, oh, Babouscka had forgotten to ask the three old men the road to
+ Bethlehem, and they travelled so far through the night that she could not
+ overtake them. Up and down the road she hurried, through woods and fields
+ and towns, saying to whomsoever she met: "I go to find the Christ-Child.
+ Where does He lie? I bring some pretty toys for His sake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no one could tell her the way to go, and they all said: "Farther on,
+ Babouscka, farther on." So she travelled on and on and on for years and
+ years&mdash;but she never found the little Christ-Child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They say that old Babouscka is travelling still, looking for Him. When it
+ comes Christmas Eve, and the children are lying fast asleep, Babouscka
+ comes softly through the snowy fields and towns, wrapped in her long cloak
+ and carrying her basket on her arm. With her staff she raps gently at the
+ doors and goes inside and holds her candle close to the little children's
+ faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is He here?" she asks. "Is the little Christ-Child here?" And then she
+ turns sorrowfully away again, crying: "Farther on, farther on!" But before
+ she leaves she takes a toy from her basket and lays it beside the pillow
+ for a Christmas gift. "For His sake," she says softly, and then hurries on
+ through the years and forever in search of the little Christ-Child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII. CHRISTMAS IN THE BARN*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * From "In the Child's World," by Emilie Poulssen, Milton Bradley Co.,
+ Publishers. Used by permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ F. ARNSTEIN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only two more days and Christmas would be here! It had been snowing hard,
+ and Johnny was standing at the window, looking at the soft, white snow
+ which covered the ground half a foot deep. Presently he heard the noise of
+ wheels coming up the road, and a wagon turned in at the gate and came past
+ the window. Johnny was very curious to know what the wagon could be
+ bringing. He pressed his little nose close to the cold window pane, and to
+ his great surprise, saw two large Christmas-trees. Johnny wondered why
+ there were TWO trees, and turned quickly to run and tell mamma all about
+ it; but then remembered that mamma was not at home. She had gone to the
+ city to buy some Christmas presents and would not return until quite late.
+ Johnny began to feel that his toes and fingers had grown quite cold from
+ standing at the window so long; so he drew his own little chair up to the
+ cheerful grate fire and sat there quietly thinking. Pussy, who had been
+ curled up like a little bundle of wool, in the very warmest corner, jumped
+ up, and, going to Johnny, rubbed her head against his knee to attract his
+ attention. He patted her gently and began to talk to her about what was in
+ his thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been puzzling over the TWO trees which had come, and at last had
+ made up his mind about them. "I know now, Pussy," said he, "why there are
+ two trees. This morning when I kissed Papa good-bye at the gate he said he
+ was going to buy one for me, and mamma, who was busy in the house, did not
+ hear him say so; and I am sure she must have bought the other. But what
+ shall we do with two Christmas-trees?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pussy jumped into his lap and purred and purred. A plan suddenly flashed
+ into Johnny's mind. "Would you like to have one, Pussy?" Pussy purred more
+ loudly, and it seemed almost as though she had said yes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh! I will, I will! if mamma will let me. I'll have a Christmas-tree out
+ in the bam for you, Pussy, and for all the pets; and then you'll all be as
+ happy as I shall be with my tree in the parlour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time it had grown quite late. There was a ring at the door-bell;
+ and quick as a flash Johnny ran, with happy, smiling face, to meet papa
+ and mamma and gave them each a loving kiss. During the evening he told
+ them all that he had done that day and also about the two big trees which
+ the man had brought. It was just as Johnny had thought. Papa and mamma had
+ each bought one, and as it was so near Christmas they thought they would
+ not send either of them back. Johnny was very glad of this, and told them
+ of the happy plan he had made and asked if he might have the extra tree.
+ Papa and mamma smiled a little as Johnny explained his plan but they said
+ he might have the tree, and Johnny went to bed feeling very happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night his papa fastened the tree into a block of wood so that it
+ would stand firmly and then set it in the middle of the barn floor. The
+ next day when Johnny had finished his lessons he went to the kitchen, and
+ asked Annie, the cook, if she would save the bones and potato parings and
+ all other leavings from the day's meals and give them to him the following
+ morning. He also begged her to give him several cupfuls of salt and
+ cornmeal, which she did, putting them in paper bags for him. Then she gave
+ him the dishes he asked for&mdash;a few chipped ones not good enough to be
+ used at table&mdash;and an old wooden bowl. Annie wanted to know what
+ Johnny intended to do with all these things, but he only said: "Wait until
+ to-morrow, then you shall see." He gathered up all the things which the
+ cook had given him and carried them to the barn, placing them on a shelf
+ in one corner, where he was sure no one would touch them and where they
+ would be all ready for him to use the next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christmas morning came, and, as soon as he could, Johnny hurried out to
+ the barn, where stood the Christmas-tree which he was going to trim for
+ all his pets. The first thing he did was to get a paper bag of oats; this
+ he tied to one of the branches of the tree, for Brownie the mare. Then he
+ made up several bundles of hay and tied these on the other side of the
+ tree, not quite so high up, where White Face, the cow, could reach them;
+ and on the lowest branches some more hay for Spotty, the calf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next Johnny hurried to the kitchen to get the things Annie had promised to
+ save for him. She had plenty to give. With his arms and hands full he went
+ back to the barn. He found three "lovely" bones with plenty of meat on
+ them; these he tied together to another branch of the tree, for Rover, his
+ big black dog. Under the tree he placed the big wooden bowl, and filled it
+ well with potato parings, rice, and meat, left from yesterday's dinner;
+ this was the "full and tempting trough" for Piggywig. Near this he placed
+ a bowl of milk for Pussy, on one plate the salt for the pet lamb, and on
+ another the cornmeal for the dear little chickens. On the top of the tree
+ he tied a basket of nuts; these were for his pet squirrel; and I had
+ almost forgotten to tell you of the bunch of carrots tied very low down
+ where soft white Bunny could reach them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all was done, Johnny stood off a little way to look at this wonderful
+ Christmas-tree. Clapping his hands with delight, he ran to call papa and
+ mamma and Annie, and they laughed aloud when they saw what he had done. It
+ was the funniest Christmas-tree they had ever seen. They were sure the
+ pets would like the presents Johnny had chosen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there was a busy time in the barn. Papa and mamma and Annie helped
+ about bringing in the animals, and before long, Brownie, White Face,
+ Spotty, Rover, Piggywig, Pussy, Lambkin, the chickens, the squirrel and
+ Bunny, the rabbit, had been led each to his own Christmas breakfast on and
+ under the tree. What a funny sight it was to see them all standing around
+ looking happy and contented, eating and drinking with such an appetite!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While watching them Johnny had another thought, and he ran quickly to the
+ house, and brought out the new trumpet which papa had given him for
+ Christmas. By this time the animals had all finished their breakfast and
+ Johnny gave a little toot on his trumpet as a signal that the tree
+ festival was over. Brownie went, neighing and prancing, to her stall,
+ White Face walked demurely off with a bellow, which Spotty, the calf,
+ running at her heels, tried to imitate; the little lamb skipped bleating
+ away; Piggywig walked off with a grunt; Pussy jumped on the fence with a
+ mew; the squirrel still sat up in the tree cracking her nuts; Bunny hopped
+ to her snug little quarters; while Rover, barking loudly, chased the
+ chickens back to their coop. Such a hubbub of noises! Mamma said it
+ sounded as if they were trying to say "Merry Christmas to you, Johnny!
+ Merry Christmas to all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV. THE PHILANTHROPIST'S CHRISTMAS*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 82.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ JAMES WEBER LINN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you see this committee yesterday, Mr. Mathews?" asked the
+ philanthropist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His secretary looked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You recommend them then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For fifty thousand?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For fifty thousand&mdash;yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their corresponding subscriptions are guaranteed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I went over the list carefully, Mr. Carter. The money is promised, and by
+ responsible people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well," said the philanthropist. "You may notify them, Mr. Mathews,
+ that my fifty thousand will be available as the bills come in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Mr. Carter laid down the letter he had been reading, and took up
+ another. As he perused it his white eyebrows rose in irritation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Mathews!" he snapped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are careless, sir!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I beg your pardon, Mr. Carter?" questioned the secretary, his face
+ flushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman tapped impatiently the letter he held in his hand. "Do
+ you pay no attention, Mr. Mathews, to my rule that NO personal letters
+ containing appeals for aid are to reach me? How do you account for this,
+ may I ask?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I beg your pardon," said the secretary again. "You will see, Mr. Carter,
+ that that letter is dated three weeks ago. I have had the woman's case
+ carefully investigated. She is undoubtedly of good reputation, and
+ undoubtedly in need; and as she speaks of her father as having associated
+ with you, I thought perhaps you would care to see her letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand worthless fellows associated with me," said the old man,
+ harshly. "In a great factory, Mr. Mathews, a boy works alongside of the
+ men he is put with; he does not pick and choose. I dare say this woman is
+ telling the truth. What of it? You know that I regard my money as a public
+ trust. Were my energy, my concentration, to be wasted by innumerable
+ individual assaults, what would become of them? My fortune would slip
+ through my fingers as unprofitably as sand. You understand, Mr. Mathews?
+ Let me see no more individual letters. You know that Mr. Whittemore has
+ full authority to deal with them. May I trouble you to ring? I am going
+ out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man appeared very promptly in answer to the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sniffen, my overcoat," said the philanthropist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is 'ere, sir," answered Sniffen, helping the thin old man into the
+ great fur folds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no word of the dog, I suppose, Sniffen?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None, sir. The police was here again yesterday sir, but they said as 'ow&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The police!" The words were fierce with scorn. "Eight thousand
+ incompetents!" He turned abruptly and went toward the door, where he
+ halted a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Mathews, since that woman's letter did reach me, I suppose I must pay
+ for my carelessness&mdash;or yours. Send her&mdash;what does she say&mdash;four
+ children?&mdash;send her a hundred dollars. But, for my sake, send it
+ anonymously. Write her that I pay no attention to such claims." He went
+ out, and Sniffen closed the door behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Takes losin' the little dog 'ard, don't he?" remarked Sniffen, sadly, to
+ the secretary. "I'm afraid there ain't a chance of findin' 'im now. 'E
+ ain't been stole, nor 'e ain't been found, or they'd 'ave brung him back
+ for the reward. 'E's been knocked on the 'ead, like as not. 'E wasn't much
+ of a dog to look at, you see&mdash;just a pup, I'd call 'im. An' after 'e
+ learned that trick of slippin' 'is collar off&mdash;well, I fancy Mr.
+ Carter's seen the last of 'im. I do, indeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Carter meanwhile was making his way slowly down the snowy avenue, upon
+ his accustomed walk. The walk, however, was dull to-day, for Skiddles, his
+ little terrier, was not with him to add interest and excitement. Mr.
+ Carter had found Skiddles in the country a year and a half before.
+ Skiddles, then a puppy, was at the time in a most undignified and
+ undesirable position, stuck in a drain tile, and unable either to advance
+ or to retreat. Mr. Carter had shoved him forward, after a heroic struggle,
+ whereupon Skiddles had licked his hand. Something in the little dog's eye,
+ or his action, had induced the rich philanthropist to bargain for him and
+ buy him at a cost of half a dollar. Thereafter Skiddles became his daily
+ companion, his chief distraction, and finally the apple of his eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skiddles was of no known parentage, hardly of any known breed, but he
+ suited Mr. Carter. What, the millionaire reflected with a proud cynicism,
+ were his own antecedents, if it came to that? But now Skiddles had
+ disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Sniffen said, he had learned the trick of slipping free from his
+ collar. One morning the great front doors had been left open for two
+ minutes while the hallway was aired. Skiddles must have slipped down the
+ marble steps unseen, and dodged round the corner. At all events, he had
+ vanished, and although the whole police force of the city had been roused
+ to secure his return, it was aroused in vain. And for three weeks,
+ therefore, a small, straight, white bearded man in a fur overcoat had
+ walked in mournful irritation alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood upon a corner uncertainly. One way led to the park, and this he
+ usually took; but to-day he did not want to go to the park&mdash;it was
+ too reminiscent of Skiddles. He looked the other way. Down there, if one
+ went far enough, lay "slums," and Mr. Carter hated the sight of slums;
+ they always made him miserable and discontented. With all his money and
+ his philanthropy, was there still necessity for such misery in the world?
+ Worse still came the intrusive question at times: Had all his money
+ anything to do with the creation of this misery? He owned no tenements; he
+ paid good wages in every factory; he had given sums such as few men have
+ given in the history of philanthropy. Still&mdash;there were the slums.
+ However, the worst slums lay some distance off, and he finally turned his
+ back on the park and walked on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the day before Christmas. You saw it in people's faces; you saw it
+ in the holly wreaths that hung in windows; you saw it, even as you passed
+ the splendid, forbidding houses on the avenue, in the green that here and
+ there banked massive doors; but most of all, you saw it in the shops. Up
+ here the shops were smallish, and chiefly of the provision variety, so
+ there was no bewildering display of gifts; but there were Christmas-trees
+ everywhere, of all sizes. It was astonishing how many people in that
+ neighbourhood seemed to favour the old-fashioned idea of a tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Carter looked at them with his irritation softening. If they made him
+ feel a trifle more lonely, they allowed him to feel also a trifle less
+ responsible&mdash;for, after all, it was a fairly happy world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment he perceived a curious phenomenon a short distance before
+ him&mdash;another Christmas-tree, but one which moved, apparently of its
+ own volition, along the sidewalk. As Mr. Carter overtook it, he saw that
+ it was borne, or dragged, rather by a small boy who wore a bright red
+ flannel cap and mittens of the same peculiar material. As Mr. Carter
+ looked down at him, he looked up at Mr. Carter, and spoke cheerfully:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Goin' my way, mister?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," said the philanthropist, somewhat taken back, "I WAS!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mind draggin' this a little way?" asked the boy, confidently, "my hands
+ is cold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Won't you enjoy it more if you manage to take it home by yourself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it ain't for me!" said the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your employer," said the philanthropist, severely, "is certainly careless
+ if he allows his trees to be delivered in this fashion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I ain't deliverin' it, either," said the boy. "This is Bill's tree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who is Bill?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's a feller with a back that's no good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is he your brother?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. Take the tree a little way, will you, while I warm myself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The philanthropist accepted the burden&mdash;he did not know why. The boy,
+ released, ran forward, jumped up and down, slapped his red flannel mittens
+ on his legs, and then ran back again. After repeating these manoeuvres two
+ or three times, he returned to where the old gentleman stood holding the
+ tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thanks," he said. "Say, mister, you look like Santa Claus yourself,
+ standin' by the tree, with your fur cap and your coat. I bet you don't
+ have to run to keep warm, hey?" There was high admiration in his look.
+ Suddenly his eyes sparkled with an inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say, mister," he cried, "will you do something for me? Come in to Bill's&mdash;he
+ lives only a block from here&mdash;and just let him see you. He's only a
+ kid, and he'll think he's seen Santa Claus, sure. We can tell him you're
+ so busy to-morrow you have to go to lots of places to-day. You won't have
+ to give him anything. We're looking out for all that. Bill got hurt in the
+ summer, and he's been in bed ever since. So we are giving him a Christmas&mdash;tree
+ and all. He gets a bunch of things&mdash;an air gun, and a train that goes
+ around when you wind her up. They're great!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You boys are doing this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, it's our club at the settlement, and of course Miss Gray thought of
+ it, and she's givin' Bill the train. Come along, mister."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mr. Carter declined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right," said the boy. "I guess, what with Pete and all, Bill will
+ have Christmas enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who is Pete?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bill's dog. He's had him three weeks now&mdash;best little pup you ever
+ saw!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dog which Bill had had three weeks&mdash;and in a neighbourhood not a
+ quarter of a mile from the avenue. It was three weeks since Skiddles had
+ disappeared. That this dog was Skiddles was of course most improbable, and
+ yet the philanthropist was ready to grasp at any clue which might lead to
+ the lost terrier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How did Bill get this dog?" he demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I found him myself. Some kids had tin-canned him, and he came into our
+ entry. He licked my hand, and then sat up on his hind legs. Somebody'd
+ taught him that, you know. I thought right away, 'Here's a dog for Bill!'
+ And I took him over there and fed him, and they kept him in Bill's room
+ two or three days, so he shouldn't get scared again and run off; and now
+ he wouldn't leave Bill for anybody. Of course, he ain't much of a dog,
+ Pete ain't," he added "he's just a pup, but he's mighty friendly!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Boy," said Mr. Carter, "I guess I'll just go round and"&mdash;he was
+ about to add, "have a look at that dog," but fearful of raising suspicion,
+ he ended&mdash;"and see Bill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tenements to which the boy led him were of brick, and reasonably
+ clean. Nearly every window showed some sign of Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tree-bearer led the way into a dark hall, up one flight&mdash;Mr.
+ Carter assisting with the tree&mdash;and down another dark hall, to a
+ door, on which he knocked. A woman opened it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's the tree!" said the boy, in a loud whisper. "Is Bill's door shut?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Carter stepped forward out of the darkness. "I beg your pardon,
+ madam," he said. "I met this young man in the street, and he asked me to
+ come here and see a playmate of his who is, I understand, an invalid. But
+ if I am intruding&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come in," said the woman, heartily, throwing the door open. "Bill will be
+ glad to see you, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The philanthropist stepped inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The room was decently furnished and clean. There was a sewing machine in
+ the corner, and in both the windows hung wreaths of holly. Between the
+ windows was a cleared space, where evidently the tree, when decorated, was
+ to stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are all the things here?" eagerly demanded the tree-bearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're all here, Jimmy," answered Mrs. Bailey. "The candy just came."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say," cried the boy, pulling off his red flannel mittens to blow on his
+ fingers, "won't it be great? But now Bill's got to see Santa Claus. I'll
+ just go in and tell him, an' then, when I holler, mister, you come on, and
+ pretend you're Santa Claus." And with incredible celerity the boy opened
+ the door at the opposite end of the room and disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madam," said Mr. Carter, in considerable embarrassment, "I must say one
+ word. I am Mr. Carter, Mr. Allan Carter. You may have heard my name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head. "No, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I live not far from here on the avenue. Three weeks ago I lost a little
+ dog that I valued very much I have had all the city searched since then,
+ in vain. To-day I met the boy who has just left us. He informed me that
+ three weeks ago he found a dog, which is at present in the possession of
+ your son. I wonder&mdash;is it not just possible that this dog may be
+ mine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bailey smiled. "I guess not, Mr. Carter. The dog Jimmy found hadn't
+ come off the avenue&mdash;not from the look of him. You know there's
+ hundreds and hundreds of dogs without homes, sir. But I will say for this
+ one, he has a kind of a way with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark!" said Mr. Carter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a rustling and a snuffing at the door at the far end of the
+ room, a quick scratching of feet. Then:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Woof! woof! woof!" sharp and clear came happy impatient little barks. The
+ philanthropist's eyes brightened. "Yes," he said, "that is the dog."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I doubt if it can be, sir," said Mrs. Bailey, deprecatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Open the door, please," commanded the philanthropist, "and let us see."
+ Mrs. Bailey complied. There was a quick jump, a tumbling rush, and
+ Skiddles, the lost Skiddles, was in the philanthropist's arms. Mrs. Bailey
+ shut the door with a troubled face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see it's your dog, sir," she said, "but I hope you won't be thinking
+ that Jimmy or I&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madam," interrupted Mr. Carter, "I could not be so foolish. On the
+ contrary, I owe you a thousand thanks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bailey looked more cheerful. "Poor little Billy!" she said. "It'll
+ come hard on him, losing Pete just at Christmas time. But the boys are so
+ good to him, I dare say he'll forget it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who are these boys?" inquired the philanthropist. "Isn't their action&mdash;somewhat
+ unusual?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's Miss Gray's club at the settlement, sir," explained Mrs. Bailey.
+ "Every Christmas they do this for somebody. It's not charity; Billy and I
+ don't need charity, or take it. It's just friendliness. They're good
+ boys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see," said the philanthropist. He was still wondering about it, though,
+ when the door opened again, and Jimmy thrust out a face shining with
+ anticipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All ready, mister!" he said. "Bill's waitin' for you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jimmy," began Mrs. Bailey, about to explain, "the gentleman&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the philanthropist held up his hand, interrupting her. "You'll let me
+ see your son, Mrs. Bailey?" he asked, gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, certainly, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Carter put Skiddles down and walked slowly into the inner room. The
+ bed stood with its side toward him. On it lay a small boy of seven, rigid
+ of body, but with his arms free and his face lighted with joy. "Hello,
+ Santa Claus!" he piped, in a voice shrill with excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hello, Bill!" answered the philanthropist, sedately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy turned his eyes on Jimmy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He knows my name," he said, with glee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He knows everybody's name," said Jimmy. "Now you tell him what you want,
+ Bill, and he'll bring it to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How would you like," said the philanthropist, reflectively, "an&mdash;an&mdash;"
+ he hesitated, it seemed so incongruous with that stiff figure on the bed&mdash;"an
+ airgun?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess yes," said Bill, happily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And a train of cars," broke in the impatient Jimmy, "that goes like sixty
+ when you wind her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hi!" said Bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The philanthropist solemnly made notes of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How about," he remarked, inquiringly, "a tree?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honest?" said Bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it can be managed," said Santa Claus. He advanced to the bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm glad to have seen you, Bill. You know how busy I am, but I hope&mdash;I
+ hope to see you again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not till next year, of course," warned Jimmy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not till then, of course," assented Santa Claus. "And now, good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You forgot to ask him if he'd been a good boy," suggested Jimmy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have," said Bill. "I've been fine. You ask mother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She gives you&mdash;she gives you both a high character," said Santa
+ Claus. "Good-bye again," and so saying he withdrew. Skiddles followed him
+ out. The philanthropist closed the door of the bedroom, and then turned to
+ Mrs. Bailey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was regarding him with awestruck eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, sir," she said, "I know now who you are&mdash;the Mr. Carter that
+ gives so much away to people!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The philanthropist nodded, deprecatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just so, Mrs. Bailey," he said. "And there is one gift&mdash;or loan
+ rather&mdash;which I should like to make to you. I should like to leave
+ the little dog with you till after the holidays. I'm afraid I'll have to
+ claim him then; but if you'll keep him till after Christmas&mdash;and let
+ me find, perhaps, another dog for Billy&mdash;I shall be much obliged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the door of the bedroom opened, and Jimmy emerged quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bill wants the pup," he explained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pete! Pete!" came the piping but happy voice from the inner room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skiddles hesitated. Mr. Carter made no sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pete! Pete!" shrilled the voice again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly, very slowly, Skiddles turned and went back into the bedroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see," said Mr. Carter, smiling, "he won't be too unhappy away from
+ me, Mrs. Bailey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way home the philanthropist saw even more evidences of Christmas
+ gaiety along the streets than before. He stepped out briskly, in spite of
+ his sixty-eight years; he even hummed a little tune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he reached the house on the avenue he found his secretary still at
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, by the way, Mr. Mathews," he said, "did you send that letter to the
+ woman, saying I never paid attention to personal appeals? No? Then write
+ her, please, enclosing my check for two hundred dollars, and wish her a
+ very Merry Christmas in my name, will you? And hereafter will you always
+ let me see such letters as that one&mdash;of course after careful
+ investigation? I fancy perhaps I may have been too rigid in the past."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, sir," answered the bewildered secretary. He began fumbling
+ excitedly for his note-book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I found the little dog," continued the philanthropist. "You will be glad
+ to know that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have found him?" cried the secretary. "Have you got him back, Mr.
+ Carter? Where was he?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was&mdash;detained&mdash;on Oak Street, I believe," said the
+ philanthropist. "No, I have not got him back yet. I have left him with a
+ young boy till after the holidays."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He settled himself to his papers, for philanthropists must toil even on
+ the twenty-fourth of December, but the secretary shook his head in a daze.
+ "I wonder what's happened?" he said to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV. THE FIRST CHRISTMAS-TREE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ BY LUCY WHEELOCK
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Two little children were sitting by the fire one cold winter's night. All
+ at once they heard a timid knock at the door and one ran to open it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, outside in the cold and darkness, stood a child with no shoes upon
+ his feet and clad in thin, ragged garments. He was shivering with cold,
+ and he asked to come in and warm himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, come in," cried both the children. "You shall have our place by the
+ fire. Come in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They drew the little stranger to their warm seat and shared their supper
+ with him, and gave him their bed, while they slept on a hard bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the night they were awakened by strains of sweet music, and looking
+ out, they saw a band of children in shining garments, approaching the
+ house. They were playing on golden harps and the air was full of melody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the Strange Child stood before them: no longer cold and ragged,
+ but clad in silvery light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His soft voice said: "I was cold and you took Me in. I was hungry and you
+ fed Me. I was tired and you gave Me your bed. I am the Christ-Child,
+ wandering through the world to bring peace and happiness to all good
+ children. As you have given to Me, so may this tree every year give rich
+ fruit to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, He broke a branch from the fir-tree that grew near the door,
+ and He planted it in the ground and disappeared. And the branch grew into
+ a great tree, and every year it bore wonderful fruit for the kind
+ children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI. THE FIRST NEW ENGLAND CHRISTMAS*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From Stone and Fickett's "Every Day Life in the Colonies;" copyrighted
+ 1905, by D. C. Heath &amp; Co. Used by permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ G. L. STONE AND M. G. FICKETT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a warm and pleasant Saturday&mdash;that twenty-third of December,
+ 1620. The winter wind had blown itself away in the storm of the day
+ before, and the air was clear and balmy. The people on board the Mayflower
+ were glad of the pleasant day. It was three long months since they had
+ started from Plymouth, in England, to seek a home across the ocean. Now
+ they had come into a harbour that they named New Plymouth, in the country
+ of New England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other people called these voyagers Pilgrims, which means wanderers. A long
+ while before, the Pilgrims had lived in England; later they made their
+ home with the Dutch in Holland; finally they had said goodbye to their
+ friends in Holland and in England, and had sailed away to America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were only one hundred and two of the Pilgrims on the Mayflower, but
+ they were brave and strong and full of hope. Now the Mayflower was the
+ only home they had; yet if this weather lasted they might soon have warm
+ log-cabins to live in. This very afternoon the men had gone ashore to cut
+ down the large trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women of the Mayflower were busy, too. Some were spinning, some
+ knitting, some sewing. It was so bright and pleasant that Mistress Rose
+ Standish had taken out her knitting and had gone to sit a little while on
+ deck. She was too weak to face rough weather, and she wanted to enjoy the
+ warm sunshine and the clear salt air. By her side was Mistress Brewster,
+ the minister's wife. Everybody loved Mistress Standish and Mistress
+ Brewster, for neither of them ever spoke unkindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The air on deck would have been warm even on a colder day, for in one
+ corner a bright fire was burning. It would seem strange now, would it not,
+ to see a fire on the deck of a vessel? But in those days, when the weather
+ was pleasant, people on shipboard did their cooking on deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pilgrims had no stoves, and Mistress Carver's maid had built this fire
+ on a large hearth covered with sand. She had hung a great kettle on the
+ crane over the fire, where the onion soup for supper was now simmering
+ slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near the fire sat a little girl, busily playing and singing to herself.
+ Little Remember Allerton was only six years old, but she liked to be with
+ Hannah, Mistress Carver's maid. This afternoon Remember had been watching
+ Hannah build the fire and make the soup. Now the little girl was playing
+ with the Indian arrowheads her father had brought her the night before.
+ She was singing the words of the old psalm:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shout to Jehovah, all the earth, Serve ye Jehovah with gladness; before
+ Him bow with singing mirth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, child, methinks the children of Old England are singing different
+ words from those to-day," spoke Hannah at length, with a faraway look in
+ her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Hannah? What songs are the little English children singing now?"
+ questioned Remember in surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It lacks but two days of Christmas, child, and in my old home everybody
+ is singing Merry Christmas songs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But thou hast not told me what is Christmas!' persisted the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, me! Thou dost not know, 'tis true. Christmas, Remember, is the
+ birthday of the Christ-Child, of Jesus, whom thou hast learned to love,"
+ Hannah answered softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what makes the English children so happy then? And we are English,
+ thou hast told me, Hannah. Why don't we keep Christmas, too?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In sooth we are English, child. But the reason why we do not sing the
+ Christmas carols or play the Christmas games makes a long, long story,
+ Remember. Hannah cannot tell it so that little children will understand.
+ Thou must ask some other, child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hannah and the little girl were just then near the two women on the deck,
+ and Remember said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mistress Brewster, Hannah sayeth she knoweth not how to tell why Love and
+ Wrestling and Constance and the others do not sing the Christmas songs or
+ play the Christmas games. But thou wilt tell me wilt thou not?" she added
+ coaxingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sad look came into Mistress Brewster's eyes, and Mistress Standish
+ looked grave, too. No one spoke for a few seconds, until Hannah said
+ almost sharply:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why could we not burn a Yule log Monday, and make some meal into little
+ cakes for the children?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Hannah," answered the gentle voice of Mistress Brewster. "Such are
+ but vain shows and not for those of us who believe in holier things. But,"
+ she added, with a kind glance at little Remember, "wouldst thou like to
+ know why we have left Old England and do not keep the Christmas Day? Thou
+ canst not understand it all, child, and yet it may do thee no harm to hear
+ the story. It may help thee to be a brave and happy little girl in the
+ midst of our hard life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely it can do no harm, Mistress Brewster," spoke Rose Standish,
+ gently. "Remember is a little Pilgrim now, and she ought, methinks, to
+ know something of the reason for our wandering. Come here, child, and sit
+ by me, while good Mistress Brewster tells thee how cruel men have made us
+ suffer. Then will I sing thee one of the Christmas carols."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words she held out her hands to little Remember, who ran
+ quickly to the side of Mistress Standish, and eagerly waited for the story
+ to begin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have not always lived in Holland, Remember. Most of us were born in
+ England, and England is the best country in the world. 'Tis a land to be
+ proud of, Remember, though some of its rulers have been wicked and cruel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Long before you were born, when your mother was a little girl, the
+ English king said that everybody in the land ought to think as he thought,
+ and go to a church like his. He said he would send us away from England if
+ we did not do as he ordered. Now, we could not think as he did on holy
+ matters, and it seemed wrong to us to obey him. So we decided to go to a
+ country where we might worship as we pleased."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What became of that cruel king, Mistress Brewster?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He ruleth England now. But thou must not think too hardly of him. He doth
+ not understand, perhaps. Right will win some day, Remember, though there
+ may be bloody war before peace cometh. And I thank God that we, at least,
+ shall not be called on to live in the midst of the strife," she went on,
+ speaking more to herself than to the little girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We decided to go to Holland, out of the reach of the king. We were not
+ sure whether it was best to move or not, but our hearts were set on God's
+ ways. We trusted Him in whom we believed. Yes," she went on, "and shall we
+ not keep on trusting Him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Rose Standish, remembering the little stock of food that was nearly
+ gone, the disease that had come upon many of their number, and the five
+ who had died that month, answered firmly: "Yes. He who has led us thus far
+ will not leave us now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were all silent a few seconds. Presently Remember said: "Then did ye
+ go to Holland, Mistress Brewster?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," she said. "Our people all went over to Holland, where the Dutch
+ folk live and the little Dutch children clatter about with their wooden
+ shoes. There thou wast born, Remember, and my own children, and there we
+ lived in love and peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet, we were not wholly happy. We could not talk well with the Dutch,
+ and so we could not set right what was wrong among them. 'Twas so hard to
+ earn money that many had to go back to England. And worst of all,
+ Remember, we were afraid that you and little Bartholomew and Mary and Love
+ and Wrestling and all the rest would not grow to be good girls and boys.
+ And so we have come to this new country to teach our children to be pure
+ and noble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After another silence Remember spoke again: "I thank thee, Mistress
+ Brewster. And I will try to be a good girl. But thou didst not tell me
+ about Christmas after all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, child, but now I will. There are long services on that day in every
+ church where the king's friends go. But there are parts of these services
+ which we cannot approve; and so we think it best not to follow the other
+ customs that the king's friends observe on Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They trim their houses with mistletoe and holly so that everything looks
+ gay and cheerful. Their other name for the Christmas time is the Yuletide,
+ and the big log that is burned then is called the Yule log. The children
+ like to sit around the hearth in front of the great, blazing Yule log, and
+ listen to stories of long, long ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At Christmas there are great feasts in England, too. No one is allowed to
+ go hungry, for the rich people on the day always send meat and cakes to
+ the poor folk round about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we like to make all our days Christmas days, Remember. We try never
+ to forget God's gifts to us, and they remind us always to be good to other
+ people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the Christmas carols, Mistress Standish? What are they?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On Christmas Eve and early on Christmas morning," Rose Standish answered,
+ "little children go about from house to house, singing Christmas songs.
+ 'Tis what I like best in all the Christmas cheer. And I promised to sing
+ thee one, did I not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Mistress Standish sang in her dear, sweet voice the quaint old
+ English words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As Joseph was a-walking,
+ He heard an angel sing:
+ "This night shall be the birth-time
+ Of Christ, the heavenly King.
+
+ "He neither shall be born
+ In housen nor in hall,
+ Nor in the place of Paradise,
+ But in an ox's stall.
+
+ "He neither shall be clothed
+ In purple nor in pall,
+ But in the fair white linen
+ That usen babies all.
+
+ "He neither shall be rocked
+ In silver nor in gold,
+ But in a wooden manger
+ That resteth in the mould."
+
+ As Joseph was a-walking
+ There did an angel sing,
+ And Mary's child at midnight
+ Was born to be our King.
+
+ Then be ye glad, good people,
+ This night of all the year,
+ And light ye up your candles,
+ For His star it shineth clear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before the song was over, Hannah had come on deck again, and was listening
+ eagerly. "I thank thee, Mistress Standish," she said, the tears filling
+ her blue eyes. "'Tis long, indeed, since I have heard that song."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would it be wrong for me to learn to sing those words, Mistress
+ Standish?" gently questioned the little girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Remember, I trow not. The song shall be thy Christmas gift."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Mistress Standish taught the little girl one verse after another of
+ the sweet old carol, and it was not long before Remember could say it all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day was dull and cold, and on Monday, the twenty-fifth, the sky
+ was still overcast. There was no bright Yule log in the Mayflower, and no
+ holly trimmed the little cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pilgrims were true to the faith they loved. They held no special
+ service. They made no gifts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead, they went again to the work of cutting the trees, and no one
+ murmured at his hard lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We went on shore," one man wrote in his diary, "some to fell timber, some
+ to saw, some to rive, and some to carry; so no man rested all that day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for little Remember, she spent the day on board the Mayflower. She
+ heard no one speak of England or sigh for the English home across the sea.
+ But she did not forget Mistress Brewster's story; and more than once that
+ day, as she was playing by herself, she fancied that she was in front of
+ some English home, helping the English children sing their Christmas
+ songs. And both Mistress Allerton and Mistress Standish, whom God was soon
+ to call away from their earthly home, felt happier and stronger as they
+ heard the little girl singing:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He neither shall be born
+ In housen nor in hall,
+ Nor in the place of Paradise,
+ But in an ox's stall.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVII. THE CRATCHITS' CHRISTMAS DINNER
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ (Adapted)
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ CHARLES DICKENS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Present stood in the city streets on
+ Christmas morning, where (for the weather was severe) the people made a
+ rough but brisk and not unpleasant kind of music, in scraping the snow
+ from the pavement in front of their dwellings, and from the tops of their
+ houses, whence it was mad delight to the boys to see it come plumping down
+ into the road below, and splitting into artificial little snowstorms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house fronts looked black enough, and the windows blacker, contrasting
+ with the smooth white sheet of snow upon the roofs, and with the dirtier
+ snow upon the ground, which last deposit had been ploughed up in deep
+ furrows by the heavy wheels of carts and wagons; furrows that crossed and
+ recrossed each other hundreds of times where the great streets branched
+ off, and made intricate channels, hard to trace, in the thick yellow mud
+ and icy water. The sky was gloomy, and the shortest streets were choked up
+ with a dingy mist, half thawed, half frozen, whose heavier particles
+ descended in a shower of sooty atoms, as if all the chimneys in Great
+ Britain had, by one consent, caught fire, and were blazing away to their
+ dear heart's content. There was nothing very cheerful in the climate or
+ the town, and yet was there an air of cheerfulness abroad that the dearest
+ summer air and brightest summer sun might have endeavoured to diffuse in
+ vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the people who were shovelling away on the housetops were jovial and
+ full of glee, calling out to one another from the parapets, and now and
+ then exchanging a facetious snowball&mdash;better-natured missile far than
+ many a wordy jest&mdash;laughing heartily if it went right, and not less
+ heartily if it went wrong. The poulterers' shops were still half open, and
+ the fruiterers' were radiant in their glory. There were great, round,
+ potbellied baskets of chestnuts, shaped like the waistcoats of jolly old
+ gentlemen, lolling at the doors, and tumbling out into the street in their
+ apoplectic opulence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were ruddy, brown-faced, broad-girthed Spanish onions, shining in
+ the fatness of their growth like Spanish friars, and winking, from their
+ shelves, in wanton slyness at the girls as they went by, and glanced
+ demurely at the hung-up mistletoe. There were pears and apples, clustering
+ high in blooming pyramids; there were bunches of grapes, made, in the
+ shop-keeper's benevolence, to dangle from conspicuous hooks, that people's
+ mouths might water gratis as they passed; there were piles of filberts,
+ mossy and brown, recalling, in their fragrance, ancient walks among the
+ woods, and pleasant shufflings ankle deep through withered leaves; there
+ were Norfolk biffins, squab and swarthy, setting off the yellow of the
+ oranges and lemons, and, in the great compactness of their juicy persons,
+ urgently entreating and beseeching to be carried home in paper bags and
+ eaten after dinner. The very gold and silver fish, set forth among these
+ choice fruits in a bowl, though members of a dull and stagnant-blooded
+ race, appeared to know that there was something going on; and, to a fish,
+ went gasping round and round their little world in slow and passionless
+ excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grocers'! oh, the grocers'! nearly closed, with perhaps two shutters
+ down, or one; but through those gaps such glimpses! It was not alone that
+ the scales descending on the counter made a merry sound, or that the twine
+ and roller parted company so briskly, or that the canisters were rattled
+ up and down like juggling tricks, or even that the blended scents of tea
+ and coffee were so grateful to the nose, or even that the raisins were so
+ plentiful and rare, the almonds so extremely white, the sticks of cinnamon
+ so long and straight, the other spices so delicious, the candied fruits so
+ caked and spotted with molten sugar as to make the coldest lookers-on feel
+ faint, and subsequently bilious. Nor was it that the figs were moist and
+ pulpy, or that the French plums blushed in modest tartness from their
+ highly decorated boxes, or that everything was good to eat and in its
+ Christmas dress; but the customers were all so hurried and so eager in the
+ hopeful promise of the day that they tumbled up against each other at the
+ door, crashing their wicker baskets wildly, and left their purchases upon
+ the counter, and came running back to fetch them, and committed hundreds
+ of the like mistakes, in the best humour possible; while the grocer and
+ his people were so frank and fresh that the polished hearts with which
+ they fastened their aprons behind might have been their own, worn outside
+ for general inspection, and for Christmas daws to peck at, if they chose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But soon the steeples called good people all to church and chapel, and
+ away they came, flocking through the streets in their best clothes, and
+ with their gayest faces. And at the same time there emerged from scores of
+ by-streets, lanes, and nameless turnings, innumerable people, carrying
+ their dinners to the bakers' shops. The sight of these poor revellers
+ appeared to interest the Spirit very much, for he stood, with Scrooge
+ beside him, in a baker's doorway, and, taking off the covers as their
+ bearers passed, sprinkled incense on their dinners from his torch. And it
+ was a very uncommon kind of torch, for once or twice when there were angry
+ words between some dinner-carriers who had jostled each other, he shed a
+ few drops of water on them from it, and their good-humour was restored
+ directly. For they said it was a shame to quarrel upon Christmas Day. And
+ so it was! God love it, so it was!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In time the bells ceased, and the bakers were shut up; and yet there was a
+ genial shadowing forth of all these dinners, and the progress of their
+ cooking, in the thawed blotch of wet above each baker's oven, where the
+ pavement smoked as if its stones were cooking too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there a peculiar flavour in what you sprinkle from your torch?" asked
+ Scrooge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is. My own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would it apply to any kind of dinner on this day?" asked Scrooge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To any kindly given. To a poor one most."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why to a poor one most?" asked Scrooge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because it needs it most."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went on, invisible, as they had been before, into the suburbs of the
+ town. It was a remarkable quality of the Ghost (which Scrooge had observed
+ at the baker's) that, notwithstanding his gigantic size, he could
+ accommodate himself to any place with ease; and that he stood beneath a
+ low roof quite as gracefully, and like a supernatural creature, as it was
+ possible he could have done in any lofty hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And perhaps it was the pleasure the good Spirit had in showing off this
+ power of his, or else it was his own kind, generous, hearty nature, and
+ his sympathy with all poor men, that led him straight to Scrooge's
+ clerk's; for there he went, and took Scrooge with him, holding to his
+ robe; and on the threshold of the door the Spirit smiled, and stopped to
+ bless Bob Cratchit's dwelling with the sprinklings of his torch. Think of
+ that! Bob had but fifteen "bob" a week himself; he pocketed on Saturdays
+ but fifteen copies of his Christian name; and yet the Ghost of Christmas
+ Present blessed his four-roomed house!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then up rose Mrs. Cratchit, Cratchit's wife, dressed out but poorly in a
+ twice-turned gown, but brave in ribbons, which are cheap and make a goodly
+ show for sixpence; and she laid the cloth, assisted by Belinda Cratchit,
+ second of her daughters, also brave in ribbons; while Master Peter
+ Cratchit plunged a fork into the saucepan of potatoes, and getting the
+ corners of his monstrous shirt-collar (Bob's private property, conferred
+ upon his son and heir in honour of the day) into his mouth, rejoiced to
+ find himself so gallantly attired, and yearned to show his linen in the
+ fashionable parks. And now two smaller Cratchits, boy and girl, came
+ tearing in, screaming that outside the baker's they had smelt the goose,
+ and known it for their own, and, basking in luxurious thoughts of sage and
+ onion, these young Cratchits danced about the table, and exalted Master
+ Peter Cratchit to the skies, while he (not proud, although his collar
+ nearly choked him) blew the fire, until the slow potatoes, bubbling up,
+ knocked loudly at the saucepan lid to be let out and peeled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What has ever got your precious father, then?" said Mrs. Cratchit. "And
+ your brother, Tiny Tim? And Martha warn't as late last Christmas Day by
+ half an hour!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's Martha, mother!" said a girl, appearing as she spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's Martha, mother!" cried the two young Cratchits. "Hurrah! There's
+ such a goose, Martha!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, bless your heart alive, my dear, how late you are!" said Mrs.
+ Cratchit, kissing her a dozen times, and taking off her shawl and bonnet
+ for her with officious zeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'd a deal of work to finish up last night," replied the girl, "and had
+ to clear away this morning, mother!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, never mind so long as you are come," said Mrs. Cratchit. "Sit ye
+ down before the fire, my dear, and have a warm, Lord bless ye!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no! There's father coming!" cried the two young Cratchits, who were
+ everywhere at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hide, Martha, hide!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Martha hid herself, and in came little Bob, the father, with at least
+ three feet of comforter, exclusive of the fringe, hanging down before him,
+ and his threadbare clothes darned up and brushed, to look seasonable; and
+ Tiny Tim upon his shoulder. Alas for Tiny Tim, he bore a little crutch,
+ and had his limbs supported by an iron frame!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, where's our Martha?" cried Bob Cratchit, looking around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not coming," said Mrs. Cratchit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not coming?" said Bob, with a sudden declension in his high spirits; for
+ he had been Tim's blood horse all the way from the church, and had come
+ home rampant. "Not coming upon Christmas Day?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Martha didn't like to see him disappointed, if it were only in joke; so
+ she came out prematurely from behind the closet door, and ran into his
+ arms, while the two young Cratchits hustled Tiny Tim, and bore him off
+ into the wash-house, that he might hear the pudding singing in the copper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And how did little Tim behave?" asked Mrs. Cratchit, when she had rallied
+ Bob on his credulity, and Bob had hugged his daughter to his heart's
+ content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As good as gold," said Bob, "and better. Somehow he gets thoughtful,
+ sitting by himself so much, and thinks the strangest things you ever
+ heard. He told me, coming home, that he hoped the people saw him in the
+ church, because he was a cripple, and it might be pleasant to them to
+ remember, upon Christmas Day, who made lame beggars walk, and blind men
+ see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bob's voice was tremulous when he told them this, and trembled more when
+ he said that Tiny Tim was growing strong and hearty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His active little crutch was heard upon the floor, and back came Tiny Tim
+ before another word was spoken, escorted by his brother and sister to his
+ stool beside the fire; and while Bob, turning up his cuffs&mdash;as if,
+ poor fellow, they were capable of being made more shabby&mdash;compounded
+ some hot mixture in a jug with gin and lemons, and stirred it round and
+ round, and put it on the hob to simmer, Master Peter and the two
+ ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the goose, with which they soon
+ returned in high procession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of all
+ birds&mdash;a feathered phenomenon, to which a black swan was a matter of
+ course&mdash;and in truth it was something very like it in that house.
+ Mrs. Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little saucepan)
+ hissing hot; Master Peter mashed the potatoes with incredible vigour; Miss
+ Belinda sweetened up the apple-sauce; Martha dusted the hot plates; Bob
+ took Tiny Tim beside him in a tiny corner at the table; the two young
+ Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting themselves, and,
+ mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into their mouths, lest
+ they should shriek for goose before their turn came to be helped. At last
+ the dishes were set on and grace was said. It was succeeded by a
+ breathless pause, as Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly all along the carving
+ knife, prepared to plunge it into the breast; but when she did, and when
+ the long expected gush of stuffing issued forth, one murmur of delight
+ arose all round the board, and even Tiny Tim, excited by the two young
+ Cratchits, beat on the table with the handle of his knife, and feebly
+ cried, "Hurrah!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There never was such a goose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was
+ such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness, were
+ the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by apple-sauce and mashed
+ potatoes, it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family; indeed, as Mrs.
+ Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small atom of a bone upon
+ the dish), they hadn't ate it all at last! Yet every one had had enough,
+ and the youngest Cratchits in particular were steeped in sage and onion to
+ the eyebrows! But now, the plates being changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs.
+ Cratchit left the room alone&mdash;too nervous to bear witnesses&mdash;to
+ take the pudding up, and bring it in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose it should not be done enough? Suppose it should break in turning
+ out? Suppose somebody should have got over the wall of the backyard and
+ stolen it, while they were merry with the goose&mdash;a supposition at
+ which the two young Cratchits became livid! All sorts of horrors were
+ supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hallo! A great deal of steam! The pudding was out of the copper. A smell
+ like a washing-day! That was the cloth. A smell like an eating house and a
+ pastry-cook's next door to each other, with a laundress's next door to
+ that! That was the pudding! In half a minute Mrs. Cratchit entered&mdash;flushed,
+ but smiling proudly&mdash;with the pudding, like a speckled cannon-ball,
+ so hard and firm, blazing in half of half-a-quartern of ignited brandy,
+ and bedight with Christmas holly stuck into the top.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, a wonderful pudding! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly, too, that he
+ regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since their
+ marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that, now the weight was off her mind, she
+ would confess she had her doubts about the quantity of flour. Everybody
+ had something to say about it, but nobody thought or said it was at all a
+ small pudding for a large family. It would have been flat heresy to do so.
+ Any Cratchit would have blushed to hint at such a thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the hearth swept,
+ and the fire made up. The compound in the jug being tasted, and considered
+ perfect, tipples and oranges were put upon the table, and a shovelful of
+ chestnuts on the fire. Then all the Cratchit family drew round the hearth
+ in what Bob Cratchit called a circle, meaning half a one; and at Bob
+ Cratchit's elbow stood the family display of glass&mdash;two tumblers and
+ a custard-cup without a handle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as golden goblets
+ would have done; and Bob served it out with beaming looks, while the
+ chestnuts on the fire sputtered and cracked noisily. Then Bob proposed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which all the family reechoed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim, the last of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVIII. CHRISTMAS IN SEVENTEEN SEVENTY-SIX*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ *From "A Last Century Maid and Other Stories for Children," by A.H.W.
+ Lippincott, 1895.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ANNE HOLLINGSWORTH WHARTON
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "On Christmas day in Seventy-six,
+ Our gallant troops with bayonets fixed,
+ To Trenton marched away."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Children, have any of you ever thought of what little people like you were
+ doing in this country more than a hundred years ago, when the cruel tide
+ of war swept over its bosom? From many homes the fathers were absent,
+ fighting bravely for the liberty which we now enjoy, while the mothers no
+ less valiantly struggled against hardships and discomforts in order to
+ keep a home for their children, whom you only know as your
+ great-grandfathers and great-grandmothers, dignified gentlemen and
+ beautiful ladies, whose painted portraits hang upon the walls in some of
+ your homes. Merry, romping children they were in those far-off times, yet
+ their bright faces must have looked grave sometimes, when they heard the
+ grown people talk of the great things that were happening around them.
+ Some of these little people never forgot the wonderful events of which
+ they heard, and afterward related them to their children and
+ grandchildren, which accounts for some of the interesting stories which
+ you may still hear, if you are good children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christmas story that I have to tell you is about a boy and girl who
+ lived in Bordentown, New Jersey. The father of these children was a
+ soldier in General Washington's army, which was encamped a few miles north
+ of Trenton, on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River. Bordentown, as
+ you can see by looking on your map, if you have not hidden them all away
+ for the holidays, is about seven miles south of Trenton, where fifteen
+ hundred Hessians and a troop of British light horse were holding the town.
+ Thus you see that the British, in force, were between Washington's army
+ and Bordentown, besides which there were some British and Hessian troops
+ in the very town. All this seriously interfered with Captain Tracy's going
+ home to eat his Christmas dinner with his wife and children. Kitty and
+ Harry Tracy, who had not lived long enough to see many wars, could not
+ imagine such a thing as Christmas without their father, and had busied
+ themselves for weeks in making everything ready to have a merry time with
+ him. Kitty, who loved to play quite as much as any frolicsome Kitty of
+ to-day, had spent all her spare time in knitting a pair of thick woollen
+ stockings, which seems a wonderful feat for a little girl only eight years
+ old to perform! Can you not see her sitting by the great chimney-place,
+ filled with its roaring, crackling logs, in her quaint, short-waisted
+ dress, knitting away steadily, and puckering up her rosy, dimpled face
+ over the strange twists and turns of that old stocking? I can see her, and
+ I can also hear her sweet voice as she chatters away to her mother about
+ "how 'sprised papa will be to find that his little girl can knit like a
+ grown-up woman," while Harry spreads out on the hearth a goodly store of
+ shellbarks that he has gathered and is keeping for his share of the
+ 'sprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What if he shouldn't come?" asks Harry, suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, he'll come! Papa never stays away on Christmas," says Kitty, looking
+ up into her mother's face for an echo to her words. Instead she sees
+ something very like tears in her mother's eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, mamma, don't you think he'll come?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He will come if he possibly can," says Mrs. Tracy; "and if he cannot, we
+ will keep Christmas whenever dear papa does come home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It won't be half so nice," said Kitty, "nothing's so nice as REALLY
+ Christmas, and how's Kriss Kringle going to know about it if we change the
+ day?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll let him come just the same, and if he brings anything for papa we
+ can put it away for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plan, still, seemed a poor one to Miss Kitty, who went to her bed in
+ a sober mood that night, and was heard telling her dear dollie, Martha
+ Washington, that "wars were mis'able, and that when she married she should
+ have a man who kept a candy-shop for a husband, and not a soldier&mdash;no,
+ Martha, not even if he's as nice as papa!" As Martha made no objection to
+ this little arrangement, being an obedient child, they were both soon fast
+ asleep. The days of that cold winter of 1776 wore on; so cold it was that
+ the sufferings of the soldiers were great, their bleeding feet often
+ leaving marks on the pure white snow over which they marched. As Christmas
+ drew near there was a feeling among the patriots that some blow was about
+ to be struck; but what it was, and from whence they knew not; and, better
+ than all, the British had no idea that any strong blow could come from
+ Washington's army, weak and out of heart, as they thought, after being
+ chased through Jersey by Cornwallis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Tracy looked anxiously each day for news of the husband and father
+ only a few miles away, yet so separated by the river and the enemy's
+ troops that they seemed like a hundred. Christmas Eve came, but brought
+ with it few rejoicings. The hearts of the people were too sad to be taken
+ up with merrymaking, although the Hessian soldiers in the town,
+ good-natured Germans, who only fought the Americans because they were paid
+ for it, gave themselves up to the feasting and revelry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall we hang up our stockings?" asked Kitty, in rather a doleful voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said her mother, "Santa Claus won't forget you, I am sure, although
+ he has been kept pretty busy looking after the soldiers this winter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which side is he on?" asked Harry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The right side, of course," said Mrs. Tracy, which was the most sensible
+ answer she could possibly have given. So:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, In hopes that St.
+ Nicholas soon would be there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two little rosy faces lay fast asleep upon the pillow when the good old
+ soul came dashing over the roof about one o'clock, and after filling each
+ stocking with red apples, and leaving a cornucopia of sugar-plums for each
+ child, he turned for a moment to look at the sleeping faces, for St.
+ Nicholas has a tender spot in his great big heart for a soldier's
+ children. Then, remembering many other small folks waiting for him all
+ over the land, he sprang up the chimney and was away in a trice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Santa Claus, in the form of Mrs. Tracy's farmer brother, brought her a
+ splendid turkey; but because the Hessians were uncommonly fond of turkey,
+ it came hidden under a load of wood. Harry was very fond of turkey, too,
+ as well as of all other good things; but when his mother said, "It's such
+ a fine bird, it seems too bad to eat it without father," Harry cried out,
+ "Yes, keep it for papa!" and Kitty, joining in the chorus, the vote was
+ unanimous, and the turkey was hung away to await the return of the good
+ soldier, although it seemed strange, as Kitty told Martha Washington, "to
+ have no papa and no turkey on Christmas Day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day passed and night came, cold with a steady fall of rain and sleet.
+ Kitty prayed that her "dear papa might not be out in the storm, and that
+ he might come home and wear his beautiful blue stockings"; "And eat his
+ turkey," said Harry's sleepy voice; after which they were soon in the land
+ of dreams. Toward morning the good people in Bordentown were suddenly
+ aroused by firing in the distance, which became more and more distinct as
+ the day wore on. There was great excitement in the town; men and women
+ gathered together in little groups in the streets to wonder what it was
+ all about, and neighbours came dropping into Mrs. Tracy's parlour, all day
+ long, one after the other, to say what they thought of the firing. In the
+ evening there came a body of Hessians flying into the town, to say that
+ General Washington had surprised the British at Trenton, early that
+ morning, and completely routed them, which so frightened the Hessians in
+ Bordentown that they left without the slightest ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a joyful hour to the good town people when the red-jackets turned
+ their backs on them, thinking every moment that the patriot army would be
+ after them. Indeed, it seemed as if wonders would never cease that day,
+ for while rejoicings were still loud, over the departure of the enemy,
+ there came a knock at Mrs. Tracy's door, and while she was wondering
+ whether she dared open it, it was pushed ajar, and a tall soldier entered.
+ What a scream of delight greeted that soldier, and how Kitty and Harry
+ danced about him and clung to his knees, while Mrs. Tracy drew him toward
+ the warm blaze, and helped him off with his damp cloak!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold and tired Captain Tracy was, after a night's march in the streets and
+ a day's fighting; but he was not too weary to smile at the dear faces
+ around him, or to pat Kitty's head when she brought his warm stockings and
+ would put them on the tired feet, herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly there was a sharp, quick bark outside the door. "What's that?"
+ cried Harry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I forgot. Open the door. Here, Fido, Fido!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into the room there sprang a beautiful little King Charles spaniel, white,
+ with tan spots, and ears of the longest, softest, and silkiest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a little dear!" exclaimed Kitty; "where did it come from?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the battle of Trenton," said her father. "His poor master was shot.
+ After the red-coats had turned their backs, and I was hurrying along one
+ of the streets where the fight had been the fiercest, I heard a low groan,
+ and, turning, saw a British officer lying among a number of slain. I
+ raised his head; he begged for some water, which I brought him, and
+ bending down my ear I heard him whisper, 'Dying&mdash;last battle&mdash;say
+ a prayer.' He tried to follow me in the words of a prayer, and then,
+ taking my hand, laid it on something soft and warm, nestling close up to
+ his breast&mdash;it was this little dog. The gentleman&mdash;for he was a
+ real gentleman&mdash;gasped out, 'Take care of my poor Fido; good-night,'
+ and was gone. It was as much as I could do to get the little creature away
+ from his dead master; he clung to him as if he loved him better than life.
+ You'll take care of him, won't you, children? I brought him home to you,
+ for a Christmas present."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pretty little Fido," said Kitty, taking the soft, curly creature in her
+ arms; "I think it's the best present in the world, and to-morrow is to be
+ real Christmas, because you are home, papa."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And we'll eat the turkey," said Harry, "and shellbarks, lots of them,
+ that I saved for you. What a good time we'll have! And oh, papa, don't go
+ to war any more, but stay at home, with mother and Kitty and Fido and me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What would become of our country if we should all do that, my little man?
+ It was a good day's work that we did this Christmas, getting the army all
+ across the river so quickly and quietly that we surprised the enemy, and
+ gained a victory, with the loss of few men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it was that some of the good people of 1776 spent their Christmas,
+ that their children and grandchildren might spend many of them as citizens
+ of a free nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIX. CHRISTMAS UNDER THE SNOW*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ *From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co., 1904.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was just before Christmas, and Mr. Barnes was starting for the nearest
+ village. The family were out at the door to see him start, and give him
+ the last charges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't forget the Christmas dinner, papa," said Willie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Specially the chickens for the pie!" put in Nora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An' the waisins," piped up little Tot, standing on tiptoe to give papa a
+ good-bye kiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hate to have you go, George," said Mrs. Barnes anxiously. "It looks to
+ me like a storm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I guess it won't be much," said Mr. Barnes lightly; "and the
+ youngsters must have their Christmas dinner, you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Mrs. Barnes, "remember this, George: if there is a bad storm
+ don't try to come back. Stay in the village till it is over. We can get
+ along alone for a few days, can't we, Willie?" turning to the boy who was
+ giving the last touches to the harness of old Tim, the horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes! Papa, I can take care of mamma," said Willie earnestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And get up the Christmas dinner out of nothing?" asked papa, smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know," said Willie, hesitating, as he remembered the proposed
+ dinner, in which he felt a deep interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What could you do for the chicken pie?" went on papa with a roguish look
+ in his eye, "or the plum-pudding?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or the waisins?" broke in Tot anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tot has set her heart on the raisins," said papa, tossing the small
+ maiden up higher than his head, and dropping her all laughing on the
+ door-step, "and Tot shall have them sure, if papa can find them in S&mdash;.
+ Now good-bye, all! Willie, remember to take care of mamma, and I depend on
+ you to get up a Christmas dinner if I don't get back. Now, wife, don't
+ worry!" were his last words as the faithful old horse started down the
+ road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Barnes turned one more glance to the west, where a low, heavy bank of
+ clouds was slowly rising, and went into the little house to attend to her
+ morning duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Willie," she said, when they were all in the snug little log-cabin in
+ which they lived, "I'm sure there's going to be a storm, and it may be
+ snow. You had better prepare enough wood for two or three days; Nora will
+ help bring it in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Me, too!" said grave little Tot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Tot may help too," said mamma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This simple little home was a busy place, and soon every one was hard at
+ work. It was late in the afternoon before the pile of wood, which had been
+ steadily growing all day, was high enough to satisfy Willie, for now there
+ was no doubt about the coming storm, and it would probably bring snow; no
+ one could guess how much, in that country of heavy storms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish the village was not so far off, so that papa could get back
+ to-night," said Willie, as he came in with his last load.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Barnes glanced out of the window. Broad scattering snowflakes were
+ silently falling; the advance guard, she felt them to be, of a numerous
+ host.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So do I," she replied anxiously, "or that he did not have to come over
+ that dreadful prairie, where it is so easy to get lost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But old Tim knows the way, even in the dark," said Willie proudly. "I
+ believe Tim knows more'n some folks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt he does, about the way home," said mamma, "and we won't worry
+ about papa, but have our supper and go to bed. That'll make the time seem
+ short."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meal was soon eaten and cleared away, the fire carefully covered up on
+ the hearth, and the whole little family quietly in bed. Then the storm,
+ which had been making ready all day, came down upon them in earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bleak wind howled around the corners, the white flakes by millions and
+ millions came with it, and hurled themselves upon that house. In fact,
+ that poor little cabin alone on the wide prairie seemed to be the object
+ of their sport. They sifted through the cracks in the walls, around the
+ windows, and under the door, and made pretty little drifts on the floor.
+ They piled up against it outside, covered the steps, and then the door,
+ and then the windows, and then the roof, and at last buried it completely
+ out of sight under the soft, white mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all the time the mother and her three children lay snugly covered up
+ in their beds fast asleep, and knew nothing about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night passed away and morning came, but no light broke through the
+ windows of the cabin. Mrs. Barnes woke at the usual time, but finding it
+ still dark and perfectly quiet outside, she concluded that the storm was
+ over, and with a sigh of relief turned over to sleep again. About eight
+ o'clock, however, she could sleep no more, and became wide awake enough to
+ think the darkness strange. At that moment the clock struck, and the truth
+ flashed over her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being buried under snow is no uncommon thing on the wide prairies, and
+ since they had wood and cornmeal in plenty, she would not have been much
+ alarmed if her husband had been home. But snow deep enough to bury them
+ must cover up all landmarks, and she knew her husband would not rest till
+ he had found them. To get lost on the trackless prairie was fearfully
+ easy, and to suffer and die almost in sight of home was no unusual thing,
+ and was her one dread in living there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments she lay quiet in bed, to calm herself and get control of her
+ own anxieties before she spoke to the children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Willie," she said at last, "are you awake?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, mamma," said Willie; "I've been awake ever so long; isn't it most
+ morning?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Willie," said the mother quietly, "we mustn't be frightened, but I think&mdash;I'm
+ afraid&mdash;we are snowed in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Willie bounded to his feet and ran to the door. "Don't open it!" said
+ mamma hastily; "the snow may fall in. Light a candle and look out the
+ window."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a moment the flickering rays of the candle fell upon the window. Willie
+ drew back the curtain. Snow was tightly banked up against it to the top.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, mamma," he exclaimed, "so we are! and how can papa find us? and what
+ shall we do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must do the best we can," said mamma, in a voice which she tried to
+ make steady, "and trust that it isn't very deep, and that Tim and papa
+ will find us, and dig us out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the little girls were awake and inclined to be very much
+ frightened, but mamma was calm now, and Willie was brave and hopeful. They
+ all dressed, and Willie started the fire. The smoke refused to rise, but
+ puffed out into the room, and Mrs. Barnes knew that if the chimney were
+ closed they would probably suffocate, if they did not starve or freeze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The smoke in a few minutes choked them, and, seeing that something must be
+ done, she put the two girls, well wrapped in blankets, into the shed
+ outside the back door, closed the door to keep out the smoke, and then
+ went with Willie to the low attic, where a scuttle door opened onto the
+ roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must try," she said, "to get it open without letting in too much snow,
+ and see if we can manage to clear the chimney."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can reach the chimney from the scuttle with a shovel," said Willie. "I
+ often have with a stick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After much labour, and several small avalanches of snow, the scuttle was
+ opened far enough for Willie to stand on the top round of the short
+ ladder, and beat a hole through to the light, which was only a foot above.
+ He then shovelled off the top of the chimney, which was ornamented with a
+ big round cushion of snow, and then by beating and shovelling he was able
+ to clear the door, which he opened wide, and Mrs. Barnes came up on the
+ ladder to look out. Dreary indeed was the scene! Nothing but snow as far
+ as the eye could reach, and flakes still falling, though lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The storm was evidently almost over, but the sky was gray and overcast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They closed the door, went down, and soon had a fire, hoping that the
+ smoke would guide somebody to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Breakfast was taken by candle-light, dinner&mdash;in time&mdash;in the
+ same way, and supper passed with no sound from the outside world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many times Willie and mamma went to the scuttle door to see if any one was
+ in sight, but not a shadow broke the broad expanse of white over which
+ toward night the sun shone. Of course there were no signs of the roads,
+ for through so deep snow none could be broken, and until the sun and frost
+ should form a crust on top there was little hope of their being reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second morning broke, and Willie hurried up to his post of lookout the
+ first thing. No person was in sight, but he found a light crust on the
+ snow, and the first thing he noticed was a few half-starved birds trying
+ in vain to pick up something to eat. They looked weak and almost
+ exhausted, and a thought struck Willie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was hard to keep up the courage of the little household. Nora had
+ openly lamented that to-night was Christmas Eve, and no Christmas dinner
+ to be had. Tot had grown very tearful about her "waisins," and Mrs.
+ Barnes, though she tried to keep up heart, had become very pale and
+ silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Willie, though he felt unbounded faith in papa, and especially in Tim,
+ found it hard to suppress his own complaints when he remembered that
+ Christmas would probably be passed in the same dismal way, with fears for
+ papa added to their own misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wood, too, was getting low, and mamma dared not let the fire go out,
+ as that was the only sign of their existence to anybody; and though she
+ did not speak of it, Willie knew, too, that they had not many candles, and
+ in two days at farthest they would be left in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought that struck Willie pleased him greatly, and he was sure it
+ would cheer up the rest. He made his plans, and went to work to carry them
+ out without saying anything about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He brought out of a corner of the attic an old boxtrap he had used in the
+ summer to catch birds and small animals, set it carefully on the snow, and
+ scattered crumbs of corn-bread to attract the birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In half an hour he went up again, and found to his delight he had caught
+ bigger game&mdash;a poor rabbit which had come from no one knows where
+ over the crust to find food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gave Willie a new idea; they could save their Christmas dinner after
+ all; rabbits made very nice pies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Bunny was quietly laid to rest, and the trap set again. This time
+ another rabbit was caught, perhaps the mate of the first. This was the
+ last of the rabbits, but the next catch was a couple of snowbirds. These
+ Willie carefully placed in a corner of the attic, using the trap for a
+ cage, and giving them plenty of food and water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the girls were fast asleep, with tears on their cheeks for the
+ dreadful Christmas they were going to have, Willie told mamma about his
+ plans. Mamma was pale and weak with anxiety, and his news first made her
+ laugh and then cry. But after a few moments given to her long pent-up
+ tears, she felt much better and entered into his plans heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two captives up in the attic were to be Christmas presents to the
+ girls, and the rabbits were to make the long anticipated pie. As for
+ plum-pudding, of course that couldn't be thought of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But don't you think, mamma," said Willie eagerly, "that you could make
+ some sort of a cake out of meal, and wouldn't hickory nuts be good in it?
+ You know I have some left up in the attic, and I might crack them softly
+ up there, and don't you think they would be good?" he concluded anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, perhaps so," said mamma, anxious to please him and help him in his
+ generous plans. "I can try. If I only had some eggs&mdash;but seems to me
+ I have heard that snow beaten into cake would make it light&mdash;and
+ there's snow enough, I'm sure," she added with a faint smile, the first
+ Willie had seen for three days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The smile alone he felt to be a great achievement, and he crept carefully
+ up the ladder, cracked the nuts to the last one, brought them down, and
+ mamma picked the meats out, while he dressed the two rabbits which had
+ come so opportunely to be their Christmas dinner. "Wish you Merry
+ Christmas!" he called out to Nora and Tot when they waked. "See what Santa
+ Claus has brought you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before they had time to remember what a sorry Christmas it was to be, they
+ received their presents, a live bird, for each, a bird that was never to
+ be kept in a cage, but fly about the house till summer came, and then to
+ go away if it wished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pets were scarce on the prairie, and the girls were delighted. Nothing
+ papa could have brought them would have given them so much happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They thought no more of the dinner, but hurried to dress themselves and
+ feed the birds, which were quite tame from hunger and weariness. But after
+ a while they saw preparations for dinner, too. Mamma made a crust and
+ lined a deep dish&mdash;the chicken pie dish&mdash;and then she brought a
+ mysterious something out of the cupboard, all cut up so that it looked as
+ if it might be chicken, and put it in the dish with other things, and then
+ she tucked them all under a thick crust, and set it down in a tin oven
+ before the fire to bake. And that was not all. She got out some more
+ cornmeal, and made a batter, and put in some sugar and something else
+ which she slipped in from a bowl, and which looked in the batter something
+ like raisins; and at the last moment Willie brought her a cup of snow and
+ she hastily beat it into the cake, or pudding, whichever you might call
+ it, while the children laughed at the idea of making a cake out of snow.
+ This went into the same oven and pretty soon it rose up light and showed a
+ beautiful brown crust, while the pie was steaming through little fork
+ holes on top, and sending out most delicious odours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the last minute, when the table was set and everything ready to come
+ up, Willie ran up to look out of the scuttle, as he had every hour of
+ daylight since they were buried. In a moment came a wild shout down the
+ ladder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're coming! Hurrah for old Tim!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mamma rushed up and looked out, and saw&mdash;to be sure&mdash;old Tim
+ slowly coming along over the crust, drawing after him a wood sled on which
+ were two men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's papa!" shouted Willie, waving his arms to attract their attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Willie!" came back over the snow in tones of agony. "Is that you? Are all
+ well?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All well!" shouted Willie, "and just going to have our Christmas dinner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dinner?" echoed papa, who was now nearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is the house, then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, down here!" said Willie, "under the snow; but we're all right, only
+ we mustn't let the plum-pudding spoil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Looking into the attic, Willie found that mamma had fainted away, and this
+ news brought to her aid papa and the other man, who proved to be a good
+ friend who had come to help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tim was tied to the chimney, whose thread of smoke had guided them home,
+ and all went down into the dark room. Mrs. Barnes soon recovered, and
+ while Willie dished up the smoking dinner, stories were told on both
+ sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Barnes had been trying to get through the snow and to find them all
+ the time, but until the last night had made a stiff crust he had been
+ unable to do so. Then Mrs. Barnes told her story, winding up with the
+ account of Willie's Christmas dinner. "And if it hadn't been for his
+ keeping up our hearts I don't know what would have become of us," she said
+ at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, my son," said papa, "you did take care of mamma, and get up a
+ dinner out of nothing, sure enough; and now we'll eat the dinner, which I
+ am sure is delicious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it proved to be; even the cake, or pudding, which Tot christened snow
+ pudding, was voted very nice, and the hickory nuts as good as raisins.
+ When they had finished, Mr. Barnes brought in his packages, gave Tot and
+ the rest some "sure-enough waisins," and added his Christmas presents to
+ Willie's; but though all were overjoyed, nothing was quite so nice in
+ their eyes as the two live birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner the two men and Willie dug out passages from the doors,
+ through the snow, which had wasted a good deal, uncovered the windows, and
+ made a slanting way to his shed for old Tim. Then for two or three days
+ Willie made tunnels and little rooms under the snow, and for two weeks,
+ while the snow lasted, Nora and Tot had fine times in the little snow
+ playhouses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXX. MR. BLUFF'S EXPERIENCES OF HOLIDAYS*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * Reprinted by permission of Moffat, Yird &amp; Co., from Christmas. R.H.
+ Schauffler, Editor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OLIVER BELL BUNCE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hate holidays," said Bachelor Bluff to me, with some little irritation,
+ on a Christmas a few years ago. Then he paused an instant, after which he
+ resumed: "I don't mean to say that I hate to see people enjoying
+ themselves. But I hate holidays, nevertheless, because to me they are
+ always the saddest and dreariest days of the year. I shudder at the name
+ of holiday. I dread the approach of one, and thank heaven when it is over.
+ I pass through, on a holiday, the most horrible sensations, the bitterest
+ feelings, the most oppressive melancholy; in fact, I am not myself at
+ holiday-times."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very strange," I ventured to interpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A plague on it!" said he, almost with violence. "I'm not inhuman. I don't
+ wish anybody harm. I'm glad people can enjoy themselves. But I hate
+ holidays all the same. You see, this is the reason: I am a bachelor; I am
+ without kin; I am in a place that did not know me at birth. And so, when
+ holidays come around, there is no place anywhere for me. I have friends,
+ of course; I don't think I've been a very sulky, shut-in, reticent fellow;
+ and there is many a board that has a place for me&mdash;but not at
+ Christmastime. At Christmas, the dinner is a family gathering; and I've no
+ family. There is such a gathering of kindred on this occasion, such a
+ reunion of family folk, that there is no place for a friend, even if the
+ friend be liked. Christmas, with all its kindliness and charity and
+ good-will, is, after all, deuced selfish. Each little set gathers within
+ its own circle; and people like me, with no particular circle, are left in
+ the lurch. So you see, on the day of all the days in the year that my
+ heart pines for good cheer, I'm without an invitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it's because I pine for good cheer," said the bachelor, sharply,
+ interrupting my attempt to speak, "that I hate holidays. If I were an
+ infernally selfish fellow, I wouldn't hate holidays. I'd go off and have
+ some fun all to myself, somewhere or somehow. But, you see, I hate to be
+ in the dark when all the rest of the world is in light. I hate holidays
+ because I ought to be merry and happy on holidays and can't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't tell me," he cried, stopping the word that was on my lips; "I tell
+ you, I hate holidays. The shops look merry, do they, with their bright
+ toys and their green branches? The pantomime is crowded with merry hearts,
+ is it? The circus and the show are brimful of fun and laughter, are they?
+ Well, they all make me miserable. I haven't any pretty-faced girls or
+ bright-eyed boys to take to the circus or the show, and all the nice girls
+ and fine boys of my acquaintance have their uncles or their grand-dads or
+ their cousins to take them to those places; so, if I go, I must go alone.
+ But I don't go. I can't bear the chill of seeing everybody happy, and
+ knowing myself so lonely and desolate. Confound it, sir, I've too much
+ heart to be happy under such circumstances! I'm too humane, sir! And the
+ result is, I hate holidays. It's miserable to be out, and yet I can't stay
+ at home, for I get thinking of Christmases past. I can't read&mdash;the
+ shadow of my heart makes it impossible. I can't walk&mdash;for I see
+ nothing but pictures through the bright windows, and happy groups of
+ pleasure-seekers. The fact is, I've nothing to do but to hate holidays.
+ But will you not dine with me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, I had to plead engagement with my own family circle, and I
+ couldn't quite invite Mr. Bluff home that day, when Cousin Charles and his
+ wife, and Sister Susan and her daughter, and three of my wife's kin had
+ come in from the country, all to make a merry Christmas with us. I felt
+ sorry, but it was quite impossible, so I wished Mr. Bluff a "Merry
+ Christmas," and hurried homeward through the cold and nipping air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not meet Bachelor Bluff again until a week after Christmas of the
+ next year, when I learned some strange particulars of what occurred to him
+ after our parting on the occasion just described. I will let Bachelor
+ Bluff tell his adventure for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I went to church," said he, "and was as sad there as everywhere else. Of
+ course, the evergreens were pretty, and the music fine; but all around me
+ were happy groups of people, who could scarcely keep down merry Christmas
+ long enough to do reverence to sacred Christmas. And nobody was alone but
+ me. Every happy paterfamilias in his pew tantalized me, and the whole
+ atmosphere of the place seemed so much better suited to every one else
+ than me that I came away hating holidays worse than ever. Then I went to
+ the play, and sat down in a box all alone by myself. Everybody seemed on
+ the best of terms with everybody else, and jokes and banter passed from
+ one to another with the most good-natured freedom. Everybody but me was in
+ a little group of friends. I was the only person in the whole theatre that
+ was alone. And then there was such clapping of hands, and roars of
+ laughter, and shouts of delight at all the fun going on upon the stage,
+ all of which was rendered doubly enjoyable by everybody having somebody
+ with whom to share and interchange the pleasure, that my loneliness got
+ simply unbearable, and I hated holidays infinitely worse than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By five o'clock the holiday became so intolerable that I said I'd go and
+ get a dinner. The best dinner the town could provide. A sumptuous dinner
+ for one. A dinner with many courses, with wines of the finest brands, with
+ bright lights, with a cheerful fire, with every condition of comfort&mdash;and
+ I'd see if I couldn't for once extract a little pleasure out of a holiday!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The handsome dining-room at the club looked bright, but it was empty. Who
+ dines at this club on Christmas but lonely bachelors? There was a flutter
+ of surprise when I ordered a dinner, and the few attendants were, no
+ doubt, glad of something to break the monotony of the hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dinner was well served. The spacious room looked lonely; but the
+ white, snowy cloths, the rich window hangings, the warm tints of the
+ walls, the sparkle of the fire in the steel grate, gave the room an air of
+ elegance and cheerfulness; and then the table at which I dined was close
+ to the window, and through the partly drawn curtains were visible centres
+ of lonely, cold streets, with bright lights from many a window, it is
+ true, but there was a storm, and snow began whirling through the street. I
+ let my imagination paint the streets as cold and dreary as it would, just
+ to extract a little pleasure by way of contrast from the brilliant room of
+ which I was apparently sole master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dined well, and recalled in fancy old, youthful Christmases, and
+ pledged mentally many an old friend, and my melancholy was mellowing into
+ a low, sad undertone, when, just as I was raising a glass of wine to my
+ lips, I was startled by a picture at the windowpane. It was a pale, wild,
+ haggard face, in a great cloud of black hair, pressed against the glass.
+ As I looked it vanished. With a strange thrill at my heart, which my lips
+ mocked with a derisive sneer, I finished the wine and set down the glass.
+ It was, of course, only a beggar-girl that had crept up to the window and
+ stole a glance at the bright scene within; but still the pale face
+ troubled me a little, and threw a fresh shadow on my heart. I filled my
+ glass once more with wine, and was again about to drink, when the face
+ reappeared at the window. It was so white, so thin, with eyes so large,
+ wild, and hungry-looking, and the black, unkempt hair, into which the snow
+ had drifted, formed so strange and weird a frame to the picture, that I
+ was fairly startled. Replacing, untasted, the liquor on the table, I rose
+ and went close to the pane. The face had vanished, and I could see no
+ object within many feet of the window. The storm had increased, and the
+ snow was driving in wild gusts through the streets, which were empty, save
+ here and there a hurrying wayfarer. The whole scene was cold, wild, and
+ desolate, and I could not repress a keen thrill of sympathy for the child,
+ whoever it was, whose only Christmas was to watch, in cold and storm, the
+ rich banquet ungratefully enjoyed by the lonely bachelor. I resumed my
+ place at the table; but the dinner was finished, and the wine had no
+ further relish. I was haunted by the vision at the window, and began, with
+ an unreasonable irritation at the interruption, to repeat with fresh
+ warmth my detestation of holidays. One couldn't even dine alone on a
+ holiday with any sort of comfort, I declared. On holidays one was
+ tormented by too much pleasure on one side, and too much misery on the
+ other. And then, I said, hunting for justification of my dislike of the
+ day, 'How many other people are, like me, made miserable by seeing the
+ fullness of enjoyment others possess!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes, I know," sarcastically replied the bachelor to a comment of
+ mine; "of course, all magnanimous, generous, and noble-souled people
+ delight in seeing other people made happy, and are quite content to accept
+ this vicarious felicity. But I, you see, and this dear little girl&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear little girl?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I forgot," said Bachelor Bluff, blushing a little, in spite of a
+ desperate effort not to do so. "I didn't tell you. Well, it was so absurd!
+ I kept thinking, thinking of the pale, haggard, lonely little girl on the
+ cold and desolate side of the window-pane, and the over-fed, discontented,
+ lonely old bachelor on the splendid side of the window-pane, and I didn't
+ get much happier thinking about it, I can assure you. I drank glass after
+ glass of the wine&mdash;not that I enjoyed its flavour any more, but
+ mechanically, as it were, and with a sort of hope thereby to drown
+ unpleasant reminders. I tried to attribute my annoyance in the matter to
+ holidays, and so denounced them more vehemently than ever. I rose once in
+ a while and went to the window, but could see no one to whom the pale face
+ could have belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last, in no very amiable mood, I got up, put on my wrappers, and went
+ out; and the first thing I did was to run against a small figure crouching
+ in the doorway. A face looked up quickly at the rough encounter, and I saw
+ the pale features of the window-pane. I was very irritated and angry, and
+ spoke harshly; and then, all at once, I am sure I don't know how it
+ happened, but it flashed upon me that I, of all men, had no right to utter
+ a harsh word to one oppressed with so wretched a Christmas as this poor
+ creature was. I couldn't say another word, but began feeling in my pocket
+ for some money, and then I asked a question or two, and then I don't quite
+ know how it came about&mdash;isn't it very warm here?" exclaimed Bachelor
+ Bluff, rising and walking about, and wiping the perspiration from his
+ brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you see," he resumed nervously, "it was very absurd, but I did
+ believe the girl's story&mdash;the old story, you know, of privation and
+ suffering, and just thought I'd go home with the brat and see if what she
+ said was all true. And then I remembered that all the shops were closed,
+ and not a purchase could be made. I went back and persuaded the steward to
+ put up for me a hamper of provisions, which the half-wild little youngster
+ helped me carry through the snow, dancing with delight all the way. And
+ isn't this enough?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a bit, Mr. Bluff. I must have the whole story."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I declare," said Bachelor Bluff, "there's no whole story to tell. A widow
+ with children in great need, that was what I found; and they had a feast
+ that night, and a little money to buy them a load of wood and a garment or
+ two the next day; and they were all so bright, and so merry, and so
+ thankful, and so good, that, when I got home that night, I was mightily
+ amazed that, instead of going to bed sour at holidays, I was in a state of
+ great contentment in regard to holidays. In fact, I was really merry. I
+ whistled. I sang. I do believe I cut a caper. The poor wretches I had left
+ had been so merry over their unlooked-for Christmas banquet that their
+ spirits infected mine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And then I got thinking again. Of course, holidays had been miserable to
+ me, I said. What right had a well-to-do, lonely old bachelor hovering
+ wistfully in the vicinity of happy circles, when all about there were so
+ many people as lonely as he, and yet oppressed with want? 'Good gracious!'
+ I exclaimed, 'to think of a man complaining of loneliness with thousands
+ of wretches yearning for his help and comfort, with endless opportunities
+ for work and company, with hundreds of pleasant and delightful things to
+ do. Just to think of it! It put me in a great fury at myself to think of
+ it. I tried pretty hard to escape from myself and began inventing excuses
+ and all that sort of thing, but I rigidly forced myself to look squarely
+ at my own conduct. And then I reconciled my confidence by declaring that,
+ if ever after that day I hated a holiday again, might my holidays end at
+ once and forever!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did I go and see my proteges again? What a question! Why&mdash;well, no
+ matter. If the widow is comfortable now, it is because she has found a way
+ to earn without difficulty enough for her few wants. That's no fault of
+ mine. I would have done more for her, but she wouldn't let me. But just
+ let me tell you about New Year's&mdash;the New-Year's day that followed
+ the Christmas I've been describing. It was lucky for me there was another
+ holiday only a week off. Bless you! I had so much to do that day I was
+ completely bewildered, and the hours weren't half long enough. I did make
+ a few social calls, but then I hurried them over; and then hastened to my
+ little girl, whose face had already caught a touch of colour; and she,
+ looking quite handsome in her new frock and her ribbons, took me to other
+ poor folk, and,&mdash;well, that's about the whole story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, as to the next Christmas. Well, I didn't dine alone, as you may
+ guess. It was up three stairs, that's true, and there was none of that
+ elegance that marked the dinner of the year before; but it was merry, and
+ happy, and bright; it was a generous, honest, hearty Christmas dinner,
+ that it was, although I do wish the widow hadn't talked so much about the
+ mysterious way a turkey had been left at her door the night before. And
+ Molly&mdash;that's the little girl&mdash;and I had a rousing appetite. We
+ went to church early; then we had been down to the Five Points to carry
+ the poor outcasts there something for their Christmas dinner; in fact, we
+ had done wonders of work, and Molly was in high spirits, and so the
+ Christmas dinner was a great success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear me, sir, no! Just as you say. Holidays are not in the least
+ wearisome any more. Plague on it! When a man tells me now that he hates
+ holidays, I find myself getting very wroth. I pin him by the buttonhole at
+ once, and tell him my experience. The fact is, if I were at dinner on a
+ holiday, and anybody should ask me for a sentiment, I should say, 'God
+ bless all holidays!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXI. MASTER SANDY'S SNAPDRAGON*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * This story was first published in Wide Awake, vol. 26.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ ELDRIDGE S. BROOKS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was just enough of December in the air and of May in the sky to make
+ the Yuletide of the year of grace 1611 a time of pleasure and delight to
+ every boy and girl in "Merrie England" from the princely children in
+ stately Whitehall to the humblest pot-boy and scullery-girl in the hall of
+ the country squire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the palace at Whitehall even the cares of state gave place to the
+ sports of this happy season. For that "Most High and Mighty Prince James,
+ by the Grace of God King of Great Britain, France, and Ireland"&mdash;as
+ you will find him styled in your copy of the Old Version, or what is known
+ as "King James' Bible"&mdash;loved the Christmas festivities, cranky,
+ crabbed, and crusty though he was. And this year he felt especially
+ gracious. For now, first since the terror of the Guy Fawkes plot which had
+ come to naught full seven years before, did the timid king feel secure on
+ his throne; the translation of the Bible, on which so many learned men had
+ been for years engaged, had just been issued from the press of Master
+ Robert Baker; and, lastly, much profit was coming into the royal treasury
+ from the new lands in the Indies and across the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was to be a Merry Christmas in the palace at Whitehall. Great were
+ the preparations for its celebration, and the Lord Henry, the handsome,
+ wise and popular young Prince of Wales, whom men hoped some day to hail as
+ King Henry of England, was to take part in a jolly Christmas mask, in
+ which, too, even the little Prince Charles was to perform for the
+ edification of the court when the mask should be shown in the new and
+ gorgeous banqueting hall of the palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to-night it was Christmas Eve. The Little Prince Charles and the
+ Princess Elizabeth could scarcely wait for the morrow, so impatient were
+ they to see all the grand devisings that were in store for them. So good
+ Master Sandy, under-tutor to the Prince, proposed to wise Archie
+ Armstrong, the King's jester, that they play at snapdragon for the
+ children in the royal nursery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince and Princess clamoured for the promised game at once, and soon
+ the flicker from the flaming bow lighted up the darkened nursery as,
+ around the witchlike caldron, they watched their opportunity to snatch the
+ lucky raisin. The room rang so loudly with fun and laughter that even the
+ King himself, big of head and rickety of legs, shambled in good-humouredly
+ to join in the sport that was giving so much pleasure to the royal boy he
+ so dearly loved, and whom he always called "Baby Charles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what was snapdragon, you ask? A simple enough game, but dear for many
+ and many a year to English children. A broad and shallow bowl or dish
+ half-filled with blazing brandy, at the bottom of which lay numerous
+ toothsome raisins&mdash;a rare tidbit in those days&mdash;and one of
+ these, pierced with a gold button, was known as the "lucky raisin." Then,
+ as the flaming brandy flickered and darted from the yawning bowl, even as
+ did the flaming poison tongues of the cruel dragon that St. George of
+ England conquered so valiantly, each one of the revellers sought to snatch
+ a raisin from the burning bowl without singe or scar. And he who drew out
+ the lucky raisin was winner and champion, and could claim a boon or reward
+ for his superior skill. Rather a dangerous game, perhaps it seems, but
+ folks were rough players in those old days and laughed at a burn or a
+ bruise, taking them as part of the fun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So around Master Sandy's Snapdragon danced the royal children, and even
+ the King himself condescended to dip his royal hands in the flames, while
+ Archie Armstrong the jester cried out: "Now fair and softly, brother
+ Jamie, fair and softly, man. There's ne'er a plum in all that plucking so
+ worth the burning as there was in Signer Guy Fawkes' snapdragon when ye
+ proved not to be his lucky raisin." For King's jesters were privileged
+ characters in the old days, and jolly Archie Armstrong could joke with the
+ King on this Guy Fawkes scare as none other dared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And still no one brought out the lucky raisin, though the Princess
+ Elizabeth's fair arm was scotched and good Master Sandy's peaked beard was
+ singed, and my Lord Montacute had dropped his signet ring in the fiery
+ dragon's mouth, and even His Gracious Majesty the King was nursing one of
+ his royal fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just as through the parted arras came young Henry, Prince of Wales,
+ little Prince Charles gave a boyish shout of triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hey, huzzoy!" he cried, "'tis mine, 'tis mine! Look, Archie; see, dear
+ dad; I have the lucky raisin! A boon, good folk; a boon for me!" And the
+ excited lad held aloft the lucky raisin in which gleamed the golden
+ button.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rarely caught, young York," cried Prince Henry, clapping his hands in
+ applause. "I came in right in good time, did I not, to give you luck,
+ little brother? And now, lad, what is the boon to be?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And King James, greatly pleased at whatever his dear "Baby Charles" said
+ or did, echoed his eldest son's question. "Ay lad, 'twas a rare good dip;
+ so crave your boon. What does my bonny boy desire?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the boy hesitated. What was there that a royal prince, indulged as was
+ he, could wish for or desire? He really could think of nothing, and
+ crossing quickly to his elder brother, whom, boy-fashion, he adored, he
+ whispered, "Ud's fish, Hal, what DO I want?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Henry placed his hand upon his brother's shoulder and looked
+ smilingly into his questioning eyes, and all within the room glanced for a
+ moment at the two lads standing thus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they were well worth looking at. Prince Henry of Wales, tall, comely,
+ open-faced, and well-built, a noble lad of eighteen who called to men's
+ minds, so "rare Ben Jonson" says, the memory of the hero of Agincourt,
+ that other
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ thunderbolt of war,
+ Harry the Fifth, to whom in face you are
+ So like, as Fate would have you so in worth;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Prince Charles, royal Duke of York, Knight of the Garter and of the Bath,
+ fair in face and form, an active, manly, daring boy of eleven&mdash;the
+ princely brothers made so fair a sight that the King, jealous and
+ suspicious of Prince Henry's popularity though he was, looked now upon
+ them both with loving eyes. But how those loving eyes would have grown dim
+ with tears could this fickle, selfish, yet indulgent father have foreseen
+ the sad and bitter fates of both his handsome boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, fortunately, such foreknowledge is not for fathers or mothers,
+ whatever their rank or station, and King James's only thought was one of
+ pride in the two brave lads now whispering together in secret confidence.
+ And into this he speedily broke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, Baby Charles," he cried, "stand no more parleying, but out
+ and over with the boon ye crave as guerdon for your lucky plum. Ud's fish,
+ lad, out with it; we'd get it for ye though it did rain jeddert staves
+ here in Whitehall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So please your Grace," said the little Prince, bowing low with true
+ courtier-like grace and suavity, "I will, with your permission, crave my
+ boon as a Christmas favor at wassail time in to-morrow's revels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then he passed from the chamber arm-in-arm with his elder brother,
+ while the King, chuckling greatly over the lad's show of courtliness and
+ ceremony, went into a learned discussion with my lord of Montacute and
+ Master Sandy as to the origin of the snapdragon, which he, with his
+ customary assumption of deep learning, declared was "but a modern
+ paraphrase, my lord, of the fable which telleth how Dan Hercules did kill
+ the flaming dragon of Hesperia and did then, with the apple of that famous
+ orchard, make a fiery dish of burning apple brandy which he did name
+ 'snapdragon.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For King James VI of Scotland and I of England was, you see, something too
+ much of what men call a pendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christmas morning rose bright and glorious. A light hoarfrost whitened the
+ ground and the keen December air nipped the noses as it hurried the
+ song-notes of the score of little waifs who, gathered beneath the windows
+ of the big palace, sung for the happy awaking of the young Prince Charles
+ their Christmas carol and their Christmas noel:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A child this day is born,
+ A child of great renown;
+ Most worthy of a sceptre,
+ A sceptre and a crown.
+
+ Noel, noel, noel,
+ Noel sing we may
+ Because the King of all Kings
+ Was born this blessed day.
+
+ These tidings shepherds heard
+ In field watching their fold,
+ Were by an angel unto them
+ At night revealed and told.
+
+ Noel, noel, noel,
+ Noel sing we may
+ Because the King of all Kings
+ Was born this blessed day.
+
+ He brought unto them tidings
+ Of gladness and of mirth,
+ Which cometh to all people by
+ This holy infant's birth.
+
+ Noel, noel, noel,
+ Noel sing we may
+ Because the King of all Kings
+ Was born this blessed day.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The "blessed day" wore on. Gifts and sports filled the happy hours. In the
+ royal banqueting hall the Christmas dinner was royally set and served, and
+ King and Queen and Princes, with attendant nobles and holiday guests,
+ partook of the strong dishes of those old days of hearty appetites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A shield of brawn with mustard, boyl'd capon, a chine of beef roasted, a
+ neat's tongue roasted, a pig roasted, chewets baked, goose, swan and
+ turkey roasted, a haunch of venison roasted, a pasty of venison, a kid
+ stuffed with pudding, an olive-pye, capons and dowsets, sallats and
+ fricases"&mdash;all these and much more, with strong beer and spiced ale
+ to wash the dinner down, crowned the royal board, while the great boar's
+ head and the Christmas pie, borne in with great parade, were placed on the
+ table joyously decked with holly and rosemary and bay. It was a great
+ ceremony&mdash;this bringing in of the boar's head. First came an
+ attendant, so the old record tells us,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "attyr'd in a horseman's coat with a Boares-speare in his hande; next to
+ him another huntsman in greene, with a bloody faulchion drawne; next to
+ him two pages in tafatye sarcenet, each of them with a messe of mustard;
+ next to whom came hee that carried the Boareshead, crosst with a greene
+ silk scarfe, by which hunge the empty scabbard of the faulchion which was
+ carried before him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the dinner&mdash;the boar's head having been wrestled for by some of
+ the royal yeomen&mdash;came the wassail or health-drinking. Then the King
+ said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now, Baby Charles, let us hear the boon ye were to crave of us at
+ wassail as the guerdon for the holder of the lucky raisin in Master
+ Sandy's snapdragon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the little eleven-year-old Prince stood up before the company in all
+ his brave attire, glanced at his brother Prince Henry, and then facing the
+ King said boldly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray you, my father and my Hege, grant me as the boon I ask&mdash;the
+ freeing of Walter Raleigh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this altogether startling and unlooked-for request, amazement and
+ consternation appeared on the faces around the royal banqueting board, and
+ the King put down his untasted tankard of spiced ale, while surprise,
+ doubt and anger quickly crossed the royal face. For Sir Walter Raleigh,
+ the favourite of Queen Elizabeth, the lord-proprietor and colonizer of the
+ American colonies, and the sworn foe to Spain, had been now close prisoner
+ in the Tower for more than nine years, hated and yet dreaded by this
+ fickle King James, who dared not put him to death for fear of the people
+ to whom the name and valour of Raleigh were dear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hoot, chiel!" cried the King at length, spluttering wrathfully in the
+ broadest of his native Scotch, as was his habit when angered or surprised.
+ "Ye reckless fou, wha hae put ye to sic a jackanape trick? Dinna ye ken
+ that sic a boon is nae for a laddie like you to meddle wi'? Wha hae put ye
+ to't, I say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But ere the young Prince could reply, the stately and solemn-faced
+ ambassador of Spain, the Count of Gondemar, arose in the place of honour
+ he filled as a guest of the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord King," he said, "I beg your majesty to bear in memory your pledge
+ to my gracious master King Philip of Spain, that naught save grave cause
+ should lead you to liberate from just durance that arch enemy of Spain,
+ the Lord Raleigh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you did promise me, my lord," said Prince Charles, hastily, "and you
+ have told me that the royal pledge is not to be lightly broken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ma certie, lad," said King James, "ye maunay learn that there is nae rule
+ wi'out its aicciptions." And then he added, "A pledge to a boy in play,
+ like to ours of yester-eve, Baby Charles, is not to be kept when matters
+ of state conflict." Then turning to the Spanish ambassador, he said: "Rest
+ content, my lord count. This recreant Raleigh shall not yet be loosed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, my liege," still persisted the boy prince, "my brother Hal did say&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wrath of the King burst out afresh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, said you so? Brother Hal, indeed!" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought the wind blew from that quarter," and he angrily faced his
+ eldest son. "So, sirrah; 'twas you that did urge this foolish boy to work
+ your traitorous purpose in such coward guise!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My liege," said Prince Henry, rising in his place, "traitor and coward
+ are words I may not calmly hear even from my father and my king. You wrong
+ me foully when you use them thus. For though I do bethink me that the
+ Tower is but a sorry cage in which to keep so grandly plumed a bird as my
+ Lord of Raleigh, I did but seek&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, you did but seek to curry favour with the craven crowd," burst out
+ the now thoroughly angry King, always jealous of the popularity of this
+ brave young Prince of Wales. "And am I, sirrah, to be badgered and
+ browbeaten in my own palace by such a thriftless ne'er-do-weel as you,
+ ungrateful boy, who seekest to gain preference with the people in this
+ realm before your liege lord the King? Quit my presence, sirrah, and that
+ instanter, ere that I do send you to spend your Christmas where your
+ great-grandfather, King Henry, bade his astrologer spend his&mdash;in the
+ Tower, there to keep company with your fitting comrade, Raleigh, the
+ traitor!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without a word in reply to this outburst, with a son's submission, but
+ with a royal dignity, Prince Henry bent his head before his father's
+ decree and withdrew from the table, followed by the gentlemen of his
+ household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But ere he could reach the arrased doorway, Prince Charles sprang to his
+ side and cried, valiantly: "Nay then, if he goes so do I! 'Twas surely but
+ a Christmas joke and of my own devising. Spoil not our revel, my gracious
+ liege and father, on this of all the year's red-letter days, by turning my
+ thoughtless frolic into such bitter threatening. I did but seek to test
+ the worth of Master Sandy's lucky raisin by asking for as wildly great a
+ boon as might be thought upon. Brother Hal too, did but give me his
+ advising in joke even as I did seek it. None here, my royal father, would
+ brave your sovereign displeasure by any unknightly or unloyal scheme."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentle and dignified words of the young prince&mdash;for Charles
+ Stuart, though despicable as a king, was ever loving and loyal as a friend&mdash;were
+ as oil upon the troubled waters. The ruffled temper of the ambassador of
+ Spain&mdash;who in after years really did work Raleigh's downfall and
+ death&mdash;gave place to courtly bows, and the King's quick anger melted
+ away before the dearly loved voice of his favourite son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, resume your place, son Hal," he said, "and you, gentlemen all,
+ resume your seats, I pray. I too did but jest as did Baby Charles here&mdash;a
+ sad young wag, I fear me, is this same young Prince."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as, after the wassail, came the Christmas mask, in which both Princes
+ bore their parts, Prince Charles said to Archie Armstrong, the King's
+ jester:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Faith, good Archie; now is Master Sandy's snapdragon but a false beast
+ withal, and his lucky raisin is but an evil fruit that pays not for the
+ plucking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And wise old Archie only wagged his head and answered, "Odd zooks, Cousin
+ Charlie, Christmas raisins are not the only fruit that burns the fingers
+ in the plucking, and mayhap you too may live to know that a mettlesome
+ horse never stumbleth but when he is reined."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor "Cousin Charlie" did not then understand the full meaning of the wise
+ old jester's words, but he did live to learn their full intent. For when,
+ in after years, his people sought to curb his tyrannies with a revolt that
+ ended only with his death upon the scaffold, outside this very banqueting
+ house at Whitehall, Charles Stuart learned all too late that a "mettlesome
+ horse" needed sometimes to be "reined," and heard, too late as well, the
+ stern declaration of the Commons of England that "no chief officer might
+ presume for the future to contrive the enslaving and destruction of the
+ nation with impunity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though many a merry and many a happy day had the young Prince Charles
+ before the dark tragedy of his sad and sorry manhood, he lost all faith in
+ lucky raisins. Not for three years did Sir Walter Raleigh&mdash;whom both
+ the Princes secretly admired&mdash;obtain release from the Tower, and ere
+ three more years were past his head fell as a forfeit to the stern demands
+ of Spain. And Prince Charles often declared that naught indeed could come
+ from meddling with luck saving burnt fingers, "even," he said, "as came to
+ me that profitless night when I sought a boon for snatching the lucky
+ raisin from good Master Sandy's Christmas snapdragon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXII. A CHRISTMAS FAIRY*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * Reprinted with the permission of the Henry Altemus Company.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ JOHN STRANGE WINTER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was getting very near to Christmas time, and all the boys at Miss
+ Ware's school were talking about going home for the holidays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall go to the Christmas festival," said Bertie Fellows, "and my
+ mother will have a party, and my Aunt will give another. Oh! I shall have
+ a splendid time at home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Uncle Bob is going to give me a pair of skates," remarked Harry
+ Wadham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father is going to give me a bicycle," put in George Alderson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you bring it back to school with you?" asked Harry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh! yes, if Miss Ware doesn't say no."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Tom," cried Bertie, "where are you going to spend your holidays?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going to stay here," answered Tom in a very forlorn voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here&mdash;at school&mdash;oh, dear! Why can't you go home?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't go home to India," answered Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobody said you could. But haven't you any relatives anywhere?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom shook his head. "Only in India," he said sadly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor fellow! That's hard luck for you. I'll tell you what it is, boys, if
+ I couldn't go home for the holidays, especially at Christmas&mdash;I think
+ I would just sit down and die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no, you wouldn't," said Tom. "You would get ever so homesick, but you
+ wouldn't die. You would just get through somehow, and hope something would
+ happen before next year, or that some kind fairy would&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are no fairies nowadays," said Bertie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See here, Tom, I'll write and ask my mother to invite you to go home with
+ me for the holidays."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you really?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I will. And if she says yes, we shall have such a splendid time. We
+ live in London, you know, and have lots of parties and fun."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps she will say no?" suggested poor little Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My mother isn't the kind that says no," Bertie declared loudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few days' time a letter arrived from Bertie's mother. The boy opened
+ it eagerly. It said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My own dear Bertie:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am very sorry to tell you that little Alice is ill with scarlet fever.
+ And so you cannot come for your holidays. I would have been glad to have
+ you bring your little friend with you if all had been well here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your father and I have decided that the best thing that you can do is to
+ stay at Miss Ware's. We shall send your Christmas present to you as well
+ as we can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will not be like coming home, but I am sure you will try to be happy,
+ and make me feel that you are helping me in this sad time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear little Alice is very ill, very ill indeed. Tell Tom that I am sending
+ you a box for both of you, with two of everything. And tell him that it
+ makes me so much happier to know that you will not be alone.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Your own mother.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Bertie Fellows received this letter, which ended all his Christmas
+ hopes and joys, he hid his face upon his desk and sobbed aloud. The lonely
+ boy from India, who sat next to him, tried to comfort his friend in every
+ way he could think of. He patted his shoulder and whispered many kind
+ words to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Bertie put the letter into Tom's hands. "Read it," he sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So then Tom understood the cause of Bertie's grief. "Don't fret over it,"
+ he said at last. "It might be worse. Why, your father and mother might be
+ thousands of miles away, like mine are. When Alice is better, you will be
+ able to go home. And it will help your mother if she thinks you are almost
+ as happy as if you could go now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon Miss Ware came to tell Bertie how sorry she was for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After all," said she, smiling down on the two boys, "it is an ill wind
+ that blows nobody good. Poor Tom has been expecting to spend his holidays
+ alone, and now he will have a friend with him&mdash;Try to look on the
+ bright side, Bertie, and to remember how much worse it would have been if
+ there had been no boy to stay with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't help being disappointed, Miss Ware," said Bertie, his eyes
+ filling with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; you would be a strange boy if you were not. But I want you to try to
+ think of your poor mother, and write her as cheerfully as you can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," answered Bertie; but his heart was too full to say more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last day of the term came, and one by one, or two by two, the boys
+ went away, until only Bertie and Tom were left in the great house. It had
+ never seemed so large to either of them before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's miserable," groaned poor Bertie, as they strolled into the
+ schoolroom. "Just think if we were on our way home now&mdash;how
+ different."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just think if I had been left here by myself," said Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Bertie, "but you know when one wants to go home he never
+ thinks of the boys that have no home to go to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evening passed, and the two boys went to bed. They told stories to
+ each other for a long time before they could go to sleep. That night they
+ dreamed of their homes, and felt very lonely. Yet each tried to be brave,
+ and so another day began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the day before Christmas. Quite early in the morning came the
+ great box of which Bertie's mother had spoken in her letter. Then, just as
+ dinner had come to an end, there was a peal of the bell, and a voice was
+ heard asking for Tom Egerton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom sprang to his feet, and flew to greet a tall, handsome lady, crying,
+ "Aunt Laura! Aunt Laura!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Laura explained that she and her husband had arrived in London only
+ the day before. "I was so afraid, Tom," she said, "that we should not get
+ here until Christmas Day was over and that you would be disappointed. So I
+ would not let your mother write you that we were on our way home. You must
+ get your things packed up at once, and go back with me to London. Then
+ uncle and I will give you a splendid time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a minute or two Tom's face shone with delight. Then he caught sight of
+ Bertie and turned to his aunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Aunt Laura," he said, "I am very sorry, but I can't go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can't go? and why not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because I can't go and leave Bertie here all alone," he said stoutly.
+ "When I was going to be alone he wrote and asked his mother to let me go
+ home with him. She could not have either of us because Bertie's sister has
+ scarlet fever. He has to stay here, and he has never been away from home
+ at Christmas time before, and I can't go away and leave him by himself,
+ Aunt Laura."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a minute Aunt Laura looked at the boy as if she could not believe him.
+ Then she caught him in her arms and kissed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You dear little boy, you shall not leave him. You shall bring him along,
+ and we shall all enjoy ourselves together. Bertie, my boy, you are not
+ very old yet, but I am going to teach you a lesson as well as I can. It is
+ that kindness is never wasted in this world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so Bertie and Tom found that there was such a thing as a fairy after
+ all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIII. THE GREATEST OF THESE*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ *This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, vol. 76.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ JOSEPH MILLS HANSON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outside door swung open suddenly, letting a cloud of steam into the
+ small, hot kitchen. Charlie Moore, a milk pail in one hand, a lantern in
+ the other, closed the door behind him with a bang, set the pail on the
+ table and stamped the snow from his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's the milk, and I near froze gettin' it," said he, addressing his
+ partner, who was chopping potatoes in a pan on the stove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dose vried bodadoes vas burnt," said the other, wielding his knife
+ vigorously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are, eh? Why didn't you watch 'em instead of readin' your old
+ Scandinavian paper?" answered Charlie, hanging his overcoat and cap behind
+ the door and laying his mittens under the stove to dry. Then he drew up a
+ chair and with much exertion pulled off his heavy felt boots and stood
+ them beside his mittens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why didn't you shut the gate after you came in from town? The cows got
+ out and went up to Roney's an' I had to chase 'em; 'tain't any joke
+ runnin' round after cows such a night as this." Having relieved his mind
+ of its grievance, Charlie sat down before the oven door, and, opening it,
+ laid a stick of wood along its outer edge and thrust his feet into the hot
+ interior, propping his heels against the stick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look oud for dese har biscuits!" exclaimed his partner, anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, hang the biscuits!" was Charlie's hasty answer. "I'll watch 'em. Why
+ didn't you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay tank Ay fergit hem."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you don't want to forget. A feller forgot his clothes once, an' he
+ got froze."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay gass dose taller vas ketch in a sbring snowstorm. Vas dose biscuits
+ done, Sharlie?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You bet they are, Nels," replied Charlie, looking into the pan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dan subbar vas ready. Yom on!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nels picked up the frying-pan and Charlie the biscuits, and set them on
+ the oilcloth-covered table, where a plate of butter, a jar of plum jelly,
+ and a coffee-pot were already standing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside the frozen kitchen window the snow-covered fields and meadows
+ stretched, glistening and silent, away to the dark belt of timber by the
+ river. Along the deep-rutted road in front a belated lumber-wagon passed
+ slowly, the wheels crunching through the packed snow with a wavering,
+ incessant shriek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men hitched their chairs up to the table, and without ceremony
+ helped themselves liberally to the steaming food. For a few moments they
+ seemed oblivious to everything but the demands of hunger. The potatoes and
+ biscuits disappeared with surprising rapidity, washed down by large drafts
+ of coffee. These men, labouring steadily through the short daylight hours
+ in the dry, cold air of the Dakota winter, were like engines whose fires
+ had burned low&mdash;they were taking fuel. Presently, the first keen edge
+ of appetite satisfied, they ate more slowly, and Nels, straightening up
+ with a sigh, spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay seen Seigert in town ta-day. Ha vants von hundred fifty fer dose
+ team."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come down, eh?" commented Charlie. "Well, they're worth that. We'd better
+ take 'em, Nels. We'll need 'em in the spring if we break the north forty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yas, et's a nice team," agreed Nels. "Ha vas driven ham ta-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is he haulin' corn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Na; he had his kids oop gettin' Christmas bresents."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chris&mdash;By gracious! to-morrow's Christmas!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nels nodded solemnly, as one possessing superior knowledge. Charlie became
+ thoughtful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll come in sort of slim on it here, I reckon, Nels. Christmas ain't
+ right, somehow, out here. Back in Wisconsin, where I came from, there's
+ where you get your Christmas!" Charlie spoke with the unswerving prejudice
+ of mankind for the land of his birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yas, dose been right. En da ol' kontry dey havin' gret times Christmas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their thoughts were all bent now upon the holiday scenes of the past. As
+ they finished the meal and cleared away and washed the dishes they related
+ incidents of their boyhood's time, compared, reiterated, and embellished.
+ As they talked they grew jovial, and laughed often.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The skee broke an' you went over kerplunk, hey? Haw, haw! That reminds me
+ of one time in Wisconsin&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something of the joyous spirit of the Christmastide seemed to have entered
+ into this little farmhouse set in the midst of the lonely, white fields.
+ In the hearts of these men, moving about in their dim-lighted room, was
+ reechoed the joyous murmur of the great world without: the gayety of the
+ throngs in city streets, where the brilliant shop-windows, rich with
+ holiday spoils, smile out upon the passing crowd, and the clang of
+ street-cars and roar of traffic mingle with the cries of street-venders.
+ The work finished, they drew their chairs to the stove, and filled their
+ pipes, still talking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well," said Charlie, after the laugh occasioned by one of Nels'
+ droll stories had subsided. "It's nice to think of those old times. I'd
+ hate to have been one of these kids that can't have any fun. Christmas or
+ any other time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay gass dere ain't anybody much dot don'd have someding dis tams a year."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes, there are, Nels! You bet there are!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charlie nodded at his partner with serious conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, there's the Roneys," he waved his pipe over his shoulder. "The old
+ man told me to-night when I was up after the cows that he's sold all the
+ crops except what they need for feedin'&mdash;wheat, and corn, and
+ everything, and some hogs besides&mdash;and ain't got hardly enough now
+ for feed and clothes for all that family. The rent and the lumber he had
+ to buy to build the new barn after the old one burnt ate up the money like
+ fury. He kind of laughed, and said he guessed the children wouldn't get
+ much Christmas this year. I didn't think about it's being so close when he
+ told me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No Christmas!" Nels' round eyes widened with astonishment. "Ay tank dose
+ been pooty bad!" He studied the subject for a few moments, his stolid face
+ suddenly grown thoughtful. Charlie stared at the stove. Far away by the
+ river a lonely coyote set up his quick, howling yelp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dere's been seven kids oop dere," said Nels at last, glancing up as it
+ for corroboration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, seven," agreed Charlie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say, do ve need Seigert's team very pad?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, now that depends," said Charlie. "Why not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothin', only Ay vas tankin' ve might tak' some a das veat we vas goin'
+ to sell and&mdash;and&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yep, what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And dumb it on Roney's granary floor to-night after dere been asleeb."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charlie stared at his companion for a moment in silence. Then he rose,
+ and, approaching Nels, examined his partner's face with solemn scrutiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the great horn spoon," he announced, finally, "you've got a head on
+ you like a balloon, my boy! Keep on gettin' ideas like that, and you'll
+ land in Congress or the poor-farm before many years!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, abandoning his pretense of gravity, he slapped the other on the
+ back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why didn't I think of that? It's the best yet. Seigert's team? Oh, hang
+ Seigert's team. We don't need it. We'll have a little merry Christmas out
+ of this yet. Only they mustn't know where it came from. I'll write a note
+ and stick it under the door, 'You'll find some merry wheat&mdash;'No, that
+ ain't it. 'You'll find some wheat in the granary to give the kids a merry
+ Christmas with,' signed, 'Santa Claus.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wrote out the message in the air with a pointing forefinger. He had
+ entered into the spirit of the thing eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's half-past nine now," he went on, looking at the clock. "It'll be
+ eleven time we get the stuff loaded and hauled up there. Let's go out and
+ get at it. Lucky the bobs are on the wagon; they don't make such a racket
+ as wheels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took the lantern from its nail behind the door and lighted it, after
+ which he put on his boots, cap, and mittens, and flung his overcoat across
+ his shoulders. Nels, meanwhile, had put on his outer garments, also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shut up the stove, Nels." Charlie blew out the light and opened the door.
+ "There, hang it!" he exclaimed, turning back. "I forgot the note. Ought to
+ be in ink, I suppose. Well, never mind now; we won't put on any style
+ about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took down a pencil from the shelf, and, extracting a bit of wrapping
+ paper from a bundle behind the woodbox, wrote the note by the light of the
+ lantern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, I guess that will do," he said, finally. "Come on!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside, the night air was cold and bracing, and in the black vault of the
+ sky the winter constellations flashed and throbbed. The shadows of the two
+ men, thrown by the lantern, bobbed huge and grotesque across the snow and
+ among the bare branches of the cottonwoods, as they moved toward the barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay tank ve put on dose extra side poards and make her an even fifty
+ pushel," said Nels, after they had backed the wagon up to the granary
+ door. "Ve might as vell do it oop right, skence ve're at it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having carried out this suggestion, the two shovelled steadily, with short
+ intervals of rest, for three quarters of an hour, the dark pile of grain
+ in the wagon-box rising gradually until it stood flush with the top.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good it was to look upon, cold and soft and yielding to the touch, this
+ heaped-up wealth from the inexhaustible treasure-house of the mighty West.
+ Charlie and Nels felt something of this as they viewed the results of
+ their labours for a moment before hitching up the team.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's A number one hard," said Charlie, picking up a handful and sifting
+ it slowly through his fingers, "and it'll fetch seventy-four cents. But
+ you can't raise any worse on this old farm of ours if you try," he added,
+ a little proudly. "Nor anywhere else in the Jim River Valley, for that
+ matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they approached the Roney place, looking dim and indistinct in the
+ darkness, their voices hushed apprehensively, and the noise of the
+ sled-runners slipping through the snow seemed to them to increase from a
+ purr to a roar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, stob a minute!" whispered Nels, in agony of discovery. "Ve're
+ magin' an awful noise. Ay'll go und take a beek."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He slipped away and cautiously approached the house. "Et's all right," he
+ whispered, hoarsely, returning after a moment; "dere all asleeb. But go
+ easy; Ay tank ve pest go easy." They seemed burdened all at once with the
+ consciences of criminals, and went forward with almost guilty timidity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thunder, dere's a bump! Vy don'd you drive garefuller, Sharlie?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Drive yourself, if you think you can do any better!" As they came into
+ the yard a dog suddenly ran out from the barn, barking furiously. Charlie
+ reined up with an ejaculation of despair; "Look there, the dog! We're done
+ for now, sure! Stop him, Nels! Throw somethin' at 'im!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise seemed to their excited ears louder than the crash of artillery.
+ Nels threw a piece of snow crust. The dog ran back a few steps, but his
+ barking did not diminish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, hold the lines. I'll try to catch 'im." Charlie jumped from the
+ wagon and approached the dog with coaxing words: "Come, doggie, good
+ doggie, nice boy, come!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His manoeuvre, however, merely served to increase the animal's frenzy. As
+ Charlie approached the dog retired slowly toward the house, his head
+ thrown back, and his rapid barking increased to a long-drawn howl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good boy, come! Bother the brute! He'll wake up the whole household! Nice
+ doggie! Phe-e&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise, however, had no apparent effect upon the occupants of the
+ house. All remained as dark and silent as ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sharlie, Sharlie, let him go!" cried Nels, in a voice smothered with
+ laughter. "Ay go in dose parn; maype ha'll chase me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His hope was well founded. The dog, observing this treacherous occupation
+ by the enemy of his last harbour of refuge, gave pursuit and disappeared
+ within the door, which Charlie, hard behind him, closed with a bang. There
+ was the sound of a hurried scuffle within. The dog's barking gave place to
+ terrified whinings, which in turn were suddenly quenched to a choking
+ murmur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gome in, Sharlie, kvick!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You got him?" queried Charlie, opening the door cautiously. "Did he bite
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Na, yust ma mitten. Gat a sack or someding da die him oop in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sack was procured from somewhere, into which the dog, now silenced from
+ sheer exhaustion and fright, was unceremoniously thrust, after which the
+ sack was tied and flung into the wagon. This formidable obstacle overcome
+ and the Roneys still slumbering peacefully, the rest was easy. The granary
+ door was pried open and the wheat shovelled hurriedly in upon the empty
+ floor. Charlie then crept up to the house and slipped his note under the
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sack was lifted from the now empty wagon and opened before the barn,
+ whereupon its occupant slipped meekly out and retreated at once to a far
+ corner, seemingly too much incensed at his discourteous treatment even to
+ fling a volley of farewell barks at his departing captors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Vell," remarked Nels, with a sigh of relief as they gained the road, "Ay
+ tank dose Roneys pelieve en Santa Claus now. Dose peen funny vay fer Santa
+ Claus to coom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charlie's laugh was good to hear. "He didn't exactly come down the
+ chimney, that's a fact, but it'll do at a pinch. We ought to have told
+ them to get a present for the dog&mdash;collar and chain. I reckon he
+ wouldn't hardly be thankful for it, though, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay gass not. Ha liges ta haf hes nights ta hemself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, we had our fun, anyway. Sort of puts me in mind of old Wisconsin,
+ somehow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From far off over the valley, with its dismantled cornfields and
+ snow-covered haystacks, beyond the ice-bound river, floated slow, and
+ sonorous, the mellow clanging of church bells. They were ushering in the
+ Christmas morn. Overhead the starlit heavens glistened, brooding and
+ mysterious, looking down with luminous, loving eyes upon these humble sons
+ of men doing a good deed, from the impulse of simple, generous hearts, as
+ upon that other Christmas morning, long ago, when the Jewish shepherds,
+ guarding their flocks by night, read in their shining depths that in
+ Bethlehem of Judea the Christ-Child was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rising sun was touching the higher hilltops with a faint rush of
+ crimson the next morning when the back door of the Roney house opened with
+ a creak, and Mr. Roney, still heavy-eyed with sleep, stumbled out upon the
+ porch, stretched his arms above his head, yawned, blinked at the dazzling
+ snow, and then shambled off toward the barn. As he approached, the dog ran
+ eagerly out, gambolled meekly around his feet and caressed his boots. The
+ man patted him kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hello, old boy! What were you yappin' around so for last night, huh?
+ Grain-thieves? You needn't worry about them. There ain't nothin' left for
+ them to steal. No, sir! If they got into that granary they'd have to take
+ a lantern along to find a pint of wheat. I don't suppose," he added,
+ reflectively, "that I could scrape up enough to feed the chickens this
+ mornin', but I guess I might's well see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed over to the little building. What he saw when he looked within
+ seemed for a moment to produce no impression upon him whatever. He stared
+ at the hillock of grain in motionless silence. Finally Mr. Roney gave
+ utterance to a single word, "Geewhilikins!" and started for the house on a
+ run. Into the kitchen, where his wife was just starting the fire, the
+ excited man burst like a whirlwind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come out here, Mary!" he cried. "Come out here, quick!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worthy woman, unaccustomed to such demonstrations, looked at him in
+ amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For goodness sake, what's come over you, Peter Roney?" she exclaimed.
+ "Are you daft? Don't make such a noise! You'll wake the young ones, and I
+ don't want them waked till need be, with no Christmas for 'em, poor little
+ things!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind the young 'uns," he replied. "Come on!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they passed out he noticed the slip of paper under the door and picked
+ it up, but without comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He charged down upon the granary, his wife, with a shawl over her head,
+ close behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She peered in, apprehensively at first, then with eyes of widening wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Peter!" she said, turning to him. "Why, Peter! What does&mdash;I
+ thought&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You thought!" he broke in. "Me, too. But it ain't so. It means that we've
+ got some of the best neighbours that ever was, a thinkin' of our young
+ 'uns this way! Read that!" and he thrust the paper into her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Peter!" she ejaculated again, weakly. Then suddenly she turned, and
+ laying her head on his shoulder, began to sob softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, there," he said, patting her arm awkwardly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you go and cry now. Let's just be thankful to the good Lord for
+ puttin' such fellers into the world as them fellers down the road. And now
+ you run in and hurry up breakfast while I do up the chores. Then we'll
+ hitch up and get into town 'fore the stores close. Tell the young 'uns
+ Santy didn't get round last night with their things, but we've got word to
+ meet him in town. Hey? Yes, I saw just the kind of sled Pete wants when I
+ was up yesterday, and that china doll for Mollie. Yes, tell 'em anything
+ you want. Twon't be too big. Santy Claus has come to Roney's ranch this
+ year, sure!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIV. LITTLE GRETCHEN AND THE WOODEN SHOE*
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ * From "Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College,
+ copyright 1902.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ELIZABETH HARRISON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following story is one of many which has drifted down to us from the
+ story-loving nurseries and hearthstones of Germany. I cannot recall when I
+ first had it told to me as a child, varied, of course, by different
+ tellers, but always leaving that sweet, tender impression of God's loving
+ care for the least of his children. I have since read different versions
+ of it in at least a half-dozen story books for children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once upon a time, a long time ago, far away across the great ocean, in a
+ country called Germany, there could be seen a small log hut on the edge of
+ a great forest, whose fir-trees extended for miles and miles to the north.
+ This little house, made of heavy hewn logs, had but one room in it. A
+ rough pine door gave entrance to this room, and a small square window
+ admitted the light. At the back of the house was built an old-fashioned
+ stone chimney, out of which in winter usually curled a thin, blue smoke,
+ showing that there was not very much fire within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Small as the house was, it was large enough for the two people who lived
+ in it. I want to tell you a story to-day about these two people. One was
+ an old, gray-haired woman, so old that the little children of the village,
+ nearly half a mile away, often wondered whether she had come into the
+ world with the huge mountains, and the great fir-trees, which stood like
+ giants back of her small hut. Her face was wrinkled all over with deep
+ lines, which, if the children could only have read aright, would have told
+ them of many years of cheerful, happy, self-sacrifice, of loving, anxious
+ watching beside sick-beds, of quiet endurance of pain, of many a day of
+ hunger and cold, and of a thousand deeds of unselfish love for other
+ people; but, of course, they could not read this strange handwriting. They
+ only knew that she was old and wrinkled, and that she stooped as she
+ walked. None of them seemed to fear her, for her smile was always
+ cheerful, and she had a kindly word for each of them if they chanced to
+ meet her on her way to and from the village. With this old, old woman
+ lived a very little girl. So bright and happy was she that the travellers
+ who passed by the lonesome little house on the edge of the forest often
+ thought of a sunbeam as they saw her. These two people were known in the
+ village as Granny Goodyear and Little Gretchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter had come and the frost had snapped off many of the smaller
+ branches from the pine-trees in the forest. Gretchen and her Granny were
+ up by daybreak each morning. After their simple breakfast of oatmeal,
+ Gretchen would run to the little closet and fetch Granny's old woollen
+ shawl, which seemed almost as old as Granny herself. Gretchen always
+ claimed the right to put the shawl over her Granny's head, even though she
+ had to climb onto the wooden bench to do it. After carefully pinning it
+ under Granny's chin, she gave her a good-bye kiss, and Granny started out
+ for her morning's work in the forest. This work was nothing more nor less
+ than the gathering up of the twigs and branches which the autumn winds and
+ winter frosts had thrown upon the ground. These were carefully gathered
+ into a large bundle which Granny tied together with a strong linen band.
+ She then managed to lift the bundle to her shoulder and trudged off to the
+ village with it. Here she sold the fagots for kindling wood to the people
+ of the village. Sometimes she would get only a few pence each day, and
+ sometimes a dozen or more, but on this money little Gretchen and she
+ managed to live; they had their home, and the forest kindly furnished the
+ wood for the fire which kept them warm in cold weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summer time Granny had a little garden at the back of the hut where
+ she raised, with little Gretchen's help, a few potatoes and turnips and
+ onions. These she carefully stored away for winter use. To this meagre
+ supply, the pennies, gained by selling the twigs from the forest, added
+ the oatmeal for Gretchen and a little black coffee for Granny. Meat was a
+ thing they never thought of having. It cost too much money. Still, Granny
+ and Gretchen were very happy, because they loved each other dearly.
+ Sometimes Gretchen would be left alone all day long in the hut, because
+ Granny would have some work to do in the village after selling her bundle
+ of sticks and twigs. It was during these long days that little Gretchen
+ had taught herself to sing the song which the wind sang to the pine
+ branches. In the summer time she learned the chirp and twitter of the
+ birds, until her voice might almost be mistaken for a bird's voice; she
+ learned to dance as the swaying shadows did, and even to talk to the stars
+ which shone through the little square window when Granny came home too
+ late or too tired to talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes, when the weather was fine, or her Granny had an extra bundle of
+ newly knitted stockings to take to the village, she would let little
+ Gretchen go along with her. It chanced that one of these trips to the town
+ came just the week before Christmas, and Gretchen's eyes were delighted by
+ the sight of the lovely Christmas-trees which stood in the window of the
+ village store. It seemed to her that she would never tire of looking at
+ the knit dolls, the woolly lambs, the little wooden shops with their
+ queer, painted men and women in them, and all the other fine things. She
+ had never owned a plaything in her whole life; therefore, toys which you
+ and I would not think much of, seemed to her to be very beautiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night, after their supper of baked potatoes was over, and little
+ Gretchen had cleared away the dishes and swept up the hearth, because
+ Granny dear was so tired, she brought her own small wooden stool and
+ placed it very near Granny's feet and sat down upon it, folding her hands
+ on her lap. Granny knew that this meant she wanted to talk about
+ something, so she smilingly laid away the large Bible which she had been
+ reading, and took up her knitting, which was as much as to say: "Well,
+ Gretchen, dear, Granny is ready to listen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Granny," said Gretchen slowly, "it's almost Christmas time, isn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, dearie," said Granny, "only five more days now," and then she
+ sighed, but little Gretchen was so happy that she did not notice Granny's
+ sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you think, Granny, I'll get this Christmas?" said she, looking up
+ eagerly into Granny's face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, child, child," said Granny, shaking her head, "you'll have no
+ Christmas this year. We are too poor for that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, but, Granny," interrupted little Gretchen, "think of all the
+ beautiful toys we saw in the village to-day. Surely Santa Claus has sent
+ enough for every little child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, dearie," said Granny, "those toys are for people who can pay money
+ for them, and we have no money to spend for Christmas toys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Granny," said Gretchen, "perhaps some of the little children who
+ live in the great house on the hill at the other end of the village will
+ be willing to share some of their toys with me. They will be so glad to
+ give some to a little girl who has none."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear child, dear child," said Granny, leaning forward and stroking the
+ soft, shiny hair of the little girl, "your heart is full of love. You
+ would be glad to bring a Christmas to every child; but their heads are so
+ full of what they are going to get that they forget all about anybody else
+ but themselves." Then she sighed and shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Granny," said Gretchen, her bright, happy tone of voice growing a
+ little less joyous, "perhaps the dear Santa Claus will show some of the
+ village children how to make presents that do not cost money, and some of
+ them may surprise me Christmas morning with a present. And, Granny, dear,"
+ added she, springing up from her low stool, "can't I gather some of the
+ pine branches and take them to the old sick man who lives in the house by
+ the mill, so that he can have the sweet smell of our pine forest in his
+ room all Christmas day?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, dearie," said Granny, "you may do what you can to make the Christmas
+ bright and happy, but you must not expect any present yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, but, Granny," said little Gretchen, her face brightening, "you forget
+ all about the shining Christmas angels, who came down to earth and sang
+ their wonderful song the night the beautiful Christ-Child was born! They
+ are so loving and good that they will not forget any little child. I shall
+ ask my dear stars to-night to tell them of us. You know," she added, with
+ a look of relief, "the stars are so very high that they must know the
+ angels quite well, as they come and go with their messages from the loving
+ God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Granny sighed, as she half whispered, "Poor child, poor child!" but
+ Gretchen threw her arm around Granny's neck and gave her a hearty kiss,
+ saying as she did so: "Oh, Granny, Granny, you don't talk to the stars
+ often enough, else you wouldn't be sad at Christmas time." Then she danced
+ all around the room, whirling her little skirts about her to show Granny
+ how the wind had made the snow dance that day. She looked so droll and
+ funny that Granny forgot her cares and worries and laughed with little
+ Gretchen over her new snow-dance. The days passed on, and the morning
+ before Christmas Eve came. Gretchen having tidied up the little room&mdash;for
+ Granny had taught her to be a careful little housewife&mdash;was off to
+ the forest, singing a birdlike song, almost as happy and free as the birds
+ themselves. She was very busy that day, preparing a surprise for Granny.
+ First, however, she gathered the most beautiful of the fir branches within
+ her reach to take the next morning to the old sick man who lived by the
+ mill. The day was all too short for the happy little girl. When Granny
+ came trudging wearily home that night, she found the frame of the doorway
+ covered with green pine branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's to welcome you, Granny! It's to welcome you!" cried Gretchen; "our
+ old dear home wanted to give you a Christmas welcome. Don't you see, the
+ branches of evergreen make it look as if it were smiling all over, and it
+ is trying to say, 'A happy Christmas' to you, Granny!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Granny laughed and kissed the little girl, as they opened the door and
+ went in together. Here was a new surprise for Granny. The four posts of
+ the wooden bed, which stood in one corner of the room, had been trimmed by
+ the busy little fingers, with smaller and more flexible branches of the
+ pine-trees. A small bouquet of red mountain-ash berries stood at each side
+ of the fireplace, and these, together with the trimmed posts of the bed,
+ gave the plain old room quite a festival look. Gretchen laughed and
+ clapped her hands and danced about until the house seemed full of music to
+ poor, tired Granny, whose heart had been sad as she turned toward their
+ home that night, thinking of the disappointment which must come to loving
+ little Gretchen the next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After supper was over little Gretchen drew her stool up to Granny's side,
+ and laying her soft, little hands on Granny's knee, asked to be told once
+ again the story of the coming of the Christ-Child; how the night that he
+ was born the beautiful angels had sung their wonderful song, and how the
+ whole sky had become bright with a strange and glorious light, never seen
+ by the people of earth before. Gretchen had heard the story many, many
+ times before, but she never grew tired of it, and now that Christmas Eve
+ had come again, the happy little child wanted to hear it once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Granny had finished telling it the two sat quiet and silent for a
+ little while thinking it over; then Granny rose and said that it was time
+ for them to go to bed. She slowly took off her heavy wooden shoes, such as
+ are worn in that country, and placed them beside the hearth. Gretchen
+ looked thoughtfully at them for a minute or two, and then she said,
+ "Granny, don't you think that somebody in all this wide world will think
+ of us to-night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Gretchen," said Granny, "I don't think any one will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then, Granny," said Gretchen, "the Christmas angels will, I know;
+ so I am going to take one of your wooden shoes, and put it on the
+ windowsill outside, so that they may see it as they pass by. I am sure the
+ stars will tell the Christmas angels where the shoe is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, you foolish, foolish child," said Granny, "you are only getting ready
+ for a disappointment To-morrow morning there will be nothing whatever in
+ the shoe. I can tell you that now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But little Gretchen would not listen. She only shook her head and cried
+ out: "Ah, Granny, you don't talk enough to the stars." With this she
+ seized the shoe, and, opening the door, hurried out to place it on the
+ windowsill. It was very dark without, and something soft and cold seemed
+ to gently kiss her hair and face. Gretchen knew by this that it was
+ snowing, and she looked up to the sky, anxious to see if the stars were in
+ sight, but a strong wind was tumbling the dark, heavy snow-clouds about
+ and had shut away all else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind," said Gretchen softly to herself, "the stars are up there,
+ even if I can't see them, and the Christmas angels do not mind
+ snowstorms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then a rough wind went sweeping by the little girl, whispering
+ something to her which she could not understand, and then it made a sudden
+ rush up to the snow-clouds and parted them, so that the deep, mysterious
+ sky appeared beyond, and shining down out of the midst of it was
+ Gretchen's favourite star.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, little star, little star!" said the child, laughing aloud, "I knew
+ you were there, though I couldn't see you. Will you whisper to the
+ Christmas angels as they come by that little Gretchen wants so very much
+ to have a Christmas gift to-morrow morning, if they have one to spare, and
+ that she has put one of Granny's shoes upon the windowsill ready for it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment more and the little girl, standing on tiptoe, had reached the
+ windowsill and placed the shoe upon it, and was back again in the house
+ beside Granny and the warm fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two went quietly to bed, and that night as little Gretchen knelt to
+ pray to the Heavenly Father, she thanked him for having sent the
+ Christ-Child into the world to teach all mankind how to be loving and
+ unselfish, and in a few moments she was quietly sleeping, dreaming of the
+ Christmas angels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning, very early, even before the sun was up, little Gretchen
+ was awakened by the sound of sweet music coming from the village. She
+ listened for a moment and then she knew that the choir-boys were singing
+ the Christmas carols in the open air of the village street. She sprang up
+ out of bed and began to dress herself as quickly as possible, singing as
+ she dressed. While Granny was slowly putting on her clothes, little
+ Gretchen, having finished dressing herself, unfastened the door and
+ hurried out to see what the Christmas angels had left in the old wooden
+ shoe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The white snow covered everything&mdash;trees, stumps, roads, and pastures&mdash;until
+ the whole world looked like fairyland. Gretchen climbed up on a large
+ stone which was beneath the window and carefully lifted down the wooden
+ shoe. The snow tumbled off of it in a shower over the little girl's hands,
+ but she did not heed that; she ran hurriedly back into the house, putting
+ her hand into the toe of the shoe as she ran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Granny! Oh, Granny!" she exclaimed, "you didn't believe the Christmas
+ angels would think about us, but see, they have, they have! Here is a dear
+ little bird nestled down in the toe of your shoe! Oh, isn't he beautiful?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Granny came forward and looked at what the child was holding lovingly in
+ her hand. There she saw a tiny chick-a-dee, whose wing was evidently
+ broken by the rough and boisterous winds of the night before, and who had
+ taken shelter in the safe, dry toe of the old wooden shoe. She gently took
+ the little bird out of Gretchen's hands, and skilfully bound his broken
+ wing to his side, so that he need not hurt himself by trying to fly with
+ it. Then she showed Gretchen how to make a nice warm nest for the little
+ stranger, close beside the fire, and when their breakfast was ready she
+ let Gretchen feed the little bird with a few moist crumbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the day Gretchen carried the fresh, green boughs to the old sick
+ man by the mill, and on her way home stopped to see and enjoy the
+ Christmas toys of some other children whom she knew, never once wishing
+ that they were hers. When she reached home she found that the little bird
+ had gone to sleep. Soon, however, he opened his eyes and stretched his
+ head up, saying just as plain as a bird could say, "Now, my new friends, I
+ want you to give me something more to eat." Gretchen gladly fed him again,
+ and then, holding him in her lap, she softly and gently stroked his gray
+ feathers until the little creature seemed to lose all fear of her. That
+ evening Granny taught her a Christmas hymn and told her another beautiful
+ Christmas story. Then Gretchen made up a funny little story to tell to the
+ birdie. He winked his eyes and turned his head from side to side in such a
+ droll fashion that Gretchen laughed until the tears came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Granny and she got ready for bed that night, Gretchen put her arms
+ softly around Granny's neck, and whispered: "What a beautiful Christmas we
+ have had to-day, Granny! Is there anything in the world more lovely than
+ Christmas?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, child, nay," said Granny, "not to such loving hearts as yours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXV. CHRISTMAS ON BIG RATTLE*
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ * This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, Dec. 14, 1905.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer sat by the rude hearth of his Big Rattle camp, brooding in a sort
+ of tired contentment over the spitting fagots of var and glowing coals of
+ birch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Christmas Eve. He had been out on his snowshoes all that day, and
+ all the day before, springing his traps along the streams and putting his
+ deadfalls out of commission&mdash;rather queer work for a trapper to be
+ about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Archer, despite all his gloomy manner, was really a sentimentalist,
+ who practised what he felt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christmas is a season of peace on earth," he had told himself, while
+ demolishing the logs of a sinister deadfall with his axe; and now the
+ remembrance of his quixotic deed added a brightness to the fire and to the
+ rough, undecorated walls of the camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside, the wind ran high in the forest, breaking and sweeping tidelike
+ over the reefs of treetops. The air was bitterly cold. Another voice,
+ almost as fitful as the sough of the wind, sounded across the night. It
+ was the waters of Stone Arrow Falls, above Big Rattle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The frosts had drawn their bonds of ice and blankets of silencing snow
+ over all the rest of the stream, but the white and black face of the falls
+ still flashed from a window in the great house of crystal, and threw out a
+ voice of desolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sacobie Bear, a full-blooded Micmac, uttered a grunt of relief when his
+ ears caught the bellow of Stone Arrow Falls. He stood still, and turned
+ his head from side to side, questioningly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good!" he said. "Big Rattle off there, Archer's camp over there. I go
+ there. Good 'nough!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hitched his old smooth-bore rifle higher under his arm and continued
+ his journey. Sacobie had tramped many miles&mdash;all the way from
+ ice-imprisoned Fox Harbor. His papoose was sick. His squaw was hungry.
+ Sacobie's belt was drawn tight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all that weary journey his old rifle had not banged once, although
+ few eyes save those of timberwolf and lynx were sharper in the hunt than
+ Sacobie's. The Indian was reeling with hunger and weakness, but he held
+ bravely on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A white man, no matter how courageous and sinewy, would have been prone in
+ the snow by that time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sacobie, with his head down and his round snowshoes padding! padding!
+ like the feet of a frightened duck, raced with death toward the haven of
+ Archer's cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer was dreaming of a Christmas-time in a great faraway city when he
+ was startled by a rattle of snowshoes at his threshold and a soft beating
+ on his door, like weak blows from mittened hands. He sprang across the
+ cabin and pulled open the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short, stooping figure shuffled in and reeled against him. A rifle in a
+ woollen case clattered at his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mer' Christmas! How-do?" said a weary voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry Christmas, brother!" replied Archer. Then, "Bless me, but it's
+ Sacobie Bear! Why, what's the matter, Sacobie?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heap tired! Heap hungry!" replied the Micmac, sinking to the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer lifted the Indian and carried him over to the bunk at the farther
+ end of the room. He filled his iron-pot spoon with brandy, and inserted
+ the point of it between Sacobie's unresisting jaws. Then he loosened the
+ Micmac's coat and shirt and belt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He removed his moccasins and stockings and rubbed the straight thin feet
+ with brandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a while Sacobie Bear opened his eyes and gazed up at Archer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good!" he said. "John Archer, he heap fine man, anyhow. Mighty good to
+ poor Injun Sacobie, too. Plenty tobac, I s'pose. Plenty rum, too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No more rum, my son," replied Archer, tossing what was left in the mug
+ against the log wall, and corking the bottle, "and no smoke until you have
+ had a feed. What do you say to bacon and tea! Or would tinned beef suit
+ you better?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bacum," replied Sacobie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hoisted himself to his elbow, and wistfully sniffed the fumes of brandy
+ that came from the direction of his bare feet. "Heap waste of good rum, me
+ t'ink," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You ungratefu' little beggar!" laughed Archer, as he pulled a frying pan
+ from under the bunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time the bacon was fried and the tea steeped, Sacobie was
+ sufficiently revived to leave the bunk and take a seat by the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ate as all hungry Indians do; and Archer looked on in wonder and
+ whimsical regret, remembering the miles and miles he had tramped with that
+ bacon on his back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sacobie, you will kill yourself!" he protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sacobie no kill himself now," replied the Micmac, as he bolted a brown
+ slice and a mouthful of hard bread. "Sacobie more like to kill himself
+ when he empty. Want to live when he chock-full. Good fun. T'ank you for
+ more tea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer filled the extended mug and poured in the molasses&mdash;"long
+ sweet'nin'" they call it in that region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What brings you so far from Fox Harbor this time of year?" inquired
+ Archer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Squaw sick. Papoose sick. Bote empty. Wan' good bacum to eat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer smiled at the fire. "Any luck trapping?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His guest shook his head and hid his face behind the upturned mug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not much," he replied, presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew his sleeve across his mouth, and then produced a clay pipe from a
+ pocket in his shirt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tobac?" he inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer passed him a dark and heavy plug of tobacco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Knife?" queried Sacobie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Try your own knife on it," answered Archer, grinning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sigh Sacobie produced his sheath-knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You t'ink Sacobie heap big t'ief," he said, accusingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Knives are easily lost&mdash;in people's pockets," replied Archer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men talked for hours. Sacobie Bear was a great gossip for one of
+ his race. In fact, he had a Micmac nickname which, translated, meant "the
+ man who deafens his friends with much talk." Archer, however, was pleased
+ with his ready chatter and unforced humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at last they both began to nod. The white man made up a bed on the
+ floor for Sacobie with a couple of caribou skins and a heavy blanket. Then
+ he gathered together a few plugs of tobacco, some tea, flour, and dried
+ fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sacobie watched him with freshly aroused interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More tobac, please," he said. "Squaw, he smoke, too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer added a couple of sticks of the black leaf to the pile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bacum, too," said the Micmac. "Bacum better nor fish, anyhow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'll have to do with the fish," he replied; "but I'll give you a tin of
+ condensed milk for the papoose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, ah! Him good stuff!" exclaimed Sacobie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archer considered the provisions for a second or two. Then, going over to
+ a dunnage bag near his bunk, he pulled its contents about until he found a
+ bright red silk handkerchief and a red flannel shirt. Their colour was too
+ gaudy for his taste. "These things are for your squaw," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sacobie was delighted. Archer tied the articles into a neat pack and stood
+ it in the corner, beside his guest's rifle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now you had better turn in," he said, and blew out the light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In ten minutes both men slept the sleep of the weary. The fire, a great
+ mass of red coals, faded and flushed like some fabulous jewel. The wind
+ washed over the cabin and fingered the eaves, and brushed furtive hands
+ against the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was dawn when Archer awoke. He sat up in his bunk and looked about the
+ quiet, gray-lighted room. Sacobie Bear was nowhere to be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He glanced at the corner by the door. Rifle and pack were both gone. He
+ looked up at the rafter where his slab of bacon was always hung. It, too,
+ was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He jumped out of his bunk and ran to the door. Opening it, he looked out.
+ Not a breath of air stirred. In the east, saffron and scarlet, broke the
+ Christmas morning, and blue on the white surface of the world lay the
+ imprints of Sacobie's round snowshoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time the trapper stood in the doorway in silence, looking out
+ at the stillness and beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Sacobie!" he said, after a while. "Well, he's welcome to the bacon,
+ even if it is all I had."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned to light the fire and prepare breakfast. Something at the foot
+ of his bunk caught his eye. He went over and took it up. It was a cured
+ skin&mdash;a beautiful specimen of fox. He turned it over, and on the
+ white hide an uncultured hand had written, with a charred stick, "Archer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, bless that old red-skin!" exclaimed the trapper, huskily. "Bless
+ his puckered eyes! Who'd have thought that I should get a Christmas
+ present?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Children's Book of Christmas
+Stories, by Various
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/5061.txt b/5061.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/5061.txt
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+Project Gutenberg's The Children's Book of Christmas Stories, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Children's Book of Christmas Stories
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+
+Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5061]
+Posting Date: March 25, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTMAS STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF CHRISTMAS STORIES
+
+By Various
+
+Edited by Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+Many librarians have felt the need and expressed the desire for a select
+collection of children's Christmas stories in one volume. This books
+claims to be just that and nothing more.
+
+Each of the stories has already won the approval of thousands of
+children, and each is fraught with the true Christmas spirit.
+
+It is hoped that the collection will prove equally acceptable to
+parents, teachers, and librarians.
+
+Asa Don Dickinson.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+(Note.--The stories marked with a star (*) will be most enjoyed by
+younger children; those marked with a two stars (**) are better suited
+to older children.)
+
+ Christmas at Fezziwig's Warehouse. By Charles Dickens
+ * The Fir-Tree. By Hans Christian Andersen
+ The Christmas Masquerade. By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
+ * The Shepherds and the Angels. Adapted from the Bills
+ ** The Telltale Tile. By Olive Thorne Miller
+ * Little Girl's Christmas. By Winnifred E. Lincoln
+ ** A Christmas Matinee. By M.A.L. Lane
+ * Toinette and the Elves. By Susan Coolidge
+ The Voyage of the Wee Red Cap. By Ruth Sawyer Durand
+ * A Story of the Christ-Child (a German Legend for Christmas Eve). As
+ told by
+ Elizabeth Harrison
+ * Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas. By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
+ Why the Chimes Rang. By Raymond McAlden
+ The Birds' Christmas (founded on fact). By F.E. Mann
+ ** The Little Sister's Vacation. By Winifred M. Kirkland
+ * Little Wolff's Wooden Shoes. By Francois Coppee, adapted and
+ translated by
+ Alma J. Foster
+ ** Christmas in the Alley. By Olive Thorne Miller
+ * A Christmas Star. By Katherine Pyle
+ ** The Queerest Christmas. By Grace Margaret Gallaher
+ Old Father Christmas. By J.H. Ewing
+ A Christmas Carol. By Charles Dickens
+ How Christmas Came to the Santa Maria Flats. By Elia W. Peattie
+ The Legend of Babouscka. From the Russian Folk Tale
+ * Christmas in the Barn. By F. Arnstein
+ The Philanthropist's Christmas. By James Weber Linn
+ * The First Christmas-Tree. By Lucy Wheelock
+ The First New England Christmas. By G.L. Stone and M.G. Fickett
+ The Cratchits' Christmas Dinner. By Charles Dickens
+ Christmas in Seventeen Seventy-Six. By Anne Hollingsworth Wharton
+ * Christmas Under the Snow. By Olive Thorne Miller
+ Mr. Bluff's Experience of Holidays. By Oliver Bell Bunce
+ ** Master Sandy's Snapdragon. By Elbridge S. Brooks
+ A Christmas Fairy. By John Strange Winter
+ The Greatest of These. By Joseph Mills Hanson
+ * Little Gretchen and the Wooden Shoe. By Elizabeth Harrison
+ ** Big Rattle. By Theodore Goodridge Roberts
+
+
+
+
+I. CHRISTMAS AT FEZZIWIG'S WAREHOUSE
+
+CHARLES DICKENS
+
+"Yo Ho! my boys," said Fezziwig. "No more work to-night! Christmas
+Eve, Dick! Christmas, Ebenezer! Let's have the shutters up!" cried old
+Fezziwig with a sharp clap of his hands, "before a man can say Jack
+Robinson...."
+
+"Hilli-ho!" cried old Fezziwig, skipping down from the high desk with
+wonderful agility. "Clear away, my lads, and let's have lots of room
+here! Hilli-ho, Dick! Cheer-up, Ebenezer!"
+
+Clear away! There was nothing they wouldn't have cleared away, or
+couldn't have cleared away with old Fezziwig looking on. It was done
+in a minute. Every movable was packed off, as if it were dismissed from
+public life forevermore; the floor was swept and watered, the lamps were
+trimmed, fuel was heaped upon the fire; and the warehouse was as snug,
+and warm, and dry, and bright a ballroom as you would desire to see on a
+winter's night.
+
+In came a fiddler with a music book, and went up to the lofty desk and
+made an orchestra of it and tuned like fifty stomach-aches. In came Mrs.
+Fezziwig, one vast substantial smile. In came the three Misses Fezziwig,
+beaming and lovable. In came the six followers whose hearts they broke.
+In came all the young men and women employed in the business. In came
+the housemaid with her cousin the baker. In came the cook with her
+brother's particular friend the milkman. In came the boy from over
+the way, who was suspected of not having board enough from his master,
+trying to hide himself behind the girl from next door but one who was
+proved to have had her ears pulled by her mistress; in they all came,
+anyhow and everyhow. Away they all went, twenty couple at once; hands
+half round and back again the other way; down the middle and up again;
+round and round in various stages of affectionate grouping, old top
+couple always turning up in the wrong place; new top couple starting
+off again, as soon as they got there; all top couples at last, and not a
+bottom one to help them.
+
+When this result was brought about the fiddler struck up "Sir Roger de
+Coverley." Then old Fezziwig stood out to dance with Mrs. Fezziwig. Top
+couple, too, with a good stiff piece of work cut out for them; three
+or four and twenty pairs of partners; people who were not to be trifled
+with; people who would dance and had no notion of walking.
+
+But if they had been thrice as many--oh, four times as many--old
+Fezziwig would have been a match for them, and so would Mrs. Fezziwig.
+As to her, she was worthy to be his partner in every sense of the term.
+If that's not high praise, tell me higher and I'll use it. A positive
+light appeared to issue from Fezziwig's calves. They shone in every part
+of the dance like moons. You couldn't have predicted at any given time
+what would become of them next. And when old Fezziwig and Mrs. Fezziwig
+had gone all through the dance, advance and retire; both hands to your
+partner, bow and courtesy, corkscrew, thread the needle, and back again
+to your place; Fezziwig "cut"--cut so deftly that he appeared to wink
+with his legs, and came upon his feet again with a stagger.
+
+When the clock struck eleven the domestic ball broke up. Mr. and Mrs.
+Fezziwig took their stations, one on either side of the door, and
+shaking hands with every person individually, as he or she went out,
+wished him or her a Merry Christmas!
+
+
+
+
+II. THE FIR-TREE*
+
+*Reprinted by permission of the Houghton-Mifflin Company.
+
+HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
+
+Out in the woods stood a nice little Fir-tree. The place he had was a
+very good one; the sun shone on him; as to fresh air, there was enough
+of that, and round him grew many large-sized comrades, pines as well as
+firs. But the little Fir wanted so very much to be a grown-up tree.
+
+He did not think of the warm sun and of the fresh air; he did not care
+for the little cottage children that ran about and prattled when they
+were in the woods looking for wild strawberries. The children often came
+with a whole pitcher full of berries, or a long row of them threaded on
+a straw, and sat down near the young tree and said, "Oh, how pretty he
+is! what a nice little fir!" But this was what the Tree could not bear
+to hear.
+
+At the end of a year he had shot up a good deal, and after another year
+he was another long bit taller; for with fir-trees one can always tell
+by the shoots how many years old they are.
+
+"Oh, were I but such a high tree as the others are!" sighed he. "Then I
+should be able to spread out my branches, and with the tops to look into
+the wide world! Then would the birds build nests among my branches; and
+when there was a breeze, I could bend with as much stateliness as the
+others!"
+
+Neither the sunbeams, nor the birds, nor the red clouds, which morning
+and evening sailed above them, gave the little Tree any pleasure.
+
+In winter, when the snow lay glittering on the ground, a hare would
+often come leaping along, and jump right over the little Tree. Oh, that
+made him so angry! But two winters were past, and in the third the tree
+was so large that the hare was obliged to go round it. "To grow and
+grow, to get older and be tall," thought the Tree--"that, after all, is
+the most delightful thing in the world!"
+
+In autumn the wood-cutters always came and felled some of the largest
+trees. This happened every year; and the young Fir-tree, that had now
+grown to a very comely size, trembled at the sight; for the magnificent
+great trees fell to the earth with noise and cracking, the branches were
+lopped off, and the trees looked long and bare; they were hardly to be
+recognized; and then they were laid in carts, and the horses dragged
+them out of the woods.
+
+Where did they go to? What became of them?
+
+In spring, when the Swallows and the Storks came, the Tree asked them,
+"Don't you know where they have been taken? Have you not met them
+anywhere?"
+
+The Swallows did not know anything about it; but the Stork looked
+musing, nodded his head, and said: "Yes, I think I know; I met many
+ships as I was flying hither from Egypt; on the ships were magnificent
+masts, and I venture to assert that it was they that smelt so of fir.
+I may congratulate you, for they lifted themselves on high most
+majestically!"
+
+"Oh, were I but old enough to fly across the sea! But how does the sea
+look in reality? What is it like?"
+
+"That would take a long time to explain," said the Stork, and with these
+words off he went.
+
+"Rejoice in thy growth!" said the Sunbeams, "rejoice in thy vigorous
+growth, and in the fresh life that moveth within thee!"
+
+And the Wind kissed the Tree, and the Dew wept tears over him; but the
+Fir understood it not.
+
+When Christmas came, quite young trees were cut down; trees which often
+were not even as large or of the same age as this Fir-tree, who could
+never rest, but always wanted to be off. These young trees, and they
+were always the finest looking, retained their branches; they were laid
+on carts, and the horses drew them out of the woods.
+
+"Where are they going to?" asked the Fir. "They are not taller than
+I; there was one indeed that was considerably shorter; and why do they
+retain all their branches? Whither are they taken?"
+
+"We know! we know!" chirped the Sparrows. "We have peeped in at the
+windows in the town below! We know whither they are taken! The greatest
+splendour and the greatest magnificence one can imagine await them. We
+peeped through the windows, and saw them planted in the middle of the
+warm room, and ornamented with the most splendid things--with gilded
+apples, with gingerbread, with toys, and many hundred lights!"
+
+"And then?" asked the Fir-tree, trembling in every bough. "And then?
+What happens then?"
+
+"We did not see anything more: it was incomparably beautiful."
+
+"I would fain know if I am destined for so glorious a career," cried
+the Tree, rejoicing. "That is still better than to cross the sea! What
+a longing do I suffer! Were Christmas but come! I am now tall, and my
+branches spread like the others that were carried off last year! Oh,
+were I but already on the cart. Were I in the warm room with all the
+splendour and magnificence! Yes; then something better, something still
+grander, will surely follow, or wherefore should they thus ornament me?
+Something better, something still grander, MUST follow--but what? Oh,
+how I long, how I suffer! I do not know myself what is the matter with
+me!"
+
+"Rejoice in our presence!" said the Air and the Sunlight; "rejoice in
+thy own fresh youth!"
+
+But the Tree did not rejoice at all; he grew and grew, and was green
+both winter and summer. People that saw him said, "What a fine tree!"
+and toward Christmas he was one of the first that was cut down. The axe
+struck deep into the very pith; the tree fell to the earth with a sigh:
+he felt a pang--it was like a swoon; he could not think of happiness,
+for he was sorrowful at being separated from his home, from the place
+where he had sprung up. He knew well that he should never see his
+dear old comrades, the little bushes and flowers around him, any more;
+perhaps not even the birds! The departure was not at all agreeable.
+
+The Tree only came to himself when he was unloaded in a courtyard with
+the other trees, and heard a man say, "That one is splendid! we don't
+want the others." Then two servants came in rich livery and carried the
+Fir-tree into a large and splendid drawing-room. Portraits were hanging
+on the walls, and near the white porcelain stove stood two large Chinese
+vases with lions on the covers. There, too, were large easy chairs,
+silken sofas, large tables full of picture-books, and full of toys worth
+hundreds and hundreds of crowns--at least the children said so. And the
+Fir-tree was stuck upright in a cask that was filled with sand: but no
+one could see that it was a cask, for green cloth was hung all around
+it, and it stood on a large gayly coloured carpet. Oh, how the Tree
+quivered! What was to happen? The servants, as well as the young ladies,
+decorated it. On one branch there hung little nets cut out of coloured
+paper, and each net was filled with sugar-plums; and among the other
+boughs gilded apples and walnuts were suspended, looking as though they
+had grown there, and little blue and white tapers were placed among the
+leaves. Dolls that looked for all the world like men--the Tree had never
+beheld such before--were seen among the foliage, and at the very top
+a large star of gold tinsel was fixed. It was really splendid--beyond
+description splendid.
+
+"This evening!" said they all; "how it will shine this evening!"
+
+"Oh," thought the Tree, "if the evening were but come! If the tapers
+were but lighted! And then I wonder what will happen! Perhaps the other
+trees from the forest will come to look at me! Perhaps the sparrows will
+beat against the window-panes! I wonder if I shall take root here, and
+winter and summer stand covered with ornaments!"
+
+He knew very much about the matter! but he was so impatient that for
+sheer longing he got a pain in his back, and this with trees is the same
+thing as a headache with us.
+
+The candles were now lighted. What brightness! What splendour! The
+Tree trembled so in every bough that one of the tapers set fire to the
+foliage. It blazed up splendidly.
+
+"Help! Help!" cried the young ladies, and they quickly put out the fire.
+
+Now the Tree did not even dare tremble. What a state he was in! He was
+so uneasy lest he should lose something of his splendour, that he was
+quite bewildered amidst the glare and brightness; when suddenly both
+folding-doors opened, and a troop of children rushed in as if they would
+upset the Tree. The older persons followed quietly; the little ones
+stood quite still. But it was only for a moment; then they shouted so
+that the whole place reechoed with their rejoicing; they danced round
+the tree, and one present after the other was pulled off.
+
+"What are they about?" thought the Tree. "What is to happen now?" And
+the lights burned down to the very branches, and as they burned down
+they were put out, one after the other, and then the children had
+permission to plunder the tree. So they fell upon it with such violence
+that all its branches cracked; if it had not been fixed firmly in the
+cask, it would certainly have tumbled down.
+
+The children danced about with their beautiful playthings: no one looked
+at the Tree except the old nurse, who peeped between the branches; but
+it was only to see if there was a fig or an apple left that had been
+forgotten.
+
+"A story! a story!" cried the children, drawing a little fat man toward
+the tree. He seated himself under it, and said: "Now we are in the
+shade, and the Tree can listen, too. But I shall tell only one story.
+Now which will you have: that about Ivedy-Avedy, or about Klumpy-Dumpy
+who tumbled downstairs, and yet after all came to the throne and married
+the princess?"
+
+"Ivedy-Avedy!" cried some; "Klumpy-Dumpy" cried the others. There was
+such a bawling and screaming--the Fir-tree alone was silent, and he
+thought to himself, "Am I not to bawl with the rest?--am I to do nothing
+whatever?" for he was one of the company, and had done what he had to
+do.
+
+And the man told about Klumpy-Dumpy that tumbled down, who
+notwithstanding came to the throne, and at last married the princess.
+And the children clapped their hands, and cried out, "Oh, go on! Do go
+on!" They wanted to hear about Ivedy-Avedy, too, but the little man
+only told them about Klumpy-Dumpy. The Fir-tree stood quite still and
+absorbed in thought; the birds in the woods had never related the like
+of this. "Klumpy-Dumpy fell downstairs, and yet he married the princess!
+Yes! Yes! that's the way of the world!" thought the Fir-tree, and
+believed it all, because the man who told the story was so good-looking.
+"Well, well! who knows, perhaps I may fall downstairs, too, and get a
+princess as wife!" And he looked forward with joy to the morrow, when
+he hoped to be decked out again with lights, playthings, fruits, and
+tinsel.
+
+"I won't tremble to-morrow," thought the Fir-tree. "I will enjoy to
+the full all my splendour. To-morrow I shall hear again the story of
+Klumpy-Dumpy, and perhaps that of Ivedy-Avedy, too." And the whole night
+the Tree stood still and in deep thought.
+
+In the morning the servant and the housemaid came in.
+
+"Now, then, the splendour will begin again," thought the Fir. But they
+dragged him out of the room, and up the stairs into the loft; and here
+in a dark corner, where no daylight could enter, they left him. "What's
+the meaning of this?" thought the Tree. "What am I to do here? What
+shall I hear now, I wonder?" And he leaned against the wall, lost in
+reverie. Time enough had he, too, for his reflections; for days and
+nights passed on, and nobody came up; and when at last somebody did
+come, it was only to put some great trunks in a corner out of the way.
+There stood the Tree quite hidden; it seemed as if he had been entirely
+forgotten.
+
+"'Tis now winter out of doors!" thought the Tree. "The earth is hard and
+covered with snow; men cannot plant me now, and therefore I have been
+put up here under shelter till the springtime comes! How thoughtful that
+is! How kind man is, after all! If it only were not so dark here, and
+so terribly lonely! Not even a hare. And out in the woods it was so
+pleasant, when the snow was on the ground, and the hare leaped by;
+yes--even when he jumped over me; but I did not like it then. It is
+really terribly lonely here!"
+
+"Squeak! squeak!" said a little Mouse at the same moment, peeping out
+of his hole. And then another little one came. They sniffed about the
+Fir-tree, and rustled among the branches.
+
+"It is dreadfully cold," said the Mouse. "But for that, it would be
+delightful here, old Fir, wouldn't it?"
+
+"I am by no means old," said the Fir-tree. "There's many a one
+considerably older than I am."
+
+"Where do you come from," asked the Mice; "and what can you do?" They
+were so extremely curious. "Tell us about the most beautiful spot on the
+earth. Have you never been there? Were you never in the larder, where
+cheeses lie on the shelves, and hams hang from above; where one dances
+about on tallow-candles; that place where one enters lean, and comes out
+again fat and portly?"
+
+"I know no such place," said the Tree, "but I know the woods, where the
+sun shines, and where the little birds sing." And then he told all about
+his youth; and the little Mice had never heard the like before; and they
+listened and said:
+
+"Well, to be sure! How much you have seen! How happy you must have
+been!"
+
+"I?" said the Fir-tree, thinking over what he had himself related. "Yes,
+in reality those were happy times." And then he told about Christmas
+Eve, when he was decked out with cakes and candles.
+
+"Oh," said the little Mice, "how fortunate you have been, old Fir-tree!"
+
+"I am by no means old," said he. "I came from the woods this winter; I
+am in my prime, and am only rather short for my age."
+
+"What delightful stories you know!" said the Mice: and the next night
+they came with four other little Mice, who were to hear what the tree
+recounted; and the more he related, the more plainly he remembered all
+himself; and it appeared as if those times had really been happy
+times. "But they may still come--they may still come. Klumpy-Dumpy fell
+downstairs and yet he got a princess," and he thought at the moment of a
+nice little Birch-tree growing out in the woods; to the Fir, that would
+be a real charming princess.
+
+"Who is Klumpy-Dumpy?" asked the Mice. So then the Fir-tree told the
+whole fairy tale, for he could remember every single word of it; and the
+little Mice jumped for joy up to the very top of the Tree. Next night
+two more Mice came, and on Sunday two Rats, even; but they said the
+stories were not interesting, which vexed the little Mice; and they,
+too, now began to think them not so very amusing either.
+
+"Do you know only one story?" asked the Rats.
+
+"Only that one," answered the Tree. "I heard it on my happiest evening;
+but I did not then know how happy I was."
+
+"It is a very stupid story. Don't you know one about bacon and tallow
+candles? Can't you tell any larder stories?"
+
+"No," said the Tree.
+
+"Then good-bye," said the Rats; and they went home.
+
+At last the little Mice stayed away also; and the Tree sighed: "After
+all, it was very pleasant when the sleek little Mice sat around me and
+listened to what I told them. Now that too is over. But I will take good
+care to enjoy myself when I am brought out again."
+
+But when was that to be? Why, one morning there came a quantity of
+people and set to work in the loft. The trunks were moved, the Tree was
+pulled out and thrown--rather hard, it is true--down on the floor, but a
+man drew him toward the stairs, where the daylight shone.
+
+"Now a merry life will begin again," thought the Tree. He felt the fresh
+air, the first sunbeam--and now he was out in the courtyard. All passed
+so quickly, there was so much going on around him, that the Tree quite
+forgot to look to himself. The court adjoined a garden, and all was in
+flower; the roses hung so fresh and odorous over the balustrade, the
+lindens were in blossom, the Swallows flew by, and said, "Quirre-vit! my
+husband is come!" but it was not the Fir-tree that they meant.
+
+"Now, then, I shall really enjoy life," said he, exultingly, and spread
+out his branches; but, alas! they were all withered and yellow. It was
+in a corner that he lay, among weeds and nettles. The golden star of
+tinsel was still on the top of the Tree, and glittered in the sunshine.
+
+In the courtyard some of the merry children were playing who had danced
+at Christmas round the Fir-tree, and were so glad at the sight of him.
+One of the youngest ran and tore off the golden star.
+
+"Only look what is still on the ugly old Christmas tree!" said he,
+trampling on the branches, so that they all cracked beneath his feet.
+And the Tree beheld all the beauty of the flowers, and the freshness in
+the garden; he beheld himself, and wished he had remained in his dark
+corner in the loft; he thought of his first youth in the woods, of the
+merry Christmas Eve, and of the little Mice who had listened with so
+much pleasure to the story of Klumpy-Dumpy.
+
+"'Tis over--'tis past!" said the poor Tree. "Had I but rejoiced when I
+had reason to do so! But now 'tis past, 'tis past!"
+
+And the gardener's boy chopped the Tree into small pieces; there was a
+whole heap lying there. The wood flamed up splendidly under the large
+brewing copper, and it sighed so deeply! Each sigh was like a shot.
+
+The boys played about in the court, and the youngest wore the gold star
+on his breast which the Tree had had on the happiest evening of his
+life. However, that was over now--the Tree gone, the story at an end.
+All, all was over; every tale must end at last.
+
+
+
+
+III. THE CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE*
+
+* From "The Pot of Gold", copyright by Lothrop, Lee & Shepherd Co.
+
+MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+
+On Christmas Eve the Mayor's stately mansion presented a beautiful
+appearance. There were rows of different coloured wax candles burning in
+every window, and beyond them one could see the chandeliers of gold
+and crystal blazing with light. The fiddles were squeaking merrily, and
+lovely little forms flew past the windows in time to the music.
+
+There were gorgeous carpets laid from the door to the street, and
+carriages were constantly arriving and fresh guests tripping over them.
+They were all children. The Mayor was giving a Christmas Masquerade
+tonight to all the children in the city, the poor as well as the rich.
+The preparation for this ball had been making an immense sensation for
+the last three months. Placards had been up in the most conspicuous
+points in the city, and all the daily newspapers had at least a column
+devoted to it, headed with "THE MAYOR'S CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE," in very
+large letters.
+
+The Mayor had promised to defray the expenses of all the poor children
+whose parents were unable to do so, and the bills for their costumes
+were directed to be sent in to him.
+
+Of course there was great excitement among the regular costumers of the
+city, and they all resolved to vie with one another in being the most
+popular, and the best patronized on this gala occasion. But the placards
+and the notices had not been out a week before a new Costumer appeared
+who cast all the others into the shade directly. He set up his shop on
+the corner of one of the principal streets, and hung up his beautiful
+costumes in the windows. He was a little fellow, not much bigger than
+a boy of ten. His cheeks were as red as roses, and he had on a
+long curling wig as white as snow. He wore a suit of crimson velvet
+knee-breeches, and a little swallow-tailed coat with beautiful golden
+buttons. Deep lace ruffles fell over his slender white hands, and he
+wore elegant knee buckles of glittering stones. He sat on a high stool
+behind his counter and served his customers himself; he kept no clerk.
+
+It did not take the children long to discover what beautiful things he
+had, and how superior he was to the other costumers, and they begun to
+flock to his shop immediately, from the Mayor's daughter to the poor
+ragpicker's. The children were to select their own costumes; the Mayor
+had stipulated that. It was to be a children's ball in every sense of
+the word.
+
+So they decided to be fairies and shepherdesses, and princesses
+according to their own fancies; and this new Costumer had charming
+costumes to suit them.
+
+It was noticeable that, for the most part, the children of the rich,
+who had always had everything they desired, would choose the parts of
+goose-girls and peasants and such like; and the poor children jumped
+eagerly at the chance of being princesses or fairies for a few hours in
+their miserable lives.
+
+When Christmas Eve came and the children flocked into the Mayor's
+mansion, whether it was owing to the Costumer's art, or their own
+adaptation to the characters they had chosen, it was wonderful how
+lifelike their representations were. Those little fairies in their short
+skirts of silken gauze, in which golden sparkles appeared as they moved
+with their little funny gossamer wings, like butterflies, looked like
+real fairies. It did not seem possible, when they floated around to the
+music, half supported on the tips of their dainty toes, half by their
+filmy purple wings, their delicate bodies swaying in time, that they
+could be anything but fairies. It seemed absurd to imagine that they
+were Johnny Mullens, the washerwoman's son, and Polly Flinders, the
+charwoman's little girl, and so on.
+
+The Mayor's daughter, who had chosen the character of a goose-girl,
+looked so like a true one that one could hardly dream she ever was
+anything else. She was, ordinarily, a slender, dainty little lady rather
+tall for her age. She now looked very short and stubbed and brown, just
+as if she had been accustomed to tend geese in all sorts of weather. It
+was so with all the others--the Red Riding-hoods, the princesses, the
+Bo-Peeps and with every one of the characters who came to the Mayor's
+ball; Red Riding-hood looked round, with big, frightened eyes, all ready
+to spy the wolf, and carried her little pat of butter and pot of honey
+gingerly in her basket; Bo-Peep's eyes looked red with weeping for the
+loss of her sheep; and the princesses swept about so grandly in their
+splendid brocaded trains, and held their crowned heads so high that
+people half-believed them to be true princesses.
+
+But there never was anything like the fun at the Mayor's Christmas ball.
+The fiddlers fiddled and fiddled, and the children danced and danced on
+the beautiful waxed floors. The Mayor, with his family and a few grand
+guests, sat on a dais covered with blue velvet at one end of the dancing
+hall, and watched the sport. They were all delighted. The Mayor's eldest
+daughter sat in front and clapped her little soft white hands. She was
+a tall, beautiful young maiden, and wore a white dress, and a little cap
+woven of blue violets on her yellow hair. Her name was Violetta.
+
+The supper was served at midnight--and such a supper! The mountains of
+pink and white ices, and the cakes with sugar castles and flower gardens
+on the tops of them, and the charming shapes of gold and ruby-coloured
+jellies. There were wonderful bonbons which even the Mayor's daughter
+did not have every day; and all sorts of fruits, fresh and candied. They
+had cowslip wine in green glasses, and elderberry wine in red, and
+they drank each other's health. The glasses held a thimbleful each; the
+Mayor's wife thought that was all the wine they ought to have. Under
+each child's plate there was a pretty present and every one had a basket
+of bonbons and cake to carry home.
+
+At four o'clock the fiddlers put up their fiddles and the children went
+home; fairies and shepherdesses and pages and princesses all jabbering
+gleefully about the splendid time they had had.
+
+But in a short time what consternation there was throughout the city.
+When the proud and fond parents attempted to unbutton their children's
+dresses, in order to prepare them for bed, not a single costume would
+come off. The buttons buttoned again as fast as they were unbuttoned;
+even if they pulled out a pin, in it would slip again in a twinkling;
+and when a string was untied it tied itself up again into a bowknot. The
+parents were dreadfully frightened. But the children were so tired out
+they finally let them go to bed in their fancy costumes and thought
+perhaps they would come off better in the morning. So Red Riding-hood
+went to bed in her little red cloak holding fast to her basket full of
+dainties for her grandmother, and Bo-Peep slept with her crook in her
+hand.
+
+The children all went to bed readily enough, they were so very
+tired, even though they had to go in this strange array. All but the
+fairies--they danced and pirouetted and would not be still.
+
+"We want to swing on the blades of grass," they kept saying, "and play
+hide and seek in the lily cups, and take a nap between the leaves of the
+roses."
+
+The poor charwomen and coal-heavers, whose children the fairies were for
+the most part, stared at them in great distress. They did not know
+what to do with these radiant, frisky little creatures into which their
+Johnnys and their Pollys and Betseys were so suddenly transformed. But
+the fairies went to bed quietly enough when daylight came, and were soon
+fast asleep.
+
+There was no further trouble till twelve o'clock, when all the children
+woke up. Then a great wave of alarm spread over the city. Not one of the
+costumes would come off then. The buttons buttoned as fast as they were
+unbuttoned; the pins quilted themselves in as fast as they were pulled
+out; and the strings flew round like lightning and twisted themselves
+into bow-knots as fast as they were untied.
+
+And that was not the worst of it; every one of the children seemed to
+have become, in reality, the character which he or she had assumed.
+
+The Mayor's daughter declared she was going to tend her geese out in the
+pasture, and the shepherdesses sprang out of their little beds of down,
+throwing aside their silken quilts, and cried that they must go out and
+watch their sheep. The princesses jumped up from their straw pallets,
+and wanted to go to court; and all the rest of them likewise. Poor
+little Red Riding-hood sobbed and sobbed because she couldn't go
+and carry her basket to her grandmother, and as she didn't have any
+grandmother she couldn't go, of course, and her parents were very much
+doubled. It was all so mysterious and dreadful. The news spread very
+rapidly over the city, and soon a great crowd gathered around the new
+Costumer's shop for every one thought he must be responsible for all
+this mischief.
+
+The shop door was locked; but they soon battered it down with stones.
+When they rushed in the Costumer was not there; he had disappeared with
+all his wares. Then they did not know what to do. But it was evident
+that they must do something before long for the state of affairs was
+growing worse and worse.
+
+The Mayor's little daughter braced her back up against the tapestried
+wall, and planted her two feet in their thick shoes firmly. "I will go
+and tend my geese," she kept crying. "I won't eat my breakfast. I won't
+go out in the park. I won't go to school. I'm going to tend my geese--I
+will, I will, I will!"
+
+And the princesses trailed their rich trains over the rough unpainted
+floors in their parents' poor little huts, and held their crowned heads
+very high and demanded to be taken to court. The princesses were mostly
+geese-girls when they were their proper selves, and their geese were
+suffering, and their poor parents did not know what they were going to
+do and they wrung their hands and wept as they gazed on their gorgeously
+apparelled children.
+
+Finally the Mayor called a meeting of the Aldermen, and they all
+assembled in the City Hall. Nearly every one of them had a son or
+a daughter who was a chimney-sweep, or a little watch-girl, or a
+shepherdess. They appointed a chairman and they took a great many votes
+and contrary votes but they did not agree on anything, until every one
+proposed that they consult the Wise Woman. Then they all held up their
+hands, and voted to, unanimously.
+
+So the whole board of Aldermen set out, walking by twos, with the Mayor
+at their head, to consult the Wise Woman. The Aldermen were all very
+fleshy, and carried gold-headed canes which they swung very high at
+every step. They held their heads well back, and their chins stiff,
+and whenever they met common people they sniffed gently. They were very
+imposing.
+
+The Wise Woman lived in a little hut on the outskirts of the city. She
+kept a Black Cat, except for her, she was all alone. She was very
+old, and had brought up a great many children, and she was considered
+remarkably wise.
+
+But when the Aldermen reached her hut and found her seated by the fire,
+holding her Black Cat, a new difficulty presented itself. She had always
+been quite deaf and people had been obliged to scream as loud as they
+could in order to make her hear; but lately she had grown much deafer,
+and when the Aldermen attempted to lay the case before her she could
+not hear a word. In fact, she was so very deaf that she could not
+distinguish a tone below G-sharp. The Aldermen screamed till they were
+quite red in the faces, but all to no purpose: none of them could get up
+to G-sharp of course.
+
+So the Aldermen all went back, swinging their gold-headed canes, and
+they had another meeting in the City Hall. Then they decided to send the
+highest Soprano Singer in the church choir to the Wise Woman; she could
+sing up to G-sharp just as easy as not. So the high Soprano Singer set
+out for the Wise Woman's in the Mayor's coach, and the Aldermen marched
+behind, swinging their gold-headed canes.
+
+The High Soprano Singer put her head down close to the Wise Woman's ear,
+and sung all about the Christmas Masquerade and the dreadful dilemma
+everybody was in, in G-sharp--she even went higher, sometimes, and the
+Wise Woman heard every word.
+
+She nodded three times, and every time she nodded she looked wiser.
+
+"Go home, and give 'em a spoonful of castor-oil, all 'round," she piped
+up; then she took a pinch of snuff, and wouldn't say any more.
+
+So the Aldermen went home, and every one took a district and marched
+through it, with a servant carrying an immense bowl and spoon, and every
+child had to take a dose of castor-oil.
+
+But it didn't do a bit of good. The children cried and struggled when
+they were forced to take the castor-oil; but, two minutes afterward,
+the chimney-sweeps were crying for their brooms, and the princesses
+screaming because they couldn't go to court, and the Mayor's daughter,
+who had been given a double dose, cried louder and more sturdily: "I
+want to go and tend my geese. I will go and tend my geese."
+
+So the Aldermen took the high Soprano Singer, and they consulted the
+Wise Woman again. She was taking a nap this time, and the Singer had to
+sing up to B-flat before she could wake her. Then she was very cross and
+the Black Cat put up his back and spit at the Aldermen.
+
+"Give 'em a spanking all 'round," she snapped out, "and if that don't
+work put 'em to bed without their supper."
+
+Then the Aldermen marched back to try that; and all the children in the
+city were spanked, and when that didn't do any good they were put to
+bed without any supper. But the next morning when they woke up they were
+worse than ever.
+
+The Mayor and Aldermen were very indignant, and considered that they
+had been imposed upon and insulted. So they set out for the Wise Woman
+again, with the high Soprano Singer.
+
+She sang in G-sharp how the Aldermen and the Mayor considered her an
+impostor, and did not think she was wise at all, and they wished her to
+take her Black Cat and move beyond the limits of the city.
+
+She sang it beautifully; it sounded like the very finest Italian opera
+music.
+
+"Deary me," piped the Wise Woman, when she had finished, "how very grand
+these gentlemen are." Her Black Cat put up his back and spit.
+
+"Five times one Black Cat are five Black Cats," said the Wise Woman. And
+directly there were five Black Cats spitting and miauling.
+
+"Five times five Black Cats are twenty-five Black Cats." And then there
+were twenty-five of the angry little beasts.
+
+"Five times twenty-five Black Cats are one hundred and twenty-five Black
+Cats," added the Wise Woman with a chuckle.
+
+Then the Mayor and the Aldermen and the high Soprano Singer fled
+precipitately out the door and back to the city. One hundred and
+twenty-five Black Cats had seemed to fill the Wise Woman's hut full, and
+when they all spit and miauled together it was dreadful. The visitors
+could not wait for her to multiply Black Cats any longer.
+
+As winter wore on and spring came, the condition of things grew more
+intolerable. Physicians had been consulted, who advised that the
+children should be allowed to follow their own bents, for fear of injury
+to their constitutions. So the rich Aldermen's daughters were actually
+out in the fields herding sheep, and their sons sweeping chimneys or
+carrying newspapers; and while the poor charwomen's and coal-heavers,
+children spent their time like princesses and fairies. Such a
+topsy-turvy state of society was shocking. While the Mayor's little
+daughter was tending geese out in the meadow like any common goose-girl,
+her pretty elder sister, Violetta, felt very sad about it and used often
+to cast about in her mind for some way of relief.
+
+When cherries were ripe in spring, Violetta thought she would ask the
+Cherry-man about it. She thought the Cherry-man quite wise. He was a
+very pretty young fellow, and he brought cherries to sell in graceful
+little straw baskets lined with moss. So she stood in the kitchen door
+one morning and told him all about the great trouble that had come upon
+the city. He listened in great astonishment; he had never heard of it
+before. He lived several miles out in the country.
+
+"How did the Costumer look?" he asked respectfully; he thought Violetta
+the most beautiful lady on earth.
+
+Then Violetta described the Costumer, and told him of the unavailing
+attempts that had been made to find him. There were a great many
+detectives out, constantly at work.
+
+"I know where he is!" said the Cherry-man. "He's up in one of my
+cherry-trees. He's been living there ever since cherries were ripe, and
+he won't come down."
+
+Then Violetta ran and told her father in great excitement, and he at
+once called a meeting of the Aldermen, and in a few hours half the city
+was on the road to the Cherry-man's.
+
+He had a beautiful orchard of cherry-trees all laden with fruit. And,
+sure enough in one of the largest, way up amongst the topmost branches,
+sat the Costumer in his red velvet and short clothes and his diamond
+knee-buckles. He looked down between the green boughs. "Good-morning,
+friends!" he shouted.
+
+The Aldermen shook their gold-headed canes at him, and the people danced
+round the tree in a rage. Then they began to climb. But they soon found
+that to be impossible. As fast as they touched a hand or foot to a tree,
+back it flew with a jerk exactly as if the tree pushed it. They tried a
+ladder, but the ladder fell back the moment it touched the tree, and lay
+sprawling upon the ground. Finally, they brought axes and thought they
+could chop the tree down, Costumer and all; but the wood resisted the
+axes as if it were iron, and only dented them, receiving no impression
+itself.
+
+Meanwhile, the Costumer sat up in the tree, eating cherries and throwing
+the stones down. Finally he stood up on a stout branch, and, looking
+down, addressed the people.
+
+"It's of no use, your trying to accomplish anything in this way," said
+he; "you'd better parley. I'm willing to come to terms with you, and
+make everything right on two conditions."
+
+The people grew quiet then, and the Mayor stepped forward as spokesman,
+"Name your two conditions," said he rather testily. "You own, tacitly,
+that you are the cause of all this trouble."
+
+"Well" said the Costumer, reaching out for a handful of cherries, "this
+Christmas Masquerade of yours was a beautiful idea; but you wouldn't do
+it every year, and your successors might not do it at all. I want those
+poor children to have a Christmas every year. My first condition is that
+every poor child in the city hangs its stocking for gifts in the
+City Hall on every Christmas Eve, and gets it filled, too. I want the
+resolution filed and put away in the city archives."
+
+"We agree to the first condition!" cried the people with one voice,
+without waiting for the Mayor and Aldermen.
+
+"The second condition," said the Costumer, "is that this good young
+Cherry-man here has the Mayor's daughter, Violetta, for his wife. He has
+been kind to me, letting me live in his cherry-tree and eat his cherries
+and I want to reward him."
+
+"We consent," cried all the people; but the Mayor, though he was so
+generous, was a proud man. "I will not consent to the second condition,"
+he cried angrily.
+
+"Very well," replied the Costumer, picking some more cherries, "then
+your youngest daughter tends geese the rest of her life, that's all."
+
+The Mayor was in great distress; but the thought of his youngest
+daughter being a goose-girl all her life was too much for him. He gave
+in at last.
+
+"Now go home and take the costumes off your children," said the
+Costumer, "and leave me in peace to eat cherries."
+
+Then the people hastened back to the city, and found, to their great
+delight, that the costumes would come off. The pins stayed out, the
+buttons stayed unbuttoned, and the strings stayed untied. The children
+were dressed in their own proper clothes and were their own proper
+selves once more. The shepherdesses and the chimney-sweeps came
+home, and were washed and dressed in silks and velvets, and went to
+embroidering and playing lawn-tennis. And the princesses and the
+fairies put on their own suitable dresses, and went about their useful
+employments. There was great rejoicing in every home. Violetta thought
+she had never been so happy, now that her dear little sister was no
+longer a goose-girl, but her own dainty little lady-self.
+
+The resolution to provide every poor child in the city with a stocking
+full of gifts on Christmas was solemnly filed, and deposited in the city
+archives, and was never broken.
+
+Violetta was married to the Cherry-man, and all the children came to the
+wedding, and strewed flowers in her path till her feet were quite hidden
+in them. The Costumer had mysteriously disappeared from the cherry-tree
+the night before, but he left at the foot some beautiful wedding
+presents for the bride--a silver service with a pattern of cherries
+engraved on it, and a set of china with cherries on it, in hand
+painting, and a white satin robe, embroidered with cherries down the
+front.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE SHEPHERDS AND THE ANGELS
+
+ADAPTED FROM THE BIBLE
+
+And there were shepherds in the same country abiding in the field, and
+keeping watch by night over their flock. And an angel of the Lord stood
+by them and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were
+sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Be not afraid; for, behold,
+I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all the people:
+for there is born to you this day in the city of David a Saviour, which
+is Christ the Lord. And this is the sign unto you; ye shall find a babe
+wrapped in swaddling clothes, and lying in a manger. And suddenly there
+was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and
+saying:
+
+ Glory to God in the highest,
+ And on earth peace,
+ Good will toward men.
+
+And it came to pass, when the angels went away from them into heaven,
+the shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even unto Bethlehem,
+and see this thing that is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known
+unto us. And they came with haste, and found Mary and Joseph and
+the babe lying in the manger. And when they saw it, they made known
+concerning the saying which was spoken to them about this child. And all
+that heard it wondered at the things which were spoken unto them by the
+shepherds. But Mary kept all these sayings, pondering them in her heart.
+And the shepherds returned glorifying and praising God for all the
+things that they had heard and seen, even as it was spoken unto them.
+
+And when eight days were fulfilled his name was called
+
+ JESUS
+
+
+
+
+V. THE TELLTALE TILE*
+
+* From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904.
+
+OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+
+It begins with a bit of gossip of a neighbour who had come in to see
+Miss Bennett, and was telling her about a family who had lately moved
+into the place and were in serious trouble. "And they do say she'll have
+to go to the poorhouse," she ended.
+
+"To the poorhouse! how dreadful! And the children, too?" and Miss
+Bennett shuddered.
+
+"Yes; unless somebody'll adopt them, and that's not very likely. Well, I
+must go," the visitor went on, rising. "I wish I could do something for
+her, but, with my houseful of children, I've got use for every penny I
+can rake and scrape."
+
+"I'm sure I have, with only myself," said Miss Bennett, as she closed
+the door. "I'm sure I have," she repeated to herself as she resumed her
+knitting; "it's as much as I can do to make ends meet, scrimping as I
+do, not to speak of laying up a cent for sickness and old age."
+
+"But the poorhouse!" she said again. "I wish I could help her!" and the
+needles flew in and out, in and out, faster than ever, as she turned
+this over in her mind. "I might give up something," she said at last,
+"though I don't know what, unless--unless," she said slowly, thinking
+of her one luxury, "unless I give up my tea, and it don't seem as if I
+COULD do that."
+
+Some time the thought worked in her mind, and finally she resolved to
+make the sacrifice of her only indulgence for six months, and send the
+money to her suffering neighbour, Mrs. Stanley, though she had never
+seen her, and she had only heard she was in want.
+
+How much of a sacrifice that was you can hardly guess, you, Kristy, who
+have so many luxuries.
+
+That evening Mrs. Stanley was surprised by a small gift of money "from a
+friend," as was said on the envelope containing it.
+
+"Who sent it?" she asked, from the bed where she was lying.
+
+"Miss Bennett told me not to tell," said the boy, unconscious that he
+had already told.
+
+The next day Miss Bennett sat at the window knitting, as usual--for
+her constant contribution to the poor fund of the church was a certain
+number of stockings and mittens--when she saw a young girl coming up to
+the door of the cottage.
+
+"Who can that be?" she said to herself. "I never saw her before. Come
+in!" she called; in answer to a knock. The girl entered, and walked up
+to Miss Bennett.
+
+"Are you Miss Bennett?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," said Miss Bennett with an amused smile.
+
+"Well, I'm Hetty Stanley."
+
+Miss Bennett started, and her colour grew a little brighter.
+
+"I'm glad to see you, Hetty." she said, "won't you sit down?"
+
+"Yes, if you please," said Hetty, taking a chair near her.
+
+"I came to tell you how much we love you for--"
+
+"Oh, don't! don't say any more!" interrupted Miss Bennett; "never mind
+that! Tell me about your mother and your baby brother."
+
+This was an interesting subject, and they talked earnestly about it.
+The time passed so quickly that, before she knew it, she had been in the
+house an hour. When she went away Miss Bennett asked her to come again,
+a thing she had never been known to do before, for she was not fond of
+young people in general.
+
+"But, then, Hetty's different," she said to herself, when wondering at
+her own interest.
+
+"Did you thank kind Miss Bennett?" was her mother's question as Hetty
+opened the door.
+
+Hetty stopped as if struck, "Why, no! I don't think I did."
+
+"And stayed so long, too? Whatever did you do? I've heard she isn't fond
+of people generally."
+
+"We talked; and--I think she's ever so nice. She asked me to come again;
+may I?"
+
+"Of course you may, if she cares to have you. I should be glad to do
+something to please her."
+
+That visit of Hetty's was the first of a long series. Almost every day
+she found her way to the lonely cottage, where a visitor rarely came,
+and a strange intimacy grew up between the old and the young. Hetty
+learned of her friend to knit, and many an hour they spent knitting
+while Miss Bennett ransacked her memory for stories to tell. And then,
+one day, she brought down from a big chest in the garret two of the
+books she used to have when she was young, and let Hetty look at them.
+
+One was "Thaddeus of Warsaw," and the other "Scottish Chiefs." Poor
+Hetty had not the dozens of books you have, and these were treasures
+indeed. She read them to herself, and she read them aloud to Miss
+Bennett, who, much to her own surprise, found her interest almost as
+eager as Hetty's.
+
+All this time Christmas was drawing near, and strange, unusual feelings
+began to stir in Miss Bennett's heart, though generally she did not
+think much about that happy time. She wanted to make Hetty a happy day.
+Money she had none, so she went into the garret, where her youthful
+treasures had long been hidden. From the chest from which she had
+taken the books she now took a small box of light-coloured wood, with
+a transferred engraving on the cover. With a sigh--for the sight of it
+brought up old memories--Miss Bennett lifted the cover by its loop of
+ribbon, took out a package of old letters, and went downstairs with the
+box, taking also a few bits of bright silk from a bundle in the chest.
+
+"I can fit it up for a workbox," she said, "and I'm sure Hetty will like
+it."
+
+For many days after this Miss Bennett had her secret work, which she
+carefully hid when she saw Hetty coming. Slowly, in this way, she made
+a pretty needle-book, a tiny pincushion, and an emery bag like a big
+strawberry. Then from her own scanty stock she added needles, pins,
+thread, and her only pair of small scissors, scoured to the last extreme
+of brightness.
+
+One thing only she had to buy--a thimble, and that she bought for a
+penny, of brass so bright it was quite as handsome as gold.
+
+Very pretty the little box looked when full; in the bottom lay a quilted
+lining, which had always been there, and upon this the fittings she
+had made. Besides this, Miss Bennett knit a pair of mittens for each of
+Hetty's brothers and sisters.
+
+The happiest girl in town on Christmas morning was Hetty Stanley. To
+begin with, she had the delight of giving the mittens to the children,
+and when she ran over to tell Miss Bennett how pleased they were, she
+was surprised by the present of the odd little workbox and its pretty
+contents.
+
+Christmas was over all too soon, and New Year's, and it was about the
+middle of January that the time came which, all her life, Miss Bennett
+had dreaded--the time when she should be helpless. She had not money
+enough to hire a girl, and so the only thing she could imagine when that
+day should come was her special horror--the poorhouse.
+
+But that good deed of hers had already borne fruit, and was still
+bearing. When Hetty came over one day, and found her dear friend lying
+on the floor as if dead, she was dreadfully frightened, of course, but
+she ran after the neighbours and the doctor, and bustled about the house
+as if she belonged to it.
+
+Miss Bennett was not dead--she had a slight stroke of paralysis; and
+though she was soon better, and would be able to talk, and probably to
+knit, and possibly to get about the house, she would never be able to
+live alone and do everything for herself, as she had done.
+
+So the doctor told the neighbours who came in to help, and so Hetty
+heard, as she listened eagerly for news.
+
+"Of course she can't live here any longer; she'll have to go to a
+hospital," said one woman.
+
+"Or to the poorhouse, more likely," said another.
+
+"She'll hate that," said the first speaker. "I've heard her shudder over
+the poorhouse."
+
+"She shall never go there!" declared Hetty, with blazing eyes.
+
+"Hoity-toity! who's to prevent?" asked the second speaker, turning a
+look of disdain on Hetty.
+
+"I am," was the fearless answer. "I know all Miss Bennett's ways, and
+I can take care of her, and I will," went on Hetty indignantly; and
+turning suddenly, she was surprised to find Miss Bennett's eyes fixed on
+her with an eager, questioning look.
+
+"There! she understands! she's better!" cried Hetty. "Mayn't I stay and
+take care of you, dear Miss Bennett?" she asked, running up to the bed.
+
+"Yes, you may," interrupted the doctor, seeing the look in his patient's
+face; "but you mustn't agitate her now. And now, my good women"--turning
+to the others--"I think she can get along with her young friend here,
+whom I happen to know is a womanly young girl, and will be attentive and
+careful."
+
+They took the hint and went away, and the doctor gave directions to
+Hetty what to do, telling her she must not leave Miss Bennett. So she
+was now regularly installed as nurse and housekeeper.
+
+Days and weeks rolled by. Miss Bennett was able to be up in her chair,
+to talk and knit, and to walk about the house, but was not able to be
+left alone. Indeed, she had a horror of being left alone; she could
+not bear Hetty out of her sight, and Hetty's mother was very willing to
+spare her, for she had many mouths to fill.
+
+To provide food for two out of what had been scrimping for one was a
+problem; but Miss Bennett ate very little, and she did not resume her
+tea so they managed to get along and not really suffer.
+
+One day Hetty sat by the fire with her precious box on her knee, which
+she was putting to rights for the twentieth time. The box was empty, and
+her sharp young eyes noticed a little dust on the silk lining.
+
+"I think I'll take this out and dust it," she said to Miss Bennett, "if
+you don't mind."
+
+"Do as you like with it," answered Miss Bennett; "it is yours."
+
+So she carefully lifted the silk, which stuck a little.
+
+"Why, here's something under it," she said--"an old paper, and it has
+writing on."
+
+"Bring it to me," said Miss Bennett; "perhaps it's a letter I have
+forgotten."
+
+Hetty brought it.
+
+"Why, it's father's writing!" said Miss Bennett, looking closely at
+the faded paper; "and what can it mean? I never saw it before. It says,
+'Look, and ye shall find'--that's a Bible text. And what is this under
+it? 'A word to the wise is sufficient.' I don't understand--he must have
+put it there himself, for I never took that lining out--I thought it was
+fastened. What can it mean?" and she pondered over it long, and all day
+seemed absent-minded.
+
+After tea, when they sat before the kitchen fire, as they always did,
+with only the firelight flickering and dancing on the walls while they
+knitted, or told stories, or talked, she told Hetty about her father:
+that they had lived comfortably in this house, which he built, and that
+everybody supposed that he had plenty of money, and would leave enough
+to take care of his only child, but that when he died suddenly nothing
+had been found, and nothing ever had been, from that day to this.
+
+"Part of the place I let to John Thompson, Hetty, and that rent is all
+I have to live on. I don't know what makes me think of old times so
+to-night."
+
+"I know," said Hetty; "it's that paper, and I know what it reminds me
+of," she suddenly shouted, in a way very unusual with her. "It's
+that tile over there," and she jumped up and ran to the side of the
+fireplace, and put her hand on the tile she meant.
+
+On each side of the fireplace was a row of tiles. They were Bible
+subjects, and Miss Bennett had often told Hetty the story of each one,
+and also the stories she used to make up about them when she was young.
+The one Hetty had her hand on now bore the picture of a woman standing
+before a closed door, and below her the words of the yellow bit of
+paper: "Look, and ye shall find."
+
+"I always felt there was something different about that," said Hetty
+eagerly, "and you know you told me your father talked to you about
+it--about what to seek in the world when he was gone away, and other
+things."
+
+"Yes, so he did," said Miss Bennett thoughtfully; "come to think of it,
+he said a great deal about it, and in a meaning way. I don't understand
+it," she said slowly, turning it over in her mind.
+
+"I do!" cried Hetty, enthusiastically. "I believe you are to seek here!
+I believe it's loose!" and she tried to shake it. "It IS loose!" she
+cried excitedly. "Oh, Miss Bennett, may I take it out?"
+
+Miss Bennett had turned deadly pale. "Yes," she gasped, hardly knowing
+what she expected, or dared to hope.
+
+A sudden push from Hetty's strong fingers, and the tile slipped out
+at one side and fell to the floor. Behind it was an opening into the
+brickwork. Hetty thrust in her hand.
+
+"There's something in there!" she said in an awed tone.
+
+"A light!" said Miss Bennett hoarsely.
+
+There was not a candle in the house, but Hetty seized a brand from the
+fire, and held it up and looked in.
+
+"It looks like bags--tied up," she cried. "Oh, come here yourself!"
+
+The old woman hobbled over and thrust her hand into the hole, bringing
+out what was once a bag, but which crumpled to pieces in her hands, and
+with it--oh, wonder!--a handful of gold pieces, which fell with a jingle
+on the hearth, and rolled every way.
+
+"My father's money! Oh, Hetty!" was all she could say, and she seized a
+chair to keep from falling, while Hetty was nearly wild, and talked like
+a crazy person.
+
+"Oh, goody! goody! now you can have things to eat! and we can have a
+candle! and you won't have to go to the poorhouse!"
+
+"No, indeed, you dear child!" cried Miss Bennett who had found her
+voice. "Thanks to you--you blessing!--I shall be comfortable now the
+rest of my days. And you! oh! I shall never forget you! Through you has
+everything good come to me."
+
+"Oh, but you have been so good to me, dear Miss Bennett!"
+
+"I should never have guessed it, you precious child! If it had not been
+for your quickness I should have died and never found it."
+
+"And if you hadn't given me the box, it might have rusted away in that
+chest."
+
+"Thank God for everything, child! Take money out of my purse and go buy
+a candle. We need not save it for bread now. Oh, child!" she interrupted
+herself, "do you know, we shall have everything we want to-morrow. Go!
+Go! I want to see how much there is."
+
+The candle bought, the gold was taken out and counted, and proved to
+be more than enough to give Miss Bennett a comfortable income without
+touching the principal. It was put back, and the tile replaced, as the
+safest place to keep it till morning, when Miss Bennett intended to put
+it into a bank.
+
+But though they went to bed, there was not a wink of sleep for Miss
+Bennett, for planning what she would do. There were a thousand things
+she wanted to do first. To get clothes for Hetty, to brighten up the old
+house, to hire a girl to relieve Hetty, so that the dear child should
+go to school, to train her into a noble woman--all her old ambitions and
+wishes for herself sprang into life for Hetty. For not a thought of her
+future life was separate from Hetty.
+
+In a very short time everything was changed in Miss Bennett's cottage.
+She had publicly adopted Hetty, and announced her as her heir. A girl
+had been installed in the kitchen, and Hetty, in pretty new clothes, had
+begun school. Fresh paint inside and out, with many new comforts, made
+the old house charming and bright. But nothing could change the pleasant
+and happy relations between the two friends, and a more contented and
+cheerful household could not be found anywhere.
+
+Happiness is a wonderful doctor and Miss Bennett grew so much better,
+that she could travel, and when Hetty had finished school days, they saw
+a little of the world before they settled down to a quiet, useful life.
+
+"Every comfort on earth I owe to you," said Hetty, one day, when Miss
+Bennett had proposed some new thing to add to her enjoyment.
+
+"Ah, dear Hetty! how much do I owe to you! But for you, I should, no
+doubt, be at this moment a shivering pauper in that terrible poorhouse,
+while some one else would be living in this dear old house. And it all
+comes," she added softly, "of that one unselfish thought, of that one
+self-denial for others."
+
+
+
+
+VI. LITTLE GIRL'S CHRISTMAS
+
+WINNIFRED E. LINCOLN
+
+It was Christmas Eve, and Little Girl had just hung up her stocking
+by the fireplace--right where it would be all ready for Santa when he
+slipped down the chimney. She knew he was coming, because--well, because
+it was Christmas Eve, and because he always had come to leave gifts for
+her on all the other Christmas Eves that she could remember, and because
+she had seen his pictures everywhere down town that afternoon when she
+was out with Mother.
+
+Still, she wasn't JUST satisfied. 'Way down in her heart she was a
+little uncertain--you see, when you have never really and truly seen
+a person with your very own eyes, it's hard to feel as if you exactly
+believed in him--even though that person always has left beautiful gifts
+for you every time he has come.
+
+"Oh, he'll come," said Little Girl; "I just know he will be here before
+morning, but somehow I wish--"
+
+"Well, what do you wish?" said a Tiny Voice close by her--so close that
+Little Girl fairly jumped when she heard it.
+
+"Why, I wish I could SEE Santa myself. I'd just like to go and see
+his house and his workshop, and ride in his sleigh, and know Mrs.
+Santa--'twould be such fun, and then I'd KNOW for sure."
+
+"Why don't you go, then?" said Tiny Voice. "It's easy enough. Just try
+on these Shoes, and take this Light in your hand, and you'll find your
+way all right."
+
+So Little Girl looked down on the hearth, and there were two cunning
+little Shoes side by side, and a little Spark of a Light close to
+them--just as if they were all made out of one of the glowing coals of
+the wood-fire. Such cunning Shoes as they were--Little Girl could hardly
+wait to pull off her slippers and try them on. They looked as if they
+were too small, but they weren't--they fitted exactly right, and just
+as Little Girl had put them both on and had taken the Light in her hand,
+along came a little Breath of Wind, and away she went up the chimney,
+along with ever so many other little Sparks, past the Soot Fairies, and
+out into the Open Air, where Jack Frost and the Star Beams were all busy
+at work making the world look pretty for Christmas.
+
+Away went Little Girl--Two Shoes, Bright Light, and all--higher and
+higher, until she looked like a wee bit of a star up in the sky. It was
+the funniest thing, but she seemed to know the way perfectly, and didn't
+have to stop to make inquiries anywhere. You see it was a straight road
+all the way, and when one doesn't have to think about turning to the
+right or the left, it makes things very much easier. Pretty soon Little
+Girl noticed that there was a bright light all around her--oh, a very
+bright light--and right away something down in her heart began to make
+her feel very happy indeed. She didn't know that the Christmas spirits
+and little Christmas fairies were all around her and even right inside
+her, because she couldn't see a single one of them, even though her eyes
+were very bright and could usually see a great deal.
+
+But that was just it, and Little Girl felt as if she wanted to laugh and
+sing and be glad. It made her remember the Sick Boy who lived next door,
+and she said to herself that she would carry him one of her prettiest
+picture-books in the morning, so that he could have something to make
+him happy all day. By and by, when the bright light all around her had
+grown very, very much brighter, Little Girl saw a path right in front of
+her, all straight and trim, leading up a hill to a big, big house
+with ever and ever so many windows in it. When she had gone just a bit
+nearer, she saw candles in every window, red and green and yellow ones,
+and every one burning brightly, so Little Girl knew right away that
+these were Christmas candles to light her on her journey, and make the
+way dear for her, and something told her that this was Santa's house,
+and that pretty soon she would perhaps see Santa himself.
+
+Just as she neared the steps and before she could possibly have had time
+to ring the bell, the door opened--opened of itself as wide as could
+be--and there stood--not Santa himself--don't think it--but a funny
+Little Man with slender little legs and a roly-poly stomach which shook
+every now and then when he laughed. You would have known right away,
+just as Little Girl knew, that he was a very happy little man, and you
+would have guessed right away, too, that the reason he was so roly-poly
+was because he laughed and chuckled and smiled all the time--for it's
+only sour, cross folks who are thin and skimpy. Quick as a wink, he
+pulled off his little peaked red cap, smiled the broadest kind of a
+smile, and said, "Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas! Come in! Come in!"
+
+So in went Little Girl, holding fast to Little Man's hand, and when she
+was really inside there was the jolliest, reddest fire all glowing and
+snapping, and there were Little Man and all his brothers and sisters,
+who said their names were "Merry Christmas," and "Good Cheer," and ever
+so many other jolly-sounding things, and there were such a lot of them
+that Little Girl just knew she never could count them, no matter how
+long she tried.
+
+All around her were bundles and boxes and piles of toys and games, and
+Little Girl knew that these were all ready and waiting to be loaded into
+Santa's big sleigh for his reindeer to whirl them away over cloudtops
+and snowdrifts to the little people down below who had left their
+stockings all ready for him. Pretty soon all the little Good Cheer
+Brothers began to hurry and bustle and carry out the bundles as fast as
+they could to the steps where Little Girl could hear the jingling bells
+and the stamping of hoofs. So Little Girl picked up some bundles and
+skipped along too, for she wanted to help a bit herself--it's no fun
+whatever at Christmas unless you can help, you know--and there in the
+yard stood the BIGGEST sleigh that Little Girl had ever seen, and the
+reindeer were all stamping and prancing and jingling the bells on their
+harnesses, because they were so eager to be on their way to the Earth
+once more.
+
+She could hardly wait for Santa to come, and just as she had begun to
+wonder where he was, the door opened again and out came a whole forest
+of Christmas trees, at least it looked just as if a whole forest had
+started out for a walk somewhere, but a second glance showed Little
+Girl that there were thousands of Christmas sprites, and that each one
+carried a tree or a big Christmas wreath on his back. Behind them all,
+she could hear some one laughing loudly, and talking in a big, jovial
+voice that sounded as if he were good friends with the whole world.
+
+And straightway she knew that Santa himself was coming. Little Girl's
+heart went pit-a-pat for a minute while she wondered if Santa would
+notice her, but she didn't have to wonder long, for he spied her at once
+and said:
+
+"Bless my soul! who's this? and where did you come from?"
+
+Little Girl thought perhaps she might be afraid to answer him, but she
+wasn't one bit afraid. You see he had such a kind little twinkle in
+his eyes that she felt happy right away as she replied, "Oh, I'm Little
+Girl, and I wanted so much to see Santa that I just came, and here I
+am!"
+
+"Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho!" laughed Santa, "and here you are! Wanted to see
+Santa, did you, and so you came! Now that's very nice, and it's too bad
+I'm in such a hurry, for we should like nothing better than to show you
+about and give you a real good time. But you see it is quarter of twelve
+now, and I must be on my way at once, else I'll never reach that first
+chimney-top by midnight. I'd call Mrs. Santa and ask her to get you
+some supper, but she is busy finishing dolls' clothes which must be
+done before morning, and I guess we'd better not bother her. Is there
+anything that you would like, Little Girl?" and good old Santa put
+his big warm hand on Little Girl's curls and she felt its warmth and
+kindness clear down to her very heart. You see, my dears, that even
+though Santa was in such a great hurry, he wasn't too busy to stop and
+make some one happy for a minute, even if it was some one no bigger than
+Little Girl.
+
+So she smiled back into Santa's face and said: "Oh, Santa, if I could
+ONLY ride down to Earth with you behind those splendid reindeer! I'd
+love to go; won't you PLEASE take me? I'm so small that I won't take up
+much room on the seat, and I'll keep very still and not bother one bit!"
+
+Then Santa laughed, SUCH a laugh, big and loud and rollicking, and he
+said, "Wants a ride, does she? Well, well, shall we take her, Little
+Elves? Shall we take her, Little Fairies? Shall we take her, Good
+Reindeer?"
+
+And all the Little Elves hopped and skipped and brought Little Girl a
+sprig of holly; and all the Little Fairies bowed and smiled and brought
+her a bit of mistletoe; and all the Good Reindeer jingled their bells
+loudly, which meant, "Oh, yes! let's take her! She's a good Little
+Girl! Let her ride!" And before Little Girl could even think, she found
+herself all tucked up in the big fur robes beside Santa, and away they
+went, right out into the air, over the clouds, through the Milky Way,
+and right under the very handle of the Big Dipper, on, on, toward the
+Earthland, whose lights Little Girl began to see twinkling away down
+below her. Presently she felt the runners scrape upon something, and
+she knew they must be on some one's roof, and that Santa would slip down
+some one's chimney in a minute.
+
+How she wanted to go, too! You see if you had never been down a chimney
+and seen Santa fill up the stockings, you would want to go quite as
+much as Little Girl did, now, wouldn't you? So, just as Little Girl
+was wishing as hard as ever she could wish, she heard a Tiny Voice say,
+"Hold tight to his arm! Hold tight to his arm!" So she held Santa's arm
+tight and close, and he shouldered his pack, never thinking that it
+was heavier than usual, and with a bound and a slide, there they were,
+Santa, Little Girl, pack and all, right in the middle of a room where
+there was a fireplace and stockings all hung up for Santa to fill.
+
+Just then Santa noticed Little Girl. He had forgotten all about her for
+a minute, and he was very much surprised to find that she had come, too.
+"Bless my soul!" he said, "where did you come from, Little Girl? and
+how in the world can we both get back up that chimney again? It's easy
+enough to slide down, but it's quite another matter to climb up again!"
+and Santa looked real worried. But Little Girl was beginning to feel
+very tired by this time, for she had had a very exciting evening, so she
+said, "Oh, never mind me, Santa. I've had such a good time, and I'd
+just as soon stay here a while as not. I believe I'll curl up on his
+hearth-rug a few minutes and have a little nap, for it looks as warm and
+cozy as our own hearth-rug at home, and--why, it is our own hearth and
+it's my own nursery, for there is Teddy Bear in his chair where I leave
+him every night, and there's Bunny Cat curled up on his cushion in the
+corner."
+
+And Little Girl turned to thank Santa and say goodbye to him, but
+either he had gone very quickly, or else she had fallen asleep very
+quickly--she never could tell which--for the next thing she knew, Daddy
+was holding her in his arms and was saying, "What is my Little Girl
+doing here? She must go to bed, for it's Christmas Eve, and old Santa
+won't come if he thinks there are any little folks about."
+
+But Little Girl knew better than that, and when she began to tell him
+all about it, and how the Christmas fairies had welcomed her, and how
+Santa had given her such a fine ride, Daddy laughed and laughed, and
+said, "You've been dreaming, Little Girl, you've been dreaming."
+
+But Little Girl knew better than that, too, for there on the hearth was
+the little Black Coal, which had given her Two Shoes and Bright Light,
+and tight in her hand she held a holly berry which one of the Christmas
+Sprites had placed there. More than all that, there she was on the
+hearth-rug herself, just as Santa had left her, and that was the best
+proof of all.
+
+The trouble was, Daddy himself had never been a Little Girl, so he
+couldn't tell anything about it, but we know she hadn't been dreaming,
+now, don't we, my dears?
+
+
+
+
+VII. "A CHRISTMAS MATINEE"*
+
+*This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 74.
+
+MRS. M.A.L. LANE
+
+It was the day before Christmas in the year 189-. Snow was falling
+heavily in the streets of Boston, but the crowd of shoppers seemed
+undiminished. As the storm increased, groups gathered at the corners and
+in sheltering doorways to wait for belated cars; but the holiday cheer
+was in the air, and there was no grumbling. Mothers dragging tired
+children through the slush of the streets; pretty girls hurrying home
+for the holidays; here and there a harassed-looking man with perhaps a
+single package which he had taken a whole morning to select--all had the
+same spirit of tolerant good-humor.
+
+"School Street! School Street!" called the conductor of an electric car.
+A group of young people at the farther end of the car started to
+their feet. One of them, a young man wearing a heavy fur-trimmed coat,
+addressed the conductor angrily.
+
+"I said, 'Music Hall,' didn't I?" he demanded. "Now we've got to walk
+back in the snow because of your stupidity!"
+
+"Oh, never mind, Frank!" one of the girls interposed. "We ought to have
+been looking out ourselves! Six of us, and we went by without a
+thought! It is all Mrs. Tirrell's fault! She shouldn't have been so
+entertaining!"
+
+The young matron dimpled and blushed. "That's charming of you, Maidie,"
+she said, gathering up her silk skirts as she prepared to step down into
+the pond before her. "The compliment makes up for the blame. But how it
+snows!"
+
+"It doesn't matter. We all have gaiters on," returned Maidie Williams,
+undisturbed.
+
+"Fares, please!" said the conductor stolidly.
+
+Frank Armstrong thrust his gloved hand deep into his pocket with angry
+vehemence. "There's your money," he said, "and be quick about the
+change, will you? We've lost time enough!"
+
+The man counted out the change with stiff, red fingers, closed his lips
+firmly as if to keep back an obvious rejoinder, rang up the six fares
+with careful accuracy, and gave the signal to go ahead. The car went on
+into the drifting storm.
+
+Armstrong laughed shortly as he rapidly counted the bits of silver lying
+in his open palm. He turned instinctively, but two or three cars were
+already between him and the one he was looking for.
+
+"The fellow must be an imbecile," he said, rejoining the group on the
+crossing. "He's given me back a dollar and twenty cents, and I handed
+him a dollar bill."
+
+"Oh, can't you stop him?" cried Maidie Williams, with a backward step
+into the wet street.
+
+The Harvard junior, who was carrying her umbrella, protested: "What's
+the use. Miss Williams? He'll make it up before he gets to Scollay
+Square, you may be sure. Those chaps don't lose anything. Why, the
+other day, I gave one a quarter and he went off as cool as you please.
+'Where's my change?' said I. 'You gave me a nickel,' said he. And
+there wasn't anybody to swear that I didn't except myself, and I didn't
+count."
+
+"But that doesn't make any difference," insisted the girl warmly.
+"Because one conductor was dishonest, we needn't be. I beg your pardon,
+Frank, but it does seem to me just stealing."
+
+"Oh, come along!" said her cousin, with an easy laugh. "I guess the West
+End Corporation won't go without their dinners to-morrow. Here, Maidie,
+here's the ill-gotten fifty cents. _I_ think you ought to treat us
+all after the concert; still, I won't urge you. I wash my hands of all
+responsibility. But I do wish you hadn't such an unpleasant conscience."
+
+Maidie flushed under the sting of his cousinly rudeness, but she went on
+quietly with the rest. It was evident that any attempt to overtake the
+car was out of the question.
+
+"Did you notice his number, Frank?" she asked, suddenly.
+
+"No, I never thought of it" said Frank, stopping short. "However, I
+probably shouldn't make any complaint if I had. I shall forget all about
+it tomorrow. I find it's never safe to let the sun go down on my wrath.
+It's very likely not to be there the next day."
+
+"I wasn't thinking of making a complaint," said Maidie; but the two
+young men were enjoying the small joke too much to notice what she said.
+
+The great doorway of Music Hall was just ahead. In a moment the party
+were within its friendly shelter, stamping off the snow. The girls
+were adjusting veils and hats with adroit feminine touches; the pretty
+chaperon was beaming approval upon them, and the young men were taking
+off their wet overcoats, when Maidie turned again in sudden desperation.
+
+"Mr. Harris," she said, rather faintly, for she did not like to make
+herself disagreeable, "do you suppose that car comes right back from
+Scollay Square?"
+
+"What car?" asked Walter Harris, blankly. "Oh, the one we came in? Yes,
+I suppose it does. They're running all the time, anyway. Why, you are
+not sick, are you, Miss Williams?"
+
+There was genuine concern in his tone. This girl, with her sweet,
+vibrant voice, her clear gray eyes, seemed very charming to him. She
+wasn't beautiful, perhaps, but she was the kind of girl he liked. There
+was a steady earnestness in the gray eyes that made him think of his
+mother.
+
+"No," said Maidie, slowly. "I'm all right, thank you. But I wish I could
+find that man again. I know sometimes they have to make it up if their
+accounts are wrong, and I couldn't--we couldn't feel very comfortable--"
+
+Frank Armstrong interrupted her. "Maidie," he said, with the studied
+calmness with which one speaks to an unreasonable child, "you are
+perfectly absurd. Here it is within five minutes of the tune for the
+concert to begin. It is impossible to tell when that car is coming back.
+You are making us all very uncomfortable. Mrs. Tirrell, won't you please
+tell her not to spoil our afternoon?"
+
+"I think he's right, Maidie," said Mrs. Tirrell. "It's very nice of you
+to feel so sorry for the poor man, but he really was very careless. It
+was all his own fault. And just think how far he made us walk! My feet
+are quite damp. We ought to go in directly or we shall all take cold,
+and I'm sure you wouldn't like that, my dear."
+
+She led the way as she spoke, the two girls and young Armstrong
+following. Maidie hesitated. It was so easy to go in, to forget
+everything in the light and warmth and excitement.
+
+"No," said she, very firmly, and as much to herself as to the young man
+who stood waiting for her. "I must go back and try to make it right. I'm
+so sorry, Mr. Harris, but if you will tell them--"
+
+"Why, I'm going with you, of course" said the young fellow, impulsively.
+"If I'd only looked once at the man I'd go alone, but I shouldn't know
+him from Adam."
+
+Maidie laughed. "Oh, I don't want to lose the whole concert, Mr. Harris,
+and Frank, has all the tickets. You must go after them and try to make
+my peace. I'll come just as soon as I can. Don't wait for me, please.
+If you'll come and look for me here the first number, and not let them
+scold me too much--" She ended with an imploring little catch in her
+breath that was almost a sob.
+
+"They sha'n't say a word, Miss Williams!" cried Walter Harris, with
+honest admiration in his eyes.
+
+But she was gone already, and conscious that further delay was only
+making matters worse, he went on into the hall.
+
+Meanwhile, the car swung heavily along the wet rails on its way to the
+turning-point. It was nearly empty now. An old gentleman and his nurse
+were the only occupants. Jim Stevens, the conductor, had stepped inside
+the car.
+
+"Too bad I forgot those young people wanted to get off at Music Hall,"
+he was thinking to himself. "I don't see how I came to do it. That chap
+looked as if he wanted to complain of me, and I don't know as I blame
+him. I'd have said I was sorry if he hadn't been so sharp with his
+tongue. I hope he won't complain just now. 'Twould be a pretty bad time
+for me to get into trouble, with Mary and the baby both sick. I'm too
+sleepy to be good for much, that's a fact. Sitting up three nights
+running takes hold of a fellow somehow when he's at work all day. The
+rent's paid, that's one thing, if it hasn't left me but half a dollar to
+my name. Hullo!" He was struck by a sudden distinct recollection of the
+coins he had returned. "Why, I gave him fifty cents too much!"
+
+He glanced up at the dial which indicated the fares and began to count
+the change in his pocket. He knew exactly how much money he had had at
+the beginning of the trip. He counted carefully. Then he plunged his
+hand into the heavy canvas pocket of his coat. Perhaps he had half a
+dollar there. No, it was empty!
+
+He faced the fact reluctantly. Fifty cents short, ten fares! Gone into
+the pocket of the young gentleman with the fur collar! The conductor's
+hand shook as he put the money back in his pocket. It meant--what did it
+mean? He drew a long breath.
+
+Christmas Eve! A dark dreary little room upstairs in a noisy tenement
+house. A pale, thin woman on a shabby lounge vainly trying to quiet a
+fretful child. The child is thin and pale, too, with a hard, racking
+cough. There is a small fire in the stove, a very small fire; coal is so
+high. The medicine stands on the shelf. "Medicine won't do much good,"
+the doctor had said; "he needs beef and cream."
+
+Jim's heart sank at the thought. He could almost hear the baby asking;
+"Isn't papa coming soon? Isn't he, mamma?"
+
+"Poor little kid!" Jim said, softly, under his breath. "And I shan't
+have a thing to take home to him; nor Mary's violets, either. It'll be
+the first Christmas that ever happened. I suppose that chap would think
+it was ridiculous for me to be buying violets. He wouldn't understand
+what the flowers mean to Mary. Perhaps he didn't notice I gave him too
+much. That kind don't know how much they have. They just pull it out as
+if it was newspaper."
+
+The conductor went out into the snow to help the nurse, who was
+assisting the old gentleman to the ground. Then the car swung on again.
+Jim turned up the collar of his coat about his ears and stamped his
+feet. There was the florist's shop where he had meant to buy the
+violets, and the toy-shop was just around the corner.
+
+A thought flashed across his tired brain. "Plenty of men would do it;
+they do it every day. Nobody ever would be the poorer for it. This car
+will be crowded going home. I needn't ring in every fare; nobody could
+tell. But Mary! She wouldn't touch those violets if she knew. And she'd
+know. I'd have to tell her. I couldn't keep it from her, she's that
+quick."
+
+He jumped off to adjust the trolley with a curious sense of unreality.
+It couldn't be that he was really going home this Christmas Eve with
+empty hands. Well, they must all suffer together for his carelessness.
+It was his own fault, but it was hard. And he was so tired!
+
+To his amazement he found his eyes were blurred as he watched the people
+crowding into the car. What? Was he going to cry like a baby--he, a
+great burly man of thirty years?
+
+"It's no use," he thought. "I couldn't do it. The first time I gave Mary
+violets was the night she said she'd marry me. I told her then I'd do
+my best to make her proud of me. I guess she wouldn't be very proud of a
+man who could cheat. She'd rather starve than have a ribbon she couldn't
+pay for."
+
+He rang up a dozen fares with a steady hand. The temptation was over.
+Six more strokes--then nine without a falter. He even imagined the bell
+rang more distinctly than usual, even encouragingly. The car stopped.
+Jim flung the door open with a triumphant sweep of his arm. He felt
+ready to face the world. But the baby--his arm dropped. It was hard.
+
+He turned to help the young girl who was waiting at the step. Through
+the whirling snow he saw her eager face, with a quick recognition
+lighting the steady eyes, and wondered dimly, as he stood with his hand
+on the signal-strap, where he could have seen her before.
+
+He knew immediately.
+
+"There was a mistake," she said, with a shy tremor in her voice. "You
+gave us too much change and here it is." She held out to Jim the piece
+of silver which had given him such an unhappy quarter of an hour.
+
+He took it like one dazed. Would the young lady think he was crazy to
+care so much about so small a coin? He must say something. "Thank you,
+miss," he stammered as well as he could. "You see, I thought it was
+gone--and there's the baby--and it's Christmas Eve--and my wife's
+sick--and you can't understand--"
+
+It certainly was not remarkable that she couldn't.
+
+"But I do," she said, simply. "I was afraid of that. And I thought
+perhaps there was a baby, so I brought my Christmas present for her,"
+and something else dropped into Jim's cold hand.
+
+"What you waiting for?" shouted the motorman from the front platform.
+The girl had disappeared in the snow.
+
+Jim rang the bell to go ahead, and gazed again at the two shining half
+dollars in his hand.
+
+"I didn't have a chance to tell her," he explained to his wife late in
+the evening, as he sat in a tiny rocking-chair several sizes too small
+for him, "that the baby wasn't a her at all, though if I thought he'd
+grow up into such a lovely one as she is, I don't know but I almost wish
+he was."
+
+"Poor Jim!" said Mary, with a little laugh as she put up her hand to
+stroke his rough cheek. "I guess you're tired."
+
+"And I should say," he added, stretching out his long legs toward the
+few red sparks in the bottom of the grate, "I should say she had tears
+in her eyes, too, but I was that near crying myself I couldn't be sure."
+
+The little room was sweet with the odour of English violets. Asleep in
+the bed lay the boy, a toy horse clasped close to his breast.
+
+"Bless her heart!" said Mary, softly.
+
+"Well, Miss Williams," said Walter Harris, as he sprang to meet a
+snow-covered figure coming swiftly along the sidewalk. "I can see
+that you found him. You've lost the first number, but they won't scold
+you--not this time."
+
+The girl turned a radiant face upon him. "Thank you," she said, shaking
+the snowy crystals from her skirt. "I don't care now if they do. I
+should have lost more than that if I had stayed."
+
+
+
+
+VIII. TOINETTE AND THE ELVES*
+
+* Published by arrangement with Little, Brown & Co.
+
+SUSAN COOLIDGE
+
+The winter's sun was nearing the horizon's edge. Each moment the tree
+shadows grew longer in the forest; each moment the crimson light on the
+upper boughs became more red and bright. It was Christmas Eve, or would
+be in half an hour, when the sun should be fairly set; but it did not
+feel like Christmas, for the afternoon was mild and sweet, and the wind
+in the leafless boughs sang, as it moved about, as though to imitate
+the vanished birds. Soft trills and whistles, odd little shakes and
+twitters--it was astonishing what pretty noises the wind made, for it
+was in good humor, as winds should be on the Blessed Night; all its
+storm-tones and bass-notes were for the moment laid aside, and gently as
+though hushing a baby to sleep, it cooed and rustled and brushed to and
+fro in the leafless woods.
+
+Toinette stood, pitcher in hand, beside the well. "Wishing Well," the
+people called it, for they believed that if any one standing there bowed
+to the East, repeated a certain rhyme and wished a wish, the wish would
+certainly come true. Unluckily, nobody knew exactly what the rhyme
+should be. Toinette did not; she was wishing that she did, as she stood
+with her eyes fixed on the bubbling water. How nice it would be! she
+thought. What beautiful things should be hers, if it were only to
+wish and to have. She would be beautiful, rich, good--oh, so good.
+The children should love her dearly, and never be disagreeable. Mother
+should not work so hard--they should all go back to France--which mother
+said was si belle. Oh, dear, how nice it would be. Meantime, the sun
+sank lower, and mother at home was waiting for the water, but Toinette
+forgot that.
+
+Suddenly she started. A low sound of crying met her ear, and something
+like a tiny moan. It seemed close by but she saw nothing.
+
+Hastily she filled her pitcher and turned to go. But again the sound
+came, an unmistakable sob, right under her feet. Toinette stopped short.
+
+"What is the matter?" she called out bravely. "Is anybody there? and if
+there is, why don't I see you?"
+
+A third sob--and all at once, down on the ground beside her, a tiny
+figure became visible, so small that Toinette had to kneel and stoop
+her head to see it plainly. The figure was that of an odd little man. He
+wore a garb of green bright and glancing as the scales of a beetle. In
+his mite of a hand was a cap, out of which stuck a long pointed feather.
+Two specks of tears stood on his cheeks and he fixed on Toinette a
+glance so sharp and so sad that it made her feel sorry and frightened
+and confused all at once.
+
+"Why how funny this is!" she said, speaking to herself out loud.
+
+"Not at all," replied the little man, in a voice as dry and crisp as
+the chirr of a grasshopper. "Anything but funny. I wish you wouldn't use
+such words. It hurts my feelings, Toinette."
+
+"Do you know my name, then?" cried Toinette, astonished. "That's
+strange. But what is the matter? Why are you crying so, little man?"
+
+"I'm not a little man. I'm an elf," responded the dry voice; "and I
+think you'd cry if you had an engagement out to tea, and found yourself
+spiked on a great bayonet, so that you couldn't move an inch. Look!" He
+turned a little as he spoke and Toinette saw a long rose-thorn sticking
+through the back of the green robe. The little man could by no means
+reach the thorn, and it held him fast prisoner to the place.
+
+"Is that all? I'll take it out for you," she said.
+
+"Be careful--oh, be careful," entreated the little man. "This is my
+new dress, you know--my Christmas suit, and it's got to last a year. If
+there is a hole in it, Peascod will tickle me and Bean Blossom tease,
+till I shall wish myself dead." He stamped with vexation at the thought.
+
+"Now, you mustn't do that," said Toinette, in a motherly tone, "else
+you'll tear it yourself, you know." She broke off the thorn as she
+spoke, and gently drew it out. The elf anxiously examined the stuff. A
+tiny puncture only was visible and his face brightened.
+
+"You're a good child," he said. "I'll do as much for you some day,
+perhaps."
+
+"I would have come before if I had seen you," remarked Toinette,
+timidly. "But I didn't see you a bit."
+
+"No, because I had my cap on," cried the elf. He placed it on his head
+as he spoke, and hey, presto! nobody was there, only a voice which
+laughed and said: "Well--don't stare so. Lay your finger on me now."
+
+"Oh," said Toinette, with a gasp. "How wonderful. What fun it must be
+to do that. The children wouldn't see me. I should steal in and surprise
+them; they would go on talking, and never guess that I was there. I
+should so like it. Do elves ever lend their caps to anybody? I wish
+you'd lend me yours. It must be so nice to be invisible."
+
+"Ho," cried the elf, appearing suddenly again. "Lend my cap, indeed!
+Why it wouldn't stay on the very tip of your ear, it's so small. As for
+nice, that depends. Sometimes it is, and sometimes it isn't. No, the
+only way for mortal people to be invisible is to gather the fern-seed
+and put it in their shoes."
+
+"Gather it? Where? I never saw any seed to the ferns," said Toinette,
+staring about her.
+
+"Of course not--we elves take care of that," replied the little man.
+"Nobody finds the fern-seed but ourselves. I'll tell you what, though.
+You were such a nice child to take out the thorn so cleverly, that
+I'll give you a little of the seed. Then you can try the fun of being
+invisible, to your heart's content."
+
+"Will you really? How delightful. May I have it now?"
+
+"Bless me. Do you think I carry my pockets stuffed with it?" said the
+elf. "Not at all. Go home, say not a word to any one, but leave your
+bedroom window open to night, and you'll see what you'll see."
+
+He laid his finger on his nose as he spoke, gave a jump like a
+grasshopper, clapping on his cap as he went, and vanished. Toinette
+lingered a moment, in hopes that he might come back, then took her
+pitcher and hurried home. The woods were very dusky by this time; but
+full of her strange adventures, she did not remember to feel afraid.
+
+"How long you have been," said her mother. "It's late for a little maid
+like you to be up. You must make better speed another time, my child."
+
+Toinette pouted as she was apt to do when reproved. The children
+clamoured to know what had kept her, and she spoke pettishly and
+crossly; so that they too became cross, and presently went away into the
+outer kitchen to play by themselves. The children were apt to creep away
+when Toinette came. It made her angry and unhappy at times that they
+should do so, but she did not realize that it was in great part her own
+fault, and so did not set herself to mend it.
+
+"Tell me a 'tory," said baby Jeanneton, creeping to her knee a little
+later. But Toinette's head was full of the elf; she had no time to spare
+for Jeanneton.
+
+"Oh, not to-night," she replied. "Ask mother to tell you one."
+
+"Mother's busy," said Jeanneton wistfully.
+
+Toinette took no notice and the little one crept away disconsolately.
+
+Bedtime at last. Toinette set the casement open, and lay a long time
+waiting and watching; then she fell asleep. She waked with a sneeze and
+jump and sat up in bed. Behold, on the coverlet stood her elfin friend,
+with a long train of other elves beside him, all clad in the beetle-wing
+green, and wearing little pointed caps. More were coming in at the
+window; outside a few were drifting about in the moon rays, which lit
+their sparkling robes till they glittered like so many fireflies. The
+odd thing was, that though the caps were on, Toinette could see the
+elves distinctly and this surprised her so much, that again she thought
+out loud and said, "How funny."
+
+"You mean about the caps," replied her special elf, who seemed to have
+the power of reading thought.
+
+"Yes, you can see us to-night, caps and all. Spells lose their value on
+Christmas Eve, always. Peascod, where is the box? Do you still wish to
+try the experiment of being invisible, Toinette?"
+
+"Oh, yes--indeed I do."
+
+"Very well; so let it be."
+
+As he spoke he beckoned, and two elves puffing and panting like little
+men with a heavy load, dragged forward a droll little box about the size
+of a pumpkin-seed.
+
+One of them lifted the cover.
+
+"Pay the porter, please, ma'am," he said giving Toinette's ear a
+mischievous tweak with his sharp fingers.
+
+"Hands off, you bad Peascod!" cried Toinette's elf. "This is my girl.
+She shan't be pinched!" He dealt Peascod a blow with his tiny hand as
+he spoke and looked so brave and warlike that he seemed at least an inch
+taller than he had before. Toinette admired him very much; and Peascod
+slunk away with an abashed giggle muttering that Thistle needn't be so
+ready with his fist.
+
+Thistle--for thus, it seemed, Toinette's friend was named--dipped his
+fingers in the box, which was full of fine brown seeds, and shook a
+handful into each of Toinette's shoes, as they stood, toes together by
+the bedside.
+
+"Now you have your wish," he said, "and can go about and do what you
+like, no one seeing. The charm will end at sunset. Make the most of it
+while you can; but if you want to end it sooner, shake the seeds from
+the shoes and then you are just as usual."
+
+"Oh, I shan't want to," protested Toinette; "I'm sure I shan't."
+
+"Good-bye," said Thistle, with a mocking little laugh.
+
+"Good-bye, and thank you ever so much," replied Toinette.
+
+"Good-bye, good-bye," replied the other elves, in shrill chorus. They
+clustered together, as if in consultation; then straight out of the
+window they flew like a swarm of gauzy-winged bees, and melted into the
+moonlight. Toinette jumped up and ran to watch them but the little men
+were gone--not a trace of them was to be seen; so she shut the window,
+went back to bed and presently in the midst of her amazed and excited
+thoughts fell asleep.
+
+She waked in the morning, with a queer, doubtful feeling. Had she
+dreamed, or had it really happened? She put on her best petticoat and
+laced her blue bodice; for she thought the mother would perhaps take
+them across the wood to the little chapel for the Christmas service. Her
+long hair smoothed and tied, her shoes trimly fastened, downstairs she
+ran. The mother was stirring porridge over the fire. Toinette went close
+to her, but she did not move or turn her head.
+
+"How late the children are," she said at last, lifting the boiling
+pot on the hob. Then she went to the stair-foot and called, "Marc,
+Jeanneton, Pierre, Marie. Breakfast is ready, my children. Toinette--but
+where, then, is Toinette? She is used to be down long before this."
+
+"Toinette isn't upstairs," said Marie from above.
+
+"Her door is wide open, and she isn't there."
+
+"That is strange," said the mother. "I have been here an hour, and she
+has not passed this way since." She went to the outer door and called,
+"Toinette! Toinette!" passing close to Toinette as she did so. And
+looking straight at her with unseeing eyes. Toinette, half frightened,
+half pleased, giggled low to herself. She really was invisible, then.
+How strange it seemed and what fun it was going to be.
+
+The children sat down to breakfast, little Jeanneton, as the youngest,
+saying grace. The mother distributed the porridge and gave each a spoon
+but she looked anxious.
+
+"Where can Toinette have gone?" she said to herself. Toinette was
+conscious-pricked. She was half inclined to dispel the charm on the
+spot. But just then she caught a whisper from Pierre to Marc which so
+surprised her as to put the idea out of her head.
+
+"Perhaps a wolf has eaten her up--a great big wolf like the 'Capuchon
+Rouge,' you know." This was what Pierre said; and Marc answered
+unfeelingly:
+
+"If he has, I shall ask mother to let me have her room for my own."
+
+Poor Toinette, her cheeks burned and her eyes filled with tears at this.
+Didn't the boys love her a bit then? Next she grew angry, and longed to
+box Marc's ears, only she recollected in time that she was invisible.
+What a bad boy he was, she thought.
+
+The smoking porridge reminded her that she was hungry; so brushing away
+the tears she slipped a spoon off the table and whenever she found the
+chance, dipped it into the bowl for a mouthful. The porridge disappeared
+rapidly.
+
+"I want some more," said Jeanneton.
+
+"Bless me, how fast you have eaten," said the mother, turning to the
+bowl.
+
+This made Toinette laugh, which shook her spoon, and a drop of the hot
+mixture fell right on the tip of Marie's nose as she sat with upturned
+face waiting her turn for a second helping. Marie gave a little scream.
+
+"What is it?" said the mother.
+
+"Hot water! Right in my face!" sputtered Marie.
+
+"Water!" cried Marc. "It's porridge."
+
+"You spattered with your spoon. Eat more carefully, my child," said the
+mother, and Toinette laughed again as she heard her. After all, there
+was some fun in being invisible.
+
+The morning went by. Constantly the mother went to the door, and,
+shading her eyes with her hand, looked out, in hopes of seeing a little
+figure come down the wood-path, for she thought perhaps the child went
+to the spring after water, and fell asleep there. The children played
+happily, meanwhile. They were used to doing without Toinette and did not
+seem to miss her, except that now and then baby Jeanneton said: "Poor
+Toinette gone--not here--all gone."
+
+"Well, what if she has?" said Marc at last looking up from the wooden
+cup he was carving for Marie's doll. "We can play all the better."
+
+Marc was a bold, outspoken boy, who always told his whole mind about
+things.
+
+"If she were here," he went on," she'd only scold and interfere.
+Toinette almost always scolds. I like to have her go away. It makes it
+pleasanter."
+
+"It is rather pleasanter," admitted Marie, "only I'd like her to be
+having a nice time somewhere else."
+
+"Bother about Toinette," cried Pierre.
+
+"Let's play 'My godmother has cabbage to sell.'"
+
+I don't think Toinette had ever felt so unhappy in her life, as when she
+stood by unseen, and heard the children say these words. She had never
+meant to be unkind to them, but she was quick-tempered, dreamy, wrapped
+up in herself. She did not like being interrupted by them, it put her
+out, and she spoke sharply and was cross. She had taken it for granted
+that the others must love her, by a sort of right, and the knowledge
+that they did not grieved over very much. Creeping away, she hid herself
+in the woods. It was a sparkling day, but the sun did not look so bright
+as usual. Cuddled down under a rosebush, Toinette sat sobbing as if her
+heart would break at the recollection of the speeches she had overheard.
+
+By and by a little voice within her woke up and began to make itself
+audible. All of us know this little voice. We call it conscience.
+
+"Jeanneton missed me," she thought. "And, oh, dear! I pushed her away
+only last night and wouldn't tell her a story. And Marie hoped I was
+having a pleasant time somewhere. I wish I hadn't slapped Marie last
+Friday. And I wish I hadn't thrown Marc's ball into the fire that day I
+was angry with him. How unkind he was to say that--but I wasn't always
+kind to him. And once I said that I wished a bear would eat Pierre up.
+That was because he broke my cup. Oh, dear, oh, dear. What a bad girl
+I've been to them all."
+
+"But you could be better and kinder if you tried, couldn't you?" said
+the inward voice. "I think you could."
+
+And Toinette clasped her hands tight and said out loud: "I could.
+Yes--and I will."
+
+The first thing to be done was to get rid of the fern-seed which she now
+regarded as a hateful thing. She untied her shoes and shook it out in
+the grass. It dropped and seemed to melt into the air, for it instantly
+vanished. A mischievous laugh sounded close behind, and a beetle-green
+coat-tail was visible whisking under a tuft of rushes. But Toinette
+had had enough of the elves, and, tying her shoes, took the road toward
+home, running with all her might.
+
+"Where have you been all day, Toinette?" cried the children, as,
+breathless and panting, she flew in at the gate. But Toinette could not
+speak. She made slowly for her mother, who stood in the doorway, flung
+herself into her arms and burst into a passion of tears.
+
+"Ma cherie, what is it, whence hast thou come?" asked the good mother
+alarmed. She lifted Toinette into her arms as she spoke, and hastened
+indoors. The other children followed, whispering and peeping, but the
+mother sent them away, and sitting down by the fire with Toinette in her
+lap, she rocked and hushed and comforted, as though Toinette had been
+again a little baby. Gradually the sobs ceased. For a while Toinette
+lay quiet, with her head on her mother's breast. Then she wiped her wet
+eyes, put her arms around her mother's neck, and told her all from the
+very beginning, keeping not a single thing back. The dame listened with
+alarm.
+
+"Saints protect us," she muttered. Then feeling Toinette's hands and
+head, "Thou hast a fever," she said. "I will make thee a tisane, my
+darling, and thou must at once go to bed." Toinette vainly protested;
+to bed she went and perhaps it was the wisest thing, for the warm drink
+threw her into a long sound sleep and when she woke she was herself
+again, bright and well, hungry for dinner, and ready to do her usual
+tasks.
+
+Herself--but not quite the same Toinette that she had been before.
+Nobody changes from bad to better in a minute. It takes time for that,
+time and effort, and a long struggle with evil habits and tempers. But
+there is sometimes a certain minute or day in which people begin to
+change, and thus it was with Toinette. The fairy lesson was not lost
+upon her. She began to fight with herself, to watch her faults and try
+to conquer them. It was hard work; often she felt discouraged, but she
+kept on. Week after week and month after month she grew less selfish,
+kinder, more obliging than she used to be. When she failed and her old
+fractious temper got the better of her, she was sorry and begged every
+one's pardon so humbly that they could not but forgive. The mother
+began to think that the elves really had bewitched her child. As for the
+children they learned to love Toinette as never before, and came to her
+with all their pains and pleasures, as children should to a kind older
+sister. Each fresh proof of this, every kiss from Jeanneton, every
+confidence from Marc, was a comfort to Toinette, for she never forgot
+Christmas Day, and felt that no trouble was too much to wipe out that
+unhappy recollection. "I think they like me better than they did then,"
+she would say; but then the thought came, "Perhaps if I were invisible
+again, if they did not know I was there, I might hear something to make
+me feel as badly as I did that morning." These sad thoughts were part of
+the bitter fruit of the fairy fern-seed.
+
+So with doubts and fears the year went by, and again it was Christmas
+Eve. Toinette had been asleep some hours when she was roused by a sharp
+tapping at the window pane. Startled, and only half awake, she sat up in
+bed and saw by the moonlight a tiny figure outside which she recognized.
+It was Thistle drumming with his knuckles on the glass.
+
+"Let me in," cried the dry little voice. So Toinette opened the
+casement, and Thistle flew in and perched as before on the coverlet.
+
+"Merry Christmas, my girl." he said, "and a Happy New Year when it
+comes. I've brought you a present;" and, dipping into a pouch tied round
+his waist, he pulled out a handful of something brown. Toinette knew
+what it was in a moment.
+
+"Oh, no," she cried shrinking back. "Don't give me any fern-seeds. They
+frighten me. I don't like them."
+
+"Don't be silly," said Thistle, his voice sounding kind this time, and
+earnest. "It wasn't pleasant being invisible last year, but perhaps this
+year it will be. Take my advice, and try it. You'll not be sorry."
+
+"Sha'n't I?" said Toinette, brightening. "Very well, then, I will." She
+leaned out of bed, and watched Thistle strew the fine dustlike grains in
+each shoe.
+
+"I'll drop in to-morrow night, and just see how you like it," he said.
+Then, with a nod, he was gone.
+
+The old fear came back when she woke in the morning, and she tied on her
+shoes with a tremble at her heart. Downstairs she stole. The first thing
+she saw was a wooden ship standing on her plate. Marc had made the ship,
+but Toinette had no idea it was for her.
+
+The little ones sat round the table with their eyes on the door,
+watching till Toinette should come in and be surprised.
+
+"I wish she'd hurry," said Pierre, drumming on his bowl with a spoon.
+
+"We all want Toinette, don't we?" said the mother, smiling as she poured
+the hot porridge.
+
+"It will be fun to see her stare," declared Marc.
+
+"Toinette is jolly when she stares. Her eyes look big and her cheeks
+grow pink. Andre Brugen thinks his sister Aline is prettiest, but I
+don't. Our Toinette is ever so pretty."
+
+"She is ever so nice, too," said Pierre. "She's as good to play with
+as--as--a boy," finished triumphantly.
+
+"Oh, I wish my Toinette would come," said Jeanneton.
+
+Toinette waited no longer, but sped upstairs with glad tears in her
+eyes. Two minutes, and down she came again visible this time. Her heart
+was light as a feather.
+
+"Merry Christmas!" clamoured the children. The ship was presented,
+Toinette was duly surprised, and so the happy day began.
+
+That night Toinette left the window open, and lay down in her clothes;
+for she felt, as Thistle had been so kind, she ought to receive him
+politely. He came at midnight, and with him all the other little men in
+green.
+
+"Well, how was it?" asked Thistle.
+
+"Oh, I liked it this time," declared Toinette, with shining eyes, "and I
+thank you so much."
+
+"I'm glad you did," said the elf. "And I'm glad you are thankful, for we
+want you to do something for us."
+
+"What can it be?" inquired Toinette, wondering.
+
+"You must know," went on Thistle, "that there is no dainty in the world
+which we elves enjoy like a bowl of fern-seed broth. But it has to be
+cooked over a real fire, and we dare not go near fire, you know, lest
+our wings scorch. So we seldom get any fern-seed broth. Now, Toinette,
+will you make us some?"
+
+"Indeed, I will!" cried Toinette, "only you must tell me how."
+
+"It is very simple," said Peascod; "only seed and honey dew, stirred
+from left to right with a sprig of fennel. Here's the seed and the
+fennel, and here's the dew. Be sure and stir from the left; if you
+don't, it curdles, and the flavour will be spoiled."
+
+Down into the kitchen they went, and Toinette, moving very softly,
+quickened the fire, set on the smallest bowl she could find, and
+spread the doll's table with the wooden saucers which Marc had made for
+Jeanneton to play with. Then she mixed and stirred as the elves bade,
+and when the soup was done, served it to them smoking hot. How they
+feasted! No bumblebee, dipping into a flower-cup, ever sipped and
+twinkled more rapturously than they.
+
+When the last drop was eaten, they made ready to go. Each in turn
+kissed Toinette's hand, and said a word of farewell. Thistle brushed his
+feathered cap over the doorpost as he passed.
+
+"Be lucky, house," he said, "for you have received and entertained the
+luck-bringers. And be lucky, Toinette. Good temper is good luck, and
+sweet words and kind looks and peace in the heart are the fairest of
+fortunes. See that you never lose them again, my girl." With this, he,
+too, kissed Toinette's hand, waved his feathered cap, and--whir! they
+all were gone, while Toinette, covering the fire with ashes and putting
+aside the little cups, stole up to her bed a happy child.
+
+
+
+
+IX. THE VOYAGE OF THE WEE RED CAP
+
+*Published originally in the Outlook. Reprinted here by arrangement with
+the author.
+
+RUTH SAWYER DURAND
+
+It was the night of St. Stephen, and Teig sat alone by his fire with
+naught in his cupboard but a pinch of tea and a bare mixing of meal, and
+a heart inside of him as soft and warm as the ice on the water-bucket
+outside the door. The tuft was near burnt on the hearth--a handful of
+golden cinders left, just; and Teig took to counting them greedily on
+his fingers.
+
+"There's one, two, three, an' four an' five," he laughed. "Faith, there
+be more bits o' real gold hid undther the loose clay in the corner."
+
+It was the truth; and it was the scraping and scrooching for the last
+piece that had left Teig's cupboard bare of a Christmas dinner.
+
+"Gold is betther nor eatin' an' dthrinkin'. An' if ye have naught to
+give, there'll be naught asked of ye;" and he laughed again.
+
+He was thinking of the neighbours, and the doles of food and piggins of
+milk that would pass over their thresholds that night to the vagabonds
+and paupers who were sure to come begging. And on the heels of that
+thought followed another: who would be giving old Barney his dinner?
+Barney lived a stone's throw from Teig, alone, in a wee tumbled-in
+cabin; and for a score of years past Teig had stood on the doorstep
+every Christmas Eve, and, making a hollow of his two hands, had called
+across the road:
+
+"Hey, there, Barney, will ye come over for a sup?"
+
+And Barney had reached for his crutches--there being but one leg to
+him--and had come.
+
+"Faith," said Teig, trying another laugh, "Barney can fast for the once;
+'twill be all the same in a month's time." And he fell to thinking of
+the gold again. A knock came at the door. Teig pulled himself down in
+his chair where the shadow would cover him, and held his tongue.
+
+"Teig, Teig!" It was the widow O'Donnelly's voice. "If ye are there,
+open your door. I have not got the pay for the spriggin' this month, an'
+the childher are needin' food."
+
+But Teig put the leash on his tongue, and never stirred till he heard
+the tramp of her feet going on to the next cabin. Then he saw to it that
+the door was tight-barred. Another knock came, and it was a stranger's
+voice this time:
+
+"The other cabins are filled; not one but has its hearth crowded; will
+ye take us in--the two of us? The wind bites mortal sharp, not a morsel
+o' food have ne tasted this day. Masther, will ye take us in?"
+
+But Teig sat on, a-holding his tongue; and the tramp of the strangers'
+feet passed down the road. Others took their place--small feet, running.
+It was the miller's wee Cassie, and she called out as she ran by.
+
+"Old Barney's watchin' for ye. Ye'll not be forgettin' him, will ye,
+Teig?"
+
+And then the child broke into a song, sweet and clear, as she passed
+down the road:
+
+ "Listen all ye, 'tis the Feast o' St. Stephen,
+ Mind that ye keep it, this holy even.
+ Open your door an' greet ye the stranger--
+ For ye mind that the wee Lord had naught but a manger.
+ Mhuire as truagh!
+
+ "Feed ye the hungry an' rest ye the weary,
+ This ye must do for the sake of Our Mary.
+ 'Tis well that ye mind--ye who sit by the fire--
+ That the Lord he was born in a dark and cold byre.
+ Mhuire as truagh!"
+
+Teig put his fingers deep in his ears. "A million murdthering curses on
+them that won't let me be! Can't a man try to keep what is his without
+bein' pesthered by them that has only idled an' wasted their days?"
+
+And then the strange thing happened: hundreds and hundreds of wee lights
+began dancing outside the window, making the room bright; the hands of
+the clock began chasing each other round the dial, and the bolt of the
+door drew itself out. Slowly, without a creak or a cringe, the door
+opened, and in there trooped a crowd of the Good People. Their wee green
+cloaks were folded close about them, and each carried a rush candle.
+
+Teig was filled with a great wonderment, entirely, when he saw the
+fairies, but when they saw him they laughed.
+
+"We are takin' the loan o' your cabin this night, Teig," said they. "Ye
+are the only man hereabout with an empty hearth, an' we're needin' one."
+
+Without saying more, they bustled about the room making ready. They
+lengthened out the table and spread and set it; more of the Good People
+trooped in, bringing stools and food and drink. The pipers came last,
+and they sat themselves around the chimney-piece a-blowing their
+chanters and trying the drones. The feasting began and the pipers played
+and never had Teig seen such a sight in his life. Suddenly a wee man
+sang out:
+
+"Clip, clap, clip, clap, I wish I had my wee red cap!" And out of the
+air there tumbled the neatest cap Teig ever laid his two eyes on. The
+wee man clapped it on his head, crying:
+
+"I wish I was in Spain!" and--whist--up the chimney he went, and away
+out of sight.
+
+It happened just as I am telling it. Another wee man called for his cap,
+and away he went after the first. And then another and another until the
+room was empty and Teig sat alone again.
+
+"By my soul," said Teig, "I'd like to thravel that way myself! It's a
+grand savin' of tickets an' baggage; an' ye get to a place before ye've
+had time to change your mind. Faith there is no harm done if I thry it."
+
+So he sang the fairies' rhyme and out of the air dropped a wee cap for
+him. For a moment the wonder had him, but the next he was clapping the
+cap on his head and crying:
+
+"Spain!"
+
+Then--whist--up the chimney he went after the fairies, and before he had
+time to let out his breath he was standing in the middle of Spain, and
+strangeness all about him.
+
+He was in a great city. The doorways of the houses were hung with
+flowers and the air was warm and sweet with the smell of them. Torches
+burned along the streets, sweetmeat-sellers went about crying their
+wares, and on the steps of the cathedral crouched a crowd of beggars.
+
+"What's the meanin' o' that?" asked Teig of one of the fairies. "They
+are waiting for those that are hearing mass. When they come out, they
+give half of what they have to those that have nothing, so on this night
+of all the year there shall be no hunger and no cold."
+
+And then far down the street came the sound of a child's voice, singing:
+
+ "Listen all ye, 'tis the Feast o' St. Stephen,
+ Mind that ye keep it, this holy even".
+
+"Curse it!" said Teig; "can a song fly afther ye?"
+
+And then he heard the fairies cry "Holland!" and cried "Holland!" too.
+
+In one leap he was over France, and another over Belgium; and with the
+third he was standing by long ditches of water frozen fast, and over
+them glided hundreds upon hundreds of lads and maids. Outside each door
+stood a wee wooden shoe empty. Teig saw scores of them as he looked down
+the ditch of a street.
+
+"What is the meanin' o' those shoes? " he asked the fairies.
+
+"Ye poor lad!" answered the wee man next to him; "are ye not knowing
+anything? This is the Gift Night of the year, when every man gives to
+his neighbour."
+
+A child came to the window of one of the houses, and in her hand was a
+lighted candle. She was singing as she put the light down close to the
+glass, and Teig caught the words:
+
+ "Open your door an' greet ye the stranger--
+ For ye mind that the wee Lord had naught but a manger.
+ Mhuire as truagh!"
+
+"'Tis the de'il's work!" cried Teig, and he set the red cap more firmly
+on his head.
+
+"I'm for another country."
+
+I cannot be telling you a half of the adventures Teig had that night,
+nor half the sights that he saw. But he passed by fields that held
+sheaves of grain for the birds and doorsteps that held bowls of porridge
+for the wee creatures. He saw lighted trees, sparkling and heavy with
+gifts; and he stood outside the churches and watched the crowds pass in,
+bearing gifts to the Holy Mother and Child.
+
+At last the fairies straightened their caps and cried, "Now for the
+great hall in the King of England's palace!"
+
+Whist--and away they went, and Teig after them; and the first thing he
+knew he was in London, not an arm's length from the King's throne. It
+was a grander sight than he had seen in any other country. The hall was
+filled entirely with lords and ladies; and the great doors were open for
+the poor and the homeless to come in and warm themselves by the King's
+fire and feast from the King's table. And many a hungry soul did the
+King serve with his own hands.
+
+Those that had anything to give gave it in return. It might be a bit of
+music played on a harp or a pipe, or it might be a dance or a song; but
+more often it was a wish, just, for good luck and safekeeping.
+
+Teig was so taken up with the watching that he never heard the fairies
+when they wished themselves on; moreover, he never saw the wee girl that
+was fed, and went laughing away. But he heard a bit of her song as she
+passed through the door:
+
+"Feed ye the hungry an' rest ye the weary, This ye must do for the sake
+of Our Mary."
+
+Then the anger had Teig. "I'll stop your pestherin' tongue, once an' for
+all time!" and, catching the cap from his head, he threw it after her.
+No sooner was the cap gone than every soul in the hall saw him. The next
+moment they were about him, catching at his coat and crying:
+
+"Where is he from, what does he here? Bring him before the King!" And
+Teig was dragged along by a hundred hands to the throne where the King
+sat.
+
+"He was stealing food," cried one.
+
+"He was robbing the King's jewels," cried another.
+
+"He looks evil," cried a third. "Kill him!"
+
+And in a moment all the voices took it up and the hall rang with: "Aye,
+kill him, kill him!"
+
+Teig's legs took to trembling, and fear put the leash on his tongue; but
+after a long silence he managed to whisper:
+
+"I have done evil to no one--no one!"
+
+"Maybe," said the King; "but have ye done good? Come, tell us, have ye
+given aught to any one this night? If ye have, we will pardon ye."
+
+Not a word could Teig say--fear tightened the leash--for he was knowing
+full well there was no good to him that night.
+
+"Then ye must die," said the King. "Will ye try hanging or beheading?"
+
+"Hanging, please, your Majesty," said Teig.
+
+The guards came rushing up and carried him off.
+
+But as he was crossing the threshold of the hall a thought sprang at him
+and held him.
+
+"Your Majesty," he called after him, "will ye grant me a last request?"
+
+"I will," said the King.
+
+"Thank ye. There's a wee red cap that I'm mortal fond of, and I lost
+it a while ago; if I could be hung with it on, I would hang a deal more
+comfortable."
+
+The cap was found and brought to Teig.
+
+"Clip, clap, clip, clap, for my wee red cap, I wish I was home," he
+sang.
+
+Up and over the heads of the dumfounded guard he flew, and--whist--and
+away out of sight. When he opened his eyes again, he was sitting dose
+by his own hearth, with the fire burnt low. The hands of the clock were
+still, the bolt was fixed firm in the door. The fairies' lights were
+gone, and the only bright thing was the candle burning in old Barney's
+cabin across the road.
+
+A running of feet sounded outside, and then the snatch of a song
+
+ "'Tis well that ye mind--ye who sit by the fire--
+ That the Lord he was born in a dark and cold byre.
+ Mhuire as traugh!"
+
+"Wait ye, whoever ye are!" and Teig was away to the corner, digging fast
+at the loose clay, as a terrier digs at a bone. He filled his hands full
+of the shining gold, then hurried to the door, unbarring it.
+
+The miller's wee Cassie stood there, peering at him out of the darkness.
+
+"Take those to the widow O'Donnelly, do ye hear? And take the rest to
+the store. Ye tell Jamie to bring up all that he has that is eatable an'
+dhrinkable; and to the neighbours ye say, 'Teig's keepin' the feast this
+night.' Hurry now!"
+
+Teig stopped a moment on the threshold until the tramp of her feet had
+died away; then he made a hollow of his two hands and called across the
+road:
+
+"Hey there, Barney, will ye come over for a sup?"
+
+
+
+
+X. A STORY OF THE CHRIST-CHILD*
+
+*Reprinted by permission of the author from her collection,
+"Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College.
+
+A German legend for Christmas Eve as told by
+
+ELIZABETH HARKISON
+
+Once upon a time, a long, long time ago, on the night before Christmas,
+a little child was wandering all alone through the streets of a great
+city. There were many people on the street, fathers and mothers, sisters
+and brothers, uncles and aunts, and even gray-haired grandfathers and
+grandmothers, all of whom were hurrying home with bundles of presents
+for each other and for their little ones. Fine carriages rolled by,
+express wagons rattled past, even old carts were pressed into service,
+and all things seemed in a hurry and glad with expectation of the coming
+Christmas morning.
+
+From some of the windows bright lights were already beginning to stream
+until it was almost as bright as day. But the little child seemed to
+have no home, and wandered about listlessly from street to street. No
+one took any notice of him except perhaps Jack Frost, who bit his bare
+toes and made the ends of his fingers tingle. The north wind, too,
+seemed to notice the child, for it blew against him and pierced his
+ragged garments through and through, causing him to shiver with cold.
+Home after home he passed, looking with longing eyes through the
+windows, in upon the glad, happy children, most of whom were helping to
+trim the Christmas trees for the coming morrow.
+
+"Surely," said the child to himself, "where there is so must gladness
+and happiness, some of it may be for me." So with timid steps he
+approached a large and handsome house. Through the windows, he could see
+a tall and stately Christmas tree already lighted. Many presents hung
+upon it. Its green boughs were trimmed with gold and silver ornaments.
+Slowly he climbed up the broad steps and gently rapped at the door. It
+was opened by a large man-servant. He had a kindly face, although his
+voice was deep and gruff. He looked at the little child for a moment,
+then sadly shook his head and said, "Go down off the steps. There is
+no room here for such as you." He looked sorry as he spoke; possibly he
+remembered his own little ones at home, and was glad that they were not
+out in this cold and bitter night. Through the open door a bright light
+shone, and the warm air, filled with fragrance of the Christmas pine,
+rushed out from the inner room and greeted the little wanderer with a
+kiss. As the child turned back into the cold and darkness, he wondered
+why the footman had spoken thus, for surely, thought he, those little
+children would love to have another companion join them in their joyous
+Christmas festival. But the little children inside did not even know
+that he had knocked at the door.
+
+The street grew colder and darker as the child passed on. He went sadly
+forward, saying to himself, "Is there no one in all this great city who
+will share the Christmas with me?" Farther and farther down the street
+he wandered, to where the homes were not so large and beautiful. There
+seemed to be little children inside of nearly all the houses. They were
+dancing and frolicking about. Christmas trees could be seen in nearly
+every window, with beautiful dolls and trumpets and picture-books and
+balls and tops and other dainty toys hung upon them. In one window the
+child noticed a little lamb made of soft white wool. Around its neck was
+tied a red ribbon. It had evidently been hung on the tree for one of the
+children. The little stranger stopped before this window and looked long
+and earnestly at the beautiful things inside, but most of all was he
+drawn toward the white lamb. At last creeping up to the window-pane, he
+gently tapped upon it. A little girl came to the window and looked out
+into the dark street where the snow had now begun to fall. She saw the
+child, but she only frowned and shook her head and said, "Go away and
+come some other time. We are too busy to take care of you now." Back
+into the dark, cold streets he turned again. The wind was whirling past
+him and seemed to say, "Hurry on, hurry on, we have no time to stop.
+'Tis Christmas Eve and everybody is in a hurry to-night."
+
+Again and again the little child rapped softly at door or window-pane.
+At each place he was refused admission. One mother feared he might have
+some ugly disease which her darlings would catch; another father said
+he had only enough for his own children and none to spare for beggars.
+Still another told him to go home where he belonged, and not to trouble
+other folks.
+
+The hours passed; later grew the night, and colder grew the wind, and
+darker seemed the street. Farther and farther the little one wandered.
+There was scarcely any one left upon the street by this time, and the
+few who remained did not seem to see the child, when suddenly ahead of
+him there appeared a bright, single ray of light. It shone through the
+darkness into the child's eyes. He looked up smilingly and said, "I
+will go where the small light beckons, perhaps they will share their
+Christmas with me."
+
+Hurrying past all the other houses, he soon reached the end of the
+street and went straight up to the window from which the light was
+streaming. It was a poor, little, low house, but the child cared not for
+that. The light seemed still to call him in. From what do you suppose
+the light came? Nothing but a tallow candle which had been placed in
+an old cup with a broken handle, in the window, as a glad token of
+Christmas Eve. There was neither curtain nor shade to the small, square
+window and as the little child looked in he saw standing upon a
+neat wooden table a branch of a Christmas tree. The room was plainly
+furnished but it was very clean. Near the fireplace sat a lovely faced
+mother with a little two-year-old on her knee and an older child
+beside her. The two children were looking into their mother's face and
+listening to a story. She must have been telling them a Christmas story,
+I think. A few bright coals were burning in the fireplace, and all
+seemed light and warm within.
+
+The little wanderer crept closer and closer to the window-pane. So sweet
+was the mother's face, so loving seemed the little children, that at
+last he took courage and tapped gently, very gently on the door. The
+mother stopped talking, the little children looked up. "What was that,
+mother?" asked the little girl at her side. "I think it was some one
+tapping on the door," replied the mother. "Run as quickly as you can and
+open it, dear, for it is a bitter cold night to keep any one waiting in
+this storm." "Oh, mother, I think it was the bough of the tree tapping
+against the window-pane," said the little girl. "Do please go on with
+our story." Again the little wanderer tapped upon the door. "My child,
+my child," exclaimed the mother, rising, "that certainly was a rap on
+the door. Run quickly and open it. No one must be left out in the cold
+on our beautiful Christmas Eve."
+
+The child ran to the door and threw it wide open. The mother saw the
+ragged stranger standing without, cold and shivering, with bare head and
+almost bare feet. She held out both hands and drew him into the warm,
+bright room. "You poor, dear child," was all she said, and putting her
+arms around him, she drew him close to her breast. "He is very cold, my
+children," she exclaimed. "We must warm him." "And," added the little
+girl, "we must love him and give him some of our Christmas, too." "Yes,"
+said the mother, "but first let us warm him--"
+
+The mother sat down by the fire with the little child on her lap, and
+her own little ones warmed his half-frozen hands in theirs. The mother
+smoothed his tangled curls, and, bending low over his head, kissed the
+child's face. She gathered the three little ones in her arms and the
+candle and the fire light shone over them. For a moment the room was
+very still. By and by the little girl said softly, to her mother,
+"May we not light the Christmas tree, and let him see how beautiful it
+looks?" "Yes," said the mother. With that she seated the child on a
+low stool beside the fire, and went herself to fetch the few simple
+ornaments which from year to year she had saved for her children's
+Christmas tree. They were soon so busy that they did not notice the room
+had filled with a strange and brilliant light. They turned and looked at
+the spot where the little wanderer sat. His ragged clothes had changed
+to garments white and beautiful; his tangled curls seemed like a halo
+of golden light about his head; but most glorious of all was his face,
+which shone with a light so dazzling that they could scarcely look upon
+it.
+
+In silent wonder they gazed at the child. Their little room seemed to
+grow larger and larger, until it was as wide as the whole world, the
+roof of their low house seemed to expand and rise, until it reached to
+the sky.
+
+With a sweet and gentle smile the wonderful child looked upon them for
+a moment, and then slowly rose and floated through the air, above
+the treetops, beyond the church spire, higher even than the clouds
+themselves, until he appeared to them to be a shining star in the sky
+above. At last he disappeared from sight. The astonished children turned
+in hushed awe to their mother, and said in a whisper, "Oh, mother, it
+was the Christ-Child, was it not?" And the mother answered in a low
+tone, "Yes."
+
+And it is said, dear children, that each Christmas Eve the little
+Christ-Child wanders through some town or village, and those who receive
+him and take him into their homes and hearts have given to them this
+marvellous vision which is denied to others.
+
+
+
+
+XI. JIMMY SCARECROW'S CHRISTMAS
+
+MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+
+Jimmy Scarecrow led a sad life in the winter. Jimmy's greatest grief
+was his lack of occupation. He liked to be useful, and in winter he was
+absolutely of no use at all.
+
+He wondered how many such miserable winters he would have to endure. He
+was a young Scarecrow, and this was his first one. He was strongly made,
+and although his wooden joints creaked a little when the wind blew he
+did not grow in the least rickety. Every morning, when the wintry sun
+peered like a hard yellow eye across the dry corn-stubble, Jimmy felt
+sad, but at Christmas time his heart nearly broke.
+
+On Christmas Eve Santa Claus came in his sledge heaped high with
+presents, urging his team of reindeer across the field. He was on his
+way to the farmhouse where Betsey lived with her Aunt Hannah.
+
+Betsey was a very good little girl with very smooth yellow curls, and
+she had a great many presents. Santa Claus had a large wax doll-baby
+for her on his arm, tucked up against the fur collar of his coat. He was
+afraid to trust it in the pack, lest it get broken.
+
+When poor Jimmy Scarecrow saw Santa Claus his heart gave a great leap.
+"Santa Claus! Here I am!" he cried out, but Santa Claus did not hear
+him.
+
+"Santa Claus, please give me a little present. I was good all summer
+and kept the crows out of the corn," pleaded the poor Scarecrow in his
+choking voice, but Santa Claus passed by with a merry halloo and a great
+clamour of bells.
+
+Then Jimmy Scarecrow stood in the corn-stubble and shook with sobs until
+his joints creaked. "I am of no use in the world, and everybody has
+forgotten me," he moaned. But he was mistaken.
+
+The next morning Betsey sat at the window holding her Christmas
+doll-baby, and she looked out at Jimmy Scarecrow standing alone in the
+field amidst the corn-stubble.
+
+"Aunt Hannah?" said she. Aunt Hannah was making a crazy patchwork quilt,
+and she frowned hard at a triangular piece of red silk and circular
+piece of pink, wondering how to fit them together. "Well?" said she.
+
+"Did Santa Claus bring the Scarecrow any Christmas present?"
+
+"No, of course he didn't."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because he's a Scarecrow. Don't ask silly questions."
+
+"I wouldn't like to be treated so, if I was a Scarecrow," said Betsey,
+but her Aunt Hannah did not hear her. She was busy cutting a triangular
+snip out of the round piece of pink silk so the piece of red silk could
+be feather-stitched into it.
+
+It was snowing hard out of doors, and the north wind blew. The
+Scarecrow's poor old coat got whiter and whiter with snow. Sometimes he
+almost vanished in the thick white storm. Aunt Hannah worked until the
+middle of the afternoon on her crazy quilt. Then she got up and spread
+it out over the sofa with an air of pride.
+
+"There," said she, "that's done, and that makes the eighth. I've got one
+for every bed in the house, and I've given four away. I'd give this away
+if I knew of anybody that wanted it."
+
+Aunt Hannah put on her hood and shawl, and drew some blue yarn stockings
+on over her shoes, and set out through the snow to carry a slice of
+plum-pudding to her sister Susan, who lived down the road. Half an hour
+after Aunt Hannah had gone Betsey put her little red plaid shawl over
+her head, and ran across the field to Jimmy Scarecrow. She carried her
+new doll-baby smuggled up under her shawl.
+
+"Wish you Merry Christmas!" she said to Jimmy Scarecrow.
+
+"Wish you the same," said Jimmy, but his voice was choked with sobs, and
+was also muffled, for his old hat had slipped down to his chin. Betsey
+looked pitifully at the old hat fringed with icicles, like frozen tears,
+and the old snow-laden coat. "I've brought you a Christmas present,"
+said she, and with that she tucked her doll-baby inside Jimmy
+Scarecrow's coat, sticking its tiny feet into a pocket.
+
+"Thank you," said Jimmy Scarecrow faintly.
+
+"You're welcome," said she. "Keep her under your overcoat, so the snow
+won't wet her, and she won't catch cold, she's delicate."
+
+"Yes, I will," said Jimmy Scarecrow, and he tried hard to bring one of
+his stiff, outstretched arms around to clasp the doll-baby.
+
+"Don't you feel cold in that old summer coat?" asked Betsey.
+
+"If I bad a little exercise, I should be warm," he replied. But he
+shivered, and the wind whistled through his rags.
+
+"You wait a minute," said Betsey, and was off across the field.
+
+Jimmy Scarecrow stood in the corn-stubble, with the doll-baby under his
+coat and waited, and soon Betsey was back again with Aunt Hannah's crazy
+quilt trailing in the snow behind her.
+
+"Here," said she, "here is something to keep you warm," and she folded
+the crazy quilt around the Scarecrow and pinned it.
+
+"Aunt Hannah wants to give it away if anybody wants it," she explained.
+"She's got so many crazy quilts in the house now she doesn't know what
+to do with them. Good-bye--be sure you keep the doll-baby covered up."
+And with that she ran cross the field, and left Jimmy Scarecrow alone
+with the crazy quilt and the doll-baby.
+
+The bright flash of colours under Jimmy's hat-brim dazzled his eyes,
+and he felt a little alarmed. "I hope this quilt is harmless if it IS
+crazy," he said. But the quilt was warm, and he dismissed his fears.
+Soon the doll-baby whimpered, but he creaked his joints a little, and
+that amused it, and he heard it cooing inside his coat.
+
+Jimmy Scarecrow had never felt so happy in his life as he did for an
+hour or so. But after that the snow began to turn to rain, and the crazy
+quilt was soaked through and through: and not only that, but his coat
+and the poor doll-baby. It cried pitifully for a while, and then it was
+still, and he was afraid it was dead.
+
+It grew very dark, and the rain fell in sheets, the snow melted, and
+Jimmy Scarecrow stood halfway up his old boots in water. He was saying
+to himself that the saddest hour of his life had come, when suddenly he
+again heard Santa Claus' sleigh-bells and his merry voice talking to
+his reindeer. It was after midnight, Christmas was over, and Santa was
+hastening home to the North Pole.
+
+"Santa Claus! dear Santa Claus!" cried Jimmy Scarecrow with a great sob,
+and that time Santa Claus heard him and drew rein.
+
+"Who's there?" he shouted out of the darkness.
+
+"It's only me," replied the Scarecrow.
+
+"Who's me?" shouted Santa Claus.
+
+"Jimmy Scarecrow!"
+
+Santa got out of his sledge and waded up. "Have you been standing here
+ever since corn was ripe?" he asked pityingly, and Jimmy replied that he
+had.
+
+"What's that over your shoulders?" Santa Claus continued, holding up his
+lantern.
+
+"It's a crazy quilt."
+
+"And what are you holding under your coat?"
+
+"The doll-baby that Betsey gave me, and I'm afraid it's dead," poor
+Jimmy Scarecrow sobbed.
+
+"Nonsense!" cried Santa Claus. "Let me see it!" And with that he pulled
+the doll-baby out from under the Scarecrow's coat, and patted its back,
+and shook it a little, and it began to cry, and then to crow. "It's all
+right," said Santa Claus. "This is the doll-baby I gave Betsey, and
+it is not at all delicate. It went through the measles, and the
+chicken-pox, and the mumps, and the whooping-cough, before it left the
+North Pole. Now get into the sledge, Jimmy Scarecrow, and bring the
+doll-baby and the crazy quilt. I have never had any quilts that weren't
+in their right minds at the North Pole, but maybe I can cure this one.
+Get in!" Santa chirruped to his reindeer, and they drew the sledge up
+close in a beautiful curve.
+
+"Get in, Jimmy Scarecrow, and come with me to the North Pole!" he cried.
+
+"Please, how long shall I stay?" asked Jimmy Scarecrow.
+
+"Why, you are going to live with me," replied Santa Claus. "I've been
+looking for a person like you for a long time."
+
+"Are there any crows to scare away at the North Pole? I want to be
+useful," Jimmy Scarecrow said, anxiously.
+
+"No," answered Santa Claus, "but I don't want you to scare away crows.
+I want you to scare away Arctic Explorers. I can keep you in work for a
+thousand years, and scaring away Arctic Explorers from the North Pole
+is much more important than scaring away crows from corn. Why, if they
+found the Pole, there wouldn't be a piece an inch long left in a week's
+time, and the earth would cave in like an apple without a core! They
+would whittle it all to pieces, and carry it away in their pockets for
+souvenirs. Come along; I am in a hurry."
+
+"I will go on two conditions," said Jimmy. "First, I want to make a
+present to Aunt Hannah and Betsey, next Christmas."
+
+"You shall make them any present you choose. What else?"
+
+"I want some way provided to scare the crows out of the corn next
+summer, while I am away," said Jimmy.
+
+"That is easily managed," said Santa Claus. "Just wait a minute."
+
+Santa took his stylographic pen out of his pocket, went with his lantern
+close to one of the fence-posts, and wrote these words upon it:
+
+ NOTICE TO CROWS
+
+Whichever crow shall hereafter hop, fly, or flop into this field
+during the absence of Jimmy Scarecrow, and therefrom purloin, steal, or
+abstract corn, shall be instantly, in a twinkling and a trice, turned
+snow-white, and be ever after a disgrace, a byword and a reproach to his
+whole race.
+
+ Per order of Santa Claus.
+
+"The corn will be safe now," said Santa Claus, "get in." Jimmy got into
+the sledge and they flew away over the fields, out of sight, with merry
+halloos and a great clamour of bells.
+
+The next morning there was much surprise at the farmhouse, when Aunt
+Hannah and Betsey looked out of the window and the Scarecrow was not in
+the field holding out his stiff arms over the corn stubble. Betsey had
+told Aunt Hannah she had given away the crazy quilt and the doll-baby,
+but had been scolded very little.
+
+"You must not give away anything of yours again without asking
+permission," said Aunt Hannah. "And you have no right to give anything
+of mine, even if you know I don't want it. Now both my pretty quilt and
+your beautiful doll-baby are spoiled."
+
+That was all Aunt Hannah had said. She thought she would send John after
+the quilt and the doll-baby next morning as soon as it was light.
+
+But Jimmy Scarecrow was gone, and the crazy quilt and the doll-baby with
+him. John, the servant-man, searched everywhere, but not a trace of them
+could he find. "They must have all blown away, mum," he said to Aunt
+Hannah.
+
+"We shall have to have another scarecrow next summer," said she.
+
+But the next summer there was no need of a scarecrow, for not a crow
+came past the fence-post on which Santa Claus had written his notice to
+crows. The cornfield was never so beautiful, and not a single grain was
+stolen by a crow, and everybody wondered at it, for they could not read
+the crow-language in which Santa had written.
+
+"It is a great mystery to me why the crows don't come into our
+cornfield, when there is no scarecrow," said Aunt Hannah.
+
+But she had a still greater mystery to solve when Christmas came round
+again. Then she and Betsey had each a strange present. They found them
+in the sitting-room on Christmas morning. Aunt Hannah's present was her
+old crazy quilt, remodelled, with every piece cut square and true, and
+matched exactly to its neighbour.
+
+"Why, it's my old crazy quilt, but it isn't crazy now!" cried Aunt
+Hannah, and her very spectacles seemed to glisten with amazement.
+
+Betsey's present was her doll-baby of the Christmas before; but the
+doll was a year older. She had grown an inch, and could walk and say,
+"mamma," and "how do?" She was changed a good deal, but Betsey knew her
+at once. "It's my doll-baby!" she cried, and snatched her up and kissed
+her.
+
+But neither Aunt Hannah nor Betsey ever knew that the quilt and the doll
+were Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas presents to them.
+
+
+
+
+XII. WHY THE CHIMES RANG*
+
+* Copyright, 1906. Used by special permission of the publishers, the
+Bobbs-Merrill Company.
+
+RAYMOND MC ALDEN
+
+There was once in a faraway country where few people have ever
+travelled, a wonderful church. It stood on a high hill in the midst of a
+great city; and every Sunday, as well as on sacred days like Christmas,
+thousands of people climbed the hill to its great archways, looking like
+lines of ants all moving in the same direction.
+
+When you came to the building itself, you found stone columns and dark
+passages, and a grand entrance leading to the main room of the church.
+This room was so long that one standing at the doorway could scarcely
+see to the other end, where the choir stood by the marble altar. In
+the farthest corner was the organ; and this organ was so loud, that
+sometimes when it played, the people for miles around would close their
+shutters and prepare for a great thunderstorm. Altogether, no such
+church as this was ever seen before, especially when it was lighted
+up for some festival, and crowded with people, young and old. But the
+strangest thing about the whole building was the wonderful chime of
+bells.
+
+At one corner of the church was a great gray tower, with ivy growing
+over it as far up as one could see. I say as far as one could see,
+because the tower was quite great enough to fit the great church, and it
+rose so far into the sky that it was only in very fair weather that
+any one claimed to be able to see the top. Even then one could not be
+certain that it was in sight. Up, and up, and up climbed the stones and
+the ivy; and as the men who built the church had been dead for hundreds
+of years, every one had forgotten how high the tower was supposed to be.
+
+Now all the people knew that at the top of the tower was a chime of
+Christmas bells. They had hung there ever since the church had been
+built, and were the most beautiful bells in the world. Some thought it
+was because a great musician had cast them and arranged them in their
+place; others said it was because of the great height, which reached up
+where the air was clearest and purest; however that might be no one
+who had ever heard the chimes denied that they were the sweetest in the
+world. Some described them as sounding like angels far up in the sky;
+others as sounding like strange winds singing through the trees.
+
+But the fact was that no one had heard them for years and years. There
+was an old man living not far from the church who said that his mother
+had spoken of hearing them when she was a little girl, and he was the
+only one who was sure of as much as that. They were Christmas chimes,
+you see, and were not meant to be played by men or on common days.
+It was the custom on Christmas Eve for all the people to bring to the
+church their offerings to the Christ-Child; and when the greatest and
+best offering was laid on the altar there used to come sounding through
+the music of the choir the Christmas chimes far up in the tower. Some
+said that the wind rang them, and others, that they were so high that
+the angels could set them swinging. But for many long years they had
+never been heard. It was said that people had been growing less careful
+of their gifts for the Christ-Child, and that no offering was brought
+great enough to deserve the music of the chimes.
+
+Every Christmas Eve the rich people still crowded to the altar, each one
+trying to bring some better gift than any other, without giving anything
+that he wanted for himself, and the church was crowded with those who
+thought that perhaps the wonderful bells might be heard again. But
+although the service was splendid, and the offerings plenty, only the
+roar of the wind could be heard, far up in the stone tower.
+
+Now, a number of miles from the city, in a little country village, where
+nothing could be seen of the great church but glimpses of the tower when
+the weather was fine, lived a boy named Pedro, and his little brother.
+They knew very little about the Christmas chimes, but they had heard of
+the service in the church on Christmas Eve, and had a secret plan
+which they had often talked over when by themselves, to go to see the
+beautiful celebration.
+
+"Nobody can guess, Little Brother," Pedro would say; "all the fine
+things there are to see and hear; and I have even heard it said that the
+Christ-Child sometimes comes down to bless the service. What if we could
+see Him?"
+
+The day before Christmas was bitterly cold, with a few lonely snowflakes
+flying in the air, and a hard white crust on the ground. Sure enough
+Pedro and Little Brother were able to slip quietly away early in the
+afternoon; and although the walking was hard in the frosty air, before
+nightfall they had trudged so far, hand in hand, that they saw the
+lights of the big city just ahead of them. Indeed they were about to
+enter one of the great gates in the wall that surrounded it, when they
+saw something dark on the snow near their path, and stepped aside to
+look at it.
+
+It was a poor woman, who had fallen just outside the city, too sick and
+tired to get in where she might have found shelter. The soft snow made
+of a drift a sort of pillow for her, and she would soon be so sound
+asleep, in the wintry air, that no one could ever waken her again. All
+this Pedro saw in a moment and he knelt down beside her and tried to
+rouse her, even tugging at her arm a little, as though he would have
+tried to carry her away. He turned her face toward him, so that he could
+rub some of the snow on it, and when he had looked at her silently a
+moment he stood up again, and said:
+
+"It's no use, Little Brother. You will have to go on alone."
+
+"Alone?" cried Little Brother. "And you not see the Christmas festival?"
+
+"No," said Pedro, and he could not keep back a bit of a choking sound in
+his throat. "See this poor woman. Her face looks like the Madonna in
+the chapel window, and she will freeze to death if nobody cares for her.
+Every one has gone to the church now, but when you come back you can
+bring some one to help her. I will rub her to keep her from freezing,
+and perhaps get her to eat the bun that is left in my pocket."
+
+"But I cannot bear to leave you, and go on alone," said Little Brother.
+
+"Both of us need not miss the service," said Pedro, "and it had better
+be I than you. You can easily find your way to church; and you must see
+and hear everything twice, Little Brother--once for you and once for me.
+I am sure the Christ-Child must know how I should love to come with you
+and worship Him; and oh! if you get a chance, Little Brother, to slip up
+to the altar without getting in any one's way, take this little silver
+piece of mine, and lay it down for my offering, when no one is looking.
+Do not forget where you have left me, and forgive me for not going with
+you."
+
+In this way he hurried Little Brother off to the city and winked hard
+to keep back the tears, as he heard the crunching footsteps sounding
+farther and farther away in the twilight. It was pretty hard to lose
+the music and splendour of the Christmas celebration that he had been
+planning for so long, and spend the time instead in that lonely place in
+the snow.
+
+The great church was a wonderful place that night. Every one said that
+it had never looked so bright and beautiful before. When the organ
+played and the thousands of people sang, the walls shook with the sound,
+and little Pedro, away outside the city wall, felt the earth tremble
+around them.
+
+At the close of the service came the procession with the offerings to be
+laid on the altar. Rich men and great men marched proudly up to lay down
+their gifts to the Christ-Child. Some brought wonderful jewels, some
+baskets of gold so heavy that they could scarcely carry them down the
+aisle. A great writer laid down a book that he had been making for years
+and years. And last of all walked the king of the country, hoping with
+all the rest to win for himself the chime of the Christmas bells. There
+went a great murmur through the church as the people saw the king take
+from his head the royal crown, all set with precious stones, and lay
+it gleaming on the altar, as his offering to the Holy Child. "Surely,"
+every one said, "we shall hear the bells now, for nothing like this has
+ever happened before."
+
+But still only the cold old wind was heard in the tower and the people
+shook their heads; and some of them said, as they had before, that they
+never really believed the story of the chimes, and doubted if they ever
+rang at all.
+
+The procession was over, and the choir began the closing hymn. Suddenly
+the organist stopped playing; and every one looked at the old minister,
+who was standing by the altar, holding up his hand for silence. Not a
+sound could be heard from any one in the church, but as all the people
+strained their ears to listen, there came softly, but distinctly,
+swinging through the air, the sound of the chimes in the tower. So far
+away, and yet so clear the music seemed--so much sweeter were the notes
+than anything that had been heard before, rising and falling away up
+there in the sky, that the people in the church sat for a moment as
+still as though something held each of them by the shoulders. Then they
+all stood up together and stared straight at the altar, to see what
+great gift had awakened the long silent bells.
+
+But all that the nearest of them saw was the childish figure of Little
+Brother, who had crept softly down the aisle when no one was looking,
+and had laid Pedro's little piece of silver on the altar.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. THE BIRDS' CHRISTMAS
+
+From "In the Child's World," by Emilie Poulssen, Milton Bradley Co.
+Publishers. Used by permission.
+
+F. E. MANN
+
+Founded on fact.
+
+"Chickadee-dee-dee-dee! Chickadee-dee-dee-dee! Chicka--" "Cheerup,
+cheerup, chee-chee! Cheerup, cheerup, chee-chee!" "Ter-ra-lee,
+ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee!"
+
+"Rap-atap-atap-atap!" went the woodpecker; "Mrs. Chickadee may speak
+first."
+
+"Friends," began Mrs. Chickadee, "why do you suppose I called you
+together?"
+
+"Because it's the day before Christmas," twittered Snow Bunting. "And
+you're going to give a Christmas party," chirped the Robin. "And you
+want us all to come!" said Downy Woodpecker. "Hurrah! Three cheers for
+Mrs. Chickadee!"
+
+"Hush!" said Mrs. Chickadee, "and I'll tell you all about it. To-morrow
+IS Christmas Day, but I don't want to give a party."
+
+"Chee, chee, chee!" cried Robin Rusty-breast; "chee, chee, chee!"
+
+"Just listen to my little plan," said Mrs. Chickadee, "for, indeed, I
+want you all to help. How many remember Thistle Goldfinch--the happy
+little fellow who floated over the meadows through the summer and fall?"
+
+"Cheerup, chee-chee, cheerup, chee-chee, I do," sang the Robin; "how he
+loved to sway on thistletops!"
+
+"Yes," said Downy Woodpecker, "and didn't he sing? All about blue skies,
+and sunshine and happy days, with his 'Swee-e-et sweet-sweet-sweet-a-
+twitter-witter-witter-witter-wee-twea!'"
+
+"Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee," said Snow Bunting. "We've all heard of Thistle
+Goldfinch, but what can he have to do with your Christmas party? He's
+away down South now, and wouldn't care if you gave a dozen parties."
+
+"Oh, but he isn't; he's right in these very woods!"
+
+"Why, you don't mean--"
+
+"Indeed I do mean it, every single word. Yesterday I was flitting about
+among the trees, peeking at a dead branch here, and a bit of moss there,
+and before I knew it I found myself away over at the other side of the
+woods! 'Chickadee-dee-dee, chickadee-dee-dee!' I sang, as I turned my
+bill toward home. Just then I heard the saddest little voice pipe
+out: 'Dear-ie me! Dear-ie me!' and there on the sunny side of a branch
+perched a lonesome bit of yellowish down. I went up to see what it was,
+and found dear little Thistle Goldfinch! He was very glad to see me, and
+soon told his short story. Through the summer Papa and Mamma Goldfinch
+and all the brothers and sisters had a fine time, singing together,
+fluttering over thistletops, or floating through the balmy air. But when
+'little Jack Frost walked through the trees,' Papa Goldfinch said: 'It
+is high time we went South!' All were ready but Thistle; he wanted to
+stay through the winter, and begged so hard that Papa Goldfinch soberly
+said: 'Try it, my son, but do find a warm place to stay in at night.'
+Then off they flew, and Thistle was alone. For a while he was happy. The
+sun shone warm through the middle of the day, and there were fields and
+meadows full of seeds. You all remember how sweetly he sang for us then.
+But by and by the cold North Wind came whistling through the trees, and
+chilly Thistle woke up one gray morning to find the air full of whirling
+snowflakes He didn't mind the light snows, golden-rod and some high
+grasses were too tall to be easily covered, and he got seeds from them.
+But now that the heavy snows have come, the poor little fellow is almost
+starved, and if he doesn't have a warm place to sleep in these cold
+nights, he'll surely die!"
+
+Mrs. Chickadee paused a minute. The birds were so still one could hear
+the pine trees whisper. Then she went on: "I comforted the poor little
+fellow as best I could, and showed him where to find a few seeds; then I
+flew home, for it was bedtime. I tucked my head under my wing to keep it
+warm, and thought, and thought, and thought; and here's my plan:
+
+"We Chickadees have a nice warm home here in the spruce trees, with
+their thick, heavy boughs to shut out the snow and cold. There is plenty
+of room, so Thistle could sleep here all winter. We would let him perch
+on a branch, when we Chickadees would nestle around him until he was as
+warm as in the lovely summer tine. These cones are so full of seeds that
+we could spare him a good many; and I think that you Robins might
+let him come over to your pines some day and share your seeds. Downy
+Woodpecker must keep his eyes open as he hammers the trees, and if he
+spies a supply of seeds he will let us know at once. Snow Bunting is
+only a visitor, so I don't expect him to help, but I wanted him to hear
+my plan with the rest of you. Now you WILL try, won't you, EVERY ONE?"
+
+"Cheerup, cheerup, ter-ra-lee! Indeed we'll try; let's begin right away!
+Don't wait until to-morrow; who'll go and find Thistle?"
+
+"I will," chirped Robin Rusty-breast, and off he flew to the place which
+Mrs. Chickadee had told of, at the other side of the wood. There, sure
+enough, he found Thistle Goldfinch sighing: "Dear-ie me! dear-ie me! The
+winter is so cold and I'm here all alone!" "Cheerup, chee-chee!" piped
+the Robin:
+
+ "Cheerup, cheerup, I'm here!
+ I'm here and I mean to stay.
+ What if the winter is drear--
+ Cheerup, cheerup, anyway!"
+
+"But the snow is so deep," said Thistle, and the Robin replied:
+
+ "Soon the snows'll be over and gone,
+ Run and rippled away;
+ What's the use of looking forlorn?
+ Cheerup, cheerup, I say!"
+
+Then he told Thistle all their plans, and wasn't Thistle surprised? Why,
+he just couldn't believe a word of it till they reached Mrs. Chickadee's
+and she said it was all true. They fed him and warmed him, then settled
+themselves for a good night's rest.
+
+Christmas morning they were chirping gaily, and Thistle was trying to
+remember the happy song he sang in the summer time, when there came a
+whirr of wings as Snow Bunting flew down.
+
+"Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee," said he, "can you fly a little
+way?"
+
+"Oh, yes," replied Thistle. "I THINK I could fly a LONG way."
+
+"Come on, then," said Snow Bunting. "Every one who wants a Christmas
+dinner, follow me!" That was every word he would say, so what could they
+do but follow?
+
+Soon they came to the edge of the wood, and then to a farmhouse. Snow
+Bunting flew straight up to the piazza, and there stood a dear little
+girl in a warm hood and cloak, with a pail of bird-seed on her arm, and
+a dish of bread crumbs in her hand. As they flew down, she said:
+
+"And here are some more birdies who have come for a Christmas dinner.
+Of course you shall have some, you dear little things!" and she laughed
+merrily to see them dive for the crumbs.
+
+After they had finished eating, Elsie (that was the little girl's name)
+said: "Now, little birds, it is going to be a cold winter, you would
+better come here every day to get your dinner. I'll always be glad to
+see you."
+
+"Cheerup chee-chee, cheerup chee-chee! thank you, thank you," cried
+the Robins. "Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee! thank you, thank you!"
+twittered Snow Bunting.
+
+"Chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee, chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee,
+chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee-dee! how kind you are!" sang the Chickadees.
+
+And Thistle Goldfinch? Yes, he remembered his summer song, for he sang
+as they flew away:
+
+"Swee-e-et-sweet-sweet-sweet-a-twitter-witter-witter-witter--wee-twea!"
+
+notes.--l. The Robin's song is from "Bird Talks," by Mrs. A.D.T.
+Whitney. 2. The fact upon which this story is based--that is of the
+other birds adopting and warming the solitary Thistle Goldfinch--was
+observed near Northampton, Mass., where robins and other migratory birds
+sometimes spend the winter in the thick pine woods.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. THE LITTLE SISTER'S VACATION*
+
+* This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 77.
+
+WINIFRED M. KIRKLAND
+
+It was to be a glorious Christmas at Doctor Brower's. All "the
+children"--little Peggy and her mother always spoke of the grown-up ones
+as "the children"--were coming home. Mabel was coming from Ohio with
+her big husband and her two babies, Minna and little Robin, the year-old
+grandson whom the home family had never seen; Hazen was coming all the
+way from the Johns Hopkins Medical School, and Arna was coming home from
+her teaching in New York. It was a trial to Peggy that vacation did not
+begin until the very day before Christmas, and then continued only one
+niggardly week. After school hours she had helped her mother in the
+Christmas preparations every day until she crept into bed at night with
+aching arms and tired feet, to lie there tossing about, whether from
+weariness or glad excitement she did not know.
+
+"Not so hard, daughter," the doctor said to her once.
+
+"Oh, papa," protested her mother, "when we're so busy, and Peggy is so
+handy!"
+
+"Not so hard," he repeated, with his eyes on fifteen-year-old Peggy's
+delicate face, as, wearing her braids pinned up on her head and a
+pinafore down to her toes, she stoned raisins and blanched almonds,
+rolled bread crumbs and beat eggs, dusted and polished and made ready
+for the children.
+
+Finally, after a day of flying about, helping with the many last thing,
+Peggy let down her braids and put on her new crimson shirtwaist, and
+stood with her mother in the front doorway, for it was Christmas Eve at
+last, and the station 'bus was rattling up with the first homecomers,
+Arna and Hazen.
+
+Then there were voices ringing up and down the dark street, and there
+were happy tears in the mother's eyes, and Arna had taken Peggy's face
+in her two soft-gloved hands and lifted it up and kissed it, and Hazen
+had swung his little sister up in the air just as of old. Peggy's tired
+feet were dancing for joy. She was helping Arna take off her things, was
+carrying her bag upstairs--would have carried Hazen's heavy grip, too,
+only her father took it from her.
+
+"Set the kettle to boil, Peggy," directed her mother; "then run upstairs
+and see if Arna wants anything. We'll wait supper till the rest come."
+
+The rest came on the nine o'clock train, such a load of them--the big,
+bluff brother-in-law, Mabel, plump and laughing, as always, Minna, elfin
+and bright-eyed, and sleepy Baby Robin. Such hugging, such a hubbub of
+baby talk! How many things there seemed to be to do for those precious
+babies right away!
+
+Peggy was here and there and everywhere. Everything was in joyous
+confusion. Supper was to be set on, too. While the rest ate, Peggy sat
+by, holding Robin, her own little nephew, and managing at the same
+time to pick up the things--napkin, knife, spoon, bread--that Minna,
+hilarious with the late hour, flung from her high chair.
+
+It seemed as if they would never be all stowed away for the night. Some
+of them wanted pitchers of warm water, some of them pitchers of cold,
+and the alcohol stove must be brought up for heating the baby's milk at
+night. The house was crowded, too. Peggy had given up her room to Hazen,
+and slept on a cot in the sewing room with Minna.
+
+The cot had been enlarged by having three chairs piled with pillows, set
+along the side. But Minna preferred to sleep in the middle of the cot,
+or else across it, her restless little feet pounding at Peggy's ribs;
+and Peggy was unused to any bedfellow.
+
+She lay long awake thinking proudly of the children; of Hazen, the
+tall brother, with his twinkling eyes, his drolleries, his teasing; of
+graceful Arna who dressed so daintily, talked so cleverly, and had been
+to college. Arna was going to send Peggy to college, too--it was so
+good of Arna! But for all Peggy's admiration for Arna, it was Mabel, the
+eldest sister, who was the more approachable. Mabel did not pretend even
+to as much learning as Peggy had herself; she was happy-go-lucky and
+sweet-tempered. Then her husband was a great jolly fellow, with whom it
+was impossible to be shy, and the babies--there never were such cunning
+babies, Peggy thought. Just here her niece gave her a particularly
+vicious kick, and Peggy opposed to her train of admiring thoughts, "But
+I'm so tired."
+
+It did not seem to Peggy that she had been asleep at all when she was
+waked with a vigorous pounding on her chest and a shrill little voice in
+her ear:
+
+"Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus! It's mornin'! It's Ch'is'mus!"
+
+"Oh, no, it isn't, Minna!" pleaded Peggy, struggling with sleepiness.
+"It's all dark still."
+
+"Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus!" reiterated Minna continuing to pound.
+
+"Hush, dear! You'll wake Aunt Arna, and she's feed after being all day
+on the chou-chou cars."
+
+"Merry Ch'is'mus, Aunty Arna!" shouted the irrepressible Minna.
+
+"Oh, darling, be quiet! We'll play little pig goes to market. I'll tell
+you a story, only be quiet a little while."
+
+It took Peggy's utmost effort to keep the little wriggler still for the
+hour from five to six. Then, however, her shrill, "Merry Ch'is'mus!"
+roused the household. Protests were of no avail. Minna was the only
+granddaughter. Dark as it was, people must get up.
+
+Peggy must dress Minna and then hurry down to help get breakfast--not
+so easy a task with Minna ever at one's heels. The quick-moving sprite
+seemed to be everywhere--into the sugar-bowl, the cooky jar, the
+steaming teakettle--before one could turn about. Urged on by the
+impatient little girl, the grown-ups made short work of breakfast.
+
+After the meal, according to time-honoured Brower custom, they formed
+in procession, single file, Minna first, then Ben with Baby Robin. They
+each held aloft a sprig of holly, and they all kept time as they sang,
+"God rest you, merry gentlemen," in their march from the dining-room to
+the office. And there they must form in circle about the tree, and dance
+three times round, singing "The Christmas-tree is an evergreen," before
+they could touch a single present.
+
+The presents are done up according to custom, packages of every shape
+and size, but all in white paper and tied with red ribbon, and all
+marked for somebody with somebody else's best love. They all fall to
+opening, and the babies' shouts are not the only ones to be heard.
+
+Passers-by smile indulgently at the racket, remembering that all the
+Browers are home for Christmas, and the Browers were ever a jovial
+company.
+
+Peggy gazes at her gifts quietly, but with shining eyes--little gold
+cuff pins from Hazen, just like Arna's; a set of furs from Mabel and
+Ben; but she likes Arna's gift best of all, a complete set of her
+favourite author.
+
+But much as they would like to linger about the Christmas tree, Peggy
+and her mother, at least, must remember that the dishes must be washed
+and the beds made, and that the family must get ready for church. Peggy
+does not go to church, and nobody dreams how much she wants to go. She
+loves the Christmas music. No hymn rings so with joy as:
+
+Jerusalem triumphs, Messiah is king.
+
+The choir sings it only once a year, on the Christmas morning. Besides,
+her chum Esther will be at church, and Peggy has been too busy to go to
+see her since she came home from boarding-school for the holidays. But
+somebody must stay at home, and that somebody who but Peggy? Somebody
+must baste the turkey and prepare the vegetables and take care of the
+babies.
+
+Peggy is surprised to find how difficult it is to combine dinner-getting
+with baby-tending. When she opens the oven-door, there is Minna's head
+thrust up under her arm, the inquisitive little nose in great danger by
+reason of sputtering gravy.
+
+"Minna," protests Peggy, "you mustn't eat another bit of candy!" and
+Minna opens her mouth in a howl, prolonged, but without tears and
+without change of colour. Robin joins in, he does not know why. Peggy is
+a doting aunt, but an honest one. She is vexed by a growing conviction
+that Mabel's babies are sadly spoiled. Peggy is ashamed of herself;
+surely she ought to be perfectly happy playing with Minna and Robin.
+Instead, she finds that the thing she would like best of all to be doing
+at this moment, next to going to church, would be to be lying on her
+father's couch in the office, all by herself, reading.
+
+The dinner is a savoury triumph for Peggy and her mother. The gravy and
+the mashed potato are entirely of Peggy's workmanship, and Peggy has had
+a hand in most of the other dishes, too, as the mother proudly tells.
+How that merry party can eat! Peggy is waitress, and it is long before
+the passing is over, and she can sit down in her own place. She is
+just as fond of the unusual Christmas good things as are the rest,
+but somehow, before she is well started at her turkey, it is time for
+changing plates for dessert, and before she has tasted her nuts and
+raisins the babies have succumbed to sleepiness, and it is Peggy who
+must carry them upstairs for their nap--just in the middle of one of
+Hazen's funniest stories, too.
+
+And all the time the little sister is so ready, so quickly serviceable,
+that somehow nobody notices--nobody but the doctor. It is he who finds
+Peggy, half as hour later, all alone in the kitchen. The mother and the
+older daughters are gathered about the sitting-room hearth, engaged in
+the dear, delicious talk about the little things that are always left
+out of letters.
+
+The doctor interrupts them.
+
+"Peggy is all alone," he says.
+
+"But we're having such a good talk," the mother pleads, "and Peggy will
+be done in no time! Peggy is so handy!"
+
+"Well, girls?" is all the doctor says, with quiet command in his eyes,
+and Peggy is not left to wash the Christmas dishes all alone. Because
+she is smiling and her cheeks are bright, her sisters do not notice that
+her eyes are wet, for Peggy is hotly ashamed of certain thoughts and
+feelings that she cannot down. She forgets them for a while, however,
+sitting on the hearth-rug, snuggled against her father's knee in the
+Christmas twilight.
+
+Yet the troublesome thoughts came back in the evening, when Peggy sat
+upstairs in the dark with Minna, vainly trying to induce the excited
+little girl to go to sleep, while bursts of merriment from the family
+below were always breaking in upon the two in their banishment.
+
+There was another restless night of it with the little niece, and
+another too early waking. Everybody but Minna was sleepy enough, and
+breakfast was a protracted meal, to which the "children" came down
+slowly one by one. Arna did not appear at all, and Peggy carried up to
+her the daintiest of trays, all of her own preparing. Arna's kiss of
+thanks was great reward. It was dinner-time before Peggy realized it,
+and she had hoped to find a quiet hour for her Latin.
+
+The dreadful regent's examination was to come the next week, and Peggy
+wanted to study for it. She had once thought of asking Arna to help her,
+but Arna seemed so tired.
+
+In the afternoon Esther came to see her chum, and to take her
+home with her to spend the night. The babies, fretful with
+after-Christmas-crossness, were tumbling over their aunt, and sadly
+interrupting confidences, while Peggy explained that she could not go
+out that evening. All the family were going to the church sociable, and
+she must put the babies to bed.
+
+"I think it's mean," Esther broke in. "Isn't it your vacation as well as
+theirs? Do make that child stop pulling your hair!"
+
+If Esther's words had only not echoed through Peggy's head as they did
+that night! "But it is so mean of me, so mean of me, to want my own
+vacation!" sobbed Peggy in the darkness. "I ought just to be glad
+they're all at home."
+
+Her self-reproach made her readier than ever to wait on them all the
+next morning. Nobody could make such buckwheat cakes as could Mrs.
+Brower; nobody could turn them as could Peggy. They were worth coming
+from New York and Baltimore and Ohio to eat. Peggy stood at the griddle
+half an hour, an hour, two hours. Her head was aching. Hazen, the latest
+riser, was joyously calling for more.
+
+At eleven o'clock Peggy realized that she had had no breakfast herself,
+and that her mother was hurrying her off to investigate the lateness of
+the butcher. Her head ached more and more, and she seemed strangely slow
+in her dinner-getting and dish-washing. Her father was away, and there
+was no one to help in the clearing-up. It was three before she had
+finished.
+
+Outside the sleigh-bells sounded enticing. It was the first sleighing of
+the season. Mabel and Ben had been off for a ride, and Arna and Hazen,
+too. How Peggy longed to be skimming over the snow instead of polishing
+knives all alone in the kitchen. Sue Cummings came that afternoon to
+invite Peggy to her party, given in Esther's honour. Sue enumerated six
+other gatherings that were being given that week in honour of Esther's
+visit home. Sue seemed to dwell much on the subject. Presently Peggy,
+with hot cheeks, understood why. Everybody was giving Esther a party,
+everybody but Peggy herself. Esther's own chum, and all the other girls,
+were talking about it.
+
+Peggy stood at the door to see Sue out, and watched the sleighs fly by.
+Out in the sitting-room she heard her mother saying, "Yes, of course we
+can have waffles for supper. Where's Peggy?" Then Peggy ran away.
+
+In the wintry dusk the doctor came stamping in, shaking the snow from
+his bearskins. As always, "Where's Peggy?" was his first question.
+
+Peggy was not to be found, they told him. They had been all over the
+house, calling her. They thought she must have gone out with Sue. The
+doctor seemed to doubt this. He went through the upstairs rooms, calling
+her softly. But Peggy was not in any of the bedrooms, or in any of the
+closets, either. There was still the kitchen attic to be tried.
+
+There came a husky little moan out of its depths, as he whispered,
+"Daughter!" He groped his way to her, and sitting down on a trunk,
+folded her into his bearskin coat.
+
+"Now tell father all about it," he said. And it all came out with
+many sobs--the nights and dawns with Minna, the Latin, the sleighing,
+Esther's party, breakfast, the weariness, the headache; and last the
+waffles, which had moved the one unbearable thing.
+
+"And it is so mean of me, so mean of me!" sobbed Peggy. "But, oh, daddy,
+I do want a vacation!"
+
+"And you shall have one," he answered.
+
+He carried her straight into her own room, laid her down on her own bed,
+and tumbled Hazen's things into the hall. Then he went downstairs and
+talked to his family.
+
+Presently the mother came stealing in, bearing a glass of medicine the
+doctor-father had sent. Then she undressed Peggy and put her to bed as
+if she had been a baby, and sat by, smoothing her hair, until she fell
+asleep.
+
+It seemed to Peggy that she had slept a long, long time. The sun was
+shining bright. Her door opened a crack and Arna peeped in, and seeing
+her awake, came to the bed and kissed her good morning.
+
+"I'm so sorry, little sister!" she said.
+
+"Sorry for what?" asked the wondering Peggy.
+
+"Because I didn't see," said Arna. "But now I'm going to bring up your
+breakfast."
+
+"Oh, no!" cried Peggy, sitting up.
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Arna, with quiet authority. It was as dainty cooking as
+Peggy's own, and Arna sat by to watch her eat.
+
+"You're so good to me, Arna!" said Peggy.
+
+"Not very," answered Arna, dryly. "When you've finished this you must
+lie up here away from the children and read."
+
+"But who will take care of Minna?" questioned Peggy.
+
+"Minna's mamma," answered a voice from the next room, where Mabel was
+pounding pillows. She came to the door to look in on Peggy in all her
+luxury of orange marmalade to eat, Christmas books to read, and Arna to
+wait upon her.
+
+"I think mothers, not aunts, were meant to look after babies," said
+Mabel. "I'm so sorry, dear!"
+
+"Oh, I wish you two wouldn't talk like that!" cried Peggy. "I'm so
+ashamed."
+
+"All right, we'll stop talking," said Mabel quickly, "but we'll
+remember."
+
+They would not let Peggy lift her hand to any of the work that day.
+Mabel managed the babies masterfully. Arna moved quietly about,
+accomplishing wonders.
+
+"But aren't you tired, Arna?" queried Peggy.
+
+"Not a bit of it, and I'll have time to help you with your Caesar
+before--"
+
+"Before what?" asked Peggy, but got no answer. They had been translating
+famously, when, in the late afternoon, there came a ring of the
+doorbell. Peggy found Hazen bowing low, and craving "Mistress Peggy's
+company." A sleigh and two prancing horses stood at the gate.
+
+It was a glorious drive. Peggy's eyes danced and her laugh rang out at
+Hazen's drolleries. The world stretched white all about them, and their
+horses flew on and on like the wind. They rode till dark, then turned
+back to the village, twinkling with lights.
+
+The Brower house was alight in every window, and there was the sound
+of many voices in the hall. The door flew open upon a laughing crowd of
+boys and girls. Peggy, all glowing and rosy with the wind, stood utterly
+bewildered until Esther rushed forward and hugged and shook her.
+
+"It's a party!" she exclaimed. "One of your mother's waffle suppers!
+We're all here! Isn't it splendid?"
+
+"But, but, but--" stammered Peggy.
+
+"'But, but, but,'" mimicked Esther. "But this is your vacation, don't
+you see?"
+
+
+
+
+XV. LITTLE WOLFF'S WOODEN SHOES
+
+A CHRISTMAS STORY BY FRANCOIS COPPEE; ADAPTED AND TRANSLATED BY ALMA J.
+FOSTER
+
+Once upon a time--so long ago that everybody has forgotten the date--in
+a city in the north of Europe--with such a hard name that nobody can
+ever remember it--there was a little seven-year-old boy named Wolff,
+whose parents were dead, who lived with a cross and stingy old aunt, who
+never thought of kissing him more than once a year and who sighed deeply
+whenever she gave him a bowlful of soup.
+
+But the poor little fellow had such a sweet nature that in spite of
+everything, he loved the old woman, although he was terribly afraid of
+her and could never look at her ugly old face without shivering.
+
+As this aunt of little Wolff was known to have a house of her own and an
+old woollen stocking full of gold, she had not dared to send the boy to
+a charity school; but, in order to get a reduction in the price, she had
+so wrangled with the master of the school, to which little Wolff finally
+went, that this bad man, vexed at having a pupil so poorly dressed and
+paying so little, often punished him unjustly, and even prejudiced
+his companions against him, so that the three boys, all sons of rich
+parents, made a drudge and laughing stock of the little fellow.
+
+The poor little one was thus as wretched as a child could be and used to
+hide himself in corners to weep whenever Christmas time came.
+
+It was the schoolmaster's custom to take all his pupils to the midnight
+mass on Christmas Eve, and to bring them home again afterward.
+
+Now, as the winter this year was very bitter, and as heavy snow had
+been falling for several days, all the boys came well bundled up in warm
+clothes, with fur caps pulled over their ears, padded jackets, gloves
+and knitted mittens, and strong, thick-soled boots. Only little Wolff
+presented himself shivering in the poor clothes he used to wear both
+weekdays and Sundays and having on his feet only thin socks in heavy
+wooden shoes.
+
+His naughty companions noticing his sad face and awkward appearance,
+made many jokes at his expense; but the little fellow was so busy
+blowing on his fingers, and was suffering so much with chilblains, that
+he took no notice of them. So the band of youngsters, walking two and
+two behind the master, started for the church.
+
+It was pleasant in the church which was brilliant with lighted candles;
+and the boys excited by the warmth took advantage of the music of the
+choir and the organ to chatter among themselves in low tones. They
+bragged about the fun that was awaiting them at home. The mayor's son
+had seen, just before starting off, an immense goose ready stuffed and
+dressed for cooking. At the alderman's home there was a little pine-tree
+with branches laden down with oranges, sweets, and toys. And the
+lawyer's cook had put on her cap with such care as she never thought of
+taking unless she was expecting something very good!
+
+Then they talked, too, of all that the Christ-Child was going to bring
+them, of all he was going to put in their shoes which, you might be
+sure, they would take good care to leave in the chimney place before
+going to bed; and the eyes of these little urchins, as lively as a cage
+of mice, were sparkling in advance over the joy they would have when
+they awoke in the morning and saw the pink bag full of sugar-plums, the
+little lead soldiers ranged in companies in their boxes, the menageries
+smelling of varnished wood, and the magnificent jumping-jacks in purple
+and tinsel.
+
+Alas! Little Wolff knew by experience that his old miser of an aunt
+would send him to bed supperless, but, with childlike faith and certain
+of having been, all the year, as good and industrious as possible,
+he hoped that the Christ-Child would not forget him, and so he, too,
+planned to place his wooden shoes in good time in the fireplace.
+
+Midnight mass over, the worshippers departed, eager for their fun,
+and the band of pupils always walking two and two, and following the
+teacher, left the church.
+
+Now, in the porch and seated on a stone bench set in the niche of a
+painted arch, a child was sleeping--a child in a white woollen garment,
+but with his little feet bare, in spite of the cold. He was not a
+beggar, for his garment was white and new, and near him on the floor was
+a bundle of carpenter's tools.
+
+In the clear light of the stars, his face, with its closed eyes, shone
+with an expression of divine sweetness, and his long, curling, blond
+locks seemed to form a halo about his brow. But his little child's feet,
+made blue by the cold of this bitter December night, were pitiful to
+see!
+
+The boys so well clothed for the winter weather passed by quite
+indifferent to the unknown child; several of them, sons of the notables
+of the town, however, cast on the vagabond looks in which could be read
+all the scorn of the rich for the poor, of the well-fed for the hungry.
+
+But little Wolff, coming last out of the church, stopped, deeply
+touched, before the beautiful sleeping child.
+
+"Oh, dear!" said the little fellow to himself, "this is frightful! This
+poor little one has no shoes and stockings in this bad weather--and,
+what is still worse, he has not even a wooden shoe to leave near him
+to-night while he sleeps, into which the little Christ-Child can put
+something good to soothe his misery."
+
+And carried away by his loving heart, Wolff drew the wooden shoe from
+his right foot, laid it down before the sleeping child, and, as best
+he could, sometimes hopping, sometimes limping with his sock wet by the
+snow, he went home to his aunt.
+
+"Look at the good-for-nothing!" cried the old woman, full of wrath at
+the sight of the shoeless boy. "What have you done with your shoe, you
+little villain?"
+
+Little Wolff did not know how to lie, so, although trembling with terror
+when he saw the rage of the old shrew, he tried to relate his adventure.
+
+But the miserly old creature only burst into a frightful fit of
+laughter.
+
+"Aha! So my young gentleman strips himself for the beggars. Aha! My
+young gentleman breaks his pair of shoes for a bare-foot! Here is
+something new, forsooth. Very well, since it is this way, I shall put
+the only shoe that is left into the chimney-place, and I'll answer for
+it that the Christ-Child will put in something to-night to beat you
+with in the morning! And you will have only a crust of bread and water
+to-morrow. And we shall see if the next time, you will be giving your
+shoes to the first vagabond that happens along."
+
+And the wicked woman having boxed the ears of the poor little fellow,
+made him climb up into the loft where he had his wretched cubbyhole.
+
+Desolate, the child went to bed in the dark and soon fell asleep, but
+his pillow was wet with tears.
+
+But behold! the next morning when the old woman, awakened early by the
+cold, went downstairs--oh, wonder of wonders--she saw the big chimney
+filled with shining toys, bags of magnificent bonbons, and riches of
+every sort, and standing out in front of all this treasure, was the
+right wooden shoe which the boy had given to the little vagabond, yes,
+and beside it, the one which she had placed in the chimney to hold the
+bunch of switches.
+
+As little Wolff, attracted by the cries of his aunt, stood in an ecstasy
+of childish delight before the splendid Christmas gifts, shouts of
+laughter were heard outside. The woman and child ran out to see what all
+this meant, and behold! all the gossips of the town were standing around
+the public fountain. What could have happened? Oh, a most ridiculous and
+extraordinary thing! The children of the richest men in the town, whom
+their parents had planned to surprise with the most beautiful presents
+had found only switches in their shoes!
+
+Then the old woman and the child thinking of all the riches in their
+chimney were filled with fear. But suddenly they saw the priest appear,
+his countenance full of astonishment. Just above the bench placed near
+the door of the church, in the very spot where, the night before, a
+child in a white garment and with bare feet, in spite of the cold, had
+rested his lovely head, the priest had found a circlet of gold imbedded
+in the old stones.
+
+Then, they all crossed themselves devoutly, perceiving that this
+beautiful sleeping child with the carpenter's tools had been Jesus of
+Nazareth himself, who had come back for one hour just as he had been
+when he used to work in the home of his parents; and reverently they
+bowed before this miracle, which the good God had done to reward the
+faith and the love of a little child.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. CHRISTMAS IN THE ALLEY*
+
+* From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904.
+
+OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+
+"I declare for 't, to-morrow is Christmas Day an' I clean forgot all
+about it," said old Ann, the washerwoman, pausing in her work and
+holding the flatiron suspended in the air.
+
+"Much good it'll do us," growled a discontented voice from the coarse
+bed in the corner.
+
+"We haven't much extra, to be sure," answered Ann cheerfully, bringing
+the iron down onto the shirt-bosom before her, "but at least we've
+enough to eat, and a good fire, and that's more'n some have, not a
+thousand miles from here either."
+
+"We might have plenty more," said the fretful voice, "if you didn't
+think so much more of strangers than you do of your own folk's comfort,
+keeping a houseful of beggars, as if you was a lady!"
+
+"Now, John," replied Ann, taking another iron from the fire, "you're
+not half so bad as you pretend. You wouldn't have me turn them poor
+creatures into the streets to freeze, now, would you?"
+
+"It's none of our business to pay rent for them," grumbled John. "Every
+one for himself, I say, these hard times. If they can't pay you'd ought
+to send 'em off; there's plenty as can."
+
+"They'd pay quick enough if they could get work," said Ann. "They're
+good honest fellows, every one, and paid me regular as long as they had
+a cent. But when hundreds are out o' work in the city, what can they
+do?"
+
+"That's none o' your business, you can turn 'em out!" growled John.
+
+"And leave the poor children to freeze as well as starve?" said Ann.
+"Who'd ever take 'em in without money, I'd like to know? No, John,"
+bringing her iron down as though she meant it, "I'm glad I'm well enough
+to wash and iron, and pay my rent, and so long as I can do that, and
+keep the hunger away from you and the child, I'll never turn the poor
+souls out, leastways, not in this freezing winter weather."
+
+"An' here's Christmas," the old man went on whiningly, "an' not a penny
+to spend, an' I needin' another blanket so bad, with my rhumatiz, an'
+haven't had a drop of tea for I don't know how long!"
+
+"I know it," said Ann, never mentioning that she too had been without
+tea, and not only that, but with small allowance of food of any kind,
+"and I'm desperate sorry I can't get a bit of something for Katey. The
+child never missed a little something in her stocking before."
+
+"Yes," John struck in, "much you care for your flesh an' blood. The
+child ha'n't had a thing this winter."
+
+"That's true enough," said Ann, with a sigh, "an' it's the hardest thing
+of all that I've had to keep her out o' school when she was doing so
+beautiful."
+
+"An' her feet all on the ground," growled John.
+
+"I know her shoes is bad," said Ann, hanging the shirt up on a line that
+stretched across the room, and was already nearly full of freshly ironed
+clothes, "but they're better than the Parker children's."
+
+"What's that to us?" almost shouted the weak old man, shaking his fist
+at her in his rage.
+
+"Well, keep your temper, old man," said Ann. "I'm sorry it goes so hard
+with you, but as long as I can stand on my feet, I sha'n't turn anybody
+out to freeze, that's certain."
+
+"How much'll you get for them?" said the miserable old man, after a few
+moments' silence, indicating by his hand the clean clothes on the line.
+
+"Two dollars," said Ann, "and half of it must go to help make up next
+month's rent. I've got a good bit to make up yet, and only a week to do
+it in, and I sha'n't have another cent till day after to-morrow."
+
+"Well, I wish you'd manage to buy me a little tea," whined the old man;
+"seems as if that would go right to the spot, and warm up my old bones a
+bit."
+
+"I'll try," said Ann, revolving in her mind how she could save a few
+pennies from her indispensable purchases to get tea and sugar, for
+without sugar he would not touch it.
+
+Wearied with his unusual exertion, the old man now dropped off to sleep,
+and Ann went softly about, folding and piling the clothes into a big
+basket already half full. When they were all packed in, and nicely
+covered with a piece of clean muslin, she took an old shawl and hood
+from a nail in the corner, put them on, blew out the candle, for it must
+not burn one moment unnecessarily, and, taking up her basket, went out
+into the cold winter night, softly closing the door behind her.
+
+The house was on an alley, but as soon as she turned the corner she was
+in the bright streets, glittering with lamps and gay people. The shop
+windows were brilliant with Christmas displays, and thousands of warmly
+dressed buyers were lingering before them, laughing and chatting, and
+selecting their purchases. Surely it seemed as if there could be no want
+here.
+
+As quickly as her burden would let her, the old washerwoman passed
+through the crowd into a broad street and rang the basement bell of a
+large, showy house.
+
+"Oh, it's the washerwoman!" said a flashy-looking servant who answered
+the bell; "set the basket right m here. Mrs. Keithe can't look them over
+to-night. There's company in the parlour--Miss Carry's Christmas party."
+
+"Ask her to please pay me--at least a part," said old Ann hastily. "I
+don't see how I can do without the money. I counted on it."
+
+"I'll ask her," said the pert young woman, turning to go upstairs; "but
+it's no use."
+
+Returning in a moment, she delivered the message. "She has no change
+to-night; you're to come in the morning."
+
+"Dear me!" thought Ann, as she plodded back through the streets, "it'll
+be even worse than I expected, for there's not a morsel to eat in
+the house, and not a penny to buy one with. Well--well--the Lord will
+provide, the Good Book says, but it's mighty dark days, and it's hard to
+believe."
+
+Entering the house, Ann sat down silently before the expiring fire. She
+was tired, her bones ached, and she was faint for want of food.
+
+Wearily she rested her head on her hands, and tried to think of some way
+to get a few cents. She had nothing she could sell or pawn, everything
+she could do without had gone before, in similar emergencies. After
+sitting there some time, and revolving plan after plan, only to find
+them all impossible, she was forced to conclude that they must go
+supperless to bed.
+
+Her husband grumbled, and Katey--who came in from a neighbour's--cried
+with hunger, and after they were asleep old Ann crept into bed to keep
+warm, more disheartened than she had been all winter.
+
+If we could only see a little way ahead! All this time--the darkest the
+house on the alley had seen--help was on the way to them. A kind-hearted
+city missionary, visiting one of the unfortunate families living in
+the upper rooms of old Ann's house, had learned from them of the
+noble charity of the humble old washerwoman. It was more than princely
+charity, for she not only denied herself nearly every comfort, but she
+endured the reproaches of her husband, and the tears of her child.
+
+Telling the story to a party of his friends this Christmas Eve, their
+hearts were troubled, and they at once emptied their purses into his
+hands for her. And the gift was at that very moment in the pocket of the
+missionary, waiting for morning to make her Christmas happy. Christmas
+morning broke clear and cold. Ann was up early, as usual, made her fire,
+with the last of her coal, cleared up her two rooms, and, leaving her
+husband and Katey in bed, was about starting out to try and get
+her money to provide a breakfast for them. At the door she met the
+missionary.
+
+"Good-morning, Ann," said he. "I wish you a Merry Christmas."
+
+"Thank you, sir," said Ann cheerfully; "the same to yourself."
+
+"Have you been to breakfast already?" asked the missionary.
+
+"No, sir," said Ann. "I was just going out for it."
+
+"I haven't either," said he, "but I couldn't bear to wait until I had
+eaten breakfast before I brought you your Christmas present--I suspect
+you haven't had any yet."
+
+Ann smiled. "Indeed, sir, I haven't had one since I can remember."
+
+"Well, I have one for you. Come in, and I'll tell you about it."
+
+Too much amazed for words, Ann led him into the room. The missionary
+opened his purse, and handed her a roll of bills.
+
+"Why--what!" she gasped, taking it mechanically.
+
+"Some friends of mine heard of your generous treatment of the poor
+families upstairs," he went on, "and they send you this, with their
+respects and best wishes for Christmas. Do just what you please with
+it--it is wholly yours. No thanks," he went on, as she struggled to
+speak. "It's not from me. Just enjoy it--that's all. It has done them
+more good to give than it can you to receive," and before she could
+speak a word he was gone.
+
+What did the old washerwoman do?
+
+Well, first she fell on her knees and buried her agitated face in the
+bedclothes. After a while she became aware of a storm of words from her
+husband, and she got up, subdued as much as possible her agitation, and
+tried to answer his frantic questions.
+
+"How much did he give you, old stupid?" he screamed; "can't you speak,
+or are you struck dumb? Wake up! I just wish I could reach you! I'd
+shake you till your teeth rattled!"
+
+His vicious looks were a sign, it was evident that he only lacked the
+strength to be as good as his word. Ann roused herself from her stupour
+and spoke at last.
+
+"I don't know. I'll count it." She unrolled the bills and began.
+
+"O Lord!" she exclaimed excitedly, "here's ten-dollar bills! One,
+two, three, and a twenty-that makes five--and five are
+fifty-five--sixty--seventy--eighty--eighty-five--ninety--one
+hundred--and two and five are seven, and two and one are ten,
+twenty--twenty-five--one hundred and twenty-five! Why, I'm rich!" she
+shouted. "Bless the Lord! Oh, this is the glorious Christmas Day! I knew
+He'd provide. Katey! Katey!" she screamed at the door of the other room,
+where the child lay asleep. "Merry Christmas to you, darlin'! Now you
+can have some shoes! and a new dress! and--and--breakfast, and a regular
+Christmas dinner! Oh! I believe I shall go crazy!"
+
+But she did not. Joy seldom hurts people, and she was brought back to
+everyday affairs by the querulous voice of her husband.
+
+"Now I will have my tea, an' a new blanket, an' some tobacco--how I have
+wanted a pipe!" and he went on enumerating his wants while Ann bustled
+about, putting away most of her money, and once more getting ready to go
+out.
+
+"I'll run out and get some breakfast," she said, "but don't you tell a
+soul about the money."
+
+"No! they'll rob us!" shrieked the old man.
+
+"Nonsense! I'll hide it well, but I want to keep it a secret for another
+reason. Mind, Katey, don't you tell?"
+
+"No!" said Katey, with wide eyes. "But can I truly have a new frock,
+Mammy, and new shoes--and is it really Christmas?"
+
+"It's really Christmas, darlin'," said Ann, "and you'll see what
+mammy'll bring home to you, after breakfast."
+
+The luxurious meal of sausages, potatoes, and hot tea was soon smoking
+on the table, and was eagerly devoured by Katey and her father. But Ann
+could not eat much. She was absent-minded, and only drank a cup of tea.
+As soon as breakfast was over, she left Katey to wash the dishes, and
+started out again.
+
+She walked slowly down the street, revolving a great plan in her mind.
+
+"Let me see," she said to herself. "They shall have a happy day for
+once. I suppose John'll grumble, but the Lord has sent me this money,
+and I mean to use part of it to make one good day for them."
+
+Having settled this in her mind, she walked on more quickly, and visited
+various shops in the neighbourhood. When at last she went home, her big
+basket was stuffed as full as it could hold, and she carried a bundle
+besides.
+
+"Here's your tea, John," she said cheerfully, as she unpacked the
+basket, "a whole pound of it, and sugar, and tobacco, and a new pipe."
+
+"Give me some now," said the old man eagerly; "don't wait to take out
+the rest of the things."
+
+"And here's a new frock for you, Katey," old Ann went on, after making
+John happy with his treasures, "a real bright one, and a pair of shoes,
+and some real woollen stockings; oh! how warm you'll be!"
+
+"Oh, how nice, Mammy!" cried Katey, jumping about. "When will you make
+my frock?"
+
+"To-morrow," answered the mother, "and you can go to school again."
+
+"Oh, goody!" she began, but her face fell. "If only Molly Parker could
+go too!"
+
+"You wait and see," answered Ann, with a knowing look. "Who knows what
+Christmas will bring to Molly Parker?"
+
+"Now here's a nice big roast," the happy woman went on, still unpacking,
+"and potatoes and turnips and cabbage and bread and butter and coffee
+and--"
+
+"What in the world! You goin' to give a party?" asked the old man
+between the puffs, staring at her in wonder.
+
+"I'll tell you just what I am going to do," said Ann firmly, bracing
+herself for opposition, "and it's as good as done, so you needn't say
+a word about it. I'm going to have a Christmas dinner, and I'm going to
+invite every blessed soul in this house to come. They shall be warm
+and full for once in their lives, please God! And, Katey," she went on
+breathlessly, before the old man had sufficiently recovered from his
+astonishment to speak, "go right upstairs now, and invite every one of
+'em from the fathers down to Mrs. Parker's baby to come to dinner at
+three o'clock; we'll have to keep fashionable hours, it's so late now;
+and mind, Katey, not a word about the money. And hurry back, child, I
+want you to help me."
+
+To her surprise, the opposition from her husband was less than she
+expected. The genial tobacco seemed to have quieted his nerves, and even
+opened his heart. Grateful for this, Ann resolved that his pipe should
+never lack tobacco while she could work.
+
+But now the cares of dinner absorbed her. The meat and vegetables were
+prepared, the pudding made, and the long table spread, though she had
+to borrow every table in the house, and every dish to have enough to go
+around.
+
+At three o'clock when the guests came in, it was really a very pleasant
+sight. The bright warm fire, the long table, covered with a substantial,
+and, to them, a luxurious meal, all smoking hot. John, in his neatly
+brushed suit, in an armchair at the foot of the table, Ann in a bustle
+of hurry and welcome, and a plate and a seat for every one.
+
+How the half-starved creatures enjoyed it; how the children stuffed and
+the parents looked on with a happiness that was very near to tears; how
+old John actually smiled and urged them to send back their plates again
+and again, and how Ann, the washerwoman, was the life and soul of it
+all, I can't half tell.
+
+After dinner, when the poor women lodgers insisted on clearing up, and
+the poor men sat down by the fire to smoke, for old John actually passed
+around his beloved tobacco, Ann quietly slipped out for a few minutes,
+took four large bundles from a closet under the stairs, and disappeared
+upstairs. She was scarcely missed before she was back again.
+
+Well, of course it was a great day in the house on the alley, and the
+guests sat long into the twilight before the warm fire, talking of their
+old homes in the fatherland, the hard winter, and prospects for work in
+the spring.
+
+When at last they returned to the chilly discomfort of their own rooms,
+each family found a package containing a new warm dress and pair of
+shoes for every woman and child in the family.
+
+"And I have enough left,"' said Ann the washerwoman, to herself, when
+she was reckoning up the expenses of the day, "to buy my coal and pay my
+rent till spring, so I can save my old bones a bit. And sure John can't
+grumble at their staying now, for it's all along of keeping them that I
+had such a blessed Christmas day at all."
+
+
+
+
+XVII. A CHRISTMAS STAR*
+
+* Published by permission of the American Book Co.
+
+KATHERINE PYLE
+
+"Come now, my dear little stars," said Mother Moon, "and I will tell you
+the Christmas story."
+
+Every morning for a week before Christmas, Mother Moon used to call all
+the little stars around her and tell them a story.
+
+It was always the same story, but the stars never wearied of it. It was
+the story of the Christmas star--the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+When Mother Moon had finished the story the little stars always said:
+"And the star is shining still, isn't it, Mother Moon, even if we can't
+see it?"
+
+And Mother Moon would answer: "Yes, my dears, only now it shines for
+men's hearts instead of their eyes."
+
+Then the stars would bid the Mother Moon good-night and put on their
+little blue nightcaps and go to bed in the sky chamber; for the stars'
+bedtime is when people down on the earth are beginning to waken and see
+that it is morning.
+
+But that particular morning when the little stars said good-night and
+went quietly away, one golden star still lingered beside Mother Moon.
+
+"What is the matter, my little star?" asked the Mother Moon. "Why don't
+you go with your little sisters?"
+
+"Oh, Mother Moon," said the golden star. "I am so sad! I wish I could
+shine for some one's heart like that star of wonder that you tell us
+about."
+
+"Why, aren't you happy up here in the sky country?" asked Mother Moon.
+
+"Yes, I have been very happy," said the star; "but to-night it seems
+just as if I must find some heart to shine for."
+
+"Then if that is so," said Mother Moon, "the time has come, my little
+star, for you to go through the Wonder Entry."
+
+"The Wonder Entry? What is that?" asked the star. But the Mother Moon
+made no answer.
+
+Rising, she took the little star by the hand and led it to a door that
+it had never seen before.
+
+The Mother Moon opened the door, and there was a long dark entry; at the
+far end was shining a little speck of light.
+
+"What is this?" asked the star.
+
+"It is the Wonder Entry; and it is through this that you must go to find
+the heart where you belong," said the Mother Moon.
+
+Then the little star was afraid.
+
+It longed to go through the entry as it had never longed for anything
+before; and yet it was afraid and clung to the Mother Moon.
+
+But very gently, almost sadly, the Mother Moon drew her hand away. "Go,
+my child," she said.
+
+Then, wondering and trembling, the little star stepped into the Wonder
+Entry, and the door of the sky house closed behind it.
+
+The next thing the star knew it was hanging in a toy shop with a whole
+row of other stars blue and red and silver. It itself was gold. The shop
+smelled of evergreen, and was full of Christmas shoppers, men and women
+and children; but of them all, the star looked at no one but a little
+boy standing in front of the counter; for as soon as the star saw the
+child it knew that he was the one to whom it belonged.
+
+The little boy was standing beside a sweet-faced woman in a long black
+veil and he was not looking at anything in particular.
+
+The star shook and trembled on the string that held it, because it was
+afraid lest the child would not see it, or lest, if he did, he would not
+know it as his star.
+
+The lady had a number of toys on the counter before her, and she was
+saying: "Now I think we have presents for every one: There's the doll
+for Lou, and the game for Ned, and the music box for May; and then the
+rocking horse and the sled."
+
+Suddenly the little boy caught her by the arm. "Oh, mother," he said. He
+had seen the star.
+
+"Well, what is it, darling?" asked the lady.
+
+"Oh, mother, just see that star up there! I wish--oh, I do wish I had
+it."
+
+"Oh, my dear, we have so many things for the Christmas-tree," said the
+mother.
+
+"Yes, I know, but I do want the star," said the child.
+
+"Very well," said the mother, smiling; "then we will take that, too."
+
+So the star was taken down from the place where it hung and wrapped up
+in a piece of paper, and all the while it thrilled with joy, for now it
+belonged to the little boy.
+
+It was not until the afternoon before Christmas, when the tree was being
+decorated, that the golden star was unwrapped and taken out from the
+paper.
+
+"Here is something else," said the sweet-faced lady. "We must hang this
+on the tree. Paul took such a fancy to it that I had to get it for him.
+He will never be satisfied unless we hang it on too."
+
+"Oh, yes," said some one else who was helping to decorate the tree; "we
+will hang it here on the very top."
+
+So the little star hung on the highest branch of the Christmas-tree.
+
+That evening all the candles were lighted on the Christmas-tree, and
+there were so many that they fairly dazzled the eyes; and the gold and
+silver balls, the fairies and the glass fruits, shone and twinkled in
+the light; and high above them all shone the golden star.
+
+At seven o'clock a bell was rung, and then the folding doors of the room
+where the Christmas-tree stood were thrown open, and a crowd of children
+came trooping in.
+
+They laughed and shouted and pointed, and all talked together, and after
+a while there was music, and presents were taken from the tree and given
+to the children.
+
+How different it all was from the great wide, still sky house!
+
+But the star had never been so happy in all its life; for the little boy
+was there.
+
+He stood apart from the other children, looking up at the star, with his
+hands clasped behind him, and he did not seem to care for the toys and
+the games.
+
+At last it was all over. The lights were put out, the children went
+home, and the house grew still.
+
+Then the ornaments on the tree began to talk among themselves.
+
+"So that is all over," said a silver ball. "It was very gay this
+evening--the gayest Christmas I remember."
+
+"Yes," said a glass bunch of grapes; "the best of it is over. Of course
+people will come to look at us for several days yet, but it won't be
+like this evening."
+
+"And then I suppose we'll be laid away for another year," said a paper
+fairy. "Really it seems hardly worth while. Such a few days out of the
+year and then to be shut up in the dark box again. I almost wish I were
+a paper doll."
+
+The bunch of grapes was wrong in saying that people would come to look
+at the Christmas-tree the next few days, for it stood neglected in the
+library and nobody came near it. Everybody in the house went about very
+quietly, with anxious faces; for the little boy was ill.
+
+At last, one evening, a woman came into the room with a servant. The
+woman wore the cap and apron of a nurse.
+
+"That is it," she said, pointing to the golden star. The servant climbed
+up on some steps and took down the star and put it in the nurse's hand,
+and she carried it out into the hall and upstairs to a room where the
+little boy lay.
+
+The sweet-faced lady was sitting by the bed, and as the nurse came in
+she held out her hand for the star.
+
+"Is this what you wanted, my darling?" she asked, bending over the
+little boy.
+
+The child nodded and held out his hands for the star; and as he clasped
+it a wonderful, shining smile came over his face.
+
+The next morning the little boy's room was very still and dark.
+
+The golden piece of paper that had been the star lay on a table beside
+the bed, its five points very sharp and bright.
+
+But it was not the real star, any more than a person's body is the real
+person.
+
+The real star was living and shining now in the little boy's heart, and
+it had gone out with him into a new and more beautiful sky country than
+it had ever known before--the sky country where the little child angels
+live, each one carrying in its heart its own particular star.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. THE QUEEREST CHRISTMAS*
+
+* This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 83.
+
+GRACE MARGARET GALLAHER
+
+Betty stood at her door, gazing drearily down the long, empty corridor
+in which the breakfast gong echoed mournfully. All the usual brisk
+scenes of that hour, groups of girls in Peter Thomson suits or starched
+shirt-waists, or a pair of energetic ones, red-cheeked and shining-eyed
+from a run in the snow, had vanished as by the hand of some evil
+magician. Silent and lonely was the corridor.
+
+"And it's the day before Christmas!" groaned Betty. Two chill little
+tears hung on her eyelashes.
+
+The night before, in the excitement of getting the girls off with all
+their trunks and packages intact, she had not realized the homesickness
+of the deserted school. Now it seemed to pierce her very bones.
+
+"Oh, dear, why did father have to lose his money? 'Twas easy enough last
+September to decide I wouldn't take the expensive journey home these
+holidays, and for all of us to promise we wouldn't give each other as
+much as a Christmas card. But now!" The two chill tears slipped over the
+edge of her eyelashes. "Well, I know how I'll spend this whole day; I'll
+come right up here after breakfast and cry and cry and cry!" Somewhat
+fortified by this cheering resolve, Betty went to breakfast.
+
+Whatever the material joys of that meal might be, it certainly was not
+"a feast of reason and a flow of soul." Betty, whose sense of humour
+never perished, even in such a frost, looked round the table at the
+eight grim-faced girls doomed to a Christmas in school, and quoted
+mischievously to herself: "On with the dance, let joy be unconfined."
+
+Breakfast bolted, she lagged back to her room, stopping to stare out of
+the corridor windows.
+
+She saw nothing of the snowy landscape, however. Instead, a picture,
+the gayest medley of many colours and figures, danced before her
+eyes: Christmas-trees thumping in through the door, mysterious bundles
+scurried into dark corners, little brothers and sisters flying about
+with festoons of mistletoe, scarlet ribbon and holly, everywhere sound
+and laughter and excitement. The motto of Betty's family was: "Never do
+to-day what you can put off till to-morrow"; therefore the preparations
+of a fortnight were always crowded into a day.
+
+The year before, Betty had rushed till her nerves were taut and her
+temper snapped, had shaken the twins, raged at the housemaid, and had
+gone to bed at midnight weeping with weariness. But in memory only the
+joy of the day remained.
+
+"I think I could endure this jail of a school, and not getting one
+single present, but it breaks my heart not to give one least little
+thing to any one! Why, who ever heard of such a Christmas!"
+
+"Won't you hunt for that blue--"
+
+"Broken my thread again!"
+
+"Give me those scissors!"
+
+Betty jumped out of her day-dream. She had wandered into "Cork" and the
+three O'Neills surrounded her, staring.
+
+"I beg your pardon--I heard you--and it was so like home the day before
+Christmas--"
+
+"Did you hear the heathen rage?" cried Katherine.
+
+"Dolls for Aunt Anne's mission," explained Constance.
+
+"You're so forehanded that all your presents went a week ago, I
+suppose," Eleanor swept clear a chair. "The clan O'Neill is never
+forehanded."
+
+"You'd think I was from the number of thumbs I've grown this morning.
+Oh, misery!" Eleanor jerked a snarl of thread out on the floor.
+
+Betty had never cared for "Cork" but now the hot worried faces of its
+girls appealed to her. "Let me help. I'm a regular silkworm."
+
+The O'Neills assented with eagerness, and Betty began to sew in a
+capable, swift way that made the others stare and sigh with relief.
+
+The dolls were many, the O'Neills slow. Betty worked till her feet
+twitched on the floor; yet she enjoyed the morning, for it held an
+entirely new sensation, that of helping some one else get ready for
+Christmas.
+
+"Done!"
+
+"We never should have finished if you hadn't helped! Thank you, Betty
+Luther, very, VERY much! You're a duck! Let's run to luncheon together,
+quick."
+
+Somehow the big corridors did not seem half so bleak echoing to those
+warm O'Neill voices.
+
+"This morning's just spun by, but, oh, this long, dreary afternoon!"
+sighed Betty, as she wandered into the library. "Oh, me, there goes
+Alice Johns with her arms loaded with presents to mail, and I can't give
+a single soul anything!"
+
+"Do you know where 'Quotations for Occasions' has gone?" Betty turned to
+face pretty Rosamond Howitt, the only senior left behind.
+
+"Gone to be rebound. I heard Miss Dyce say so."
+
+"Oh, dear, I needed it so."
+
+"Could I help? I know a lot of rhymes and tags of proverbs and things
+like that."
+
+"Oh, if you would help me, I'd be so grateful! Won't you come to my
+room? You see, I promised a friend in town, who is to have a Christmas
+dinner, and who's been very kind to me, that I'd paint the place cards
+and write some quotation appropriate to each guest. I'm shamefully late
+over it, my own gifts took such a time; but the painting, at least, is
+done."
+
+Rosamond led the way to her room, and there displayed the cards which
+she had painted.
+
+"You can't think of my helplessness! If it were a Greek verb now, or a
+lost and strayed angle--but poetry!"
+
+Betty trotted back and forth between the room and the library, delved
+into books, and even evolved a verse which she audaciously tagged "old
+play," in imitation of Sir Walter Scott.
+
+"I think they are really and truly very bright, and I know Mrs. Fernell
+will be delighted." Rosamond wrapped up the cards carefully. "I can't
+begin to tell you how you've helped me. It was sweet in you to give me
+your whole afternoon."
+
+The dinner-bell rang at that moment, and the two went down together.
+
+"Come for a little run; I haven't been out all day," whispered Rosamond,
+slipping her hand into Betty's as they left the table.
+
+A great round moon swung cold and bright over the pines by the lodge.
+
+"Down the road a bit--just a little way--to the church," suggested
+Betty.
+
+They stepped out into the silent country road.
+
+"Why, the little mission is as gay as--as Christmas! I wonder why?"
+
+Betty glanced at the bright windows of the small plain church. "Oh, some
+Christmas-eve doings," she answered.
+
+Some one stepped quickly out from the church door.
+
+"Oh, Miss Vernon, I am relieved! I had begun to fear you could not
+come."
+
+The girls saw it was the tall old rector, his white hair shining silver
+bright in the moonbeams.
+
+"We're just two girls from the school, sir," said Rosamond.
+
+"Dear, dear!" His voice was both impatient and distressed. "I hoped you
+were my organist. We are all ready for our Christmas-eve service, but we
+can do nothing without the music."
+
+"I can play the organ a little," said Betty. "I'd be glad to help."
+
+"You can? My dear child, how fortunate! But--do you know the service?"
+
+"Yes, sir, it's my church."
+
+No vested choir stood ready to march triumphantly chanting into the
+choir stalls. Only a few boys and girls waited in the dim old choir
+loft, where Rosamond seated herself quietly.
+
+Betty's fingers trembled so at first that the music sounded dull and far
+away; but her courage crept back to her in the silence of the church,
+and the organ seemed to help her with a brave power of its own. In the
+dark church only the altar and a great gold star above it shone bright.
+Through an open window somewhere behind her she could hear the winter
+wind rattling the ivy leaves and bending the trees. Yet, somehow, she
+did not feel lonesome and forsaken this Christmas eve, far away from
+home, but safe and comforted and sheltered. The voice of the old rector
+reached her faintly in pauses; habit led her along the service, and the
+star at the altar held her eyes.
+
+Strange new ideas and emotions flowed in upon her brain. Tears stole
+softly into her eyes, yet she felt in her heart a sweet glow. Slowly the
+Christmas picture that had flamed and danced before her all day, painted
+in the glory of holly and mistletoe and tinsel, faded out, and another
+shaped itself, solemn and beautiful in the altar light.
+
+"My dear child, I thank you very much!" The old rector held Betty's hand
+in both his. "I cannot have a Christmas morning service--our people
+have too much to do to come then--but I was especially anxious that our
+evening service should have some message, some inspiration for them,
+and your music has made it so. You have given me great aid. May your
+Christmas be a blessed one."
+
+"I was glad to play, sir. Thank you!" answered Betty, simply.
+
+"Let's run!" she cried to Rosamond, and they raced back to school.
+
+She fell asleep that night without one smallest tear.
+
+The next morning Betty dressed hastily, and catching up her mandolin,
+set out into the corridor.
+
+Something swung against her hand as she opened the door. It was a great
+bunch of holly, glossy green leaves and glowing berries, and hidden in
+the leaves a card: "Betty, Merry Christmas," was all, but only one girl
+wrote that dainty hand.
+
+"A winter rose," whispered Betty, happily, and stuck the bunch into the
+ribbon of her mandolin.
+
+Down the corridor she ran until she faced a closed door. Then, twanging
+her mandolin, she burst out with all her power into a gay Christmas
+carol. High and sweet sang her voice in the silent corridor all through
+the gay carol. Then, sweeter still, it changed into a Christmas hymn.
+Then from behind the closed doors sounded voices:
+
+"Merry Christmas, Betty Luther!"
+
+Then Constance O'Neill's deep, smooth alto flowed into Betty's soprano;
+and at the last all nine girls joined in "Adeste Fideles." Christmas
+morning began with music and laughter.
+
+"This is your place, Betty. You are lord of Christmas morning."
+
+Betty stood, blushing, red as the holly in her hand, before the
+breakfast table. Miss Hyle, the teacher at the head of the table, had
+given up her place.
+
+The breakfast was a merry one. After it somebody suggested that they all
+go skating on the pond.
+
+Betty hesitated and glanced at Miss Hyle and Miss Thrasher, the two
+sad-looking teachers.
+
+She approached them and said, "Won't you come skating, too?"
+
+Miss Thrasher, hardly older than Betty herself, and pretty in a white
+frightened way, refused, but almost cheerfully. "I have a Christmas box
+to open and Christmas letters to write. Thank you very much."
+
+Betty's heart sank as she saw Miss Hyle's face. "Goodness, she's
+coming!"
+
+Miss Hyle was the most unpopular teacher in school. Neither ill-tempered
+nor harsh, she was so cold, remote and rigid in face, voice, and manner
+that the warmest blooded shivered away from her, the least sensitive
+shrank.
+
+"I have no skates, but I should like to borrow a pair to learn, if I
+may. I have never tried," she said.
+
+The tragedies of a beginner on skates are to the observers, especially
+if such be school-girls, subjects for unalloyed mirth. The nine girls
+choked and turned their backs and even giggled aloud as Miss Hyle went
+prone, now backward with a whack, now forward in a limp crumple.
+
+But amusement became admiration. Miss Hyle stumbled, fell, laughed
+merrily, scrambled up, struck out, and skated. Presently she was
+swinging up the pond in stroke with Betty and Eleanor O'Neill.
+
+"Miss Hyle, you're great!" cried Betty, at the end of the morning. "I've
+taught dozens and scores to skate, but never anybody like you. You've a
+genius for skating."
+
+Miss Hyle's blue eyes shot a sudden flash at Betty that made her whole
+severe face light up. "I've never had a chance to learn--at home there
+never is any ice--but I have always been athletic."
+
+"Where is your home, Miss Hyle?" asked Betty.
+
+"Cawnpore, India."
+
+"India?" gasped Eleanor. "How delightful! Oh, won't you tell us about
+it, Miss Hyle?"
+
+So it was that Miss Hyle found herself talking about something besides
+triangles to girls who really wanted to hear, and so it was that the
+flash came often into her eyes.
+
+"I have had a happy morning, thank you, Betty--and all." She said it
+very simply, yet a quick throb of pity and liking beat in Betty's heart.
+
+"How stupid we are about judging people!" she thought. Yet Betty had
+always prided herself on her character-reading.
+
+"Hurrah, the mail and express are in!" The girls ran excitedly to their
+rooms.
+
+Betty alone went to hers without interest. "Why, Hilma, what's
+happened?"
+
+The little round-faced Swedish maid mopped the big tears with her
+duster, and choked out:
+
+"Nothings, ma'am!"
+
+"Of course there is! You're crying like everything."
+
+Hilma wept aloud. "Christmas Day it is, and mine family and mine friends
+have party, now, all day."
+
+"Where?"
+
+Hilma jerked her head toward the window.
+
+"Oh, you mean in town? Why can't you go?"
+
+"I work. And never before am I from home Christmas day."
+
+Betty shivered. "Never before am _I_ from home Christmas day," she
+whispered.
+
+She went close to the girl, very tall and slim and bright beside the
+dumpy, flaxen Hilma.
+
+"What work do you do?"
+
+"The cook, he cooks the dinner and the supper; I put it on and wait it
+on the young ladies and wash the dishes. The others all are gone."
+
+Betty laughed suddenly. "Hilma, go put on your best clothes, quick, and
+go down to your party. I'm going to do your work."
+
+Hilma's eyes rounded with amazement. "The cook, he be mad."
+
+"No, he won't. He won't care whether it's Hilma or Betty, if things get
+done all right. I know how to wait on table and wash dishes. There's
+no housekeeper here to object. Run along, Hilma; be back by nine
+o'clock--and--Merry Christmas!"
+
+Hilma's face beamed through her tears. She was speechless with joy, but
+she seized Betty's slim brown hand and kissed it loudly.
+
+"What larks!" "Is it a joke?" "Betty, you're the handsomest butler!"
+
+Betty, in a white shirt-waist suit, a jolly red bow pinned on her white
+apron, and a little cap cocked on her dark hair, waved them to their
+seats at the holly-decked table.
+
+"Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas!"
+
+"Nobody is ill, Betty?" Rosamond asked, anxiously.
+
+"If I had three guesses, I should use every one that our maid wanted to
+go into town for the day, and Betty took her place." It was Miss Hyle's
+calm voice.
+
+Betty blushed. It was her turn now to flash back a glance; and those two
+sparks kindled the fire of friendship.
+
+It was a jolly Christmas dinner, with the "butler" eating with the
+family.
+
+"And now the dishes!" thought Betty. It must be admitted the "washing
+up" after a Christmas dinner of twelve is not a subject for much joy.
+
+"I propose we all help Betty wash the dishes!" cried Rosamond Howitt.
+
+Out in the kitchen every one laughed and talked and got in the way, and
+had a good time; and if the milk pitcher was knocked on the floor
+and the pudding bowl emptied in Betty's lap--why, it was all "Merry
+Christmas."
+
+After that they all skated again. When they came in, little Miss
+Thrasher, looking almost gay in a rose-red gown, met them in the
+corridor.
+
+"I thought it would be fun," she said, shyly, "to have supper in my
+room. I have a big box from home. I couldn't possible eat all the things
+myself, and if you'll bring chafing-dishes and spoons, and those things,
+I'll cook it, and we can sit round my open fire."
+
+Miss Thrasher's room was homelike, with its fire of white-birch and its
+easy chairs, and Miss Thrasher herself proved to be a pleasant hostess.
+
+After supper Miss Hyle told a tale of India, Miss Thrasher gave a Rocky
+Mountain adventure, and the girls contributed ghost and burglar stories
+till each guest was in a thrill of delightful horror.
+
+"We've had really a fine day!"
+
+"I expected to die of homesickness, but it's been jolly!"
+
+"So did I, but I have actually been happy."
+
+Thus the girls commented as they started for bed.
+
+"I have enjoyed my day," said little Miss Thrasher, "very much."
+
+"Yes, indeed, it's been a merry Christmas." Miss Hyle spoke almost
+eagerly.
+
+Betty gave a little jump; she realized each one of them was holding her
+hand and pressing it a little. "Thank you, it's been a lovely evening.
+Goodnight."
+
+Rosamond had invited Betty to share her roommate's bed, but both girls
+were too tired and sleepy for any confidence.
+
+"It's been the queerest Christmas!" thought Betty, as she drifted toward
+sleep. "Why, I haven't given one single soul one single present!"
+
+Yet she smiled, drowsily happy, and then the room seemed to fill with
+a bright, warm light, and round the bed there danced a great Christmas
+wreath, made up of the faces of the three O'Neills, and the thin old
+rector, with his white hair, and pretty Rosamond, and frightened Miss
+Thrasher and the homesick girls, and lonely Miss Hyle, and tear-dimmed
+Hilma.
+
+And all the faces smiled and nodded, and called, "Merry Christmas,
+Betty, Merry Christmas!"
+
+
+
+
+XIX. OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS
+
+J.H. EWING
+
+"The custom of Christmas-trees came from Germany. I can remember when
+they were first introduced into England, and what wonderful things we
+thought them. Now, every village school has its tree, and the scholars
+openly discuss whether the presents have been 'good,' or 'mean,' as
+compared with other trees in former years. The first one that I ever saw
+I believed to have come from Good Father Christmas himself; but little
+boys have grown too wise now to be taken in for their own amusement.
+They are not excited by secret and mysterious preparations in the back
+drawing-room; they hardly confess to the thrill--which I feel to this
+day--when the folding doors are thrown open, and amid the blaze of
+tapers, mamma, like a Fate, advances with her scissors to give every one
+what falls to his lot.
+
+"Well, young people, when I was eight years old I had not seen a
+Christmas-tree, and the first picture of one I ever saw was the picture
+of that held by Old Father Christmas in my godmother's picture-book."
+
+'"What are those things on the tree?' I asked.
+
+"'Candles,' said my father.
+
+"'No, father, not the candles; the other things?'
+
+"'Those are toys, my son.'
+
+"'Are they ever taken off?'
+
+"'Yes, they are taken off, and given to the children who stand around
+the tree.'
+
+"Patty and I grasped each other by the hand, and with one voice
+murmured; 'How kind of Old Father Christmas!'
+
+"By and by I asked, 'How old is Father Christmas?'
+
+"My father laughed, and said, 'One thousand eight hundred and thirty
+years, child,' which was then the year of our Lord, and thus one
+thousand eight hundred and thirty years since the first great Christmas
+Day.
+
+"'He LOOKS very old,' whispered Patty.
+
+"And I, who was, for my age, what Kitty called 'Bible-learned,' said
+thoughtfully, and with some puzzledness of mind, 'Then he's older than
+Methuselah.'
+
+"But my father had left the room, and did not hear my difficulty.
+
+"November and December went by, and still the picture-book kept all
+its charm for Patty and me; and we pondered on and loved Old Father
+Christmas as children can love and realize a fancy friend. To those who
+remember the fancies of their childhood I need say no more.
+
+"Christmas week came, Christmas Eve came. My father and mother were
+mysteriously and unaccountably busy in the parlour (we had only one
+parlour), and Patty and I were not allowed to go in. We went into the
+kitchen, but even here was no place of rest for us. Kitty was 'all over
+the place,' as she phrased it, and cakes, mince pies, and puddings were
+with her. As she justly observed, 'There was no place there for children
+and books to sit with their toes in the fire, when a body wanted to be
+at the oven all along. The cat was enough for HER temper,' she added.
+
+"As to puss, who obstinately refused to take a hint which drove her out
+into the Christmas frost, she returned again and again with soft steps,
+and a stupidity that was, I think, affected, to the warm hearth, only to
+fly at intervals, like a football, before Kitty's hasty slipper.
+
+"We had more sense, or less courage. We bowed to Kitty's behests, and
+went to the back door.
+
+"Patty and I were hardy children, and accustomed to 'run out' in all
+weathers, without much extra wrapping up. We put Kitty's shawl over our
+two heads, and went outside. I rather hoped to see something of Dick,
+for it was holiday time; but no Dick passed. He was busy helping his
+father to bore holes in the carved seats of the church, which were
+to hold sprigs of holly for the morrow--that was the idea of church
+decoration in my young days. You have improved on your elders there,
+young people, and I am candid enough to allow it. Still, the sprigs of
+red and green were better than nothing, and, like your lovely wreaths
+and pious devices, they made one feel as if the old black wood were
+bursting into life and leaf again for very Christmas joy; and, if only
+one knelt carefully, they did not scratch his nose.
+
+"Well, Dick was busy, and not to be seen. We ran across the little yard
+and looked over the wall at the end to see if we could see anything
+or anybody. From this point there was a pleasant meadow field sloping
+prettily away to a little hill about three quarters of a mile distant;
+which, catching some fine breezes from the moors beyond, was held to
+be a place of cure for whooping-cough, or kincough, as it was vulgarly
+called. Up to the top of this Kitty had dragged me, and carried Patty,
+when we were recovering from the complaint, as I well remember. It was
+the only 'change of air' we could afford, and I dare say it did as well
+as if we had gone into badly drained lodgings at the seaside.
+
+"This hill was now covered with snow and stood off against the gray sky.
+The white fields looked vast and dreary in the dusk. The only gay
+things to be seen were the berries on the holly hedge, in the little
+lane--which, running by the end of our back-yard, led up to the
+Hall--and the fat robin, that was staring at me. I was looking at the
+robin, when Patty, who had been peering out of her corner of Kitty's
+shawl, gave a great jump that dragged the shawl from our heads, and
+cried:
+
+"'Look!'
+
+"I looked. An old man was coming along the lane. His hair and beard were
+as white as cotton-wool. He had a face like the sort of apple that keeps
+well in winter; his coat was old and brown. There was snow about him in
+patches, and he carried a small fir-tree.
+
+"The same conviction seized upon us both. With one breath, we exclaimed,
+'IT'S OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS!'
+
+"I know now that it was only an old man of the place, with whom we did
+not happen to be acquainted and that he was taking a little fir-tree
+up to the Hall, to be made into a Christmas-tree. He was a very
+good-humoured old fellow, and rather deaf, for which he made up by
+smiling and nodding his head a good deal, and saying, 'aye, aye, to be
+sure!' at likely intervals.
+
+"As he passed us and met our earnest gaze, he smiled and nodded
+so earnestly that I was bold enough to cry, 'Good-evening, Father
+Christmas!'
+
+"'Same to you!' said he, in a high-pitched voice.
+
+"'Then you ARE Father Christmas?' said Patty.
+
+"'And a happy New Year,' was Father Christmas's reply, which rather put
+me out. But he smiled in such a satisfactory manner that Patty went on,
+'You're very old, aren't you?'
+
+"'So I be, miss, so I be,' said Father Christmas, nodding.
+
+"'Father says you're eighteen hundred and thirty years old,' I muttered.
+
+"'Aye, aye, to be sure,' said Father Christmas. 'I'm a long age.'
+
+"A VERY long age, thought I, and I added, 'You're nearly twice as old as
+Methuselah, you know,' thinking that this might have struck him.
+
+"'Aye, aye,' said Father Christmas; but he did not seem to think
+anything of it. After a pause he held up the tree, and cried, 'D'ye know
+what this is, little miss?'
+
+"'A Christmas-tree,' said Patty.
+
+"And the old man smiled and nodded.
+
+"I leant over the wall, and shouted, 'But there are no candles.'
+
+"'By and by,' said Father Christmas, nodding as before. 'When it's dark
+they'll all be lighted up. That'll be a fine sight!'
+
+"'Toys, too,there'll be, won't there?' said Patty.
+
+"Father Christmas nodded his head. 'And sweeties,' he added,
+expressively.
+
+"I could feel Patty trembling, and my own heart beat fast. The thought
+which agitated us both was this: 'Was Father Christmas bringing the tree
+to us?' But very anxiety, and some modesty also, kept us from asking
+outright.
+
+"Only when the old man shouldered his tree, and prepared to move on, I
+cried in despair, 'Oh, are you going?'
+
+"'I'm coming back by and by,' said he.
+
+"'How soon?' cried Patty.
+
+"'About four o'clock,' said the old man smiling. 'I'm only going up
+yonder.'
+
+"'Up yonder!' This puzzled us. Father Christmas had pointed, but so
+indefinitely that he might have been pointing to the sky, or the fields,
+or the little wood at the end of the Squire's grounds. I thought
+the latter, and suggested to Patty that perhaps he had some place
+underground like Aladdin's cave, where he got the candles, and all the
+pretty things for the tree. This idea pleased us both, and we amused
+ourselves by wondering what Old Father Christmas would choose for
+us from his stores in that wonderful hole where he dressed his
+Christmas-trees.
+
+"'I wonder, Patty,' said I, 'why there's no picture of Father
+Christmas's dog in the book.' For at the old man's heels in the lane
+there crept a little brown and white spaniel looking very dirty in the
+snow.
+
+"'Perhaps it's a new dog that he's got to take care of his cave,' said
+Patty.
+
+"When we went indoors we examined the picture afresh by the dim light
+from the passage window, but there was no dog there.
+
+"My father passed us at this moment, and patted my head. 'Father,' said
+I, 'I don't know, but I do think Old Father Christmas is going to bring
+us a Christmas-tree to-night.'
+
+"'Who's been telling you that?' said my father.
+
+"But he passed on before I could explain that we had seen Father
+Christmas himself, and had had his word for it that he would return at
+four o'clock, and that the candles on his tree would be lighted as soon
+as it was dark.
+
+"We hovered on the outskirts of the rooms till four o'clock came. We sat
+on the stairs and watched the big clock, which I was just learning
+to read; and Patty made herself giddy with constantly looking up and
+counting the four strokes, toward which the hour hand slowly moved. We
+put our noses into the kitchen now and then, to smell the cakes and get
+warm, and anon we hung about the parlour door, and were most unjustly
+accused of trying to peep. What did we care what our mother was doing
+in the parlour?--we, who had seen Old Father Christmas himself, and were
+expecting him back again every moment!
+
+"At last the church clock struck. The sounds boomed heavily through
+the frost, and Patty thought there were four of them. Then, after due
+choking and whirring, our own clock struck, and we counted the strokes
+quite clearly--one! two! three! four! Then we got Kitty's shawl once
+more, and stole out into the backyard. We ran to our old place, and
+peeped, but could see nothing.
+
+"'We'd better get up on to the wall,' I said; and with some difficulty
+and distress from rubbing her bare knees against the cold stone, and
+getting the snow up her sleeves, Patty got on to the coping of the
+little wall. I was just struggling after her, when something warm and
+something cold coming suddenly against the bare calves of my legs made
+me shriek with fright. I came down 'with a run' and bruised my knees,
+my elbows, and my chin; and the snow that hadn't gone up Patty's sleeves
+went down my neck. Then I found that the cold thing was a dog's nose
+and the warm thing was his tongue; and Patty cried from her post of
+observation, 'It's Father Christmas's dog and he's licking your legs.'
+
+"It really was the dirty little brown and white spaniel, and he
+persisted in licking me, and jumping on me, and making curious little
+noises, that must have meant something if one had known his language.
+I was rather harassed at the moment. My legs were sore, I was a little
+afraid of the dog, and Patty was very much afraid of sitting on the wall
+without me.
+
+"'You won't fall,' I said to her. 'Get down, will you?' I said to the
+dog.
+
+"'Humpty Dumpty fell off a wall,' said Patty.
+
+"'Bow! wow!' said the dog.
+
+"I pulled Patty down, and the dog tried to pull me down; but when
+my little sister was on her feet, to my relief, he transferred his
+attentions to her. When he had jumped at her, and licked her several
+times, he turned around and ran away.
+
+"'He's gone,' said I; 'I'm so glad.'
+
+"But even as I spoke he was back again, crouching at Patty's feet, and
+glaring at her with eyes the colour of his ears.
+
+"Now, Patty was very fond of animals, and when the dog looked at her
+she looked at the dog, and then she said to me, 'He wants us to go with
+him.'
+
+"On which (as if he understood our language, though we were ignorant
+of his) the spaniel sprang away, and went off as hard as he could; and
+Patty and I went after him, a dim hope crossing my mind--'Perhaps Father
+Christmas has sent him for us.'
+
+"The idea was rather favoured by the fact he led us up the lane. Only
+a little way; then he stopped by something lying in the ditch--and once
+more we cried in the same breath, 'It's Old Father Christmas!'
+
+"Returning from the Hall, the old man had slipped upon a bit of ice, and
+lay stunned in the snow.
+
+"Patty began to cry. 'I think he's dead!' she sobbed.
+
+"'He is so very old, I don't wonder,' I murmured; 'but perhaps he's not.
+I'll fetch father.'
+
+"My father and Kitty were soon on the spot. Kitty was as strong as a
+man; and they carried Father Christmas between them into the kitchen.
+There he quickly revived.
+
+"I must do Kitty the justice to say that she did not utter a word of
+complaint at the disturbance of her labours; and that she drew the old
+man's chair close up to the oven with her own hand. She was so much
+affected by the behaviour of his dog that she admitted him even to the
+hearth; on which puss, being acute enough to see how matters stood, lay
+down with her back so close to the spaniel's that Kitty could not expel
+one without kicking both.
+
+"For our parts, we felt sadly anxious about the tree; otherwise we
+could have wished for no better treat than to sit at Kitty's round table
+taking tea with Father Christmas. Our usual fare of thick bread and
+treacle was to-night exchanged for a delicious variety of cakes, which
+were none the worse to us for being 'tasters and wasters'--that is,
+little bits of dough, or shortbread, put in to try the state of the
+oven, and certain cakes that had got broken or burnt in the baking.
+
+"Well, there we sat, helping Old Father Christmas to tea and cake, and
+wondering in our hearts what could have become of the tree.
+
+"Patty and I felt a delicacy in asking Old Father Christmas about the
+tree. It was not until we had had tea three times round, with tasters
+and wasters to match, that Patty said very gently: 'It's quite dark
+now.' And then she heaved a deep sigh.
+
+"Burning anxiety overcame me. I leaned toward Father Christmas, and
+shouted--I had found out that it was needful to shout--"'I suppose the
+candles are on the tree now?'
+
+"'Just about putting of 'em on,' said Father Christmas.
+
+"'And the presents, too?' said Patty.
+
+"'Aye, aye, TO be sure,' said Father Christmas, and he smiled
+delightfully.
+
+"I was thinking what further questions I might venture upon, when he
+pushed his cup toward Patty saying, 'Since you are so pressing, miss,
+I'll take another dish.'
+
+"And Kitty, swooping on us from the oven, cried, 'Make yourself at home,
+sir; there's more where these came from. Make a long arm, Miss Patty,
+and hand them cakes.'
+
+"So we had to devote ourselves to the duties of the table; and Patty,
+holding the lid with one hand and pouring with the other, supplied
+Father Christmas's wants with a heavy heart.
+
+"At last he was satisfied. I said grace, during which he stood, and,
+indeed, he stood for some time afterward with his eyes shut--I fancy
+under the impression that I was still speaking. He had just said a
+fervent 'amen,' and reseated himself, when my father put his head into
+the kitchen, and made this remarkable statement:
+
+"'Old Father Christmas has sent a tree to the young people.'
+
+"Patty and I uttered a cry of delight, and we forthwith danced round
+the old man, saying, 'How nice; Oh, how kind of you!' which I think must
+have bewildered him, but he only smiled and nodded.
+
+"'Come along,' said my father. 'Come, children. Come, Reuben. Come,
+Kitty.'
+
+"And he went into the parlour, and we all followed him.
+
+"My godmother's picture of a Christmas-tree was very pretty; and the
+flames of the candles were so naturally done in red and yellow that I
+always wondered that they did not shine at night. But the picture was
+nothing to the reality. We had been sitting almost in the dark, for, as
+Kitty said, 'Firelight was quite enough to burn at meal-times.' And when
+the parlour door was thrown open, and the tree, with lighted tapers on
+all the branches, burst upon our view, the blaze was dazzling, and threw
+such a glory round the little gifts, and the bags of coloured muslin,
+with acid drops and pink rose drops and comfits inside, as I shall never
+forget. We all got something; and Patty and I, at any rate, believed
+that the things came from the stores of Old Father Christmas. We were
+not undeceived even by his gratefully accepting a bundle of old clothes
+which had been hastily put together to form his present.
+
+"We were all very happy; even Kitty, I think, though she kept her
+sleeves rolled up, and seemed rather to grudge enjoying herself (a weak
+point in some energetic characters). She went back to her oven before
+the lights were out and the angel on the top of the tree taken down. She
+locked up her present (a little work-box) at once. She often showed it
+off afterward, but it was kept in the same bit of tissue paper till she
+died. Our presents certainly did not last so long!
+
+"The old man died about a week afterward, so we never made his
+acquaintance as a common personage. When he was buried, his little dog
+came to us. I suppose he remembered the hospitality he had received.
+Patty adopted him, and he was very faithful. Puss always looked on him
+with favour. I hoped during our rambles together in the following summer
+that he would lead us at last to the cave where Christmas-trees are
+dressed. But he never did.
+
+"Our parents often spoke of his late master as 'old Reuben,' but
+children are not easily disabused of a favourite fancy, and in Patty's
+thoughts and in mine the old man was long gratefully remembered as Old
+Father Christmas."
+
+
+
+
+XX. A CHRISTMAS CAROL
+
+CHARLES DICKENS
+
+Master Peter, and the two ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the
+goose, with which they soon returned in high procession.
+
+Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of
+all birds; a feathered phenomenon, to which a black swan was a matter of
+course--and in truth it was something very like it in that house. Mrs.
+Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little saucepan) hissing
+hot; Master Peter mashed the potatoes with incredible vigour; Miss
+Belinda sweetened up the apple-sauce; Martha dusted the hot plates; Bob
+took Tiny Tim beside him in a tiny corner at the table; the two young
+Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting themselves, and
+mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into their mouths, lest
+they should shriek for goose before their turn came to be helped. At
+last the dishes were set on, and grace was said. It was succeeded by
+a breathless pause, as Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly all along the
+carving-knife, prepared to plunge it in the breast; but when she did,
+and when the long expected gush of stuffing issued forth, one murmur of
+delight arose all round the board, and even Tiny Tim, excited by the
+two young Cratchits, beat on the table with the handle of his knife, and
+feebly cried Hurrah!
+
+There never was such a goose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was
+such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness,
+were the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by the apple-sauce
+and mashed potatoes, it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family;
+indeed, as Mrs. Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small
+atom of a bone upon the dish), they hadn't ate it all at last! Yet
+every one had had enough, and the youngest Cratchits in particular, were
+steeped in sage and onion to the eyebrows! But now, the plates being
+changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs. Cratchit left the room alone--too nervous
+to bear witnesses--to take the pudding up and bring it in.
+
+Suppose it should not be done enough! Suppose it should break in turning
+out. Suppose somebody should have got over the wall of the back-yard and
+stolen it, while they were merry with the goose--a supposition at
+which the two young Cratchits became livid! All sorts of horrors were
+supposed.
+
+Hallo! A great deal of steam! The pudding was out of the copper. A smell
+like a washing-day! That was the cloth. A smell like an eating-house and
+a pastrycook's next door to each other, with a laundress's next door
+to that! That was the pudding! In half a minute Mrs. Cratchit
+entered--flushed, but smiling proudly--with the pudding, like a speckled
+cannon-ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half of half-a-quartern of
+ignited brandy, and bedight with Christmas holly stuck into the top.
+
+Oh, a wonderful pudding! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly too, that he
+regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since
+their marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that now the weight was off her mind,
+she would confess she had had her doubts about the quantity of flour.
+Everybody had something to say about it, but nobody said or thought it
+was at all a small pudding for a large family. It would have been,
+flat heresy to do so. Any Cratchit would have blushed to hint at such a
+thing.
+
+At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the hearth
+swept, and the fire made up. The compound in the jug being tasted, and
+considered perfect, apples and oranges were put upon the table, and a
+shovel-full of chestnuts on the fire. Then all the Cratchit family drew
+round the hearth, in what Bob Cratchit called a circle, meaning half a
+one; and at Bob Cratchit's elbow stood the family display of glasses.
+Two tumblers, and a custard-cup without a handle.
+
+These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as golden
+goblets would have done; and Bob served it out with beaming looks,
+while the chestnuts on the fire sputtered and cracked noisily. Then Bob
+proposed:
+
+"A Merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us!"
+
+Which all the family re-echoed.
+
+"God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim, the last of all.
+
+
+
+
+XXI. HOW CHRISTMAS CAME TO THE SANTA MARIA FLATS*
+
+* From "Ickery Ann and Other Girls and Boys," by Elia W. Peattie.
+Copyright, 1898, by Herbert S. Stone & Co., Duffield & Co., successors.
+
+ELIA W. PEATTIE
+
+There were twenty-six flat children, and none of them had ever been flat
+children until that year. Previously they had all been home children.
+and as such had, of course, had beautiful Christmases, in which their
+relations with Santa Claus had been of the most intimate and personal
+nature.
+
+Now, owing to their residence in the Santa Maria flats, and the Lease,
+all was changed. The Lease was a strange forbiddance, a ukase issued by
+a tyrant, which took from children their natural liberties and rights.
+
+Though, to be sure--as every one of the flat children knew--they were in
+the greatest kind of luck to be allowed to live at all, and especially
+were they fortunate past the lot of children to be permitted to live in
+a flat. There were many flats in the great city, so polished and carved
+and burnished and be-lackeyed that children were not allowed to enter
+within the portals, save on visits of ceremony in charge of parents
+or governesses. And in one flat, where Cecil de Koven le Baron was
+born--just by accident and without intending any harm--he was evicted,
+along with his parents, by the time he reached the age where he seemed
+likely to be graduated from the go-cart. And yet that flat had not
+nearly so imposing a name as the Santa Maria.
+
+The twenty-six children of the Santa Maria flats belonged to twenty
+families. All of these twenty families were peculiar, as you might learn
+any day by interviewing the families concerning one another. But they
+bore with each other's peculiarities quite cheerfully and spoke in
+the hall when they met. Sometimes this tolerance would even extend to
+conversation about the janitor, a thin creature who did the work of five
+men. The ladies complained that he never smiled.
+
+"I wouldn't so much mind the hot water pipes leaking now and then," the
+ladies would remark in the vestibule, rustling their skirts to show
+that they wore silk petticoats, "if only the janitor would smile. But he
+looks like a cemetery."
+
+"I know it," would be the response. "I told Mr. Wilberforce last night
+that if he would only get a cheerful janitor I wouldn't mind our having
+rubber instead of Axminster on the stairs."
+
+"You know we were promised Axminster when we moved in," would be the
+plaintive response. The ladies would stand together for a moment wrapped
+in gloomy reflection, and then part.
+
+The kitchen and nurse maids felt on the subject, too.
+
+"If Carl Carlsen would only smile," they used to exclaim in sibilant
+whispers, as they passed on the way to the laundry. "If he'd come in an'
+joke while we wus washin'!"
+
+Only Kara Johnson never said anything on the subject because she knew
+why Carlsen didn't smile, and was sorry for it, and would have made it
+all right--if it hadn't been for Lars Larsen.
+
+Dear, dear, but this is a digression from the subject of the Lease.
+That terrible document was held over the heads of the children as the
+Herodian pronunciamento concerning small boys was over the heads of the
+Israelites.
+
+It was in the Lease not to run--not to jump--not to yell. It was in the
+Lease not to sing in the halls, not to call from story to story, not to
+slide down the banisters. And there were blocks of banisters so smooth
+and wide and beautiful that the attraction between them and the seats
+of the little boy's trousers was like the attraction of a magnet for a
+nail. Yet not a leg, crooked or straight, fat or thin, was ever to be
+thrown over these polished surfaces!
+
+It was in the Lease, too, that no peddler or agent, or suspicious
+stranger was to enter the Santa Maria, neither by the front door nor the
+back. The janitor stood in his uniform at the rear, and the lackey in
+his uniform at the front, to prevent any such intrusion upon the privacy
+of the aristocratic Santa Marias. The lackey, who politely directed
+people, and summoned elevators, and whistled up tubes and rang bells,
+thus conducting the complex social life of those favoured apartments,
+was not one to make a mistake, and admit any person not calculated to
+ornament the front parlours of the flatters.
+
+It was this that worried the children.
+
+For how could such a dear, disorderly, democratic rascal as the
+children's saint ever hope to gain a pass to that exclusive entrance and
+get up to the rooms of the flat children?
+
+"You can see for yourself," said Ernest, who lived on the first floor,
+to Roderick who lived on the fourth, "that if Santa Claus can't get up
+the front stairs, and can't get up the back stairs, that all he can
+do is to come down the chimney. And he can't come down the chimney--at
+least, he can't get out of the fireplace."
+
+"Why not?" asked Roderick, who was busy with an "all-day sucker" and not
+inclined to take a gloomy view of anything.
+
+"Goosey!" cried Ernest, in great disdain. "I'll show you!" and he
+led Roderick, with his sucker, right into the best parlour, where the
+fireplace was, and showed him an awful thing.
+
+Of course, to the ordinary observer, there was nothing awful about the
+fireplace. Everything in the way of bric-a-brac possessed by the Santa
+Maria flatters was artistic. It may have been in the Lease that only
+people with esthetic tastes were to be admitted to the apartments.
+However that may be, the fireplace, with its vases and pictures and
+trinkets, was something quite wonderful. Indian incense burned in a
+mysterious little dish, pictures of purple ladies were hung in odd
+corners, calendars in letters nobody could read, served to decorate,
+if not to educate, and glass vases of strange colours and extraordinary
+shapes stood about filled with roses. None of these things were awful.
+At least no one would have dared say they were. But what was awful was
+the formation of the grate. It was not a hospitable place with andirons,
+where noble logs of wood could be laid for the burning, nor did it have
+a generous iron basket where honest anthracite could glow away into the
+nights. Not a bit of it. It held a vertical plate of stuff that looked
+like dirty cotton wool, on which a tiny blue flame leaped when the gas
+was turned on and ignited.
+
+"You can see for yourself!" said Ernest tragically.
+
+Roderick could see for himself. There was an inch-wide opening down
+which the Friend of the Children could squeeze himself, and, as
+everybody knows, he needs a good deal of room now, for he has grown
+portly with age, and his pack every year becomes bigger, owing to the
+ever-increasing number of girls and boys he has to supply
+
+"Gimini!" said Roderick, and dropped his all-day sucker on the
+old Bokara rug that Ernest's mamma had bought the week before at a
+fashionable furnishing shop, and which had given the sore throat to all
+the family, owing to some cunning little germs that had come over with
+the rug to see what American throats were like.
+
+Oh, me, yes! but Roderick could see! Anybody could see! And a boy could
+see better than anybody.
+
+"Let's go see the Telephone Boy," said Roderick. This seemed the wisest
+thing to do. When in doubt, all the children went to the Telephone
+Boy, who was the most fascinating person, with knowledge of the most
+wonderful kind and of a nature to throw that of Mrs. Scheherazade quite,
+quite in the shade--which, considering how long that loquacious lady had
+been a Shade, is perhaps not surprising.
+
+The Telephone Boy knew the answers to all the conundrums in the world,
+and a way out of nearly all troubles such as are likely to overtake boys
+and girls. But now he had no suggestions to offer and could speak no
+comfortable words.
+
+"He can't git inter de front, an' he can't git inter de back, an' he
+can't come down no chimney in dis here house, an' I tell yer dose," he
+said, and shut his mouth grimly, while cold apprehension crept around
+Ernest's heart and took the sweetness out of Roderick's sucker.
+
+Nevertheless, hope springs eternal, and the boys each and individually
+asked their fathers--tremendously wise and good men--if they thought
+there was any hope that Santa Claus would get into the Santa Maria
+flats, and each of the fathers looked up from his paper and said he'd be
+blessed if he did!
+
+And the words sunk deep and deep and drew the tears when the doors were
+closed and the soft black was all about and nobody could laugh because
+a boy was found crying! The girls cried too--for the awful news was
+whistled up tubes and whistled down tubes, till all the twenty-six flat
+children knew about it. The next day it was talked over in the brick
+court, where the children used to go to shout and race. But on this day
+there was neither shouting nor racing. There was, instead, a shaking of
+heads, a surreptitious dropping of tears, a guessing and protesting and
+lamenting. All the flat mothers congratulated themselves on the fact
+that their children were becoming so quiet and orderly, and wondered
+what could have come over them when they noted that they neglected to
+run after the patrol wagon as it whizzed round the block.
+
+It was decided, after a solemn talk, that every child should go to its
+own fireplace and investigate. In the event of any fireplace being found
+with an opening big enough to admit Santa Claus, a note could be left
+directing him along the halls to the other apartments. A spirit of
+universal brotherhood had taken possession of the Santa Maria flatters.
+Misery bound them together. But the investigation proved to be
+disheartening. The cruel asbestos grates were everywhere. Hope lay
+strangled!
+
+As time went on, melancholy settled upon the flat children. The parents
+noted it, and wondered if there could be sewer gas in the apartments.
+One over-anxious mother called in a physician, who gave the poor little
+child some medicine which made it quite ill. No one suspected the truth,
+though the children were often heard to say that it was evident that
+there was to be no Christmas for them! But then, what more natural for a
+child to say, thus hoping to win protestations--so the mothers reasoned,
+and let the remark pass.
+
+The day before Christmas was gray and dismal. There was no wind--indeed,
+there was a sort of tightness in the air, as if the supply of freshness
+had given out. People had headaches--even the Telephone Boy was
+cross--and none of the spirit of the time appeared to enliven the flat
+children. There appeared to be no stir--no mystery. No whisperings went
+on in the corners--or at least, so it seemed to the sad babies of the
+Santa Maria.
+
+"It's as plain as a monkey on a hand-organ," said the Telephone Boy to
+the attendants at his salon in the basement, "that there ain't to be no
+Christmas for we--no, not for we!"
+
+Had not Dorothy produced, at this junction, from the folds of her fluffy
+silken skirts several substantial sticks of gum, there is no saying to
+what depths of discouragement the flat children would have fallen!
+
+About six o'clock it seemed as if the children would smother for lack of
+air! It was very peculiar. Even the janitor noticed it. He spoke about
+it to Kara at the head of the back stairs, and she held her hand so as
+to let him see the new silver ring on her fourth finger, and he let go
+of the rope on the elevator on which he was standing and dropped to the
+bottom of the shaft, so that Kara sent up a wild hallo of alarm. But the
+janitor emerged as melancholy and unruffled as ever, only looking at his
+watch to see if it had been stopped by the concussion.
+
+The Telephone Boy, who usually got a bit of something hot sent down to
+him from one of the tables, owing to the fact that he never ate any meal
+save breakfast at home, was quite forgotten on this day, and dined
+off two russet apples, and drew up his belt to stop the ache--for the
+Telephone Boy was growing very fast indeed, in spite of his poverty, and
+couldn't seem to stop growing somehow, although he said to himself every
+day that it was perfectly brutal of him to keep on that way when his
+mother had so many mouths to feed.
+
+Well, well, the tightness of the air got worse. Every one was cross at
+dinner and complained of feeling tired afterward, and of wanting to go
+to bed. For all of that it was not to get to sleep, and the children
+tossed and tumbled for a long time before they put their little hands in
+the big, soft shadowy clasp of the Sandman, and trooped away after him
+to the happy town of sleep.
+
+It seemed to the flat children that they had been asleep but a few
+moments when there came a terrible burst of wind that shook even that
+great house to its foundations. Actually, as they sat up in bed and
+called to their parents or their nurses, their voices seemed smothered
+with roar. Could it be that the wind was a great wild beast with a
+hundred tongues which licked at the roof of the building? And how many
+voices must it have to bellow as it did?
+
+Sounds of falling glass, of breaking shutters, of crashing chimneys
+greeted their ears--not that they knew what all these sounds meant. They
+only knew that it seemed as if the end of the world had come. Ernest,
+miserable as he was, wondered if the Telephone Boy had gotten safely
+home, or if he were alone in the draughty room in the basement; and
+Roderick hugged his big brother, who slept with him and said, "Now I lay
+me," three times running, as fast as ever his tongue would say it.
+
+After a terrible time the wind settled down into a steady howl like a
+hungry wolf, and the children went to sleep, worn out with fright and
+conscious that the bedclothes could not keep out the cold.
+
+Dawn came. The children awoke, shivering. They sat up in bed and
+looked about them--yes, they did, the whole twenty-six of them in their
+different apartments and their different homes. And what do you suppose
+they saw--what do you suppose the twenty-six flat children saw as they
+looked about them?
+
+Why, stockings, stuffed full, and trees hung full, and boxes packed
+full! Yes, they did! It was Christmas morning, and the bells were
+ringing, and all the little flat children were laughing, for Santa Claus
+had come! He had really come! In the wind and wild weather, while the
+tongues of the wind licked hungrily at the roof, while the wind howled
+like a hungry wolf, he had crept in somehow and laughing, no doubt, and
+chuckling, without question, he had filled the stockings and the trees
+and the boxes! Dear me, dear me, but it was a happy time! It makes me
+out of breath to think what a happy time it was, and how surprised
+the flat children were, and how they wondered how it could ever have
+happened.
+
+But they found out, of course! It happened in the simplest way! Every
+skylight in the place was blown off and away, and that was how the wind
+howled so, and how the bedclothes would not keep the children warm, and
+how Santa Claus got in. The wind corkscrewed down into these holes, and
+the reckless children with their drums and dolls, their guns and toy
+dishes, danced around in the maelstrom and sang:
+
+ "Here's where Santa Claus came!
+ This is how he got in--
+ We should count it a sin
+ Yes, count it a shame,
+ If it hurt when he fell on the floor."
+
+Roderick's sister, who was clever for a child of her age, and who had
+read Monte Cristo ten times, though she was only eleven, wrote this
+poem, which every one thought very fine.
+
+And of course all the parents thought and said that Santa Claus must
+have jumped down the skylights. By noon there were other skylights put
+in, and not a sign left of the way he made his entrance--not that the
+way mattered a bit, no, not a bit.
+
+Perhaps you think the Telephone Boy didn't get anything! Maybe you
+imagine that Santa Claus didn't get down that far. But you are mistaken.
+The shaft below one of the skylights went away to the bottom of the
+building, and it stands to reason that the old fellow must have fallen
+way through. At any rate there was a copy of "Tom Sawyer," and a whole
+plum pudding, and a number of other things, more useful but not so
+interesting, found down in the chilly basement room. There were, indeed.
+
+In closing it is only proper to mention that Kara Johnson crocheted a
+white silk four-in-hand necktie for Carl Carlsen, the janitor--and the
+janitor smiled!
+
+
+
+
+XXII. THE LEGEND OF BABOUSCKA*
+
+*From "The Children's Hour," published by the Milton Bradley Co.
+
+ADAPTED FROM THE RUSSIAN
+
+It was the night the dear Christ-Child came to Bethlehem. In a country
+far away from Him, an old, old woman named Babouscka sat in her snug
+little house by her warm fire. The wind was drifting the snow outside
+and howling down the chimney, but it only made Babouscka's fire burn
+more brightly.
+
+"How glad I am that I may stay indoors," said Babouscka, holding her
+hands out to the bright blaze.
+
+But suddenly she heard a loud rap at her door. She opened it and her
+candle shone on three old men standing outside in the snow. Their beards
+were as white as the snow, and so long that they reached the ground.
+Their eyes shone kindly in the light of Babouscka's candle, and their
+arms were full of precious things--boxes of jewels, and sweet-smelling
+oils, and ointments.
+
+"We have travelled far, Babouscka," they said, "and we stop to tell you
+of the Baby Prince born this night in Bethlehem. He comes to rule the
+world and teach all men to be loving and true. We carry Him gifts. Come
+with us, Babouscka."
+
+But Babouscka looked at the drifting snow, and then inside at her cozy
+room and the crackling fire. "It is too late for me to go with you, good
+sirs," she said, "the weather is too cold." She went inside again and
+shut the door, and the old men journeyed on to Bethlehem without her.
+But as Babouscka sat by her fire, rocking, she began to think about the
+Little Christ-Child, for she loved all babies.
+
+"To-morrow I will go to find Him," she said; "to-morrow, when it is
+light, and I will carry Him some toys."
+
+So when it was morning Babouscka put on her long cloak and took her
+staff, and filled her basket with the pretty things a baby would
+like--gold balls, and wooden toys, and strings of silver cobwebs--and
+she set out to find the Christ-Child.
+
+But, oh, Babouscka had forgotten to ask the three old men the road to
+Bethlehem, and they travelled so far through the night that she could
+not overtake them. Up and down the road she hurried, through woods
+and fields and towns, saying to whomsoever she met: "I go to find the
+Christ-Child. Where does He lie? I bring some pretty toys for His sake."
+
+But no one could tell her the way to go, and they all said: "Farther on,
+Babouscka, farther on." So she travelled on and on and on for years and
+years--but she never found the little Christ-Child.
+
+They say that old Babouscka is travelling still, looking for Him.
+When it comes Christmas Eve, and the children are lying fast asleep,
+Babouscka comes softly through the snowy fields and towns, wrapped in
+her long cloak and carrying her basket on her arm. With her staff she
+raps gently at the doors and goes inside and holds her candle close to
+the little children's faces.
+
+"Is He here?" she asks. "Is the little Christ-Child here?" And then
+she turns sorrowfully away again, crying: "Farther on, farther on!" But
+before she leaves she takes a toy from her basket and lays it beside the
+pillow for a Christmas gift. "For His sake," she says softly, and
+then hurries on through the years and forever in search of the little
+Christ-Child.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII. CHRISTMAS IN THE BARN*
+
+* From "In the Child's World," by Emilie Poulssen, Milton Bradley Co.,
+Publishers. Used by permission.
+
+F. ARNSTEIN
+
+Only two more days and Christmas would be here! It had been snowing
+hard, and Johnny was standing at the window, looking at the soft, white
+snow which covered the ground half a foot deep. Presently he heard the
+noise of wheels coming up the road, and a wagon turned in at the gate
+and came past the window. Johnny was very curious to know what the wagon
+could be bringing. He pressed his little nose close to the cold window
+pane, and to his great surprise, saw two large Christmas-trees. Johnny
+wondered why there were TWO trees, and turned quickly to run and tell
+mamma all about it; but then remembered that mamma was not at home. She
+had gone to the city to buy some Christmas presents and would not return
+until quite late. Johnny began to feel that his toes and fingers had
+grown quite cold from standing at the window so long; so he drew his
+own little chair up to the cheerful grate fire and sat there quietly
+thinking. Pussy, who had been curled up like a little bundle of wool,
+in the very warmest corner, jumped up, and, going to Johnny, rubbed her
+head against his knee to attract his attention. He patted her gently and
+began to talk to her about what was in his thoughts.
+
+He had been puzzling over the TWO trees which had come, and at last had
+made up his mind about them. "I know now, Pussy," said he, "why there
+are two trees. This morning when I kissed Papa good-bye at the gate
+he said he was going to buy one for me, and mamma, who was busy in the
+house, did not hear him say so; and I am sure she must have bought the
+other. But what shall we do with two Christmas-trees?"
+
+Pussy jumped into his lap and purred and purred. A plan suddenly flashed
+into Johnny's mind. "Would you like to have one, Pussy?" Pussy purred
+more loudly, and it seemed almost as though she had said yes.
+
+"Oh! I will, I will! if mamma will let me. I'll have a Christmas-tree
+out in the bam for you, Pussy, and for all the pets; and then you'll all
+be as happy as I shall be with my tree in the parlour."
+
+By this time it had grown quite late. There was a ring at the door-bell;
+and quick as a flash Johnny ran, with happy, smiling face, to meet papa
+and mamma and gave them each a loving kiss. During the evening he told
+them all that he had done that day and also about the two big trees
+which the man had brought. It was just as Johnny had thought. Papa and
+mamma had each bought one, and as it was so near Christmas they thought
+they would not send either of them back. Johnny was very glad of this,
+and told them of the happy plan he had made and asked if he might have
+the extra tree. Papa and mamma smiled a little as Johnny explained
+his plan but they said he might have the tree, and Johnny went to bed
+feeling very happy.
+
+That night his papa fastened the tree into a block of wood so that it
+would stand firmly and then set it in the middle of the barn floor. The
+next day when Johnny had finished his lessons he went to the kitchen,
+and asked Annie, the cook, if she would save the bones and potato
+parings and all other leavings from the day's meals and give them to him
+the following morning. He also begged her to give him several cupfuls
+of salt and cornmeal, which she did, putting them in paper bags for him.
+Then she gave him the dishes he asked for--a few chipped ones not good
+enough to be used at table--and an old wooden bowl. Annie wanted to
+know what Johnny intended to do with all these things, but he only
+said: "Wait until to-morrow, then you shall see." He gathered up all
+the things which the cook had given him and carried them to the barn,
+placing them on a shelf in one corner, where he was sure no one would
+touch them and where they would be all ready for him to use the next
+morning.
+
+Christmas morning came, and, as soon as he could, Johnny hurried out to
+the barn, where stood the Christmas-tree which he was going to trim for
+all his pets. The first thing he did was to get a paper bag of oats;
+this he tied to one of the branches of the tree, for Brownie the mare.
+Then he made up several bundles of hay and tied these on the other side
+of the tree, not quite so high up, where White Face, the cow, could
+reach them; and on the lowest branches some more hay for Spotty, the
+calf.
+
+Next Johnny hurried to the kitchen to get the things Annie had promised
+to save for him. She had plenty to give. With his arms and hands full he
+went back to the barn. He found three "lovely" bones with plenty of
+meat on them; these he tied together to another branch of the tree, for
+Rover, his big black dog. Under the tree he placed the big wooden
+bowl, and filled it well with potato parings, rice, and meat, left
+from yesterday's dinner; this was the "full and tempting trough" for
+Piggywig. Near this he placed a bowl of milk for Pussy, on one plate the
+salt for the pet lamb, and on another the cornmeal for the dear little
+chickens. On the top of the tree he tied a basket of nuts; these were
+for his pet squirrel; and I had almost forgotten to tell you of the
+bunch of carrots tied very low down where soft white Bunny could reach
+them.
+
+When all was done, Johnny stood off a little way to look at this
+wonderful Christmas-tree. Clapping his hands with delight, he ran to
+call papa and mamma and Annie, and they laughed aloud when they saw what
+he had done. It was the funniest Christmas-tree they had ever seen. They
+were sure the pets would like the presents Johnny had chosen.
+
+Then there was a busy time in the barn. Papa and mamma and Annie helped
+about bringing in the animals, and before long, Brownie, White Face,
+Spotty, Rover, Piggywig, Pussy, Lambkin, the chickens, the squirrel and
+Bunny, the rabbit, had been led each to his own Christmas breakfast on
+and under the tree. What a funny sight it was to see them all standing
+around looking happy and contented, eating and drinking with such an
+appetite!
+
+While watching them Johnny had another thought, and he ran quickly to
+the house, and brought out the new trumpet which papa had given him for
+Christmas. By this time the animals had all finished their breakfast
+and Johnny gave a little toot on his trumpet as a signal that the tree
+festival was over. Brownie went, neighing and prancing, to her stall,
+White Face walked demurely off with a bellow, which Spotty, the calf,
+running at her heels, tried to imitate; the little lamb skipped bleating
+away; Piggywig walked off with a grunt; Pussy jumped on the fence with
+a mew; the squirrel still sat up in the tree cracking her nuts; Bunny
+hopped to her snug little quarters; while Rover, barking loudly, chased
+the chickens back to their coop. Such a hubbub of noises! Mamma said it
+sounded as if they were trying to say "Merry Christmas to you, Johnny!
+Merry Christmas to all."
+
+
+
+
+XXIV. THE PHILANTHROPIST'S CHRISTMAS*
+
+This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 82.
+
+JAMES WEBER LINN
+
+"Did you see this committee yesterday, Mr. Mathews?" asked the
+philanthropist.
+
+His secretary looked up.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"You recommend them then?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"For fifty thousand?"
+
+"For fifty thousand--yes, sir."
+
+"Their corresponding subscriptions are guaranteed?"
+
+"I went over the list carefully, Mr. Carter. The money is promised, and
+by responsible people."
+
+"Very well," said the philanthropist. "You may notify them, Mr. Mathews,
+that my fifty thousand will be available as the bills come in."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Old Mr. Carter laid down the letter he had been reading, and took up
+another. As he perused it his white eyebrows rose in irritation.
+
+"Mr. Mathews!" he snapped.
+
+"Yes, sir?"
+
+"You are careless, sir!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mr. Carter?" questioned the secretary, his face
+flushing.
+
+The old gentleman tapped impatiently the letter he held in his hand. "Do
+you pay no attention, Mr. Mathews, to my rule that NO personal letters
+containing appeals for aid are to reach me? How do you account for this,
+may I ask?"
+
+"I beg your pardon," said the secretary again. "You will see, Mr.
+Carter, that that letter is dated three weeks ago. I have had the
+woman's case carefully investigated. She is undoubtedly of good
+reputation, and undoubtedly in need; and as she speaks of her father as
+having associated with you, I thought perhaps you would care to see her
+letter."
+
+"A thousand worthless fellows associated with me," said the old man,
+harshly. "In a great factory, Mr. Mathews, a boy works alongside of the
+men he is put with; he does not pick and choose. I dare say this woman
+is telling the truth. What of it? You know that I regard my money as
+a public trust. Were my energy, my concentration, to be wasted by
+innumerable individual assaults, what would become of them? My fortune
+would slip through my fingers as unprofitably as sand. You understand,
+Mr. Mathews? Let me see no more individual letters. You know that Mr.
+Whittemore has full authority to deal with them. May I trouble you to
+ring? I am going out."
+
+A man appeared very promptly in answer to the bell.
+
+"Sniffen, my overcoat," said the philanthropist.
+
+"It is 'ere, sir," answered Sniffen, helping the thin old man into the
+great fur folds.
+
+"There is no word of the dog, I suppose, Sniffen?"
+
+"None, sir. The police was here again yesterday sir, but they said as
+'ow--"
+
+"The police!" The words were fierce with scorn. "Eight thousand
+incompetents!" He turned abruptly and went toward the door, where he
+halted a moment.
+
+"Mr. Mathews, since that woman's letter did reach me, I suppose I must
+pay for my carelessness--or yours. Send her--what does she say--four
+children?--send her a hundred dollars. But, for my sake, send it
+anonymously. Write her that I pay no attention to such claims." He went
+out, and Sniffen closed the door behind him.
+
+"Takes losin' the little dog 'ard, don't he?" remarked Sniffen, sadly,
+to the secretary. "I'm afraid there ain't a chance of findin' 'im now.
+'E ain't been stole, nor 'e ain't been found, or they'd 'ave brung him
+back for the reward. 'E's been knocked on the 'ead, like as not. 'E
+wasn't much of a dog to look at, you see--just a pup, I'd call 'im. An'
+after 'e learned that trick of slippin' 'is collar off--well, I fancy
+Mr. Carter's seen the last of 'im. I do, indeed."
+
+Mr. Carter meanwhile was making his way slowly down the snowy avenue,
+upon his accustomed walk. The walk, however, was dull to-day, for
+Skiddles, his little terrier, was not with him to add interest and
+excitement. Mr. Carter had found Skiddles in the country a year and
+a half before. Skiddles, then a puppy, was at the time in a most
+undignified and undesirable position, stuck in a drain tile, and unable
+either to advance or to retreat. Mr. Carter had shoved him forward,
+after a heroic struggle, whereupon Skiddles had licked his hand.
+Something in the little dog's eye, or his action, had induced the
+rich philanthropist to bargain for him and buy him at a cost of half
+a dollar. Thereafter Skiddles became his daily companion, his chief
+distraction, and finally the apple of his eye.
+
+Skiddles was of no known parentage, hardly of any known breed, but
+he suited Mr. Carter. What, the millionaire reflected with a proud
+cynicism, were his own antecedents, if it came to that? But now Skiddles
+had disappeared.
+
+As Sniffen said, he had learned the trick of slipping free from his
+collar. One morning the great front doors had been left open for two
+minutes while the hallway was aired. Skiddles must have slipped down the
+marble steps unseen, and dodged round the corner. At all events, he
+had vanished, and although the whole police force of the city had been
+roused to secure his return, it was aroused in vain. And for three
+weeks, therefore, a small, straight, white bearded man in a fur overcoat
+had walked in mournful irritation alone.
+
+He stood upon a corner uncertainly. One way led to the park, and this he
+usually took; but to-day he did not want to go to the park--it was too
+reminiscent of Skiddles. He looked the other way. Down there, if one
+went far enough, lay "slums," and Mr. Carter hated the sight of slums;
+they always made him miserable and discontented. With all his money
+and his philanthropy, was there still necessity for such misery in the
+world? Worse still came the intrusive question at times: Had all his
+money anything to do with the creation of this misery? He owned no
+tenements; he paid good wages in every factory; he had given sums such
+as few men have given in the history of philanthropy. Still--there
+were the slums. However, the worst slums lay some distance off, and he
+finally turned his back on the park and walked on.
+
+It was the day before Christmas. You saw it in people's faces; you saw
+it in the holly wreaths that hung in windows; you saw it, even as you
+passed the splendid, forbidding houses on the avenue, in the green that
+here and there banked massive doors; but most of all, you saw it in the
+shops. Up here the shops were smallish, and chiefly of the provision
+variety, so there was no bewildering display of gifts; but there were
+Christmas-trees everywhere, of all sizes. It was astonishing how many
+people in that neighbourhood seemed to favour the old-fashioned idea of
+a tree.
+
+Mr. Carter looked at them with his irritation softening. If they made
+him feel a trifle more lonely, they allowed him to feel also a trifle
+less responsible--for, after all, it was a fairly happy world.
+
+At this moment he perceived a curious phenomenon a short distance before
+him--another Christmas-tree, but one which moved, apparently of its own
+volition, along the sidewalk. As Mr. Carter overtook it, he saw that
+it was borne, or dragged, rather by a small boy who wore a bright red
+flannel cap and mittens of the same peculiar material. As Mr. Carter
+looked down at him, he looked up at Mr. Carter, and spoke cheerfully:
+
+"Goin' my way, mister?"
+
+"Why," said the philanthropist, somewhat taken back, "I WAS!"
+
+"Mind draggin' this a little way?" asked the boy, confidently, "my hands
+is cold."
+
+"Won't you enjoy it more if you manage to take it home by yourself?"
+
+"Oh, it ain't for me!" said the boy.
+
+"Your employer," said the philanthropist, severely, "is certainly
+careless if he allows his trees to be delivered in this fashion."
+
+"I ain't deliverin' it, either," said the boy. "This is Bill's tree."
+
+"Who is Bill?"
+
+"He's a feller with a back that's no good."
+
+"Is he your brother?"
+
+"No. Take the tree a little way, will you, while I warm myself?"
+
+The philanthropist accepted the burden--he did not know why. The boy,
+released, ran forward, jumped up and down, slapped his red flannel
+mittens on his legs, and then ran back again. After repeating these
+manoeuvres two or three times, he returned to where the old gentleman
+stood holding the tree.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "Say, mister, you look like Santa Claus yourself,
+standin' by the tree, with your fur cap and your coat. I bet you don't
+have to run to keep warm, hey?" There was high admiration in his look.
+Suddenly his eyes sparkled with an inspiration.
+
+"Say, mister," he cried, "will you do something for me? Come in to
+Bill's--he lives only a block from here--and just let him see you. He's
+only a kid, and he'll think he's seen Santa Claus, sure. We can tell him
+you're so busy to-morrow you have to go to lots of places to-day. You
+won't have to give him anything. We're looking out for all that. Bill
+got hurt in the summer, and he's been in bed ever since. So we are
+giving him a Christmas--tree and all. He gets a bunch of things--an air
+gun, and a train that goes around when you wind her up. They're great!"
+
+"You boys are doing this?"
+
+"Well, it's our club at the settlement, and of course Miss Gray thought
+of it, and she's givin' Bill the train. Come along, mister."
+
+But Mr. Carter declined.
+
+"All right," said the boy. "I guess, what with Pete and all, Bill will
+have Christmas enough."
+
+"Who is Pete?"
+
+"Bill's dog. He's had him three weeks now--best little pup you ever
+saw!"
+
+A dog which Bill had had three weeks--and in a neighbourhood not a
+quarter of a mile from the avenue. It was three weeks since Skiddles had
+disappeared. That this dog was Skiddles was of course most improbable,
+and yet the philanthropist was ready to grasp at any clue which might
+lead to the lost terrier.
+
+"How did Bill get this dog?" he demanded.
+
+"I found him myself. Some kids had tin-canned him, and he came into our
+entry. He licked my hand, and then sat up on his hind legs. Somebody'd
+taught him that, you know. I thought right away, 'Here's a dog for
+Bill!' And I took him over there and fed him, and they kept him in
+Bill's room two or three days, so he shouldn't get scared again and run
+off; and now he wouldn't leave Bill for anybody. Of course, he ain't
+much of a dog, Pete ain't," he added "he's just a pup, but he's mighty
+friendly!"
+
+"Boy," said Mr. Carter, "I guess I'll just go round and"--he was about
+to add, "have a look at that dog," but fearful of raising suspicion, he
+ended--"and see Bill."
+
+The tenements to which the boy led him were of brick, and reasonably
+clean. Nearly every window showed some sign of Christmas.
+
+The tree-bearer led the way into a dark hall, up one flight--Mr. Carter
+assisting with the tree--and down another dark hall, to a door, on which
+he knocked. A woman opened it.
+
+"Here's the tree!" said the boy, in a loud whisper. "Is Bill's door
+shut?"
+
+Mr. Carter stepped forward out of the darkness. "I beg your pardon,
+madam," he said. "I met this young man in the street, and he asked me
+to come here and see a playmate of his who is, I understand, an invalid.
+But if I am intruding--"
+
+"Come in," said the woman, heartily, throwing the door open. "Bill will
+be glad to see you, sir."
+
+The philanthropist stepped inside.
+
+The room was decently furnished and clean. There was a sewing machine in
+the corner, and in both the windows hung wreaths of holly. Between the
+windows was a cleared space, where evidently the tree, when decorated,
+was to stand.
+
+"Are all the things here?" eagerly demanded the tree-bearer.
+
+"They're all here, Jimmy," answered Mrs. Bailey. "The candy just came."
+
+"Say," cried the boy, pulling off his red flannel mittens to blow on his
+fingers, "won't it be great? But now Bill's got to see Santa Claus. I'll
+just go in and tell him, an' then, when I holler, mister, you come on,
+and pretend you're Santa Claus." And with incredible celerity the boy
+opened the door at the opposite end of the room and disappeared.
+
+"Madam," said Mr. Carter, in considerable embarrassment, "I must say one
+word. I am Mr. Carter, Mr. Allan Carter. You may have heard my name?"
+
+She shook her head. "No, sir."
+
+"I live not far from here on the avenue. Three weeks ago I lost a little
+dog that I valued very much I have had all the city searched since then,
+in vain. To-day I met the boy who has just left us. He informed me that
+three weeks ago he found a dog, which is at present in the possession of
+your son. I wonder--is it not just possible that this dog may be mine?"
+
+Mrs. Bailey smiled. "I guess not, Mr. Carter. The dog Jimmy found hadn't
+come off the avenue--not from the look of him. You know there's hundreds
+and hundreds of dogs without homes, sir. But I will say for this one, he
+has a kind of a way with him."
+
+"Hark!" said Mr. Carter.
+
+There was a rustling and a snuffing at the door at the far end of the
+room, a quick scratching of feet. Then:
+
+"Woof! woof! woof!" sharp and clear came happy impatient little barks.
+The philanthropist's eyes brightened. "Yes," he said, "that is the dog."
+
+"I doubt if it can be, sir," said Mrs. Bailey, deprecatingly.
+
+"Open the door, please," commanded the philanthropist, "and let us
+see." Mrs. Bailey complied. There was a quick jump, a tumbling rush,
+and Skiddles, the lost Skiddles, was in the philanthropist's arms. Mrs.
+Bailey shut the door with a troubled face.
+
+"I see it's your dog, sir," she said, "but I hope you won't be thinking
+that Jimmy or I--"
+
+"Madam," interrupted Mr. Carter, "I could not be so foolish. On the
+contrary, I owe you a thousand thanks."
+
+Mrs. Bailey looked more cheerful. "Poor little Billy!" she said. "It'll
+come hard on him, losing Pete just at Christmas time. But the boys are
+so good to him, I dare say he'll forget it."
+
+"Who are these boys?" inquired the philanthropist. "Isn't their
+action--somewhat unusual?"
+
+"It's Miss Gray's club at the settlement, sir," explained Mrs. Bailey.
+"Every Christmas they do this for somebody. It's not charity; Billy and
+I don't need charity, or take it. It's just friendliness. They're good
+boys."
+
+"I see," said the philanthropist. He was still wondering about it,
+though, when the door opened again, and Jimmy thrust out a face shining
+with anticipation.
+
+"All ready, mister!" he said. "Bill's waitin' for you!"
+
+"Jimmy," began Mrs. Bailey, about to explain, "the gentleman--"
+
+But the philanthropist held up his hand, interrupting her. "You'll let
+me see your son, Mrs. Bailey?" he asked, gently.
+
+"Why, certainly, sir."
+
+Mr. Carter put Skiddles down and walked slowly into the inner room.
+The bed stood with its side toward him. On it lay a small boy of seven,
+rigid of body, but with his arms free and his face lighted with joy.
+"Hello, Santa Claus!" he piped, in a voice shrill with excitement.
+
+"Hello, Bill!" answered the philanthropist, sedately.
+
+The boy turned his eyes on Jimmy.
+
+"He knows my name," he said, with glee.
+
+"He knows everybody's name," said Jimmy. "Now you tell him what you
+want, Bill, and he'll bring it to-morrow.
+
+"How would you like," said the philanthropist, reflectively, "an--an--"
+he hesitated, it seemed so incongruous with that stiff figure on the
+bed--"an airgun?"
+
+"I guess yes," said Bill, happily.
+
+"And a train of cars," broke in the impatient Jimmy, "that goes like
+sixty when you wind her?"
+
+"Hi!" said Bill.
+
+The philanthropist solemnly made notes of this.
+
+"How about," he remarked, inquiringly, "a tree?"
+
+"Honest?" said Bill.
+
+"I think it can be managed," said Santa Claus. He advanced to the
+bedside.
+
+"I'm glad to have seen you, Bill. You know how busy I am, but I hope--I
+hope to see you again."
+
+"Not till next year, of course," warned Jimmy.
+
+"Not till then, of course," assented Santa Claus. "And now, good-bye."
+
+"You forgot to ask him if he'd been a good boy," suggested Jimmy.
+
+"I have," said Bill. "I've been fine. You ask mother."
+
+"She gives you--she gives you both a high character," said Santa Claus.
+"Good-bye again," and so saying he withdrew. Skiddles followed him out.
+The philanthropist closed the door of the bedroom, and then turned to
+Mrs. Bailey.
+
+She was regarding him with awestruck eyes.
+
+"Oh, sir," she said, "I know now who you are--the Mr. Carter that gives
+so much away to people!"
+
+The philanthropist nodded, deprecatingly.
+
+"Just so, Mrs. Bailey," he said. "And there is one gift--or loan
+rather--which I should like to make to you. I should like to leave the
+little dog with you till after the holidays. I'm afraid I'll have to
+claim him then; but if you'll keep him till after Christmas--and let me
+find, perhaps, another dog for Billy--I shall be much obliged."
+
+Again the door of the bedroom opened, and Jimmy emerged quietly.
+
+"Bill wants the pup," he explained.
+
+"Pete! Pete!" came the piping but happy voice from the inner room.
+
+Skiddles hesitated. Mr. Carter made no sign.
+
+"Pete! Pete!" shrilled the voice again.
+
+Slowly, very slowly, Skiddles turned and went back into the bedroom.
+
+"You see," said Mr. Carter, smiling, "he won't be too unhappy away from
+me, Mrs. Bailey."
+
+On his way home the philanthropist saw even more evidences of Christmas
+gaiety along the streets than before. He stepped out briskly, in spite
+of his sixty-eight years; he even hummed a little tune.
+
+When he reached the house on the avenue he found his secretary still at
+work.
+
+"Oh, by the way, Mr. Mathews," he said, "did you send that letter to the
+woman, saying I never paid attention to personal appeals? No? Then write
+her, please, enclosing my check for two hundred dollars, and wish her a
+very Merry Christmas in my name, will you? And hereafter will you
+always let me see such letters as that one--of course after careful
+investigation? I fancy perhaps I may have been too rigid in the past."
+
+"Certainly, sir," answered the bewildered secretary. He began fumbling
+excitedly for his note-book.
+
+"I found the little dog," continued the philanthropist. "You will be
+glad to know that."
+
+"You have found him?" cried the secretary. "Have you got him back, Mr.
+Carter? Where was he?"
+
+"He was--detained--on Oak Street, I believe," said the philanthropist.
+"No, I have not got him back yet. I have left him with a young boy till
+after the holidays."
+
+He settled himself to his papers, for philanthropists must toil even
+on the twenty-fourth of December, but the secretary shook his head in a
+daze. "I wonder what's happened?" he said to himself.
+
+
+
+
+XXV. THE FIRST CHRISTMAS-TREE
+
+BY LUCY WHEELOCK
+
+Two little children were sitting by the fire one cold winter's night.
+All at once they heard a timid knock at the door and one ran to open it.
+
+There, outside in the cold and darkness, stood a child with no shoes
+upon his feet and clad in thin, ragged garments. He was shivering with
+cold, and he asked to come in and warm himself.
+
+"Yes, come in," cried both the children. "You shall have our place by
+the fire. Come in."
+
+They drew the little stranger to their warm seat and shared their supper
+with him, and gave him their bed, while they slept on a hard bench.
+
+In the night they were awakened by strains of sweet music, and looking
+out, they saw a band of children in shining garments, approaching the
+house. They were playing on golden harps and the air was full of melody.
+
+Suddenly the Strange Child stood before them: no longer cold and ragged,
+but clad in silvery light.
+
+His soft voice said: "I was cold and you took Me in. I was hungry and
+you fed Me. I was tired and you gave Me your bed. I am the Christ-Child,
+wandering through the world to bring peace and happiness to all good
+children. As you have given to Me, so may this tree every year give rich
+fruit to you."
+
+So saying, He broke a branch from the fir-tree that grew near the door,
+and He planted it in the ground and disappeared. And the branch grew
+into a great tree, and every year it bore wonderful fruit for the kind
+children.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI. THE FIRST NEW ENGLAND CHRISTMAS*
+
+From Stone and Fickett's "Every Day Life in the Colonies;" copyrighted
+1905, by D. C. Heath & Co. Used by permission.
+
+G. L. STONE AND M. G. FICKETT
+
+It was a warm and pleasant Saturday--that twenty-third of December,
+1620. The winter wind had blown itself away in the storm of the day
+before, and the air was clear and balmy. The people on board the
+Mayflower were glad of the pleasant day. It was three long months since
+they had started from Plymouth, in England, to seek a home across the
+ocean. Now they had come into a harbour that they named New Plymouth, in
+the country of New England.
+
+Other people called these voyagers Pilgrims, which means wanderers. A
+long while before, the Pilgrims had lived in England; later they made
+their home with the Dutch in Holland; finally they had said goodbye to
+their friends in Holland and in England, and had sailed away to America.
+
+There were only one hundred and two of the Pilgrims on the Mayflower,
+but they were brave and strong and full of hope. Now the Mayflower was
+the only home they had; yet if this weather lasted they might soon have
+warm log-cabins to live in. This very afternoon the men had gone ashore
+to cut down the large trees.
+
+The women of the Mayflower were busy, too. Some were spinning, some
+knitting, some sewing. It was so bright and pleasant that Mistress Rose
+Standish had taken out her knitting and had gone to sit a little while
+on deck. She was too weak to face rough weather, and she wanted to
+enjoy the warm sunshine and the clear salt air. By her side was Mistress
+Brewster, the minister's wife. Everybody loved Mistress Standish and
+Mistress Brewster, for neither of them ever spoke unkindly.
+
+The air on deck would have been warm even on a colder day, for in one
+corner a bright fire was burning. It would seem strange now, would it
+not, to see a fire on the deck of a vessel? But in those days, when the
+weather was pleasant, people on shipboard did their cooking on deck.
+
+The Pilgrims had no stoves, and Mistress Carver's maid had built this
+fire on a large hearth covered with sand. She had hung a great kettle
+on the crane over the fire, where the onion soup for supper was now
+simmering slowly.
+
+Near the fire sat a little girl, busily playing and singing to herself.
+Little Remember Allerton was only six years old, but she liked to be
+with Hannah, Mistress Carver's maid. This afternoon Remember had been
+watching Hannah build the fire and make the soup. Now the little girl
+was playing with the Indian arrowheads her father had brought her the
+night before. She was singing the words of the old psalm:
+
+"Shout to Jehovah, all the earth, Serve ye Jehovah with gladness; before
+Him bow with singing mirth."
+
+"Ah, child, methinks the children of Old England are singing different
+words from those to-day," spoke Hannah at length, with a faraway look in
+her eyes.
+
+"Why, Hannah? What songs are the little English children singing now?"
+questioned Remember in surprise.
+
+"It lacks but two days of Christmas, child, and in my old home everybody
+is singing Merry Christmas songs."
+
+"But thou hast not told me what is Christmas!' persisted the child.
+
+"Ah, me! Thou dost not know, 'tis true. Christmas, Remember, is the
+birthday of the Christ-Child, of Jesus, whom thou hast learned to love,"
+Hannah answered softly.
+
+"But what makes the English children so happy then? And we are English,
+thou hast told me, Hannah. Why don't we keep Christmas, too?"
+
+"In sooth we are English, child. But the reason why we do not sing the
+Christmas carols or play the Christmas games makes a long, long story,
+Remember. Hannah cannot tell it so that little children will understand.
+Thou must ask some other, child."
+
+Hannah and the little girl were just then near the two women on the
+deck, and Remember said:
+
+"Mistress Brewster, Hannah sayeth she knoweth not how to tell why Love
+and Wrestling and Constance and the others do not sing the Christmas
+songs or play the Christmas games. But thou wilt tell me wilt thou not?"
+she added coaxingly.
+
+A sad look came into Mistress Brewster's eyes, and Mistress Standish
+looked grave, too. No one spoke for a few seconds, until Hannah said
+almost sharply:
+
+"Why could we not burn a Yule log Monday, and make some meal into little
+cakes for the children?"
+
+"Nay, Hannah," answered the gentle voice of Mistress Brewster. "Such
+are but vain shows and not for those of us who believe in holier things.
+But," she added, with a kind glance at little Remember, "wouldst thou
+like to know why we have left Old England and do not keep the Christmas
+Day? Thou canst not understand it all, child, and yet it may do thee no
+harm to hear the story. It may help thee to be a brave and happy little
+girl in the midst of our hard life."
+
+"Surely it can do no harm, Mistress Brewster," spoke Rose Standish,
+gently. "Remember is a little Pilgrim now, and she ought, methinks, to
+know something of the reason for our wandering. Come here, child, and
+sit by me, while good Mistress Brewster tells thee how cruel men have
+made us suffer. Then will I sing thee one of the Christmas carols."
+
+With these words she held out her hands to little Remember, who ran
+quickly to the side of Mistress Standish, and eagerly waited for the
+story to begin.
+
+"We have not always lived in Holland, Remember. Most of us were born in
+England, and England is the best country in the world. 'Tis a land to
+be proud of, Remember, though some of its rulers have been wicked and
+cruel.
+
+"Long before you were born, when your mother was a little girl, the
+English king said that everybody in the land ought to think as he
+thought, and go to a church like his. He said he would send us away from
+England if we did not do as he ordered. Now, we could not think as
+he did on holy matters, and it seemed wrong to us to obey him. So we
+decided to go to a country where we might worship as we pleased."
+
+"What became of that cruel king, Mistress Brewster?"
+
+"He ruleth England now. But thou must not think too hardly of him. He
+doth not understand, perhaps. Right will win some day, Remember, though
+there may be bloody war before peace cometh. And I thank God that we, at
+least, shall not be called on to live in the midst of the strife," she
+went on, speaking more to herself than to the little girl.
+
+"We decided to go to Holland, out of the reach of the king. We were
+not sure whether it was best to move or not, but our hearts were set on
+God's ways. We trusted Him in whom we believed. Yes," she went on, "and
+shall we not keep on trusting Him?"
+
+And Rose Standish, remembering the little stock of food that was nearly
+gone, the disease that had come upon many of their number, and the five
+who had died that month, answered firmly: "Yes. He who has led us thus
+far will not leave us now."
+
+They were all silent a few seconds. Presently Remember said: "Then did
+ye go to Holland, Mistress Brewster?"
+
+"Yes," she said. "Our people all went over to Holland, where the Dutch
+folk live and the little Dutch children clatter about with their wooden
+shoes. There thou wast born, Remember, and my own children, and there we
+lived in love and peace."
+
+"And yet, we were not wholly happy. We could not talk well with the
+Dutch, and so we could not set right what was wrong among them. 'Twas
+so hard to earn money that many had to go back to England. And worst of
+all, Remember, we were afraid that you and little Bartholomew and Mary
+and Love and Wrestling and all the rest would not grow to be good girls
+and boys. And so we have come to this new country to teach our children
+to be pure and noble."
+
+After another silence Remember spoke again: "I thank thee, Mistress
+Brewster. And I will try to be a good girl. But thou didst not tell me
+about Christmas after all."
+
+"Nay, child, but now I will. There are long services on that day in
+every church where the king's friends go. But there are parts of these
+services which we cannot approve; and so we think it best not to follow
+the other customs that the king's friends observe on Christmas.
+
+"They trim their houses with mistletoe and holly so that everything
+looks gay and cheerful. Their other name for the Christmas time is the
+Yuletide, and the big log that is burned then is called the Yule log.
+The children like to sit around the hearth in front of the great,
+blazing Yule log, and listen to stories of long, long ago.
+
+"At Christmas there are great feasts in England, too. No one is allowed
+to go hungry, for the rich people on the day always send meat and cakes
+to the poor folk round about.
+
+"But we like to make all our days Christmas days, Remember. We try never
+to forget God's gifts to us, and they remind us always to be good to
+other people."
+
+"And the Christmas carols, Mistress Standish? What are they?"
+
+"On Christmas Eve and early on Christmas morning," Rose Standish
+answered, "little children go about from house to house, singing
+Christmas songs. 'Tis what I like best in all the Christmas cheer. And I
+promised to sing thee one, did I not?"
+
+Then Mistress Standish sang in her dear, sweet voice the quaint old
+English words:
+
+ As Joseph was a-walking,
+ He heard an angel sing:
+ "This night shall be the birth-time
+ Of Christ, the heavenly King.
+
+ "He neither shall be born
+ In housen nor in hall,
+ Nor in the place of Paradise,
+ But in an ox's stall.
+
+ "He neither shall be clothed
+ In purple nor in pall,
+ But in the fair white linen
+ That usen babies all.
+
+ "He neither shall be rocked
+ In silver nor in gold,
+ But in a wooden manger
+ That resteth in the mould."
+
+ As Joseph was a-walking
+ There did an angel sing,
+ And Mary's child at midnight
+ Was born to be our King.
+
+ Then be ye glad, good people,
+ This night of all the year,
+ And light ye up your candles,
+ For His star it shineth clear.
+
+Before the song was over, Hannah had come on deck again, and was
+listening eagerly. "I thank thee, Mistress Standish," she said, the
+tears filling her blue eyes. "'Tis long, indeed, since I have heard that
+song."
+
+"Would it be wrong for me to learn to sing those words, Mistress
+Standish?" gently questioned the little girl.
+
+"Nay, Remember, I trow not. The song shall be thy Christmas gift."
+
+Then Mistress Standish taught the little girl one verse after another
+of the sweet old carol, and it was not long before Remember could say it
+all.
+
+The next day was dull and cold, and on Monday, the twenty-fifth, the sky
+was still overcast. There was no bright Yule log in the Mayflower, and
+no holly trimmed the little cabin.
+
+The Pilgrims were true to the faith they loved. They held no special
+service. They made no gifts.
+
+Instead, they went again to the work of cutting the trees, and no one
+murmured at his hard lot.
+
+"We went on shore," one man wrote in his diary, "some to fell timber,
+some to saw, some to rive, and some to carry; so no man rested all that
+day."
+
+As for little Remember, she spent the day on board the Mayflower. She
+heard no one speak of England or sigh for the English home across the
+sea. But she did not forget Mistress Brewster's story; and more than
+once that day, as she was playing by herself, she fancied that she was
+in front of some English home, helping the English children sing their
+Christmas songs. And both Mistress Allerton and Mistress Standish, whom
+God was soon to call away from their earthly home, felt happier and
+stronger as they heard the little girl singing:
+
+ He neither shall be born
+ In housen nor in hall,
+ Nor in the place of Paradise,
+ But in an ox's stall.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII. THE CRATCHITS' CHRISTMAS DINNER
+
+(Adapted)
+
+CHARLES DICKENS
+
+Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Present stood in the city streets on
+Christmas morning, where (for the weather was severe) the people made a
+rough but brisk and not unpleasant kind of music, in scraping the snow
+from the pavement in front of their dwellings, and from the tops of
+their houses, whence it was mad delight to the boys to see it come
+plumping down into the road below, and splitting into artificial little
+snowstorms.
+
+The house fronts looked black enough, and the windows blacker,
+contrasting with the smooth white sheet of snow upon the roofs, and with
+the dirtier snow upon the ground, which last deposit had been ploughed
+up in deep furrows by the heavy wheels of carts and wagons; furrows
+that crossed and recrossed each other hundreds of times where the great
+streets branched off, and made intricate channels, hard to trace, in
+the thick yellow mud and icy water. The sky was gloomy, and the shortest
+streets were choked up with a dingy mist, half thawed, half frozen,
+whose heavier particles descended in a shower of sooty atoms, as if all
+the chimneys in Great Britain had, by one consent, caught fire, and
+were blazing away to their dear heart's content. There was nothing
+very cheerful in the climate or the town, and yet was there an air of
+cheerfulness abroad that the dearest summer air and brightest summer sun
+might have endeavoured to diffuse in vain.
+
+For the people who were shovelling away on the housetops were jovial and
+full of glee, calling out to one another from the parapets, and now and
+then exchanging a facetious snowball--better-natured missile far than
+many a wordy jest--laughing heartily if it went right, and not less
+heartily if it went wrong. The poulterers' shops were still half open,
+and the fruiterers' were radiant in their glory. There were great,
+round, potbellied baskets of chestnuts, shaped like the waistcoats of
+jolly old gentlemen, lolling at the doors, and tumbling out into the
+street in their apoplectic opulence.
+
+There were ruddy, brown-faced, broad-girthed Spanish onions, shining in
+the fatness of their growth like Spanish friars, and winking, from their
+shelves, in wanton slyness at the girls as they went by, and glanced
+demurely at the hung-up mistletoe. There were pears and apples,
+clustering high in blooming pyramids; there were bunches of grapes,
+made, in the shop-keeper's benevolence, to dangle from conspicuous
+hooks, that people's mouths might water gratis as they passed; there
+were piles of filberts, mossy and brown, recalling, in their fragrance,
+ancient walks among the woods, and pleasant shufflings ankle deep
+through withered leaves; there were Norfolk biffins, squab and swarthy,
+setting off the yellow of the oranges and lemons, and, in the great
+compactness of their juicy persons, urgently entreating and beseeching
+to be carried home in paper bags and eaten after dinner. The very gold
+and silver fish, set forth among these choice fruits in a bowl, though
+members of a dull and stagnant-blooded race, appeared to know that there
+was something going on; and, to a fish, went gasping round and round
+their little world in slow and passionless excitement.
+
+The grocers'! oh, the grocers'! nearly closed, with perhaps two shutters
+down, or one; but through those gaps such glimpses! It was not alone
+that the scales descending on the counter made a merry sound, or that
+the twine and roller parted company so briskly, or that the canisters
+were rattled up and down like juggling tricks, or even that the blended
+scents of tea and coffee were so grateful to the nose, or even that the
+raisins were so plentiful and rare, the almonds so extremely white, the
+sticks of cinnamon so long and straight, the other spices so delicious,
+the candied fruits so caked and spotted with molten sugar as to make the
+coldest lookers-on feel faint, and subsequently bilious. Nor was it
+that the figs were moist and pulpy, or that the French plums blushed in
+modest tartness from their highly decorated boxes, or that everything
+was good to eat and in its Christmas dress; but the customers were all
+so hurried and so eager in the hopeful promise of the day that they
+tumbled up against each other at the door, crashing their wicker baskets
+wildly, and left their purchases upon the counter, and came running back
+to fetch them, and committed hundreds of the like mistakes, in the best
+humour possible; while the grocer and his people were so frank and fresh
+that the polished hearts with which they fastened their aprons behind
+might have been their own, worn outside for general inspection, and for
+Christmas daws to peck at, if they chose.
+
+But soon the steeples called good people all to church and chapel, and
+away they came, flocking through the streets in their best clothes, and
+with their gayest faces. And at the same time there emerged from
+scores of by-streets, lanes, and nameless turnings, innumerable people,
+carrying their dinners to the bakers' shops. The sight of these poor
+revellers appeared to interest the Spirit very much, for he stood, with
+Scrooge beside him, in a baker's doorway, and, taking off the covers as
+their bearers passed, sprinkled incense on their dinners from his torch.
+And it was a very uncommon kind of torch, for once or twice when there
+were angry words between some dinner-carriers who had jostled each
+other, he shed a few drops of water on them from it, and their
+good-humour was restored directly. For they said it was a shame to
+quarrel upon Christmas Day. And so it was! God love it, so it was!
+
+In time the bells ceased, and the bakers were shut up; and yet there was
+a genial shadowing forth of all these dinners, and the progress of their
+cooking, in the thawed blotch of wet above each baker's oven, where the
+pavement smoked as if its stones were cooking too.
+
+"Is there a peculiar flavour in what you sprinkle from your torch?"
+asked Scrooge.
+
+"There is. My own."
+
+"Would it apply to any kind of dinner on this day?" asked Scrooge.
+
+"To any kindly given. To a poor one most."
+
+"Why to a poor one most?" asked Scrooge.
+
+"Because it needs it most."
+
+They went on, invisible, as they had been before, into the suburbs of
+the town. It was a remarkable quality of the Ghost (which Scrooge had
+observed at the baker's) that, notwithstanding his gigantic size, he
+could accommodate himself to any place with ease; and that he stood
+beneath a low roof quite as gracefully, and like a supernatural
+creature, as it was possible he could have done in any lofty hall.
+
+And perhaps it was the pleasure the good Spirit had in showing off this
+power of his, or else it was his own kind, generous, hearty nature,
+and his sympathy with all poor men, that led him straight to Scrooge's
+clerk's; for there he went, and took Scrooge with him, holding to his
+robe; and on the threshold of the door the Spirit smiled, and stopped to
+bless Bob Cratchit's dwelling with the sprinklings of his torch. Think
+of that! Bob had but fifteen "bob" a week himself; he pocketed on
+Saturdays but fifteen copies of his Christian name; and yet the Ghost of
+Christmas Present blessed his four-roomed house!
+
+Then up rose Mrs. Cratchit, Cratchit's wife, dressed out but poorly in
+a twice-turned gown, but brave in ribbons, which are cheap and make a
+goodly show for sixpence; and she laid the cloth, assisted by Belinda
+Cratchit, second of her daughters, also brave in ribbons; while Master
+Peter Cratchit plunged a fork into the saucepan of potatoes, and getting
+the corners of his monstrous shirt-collar (Bob's private property,
+conferred upon his son and heir in honour of the day) into his mouth,
+rejoiced to find himself so gallantly attired, and yearned to show his
+linen in the fashionable parks. And now two smaller Cratchits, boy and
+girl, came tearing in, screaming that outside the baker's they had
+smelt the goose, and known it for their own, and, basking in luxurious
+thoughts of sage and onion, these young Cratchits danced about the
+table, and exalted Master Peter Cratchit to the skies, while he (not
+proud, although his collar nearly choked him) blew the fire, until the
+slow potatoes, bubbling up, knocked loudly at the saucepan lid to be let
+out and peeled.
+
+"What has ever got your precious father, then?" said Mrs. Cratchit. "And
+your brother, Tiny Tim? And Martha warn't as late last Christmas Day by
+half an hour!"
+
+"Here's Martha, mother!" said a girl, appearing as she spoke.
+
+"Here's Martha, mother!" cried the two young Cratchits. "Hurrah! There's
+such a goose, Martha!"
+
+"Why, bless your heart alive, my dear, how late you are!" said Mrs.
+Cratchit, kissing her a dozen times, and taking off her shawl and bonnet
+for her with officious zeal.
+
+"We'd a deal of work to finish up last night," replied the girl, "and
+had to clear away this morning, mother!"
+
+"Well, never mind so long as you are come," said Mrs. Cratchit. "Sit ye
+down before the fire, my dear, and have a warm, Lord bless ye!"
+
+"No, no! There's father coming!" cried the two young Cratchits, who were
+everywhere at once.
+
+"Hide, Martha, hide!"
+
+So Martha hid herself, and in came little Bob, the father, with at least
+three feet of comforter, exclusive of the fringe, hanging down
+before him, and his threadbare clothes darned up and brushed, to look
+seasonable; and Tiny Tim upon his shoulder. Alas for Tiny Tim, he bore a
+little crutch, and had his limbs supported by an iron frame!
+
+"Why, where's our Martha?" cried Bob Cratchit, looking around.
+
+"Not coming," said Mrs. Cratchit.
+
+"Not coming?" said Bob, with a sudden declension in his high spirits;
+for he had been Tim's blood horse all the way from the church, and had
+come home rampant. "Not coming upon Christmas Day?"
+
+Martha didn't like to see him disappointed, if it were only in joke; so
+she came out prematurely from behind the closet door, and ran into his
+arms, while the two young Cratchits hustled Tiny Tim, and bore him
+off into the wash-house, that he might hear the pudding singing in the
+copper.
+
+"And how did little Tim behave?" asked Mrs. Cratchit, when she had
+rallied Bob on his credulity, and Bob had hugged his daughter to his
+heart's content.
+
+"As good as gold," said Bob, "and better. Somehow he gets thoughtful,
+sitting by himself so much, and thinks the strangest things you ever
+heard. He told me, coming home, that he hoped the people saw him in the
+church, because he was a cripple, and it might be pleasant to them to
+remember, upon Christmas Day, who made lame beggars walk, and blind men
+see."
+
+Bob's voice was tremulous when he told them this, and trembled more when
+he said that Tiny Tim was growing strong and hearty.
+
+His active little crutch was heard upon the floor, and back came Tiny
+Tim before another word was spoken, escorted by his brother and sister
+to his stool beside the fire; and while Bob, turning up his cuffs--as
+if, poor fellow, they were capable of being made more shabby--compounded
+some hot mixture in a jug with gin and lemons, and stirred it round
+and round, and put it on the hob to simmer, Master Peter and the two
+ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the goose, with which they soon
+returned in high procession.
+
+Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of
+all birds--a feathered phenomenon, to which a black swan was a matter of
+course--and in truth it was something very like it in that house. Mrs.
+Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little saucepan) hissing
+hot; Master Peter mashed the potatoes with incredible vigour; Miss
+Belinda sweetened up the apple-sauce; Martha dusted the hot plates; Bob
+took Tiny Tim beside him in a tiny corner at the table; the two young
+Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting themselves, and,
+mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into their mouths, lest
+they should shriek for goose before their turn came to be helped. At
+last the dishes were set on and grace was said. It was succeeded by a
+breathless pause, as Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly all along the carving
+knife, prepared to plunge it into the breast; but when she did, and when
+the long expected gush of stuffing issued forth, one murmur of delight
+arose all round the board, and even Tiny Tim, excited by the two young
+Cratchits, beat on the table with the handle of his knife, and feebly
+cried, "Hurrah!"
+
+There never was such a goose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was
+such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness,
+were the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by apple-sauce and
+mashed potatoes, it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family;
+indeed, as Mrs. Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small
+atom of a bone upon the dish), they hadn't ate it all at last! Yet
+every one had had enough, and the youngest Cratchits in particular were
+steeped in sage and onion to the eyebrows! But now, the plates being
+changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs. Cratchit left the room alone--too nervous
+to bear witnesses--to take the pudding up, and bring it in.
+
+Suppose it should not be done enough? Suppose it should break in turning
+out? Suppose somebody should have got over the wall of the backyard and
+stolen it, while they were merry with the goose--a supposition at
+which the two young Cratchits became livid! All sorts of horrors were
+supposed.
+
+Hallo! A great deal of steam! The pudding was out of the copper. A smell
+like a washing-day! That was the cloth. A smell like an eating house and
+a pastry-cook's next door to each other, with a laundress's next door
+to that! That was the pudding! In half a minute Mrs. Cratchit
+entered--flushed, but smiling proudly--with the pudding, like a speckled
+cannon-ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half of half-a-quartern of
+ignited brandy, and bedight with Christmas holly stuck into the top.
+
+Oh, a wonderful pudding! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly, too, that he
+regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since
+their marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that, now the weight was off her
+mind, she would confess she had her doubts about the quantity of flour.
+Everybody had something to say about it, but nobody thought or said it
+was at all a small pudding for a large family. It would have been flat
+heresy to do so. Any Cratchit would have blushed to hint at such a
+thing.
+
+At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the hearth
+swept, and the fire made up. The compound in the jug being tasted, and
+considered perfect, tipples and oranges were put upon the table, and a
+shovelful of chestnuts on the fire. Then all the Cratchit family drew
+round the hearth in what Bob Cratchit called a circle, meaning half a
+one; and at Bob Cratchit's elbow stood the family display of glass--two
+tumblers and a custard-cup without a handle.
+
+These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as golden
+goblets would have done; and Bob served it out with beaming looks,
+while the chestnuts on the fire sputtered and cracked noisily. Then Bob
+proposed:
+
+"A Merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us!"
+
+Which all the family reechoed.
+
+"God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim, the last of all.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII. CHRISTMAS IN SEVENTEEN SEVENTY-SIX*
+
+*From "A Last Century Maid and Other Stories for Children," by A.H.W.
+Lippincott, 1895.
+
+ANNE HOLLINGSWORTH WHARTON
+
+ "On Christmas day in Seventy-six,
+ Our gallant troops with bayonets fixed,
+ To Trenton marched away."
+
+Children, have any of you ever thought of what little people like you
+were doing in this country more than a hundred years ago, when the
+cruel tide of war swept over its bosom? From many homes the fathers were
+absent, fighting bravely for the liberty which we now enjoy, while the
+mothers no less valiantly struggled against hardships and discomforts
+in order to keep a home for their children, whom you only know as your
+great-grandfathers and great-grandmothers, dignified gentlemen and
+beautiful ladies, whose painted portraits hang upon the walls in some
+of your homes. Merry, romping children they were in those far-off times,
+yet their bright faces must have looked grave sometimes, when they heard
+the grown people talk of the great things that were happening around
+them. Some of these little people never forgot the wonderful events
+of which they heard, and afterward related them to their children and
+grandchildren, which accounts for some of the interesting stories which
+you may still hear, if you are good children.
+
+The Christmas story that I have to tell you is about a boy and girl
+who lived in Bordentown, New Jersey. The father of these children was
+a soldier in General Washington's army, which was encamped a few miles
+north of Trenton, on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River.
+Bordentown, as you can see by looking on your map, if you have not
+hidden them all away for the holidays, is about seven miles south of
+Trenton, where fifteen hundred Hessians and a troop of British light
+horse were holding the town. Thus you see that the British, in force,
+were between Washington's army and Bordentown, besides which there were
+some British and Hessian troops in the very town. All this seriously
+interfered with Captain Tracy's going home to eat his Christmas dinner
+with his wife and children. Kitty and Harry Tracy, who had not lived
+long enough to see many wars, could not imagine such a thing as
+Christmas without their father, and had busied themselves for weeks in
+making everything ready to have a merry time with him. Kitty, who loved
+to play quite as much as any frolicsome Kitty of to-day, had spent all
+her spare time in knitting a pair of thick woollen stockings, which
+seems a wonderful feat for a little girl only eight years old to
+perform! Can you not see her sitting by the great chimney-place, filled
+with its roaring, crackling logs, in her quaint, short-waisted dress,
+knitting away steadily, and puckering up her rosy, dimpled face over the
+strange twists and turns of that old stocking? I can see her, and I can
+also hear her sweet voice as she chatters away to her mother about
+"how 'sprised papa will be to find that his little girl can knit like a
+grown-up woman," while Harry spreads out on the hearth a goodly store
+of shellbarks that he has gathered and is keeping for his share of the
+'sprise.
+
+"What if he shouldn't come?" asks Harry, suddenly.
+
+"Oh, he'll come! Papa never stays away on Christmas," says Kitty,
+looking up into her mother's face for an echo to her words. Instead she
+sees something very like tears in her mother's eyes.
+
+"Oh, mamma, don't you think he'll come?"
+
+"He will come if he possibly can," says Mrs. Tracy; "and if he cannot,
+we will keep Christmas whenever dear papa does come home."
+
+"It won't be half so nice," said Kitty, "nothing's so nice as REALLY
+Christmas, and how's Kriss Kringle going to know about it if we change
+the day?"
+
+"We'll let him come just the same, and if he brings anything for papa we
+can put it away for him."
+
+This plan, still, seemed a poor one to Miss Kitty, who went to her
+bed in a sober mood that night, and was heard telling her dear dollie,
+Martha Washington, that "wars were mis'able, and that when she married
+she should have a man who kept a candy-shop for a husband, and not a
+soldier--no, Martha, not even if he's as nice as papa!" As Martha made
+no objection to this little arrangement, being an obedient child, they
+were both soon fast asleep. The days of that cold winter of 1776 wore
+on; so cold it was that the sufferings of the soldiers were great, their
+bleeding feet often leaving marks on the pure white snow over which they
+marched. As Christmas drew near there was a feeling among the patriots
+that some blow was about to be struck; but what it was, and from whence
+they knew not; and, better than all, the British had no idea that any
+strong blow could come from Washington's army, weak and out of heart, as
+they thought, after being chased through Jersey by Cornwallis.
+
+Mrs. Tracy looked anxiously each day for news of the husband and father
+only a few miles away, yet so separated by the river and the enemy's
+troops that they seemed like a hundred. Christmas Eve came, but brought
+with it few rejoicings. The hearts of the people were too sad to be
+taken up with merrymaking, although the Hessian soldiers in the town,
+good-natured Germans, who only fought the Americans because they were
+paid for it, gave themselves up to the feasting and revelry.
+
+"Shall we hang up our stockings?" asked Kitty, in rather a doleful
+voice.
+
+"Yes," said her mother, "Santa Claus won't forget you, I am sure,
+although he has been kept pretty busy looking after the soldiers this
+winter."
+
+"Which side is he on?" asked Harry.
+
+"The right side, of course," said Mrs. Tracy, which was the most
+sensible answer she could possibly have given. So:
+
+"The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, In hopes that St.
+Nicholas soon would be there."
+
+Two little rosy faces lay fast asleep upon the pillow when the good old
+soul came dashing over the roof about one o'clock, and after filling
+each stocking with red apples, and leaving a cornucopia of sugar-plums
+for each child, he turned for a moment to look at the sleeping faces,
+for St. Nicholas has a tender spot in his great big heart for a
+soldier's children. Then, remembering many other small folks waiting for
+him all over the land, he sprang up the chimney and was away in a trice.
+
+Santa Claus, in the form of Mrs. Tracy's farmer brother, brought her
+a splendid turkey; but because the Hessians were uncommonly fond of
+turkey, it came hidden under a load of wood. Harry was very fond of
+turkey, too, as well as of all other good things; but when his mother
+said, "It's such a fine bird, it seems too bad to eat it without
+father," Harry cried out, "Yes, keep it for papa!" and Kitty, joining
+in the chorus, the vote was unanimous, and the turkey was hung away to
+await the return of the good soldier, although it seemed strange,
+as Kitty told Martha Washington, "to have no papa and no turkey on
+Christmas Day."
+
+The day passed and night came, cold with a steady fall of rain and
+sleet. Kitty prayed that her "dear papa might not be out in the storm,
+and that he might come home and wear his beautiful blue stockings"; "And
+eat his turkey," said Harry's sleepy voice; after which they were soon
+in the land of dreams. Toward morning the good people in Bordentown were
+suddenly aroused by firing in the distance, which became more and more
+distinct as the day wore on. There was great excitement in the town; men
+and women gathered together in little groups in the streets to wonder
+what it was all about, and neighbours came dropping into Mrs. Tracy's
+parlour, all day long, one after the other, to say what they thought of
+the firing. In the evening there came a body of Hessians flying into
+the town, to say that General Washington had surprised the British
+at Trenton, early that morning, and completely routed them, which
+so frightened the Hessians in Bordentown that they left without the
+slightest ceremony.
+
+It was a joyful hour to the good town people when the red-jackets turned
+their backs on them, thinking every moment that the patriot army would
+be after them. Indeed, it seemed as if wonders would never cease that
+day, for while rejoicings were still loud, over the departure of the
+enemy, there came a knock at Mrs. Tracy's door, and while she was
+wondering whether she dared open it, it was pushed ajar, and a tall
+soldier entered. What a scream of delight greeted that soldier, and
+how Kitty and Harry danced about him and clung to his knees, while Mrs.
+Tracy drew him toward the warm blaze, and helped him off with his damp
+cloak!
+
+Cold and tired Captain Tracy was, after a night's march in the streets
+and a day's fighting; but he was not too weary to smile at the dear
+faces around him, or to pat Kitty's head when she brought his warm
+stockings and would put them on the tired feet, herself.
+
+Suddenly there was a sharp, quick bark outside the door. "What's that?"
+cried Harry.
+
+"Oh, I forgot. Open the door. Here, Fido, Fido!"
+
+Into the room there sprang a beautiful little King Charles spaniel,
+white, with tan spots, and ears of the longest, softest, and silkiest.
+
+"What a little dear!" exclaimed Kitty; "where did it come from?"
+
+"From the battle of Trenton," said her father. "His poor master was
+shot. After the red-coats had turned their backs, and I was hurrying
+along one of the streets where the fight had been the fiercest, I heard
+a low groan, and, turning, saw a British officer lying among a number of
+slain. I raised his head; he begged for some water, which I brought him,
+and bending down my ear I heard him whisper, 'Dying--last battle--say
+a prayer.' He tried to follow me in the words of a prayer, and then,
+taking my hand, laid it on something soft and warm, nestling close up
+to his breast--it was this little dog. The gentleman--for he was a real
+gentleman--gasped out, 'Take care of my poor Fido; good-night,' and was
+gone. It was as much as I could do to get the little creature away from
+his dead master; he clung to him as if he loved him better than life.
+You'll take care of him, won't you, children? I brought him home to you,
+for a Christmas present."
+
+"Pretty little Fido," said Kitty, taking the soft, curly creature in her
+arms; "I think it's the best present in the world, and to-morrow is to
+be real Christmas, because you are home, papa."
+
+"And we'll eat the turkey," said Harry, "and shellbarks, lots of them,
+that I saved for you. What a good time we'll have! And oh, papa, don't
+go to war any more, but stay at home, with mother and Kitty and Fido and
+me."
+
+"What would become of our country if we should all do that, my little
+man? It was a good day's work that we did this Christmas, getting the
+army all across the river so quickly and quietly that we surprised the
+enemy, and gained a victory, with the loss of few men."
+
+Thus it was that some of the good people of 1776 spent their Christmas,
+that their children and grandchildren might spend many of them as
+citizens of a free nation.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX. CHRISTMAS UNDER THE SNOW*
+
+*From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904.
+
+OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+
+It was just before Christmas, and Mr. Barnes was starting for the
+nearest village. The family were out at the door to see him start, and
+give him the last charges.
+
+"Don't forget the Christmas dinner, papa," said Willie.
+
+'"Specially the chickens for the pie!" put in Nora.
+
+"An' the waisins," piped up little Tot, standing on tiptoe to give papa
+a good-bye kiss.
+
+"I hate to have you go, George," said Mrs. Barnes anxiously. "It looks
+to me like a storm."
+
+"Oh, I guess it won't be much," said Mr. Barnes lightly; "and the
+youngsters must have their Christmas dinner, you know."
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Barnes, "remember this, George: if there is a bad
+storm don't try to come back. Stay in the village till it is over. We
+can get along alone for a few days, can't we, Willie?" turning to the
+boy who was giving the last touches to the harness of old Tim, the
+horse.
+
+"Oh, yes! Papa, I can take care of mamma," said Willie earnestly.
+
+"And get up the Christmas dinner out of nothing?" asked papa, smiling.
+
+"I don't know," said Willie, hesitating, as he remembered the proposed
+dinner, in which he felt a deep interest.
+
+"What could you do for the chicken pie?" went on papa with a roguish
+look in his eye, "or the plum-pudding?"
+
+"Or the waisins?" broke in Tot anxiously.
+
+"Tot has set her heart on the raisins," said papa, tossing the small
+maiden up higher than his head, and dropping her all laughing on the
+door-step, "and Tot shall have them sure, if papa can find them in S--.
+Now good-bye, all! Willie, remember to take care of mamma, and I depend
+on you to get up a Christmas dinner if I don't get back. Now, wife,
+don't worry!" were his last words as the faithful old horse started down
+the road.
+
+Mrs. Barnes turned one more glance to the west, where a low, heavy bank
+of clouds was slowly rising, and went into the little house to attend to
+her morning duties.
+
+"Willie," she said, when they were all in the snug little log-cabin in
+which they lived, "I'm sure there's going to be a storm, and it may be
+snow. You had better prepare enough wood for two or three days; Nora
+will help bring it in."
+
+"Me, too!" said grave little Tot.
+
+"Yes, Tot may help too," said mamma.
+
+This simple little home was a busy place, and soon every one was hard
+at work. It was late in the afternoon before the pile of wood, which had
+been steadily growing all day, was high enough to satisfy Willie, for
+now there was no doubt about the coming storm, and it would probably
+bring snow; no one could guess how much, in that country of heavy
+storms.
+
+"I wish the village was not so far off, so that papa could get back
+to-night," said Willie, as he came in with his last load.
+
+Mrs. Barnes glanced out of the window. Broad scattering snowflakes were
+silently falling; the advance guard, she felt them to be, of a numerous
+host.
+
+"So do I," she replied anxiously, "or that he did not have to come over
+that dreadful prairie, where it is so easy to get lost."
+
+"But old Tim knows the way, even in the dark," said Willie proudly. "I
+believe Tim knows more'n some folks."
+
+"No doubt he does, about the way home," said mamma, "and we won't worry
+about papa, but have our supper and go to bed. That'll make the time
+seem short."
+
+The meal was soon eaten and cleared away, the fire carefully covered
+up on the hearth, and the whole little family quietly in bed. Then
+the storm, which had been making ready all day, came down upon them in
+earnest.
+
+The bleak wind howled around the corners, the white flakes by millions
+and millions came with it, and hurled themselves upon that house. In
+fact, that poor little cabin alone on the wide prairie seemed to be
+the object of their sport. They sifted through the cracks in the walls,
+around the windows, and under the door, and made pretty little drifts on
+the floor. They piled up against it outside, covered the steps, and then
+the door, and then the windows, and then the roof, and at last buried it
+completely out of sight under the soft, white mass.
+
+And all the time the mother and her three children lay snugly covered up
+in their beds fast asleep, and knew nothing about it.
+
+The night passed away and morning came, but no light broke through the
+windows of the cabin. Mrs. Barnes woke at the usual time, but finding it
+still dark and perfectly quiet outside, she concluded that the storm was
+over, and with a sigh of relief turned over to sleep again. About eight
+o'clock, however, she could sleep no more, and became wide awake enough
+to think the darkness strange. At that moment the clock struck, and the
+truth flashed over her.
+
+Being buried under snow is no uncommon thing on the wide prairies, and
+since they had wood and cornmeal in plenty, she would not have been much
+alarmed if her husband had been home. But snow deep enough to bury them
+must cover up all landmarks, and she knew her husband would not rest
+till he had found them. To get lost on the trackless prairie was
+fearfully easy, and to suffer and die almost in sight of home was no
+unusual thing, and was her one dread in living there.
+
+A few moments she lay quiet in bed, to calm herself and get control of
+her own anxieties before she spoke to the children.
+
+"Willie," she said at last, "are you awake?"
+
+"Yes, mamma," said Willie; "I've been awake ever so long; isn't it most
+morning?"
+
+"Willie," said the mother quietly, "we mustn't be frightened, but I
+think--I'm afraid--we are snowed in."
+
+Willie bounded to his feet and ran to the door. "Don't open it!" said
+mamma hastily; "the snow may fall in. Light a candle and look out the
+window."
+
+In a moment the flickering rays of the candle fell upon the window.
+Willie drew back the curtain. Snow was tightly banked up against it to
+the top.
+
+"Why, mamma," he exclaimed, "so we are! and how can papa find us? and
+what shall we do?"
+
+"We must do the best we can," said mamma, in a voice which she tried to
+make steady, "and trust that it isn't very deep, and that Tim and papa
+will find us, and dig us out."
+
+By this time the little girls were awake and inclined to be very much
+frightened, but mamma was calm now, and Willie was brave and hopeful.
+They all dressed, and Willie started the fire. The smoke refused to
+rise, but puffed out into the room, and Mrs. Barnes knew that if the
+chimney were closed they would probably suffocate, if they did not
+starve or freeze.
+
+The smoke in a few minutes choked them, and, seeing that something must
+be done, she put the two girls, well wrapped in blankets, into the shed
+outside the back door, closed the door to keep out the smoke, and then
+went with Willie to the low attic, where a scuttle door opened onto the
+roof.
+
+"We must try," she said, "to get it open without letting in too much
+snow, and see if we can manage to clear the chimney."
+
+"I can reach the chimney from the scuttle with a shovel," said Willie.
+"I often have with a stick."
+
+After much labour, and several small avalanches of snow, the scuttle
+was opened far enough for Willie to stand on the top round of the short
+ladder, and beat a hole through to the light, which was only a
+foot above. He then shovelled off the top of the chimney, which was
+ornamented with a big round cushion of snow, and then by beating and
+shovelling he was able to clear the door, which he opened wide, and Mrs.
+Barnes came up on the ladder to look out. Dreary indeed was the scene!
+Nothing but snow as far as the eye could reach, and flakes still
+falling, though lightly.
+
+The storm was evidently almost over, but the sky was gray and overcast.
+
+They closed the door, went down, and soon had a fire, hoping that the
+smoke would guide somebody to them.
+
+Breakfast was taken by candle-light, dinner--in time--in the same way,
+and supper passed with no sound from the outside world.
+
+Many times Willie and mamma went to the scuttle door to see if any one
+was in sight, but not a shadow broke the broad expanse of white over
+which toward night the sun shone. Of course there were no signs of the
+roads, for through so deep snow none could be broken, and until the
+sun and frost should form a crust on top there was little hope of their
+being reached.
+
+The second morning broke, and Willie hurried up to his post of lookout
+the first thing. No person was in sight, but he found a light crust on
+the snow, and the first thing he noticed was a few half-starved birds
+trying in vain to pick up something to eat. They looked weak and almost
+exhausted, and a thought struck Willie.
+
+It was hard to keep up the courage of the little household. Nora had
+openly lamented that to-night was Christmas Eve, and no Christmas dinner
+to be had. Tot had grown very tearful about her "waisins," and Mrs.
+Barnes, though she tried to keep up heart, had become very pale and
+silent.
+
+Willie, though he felt unbounded faith in papa, and especially in Tim,
+found it hard to suppress his own complaints when he remembered that
+Christmas would probably be passed in the same dismal way, with fears
+for papa added to their own misery.
+
+The wood, too, was getting low, and mamma dared not let the fire go out,
+as that was the only sign of their existence to anybody; and though she
+did not speak of it, Willie knew, too, that they had not many candles,
+and in two days at farthest they would be left in the dark.
+
+The thought that struck Willie pleased him greatly, and he was sure it
+would cheer up the rest. He made his plans, and went to work to carry
+them out without saying anything about it.
+
+He brought out of a corner of the attic an old boxtrap he had used in
+the summer to catch birds and small animals, set it carefully on the
+snow, and scattered crumbs of corn-bread to attract the birds.
+
+In half an hour he went up again, and found to his delight he had caught
+bigger game--a poor rabbit which had come from no one knows where over
+the crust to find food.
+
+This gave Willie a new idea; they could save their Christmas dinner
+after all; rabbits made very nice pies.
+
+Poor Bunny was quietly laid to rest, and the trap set again. This time
+another rabbit was caught, perhaps the mate of the first. This was the
+last of the rabbits, but the next catch was a couple of snowbirds. These
+Willie carefully placed in a corner of the attic, using the trap for a
+cage, and giving them plenty of food and water.
+
+When the girls were fast asleep, with tears on their cheeks for the
+dreadful Christmas they were going to have, Willie told mamma about his
+plans. Mamma was pale and weak with anxiety, and his news first made her
+laugh and then cry. But after a few moments given to her long pent-up
+tears, she felt much better and entered into his plans heartily.
+
+The two captives up in the attic were to be Christmas presents to the
+girls, and the rabbits were to make the long anticipated pie. As for
+plum-pudding, of course that couldn't be thought of.
+
+"But don't you think, mamma," said Willie eagerly, "that you could make
+some sort of a cake out of meal, and wouldn't hickory nuts be good in
+it? You know I have some left up in the attic, and I might crack them
+softly up there, and don't you think they would be good?" he concluded
+anxiously.
+
+"Well, perhaps so," said mamma, anxious to please him and help him in
+his generous plans. "I can try. If I only had some eggs--but seems to me
+I have heard that snow beaten into cake would make it light--and there's
+snow enough, I'm sure," she added with a faint smile, the first Willie
+had seen for three days.
+
+The smile alone he felt to be a great achievement, and he crept
+carefully up the ladder, cracked the nuts to the last one, brought them
+down, and mamma picked the meats out, while he dressed the two rabbits
+which had come so opportunely to be their Christmas dinner. "Wish you
+Merry Christmas!" he called out to Nora and Tot when they waked. "See
+what Santa Claus has brought you!"
+
+Before they had time to remember what a sorry Christmas it was to be,
+they received their presents, a live bird, for each, a bird that was
+never to be kept in a cage, but fly about the house till summer came,
+and then to go away if it wished.
+
+Pets were scarce on the prairie, and the girls were delighted. Nothing
+papa could have brought them would have given them so much happiness.
+
+They thought no more of the dinner, but hurried to dress themselves and
+feed the birds, which were quite tame from hunger and weariness. But
+after a while they saw preparations for dinner, too. Mamma made a crust
+and lined a deep dish--the chicken pie dish--and then she brought a
+mysterious something out of the cupboard, all cut up so that it looked
+as if it might be chicken, and put it in the dish with other things, and
+then she tucked them all under a thick crust, and set it down in a tin
+oven before the fire to bake. And that was not all. She got out some
+more cornmeal, and made a batter, and put in some sugar and something
+else which she slipped in from a bowl, and which looked in the batter
+something like raisins; and at the last moment Willie brought her a cup
+of snow and she hastily beat it into the cake, or pudding, whichever you
+might call it, while the children laughed at the idea of making a cake
+out of snow. This went into the same oven and pretty soon it rose up
+light and showed a beautiful brown crust, while the pie was steaming
+through little fork holes on top, and sending out most delicious odours.
+
+At the last minute, when the table was set and everything ready to come
+up, Willie ran up to look out of the scuttle, as he had every hour of
+daylight since they were buried. In a moment came a wild shout down the
+ladder.
+
+"They're coming! Hurrah for old Tim!"
+
+Mamma rushed up and looked out, and saw--to be sure--old Tim slowly
+coming along over the crust, drawing after him a wood sled on which were
+two men.
+
+"It's papa!" shouted Willie, waving his arms to attract their attention.
+
+"Willie!" came back over the snow in tones of agony. "Is that you? Are
+all well?"
+
+"All well!" shouted Willie, "and just going to have our Christmas
+dinner."
+
+"Dinner?" echoed papa, who was now nearer.
+
+"Where is the house, then?"
+
+"Oh, down here!" said Willie, "under the snow; but we're all right, only
+we mustn't let the plum-pudding spoil."
+
+Looking into the attic, Willie found that mamma had fainted away, and
+this news brought to her aid papa and the other man, who proved to be a
+good friend who had come to help.
+
+Tim was tied to the chimney, whose thread of smoke had guided them home,
+and all went down into the dark room. Mrs. Barnes soon recovered, and
+while Willie dished up the smoking dinner, stories were told on both
+sides.
+
+Mr. Barnes had been trying to get through the snow and to find them all
+the time, but until the last night had made a stiff crust he had been
+unable to do so. Then Mrs. Barnes told her story, winding up with the
+account of Willie's Christmas dinner. "And if it hadn't been for his
+keeping up our hearts I don't know what would have become of us," she
+said at last.
+
+"Well, my son," said papa, "you did take care of mamma, and get up a
+dinner out of nothing, sure enough; and now we'll eat the dinner, which
+I am sure is delicious."
+
+So it proved to be; even the cake, or pudding, which Tot christened snow
+pudding, was voted very nice, and the hickory nuts as good as raisins.
+When they had finished, Mr. Barnes brought in his packages, gave Tot and
+the rest some "sure-enough waisins," and added his Christmas presents
+to Willie's; but though all were overjoyed, nothing was quite so nice in
+their eyes as the two live birds.
+
+After dinner the two men and Willie dug out passages from the doors,
+through the snow, which had wasted a good deal, uncovered the windows,
+and made a slanting way to his shed for old Tim. Then for two or three
+days Willie made tunnels and little rooms under the snow, and for two
+weeks, while the snow lasted, Nora and Tot had fine times in the little
+snow playhouses.
+
+
+
+
+XXX. MR. BLUFF'S EXPERIENCES OF HOLIDAYS*
+
+* Reprinted by permission of Moffat, Yird & Co., from Christmas. R.H.
+Schauffler, Editor.
+
+OLIVER BELL BUNCE
+
+"I hate holidays," said Bachelor Bluff to me, with some little
+irritation, on a Christmas a few years ago. Then he paused an instant,
+after which he resumed: "I don't mean to say that I hate to see people
+enjoying themselves. But I hate holidays, nevertheless, because to me
+they are always the saddest and dreariest days of the year. I shudder at
+the name of holiday. I dread the approach of one, and thank heaven when
+it is over. I pass through, on a holiday, the most horrible sensations,
+the bitterest feelings, the most oppressive melancholy; in fact, I am
+not myself at holiday-times."
+
+"Very strange," I ventured to interpose.
+
+"A plague on it!" said he, almost with violence. "I'm not inhuman. I
+don't wish anybody harm. I'm glad people can enjoy themselves. But
+I hate holidays all the same. You see, this is the reason: I am a
+bachelor; I am without kin; I am in a place that did not know me at
+birth. And so, when holidays come around, there is no place anywhere
+for me. I have friends, of course; I don't think I've been a very sulky,
+shut-in, reticent fellow; and there is many a board that has a place
+for me--but not at Christmastime. At Christmas, the dinner is a family
+gathering; and I've no family. There is such a gathering of kindred on
+this occasion, such a reunion of family folk, that there is no place
+for a friend, even if the friend be liked. Christmas, with all its
+kindliness and charity and good-will, is, after all, deuced selfish.
+Each little set gathers within its own circle; and people like me, with
+no particular circle, are left in the lurch. So you see, on the day of
+all the days in the year that my heart pines for good cheer, I'm without
+an invitation.
+
+"Oh, it's because I pine for good cheer," said the bachelor, sharply,
+interrupting my attempt to speak, "that I hate holidays. If I were an
+infernally selfish fellow, I wouldn't hate holidays. I'd go off and have
+some fun all to myself, somewhere or somehow. But, you see, I hate to be
+in the dark when all the rest of the world is in light. I hate holidays
+because I ought to be merry and happy on holidays and can't.
+
+"Don't tell me," he cried, stopping the word that was on my lips; "I
+tell you, I hate holidays. The shops look merry, do they, with their
+bright toys and their green branches? The pantomime is crowded with
+merry hearts, is it? The circus and the show are brimful of fun and
+laughter, are they? Well, they all make me miserable. I haven't any
+pretty-faced girls or bright-eyed boys to take to the circus or the
+show, and all the nice girls and fine boys of my acquaintance have
+their uncles or their grand-dads or their cousins to take them to those
+places; so, if I go, I must go alone. But I don't go. I can't bear
+the chill of seeing everybody happy, and knowing myself so lonely and
+desolate. Confound it, sir, I've too much heart to be happy under such
+circumstances! I'm too humane, sir! And the result is, I hate holidays.
+It's miserable to be out, and yet I can't stay at home, for I get
+thinking of Christmases past. I can't read--the shadow of my heart makes
+it impossible. I can't walk--for I see nothing but pictures through the
+bright windows, and happy groups of pleasure-seekers. The fact is, I've
+nothing to do but to hate holidays. But will you not dine with me?"
+
+Of course, I had to plead engagement with my own family circle, and I
+couldn't quite invite Mr. Bluff home that day, when Cousin Charles and
+his wife, and Sister Susan and her daughter, and three of my wife's kin
+had come in from the country, all to make a merry Christmas with us. I
+felt sorry, but it was quite impossible, so I wished Mr. Bluff a "Merry
+Christmas," and hurried homeward through the cold and nipping air.
+
+I did not meet Bachelor Bluff again until a week after Christmas of the
+next year, when I learned some strange particulars of what occurred
+to him after our parting on the occasion just described. I will let
+Bachelor Bluff tell his adventure for himself.
+
+"I went to church," said he, "and was as sad there as everywhere else.
+Of course, the evergreens were pretty, and the music fine; but all
+around me were happy groups of people, who could scarcely keep down
+merry Christmas long enough to do reverence to sacred Christmas. And
+nobody was alone but me. Every happy paterfamilias in his pew tantalized
+me, and the whole atmosphere of the place seemed so much better suited
+to every one else than me that I came away hating holidays worse than
+ever. Then I went to the play, and sat down in a box all alone by
+myself. Everybody seemed on the best of terms with everybody else, and
+jokes and banter passed from one to another with the most good-natured
+freedom. Everybody but me was in a little group of friends. I was the
+only person in the whole theatre that was alone. And then there was such
+clapping of hands, and roars of laughter, and shouts of delight at
+all the fun going on upon the stage, all of which was rendered
+doubly enjoyable by everybody having somebody with whom to share and
+interchange the pleasure, that my loneliness got simply unbearable, and
+I hated holidays infinitely worse than ever.
+
+"By five o'clock the holiday became so intolerable that I said I'd go
+and get a dinner. The best dinner the town could provide. A sumptuous
+dinner for one. A dinner with many courses, with wines of the finest
+brands, with bright lights, with a cheerful fire, with every condition
+of comfort--and I'd see if I couldn't for once extract a little pleasure
+out of a holiday!
+
+"The handsome dining-room at the club looked bright, but it was empty.
+Who dines at this club on Christmas but lonely bachelors? There was
+a flutter of surprise when I ordered a dinner, and the few attendants
+were, no doubt, glad of something to break the monotony of the hours.
+
+"My dinner was well served. The spacious room looked lonely; but the
+white, snowy cloths, the rich window hangings, the warm tints of the
+walls, the sparkle of the fire in the steel grate, gave the room an air
+of elegance and cheerfulness; and then the table at which I dined was
+close to the window, and through the partly drawn curtains were visible
+centres of lonely, cold streets, with bright lights from many a window,
+it is true, but there was a storm, and snow began whirling through the
+street. I let my imagination paint the streets as cold and dreary as
+it would, just to extract a little pleasure by way of contrast from the
+brilliant room of which I was apparently sole master.
+
+"I dined well, and recalled in fancy old, youthful Christmases, and
+pledged mentally many an old friend, and my melancholy was mellowing
+into a low, sad undertone, when, just as I was raising a glass of wine
+to my lips, I was startled by a picture at the windowpane. It was
+a pale, wild, haggard face, in a great cloud of black hair, pressed
+against the glass. As I looked it vanished. With a strange thrill at my
+heart, which my lips mocked with a derisive sneer, I finished the wine
+and set down the glass. It was, of course, only a beggar-girl that had
+crept up to the window and stole a glance at the bright scene within;
+but still the pale face troubled me a little, and threw a fresh shadow
+on my heart. I filled my glass once more with wine, and was again about
+to drink, when the face reappeared at the window. It was so white,
+so thin, with eyes so large, wild, and hungry-looking, and the black,
+unkempt hair, into which the snow had drifted, formed so strange and
+weird a frame to the picture, that I was fairly startled. Replacing,
+untasted, the liquor on the table, I rose and went close to the pane.
+The face had vanished, and I could see no object within many feet of the
+window. The storm had increased, and the snow was driving in wild gusts
+through the streets, which were empty, save here and there a hurrying
+wayfarer. The whole scene was cold, wild, and desolate, and I could not
+repress a keen thrill of sympathy for the child, whoever it was,
+whose only Christmas was to watch, in cold and storm, the rich banquet
+ungratefully enjoyed by the lonely bachelor. I resumed my place at the
+table; but the dinner was finished, and the wine had no further
+relish. I was haunted by the vision at the window, and began, with an
+unreasonable irritation at the interruption, to repeat with fresh warmth
+my detestation of holidays. One couldn't even dine alone on a holiday
+with any sort of comfort, I declared. On holidays one was tormented by
+too much pleasure on one side, and too much misery on the other. And
+then, I said, hunting for justification of my dislike of the day, 'How
+many other people are, like me, made miserable by seeing the fullness of
+enjoyment others possess!'
+
+"Oh, yes, I know," sarcastically replied the bachelor to a comment of
+mine; "of course, all magnanimous, generous, and noble-souled people
+delight in seeing other people made happy, and are quite content to
+accept this vicarious felicity. But I, you see, and this dear little
+girl--"
+
+"Dear little girl?"
+
+"Oh, I forgot," said Bachelor Bluff, blushing a little, in spite of
+a desperate effort not to do so. "I didn't tell you. Well, it was so
+absurd! I kept thinking, thinking of the pale, haggard, lonely little
+girl on the cold and desolate side of the window-pane, and the
+over-fed, discontented, lonely old bachelor on the splendid side of
+the window-pane, and I didn't get much happier thinking about it, I can
+assure you. I drank glass after glass of the wine--not that I enjoyed
+its flavour any more, but mechanically, as it were, and with a sort
+of hope thereby to drown unpleasant reminders. I tried to attribute
+my annoyance in the matter to holidays, and so denounced them more
+vehemently than ever. I rose once in a while and went to the window, but
+could see no one to whom the pale face could have belonged.
+
+"At last, in no very amiable mood, I got up, put on my wrappers, and
+went out; and the first thing I did was to run against a small figure
+crouching in the doorway. A face looked up quickly at the rough
+encounter, and I saw the pale features of the window-pane. I was very
+irritated and angry, and spoke harshly; and then, all at once, I am sure
+I don't know how it happened, but it flashed upon me that I, of all men,
+had no right to utter a harsh word to one oppressed with so wretched a
+Christmas as this poor creature was. I couldn't say another word, but
+began feeling in my pocket for some money, and then I asked a question
+or two, and then I don't quite know how it came about--isn't it very
+warm here?" exclaimed Bachelor Bluff, rising and walking about, and
+wiping the perspiration from his brow.
+
+"Well, you see," he resumed nervously, "it was very absurd, but I did
+believe the girl's story--the old story, you know, of privation and
+suffering, and just thought I'd go home with the brat and see if what
+she said was all true. And then I remembered that all the shops were
+closed, and not a purchase could be made. I went back and persuaded the
+steward to put up for me a hamper of provisions, which the half-wild
+little youngster helped me carry through the snow, dancing with delight
+all the way. And isn't this enough?"
+
+"Not a bit, Mr. Bluff. I must have the whole story."
+
+"I declare," said Bachelor Bluff, "there's no whole story to tell. A
+widow with children in great need, that was what I found; and they had
+a feast that night, and a little money to buy them a load of wood and a
+garment or two the next day; and they were all so bright, and so merry,
+and so thankful, and so good, that, when I got home that night, I was
+mightily amazed that, instead of going to bed sour at holidays, I was
+in a state of great contentment in regard to holidays. In fact, I was
+really merry. I whistled. I sang. I do believe I cut a caper. The poor
+wretches I had left had been so merry over their unlooked-for Christmas
+banquet that their spirits infected mine.
+
+"And then I got thinking again. Of course, holidays had been miserable
+to me, I said. What right had a well-to-do, lonely old bachelor hovering
+wistfully in the vicinity of happy circles, when all about there were
+so many people as lonely as he, and yet oppressed with want? 'Good
+gracious!' I exclaimed, 'to think of a man complaining of loneliness
+with thousands of wretches yearning for his help and comfort, with
+endless opportunities for work and company, with hundreds of pleasant
+and delightful things to do. Just to think of it! It put me in a great
+fury at myself to think of it. I tried pretty hard to escape from myself
+and began inventing excuses and all that sort of thing, but I rigidly
+forced myself to look squarely at my own conduct. And then I reconciled
+my confidence by declaring that, if ever after that day I hated a
+holiday again, might my holidays end at once and forever!
+
+"Did I go and see my proteges again? What a question! Why--well, no
+matter. If the widow is comfortable now, it is because she has found a
+way to earn without difficulty enough for her few wants. That's no fault
+of mine. I would have done more for her, but she wouldn't let me. But
+just let me tell you about New Year's--the New-Year's day that followed
+the Christmas I've been describing. It was lucky for me there was
+another holiday only a week off. Bless you! I had so much to do that day
+I was completely bewildered, and the hours weren't half long enough.
+I did make a few social calls, but then I hurried them over; and then
+hastened to my little girl, whose face had already caught a touch
+of colour; and she, looking quite handsome in her new frock and her
+ribbons, took me to other poor folk, and,--well, that's about the whole
+story.
+
+"Oh, as to the next Christmas. Well, I didn't dine alone, as you may
+guess. It was up three stairs, that's true, and there was none of that
+elegance that marked the dinner of the year before; but it was merry,
+and happy, and bright; it was a generous, honest, hearty Christmas
+dinner, that it was, although I do wish the widow hadn't talked so much
+about the mysterious way a turkey had been left at her door the night
+before. And Molly--that's the little girl--and I had a rousing appetite.
+We went to church early; then we had been down to the Five Points to
+carry the poor outcasts there something for their Christmas dinner; in
+fact, we had done wonders of work, and Molly was in high spirits, and so
+the Christmas dinner was a great success.
+
+"Dear me, sir, no! Just as you say. Holidays are not in the least
+wearisome any more. Plague on it! When a man tells me now that he hates
+holidays, I find myself getting very wroth. I pin him by the buttonhole
+at once, and tell him my experience. The fact is, if I were at dinner on
+a holiday, and anybody should ask me for a sentiment, I should say, 'God
+bless all holidays!'"
+
+
+
+
+XXXI. MASTER SANDY'S SNAPDRAGON*
+
+* This story was first published in Wide Awake, vol. 26.
+
+ELDRIDGE S. BROOKS
+
+There was just enough of December in the air and of May in the sky
+to make the Yuletide of the year of grace 1611 a time of pleasure and
+delight to every boy and girl in "Merrie England" from the princely
+children in stately Whitehall to the humblest pot-boy and scullery-girl
+in the hall of the country squire.
+
+And in the palace at Whitehall even the cares of state gave place to
+the sports of this happy season. For that "Most High and Mighty
+Prince James, by the Grace of God King of Great Britain, France, and
+Ireland"--as you will find him styled in your copy of the Old
+Version, or what is known as "King James' Bible"--loved the Christmas
+festivities, cranky, crabbed, and crusty though he was. And this year
+he felt especially gracious. For now, first since the terror of the Guy
+Fawkes plot which had come to naught full seven years before, did the
+timid king feel secure on his throne; the translation of the Bible,
+on which so many learned men had been for years engaged, had just been
+issued from the press of Master Robert Baker; and, lastly, much profit
+was coming into the royal treasury from the new lands in the Indies and
+across the sea.
+
+So it was to be a Merry Christmas in the palace at Whitehall. Great were
+the preparations for its celebration, and the Lord Henry, the handsome,
+wise and popular young Prince of Wales, whom men hoped some day to hail
+as King Henry of England, was to take part in a jolly Christmas mask,
+in which, too, even the little Prince Charles was to perform for the
+edification of the court when the mask should be shown in the new and
+gorgeous banqueting hall of the palace.
+
+And to-night it was Christmas Eve. The Little Prince Charles and the
+Princess Elizabeth could scarcely wait for the morrow, so impatient were
+they to see all the grand devisings that were in store for them. So
+good Master Sandy, under-tutor to the Prince, proposed to wise Archie
+Armstrong, the King's jester, that they play at snapdragon for the
+children in the royal nursery.
+
+The Prince and Princess clamoured for the promised game at once, and
+soon the flicker from the flaming bow lighted up the darkened nursery
+as, around the witchlike caldron, they watched their opportunity to
+snatch the lucky raisin. The room rang so loudly with fun and laughter
+that even the King himself, big of head and rickety of legs, shambled in
+good-humouredly to join in the sport that was giving so much pleasure
+to the royal boy he so dearly loved, and whom he always called "Baby
+Charles."
+
+But what was snapdragon, you ask? A simple enough game, but dear for
+many and many a year to English children. A broad and shallow bowl
+or dish half-filled with blazing brandy, at the bottom of which lay
+numerous toothsome raisins--a rare tidbit in those days--and one of
+these, pierced with a gold button, was known as the "lucky raisin."
+Then, as the flaming brandy flickered and darted from the yawning bowl,
+even as did the flaming poison tongues of the cruel dragon that St.
+George of England conquered so valiantly, each one of the revellers
+sought to snatch a raisin from the burning bowl without singe or scar.
+And he who drew out the lucky raisin was winner and champion, and could
+claim a boon or reward for his superior skill. Rather a dangerous game,
+perhaps it seems, but folks were rough players in those old days and
+laughed at a burn or a bruise, taking them as part of the fun.
+
+So around Master Sandy's Snapdragon danced the royal children, and even
+the King himself condescended to dip his royal hands in the flames,
+while Archie Armstrong the jester cried out: "Now fair and softly,
+brother Jamie, fair and softly, man. There's ne'er a plum in all
+that plucking so worth the burning as there was in Signer Guy Fawkes'
+snapdragon when ye proved not to be his lucky raisin." For King's
+jesters were privileged characters in the old days, and jolly Archie
+Armstrong could joke with the King on this Guy Fawkes scare as none
+other dared.
+
+And still no one brought out the lucky raisin, though the Princess
+Elizabeth's fair arm was scotched and good Master Sandy's peaked beard
+was singed, and my Lord Montacute had dropped his signet ring in the
+fiery dragon's mouth, and even His Gracious Majesty the King was nursing
+one of his royal fingers.
+
+But just as through the parted arras came young Henry, Prince of Wales,
+little Prince Charles gave a boyish shout of triumph.
+
+"Hey, huzzoy!" he cried, "'tis mine, 'tis mine! Look, Archie; see, dear
+dad; I have the lucky raisin! A boon, good folk; a boon for me!" And
+the excited lad held aloft the lucky raisin in which gleamed the golden
+button.
+
+"Rarely caught, young York," cried Prince Henry, clapping his hands in
+applause. "I came in right in good time, did I not, to give you luck,
+little brother? And now, lad, what is the boon to be?"
+
+And King James, greatly pleased at whatever his dear "Baby Charles" said
+or did, echoed his eldest son's question. "Ay lad, 'twas a rare good
+dip; so crave your boon. What does my bonny boy desire?"
+
+But the boy hesitated. What was there that a royal prince, indulged as
+was he, could wish for or desire? He really could think of nothing, and
+crossing quickly to his elder brother, whom, boy-fashion, he adored, he
+whispered, "Ud's fish, Hal, what DO I want?"
+
+Prince Henry placed his hand upon his brother's shoulder and looked
+smilingly into his questioning eyes, and all within the room glanced for
+a moment at the two lads standing thus.
+
+And they were well worth looking at. Prince Henry of Wales, tall,
+comely, open-faced, and well-built, a noble lad of eighteen who called
+to men's minds, so "rare Ben Jonson" says, the memory of the hero of
+Agincourt, that other
+
+ thunderbolt of war,
+ Harry the Fifth, to whom in face you are
+ So like, as Fate would have you so in worth;
+
+Prince Charles, royal Duke of York, Knight of the Garter and of the
+Bath, fair in face and form, an active, manly, daring boy of eleven--the
+princely brothers made so fair a sight that the King, jealous and
+suspicious of Prince Henry's popularity though he was, looked now upon
+them both with loving eyes. But how those loving eyes would have grown
+dim with tears could this fickle, selfish, yet indulgent father have
+foreseen the sad and bitter fates of both his handsome boys.
+
+But, fortunately, such foreknowledge is not for fathers or mothers,
+whatever their rank or station, and King James's only thought was one
+of pride in the two brave lads now whispering together in secret
+confidence. And into this he speedily broke.
+
+"Come, come, Baby Charles," he cried, "stand no more parleying, but out
+and over with the boon ye crave as guerdon for your lucky plum. Ud's
+fish, lad, out with it; we'd get it for ye though it did rain jeddert
+staves here in Whitehall."
+
+"So please your Grace," said the little Prince, bowing low with true
+courtier-like grace and suavity, "I will, with your permission, crave my
+boon as a Christmas favor at wassail time in to-morrow's revels."
+
+And then he passed from the chamber arm-in-arm with his elder brother,
+while the King, chuckling greatly over the lad's show of courtliness and
+ceremony, went into a learned discussion with my lord of Montacute and
+Master Sandy as to the origin of the snapdragon, which he, with his
+customary assumption of deep learning, declared was "but a modern
+paraphrase, my lord, of the fable which telleth how Dan Hercules did
+kill the flaming dragon of Hesperia and did then, with the apple of that
+famous orchard, make a fiery dish of burning apple brandy which he did
+name 'snapdragon.'"
+
+For King James VI of Scotland and I of England was, you see, something
+too much of what men call a pendant.
+
+Christmas morning rose bright and glorious. A light hoarfrost whitened
+the ground and the keen December air nipped the noses as it hurried
+the song-notes of the score of little waifs who, gathered beneath the
+windows of the big palace, sung for the happy awaking of the young
+Prince Charles their Christmas carol and their Christmas noel:
+
+ A child this day is born,
+ A child of great renown;
+ Most worthy of a sceptre,
+ A sceptre and a crown.
+
+ Noel, noel, noel,
+ Noel sing we may
+ Because the King of all Kings
+ Was born this blessed day.
+
+ These tidings shepherds heard
+ In field watching their fold,
+ Were by an angel unto them
+ At night revealed and told.
+
+ Noel, noel, noel,
+ Noel sing we may
+ Because the King of all Kings
+ Was born this blessed day.
+
+ He brought unto them tidings
+ Of gladness and of mirth,
+ Which cometh to all people by
+ This holy infant's birth.
+
+ Noel, noel, noel,
+ Noel sing we may
+ Because the King of all Kings
+ Was born this blessed day.
+
+The "blessed day" wore on. Gifts and sports filled the happy hours.
+In the royal banqueting hall the Christmas dinner was royally set
+and served, and King and Queen and Princes, with attendant nobles and
+holiday guests, partook of the strong dishes of those old days of hearty
+appetites.
+
+"A shield of brawn with mustard, boyl'd capon, a chine of beef roasted,
+a neat's tongue roasted, a pig roasted, chewets baked, goose, swan and
+turkey roasted, a haunch of venison roasted, a pasty of venison, a kid
+stuffed with pudding, an olive-pye, capons and dowsets, sallats and
+fricases"--all these and much more, with strong beer and spiced ale to
+wash the dinner down, crowned the royal board, while the great boar's
+head and the Christmas pie, borne in with great parade, were placed
+on the table joyously decked with holly and rosemary and bay. It was
+a great ceremony--this bringing in of the boar's head. First came an
+attendant, so the old record tells us,
+
+"attyr'd in a horseman's coat with a Boares-speare in his hande; next to
+him another huntsman in greene, with a bloody faulchion drawne; next to
+him two pages in tafatye sarcenet, each of them with a messe of mustard;
+next to whom came hee that carried the Boareshead, crosst with a greene
+silk scarfe, by which hunge the empty scabbard of the faulchion which
+was carried before him."
+
+After the dinner--the boar's head having been wrestled for by some of
+the royal yeomen--came the wassail or health-drinking. Then the King
+said:
+
+"And now, Baby Charles, let us hear the boon ye were to crave of us
+at wassail as the guerdon for the holder of the lucky raisin in Master
+Sandy's snapdragon."
+
+And the little eleven-year-old Prince stood up before the company in all
+his brave attire, glanced at his brother Prince Henry, and then facing
+the King said boldly:
+
+"I pray you, my father and my Hege, grant me as the boon I ask--the
+freeing of Walter Raleigh."
+
+At this altogether startling and unlooked-for request, amazement and
+consternation appeared on the faces around the royal banqueting
+board, and the King put down his untasted tankard of spiced ale, while
+surprise, doubt and anger quickly crossed the royal face. For Sir Walter
+Raleigh, the favourite of Queen Elizabeth, the lord-proprietor and
+colonizer of the American colonies, and the sworn foe to Spain, had been
+now close prisoner in the Tower for more than nine years, hated and yet
+dreaded by this fickle King James, who dared not put him to death for
+fear of the people to whom the name and valour of Raleigh were dear.
+
+"Hoot, chiel!" cried the King at length, spluttering wrathfully in
+the broadest of his native Scotch, as was his habit when angered or
+surprised. "Ye reckless fou, wha hae put ye to sic a jackanape trick?
+Dinna ye ken that sic a boon is nae for a laddie like you to meddle wi'?
+Wha hae put ye to't, I say?"
+
+But ere the young Prince could reply, the stately and solemn-faced
+ambassador of Spain, the Count of Gondemar, arose in the place of honour
+he filled as a guest of the King.
+
+"My Lord King," he said, "I beg your majesty to bear in memory your
+pledge to my gracious master King Philip of Spain, that naught save
+grave cause should lead you to liberate from just durance that arch
+enemy of Spain, the Lord Raleigh."
+
+"But you did promise me, my lord," said Prince Charles, hastily, "and
+you have told me that the royal pledge is not to be lightly broken."
+
+"Ma certie, lad," said King James, "ye maunay learn that there is nae
+rule wi'out its aicciptions." And then he added, "A pledge to a boy in
+play, like to ours of yester-eve, Baby Charles, is not to be kept when
+matters of state conflict." Then turning to the Spanish ambassador, he
+said: "Rest content, my lord count. This recreant Raleigh shall not yet
+be loosed."
+
+"But, my liege," still persisted the boy prince, "my brother Hal did
+say--"
+
+The wrath of the King burst out afresh.
+
+"Ay, said you so? Brother Hal, indeed!" he cried.
+
+"I thought the wind blew from that quarter," and he angrily faced his
+eldest son. "So, sirrah; 'twas you that did urge this foolish boy to
+work your traitorous purpose in such coward guise!"
+
+"My liege," said Prince Henry, rising in his place, "traitor and coward
+are words I may not calmly hear even from my father and my king. You
+wrong me foully when you use them thus. For though I do bethink me that
+the Tower is but a sorry cage in which to keep so grandly plumed a bird
+as my Lord of Raleigh, I did but seek--"
+
+"Ay, you did but seek to curry favour with the craven crowd," burst out
+the now thoroughly angry King, always jealous of the popularity of
+this brave young Prince of Wales. "And am I, sirrah, to be badgered and
+browbeaten in my own palace by such a thriftless ne'er-do-weel as you,
+ungrateful boy, who seekest to gain preference with the people in this
+realm before your liege lord the King? Quit my presence, sirrah, and
+that instanter, ere that I do send you to spend your Christmas where
+your great-grandfather, King Henry, bade his astrologer spend his--in
+the Tower, there to keep company with your fitting comrade, Raleigh, the
+traitor!"
+
+Without a word in reply to this outburst, with a son's submission, but
+with a royal dignity, Prince Henry bent his head before his father's
+decree and withdrew from the table, followed by the gentlemen of his
+household.
+
+But ere he could reach the arrased doorway, Prince Charles sprang to his
+side and cried, valiantly: "Nay then, if he goes so do I! 'Twas surely
+but a Christmas joke and of my own devising. Spoil not our revel, my
+gracious liege and father, on this of all the year's red-letter days,
+by turning my thoughtless frolic into such bitter threatening. I did but
+seek to test the worth of Master Sandy's lucky raisin by asking for as
+wildly great a boon as might be thought upon. Brother Hal too, did but
+give me his advising in joke even as I did seek it. None here, my royal
+father, would brave your sovereign displeasure by any unknightly or
+unloyal scheme."
+
+The gentle and dignified words of the young prince--for Charles Stuart,
+though despicable as a king, was ever loving and loyal as a friend--were
+as oil upon the troubled waters. The ruffled temper of the ambassador
+of Spain--who in after years really did work Raleigh's downfall and
+death--gave place to courtly bows, and the King's quick anger melted
+away before the dearly loved voice of his favourite son.
+
+"Nay, resume your place, son Hal," he said, "and you, gentlemen all,
+resume your seats, I pray. I too did but jest as did Baby Charles
+here--a sad young wag, I fear me, is this same young Prince."
+
+But as, after the wassail, came the Christmas mask, in which both
+Princes bore their parts, Prince Charles said to Archie Armstrong, the
+King's jester:
+
+"Faith, good Archie; now is Master Sandy's snapdragon but a false beast
+withal, and his lucky raisin is but an evil fruit that pays not for the
+plucking."
+
+And wise old Archie only wagged his head and answered, "Odd zooks,
+Cousin Charlie, Christmas raisins are not the only fruit that burns
+the fingers in the plucking, and mayhap you too may live to know that a
+mettlesome horse never stumbleth but when he is reined."
+
+Poor "Cousin Charlie" did not then understand the full meaning of the
+wise old jester's words, but he did live to learn their full intent.
+For when, in after years, his people sought to curb his tyrannies with
+a revolt that ended only with his death upon the scaffold, outside this
+very banqueting house at Whitehall, Charles Stuart learned all too late
+that a "mettlesome horse" needed sometimes to be "reined," and heard,
+too late as well, the stern declaration of the Commons of England that
+"no chief officer might presume for the future to contrive the enslaving
+and destruction of the nation with impunity."
+
+But though many a merry and many a happy day had the young Prince
+Charles before the dark tragedy of his sad and sorry manhood, he
+lost all faith in lucky raisins. Not for three years did Sir Walter
+Raleigh--whom both the Princes secretly admired--obtain release from the
+Tower, and ere three more years were past his head fell as a forfeit
+to the stern demands of Spain. And Prince Charles often declared that
+naught indeed could come from meddling with luck saving burnt fingers,
+"even," he said, "as came to me that profitless night when I sought a
+boon for snatching the lucky raisin from good Master Sandy's Christmas
+snapdragon."
+
+
+
+
+XXXII. A CHRISTMAS FAIRY*
+
+* Reprinted with the permission of the Henry Altemus Company.
+
+JOHN STRANGE WINTER
+
+It was getting very near to Christmas time, and all the boys at Miss
+Ware's school were talking about going home for the holidays.
+
+"I shall go to the Christmas festival," said Bertie Fellows, "and my
+mother will have a party, and my Aunt will give another. Oh! I shall
+have a splendid time at home."
+
+"My Uncle Bob is going to give me a pair of skates," remarked Harry
+Wadham.
+
+"My father is going to give me a bicycle," put in George Alderson.
+
+"Will you bring it back to school with you?" asked Harry.
+
+"Oh! yes, if Miss Ware doesn't say no."
+
+"Well, Tom," cried Bertie, "where are you going to spend your holidays?"
+
+"I am going to stay here," answered Tom in a very forlorn voice.
+
+"Here--at school--oh, dear! Why can't you go home?"
+
+"I can't go home to India," answered Tom.
+
+"Nobody said you could. But haven't you any relatives anywhere?"
+
+Tom shook his head. "Only in India," he said sadly.
+
+"Poor fellow! That's hard luck for you. I'll tell you what it is, boys,
+if I couldn't go home for the holidays, especially at Christmas--I think
+I would just sit down and die."
+
+"Oh, no, you wouldn't," said Tom. "You would get ever so homesick, but
+you wouldn't die. You would just get through somehow, and hope something
+would happen before next year, or that some kind fairy would--"
+
+"There are no fairies nowadays," said Bertie.
+
+"See here, Tom, I'll write and ask my mother to invite you to go home
+with me for the holidays."
+
+"Will you really?"
+
+"Yes, I will. And if she says yes, we shall have such a splendid time.
+We live in London, you know, and have lots of parties and fun."
+
+"Perhaps she will say no?" suggested poor little Tom.
+
+"My mother isn't the kind that says no," Bertie declared loudly.
+
+In a few days' time a letter arrived from Bertie's mother. The boy
+opened it eagerly. It said:
+
+My own dear Bertie:
+
+I am very sorry to tell you that little Alice is ill with scarlet fever.
+And so you cannot come for your holidays. I would have been glad to have
+you bring your little friend with you if all had been well here.
+
+Your father and I have decided that the best thing that you can do is to
+stay at Miss Ware's. We shall send your Christmas present to you as well
+as we can.
+
+It will not be like coming home, but I am sure you will try to be happy,
+and make me feel that you are helping me in this sad time.
+
+Dear little Alice is very ill, very ill indeed. Tell Tom that I am
+sending you a box for both of you, with two of everything. And tell him
+that it makes me so much happier to know that you will not be alone.
+
+ Your own mother.
+
+When Bertie Fellows received this letter, which ended all his Christmas
+hopes and joys, he hid his face upon his desk and sobbed aloud. The
+lonely boy from India, who sat next to him, tried to comfort his friend
+in every way he could think of. He patted his shoulder and whispered
+many kind words to him.
+
+At last Bertie put the letter into Tom's hands. "Read it," he sobbed.
+
+So then Tom understood the cause of Bertie's grief. "Don't fret over
+it," he said at last. "It might be worse. Why, your father and mother
+might be thousands of miles away, like mine are. When Alice is better,
+you will be able to go home. And it will help your mother if she thinks
+you are almost as happy as if you could go now."
+
+Soon Miss Ware came to tell Bertie how sorry she was for him.
+
+"After all," said she, smiling down on the two boys, "it is an ill
+wind that blows nobody good. Poor Tom has been expecting to spend his
+holidays alone, and now he will have a friend with him--Try to look on
+the bright side, Bertie, and to remember how much worse it would have
+been if there had been no boy to stay with you."
+
+"I can't help being disappointed, Miss Ware," said Bertie, his eyes
+filling with tears.
+
+"No; you would be a strange boy if you were not. But I want you to try
+to think of your poor mother, and write her as cheerfully as you can."
+
+"Yes," answered Bertie; but his heart was too full to say more.
+
+The last day of the term came, and one by one, or two by two, the boys
+went away, until only Bertie and Tom were left in the great house. It
+had never seemed so large to either of them before.
+
+"It's miserable," groaned poor Bertie, as they strolled into the
+schoolroom. "Just think if we were on our way home now--how different."
+
+"Just think if I had been left here by myself," said Tom.
+
+"Yes," said Bertie, "but you know when one wants to go home he never
+thinks of the boys that have no home to go to."
+
+The evening passed, and the two boys went to bed. They told stories to
+each other for a long time before they could go to sleep. That night
+they dreamed of their homes, and felt very lonely. Yet each tried to be
+brave, and so another day began.
+
+This was the day before Christmas. Quite early in the morning came the
+great box of which Bertie's mother had spoken in her letter. Then, just
+as dinner had come to an end, there was a peal of the bell, and a voice
+was heard asking for Tom Egerton.
+
+Tom sprang to his feet, and flew to greet a tall, handsome lady, crying,
+"Aunt Laura! Aunt Laura!"
+
+And Laura explained that she and her husband had arrived in London only
+the day before. "I was so afraid, Tom," she said, "that we should
+not get here until Christmas Day was over and that you would be
+disappointed. So I would not let your mother write you that we were on
+our way home. You must get your things packed up at once, and go back
+with me to London. Then uncle and I will give you a splendid time."
+
+For a minute or two Tom's face shone with delight. Then he caught sight
+of Bertie and turned to his aunt.
+
+"Dear Aunt Laura," he said, "I am very sorry, but I can't go."
+
+"Can't go? and why not?"
+
+"Because I can't go and leave Bertie here all alone," he said stoutly.
+"When I was going to be alone he wrote and asked his mother to let me go
+home with him. She could not have either of us because Bertie's sister
+has scarlet fever. He has to stay here, and he has never been away from
+home at Christmas time before, and I can't go away and leave him by
+himself, Aunt Laura."
+
+For a minute Aunt Laura looked at the boy as if she could not believe
+him. Then she caught him in her arms and kissed him.
+
+"You dear little boy, you shall not leave him. You shall bring him
+along, and we shall all enjoy ourselves together. Bertie, my boy, you
+are not very old yet, but I am going to teach you a lesson as well as I
+can. It is that kindness is never wasted in this world."
+
+And so Bertie and Tom found that there was such a thing as a fairy after
+all.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII. THE GREATEST OF THESE*
+
+*This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, vol. 76.
+
+JOSEPH MILLS HANSON
+
+The outside door swung open suddenly, letting a cloud of steam into the
+small, hot kitchen. Charlie Moore, a milk pail in one hand, a lantern in
+the other, closed the door behind him with a bang, set the pail on the
+table and stamped the snow from his feet.
+
+"There's the milk, and I near froze gettin' it," said he, addressing his
+partner, who was chopping potatoes in a pan on the stove.
+
+"Dose vried bodadoes vas burnt," said the other, wielding his knife
+vigorously.
+
+"Are, eh? Why didn't you watch 'em instead of readin' your old
+Scandinavian paper?" answered Charlie, hanging his overcoat and cap
+behind the door and laying his mittens under the stove to dry. Then he
+drew up a chair and with much exertion pulled off his heavy felt boots
+and stood them beside his mittens.
+
+"Why didn't you shut the gate after you came in from town? The cows
+got out and went up to Roney's an' I had to chase 'em; 'tain't any joke
+runnin' round after cows such a night as this." Having relieved his mind
+of its grievance, Charlie sat down before the oven door, and, opening
+it, laid a stick of wood along its outer edge and thrust his feet into
+the hot interior, propping his heels against the stick.
+
+"Look oud for dese har biscuits!" exclaimed his partner, anxiously.
+
+"Oh, hang the biscuits!" was Charlie's hasty answer. "I'll watch 'em.
+Why didn't you?"
+
+"Ay tank Ay fergit hem."
+
+"Well, you don't want to forget. A feller forgot his clothes once, an'
+he got froze."
+
+"Ay gass dose taller vas ketch in a sbring snowstorm. Vas dose biscuits
+done, Sharlie?"
+
+"You bet they are, Nels," replied Charlie, looking into the pan.
+
+"Dan subbar vas ready. Yom on!"
+
+Nels picked up the frying-pan and Charlie the biscuits, and set them
+on the oilcloth-covered table, where a plate of butter, a jar of plum
+jelly, and a coffee-pot were already standing.
+
+Outside the frozen kitchen window the snow-covered fields and meadows
+stretched, glistening and silent, away to the dark belt of timber by the
+river. Along the deep-rutted road in front a belated lumber-wagon passed
+slowly, the wheels crunching through the packed snow with a wavering,
+incessant shriek.
+
+The two men hitched their chairs up to the table, and without ceremony
+helped themselves liberally to the steaming food. For a few moments they
+seemed oblivious to everything but the demands of hunger. The potatoes
+and biscuits disappeared with surprising rapidity, washed down by
+large drafts of coffee. These men, labouring steadily through the short
+daylight hours in the dry, cold air of the Dakota winter, were like
+engines whose fires had burned low--they were taking fuel. Presently,
+the first keen edge of appetite satisfied, they ate more slowly, and
+Nels, straightening up with a sigh, spoke:
+
+"Ay seen Seigert in town ta-day. Ha vants von hundred fifty fer dose
+team."
+
+"Come down, eh?" commented Charlie. "Well, they're worth that. We'd
+better take 'em, Nels. We'll need 'em in the spring if we break the
+north forty."
+
+"Yas, et's a nice team," agreed Nels. "Ha vas driven ham ta-day."
+
+"Is he haulin' corn?"
+
+"Na; he had his kids oop gettin' Christmas bresents."
+
+"Chris--By gracious! to-morrow's Christmas!"
+
+Nels nodded solemnly, as one possessing superior knowledge. Charlie
+became thoughtful.
+
+"We'll come in sort of slim on it here, I reckon, Nels. Christmas ain't
+right, somehow, out here. Back in Wisconsin, where I came from, there's
+where you get your Christmas!" Charlie spoke with the unswerving
+prejudice of mankind for the land of his birth.
+
+"Yas, dose been right. En da ol' kontry dey havin' gret times
+Christmas."
+
+Their thoughts were all bent now upon the holiday scenes of the past.
+As they finished the meal and cleared away and washed the dishes they
+related incidents of their boyhood's time, compared, reiterated, and
+embellished. As they talked they grew jovial, and laughed often.
+
+"The skee broke an' you went over kerplunk, hey? Haw, haw! That reminds
+me of one time in Wisconsin--"
+
+Something of the joyous spirit of the Christmastide seemed to have
+entered into this little farmhouse set in the midst of the lonely, white
+fields. In the hearts of these men, moving about in their dim-lighted
+room, was reechoed the joyous murmur of the great world without: the
+gayety of the throngs in city streets, where the brilliant shop-windows,
+rich with holiday spoils, smile out upon the passing crowd, and the
+clang of street-cars and roar of traffic mingle with the cries of
+street-venders. The work finished, they drew their chairs to the stove,
+and filled their pipes, still talking.
+
+"Well, well," said Charlie, after the laugh occasioned by one of Nels'
+droll stories had subsided. "It's nice to think of those old times. I'd
+hate to have been one of these kids that can't have any fun. Christmas
+or any other time."
+
+"Ay gass dere ain't anybody much dot don'd have someding dis tams a
+year."
+
+"Oh, yes, there are, Nels! You bet there are!"
+
+Charlie nodded at his partner with serious conviction.
+
+"Now, there's the Roneys," he waved his pipe over his shoulder. "The old
+man told me to-night when I was up after the cows that he's sold all
+the crops except what they need for feedin'--wheat, and corn, and
+everything, and some hogs besides--and ain't got hardly enough now for
+feed and clothes for all that family. The rent and the lumber he had to
+buy to build the new barn after the old one burnt ate up the money like
+fury. He kind of laughed, and said he guessed the children wouldn't get
+much Christmas this year. I didn't think about it's being so close when
+he told me."
+
+"No Christmas!" Nels' round eyes widened with astonishment. "Ay tank
+dose been pooty bad!" He studied the subject for a few moments, his
+stolid face suddenly grown thoughtful. Charlie stared at the stove. Far
+away by the river a lonely coyote set up his quick, howling yelp.
+
+"Dere's been seven kids oop dere," said Nels at last, glancing up as it
+for corroboration.
+
+"Yes, seven," agreed Charlie.
+
+"Say, do ve need Seigert's team very pad?"
+
+"Well, now that depends," said Charlie. "Why not?"
+
+"Nothin', only Ay vas tankin' ve might tak' some a das veat we vas goin'
+to sell and--and--"
+
+"Yep, what?"
+
+"And dumb it on Roney's granary floor to-night after dere been asleeb."
+
+Charlie stared at his companion for a moment in silence. Then he rose,
+and, approaching Nels, examined his partner's face with solemn scrutiny.
+
+"By the great horn spoon," he announced, finally, "you've got a head on
+you like a balloon, my boy! Keep on gettin' ideas like that, and you'll
+land in Congress or the poor-farm before many years!"
+
+Then, abandoning his pretense of gravity, he slapped the other on the
+back.
+
+"Why didn't I think of that? It's the best yet. Seigert's team? Oh, hang
+Seigert's team. We don't need it. We'll have a little merry Christmas
+out of this yet. Only they mustn't know where it came from. I'll write
+a note and stick it under the door, 'You'll find some merry wheat--'No,
+that ain't it. 'You'll find some wheat in the granary to give the kids a
+merry Christmas with,' signed, 'Santa Claus.'"
+
+He wrote out the message in the air with a pointing forefinger. He had
+entered into the spirit of the thing eagerly.
+
+"It's half-past nine now," he went on, looking at the clock. "It'll be
+eleven time we get the stuff loaded and hauled up there. Let's go out
+and get at it. Lucky the bobs are on the wagon; they don't make such a
+racket as wheels."
+
+He took the lantern from its nail behind the door and lighted it, after
+which he put on his boots, cap, and mittens, and flung his overcoat
+across his shoulders. Nels, meanwhile, had put on his outer garments,
+also.
+
+"Shut up the stove, Nels." Charlie blew out the light and opened the
+door. "There, hang it!" he exclaimed, turning back. "I forgot the note.
+Ought to be in ink, I suppose. Well, never mind now; we won't put on any
+style about it."
+
+He took down a pencil from the shelf, and, extracting a bit of wrapping
+paper from a bundle behind the woodbox, wrote the note by the light of
+the lantern.
+
+"There, I guess that will do," he said, finally. "Come on!"
+
+Outside, the night air was cold and bracing, and in the black vault of
+the sky the winter constellations flashed and throbbed. The shadows of
+the two men, thrown by the lantern, bobbed huge and grotesque across
+the snow and among the bare branches of the cottonwoods, as they moved
+toward the barn.
+
+"Ay tank ve put on dose extra side poards and make her an even fifty
+pushel," said Nels, after they had backed the wagon up to the granary
+door. "Ve might as vell do it oop right, skence ve're at it."
+
+Having carried out this suggestion, the two shovelled steadily, with
+short intervals of rest, for three quarters of an hour, the dark pile
+of grain in the wagon-box rising gradually until it stood flush with the
+top.
+
+Good it was to look upon, cold and soft and yielding to the touch, this
+heaped-up wealth from the inexhaustible treasure-house of the mighty
+West. Charlie and Nels felt something of this as they viewed the results
+of their labours for a moment before hitching up the team.
+
+"It's A number one hard," said Charlie, picking up a handful and sifting
+it slowly through his fingers, "and it'll fetch seventy-four cents.
+But you can't raise any worse on this old farm of ours if you try," he
+added, a little proudly. "Nor anywhere else in the Jim River Valley, for
+that matter."
+
+As they approached the Roney place, looking dim and indistinct in the
+darkness, their voices hushed apprehensively, and the noise of the
+sled-runners slipping through the snow seemed to them to increase from a
+purr to a roar.
+
+"Here, stob a minute!" whispered Nels, in agony of discovery. "Ve're
+magin' an awful noise. Ay'll go und take a beek."
+
+He slipped away and cautiously approached the house. "Et's all right,"
+he whispered, hoarsely, returning after a moment; "dere all asleeb. But
+go easy; Ay tank ve pest go easy." They seemed burdened all at once
+with the consciences of criminals, and went forward with almost guilty
+timidity.
+
+"Thunder, dere's a bump! Vy don'd you drive garefuller, Sharlie?"
+
+"Drive yourself, if you think you can do any better!" As they came
+into the yard a dog suddenly ran out from the barn, barking furiously.
+Charlie reined up with an ejaculation of despair; "Look there, the dog!
+We're done for now, sure! Stop him, Nels! Throw somethin' at 'im!"
+
+The noise seemed to their excited ears louder than the crash of
+artillery. Nels threw a piece of snow crust. The dog ran back a few
+steps, but his barking did not diminish.
+
+"Here, hold the lines. I'll try to catch 'im." Charlie jumped from the
+wagon and approached the dog with coaxing words: "Come, doggie, good
+doggie, nice boy, come!"
+
+His manoeuvre, however, merely served to increase the animal's frenzy.
+As Charlie approached the dog retired slowly toward the house, his head
+thrown back, and his rapid barking increased to a long-drawn howl.
+
+"Good boy, come! Bother the brute! He'll wake up the whole household!
+Nice doggie! Phe-e--"
+
+The noise, however, had no apparent effect upon the occupants of the
+house. All remained as dark and silent as ever.
+
+"Sharlie, Sharlie, let him go!" cried Nels, in a voice smothered with
+laughter. "Ay go in dose parn; maype ha'll chase me."
+
+His hope was well founded. The dog, observing this treacherous
+occupation by the enemy of his last harbour of refuge, gave pursuit and
+disappeared within the door, which Charlie, hard behind him, closed
+with a bang. There was the sound of a hurried scuffle within. The dog's
+barking gave place to terrified whinings, which in turn were suddenly
+quenched to a choking murmur.
+
+"Gome in, Sharlie, kvick!"
+
+"You got him?" queried Charlie, opening the door cautiously. "Did he
+bite you?"
+
+"Na, yust ma mitten. Gat a sack or someding da die him oop in."
+
+A sack was procured from somewhere, into which the dog, now silenced
+from sheer exhaustion and fright, was unceremoniously thrust, after
+which the sack was tied and flung into the wagon. This formidable
+obstacle overcome and the Roneys still slumbering peacefully, the
+rest was easy. The granary door was pried open and the wheat shovelled
+hurriedly in upon the empty floor. Charlie then crept up to the house
+and slipped his note under the door.
+
+The sack was lifted from the now empty wagon and opened before the barn,
+whereupon its occupant slipped meekly out and retreated at once to a far
+corner, seemingly too much incensed at his discourteous treatment even
+to fling a volley of farewell barks at his departing captors.
+
+"Vell," remarked Nels, with a sigh of relief as they gained the road,
+"Ay tank dose Roneys pelieve en Santa Claus now. Dose peen funny vay fer
+Santa Claus to coom."
+
+Charlie's laugh was good to hear. "He didn't exactly come down the
+chimney, that's a fact, but it'll do at a pinch. We ought to have
+told them to get a present for the dog--collar and chain. I reckon he
+wouldn't hardly be thankful for it, though, eh?"
+
+"Ay gass not. Ha liges ta haf hes nights ta hemself."
+
+"Well, we had our fun, anyway. Sort of puts me in mind of old Wisconsin,
+somehow."
+
+From far off over the valley, with its dismantled cornfields and
+snow-covered haystacks, beyond the ice-bound river, floated slow, and
+sonorous, the mellow clanging of church bells. They were ushering in
+the Christmas morn. Overhead the starlit heavens glistened, brooding and
+mysterious, looking down with luminous, loving eyes upon these humble
+sons of men doing a good deed, from the impulse of simple, generous
+hearts, as upon that other Christmas morning, long ago, when the Jewish
+shepherds, guarding their flocks by night, read in their shining depths
+that in Bethlehem of Judea the Christ-Child was born.
+
+The rising sun was touching the higher hilltops with a faint rush of
+crimson the next morning when the back door of the Roney house opened
+with a creak, and Mr. Roney, still heavy-eyed with sleep, stumbled out
+upon the porch, stretched his arms above his head, yawned, blinked
+at the dazzling snow, and then shambled off toward the barn. As he
+approached, the dog ran eagerly out, gambolled meekly around his feet
+and caressed his boots. The man patted him kindly.
+
+"Hello, old boy! What were you yappin' around so for last night, huh?
+Grain-thieves? You needn't worry about them. There ain't nothin' left
+for them to steal. No, sir! If they got into that granary they'd have
+to take a lantern along to find a pint of wheat. I don't suppose," he
+added, reflectively, "that I could scrape up enough to feed the chickens
+this mornin', but I guess I might's well see."
+
+He passed over to the little building. What he saw when he looked within
+seemed for a moment to produce no impression upon him whatever. He
+stared at the hillock of grain in motionless silence. Finally Mr. Roney
+gave utterance to a single word, "Geewhilikins!" and started for the
+house on a run. Into the kitchen, where his wife was just starting the
+fire, the excited man burst like a whirlwind.
+
+"Come out here, Mary!" he cried. "Come out here, quick!"
+
+The worthy woman, unaccustomed to such demonstrations, looked at him in
+amazement.
+
+"For goodness sake, what's come over you, Peter Roney?" she exclaimed.
+"Are you daft? Don't make such a noise! You'll wake the young ones, and
+I don't want them waked till need be, with no Christmas for 'em, poor
+little things!"
+
+"Never mind the young 'uns," he replied. "Come on!"
+
+As they passed out he noticed the slip of paper under the door and
+picked it up, but without comment.
+
+He charged down upon the granary, his wife, with a shawl over her head,
+close behind.
+
+She peered in, apprehensively at first, then with eyes of widening
+wonder.
+
+"Why, Peter!" she said, turning to him. "Why, Peter! What does--I
+thought--"
+
+"You thought!" he broke in. "Me, too. But it ain't so. It means that
+we've got some of the best neighbours that ever was, a thinkin' of our
+young 'uns this way! Read that!" and he thrust the paper into her hand.
+
+"Why, Peter!" she ejaculated again, weakly. Then suddenly she turned,
+and laying her head on his shoulder, began to sob softly.
+
+"There, there," he said, patting her arm awkwardly.
+
+"Don't you go and cry now. Let's just be thankful to the good Lord for
+puttin' such fellers into the world as them fellers down the road. And
+now you run in and hurry up breakfast while I do up the chores. Then
+we'll hitch up and get into town 'fore the stores close. Tell the young
+'uns Santy didn't get round last night with their things, but we've got
+word to meet him in town. Hey? Yes, I saw just the kind of sled Pete
+wants when I was up yesterday, and that china doll for Mollie. Yes,
+tell 'em anything you want. Twon't be too big. Santy Claus has come to
+Roney's ranch this year, sure!"
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV. LITTLE GRETCHEN AND THE WOODEN SHOE*
+
+* From "Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College,
+copyright 1902.
+
+ELIZABETH HARRISON
+
+The following story is one of many which has drifted down to us from the
+story-loving nurseries and hearthstones of Germany. I cannot recall when
+I first had it told to me as a child, varied, of course, by different
+tellers, but always leaving that sweet, tender impression of God's
+loving care for the least of his children. I have since read different
+versions of it in at least a half-dozen story books for children.
+
+Once upon a time, a long time ago, far away across the great ocean, in a
+country called Germany, there could be seen a small log hut on the edge
+of a great forest, whose fir-trees extended for miles and miles to the
+north. This little house, made of heavy hewn logs, had but one room in
+it. A rough pine door gave entrance to this room, and a small square
+window admitted the light. At the back of the house was built an
+old-fashioned stone chimney, out of which in winter usually curled a
+thin, blue smoke, showing that there was not very much fire within.
+
+Small as the house was, it was large enough for the two people who lived
+in it. I want to tell you a story to-day about these two people. One
+was an old, gray-haired woman, so old that the little children of the
+village, nearly half a mile away, often wondered whether she had come
+into the world with the huge mountains, and the great fir-trees, which
+stood like giants back of her small hut. Her face was wrinkled all over
+with deep lines, which, if the children could only have read aright,
+would have told them of many years of cheerful, happy, self-sacrifice,
+of loving, anxious watching beside sick-beds, of quiet endurance of
+pain, of many a day of hunger and cold, and of a thousand deeds of
+unselfish love for other people; but, of course, they could not read
+this strange handwriting. They only knew that she was old and wrinkled,
+and that she stooped as she walked. None of them seemed to fear her,
+for her smile was always cheerful, and she had a kindly word for each
+of them if they chanced to meet her on her way to and from the village.
+With this old, old woman lived a very little girl. So bright and happy
+was she that the travellers who passed by the lonesome little house on
+the edge of the forest often thought of a sunbeam as they saw her.
+These two people were known in the village as Granny Goodyear and Little
+Gretchen.
+
+The winter had come and the frost had snapped off many of the smaller
+branches from the pine-trees in the forest. Gretchen and her Granny were
+up by daybreak each morning. After their simple breakfast of oatmeal,
+Gretchen would run to the little closet and fetch Granny's old woollen
+shawl, which seemed almost as old as Granny herself. Gretchen always
+claimed the right to put the shawl over her Granny's head, even though
+she had to climb onto the wooden bench to do it. After carefully pinning
+it under Granny's chin, she gave her a good-bye kiss, and Granny started
+out for her morning's work in the forest. This work was nothing more nor
+less than the gathering up of the twigs and branches which the autumn
+winds and winter frosts had thrown upon the ground. These were carefully
+gathered into a large bundle which Granny tied together with a strong
+linen band. She then managed to lift the bundle to her shoulder and
+trudged off to the village with it. Here she sold the fagots for
+kindling wood to the people of the village. Sometimes she would get only
+a few pence each day, and sometimes a dozen or more, but on this money
+little Gretchen and she managed to live; they had their home, and the
+forest kindly furnished the wood for the fire which kept them warm in
+cold weather.
+
+In the summer time Granny had a little garden at the back of the hut
+where she raised, with little Gretchen's help, a few potatoes and
+turnips and onions. These she carefully stored away for winter use. To
+this meagre supply, the pennies, gained by selling the twigs from the
+forest, added the oatmeal for Gretchen and a little black coffee for
+Granny. Meat was a thing they never thought of having. It cost too much
+money. Still, Granny and Gretchen were very happy, because they loved
+each other dearly. Sometimes Gretchen would be left alone all day long
+in the hut, because Granny would have some work to do in the village
+after selling her bundle of sticks and twigs. It was during these long
+days that little Gretchen had taught herself to sing the song which the
+wind sang to the pine branches. In the summer time she learned the chirp
+and twitter of the birds, until her voice might almost be mistaken for a
+bird's voice; she learned to dance as the swaying shadows did, and even
+to talk to the stars which shone through the little square window when
+Granny came home too late or too tired to talk.
+
+Sometimes, when the weather was fine, or her Granny had an extra bundle
+of newly knitted stockings to take to the village, she would let little
+Gretchen go along with her. It chanced that one of these trips to the
+town came just the week before Christmas, and Gretchen's eyes were
+delighted by the sight of the lovely Christmas-trees which stood in the
+window of the village store. It seemed to her that she would never tire
+of looking at the knit dolls, the woolly lambs, the little wooden shops
+with their queer, painted men and women in them, and all the other fine
+things. She had never owned a plaything in her whole life; therefore,
+toys which you and I would not think much of, seemed to her to be very
+beautiful.
+
+That night, after their supper of baked potatoes was over, and little
+Gretchen had cleared away the dishes and swept up the hearth, because
+Granny dear was so tired, she brought her own small wooden stool and
+placed it very near Granny's feet and sat down upon it, folding her
+hands on her lap. Granny knew that this meant she wanted to talk about
+something, so she smilingly laid away the large Bible which she had been
+reading, and took up her knitting, which was as much as to say: "Well,
+Gretchen, dear, Granny is ready to listen."
+
+"Granny," said Gretchen slowly, "it's almost Christmas time, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, dearie," said Granny, "only five more days now," and then she
+sighed, but little Gretchen was so happy that she did not notice
+Granny's sigh.
+
+"What do you think, Granny, I'll get this Christmas?" said she, looking
+up eagerly into Granny's face.
+
+"Ah, child, child," said Granny, shaking her head, "you'll have no
+Christmas this year. We are too poor for that."
+
+"Oh, but, Granny," interrupted little Gretchen, "think of all the
+beautiful toys we saw in the village to-day. Surely Santa Claus has sent
+enough for every little child."
+
+"Ah, dearie," said Granny, "those toys are for people who can pay money
+for them, and we have no money to spend for Christmas toys."
+
+"Well, Granny," said Gretchen, "perhaps some of the little children who
+live in the great house on the hill at the other end of the village will
+be willing to share some of their toys with me. They will be so glad to
+give some to a little girl who has none."
+
+"Dear child, dear child," said Granny, leaning forward and stroking the
+soft, shiny hair of the little girl, "your heart is full of love. You
+would be glad to bring a Christmas to every child; but their heads are
+so full of what they are going to get that they forget all about anybody
+else but themselves." Then she sighed and shook her head.
+
+"Well, Granny," said Gretchen, her bright, happy tone of voice growing a
+little less joyous, "perhaps the dear Santa Claus will show some of the
+village children how to make presents that do not cost money, and some
+of them may surprise me Christmas morning with a present. And, Granny,
+dear," added she, springing up from her low stool, "can't I gather some
+of the pine branches and take them to the old sick man who lives in
+the house by the mill, so that he can have the sweet smell of our pine
+forest in his room all Christmas day?"
+
+"Yes, dearie," said Granny, "you may do what you can to make the
+Christmas bright and happy, but you must not expect any present
+yourself."
+
+"Oh, but, Granny," said little Gretchen, her face brightening, "you
+forget all about the shining Christmas angels, who came down to earth
+and sang their wonderful song the night the beautiful Christ-Child was
+born! They are so loving and good that they will not forget any little
+child. I shall ask my dear stars to-night to tell them of us. You know,"
+she added, with a look of relief, "the stars are so very high that they
+must know the angels quite well, as they come and go with their messages
+from the loving God."
+
+Granny sighed, as she half whispered, "Poor child, poor child!" but
+Gretchen threw her arm around Granny's neck and gave her a hearty kiss,
+saying as she did so: "Oh, Granny, Granny, you don't talk to the stars
+often enough, else you wouldn't be sad at Christmas time." Then she
+danced all around the room, whirling her little skirts about her to
+show Granny how the wind had made the snow dance that day. She looked
+so droll and funny that Granny forgot her cares and worries and laughed
+with little Gretchen over her new snow-dance. The days passed on, and
+the morning before Christmas Eve came. Gretchen having tidied up
+the little room--for Granny had taught her to be a careful little
+housewife--was off to the forest, singing a birdlike song, almost as
+happy and free as the birds themselves. She was very busy that day,
+preparing a surprise for Granny. First, however, she gathered the most
+beautiful of the fir branches within her reach to take the next morning
+to the old sick man who lived by the mill. The day was all too short
+for the happy little girl. When Granny came trudging wearily home
+that night, she found the frame of the doorway covered with green pine
+branches.
+
+"It's to welcome you, Granny! It's to welcome you!" cried Gretchen; "our
+old dear home wanted to give you a Christmas welcome. Don't you see, the
+branches of evergreen make it look as if it were smiling all over, and
+it is trying to say, 'A happy Christmas' to you, Granny!"
+
+Granny laughed and kissed the little girl, as they opened the door and
+went in together. Here was a new surprise for Granny. The four posts of
+the wooden bed, which stood in one corner of the room, had been trimmed
+by the busy little fingers, with smaller and more flexible branches of
+the pine-trees. A small bouquet of red mountain-ash berries stood at
+each side of the fireplace, and these, together with the trimmed posts
+of the bed, gave the plain old room quite a festival look. Gretchen
+laughed and clapped her hands and danced about until the house seemed
+full of music to poor, tired Granny, whose heart had been sad as she
+turned toward their home that night, thinking of the disappointment
+which must come to loving little Gretchen the next morning.
+
+After supper was over little Gretchen drew her stool up to Granny's
+side, and laying her soft, little hands on Granny's knee, asked to be
+told once again the story of the coming of the Christ-Child; how the
+night that he was born the beautiful angels had sung their wonderful
+song, and how the whole sky had become bright with a strange and
+glorious light, never seen by the people of earth before. Gretchen had
+heard the story many, many times before, but she never grew tired of it,
+and now that Christmas Eve had come again, the happy little child wanted
+to hear it once more.
+
+When Granny had finished telling it the two sat quiet and silent for
+a little while thinking it over; then Granny rose and said that it was
+time for them to go to bed. She slowly took off her heavy wooden shoes,
+such as are worn in that country, and placed them beside the hearth.
+Gretchen looked thoughtfully at them for a minute or two, and then she
+said, "Granny, don't you think that somebody in all this wide world will
+think of us to-night?"
+
+"Nay, Gretchen," said Granny, "I don't think any one will."
+
+"Well, then, Granny," said Gretchen, "the Christmas angels will, I
+know; so I am going to take one of your wooden shoes, and put it on the
+windowsill outside, so that they may see it as they pass by. I am sure
+the stars will tell the Christmas angels where the shoe is."
+
+"Ah, you foolish, foolish child," said Granny, "you are only getting
+ready for a disappointment To-morrow morning there will be nothing
+whatever in the shoe. I can tell you that now."
+
+But little Gretchen would not listen. She only shook her head and cried
+out: "Ah, Granny, you don't talk enough to the stars." With this she
+seized the shoe, and, opening the door, hurried out to place it on the
+windowsill. It was very dark without, and something soft and cold seemed
+to gently kiss her hair and face. Gretchen knew by this that it was
+snowing, and she looked up to the sky, anxious to see if the stars were
+in sight, but a strong wind was tumbling the dark, heavy snow-clouds
+about and had shut away all else.
+
+"Never mind," said Gretchen softly to herself, "the stars are up
+there, even if I can't see them, and the Christmas angels do not mind
+snowstorms."
+
+Just then a rough wind went sweeping by the little girl, whispering
+something to her which she could not understand, and then it made a
+sudden rush up to the snow-clouds and parted them, so that the deep,
+mysterious sky appeared beyond, and shining down out of the midst of it
+was Gretchen's favourite star.
+
+"Ah, little star, little star!" said the child, laughing aloud, "I
+knew you were there, though I couldn't see you. Will you whisper to the
+Christmas angels as they come by that little Gretchen wants so very much
+to have a Christmas gift to-morrow morning, if they have one to spare,
+and that she has put one of Granny's shoes upon the windowsill ready for
+it?"
+
+A moment more and the little girl, standing on tiptoe, had reached the
+windowsill and placed the shoe upon it, and was back again in the house
+beside Granny and the warm fire.
+
+The two went quietly to bed, and that night as little Gretchen knelt
+to pray to the Heavenly Father, she thanked him for having sent the
+Christ-Child into the world to teach all mankind how to be loving and
+unselfish, and in a few moments she was quietly sleeping, dreaming of
+the Christmas angels.
+
+The next morning, very early, even before the sun was up, little
+Gretchen was awakened by the sound of sweet music coming from the
+village. She listened for a moment and then she knew that the choir-boys
+were singing the Christmas carols in the open air of the village street.
+She sprang up out of bed and began to dress herself as quickly as
+possible, singing as she dressed. While Granny was slowly putting on her
+clothes, little Gretchen, having finished dressing herself, unfastened
+the door and hurried out to see what the Christmas angels had left in
+the old wooden shoe.
+
+The white snow covered everything--trees, stumps, roads, and
+pastures--until the whole world looked like fairyland. Gretchen climbed
+up on a large stone which was beneath the window and carefully lifted
+down the wooden shoe. The snow tumbled off of it in a shower over the
+little girl's hands, but she did not heed that; she ran hurriedly back
+into the house, putting her hand into the toe of the shoe as she ran.
+
+"Oh, Granny! Oh, Granny!" she exclaimed, "you didn't believe the
+Christmas angels would think about us, but see, they have, they have!
+Here is a dear little bird nestled down in the toe of your shoe! Oh,
+isn't he beautiful?"
+
+Granny came forward and looked at what the child was holding lovingly
+in her hand. There she saw a tiny chick-a-dee, whose wing was evidently
+broken by the rough and boisterous winds of the night before, and who
+had taken shelter in the safe, dry toe of the old wooden shoe. She
+gently took the little bird out of Gretchen's hands, and skilfully bound
+his broken wing to his side, so that he need not hurt himself by trying
+to fly with it. Then she showed Gretchen how to make a nice warm nest
+for the little stranger, close beside the fire, and when their breakfast
+was ready she let Gretchen feed the little bird with a few moist crumbs.
+
+Later in the day Gretchen carried the fresh, green boughs to the old
+sick man by the mill, and on her way home stopped to see and enjoy the
+Christmas toys of some other children whom she knew, never once wishing
+that they were hers. When she reached home she found that the little
+bird had gone to sleep. Soon, however, he opened his eyes and stretched
+his head up, saying just as plain as a bird could say, "Now, my new
+friends, I want you to give me something more to eat." Gretchen gladly
+fed him again, and then, holding him in her lap, she softly and gently
+stroked his gray feathers until the little creature seemed to lose all
+fear of her. That evening Granny taught her a Christmas hymn and told
+her another beautiful Christmas story. Then Gretchen made up a funny
+little story to tell to the birdie. He winked his eyes and turned his
+head from side to side in such a droll fashion that Gretchen laughed
+until the tears came.
+
+As Granny and she got ready for bed that night, Gretchen put her arms
+softly around Granny's neck, and whispered: "What a beautiful Christmas
+we have had to-day, Granny! Is there anything in the world more lovely
+than Christmas?"
+
+"Nay, child, nay," said Granny, "not to such loving hearts as yours."
+
+
+
+
+XXXV. CHRISTMAS ON BIG RATTLE*
+
+* This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, Dec. 14, 1905.
+
+THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
+
+Archer sat by the rude hearth of his Big Rattle camp, brooding in a sort
+of tired contentment over the spitting fagots of var and glowing coals
+of birch.
+
+It was Christmas Eve. He had been out on his snowshoes all that day, and
+all the day before, springing his traps along the streams and putting
+his deadfalls out of commission--rather queer work for a trapper to be
+about.
+
+But Archer, despite all his gloomy manner, was really a sentimentalist,
+who practised what he felt.
+
+"Christmas is a season of peace on earth," he had told himself, while
+demolishing the logs of a sinister deadfall with his axe; and now the
+remembrance of his quixotic deed added a brightness to the fire and to
+the rough, undecorated walls of the camp.
+
+Outside, the wind ran high in the forest, breaking and sweeping tidelike
+over the reefs of treetops. The air was bitterly cold. Another voice,
+almost as fitful as the sough of the wind, sounded across the night. It
+was the waters of Stone Arrow Falls, above Big Rattle.
+
+The frosts had drawn their bonds of ice and blankets of silencing snow
+over all the rest of the stream, but the white and black face of the
+falls still flashed from a window in the great house of crystal, and
+threw out a voice of desolation.
+
+Sacobie Bear, a full-blooded Micmac, uttered a grunt of relief when his
+ears caught the bellow of Stone Arrow Falls. He stood still, and turned
+his head from side to side, questioningly.
+
+"Good!" he said. "Big Rattle off there, Archer's camp over there. I go
+there. Good 'nough!"
+
+He hitched his old smooth-bore rifle higher under his arm and
+continued his journey. Sacobie had tramped many miles--all the way from
+ice-imprisoned Fox Harbor. His papoose was sick. His squaw was hungry.
+Sacobie's belt was drawn tight.
+
+During all that weary journey his old rifle had not banged once,
+although few eyes save those of timberwolf and lynx were sharper in the
+hunt than Sacobie's. The Indian was reeling with hunger and weakness,
+but he held bravely on.
+
+A white man, no matter how courageous and sinewy, would have been prone
+in the snow by that time.
+
+But Sacobie, with his head down and his round snowshoes padding!
+padding! like the feet of a frightened duck, raced with death toward the
+haven of Archer's cabin.
+
+Archer was dreaming of a Christmas-time in a great faraway city when
+he was startled by a rattle of snowshoes at his threshold and a soft
+beating on his door, like weak blows from mittened hands. He sprang
+across the cabin and pulled open the door.
+
+A short, stooping figure shuffled in and reeled against him. A rifle in
+a woollen case clattered at his feet.
+
+"Mer' Christmas! How-do?" said a weary voice.
+
+"Merry Christmas, brother!" replied Archer. Then, "Bless me, but it's
+Sacobie Bear! Why, what's the matter, Sacobie?"
+
+"Heap tired! Heap hungry!" replied the Micmac, sinking to the floor.
+
+Archer lifted the Indian and carried him over to the bunk at the farther
+end of the room. He filled his iron-pot spoon with brandy, and inserted
+the point of it between Sacobie's unresisting jaws. Then he loosened the
+Micmac's coat and shirt and belt.
+
+He removed his moccasins and stockings and rubbed the straight thin feet
+with brandy.
+
+After a while Sacobie Bear opened his eyes and gazed up at Archer.
+
+"Good!" he said. "John Archer, he heap fine man, anyhow. Mighty good to
+poor Injun Sacobie, too. Plenty tobac, I s'pose. Plenty rum, too."
+
+"No more rum, my son," replied Archer, tossing what was left in the mug
+against the log wall, and corking the bottle, "and no smoke until you
+have had a feed. What do you say to bacon and tea! Or would tinned beef
+suit you better?"
+
+"Bacum," replied Sacobie.
+
+He hoisted himself to his elbow, and wistfully sniffed the fumes of
+brandy that came from the direction of his bare feet. "Heap waste of
+good rum, me t'ink," he said.
+
+"You ungratefu' little beggar!" laughed Archer, as he pulled a frying
+pan from under the bunk.
+
+By the time the bacon was fried and the tea steeped, Sacobie was
+sufficiently revived to leave the bunk and take a seat by the fire.
+
+He ate as all hungry Indians do; and Archer looked on in wonder and
+whimsical regret, remembering the miles and miles he had tramped with
+that bacon on his back.
+
+"Sacobie, you will kill yourself!" he protested.
+
+"Sacobie no kill himself now," replied the Micmac, as he bolted a brown
+slice and a mouthful of hard bread. "Sacobie more like to kill himself
+when he empty. Want to live when he chock-full. Good fun. T'ank you for
+more tea."
+
+Archer filled the extended mug and poured in the molasses--"long
+sweet'nin'" they call it in that region.
+
+"What brings you so far from Fox Harbor this time of year?" inquired
+Archer.
+
+"Squaw sick. Papoose sick. Bote empty. Wan' good bacum to eat."
+
+Archer smiled at the fire. "Any luck trapping?" he asked.
+
+His guest shook his head and hid his face behind the upturned mug.
+
+"Not much," he replied, presently.
+
+He drew his sleeve across his mouth, and then produced a clay pipe from
+a pocket in his shirt.
+
+"Tobac?" he inquired.
+
+Archer passed him a dark and heavy plug of tobacco.
+
+"Knife?" queried Sacobie.
+
+"Try your own knife on it," answered Archer, grinning.
+
+With a sigh Sacobie produced his sheath-knife.
+
+"You t'ink Sacobie heap big t'ief," he said, accusingly.
+
+"Knives are easily lost--in people's pockets," replied Archer.
+
+The two men talked for hours. Sacobie Bear was a great gossip for one
+of his race. In fact, he had a Micmac nickname which, translated, meant
+"the man who deafens his friends with much talk." Archer, however, was
+pleased with his ready chatter and unforced humour.
+
+But at last they both began to nod. The white man made up a bed on the
+floor for Sacobie with a couple of caribou skins and a heavy blanket.
+Then he gathered together a few plugs of tobacco, some tea, flour, and
+dried fish.
+
+Sacobie watched him with freshly aroused interest.
+
+"More tobac, please," he said. "Squaw, he smoke, too."
+
+Archer added a couple of sticks of the black leaf to the pile.
+
+"Bacum, too," said the Micmac. "Bacum better nor fish, anyhow."
+
+Archer shook his head.
+
+"You'll have to do with the fish," he replied; "but I'll give you a tin
+of condensed milk for the papoose."
+
+"Ah, ah! Him good stuff!" exclaimed Sacobie.
+
+Archer considered the provisions for a second or two. Then, going over
+to a dunnage bag near his bunk, he pulled its contents about until he
+found a bright red silk handkerchief and a red flannel shirt. Their
+colour was too gaudy for his taste. "These things are for your squaw,"
+he said.
+
+Sacobie was delighted. Archer tied the articles into a neat pack and
+stood it in the corner, beside his guest's rifle.
+
+"Now you had better turn in," he said, and blew out the light.
+
+In ten minutes both men slept the sleep of the weary. The fire, a great
+mass of red coals, faded and flushed like some fabulous jewel. The wind
+washed over the cabin and fingered the eaves, and brushed furtive hands
+against the door.
+
+It was dawn when Archer awoke. He sat up in his bunk and looked about
+the quiet, gray-lighted room. Sacobie Bear was nowhere to be seen.
+
+He glanced at the corner by the door. Rifle and pack were both gone.
+He looked up at the rafter where his slab of bacon was always hung. It,
+too, was gone.
+
+He jumped out of his bunk and ran to the door. Opening it, he looked
+out. Not a breath of air stirred. In the east, saffron and scarlet,
+broke the Christmas morning, and blue on the white surface of the world
+lay the imprints of Sacobie's round snowshoes.
+
+For a long time the trapper stood in the doorway in silence, looking out
+at the stillness and beauty.
+
+"Poor Sacobie!" he said, after a while. "Well, he's welcome to the
+bacon, even if it is all I had."
+
+He turned to light the fire and prepare breakfast. Something at the foot
+of his bunk caught his eye. He went over and took it up. It was a cured
+skin--a beautiful specimen of fox. He turned it over, and on the white
+hide an uncultured hand had written, with a charred stick, "Archer."
+
+"Well, bless that old red-skin!" exclaimed the trapper, huskily. "Bless
+his puckered eyes! Who'd have thought that I should get a Christmas
+present?"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Children's Book of Christmas
+Stories, by Various
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+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTMAS STORIES ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Children's Book of Christmas Stories
+Edited by Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Children's Book of Christmas Stories
+
+Author: Edited by Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+
+Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5061]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on April 12, 2002]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, BOOK OF CHRISTMAS STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Etext prepared by Dianne Bean, Prescott Valley, Arizona.
+
+
+
+THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF CHRISTMAS STORIES
+
+Edited by Asa Don Dickinson and Ada M. Skinner
+
+
+
+THE CHILDREN'S BOOK OF CHRISTMAS STORIES
+
+PREFACE
+
+Many librarians have felt the need and expressed the desire for a
+select collection of children's Christmas stories in one volume. This
+books claims to be just that and nothing more.
+
+Each of the stories has already won the approval of thousands of
+children, and each is fraught with the true Christmas spirit.
+
+It is hoped that the collection will prove equally acceptable to
+parents, teachers, and librarians.
+
+Asa Don Dickinson.
+
+
+CONTENTS
+(Note.--The stories marked with a star (*) will be most enjoyed by
+younger children; those marked with a two stars (**) are better suited
+to older children.)
+
+ Christmas at Fezziwig's Warehouse. By Charles Dickens
+* The Fir-Tree. By Hans Christian Andersen
+ The Christmas Masquerade. By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
+* The Shepherds and the Angels. Adapted from the Bills
+** The Telltale Tile. By Olive Thorne Miller
+* Little Girl's Christmas. By Winnifred E. Lincoln
+** A Christmas Matinee. By M.A.L. Lane
+* Toinette and the Elves. By Susan Coolidge
+ The Voyage of the Wee Red Cap. By Ruth Sawyer Durand
+* A Story of the Christ-Child (a German Legend for Christmas Eve). As
+told by
+ Elizabeth Harrison
+* Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas. By Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
+ Why the Chimes Rang. By Raymond McAlden
+ The Birds'Christmas (founded on fact). By F.E. Mann
+** The Little Sister's Vacation. By Winifred M. Kirkland
+* Little Wolff's Wooden Shoes. By Francois Coppee, adapted and
+translated by
+ Alma J. Foster
+** Christmas in the Alley. By Olive Thorne Miller
+* A Christmas Star. By Katherine Pyle
+** The Queerest Christmas. By Grace Margaret Gallaher
+ Old Father Christmas. By J.H. Ewing
+ A Christmas Carol. By Charles Dickens
+ How Christmas Came to the Santa Maria Flats. By Elia W. Peattie
+ The Legend of Babouscka. From the Russian Folk Tale
+* Christmas in the Barn. By F. Arnstein
+ The Philanthropist's Christmas. By James Weber Linn
+* The First Christmas-Tree. By Lucy Wheelock
+ The First New England Christmas. By G.L. Stone and M.G. Fickett
+ The Cratchits' Christmas Dinner. By Charles Dickens
+ Christmas in Seventeen Seventy-Six. By Anne Hollingsworth Wharton
+* Christmas Under the Snow. By Olive Thorne Miller
+ Mr. Bluff's Experience of Holidays. By Oliver Bell Bunce
+** Master Sandy's Snapdragon. By Elbridge S. Brooks
+ A Christmas Fairy. By John Strange Winter
+ The Greatest of These. By Joseph Mills Hanson
+* Little Gretchen and the Wooden Shoe. By Elizabeth Harrison
+** Big Rattle. By Theodore Goodridge Roberts
+
+
+
+I. CHRISTMAS AT FEZZIWIG'S WAREHOUSE
+
+CHARLES DICKENS
+
+"Yo Ho! my boys," said Fezziwig. "No more work to-night! Christmas Eve,
+Dick! Christmas, Ebenezer! Let's have the shutters up!" cried old
+Fezziwig with a sharp clap of his hands, "before a man can say Jack
+Robinson. . . ."
+
+"Hilli-ho!" cried old Fezziwig, skipping down from the high desk with
+wonderful agility. "Clear away, my lads, and let's have lots of room
+here! Hilli-ho, Dick! Cheer-up, Ebenezer!"
+
+Clear away! There was nothing they wouldn't have cleared away, or
+couldn't have cleared away with old Fezziwig looking on. It was done in
+a minute. Every movable was packed off, as if it were dismissed from
+public life forevermore; the floor was swept and watered, the lamps
+were trimmed, fuel was heaped upon the fire; and the warehouse was as
+snug, and warm, and dry, and bright a ballroom as you would desire to
+see on a winter's night.
+
+In came a fiddler with a music book, and went up to the lofty desk and
+made an orchestra of it and tuned like fifty stomach-aches. In came
+Mrs. Fezziwig, one vast substantial smile. In came the three Misses
+Fezziwig, beaming and lovable. In came the six followers whose hearts
+they broke. In came all the young men and women employed in the
+business. In came the housemaid with her cousin the baker. In came the
+cook with her brother's particular friend the milkman. In came the boy
+from over the way, who was suspected of not having board enough from
+his master, trying to hide himself behind the girl from next door but
+one who was proved to have had her ears pulled by her mistress; in they
+all came, anyhow and everyhow. Away they all went, twenty couple at
+once; hands half round and back again the other way; down the middle
+and up again; round and round in various stages of affectionate
+grouping, old top couple always turning up in the wrong place; new top
+couple starting off again, as soon as they got there; all top couples
+at last, and not a bottom one to help them.
+
+When this result was brought about the fiddler struck up "Sir Roger de
+Coverley." Then old Fezziwig stood out to dance with Mrs. Fezziwig. Top
+couple, too, with a good stiff piece of work cut out for them; three or
+four and twenty pairs of partners; people who were not to be trifled
+with; people who would dance and had no notion of walking.
+
+But if they had been thrice as many--oh, four times as many--old
+Fezziwig would have been a match for them, and so would Mrs. Fezziwig.
+As to her, she was worthy to be his partner in every sense of the term.
+If that's not high praise, tell me higher and I'll use it. A positive
+light appeared to issue from Fezziwig's calves. They shone in every
+part of the dance like moons. You couldn't have predicted at any given
+time what would become of them next. And when old Fezziwig and Mrs.
+Fezziwig had gone all through the dance, advance and retire; both hands
+to your partner, bow and courtesy, corkscrew, thread the needle, and
+back again to your place; Fezziwig "cut"--cut so deftly that he
+appeared to wink with his legs, and came upon his feet again with a
+stagger.
+
+When the clock struck eleven the domestic ball broke up. Mr. and Mrs.
+Fezziwig took their stations, one on either side of the door, and
+shaking hands with every person individually, as he or she went out,
+wished him or her a Merry Christmas!
+
+
+
+II. THE FIR-TREE*
+
+*Reprinted by permission of the Houghton-Mifflin Company.
+
+HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
+
+Out in the woods stood a nice little Fir-tree. The place he had was a
+very good one; the sun shone on him; as to fresh air, there was enough
+of that, and round him grew many large-sized comrades, pines as well as
+firs. But the little Fir wanted so very much to be a grown-up tree.
+
+He did not think of the warm sun and of the fresh air; he did not care
+for the little cottage children that ran about and prattled when they
+were in the woods looking for wild strawberries. The children often
+came with a whole pitcher full of berries, or a long row of them
+threaded on a straw, and sat down near the young tree and said, "Oh,
+how pretty he is! what a nice little fir!" But this was what the Tree
+could not bear to hear.
+
+At the end of a year he had shot up a good deal, and after another year
+he was another long bit taller; for with fir-trees one can always tell
+by the shoots how many years old they are.
+
+"Oh, were I but such a high tree as the others are!" sighed he. "Then I
+should be able to spread out my branches, and with the tops to look
+into the wide world! Then would the birds build nests among my
+branches; and when there was a breeze, I could bend with as much
+stateliness as the others!"
+
+Neither the sunbeams, nor the birds, nor the red clouds, which morning
+and evening sailed above them, gave the little Tree any pleasure.
+
+In winter, when the snow lay glittering on the ground, a hare would
+often come leaping along, and jump right over the little Tree. Oh, that
+made him so angry! But two winters were past, and in the third the tree
+was so large that the hare was obliged to go round it. "To grow and
+grow, to get older and be tall," thought the Tree--"that, after all, is
+the most delightful thing in the world!"
+
+In autumn the wood-cutters always came and felled some of the largest
+trees. This happened every year; and the young Fir-tree, that had now
+grown to a very comely size, trembled at the sight; for the magnificent
+great trees fell to the earth with noise and cracking, the branches
+were lopped off, and the trees looked long and bare; they were hardly
+to be recognized; and then they were laid in carts, and the horses
+dragged them out of the woods.
+
+Where did they go to? What became of them?
+
+In spring, when the Swallows and the Storks came, the Tree asked them,
+"Don't you know where they have been taken? Have you not met them
+anywhere?"
+
+The Swallows did not know anything about it; but the Stork looked
+musing, nodded his head, and said: "Yes, I think I know; I met many
+ships as I was flying hither from Egypt; on the ships were magnificent
+masts, and I venture to assert that it was they that smelt so of fir. I
+may congratulate you, for they lifted themselves on high most
+majestically!"
+
+"Oh, were I but old enough to fly across the sea! But how does the sea
+look in reality? What is it like?"
+
+"That would take a long time to explain," said the Stork, and with
+these words off he went.
+
+"Rejoice in thy growth!" said the Sunbeams, "rejoice in thy vigorous
+growth, and in the fresh life that moveth within thee!"
+
+And the Wind kissed the Tree, and the Dew wept tears over him; but the
+Fir understood it not.
+
+When Christmas came, quite young trees were cut down; trees which often
+were not even as large or of the same age as this Fir-tree, who could
+never rest, but always wanted to be off. These young trees, and they
+were always the finest looking, retained their branches; they were laid
+on carts, and the horses drew them out of the woods.
+
+"Where are they going to?" asked the Fir. "They are not taller than I;
+there was one indeed that was considerably shorter; and why do they
+retain all their branches? Whither are they taken?"
+
+"We know! we know!" chirped the Sparrows. "We have peeped in at the
+windows in the town below! We know whither they are taken! The greatest
+splendour and the greatest magnificence one can imagine await them. We
+peeped through the windows, and saw them planted in the middle of the
+warm room, and ornamented with the most splendid things--with gilded
+apples, with gingerbread, with toys, and many hundred lights!"
+
+"And then?" asked the Fir-tree, trembling in every bough. "And then?
+What happens then?"
+
+"We did not see anything more: it was incomparably beautiful."
+
+"I would fain know if I am destined for so glorious a career," cried
+the Tree, rejoicing. "That is still better than to cross the sea! What
+a longing do I suffer! Were Christmas but come! I am now tall, and my
+branches spread like the others that were carried off last year! Oh,
+were I but already on the cart. Were I in the warm room with all the
+splendour and magnificence! Yes; then something better, something still
+grander, will surely follow, or wherefore should they thus ornament me?
+Something better, something still grander, MUST follow--but what? Oh,
+how I long, how I suffer! I do not know myself what is the matter with
+me!"
+
+"Rejoice in our presence!" said the Air and the Sunlight; "rejoice in
+thy own fresh youth!"
+
+But the Tree did not rejoice at all; he grew and grew, and was green
+both winter and summer. People that saw him said, "What a fine tree!"
+and toward Christmas he was one of the first that was cut down. The axe
+struck deep into the very pith; the tree fell to the earth with a sigh:
+he felt a pang--it was like a swoon; he could not think of happiness,
+for he was sorrowful at being separated from his home, from the place
+where he had sprung up. He knew well that he should never see his dear
+old comrades, the little bushes and flowers around him, any more;
+perhaps not even the birds! The departure was not at all agreeable.
+
+The Tree only came to himself when he was unloaded in a courtyard with
+the other trees, and heard a man say, "That one is splendid! we don't
+want the others." Then two servants came in rich livery and carried the
+Fir-tree into a large and splendid drawing-room. Portraits were hanging
+on the walls, and near the white porcelain stove stood two large
+Chinese vases with lions on the covers. There, too, were large easy
+chairs, silken sofas, large tables full of picture-books, and full of
+toys worth hundreds and hundreds of crowns--at least the children said
+so. And the Fir-tree was stuck upright in a cask that was filled with
+sand: but no one could see that it was a cask, for green cloth was hung
+all around it, and it stood on a large gayly coloured carpet. Oh, how
+the Tree quivered! What was to happen? The servants, as well as the
+young ladies, decorated it. On one branch there hung little nets cut
+out of coloured paper, and each net was filled with sugar-plums; and
+among the other boughs gilded apples and walnuts were suspended,
+looking as though they had grown there, and little blue and white
+tapers were placed among the leaves. Dolls that looked for all the
+world like men--the Tree had never beheld such before--were seen among
+the foliage, and at the very top a large star of gold tinsel was fixed.
+It was really splendid--beyond description splendid.
+
+"This evening!" said they all; "how it will shine this evening!"
+
+"Oh," thought the Tree, "if the evening were but come! If the tapers
+were but lighted! And then I wonder what will happen! Perhaps the other
+trees from the forest will come to look at me! Perhaps the sparrows
+will beat against the window-panes! I wonder if I shall take root here,
+and winter and summer stand covered with ornaments!"
+
+He knew very much about the matter! but he was so impatient that for
+sheer longing he got a pain in his back, and this with trees is the
+same thing as a headache with us.
+
+The candles were now lighted. What brightness! What splendour! The Tree
+trembled so in every bough that one of the tapers set fire to the
+foliage. It blazed up splendidly.
+
+"Help! Help!" cried the young ladies, and they quickly put out the fire.
+
+Now the Tree did not even dare tremble. What a state he was in! He was
+so uneasy lest he should lose something of his splendour, that he was
+quite bewildered amidst the glare and brightness; when suddenly both
+folding-doors opened, and a troop of children rushed in as if they
+would upset the Tree. The older persons followed quietly; the little
+ones stood quite still. But it was only for a moment; then they shouted
+so that the whole place reechoed with their rejoicing; they danced
+round the tree, and one present after the other was pulled off.
+
+"What are they about?" thought the Tree. "What is to happen now?" And
+the lights burned down to the very branches, and as they burned down
+they were put out, one after the other, and then the children had
+permission to plunder the tree. So they fell upon it with such violence
+that all its branches cracked; if it had not been fixed firmly in the
+cask, it would certainly have tumbled down.
+
+The children danced about with their beautiful playthings: no one
+looked at the Tree except the old nurse, who peeped between the
+branches; but it was only to see if there was a fig or an apple left
+that had been forgotten.
+
+"A story! a story!" cried the children, drawing a little fat man toward
+the tree. He seated himself under it, and said: "Now we are in the
+shade, and the Tree can listen, too. But I shall tell only one story.
+Now which will you have: that about Ivedy-Avedy, or about Klumpy-Dumpy
+who tumbled downstairs, and yet after all came to the throne and
+married the princess?"
+
+"Ivedy-Avedy!" cried some; "Klumpy-Dumpy" cried the others. There was
+such a bawling and screaming--the Fir-tree alone was silent, and he
+thought to himself, "Am I not to bawl with the rest?--am I to do
+nothing whatever?" for he was one of the company, and had done what he
+had to do.
+
+And the man told about Klumpy-Dumpy that tumbled down, who
+notwithstanding came to the throne, and at last married the princess.
+And the children clapped their hands, and cried out, "Oh, go on! Do go
+on!" They wanted to hear about Ivedy-Avedy, too, but the little man
+only told them about Klumpy-Dumpy. The Fir-tree stood quite still and
+absorbed in thought; the birds in the woods had never related the like
+of this. "Klumpy-Dumpy fell downstairs, and yet he married the
+princess! Yes! Yes! that's the way of the world!" thought the Fir-tree,
+and believed it all, because the man who told the story was so
+good-looking. "Well, well! who knows, perhaps I may fall downstairs,
+too, and get a princess as wife!" And he looked forward with joy to the
+morrow, when he hoped to be decked out again with lights, playthings,
+fruits, and tinsel.
+
+"I won't tremble to-morrow," thought the Fir-tree. "I will enjoy to the
+full all my splendour. To-morrow I shall hear again the story of
+Klumpy-Dumpy, and perhaps that of Ivedy-Avedy, too." And the whole
+night the Tree stood still and in deep thought.
+
+In the morning the servant and the housemaid came in.
+
+"Now, then, the splendour will begin again," thought the Fir. But they
+dragged him out of the room, and up the stairs into the loft; and here
+in a dark corner, where no daylight could enter, they left him. "What's
+the meaning of this?" thought the Tree. "What am I to do here? What
+shall I hear now, I wonder?" And he leaned against the wall, lost in
+reverie. Time enough had he, too, for his reflections; for days and
+nights passed on, and nobody came up; and when at last somebody did
+come, it was only to put some great trunks in a corner out of the way.
+There stood the Tree quite hidden; it seemed as if he had been entirely
+forgotten.
+
+"'Tis now winter out of doors!" thought the Tree. "The earth is hard
+and covered with snow; men cannot plant me now, and therefore I have
+been put up here under shelter till the springtime comes! How
+thoughtful that is! How kind man is, after all! If it only were not so
+dark here, and so terribly lonely! Not even a hare. And out in the
+woods it was so pleasant, when the snow was on the ground, and the hare
+leaped by; yes--even when he jumped over me; but I did not like it
+then. It is really terribly lonely here!"
+
+"Squeak! squeak!" said a little Mouse at the same moment, peeping out
+of his hole. And then another little one came. They sniffed about the
+Fir-tree, and rustled among the branches.
+
+"It is dreadfully cold," said the Mouse. "But for that, it would be
+delightful here, old Fir, wouldn't it?"
+
+"I am by no means old," said the Fir-tree. "There's many a one
+considerably older than I am."
+
+"Where do you come from," asked the Mice; "and what can you do?" They
+were so extremely curious. "Tell us about the most beautiful spot on
+the earth. Have you never been there? Were you never in the larder,
+where cheeses lie on the shelves, and hams hang from above; where one
+dances about on tallow-candles; that place where one enters lean, and
+comes out again fat and portly?"
+
+"I know no such place," said the Tree, "but I know the woods, where the
+sun shines, and where the little birds sing." And then he told all
+about his youth; and the little Mice had never heard the like before;
+and they listened and said:
+
+"Well, to be sure! How much you have seen! How happy you must have
+been!"
+
+"I?" said the Fir-tree, thinking over what he had himself related.
+"Yes, in reality those were happy times." And then he told about
+Christmas Eve, when he was decked out with cakes and candles.
+
+"Oh," said the little Mice, "how fortunate you have been, old Fir-tree!"
+
+"I am by no means old," said he. "I came from the woods this winter; I
+am in my prime, and am only rather short for my age."
+
+"What delightful stories you know!" said the Mice: and the next night
+they came with four other little Mice, who were to hear what the tree
+recounted; and the more he related, the more plainly he remembered all
+himself; and it appeared as if those times had really been happy times.
+"But they may still come--they may still come. Klumpy-Dumpy fell
+downstairs and yet he got a princess," and he thought at the moment of
+a nice little Birch-tree growing out in the woods; to the Fir, that
+would be a real charming princess.
+
+"Who is Klumpy-Dumpy?" asked the Mice. So then the Fir-tree told the
+whole fairy tale, for he could remember every single word of it; and
+the little Mice jumped for joy up to the very top of the Tree. Next
+night two more Mice came, and on Sunday two Rats, even; but they said
+the stories were not interesting, which vexed the little Mice; and
+they, too, now began to think them not so very amusing either.
+
+"Do you know only one story?" asked the Rats.
+
+"Only that one," answered the Tree. "I heard it on my happiest evening;
+but I did not then know how happy I was."
+
+"It is a very stupid story. Don't you know one about bacon and tallow
+candles? Can't you tell any larder stories?"
+
+"No," said the Tree.
+
+"Then good-bye," said the Rats; and they went home.
+
+At last the little Mice stayed away also; and the Tree sighed: "After
+all, it was very pleasant when the sleek little Mice sat around me and
+listened to what I told them. Now that too is over. But I will take
+good care to enjoy myself when I am brought out again."
+
+But when was that to be? Why, one morning there came a quantity of
+people and set to work in the loft. The trunks were moved, the Tree was
+pulled out and thrown--rather hard, it is true--down on the floor, but
+a man drew him toward the stairs, where the daylight shone.
+
+"Now a merry life will begin again," thought the Tree. He felt the
+fresh air, the first sunbeam--and now he was out in the courtyard. All
+passed so quickly, there was so much going on around him, that the Tree
+quite forgot to look to himself. The court adjoined a garden, and all
+was in flower; the roses hung so fresh and odorous over the balustrade,
+the lindens were in blossom, the Swallows flew by, and said,
+"Quirre-vit! my husband is come!" but it was not the Fir-tree that they
+meant.
+
+"Now, then, I shall really enjoy life," said he, exultingly, and spread
+out his branches; but, alas! they were all withered and yellow. It was
+in a corner that he lay, among weeds and nettles. The golden star of
+tinsel was still on the top of the Tree, and glittered in the sunshine.
+
+In the courtyard some of the merry children were playing who had danced
+at Christmas round the Fir-tree, and were so glad at the sight of him.
+One of the youngest ran and tore off the golden star.
+
+"Only look what is still on the ugly old Christmas tree!" said he,
+trampling on the branches, so that they all cracked beneath his feet.
+And the Tree beheld all the beauty of the flowers, and the freshness in
+the garden; he beheld himself, and wished he had remained in his dark
+corner in the loft; he thought of his first youth in the woods, of the
+merry Christmas Eve, and of the little Mice who had listened with so
+much pleasure to the story of Klumpy-Dumpy.
+
+"'Tis over--'tis past!" said the poor Tree. "Had I but rejoiced when I
+had reason to do so! But now 'tis past, 'tis past!"
+
+And the gardener's boy chopped the Tree into small pieces; there was a
+whole heap lying there. The wood flamed up splendidly under the large
+brewing copper, and it sighed so deeply! Each sigh was like a shot.
+
+The boys played about in the court, and the youngest wore the gold star
+on his breast which the Tree had had on the happiest evening of his
+life. However, that was over now--the Tree gone, the story at an end.
+All, all was over; every tale must end at last.
+
+
+
+III. THE CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE*
+
+* From "The Pot of Gold , copyright by Lothrop, Lee & Shepherd Co.
+
+MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+
+On Christmas Eve the Mayor's stately mansion presented a beautiful
+appearance. There were rows of different coloured wax candles burning
+in every window, and beyond them one could see the chandeliers of gold
+and crystal blazing with light. The fiddles were squeaking merrily, and
+lovely little forms flew past the windows in time to the music.
+
+There were gorgeous carpets laid from the door to the street, and
+carriages were constantly arriving and fresh guests tripping over them.
+They were all children. The Mayor was giving a Christmas Masquerade
+tonight to all the children in the city, the poor as well as the rich.
+The preparation for this ball had been making an immense sensation for
+the last three months. Placards had been up in the most conspicuous
+points in the city, and all the daily newspapers had at least a column
+devoted to it, headed with "THE MAYOR'S CHRISTMAS MASQUERADE," in very
+large letters.
+
+The Mayor had promised to defray the expenses of all the poor children
+whose parents were unable to do so, and the bills for their costumes
+were directed to be sent in to him.
+
+Of course there was great excitement among the regular costumers of the
+city, and they all resolved to vie with one another in being the most
+popular, and the best patronized on this gala occasion. But the
+placards and the notices had not been out a week before a new Costumer
+appeared who cast all the others into the shade directly. He set up his
+shop on the corner of one of the principal streets, and hung up his
+beautiful costumes in the windows. He was a little fellow, not much
+bigger than a boy of ten. His cheeks were as red as roses, and he had
+on a long curling wig as white as snow. He wore a suit of crimson
+velvet knee-breeches, and a little swallow-tailed coat with beautiful
+golden buttons. Deep lace ruffles fell over his slender white hands,
+and he wore elegant knee buckles of glittering stones. He sat on a high
+stool behind his counter and served his customers himself; he kept no
+clerk.
+
+It did not take the children long to discover what beautiful things he
+had, and how superior he was to the other costumers, and they begun to
+flock to his shop immediately, from the Mayor's daughter to the poor
+ragpicker's. The children were to select their own costumes; the Mayor
+had stipulated that. It was to be a children's ball in every sense of
+the word.
+
+So they decided to be fairies and shepherdesses, and princesses
+according to their own fancies; and this new Costumer had charming
+costumes to suit them.
+
+It was noticeable that, for the most part, the children of the rich,
+who had always had everything they desired, would choose the parts of
+goose-girls and peasants and such like; and the poor children jumped
+eagerly at the chance of being princesses or fairies for a few hours in
+their miserable lives.
+
+When Christmas Eve came and the children flocked into the Mayor's
+mansion, whether it was owing to the Costumer's art, or their own
+adaptation to the characters they had chosen, it was wonderful how
+lifelike their representations were. Those little fairies in their
+short skirts of silken gauze, in which golden sparkles appeared as they
+moved with their little funny gossamer wings, like butterflies, looked
+like real fairies. It did not seem possible, when they floated around
+to the music, half supported on the tips of their dainty toes, half by
+their filmy purple wings, their delicate bodies swaying in time, that
+they could be anything but fairies. It seemed absurd to imagine that
+they were Johnny Mullens, the washerwoman's son, and Polly Flinders,
+the charwoman's little girl, and so on.
+
+The Mayor's daughter, who had chosen the character of a goose-girl,
+looked so like a true one that one could hardly dream she ever was
+anything else. She was, ordinarily, a slender, dainty little lady
+rather tall for her age. She now looked very short and stubbed and
+brown, just as if she had been accustomed to tend geese in all sorts of
+weather. It was so with all the others--the Red Riding-hoods, the
+princesses, the Bo-Peeps and with every one of the characters who came
+to the Mayor's ball; Red Riding-hood looked round, with big, frightened
+eyes, all ready to spy the wolf, and carried her little pat of butter
+and pot of honey gingerly in her basket; Bo-Peep's eyes looked red with
+weeping for the loss of her sheep; and the princesses swept about so
+grandly in their splendid brocaded trains, and held their crowned heads
+so high that people half-believed them to be true princesses.
+
+But there never was anything like the fun at the Mayor's Christmas
+ball. The fiddlers fiddled and fiddled, and the children danced and
+danced on the beautiful waxed floors. The Mayor, with his family and a
+few grand guests, sat on a dais covered with blue velvet at one end of
+the dancing hall, and watched the sport. They were all delighted. The
+Mayor's eldest daughter sat in front and clapped her little soft white
+hands. She was a tall, beautiful young maiden, and wore a white dress,
+and a little cap woven of blue violets on her yellow hair. Her name was
+Violetta.
+
+The supper was served at midnight--and such a supper! The mountains of
+pink and white ices, and the cakes with sugar castles and flower
+gardens on the tops of them, and the charming shapes of gold and
+ruby-coloured jellies. There were wonderful bonbons which even the
+Mayor's daughter did not have every day; and all sorts of fruits, fresh
+and candied. They had cowslip wine in green glasses, and elderberry
+wine in red, and they drank each other's health. The glasses held a
+thimbleful each; the Mayor's wife thought that was all the wine they
+ought to have. Under each child's plate there was a pretty present and
+every one had a basket of bonbons and cake to carry home.
+
+At four o'clock the fiddlers put up their fiddles and the children went
+home; fairies and shepherdesses and pages and princesses all jabbering
+gleefully about the splendid time they had had.
+
+But in a short time what consternation there was throughout the city.
+When the proud and fond parents attempted to unbutton their children's
+dresses, in order to prepare them for bed, not a single costume would
+come off. The buttons buttoned again as fast as they were unbuttoned;
+even if they pulled out a pin, in it would slip again in a twinkling;
+and when a string was untied it tied itself up again into a bowknot.
+The parents were dreadfully frightened. But the children were so tired
+out they finally let them go to bed in their fancy costumes and thought
+perhaps they would come off better in the morning. So Red Riding-hood
+went to bed in her little red cloak holding fast to her basket full of
+dainties for her grandmother, and Bo-Peep slept with her crook in her
+hand.
+
+The children all went to bed readily enough, they were so very tired,
+even though they had to go in this strange array. All but the
+fairies--they danced and pirouetted and would not be still.
+
+"We want to swing on the blades of grass," they kept saying, "and play
+hide and seek in the lily cups, and take a nap between the leaves of
+the roses."
+
+The poor charwomen and coal-heavers, whose children the fairies were
+for the most part, stared at them in great distress. They did not know
+what to do with these radiant, frisky little creatures into which their
+Johnnys and their Pollys and Betseys were so suddenly transformed. But
+the fairies went to bed quietly enough when daylight came, and were
+soon fast asleep.
+
+There was no further trouble till twelve o'clock, when all the children
+woke up. Then a great wave of alarm spread over the city. Not one of
+the costumes would come off then. The buttons buttoned as fast as they
+were unbuttoned; the pins quilted themselves in as fast as they were
+pulled out; and the strings flew round like lightning and twisted
+themselves into bow-knots as fast as they were untied.
+
+And that was not the worst of it; every one of the children seemed to
+have become, in reality, the character which he or she had assumed.
+
+The Mayor's daughter declared she was going to tend her geese out in
+the pasture, and the shepherdesses sprang out of their little beds of
+down, throwing aside their silken quilts, and cried that they must go
+out and watch their sheep. The princesses jumped up from their straw
+pallets, and wanted to go to court; and all the rest of them likewise.
+Poor little Red Riding-hood sobbed and sobbed because she couldn't go
+and carry her basket to her grandmother, and as she didn't have any
+grandmother she couldn't go, of course, and her parents were very much
+doubled. It was all so mysterious and dreadful. The news spread very
+rapidly over the city, and soon a great crowd gathered around the new
+Costumer's shop for every one thought he must be responsible for all
+this mischief.
+
+The shop door was locked; but they soon battered it down with stones.
+When they rushed in the Costumer was not there; he had disappeared with
+all his wares. Then they did not know what to do. But it was evident
+that they must do something before long for the state of affairs was
+growing worse and worse.
+
+The Mayor's little daughter braced her back up against the tapestried
+wall, and planted her two feet in their thick shoes firmly. "I will go
+and tend my geese," she kept crying. "I won't eat my breakfast. I won't
+go out in the park. I won't go to school. I'm going to tend my geese--I
+will, I will, I will!"
+
+And the princesses trailed their rich trains over the rough unpainted
+floors in their parents' poor little huts, and held their crowned heads
+very high and demanded to be taken to court. The princesses were mostly
+geese-girls when they were their proper selves, and their geese were
+suffering, and their poor parents did not know what they were going to
+do and they wrung their hands and wept as they gazed on their
+gorgeously apparelled children.
+
+Finally the Mayor called a meeting of the Aldermen, and they all
+assembled in the City Hall. Nearly every one of them had a son or a
+daughter who was a chimney-sweep, or a little watch-girl, or a
+shepherdess. They appointed a chairman and they took a great many votes
+and contrary votes but they did not agree on anything, until every one
+proposed that they consult the Wise Woman. Then they all held up their
+hands, and voted to, unanimously.
+
+So the whole board of Aldermen set out, walking by twos, with the Mayor
+at their head, to consult the Wise Woman. The Aldermen were all very
+fleshy, and carried gold-headed canes which they swung very high at
+every step. They held their heads well back, and their chins stiff, and
+whenever they met common people they sniffed gently. They were very
+imposing.
+
+The Wise Woman lived in a little hut on the outskirts of the city. She
+kept a Black Cat, except for her, she was all alone. She was very old,
+and had brought up a great many children, and she was considered
+remarkably wise.
+
+But when the Aldermen reached her hut and found her seated by the fire,
+holding her Black Cat, a new difficulty presented itself. She had
+always been quite deaf and people had been obliged to scream as loud as
+they could in order to make her hear; but lately she had grown much
+deafer, and when the Aldermen attempted to lay the case before her she
+could not hear a word. In fact, she was so very deaf that she could not
+distinguish a tone below G-sharp. The Aldermen screamed till they were
+quite red in the faces, but all to no purpose: none of them could get
+up to G-sharp of course.
+
+So the Aldermen all went back, swinging their gold-headed canes, and
+they had another meeting in the City Hall. Then they decided to send
+the highest Soprano Singer in the church choir to the Wise Woman; she
+could sing up to G-sharp just as easy as not. So the high Soprano
+Singer set out for the Wise Woman's in the Mayor's coach, and the
+Aldermen marched behind, swinging their gold-headed canes.
+
+The High Soprano Singer put her head down close to the Wise Woman's
+ear, and sung all about the Christmas Masquerade and the dreadful
+dilemma everybody was in, in G-sharp--she even went higher, sometimes,
+and the Wise Woman heard every word.
+
+She nodded three times, and every time she nodded she looked wiser.
+
+"Go home, and give 'em a spoonful of castor-oil, all 'round," she piped
+up; then she took a pinch of snuff, and wouldn't say any more.
+
+So the Aldermen went home, and every one took a district and marched
+through it, with a servant carrying an immense bowl and spoon, and
+every child had to take a dose of castor-oil.
+
+But it didn't do a bit of good. The children cried and struggled when
+they were forced to take the castor-oil; but, two minutes afterward,
+the chimney-sweeps were crying for their brooms, and the princesses
+screaming because they couldn't go to court, and the Mayor's daughter,
+who had been given a double dose, cried louder and more sturdily: "I
+want to go and tend my geese. I will go and tend my geese."
+
+So the Aldermen took the high Soprano Singer, and they consulted the
+Wise Woman again. She was taking a nap this time, and the Singer had to
+sing up to B-flat before she could wake her. Then she was very cross
+and the Black Cat put up his back and spit at the Aldermen.
+
+"Give 'em a spanking all 'round," she snapped out, "and if that don't
+work put 'em to bed without their supper."
+
+Then the Aldermen marched back to try that; and all the children in the
+city were spanked, and when that didn't do any good they were put to
+bed without any supper. But the next morning when they woke up they
+were worse than ever.
+
+The Mayor and Aldermen were very indignant, and considered that they
+had been imposed upon and insulted. So they set out for the Wise Woman
+again, with the high Soprano Singer.
+
+She sang in G-sharp how the Aldermen and the Mayor considered her an
+impostor, and did not think she was wise at all, and they wished her to
+take her Black Cat and move beyond the limits of the city.
+
+She sang it beautifully; it sounded like the very finest Italian opera
+music.
+
+"Deary me," piped the Wise Woman, when she had finished, "how very
+grand these gentlemen are." Her Black Cat put up his back and spit.
+
+"Five times one Black Cat are five Black Cats," said the Wise Woman.
+And directly there were five Black Cats spitting and miauling.
+
+"Five times five Black Cats are twenty-five Black Cats." And then there
+were twenty-five of the angry little beasts.
+
+"Five times twenty-five Black Cats are one hundred and twenty-five
+Black Cats," added the Wise Woman with a chuckle.
+
+Then the Mayor and the Aldermen and the high Soprano Singer fled
+precipitately out the door and back to the city. One hundred and
+twenty-five Black Cats had seemed to fill the Wise Woman's hut full,
+and when they all spit and miauled together it was dreadful. The
+visitors could not wait for her to multiply Black Cats any longer.
+
+As winter wore on and spring came, the condition of things grew more
+intolerable. Physicians had been consulted, who advised that the
+children should be allowed to follow their own bents, for fear of
+injury to their constitutions. So the rich Aldermen's daughters were
+actually out in the fields herding sheep, and their sons sweeping
+chimneys or carrying newspapers; and while the poor charwomen's and
+coal-heavers, children spent their time like princesses and fairies.
+Such a topsy-turvy state of society was shocking. While the Mayor's
+little daughter was tending geese out in the meadow like any common
+goose-girl, her pretty elder sister, Violetta, felt very sad about it
+and used often to cast about in her mind for some way of relief.
+
+When cherries were ripe in spring, Violetta thought she would ask the
+Cherry-man about it. She thought the Cherry-man quite wise. He was a
+very pretty young fellow, and he brought cherries to sell in graceful
+little straw baskets lined with moss. So she stood in the kitchen door
+one morning and told him all about the great trouble that had come upon
+the city. He listened in great astonishment; he had never heard of it
+before. He lived several miles out in the country.
+
+"How did the Costumer look?" he asked respectfully; he thought Violetta
+the most beautiful lady on earth.
+
+Then Violetta described the Costumer, and told him of the unavailing
+attempts that had been made to find him. There were a great many
+detectives out, constantly at work.
+
+"I know where he is!" said the Cherry-man. "He's up in one of my
+cherry-trees. He's been living there ever since cherries were ripe, and
+he won't come down."
+
+Then Violetta ran and told her father in great excitement, and he at
+once called a meeting of the Aldermen, and in a few hours half the city
+was on the road to the Cherry-man's.
+
+He had a beautiful orchard of cherry-trees all laden with fruit. And,
+sure enough in one of the largest, way up amongst the topmost branches,
+sat the Costumer in his red velvet and short clothes and his diamond
+knee-buckles. He looked down between the green boughs. "Good-morning,
+friends!" he shouted.
+
+The Aldermen shook their gold-headed canes at him, and the people
+danced round the tree in a rage. Then they began to climb. But they
+soon found that to be impossible. As fast as they touched a hand or
+foot to a tree, back it flew with a jerk exactly as if the tree pushed
+it. They tried a ladder, but the ladder fell back the moment it touched
+the tree, and lay sprawling upon the ground. Finally, they brought axes
+and thought they could chop the tree down, Costumer and all; but the
+wood resisted the axes as if it were iron, and only dented them,
+receiving no impression itself.
+
+Meanwhile, the Costumer sat up in the tree, eating cherries and
+throwing the stones down. Finally he stood up on a stout branch, and,
+looking down, addressed the people.
+
+"It's of no use, your trying to accomplish anything in this way," said
+he; "you'd better parley. I'm willing to come to terms with you, and
+make everything right on two conditions."
+
+The people grew quiet then, and the Mayor stepped forward as spokesman,
+"Name your two conditions," said he rather testily. "You own, tacitly,
+that you are the cause of all this trouble."
+
+"Well" said the Costumer, reaching out for a handful of cherries, "this
+Christmas Masquerade of yours was a beautiful idea; but you wouldn't do
+it every year, and your successors might not do it at all. I want those
+poor children to have a Christmas every year. My first condition is
+that every poor child in the city hangs its stocking for gifts in the
+City Hall on every Christmas Eve, and gets it filled, too. I want the
+resolution filed and put away in the city archives."
+
+"We agree to the first condition!" cried the people with one voice,
+without waiting for the Mayor and Aldermen.
+
+"The second condition," said the Costumer, "is that this good young
+Cherry-man here has the Mayor's daughter, Violetta, for his wife. He
+has been kind to me, letting me live in his cherry-tree and eat his
+cherries and I want to reward him."
+
+"We consent," cried all the people; but the Mayor, though he was so
+generous, was a proud man. "I will not consent to the second
+condition," he cried angrily.
+
+"Very well," replied the Costumer, picking some more cherries, "then
+your youngest daughter tends geese the rest of her life, that's all."
+
+The Mayor was in great distress; but the thought of his youngest
+daughter being a goose-girl all her life was too much for him. He gave
+in at last.
+
+"Now go home and take the costumes off your children," said the
+Costumer, "and leave me in peace to eat cherries."
+
+Then the people hastened back to the city, and found, to their great
+delight, that the costumes would come off. The pins stayed out, the
+buttons stayed unbuttoned, and the strings stayed untied. The children
+were dressed in their own proper clothes and were their own proper
+selves once more. The shepherdesses and the chimney-sweeps came home,
+and were washed and dressed in silks and velvets, and went to
+embroidering and playing lawn-tennis. And the princesses and the
+fairies put on their own suitable dresses, and went about their useful
+employments. There was great rejoicing in every home. Violetta thought
+she had never been so happy, now that her dear little sister was no
+longer a goose-girl, but her own dainty little lady-self.
+
+The resolution to provide every poor child in the city with a stocking
+full of gifts on Christmas was solemnly filed, and deposited in the
+city archives, and was never broken.
+
+Violetta was married to the Cherry-man, and all the children came to
+the wedding, and strewed flowers in her path till her feet were quite
+hidden in them. The Costumer had mysteriously disappeared from the
+cherry-tree the night before, but he left at the foot some beautiful
+wedding presents for the bride--a silver service with a pattern of
+cherries engraved on it, and a set of china with cherries on it, in
+hand painting, and a white satin robe, embroidered with cherries down
+the front.
+
+
+
+IV. THE SHEPHERDS AND THE ANGELS
+
+ADAPTED FROM THE BIBLE
+
+And there were shepherds in the same country abiding in the field, and
+keeping watch by night over their flock. And an angel of the Lord stood
+by them and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were
+sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Be not afraid; for, behold,
+I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all the people:
+for there is born to you this day in the city of David a Saviour, which
+is Christ the Lord. And this is the sign unto you; ye shall find a babe
+wrapped in swaddling clothes, and lying in a manger. And suddenly there
+was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and
+saying:
+
+Glory to God in the highest,
+And on earth peace,
+Good will toward men.
+
+And it came to pass, when the angels went away from them into heaven,
+the shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even unto Bethlehem,
+and see this thing that is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known
+unto us. And they came with haste, and found Mary and Joseph and the
+babe lying in the manger. And when they saw it, they made known
+concerning the saying which was spoken to them about this child. And
+all that heard it wondered at the things which were spoken unto them by
+the shepherds. But Mary kept all these sayings, pondering them in her
+heart. And the shepherds returned glorifying and praising God for all
+the things that they had heard and seen, even as it was spoken unto
+them.
+
+And when eight days were fulfilled his name was called
+
+ JESUS
+
+
+
+V. THE TELLTALE TILE*
+
+* From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904.
+
+OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+
+It begins with a bit of gossip of a neighbour who had come in to see
+Miss Bennett, and was telling her about a family who had lately moved
+into the place and were in serious trouble. "And they do say she'll
+have to go to the poorhouse," she ended.
+
+"To the poorhouse! how dreadful! And the children, too?" and Miss
+Bennett shuddered.
+
+"Yes; unless somebody'll adopt them, and that's not very likely. Well,
+I must go," the visitor went on, rising. "I wish I could do something
+for her, but, with my houseful of children, I've got use for every
+penny I can rake and scrape."
+
+"I'm sure I have, with only myself," said Miss Bennett, as she closed
+the door. "I'm sure I have," she repeated to herself as she resumed her
+knitting; "it's as much as I can do to make ends meet, scrimping as I
+do, not to speak of laying up a cent for sickness and old age."
+
+"But the poorhouse!" she said again. "I wish I could help her!" and the
+needles flew in and out, in and out, faster than ever, as she turned
+this over in her mind. "I might give up something," she said at last,
+"though I don't know what, unless--unless," she said slowly, thinking
+of her one luxury, "unless I give up my tea, and it don't seem as if I
+COULD do that."
+
+Some time the thought worked in her mind, and finally she resolved to
+make the sacrifice of her only indulgence for six months, and send the
+money to her suffering neighbour, Mrs. Stanley, though she had never
+seen her, and she had only heard she was in want.
+
+How much of a sacrifice that was you can hardly guess, you, Kristy, who
+have so many luxuries.
+
+That evening Mrs. Stanley was surprised by a small gift of money "from
+a friend," as was said on the envelope containing it.
+
+"Who sent it?" she asked, from the bed where she was lying.
+
+"Miss Bennett told me not to tell," said the boy, unconscious that he
+had already told.
+
+The next day Miss Bennett sat at the window knitting, as usual--for her
+constant contribution to the poor fund of the church was a certain
+number of stockings and mittens--when she saw a young girl coming up to
+the door of the cottage.
+
+"Who can that be?" she said to herself. "I never saw her before. Come
+in!" she called; in answer to a knock. The girl entered, and walked up
+to Miss Bennett.
+
+"Are you Miss Bennett?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," said Miss Bennett with an amused smile,
+
+"Well, I'm Hetty Stanley."
+
+Miss Bennett started, and her colour grew a little brighter.
+
+"I'm glad to see you, Hetty." she said, "won't you sit down?"
+
+"Yes, if you please," said Hetty, taking a chair near her.
+
+"I came to tell you how much we love you for--"
+
+"Oh, don't! don't say any more!" interrupted Miss Bennett; "never mind
+that! Tell me about your mother and your baby brother."
+
+This was an interesting subject, and they talked earnestly about it.
+The time passed so quickly that, before she knew it, she had been in
+the house an hour. When she went away Miss Bennett asked her to come
+again, a thing she had never been known to do before, for she was not
+fond of young people in general.
+
+"But, then, Hetty's different," she said to herself, when wondering at
+her own interest.
+
+"Did you thank kind Miss Bennett?" was her mother's question as Hetty
+opened the door.
+
+Hetty stopped as if struck, "Why, no! I don't think I did."
+
+"And stayed so long, too? Whatever did you do? I've heard she isn't
+fond of people generally."
+
+"We talked; and--I think she's ever so nice. She asked me to come
+again; may I?"
+
+"Of course you may, if she cares to have you. I should be glad to do
+something to please her."
+
+That visit of Hetty's was the first of a long series. Almost every day
+she found her way to the lonely cottage, where a visitor rarely came,
+and a strange intimacy grew up between the old and the young. Hetty
+learned of her friend to knit, and many an hour they spent knitting
+while Miss Bennett ransacked her memory for stories to tell. And then,
+one day, she brought down from a big chest in the garret two of the
+books she used to have when she was young, and let Hetty look at them.
+
+One was "Thaddeus of Warsaw," and the other "Scottish Chiefs." Poor
+Hetty had not the dozens of books you have, and these were treasures
+indeed. She read them to herself, and she read them aloud to Miss
+Bennett, who, much to her own surprise, found her interest almost as
+eager as Hetty's.
+
+All this time Christmas was drawing near, and strange, unusual feelings
+began to stir in Miss Bennett's heart, though generally she did not
+think much about that happy time. She wanted to make Hetty a happy day.
+Money she had none, so she went into the garret, where her youthful
+treasures had long been hidden. From the chest from which she had taken
+the books she now took a small box of light-coloured wood, with a
+transferred engraving on the cover. With a sigh--for the sight of it
+brought up old memories--Miss Bennett lifted the cover by its loop of
+ribbon, took out a package of old letters, and went downstairs with the
+box, taking also a few bits of bright silk from a bundle in the chest.
+
+"I can fit it up for a workbox," she said, "and I'm sure Hetty will
+like it."
+
+For many days after this Miss Bennett had her secret work, which she
+carefully hid when she saw Hetty coming. Slowly, in this way, she made
+a pretty needle-book, a tiny pincushion, and an emery bag like a big
+strawberry. Then from her own scanty stock she added needles, pins,
+thread, and her only pair of small scissors, scoured to the last
+extreme of brightness.
+
+One thing only she had to buy--a thimble, and that she bought for a
+penny, of brass so bright it was quite as handsome as gold.
+
+Very pretty the little box looked when full; in the bottom lay a
+quilted lining, which had always been there, and upon this the fittings
+she had made. Besides this, Miss Bennett knit a pair of mittens for
+each of Hetty's brothers and sisters.
+
+The happiest girl in town on Christmas morning was Hetty Stanley. To
+begin with, she had the delight of giving the mittens to the children,
+and when she ran over to tell Miss Bennett how pleased they were, she
+was surprised by the present of the odd little workbox and its pretty
+contents.
+
+Christmas was over all too soon, and New Year's, and it was about the
+middle of January that the time came which, all her life, Miss Bennett
+had dreaded--the time when she should be helpless. She had not money
+enough to hire a girl, and so the only thing she could imagine when
+that day should come was her special horror--the poorhouse.
+
+But that good deed of hers had already borne fruit, and was still
+bearing. When Hetty came over one day, and found her dear friend lying
+on the floor as if dead, she was dreadfully frightened, of course, but
+she ran after the neighbours and the doctor, and bustled about the
+house as if she belonged to it.
+
+Miss Bennett was not dead--she had a slight stroke of paralysis; and
+though she was soon better, and would be able to talk, and probably to
+knit, and possibly to get about the house, she would never be able to
+live alone and do everything for herself, as she had done.
+
+So the doctor told the neighbours who came in to help, and so Hetty
+heard, as she listened eagerly for news.
+
+"Of course she can't live here any longer; she'll have to go to a
+hospital," said one woman.
+
+"Or to the poorhouse, more likely," said another.
+
+"She'll hate that," said the first speaker. "I've heard her shudder
+over the poorhouse."
+
+"She shall never go there!" declared Hetty, with blazing eyes.
+
+"Hoity-toity! who's to prevent?" asked the second speaker, turning a
+look of disdain on Hetty.
+
+"I am," was the fearless answer. "I know all Miss Bennett's ways, and I
+can take care of her, and I will," went on Hetty indignantly; and
+turning suddenly, she was surprised to find Miss Bennett's eyes fixed
+on her with an eager, questioning look.
+
+"There! she understands! she's better!" cried Hetty. "Mayn't I stay and
+take care of you, dear Miss Bennett?" she asked, running up to the bed.
+
+"Yes, you may," interrupted the doctor, seeing the look in his
+patient's face; "but you mustn't agitate her now. And now, my good
+women"--turning to the others--"I think she can get along with her
+young friend here, whom I happen to know is a womanly young girl, and
+will be attentive and careful."
+
+They took the hint and went away, and the doctor gave directions to
+Hetty what to do, telling her she must not leave Miss Bennett. So she
+was now regularly installed as nurse and housekeeper.
+
+Days and weeks rolled by. Miss Bennett was able to be up in her chair,
+to talk and knit, and to walk about the house, but was not able to be
+left alone. Indeed, she had a horror of being left alone; she could not
+bear Hetty out of her sight, and Hetty's mother was very willing to
+spare her, for she had many mouths to fill.
+
+To provide food for two out of what had been scrimping for one was a
+problem; but Miss Bennett ate very little, and she did not resume her
+tea so they managed to get along and not really suffer.
+
+One day Hetty sat by the fire with her precious box on her knee, which
+she was putting to rights for the twentieth time. The box was empty,
+and her sharp young eyes noticed a little dust on the silk lining.
+
+"I think I'll take this out and dust it," she said to Miss Bennett, "if
+you don't mind."
+
+"Do as you like with it," answered Miss Bennett; "it is yours."
+
+So she carefully lifted the silk, which stuck a little.
+
+"Why, here's something under it," she said--"an old paper, and it has
+writing on."
+
+"Bring it to me," said Miss Bennett; "perhaps it's a letter I have
+forgotten."
+
+Hetty brought it.
+
+"Why, it's father's writing!" said Miss Bennett, looking closely at the
+faded paper; "and what can it mean? I never saw it before. It says,
+'Look, and ye shall find'--that's a Bible text. And what is this under
+it? 'A word to the wise is sufficient.' I don't understand--he must
+have put it there himself, for I never took that lining out--I thought
+it was fastened. What can it mean?" and she pondered over it long, and
+all day seemed absent-minded.
+
+After tea, when they sat before the kitchen fire, as they always did,
+with only the firelight flickering and dancing on the walls while they
+knitted, or told stories, or talked, she told Hetty about her father:
+that they had lived comfortably in this house, which he built, and that
+everybody supposed that he had plenty of money, and would leave enough
+to take care of his only child, but that when he died suddenly nothing
+had been found, and nothing ever had been, from that day to this.
+
+"Part of the place I let to John Thompson, Hetty, and that rent is all
+I have to live on. I don't know what makes me think of old times so
+to-night."
+
+"I know," said Hetty; "it's that paper, and I know what it reminds me
+of," she suddenly shouted, in a way very unusual with her. "It's that
+tile over there," and she jumped up and ran to the side of the
+fireplace, and put her hand on the tile she meant.
+
+On each side of the fireplace was a row of tiles. They were Bible
+subjects, and Miss Bennett had often told Hetty the story of each one,
+and also the stories she used to make up about them when she was young.
+The one Hetty had her hand on now bore the picture of a woman standing
+before a closed door, and below her the words of the yellow bit of
+paper: "Look, and ye shall find."
+
+"I always felt there was something different about that," said Hetty
+eagerly, "and you know you told me your father talked to you about
+it--about what to seek in the world when he was gone away, and other
+things."
+
+"Yes, so he did," said Miss Bennett thoughtfully; "come to think of it,
+he said a great deal about it, and in a meaning way. I don't understand
+it," she said slowly, turning it over in her mind.
+
+"I do!" cried Hetty, enthusiastically. "I believe you are to seek here!
+I believe it's loose!" and she tried to shake it. "It IS loose!" she
+cried excitedly. "Oh, Miss Bennett, may I take it out?"
+
+Miss Bennett had turned deadly pale. "Yes," she gasped, hardly knowing
+what she expected, or dared to hope.
+
+A sudden push from Hetty's strong fingers, and the tile slipped out at
+one side and fell to the floor. Behind it was an opening into the
+brickwork. Hetty thrust in her hand.
+
+"There's something in there!" she said in an awed tone.
+
+"A light!" said Miss Bennett hoarsely.
+
+There was not a candle in the house, but Hetty seized a brand from the
+fire, and held it up and looked in.
+
+"It looks like bags--tied up," she cried. "Oh, come here yourself!"
+
+The old woman hobbled over and thrust her hand into the hole, bringing
+out what was once a bag, but which crumpled to pieces in her hands, and
+with it--oh, wonder!--a handful of gold pieces, which fell with a
+jingle on the hearth, and rolled every way.
+
+"My father's money! Oh, Hetty!" was all she could say, and she seized a
+chair to keep from falling, while Hetty was nearly wild, and talked
+like a crazy person.
+
+"Oh, goody! goody! now you can have things to eat! and we can have a
+candle! and you won't have to go to the poorhouse!"
+
+"No, indeed, you dear child!" cried Miss Bennett who had found her
+voice. "Thanks to you--you blessing!--I shall be comfortable now the
+rest of my days. And you! oh! I shall never forget you! Through you has
+everything good come to me."
+
+"Oh, but you have been so good to me, dear Miss Bennett!"
+
+"I should never have guessed it, you precious child! If it had not been
+for your quickness I should have died and never found it."
+
+"And if you hadn't given me the box, it might have rusted away in that
+chest."
+
+"Thank God for everything, child! Take money out of my purse and go buy
+a candle. We need not save it for bread now. Oh, child!" she
+interrupted herself, "do you know, we shall have everything we want
+to-morrow. Go! Go! I want to see how much there is."
+
+The candle bought, the gold was taken out and counted, and proved to be
+more than enough to give Miss Bennett a comfortable income without
+touching the principal. It was put back, and the tile replaced, as the
+safest place to keep it till morning, when Miss Bennett intended to put
+it into a bank.
+
+But though they went to bed, there was not a wink of sleep for Miss
+Bennett, for planning what she would do. There were a thousand things
+she wanted to do first. To get clothes for Hetty, to brighten up the
+old house, to hire a girl to relieve Hetty, so that the dear child
+should go to school, to train her into a noble woman--all her old
+ambitions and wishes for herself sprang into life for Hetty. For not a
+thought of her future life was separate from Hetty.
+
+In a very short time everything was changed in Miss Bennett's cottage.
+She had publicly adopted Hetty, and announced her as her heir. A girl
+had been installed in the kitchen, and Hetty, in pretty new clothes,
+had begun school. Fresh paint inside and out, with many new comforts,
+made the old house charming and bright. But nothing could change the
+pleasant and happy relations between the two friends, and a more
+contented and cheerful household could not be found anywhere.
+
+Happiness is a wonderful doctor and Miss Bennett grew so much better,
+that she could travel, and when Hetty had finished school days, they
+saw a little of the world before they settled down to a quiet, useful
+life.
+
+"Every comfort on earth I owe to you," said Hetty, one day, when Miss
+Bennett had proposed some new thing to add to her enjoyment.
+
+"Ah, dear Hetty! how much do I owe to you! But for you, I should, no
+doubt, be at this moment a shivering pauper in that terrible poorhouse,
+while some one else would be living in this dear old house. And it all
+comes," she added softly, "of that one unselfish thought, of that one
+self-denial for others."
+
+
+
+VI. LITTLE GIRL'S CHRISTMAS WINNIFRED E. LINCOLN
+
+WINNIFRED E. LINCOLN
+
+It was Christmas Eve, and Little Girl had just hung up her stocking by
+the fireplace--right where it would be all ready for Santa when he
+slipped down the chimney. She knew he was coming, because--well,
+because it was Christmas Eve, and because he always had come to leave
+gifts for her on all the other Christmas Eves that she could remember,
+and because she had seen his pictures everywhere down town that
+afternoon when she was out with Mother.
+
+Still, she wasn't JUST satisfied. 'Way down in her heart she was a
+little uncertain--you see, when you have never really and truly seen a
+person with your very own eyes, it's hard to feel as if you exactly
+believed in him--even though that person always has left beautiful
+gifts for you every time he has come.
+
+"Oh, he'll come," said Little Girl; "I just know he will be here before
+morning, but somehow I wish--"
+
+"Well, what do you wish?" said a Tiny Voice close by her--so close that
+Little Girl fairly jumped when she heard it.
+
+"Why, I wish I could SEE Santa myself. I'd just like to go and see his
+house and his workshop, and ride in his sleigh, and know Mrs.
+Santa--'twould be such fun, and then I'd KNOW for sure."
+
+"Why don't you go, then?" said Tiny Voice. "It's easy enough. Just try
+on these Shoes, and take this Light in your hand, and you'll find your
+way all right."
+
+So Little Girl looked down on the hearth, and there were two cunning
+little Shoes side by side, and a little Spark of a Light close to
+them--just as if they were all made out of one of the glowing coals of
+the wood-fire. Such cunning Shoes as they were--Little Girl could
+hardly wait to pull off her slippers and try them on. They looked as if
+they were too small, but they weren't--they fitted exactly right, and
+just as Little Girl had put them both on and had taken the Light in her
+hand, along came a little Breath of Wind, and away she went up the
+chimney, along with ever so many other little Sparks, past the Soot
+Fairies, and out into the Open Air, where Jack Frost and the Star Beams
+were all busy at work making the world look pretty for Christmas.
+
+Away went Little Girl--Two Shoes, Bright Light, and all--higher and
+higher, until she looked like a wee bit of a star up in the sky. It was
+the funniest thing, but she seemed to know the way perfectly, and
+didn't have to stop to make inquiries anywhere. You see it was a
+straight road all the way, and when one doesn't have to think about
+turning to the right or the left, it makes things very much easier.
+Pretty soon Little Girl noticed that there was a bright light all
+around her--oh, a very bright light--and right away something down in
+her heart began to make her feel very happy indeed. She didn't know
+that the Christmas spirits and little Christmas fairies were all around
+her and even right inside her, because she couldn't see a single one of
+them, even though her eyes were very bright and could usually see a
+great deal.
+
+But that was just it, and Little Girl felt as if she wanted to laugh
+and sing and be glad. It made her remember the Sick Boy who lived next
+door, and she said to herself that she would carry him one of her
+prettiest picture-books in the morning, so that he could have something
+to make him happy all day. By and by, when the bright light all around
+her had grown very, very much brighter, Little Girl saw a path right in
+front of her, all straight and trim, leading up a hill to a big, big
+house with ever and ever so many windows in it. When she had gone just
+a bit nearer, she saw candles in every window, red and green and yellow
+ones, and every one burning brightly, so Little Girl knew right away
+that these were Christmas candles to light her on her journey, and make
+the way dear for her, and something told her that this was Santa's
+house, and that pretty soon she would perhaps see Santa himself.
+
+Just as she neared the steps and before she could possibly have had
+time to ring the bell, the door opened--opened of itself as wide as
+could be--and there stood--not Santa himself--don't think it--but a
+funny Little Man with slender little legs and a roly-poly stomach which
+shook every now and then when he laughed. You would have known right
+away, just as Little Girl knew, that he was a very happy little man,
+and you would have guessed right away, too, that the reason he was so
+roly-poly was because he laughed and chuckled and smiled all the
+time--for it's only sour, cross folks who are thin and skimpy. Quick as
+a wink, he pulled off his little peaked red cap, smiled the broadest
+kind of a smile, and said, "Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas! Come in!
+Come in!"
+
+So in went Little Girl, holding fast to Little Man's hand, and when she
+was really inside there was the jolliest, reddest fire all glowing and
+snapping, and there were Little Man and all his brothers and sisters,
+who said their names were "Merry Christmas," and "Good Cheer," and ever
+so many other jolly-sounding things, and there were such a lot of them
+that Little Girl just knew she never could count them, no matter how
+long she tried.
+
+All around her were bundles and boxes and piles of toys and games, and
+Little Girl knew that these were all ready and waiting to be loaded
+into Santa's big sleigh for his reindeer to whirl them away over
+cloudtops and snowdrifts to the little people down below who had left
+their stockings all ready for him. Pretty soon all the little Good
+Cheer Brothers began to hurry and bustle and carry out the bundles as
+fast as they could to the steps where Little Girl could hear the
+jingling bells and the stamping of hoofs. So Little Girl picked up some
+bundles and skipped along too, for she wanted to help a bit
+herself--it's no fun whatever at Christmas unless you can help, you
+know--and there in the yard stood the BIGGEST sleigh that Little Girl
+had ever seen, and the reindeer were all stamping and prancing and
+jingling the bells on their harnesses, because they were so eager to be
+on their way to the Earth once more.
+
+She could hardly wait for Santa to come, and just as she had begun to
+wonder where he was, the door opened again and out came a whole forest
+of Christmas trees, at least it looked just as if a whole forest had
+started out for a walk somewhere, but a second glance showed Little
+Girl that there were thousands of Christmas sprites, and that each one
+carried a tree or a big Christmas wreath on his back. Behind them all,
+she could hear some one laughing loudly, and talking in a big, jovial
+voice that sounded as if he were good friends with the whole world.
+
+And straightway she knew that Santa himself was coming. Little Girl's
+heart went pit-a-pat for a minute while she wondered if Santa would
+notice her, but she didn't have to wonder long, for he spied her at
+once and said:
+
+"Bless my soul! who's this? and where did you come from?"
+
+Little Girl thought perhaps she might be afraid to answer him, but she
+wasn't one bit afraid. You see he had such a kind little twinkle in his
+eyes that she felt happy right away as she replied, "Oh, I'm Little
+Girl, and I wanted so much to see Santa that I just came, and here I
+am!"
+
+"Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho!" laughed Santa, "and here you are! Wanted to see
+Santa, did you, and so you came! Now that's very nice, and it's too bad
+I'm in such a hurry, for we should like nothing better than to show you
+about and give you a real good time. But you see it is quarter of
+twelve now, and I must be on my way at once, else I'll never reach that
+first chimney-top by midnight. I'd call Mrs. Santa and ask her to get
+you some supper, but she is busy finishing dolls' clothes which must be
+done before morning, and I guess we'd better not bother her. Is there
+anything that you would like, Little Girl?" and good old Santa put his
+big warm hand on Little Girl's curls and she felt its warmth and
+kindness clear down to her very heart. You see, my dears, that even
+though Santa was in such a great hurry, he wasn't too busy to stop and
+make some one happy for a minute, even if it was some one no bigger
+than Little Girl.
+
+So she smiled back into Santa's face and said: "Oh, Santa, if I could
+ONLY ride down to Earth with you behind those splendid reindeer! I'd
+love to go; won't you PLEASE take me? I'm so small that I won't take up
+much room on the seat, and I'll keep very still and not bother one bit!"
+
+Then Santa laughed, SUCH a laugh, big and loud and rollicking, and he
+said, "Wants a ride, does she? Well, well, shall we take her, Little
+Elves? Shall we take her, Little Fairies? Shall we take her, Good
+Reindeer?"
+
+And all the Little Elves hopped and skipped and brought Little Girl a
+sprig of holly; and all the Little Fairies bowed and smiled and brought
+her a bit of mistletoe; and all the Good Reindeer jingled their bells
+loudly, which meant, "Oh, yes! let's take her! She's a good Little
+Girl! Let her ride!" And before Little Girl could even think, she found
+herself all tucked up in the big fur robes beside Santa, and away they
+went, right out into the air, over the clouds, through the Milky Way,
+and right under the very handle of the Big Dipper, on, on, toward the
+Earthland, whose lights Little Girl began to see twinkling away down
+below her. Presently she felt the runners scrape upon something, and
+she knew they must be on some one's roof, and that Santa would slip
+down some one's chimney in a minute.
+
+How she wanted to go, too! You see if you had never been down a chimney
+and seen Santa fill up the stockings, you would want to go quite as
+much as Little Girl did, now, wouldn't you? So, just as Little Girl was
+wishing as hard as ever she could wish, she heard a Tiny Voice say,
+"Hold tight to his arm! Hold tight to his arm!" So she held Santa's arm
+tight and close, and he shouldered his pack, never thinking that it was
+heavier than usual, and with a bound and a slide, there they were,
+Santa, Little Girl, pack and all, right in the middle of a room where
+there was a fireplace and stockings all hung up for Santa to fill.
+
+Just then Santa noticed Little Girl. He had forgotten all about her for
+a minute, and he was very much surprised to find that she had come,
+too. "Bless my soul!" he said, "where did you come from, Little Girl?
+and how in the world can we both get back up that chimney again? It's
+easy enough to slide down, but it's quite another matter to climb up
+again!" and Santa looked real worried. But Little Girl was beginning to
+feel very tired by this time, for she had had a very exciting evening,
+so she said, "Oh, never mind me, Santa. I've had such a good time, and
+I'd just as soon stay here a while as not. I believe I'll curl up on
+his hearth-rug a few minutes and have a little nap, for it looks as
+warm and cozy as our own hearth-rug at home, and--why, it is our own
+hearth and it's my own nursery, for there is Teddy Bear in his chair
+where I leave him every night, and there's Bunny Cat curled up on his
+cushion in the corner."
+
+And Little Girl turned to thank Santa and say goodbye to him, but
+either he had gone very quickly, or else she had fallen asleep very
+quickly--she never could tell which--for the next thing she knew, Daddy
+was holding her in his arms and was saying, "What is my Little Girl
+doing here? She must go to bed, for it's Christmas Eve, and old Santa
+won't come if he thinks there are any little folks about."
+
+But Little Girl knew better than that, and when she began to tell him
+all about it, and how the Christmas fairies had welcomed her, and how
+Santa had given her such a fine ride, Daddy laughed and laughed, and
+said, "You've been dreaming, Little Girl, you've been dreaming."
+
+But Little Girl knew better than that, too, for there on the hearth was
+the little Black Coal, which had given her Two Shoes and Bright Light,
+and tight in her hand she held a holly berry which one of the Christmas
+Sprites had placed there. More than all that, there she was on the
+hearth-rug herself, just as Santa had left her, and that was the best
+proof of all.
+
+The trouble was, Daddy himself had never been a Little Girl, so he
+couldn't tell anything about it, but we know she hadn't been dreaming,
+now, don't we, my dears?
+
+
+
+VII. "A CHRISTMAS MATINEE"*
+
+*This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 74.
+
+MRS. M.A.L. LANE
+
+It was the day before Christmas in the year 189-. Snow was falling
+heavily in the streets of Boston, but the crowd of shoppers seemed
+undiminished. As the storm increased, groups gathered at the corners
+and in sheltering doorways to wait for belated cars; but the holiday
+cheer was in the air, and there was no grumbling. Mothers dragging
+tired children through the slush of the streets; pretty girls hurrying
+home for the holidays; here and there a harassed-looking man with
+perhaps a single package which he had taken a whole morning to
+select--all had the same spirit of tolerant good-humor.
+
+"School Street! School Street!" called the conductor of an electric
+car. A group of young people at the farther end of the car started to
+their feet. One of them, a young man wearing a heavy fur-trimmed coat,
+addressed the conductor angrily.
+
+"I said, 'Music Hall,' didn't I?" he demanded. "Now we've got to walk
+back in the snow because of your stupidity!"
+
+"Oh, never mind, Frank!" one of the girls interposed. "We ought to have
+been looking out ourselves! Six of us, and we went by without a
+thought! It is all Mrs. Tirrell's fault! She shouldn't have been so
+entertaining!"
+
+The young matron dimpled and blushed. "That's charming of you, Maidie,"
+she said, gathering up her silk skirts as she prepared to step down
+into the pond before her. "The compliment makes up for the blame. But
+how it snows!"
+
+"It doesn't matter. We all have gaiters on," returned Maidie Williams,
+undisturbed.
+
+"Fares, please!" said the conductor stolidly.
+
+Frank Armstrong thrust his gloved hand deep into his pocket with angry
+vehemence. "There's your money," he said, "and be quick about the
+change, will you? We've lost time enough!"
+
+The man counted out the change with stiff, red fingers, closed his lips
+firmly as if to keep back an obvious rejoinder, rang up the six fares
+with careful accuracy, and gave the signal to go ahead. The car went on
+into the drifting storm.
+
+Armstrong laughed shortly as he rapidly counted the bits of silver
+lying in his open palm. He turned instinctively, but two or three cars
+were already between him and the one he was looking for.
+
+"The fellow must be an imbecile," he said, rejoining the group on the
+crossing. "He's given me back a dollar and twenty cents, and I handed
+him a dollar bill."
+
+"Oh, can't you stop him?" cried Maidie Williams, with a backward step
+into the wet street.
+
+The Harvard junior, who was carrying her umbrella, protested: "What's
+the use. Miss Williams? He'll make it up before he gets to Scollay
+Square, you may be sure. Those chaps don't lose anything. Why, the
+other day, I gave one a quarter and he went off as cool as you please.
+'Where's my change?' said I. 'You gave me a nickel,' said he. And there
+wasn't anybody to swear that I didn't except myself, and I didn't
+count."
+
+"But that doesn't make any difference," insisted the girl warmly.
+"Because one conductor was dishonest, we needn't be. I beg your pardon,
+Frank, but it does seem to me just stealing."
+
+"Oh, come along!" said her cousin, with an easy laugh. "I guess the
+West End Corporation won't go without their dinners to-morrow. Here,
+Maidie, here's the ill-gotten fifty cents. _I_ think you ought to treat
+us all after the concert; still, I won't urge you. I wash my hands of
+all responsibility. But I do wish you hadn't such an unpleasant
+conscience."
+
+Maidie flushed under the sting of his cousinly rudeness, but she went
+on quietly with the rest. It was evident that any attempt to overtake
+the car was out of the question.
+
+"Did you notice his number, Frank?" she asked, suddenly.
+
+"No, I never thought of it" said Frank, stopping short. "However, I
+probably shouldn't make any complaint if I had. I shall forget all
+about it tomorrow. I find it's never safe to let the sun go down on my
+wrath. It's very likely not to be there the next day."
+
+"I wasn't thinking of making a complaint," said Maidie; but the two
+young men were enjoying the small joke too much to notice what she said.
+
+The great doorway of Music Hall was just ahead. In a moment the party
+were within its friendly shelter, stamping off the snow. The girls were
+adjusting veils and hats with adroit feminine touches; the pretty
+chaperon was beaming approval upon them, and the young men were taking
+off their wet overcoats, when Maidie turned again in sudden desperation.
+
+"Mr. Harris," she said, rather faintly, for she did not like to make
+herself disagreeable, "do you suppose that car comes right back from
+Scollay Square?"
+
+"What car?" asked Walter Harris, blankly. "Oh, the one we came in? Yes,
+I suppose it does. They're running all the time, anyway. Why, you are
+not sick, are you, Miss Williams?"
+
+There was genuine concern in his tone. This girl, with her sweet,
+vibrant voice, her clear gray eyes, seemed very charming to him. She
+wasn't beautiful, perhaps, but she was the kind of girl he liked. There
+was a steady earnestness in the gray eyes that made him think of his
+mother.
+
+"No," said Maidie, slowly. "I'm all right, thank you. But I wish I
+could find that man again. I know sometimes they have to make it up if
+their accounts are wrong, and I couldn't--we couldn't feel very
+comfortable--"
+
+Frank Armstrong interrupted her. "Maidie," he said, with the studied
+calmness with which one speaks to an unreasonable child, "you are
+perfectly absurd. Here it is within five minutes of the tune for the
+concert to begin. It is impossible to tell when that car is coming
+back. You are making us all very uncomfortable. Mrs. Tirrell, won't you
+please tell her not to spoil our afternoon?"
+
+"I think he's right, Maidie," said Mrs. Tirrell. "It's very nice of you
+to feel so sorry for the poor man, but he really was very careless. It
+was all his own fault. And just think how far he made us walk! My feet
+are quite damp. We ought to go in directly or we shall all take cold,
+and I'm sure you wouldn't like that, my dear."
+
+She led the way as she spoke, the two girls and young Armstrong
+following. Maidie hesitated. It was so easy to go in, to forget
+everything in the light and warmth and excitement.
+
+"No," said she, very firmly, and as much to herself as to the young man
+who stood waiting for her. "I must go back and try to make it right.
+I'm so sorry, Mr. Harris, but if you will tell them--"
+
+"Why, I'm going with you, of course" said the young fellow,
+impulsively. "If I'd only looked once at the man I'd go alone, but I
+shouldn't know him from Adam."
+
+Maidie laughed. "Oh, I don't want to lose the whole concert, Mr.
+Harris, and Frank, has all the tickets. You must go after them and try
+to make my peace. I'll come just as soon as I can. Don't wait for me,
+please. If you'll come and look for me here the first number, and not
+let them scold me too much--" She ended with an imploring little catch
+in her breath that was almost a sob.
+
+"They sha'n't say a word, Miss Williams!" cried Walter Harris, with
+honest admiration in his eyes.
+
+But she was gone already, and conscious that further delay was only
+making matters worse, he went on into the hall.
+
+Meanwhile, the car swung heavily along the wet rails on its way to the
+turning-point. It was nearly empty now. An old gentleman and his nurse
+were the only occupants. Jim Stevens, the conductor, had stepped inside
+the car.
+
+"Too bad I forgot those young people wanted to get off at Music Hall,"
+he was thinking to himself. "I don't see how I came to do it. That chap
+looked as if he wanted to complain of me, and I don't know as I blame
+him. I'd have said I was sorry if he hadn't been so sharp with his
+tongue. I hope he won't complain just now. 'Twould be a pretty bad time
+for me to get into trouble, with Mary and the baby both sick. I'm too
+sleepy to be good for much, that's a fact. Sitting up three nights
+running takes hold of a fellow somehow when he's at work all day. The
+rent's paid, that's one thing, if it hasn't left me but half a dollar
+to my name. Hullo!" He was struck by a sudden distinct recollection of
+the coins he had returned. "Why, I gave him fifty cents too much!"
+
+He glanced up at the dial which indicated the fares and began to count
+the change in his pocket. He knew exactly how much money he had had at
+the beginning of the trip. He counted carefully. Then he plunged his
+hand into the heavy canvas pocket of his coat. Perhaps he had half a
+dollar there. No, it was empty!
+
+He faced the fact reluctantly. Fifty cents short, ten fares! Gone into
+the pocket of the young gentleman with the fur collar! The conductor's
+hand shook as he put the money back in his pocket. It meant--what did
+it mean? He drew a long breath.
+
+Christmas Eve! A dark dreary little room upstairs in a noisy tenement
+house. A pale, thin woman on a shabby lounge vainly trying to quiet a
+fretful child. The child is thin and pale, too, with a hard, racking
+cough. There is a small fire in the stove, a very small fire; coal is
+so high. The medicine stands on the shelf. "Medicine won't do much
+good," the doctor had said; "he needs beef and cream."
+
+Jim's heart sank at the thought. He could almost hear the baby asking;
+"Isn't papa coming soon? Isn't he, mamma?"
+
+"Poor little kid!" Jim said, softly, under his breath. "And I shan't
+have a thing to take home to him; nor Mary's violets, either. It'll be
+the first Christmas that ever happened. I suppose that chap would think
+it was ridiculous for me to be buying violets. He wouldn't understand
+what the flowers mean to Mary. Perhaps he didn't notice I gave him too
+much. That kind don't know how much they have. They just pull it out as
+if it was newspaper."
+
+The conductor went out into the snow to help the nurse, who was
+assisting the old gentleman to the ground. Then the car swung on again.
+Jim turned up the collar of his coat about his ears and stamped his
+feet. There was the florist's shop where he had meant to buy the
+violets, and the toy-shop was just around the corner.
+
+A thought flashed across his tired brain. "Plenty of men would do it;
+they do it every day. Nobody ever would be the poorer for it. This car
+will be crowded going home. I needn't ring in every fare; nobody could
+tell. But Mary! She wouldn't touch those violets if she knew. And she'd
+know. I'd have to tell her. I couldn't keep it from her, she's that
+quick."
+
+He jumped off to adjust the trolley with a curious sense of unreality.
+It couldn't be that he was really going home this Christmas Eve with
+empty hands. Well, they must all suffer together for his carelessness.
+It was his own fault, but it was hard. And he was so tired!
+
+To his amazement he found his eyes were blurred as be watched the
+people crowding into the car. What? Was he going to cry like a
+baby--he, a great burly man of thirty years?
+
+"It's no use," he thought. "I couldn't do it. The first time I gave
+Mary violets was the night she said she'd marry me. I told her then I'd
+do my best to make her proud of me. I guess she wouldn't be very proud
+of a man who could cheat. She'd rather starve than have a ribbon she
+couldn't pay for."
+
+He rang up a dozen fares with a steady hand. The temptation was over.
+Six more strokes--then nine without a falter. He even imagined the bell
+rang more distinctly than usual, even encouragingly. The car stopped.
+Jim flung the door open with a triumphant sweep of his arm. He felt
+ready to face the world. But the baby--his arm dropped. It was hard.
+
+He turned to help the young girl who was waiting at the step. Through
+the whirling snow he saw her eager face, with a quick recognition
+lighting the steady eyes, and wondered dimly, as he stood with his hand
+on the signal-strap, where he could have seen her before.
+
+He knew immediately.
+
+"There was a mistake," she said, with a shy tremor in her voice. "You
+gave us too much change and here it is." She held out to Jim the piece
+of silver which had given him such an unhappy quarter of an hour.
+
+He took it like one dazed. Would the young lady think he was crazy to
+care so much about so small a coin? He must say something. "Thank you,
+miss," he stammered as well as he could. "You see, I thought it was
+gone--and there's the baby--and it's Christmas Eve--and my wife's
+sick--and you can't understand--"
+
+It certainly was not remarkable that she couldn't.
+
+"But I do," she said, simply. "I was afraid of that. And I thought
+perhaps there was a baby, so I brought my Christmas present for her,"
+and something else dropped into Jim's cold hand.
+
+"What you waiting for?" shouted the motorman from the front platform.
+The girl had disappeared in the snow.
+
+Jim rang the bell to go ahead, and gazed again at the two shining half
+dollars in his hand.
+
+"I didn't have a chance to tell her," he explained to his wife late in
+the evening, as he sat in a tiny rocking-chair several sizes too small
+for him, "that the baby wasn't a her at all, though if I thought he'd
+grow up into such a lovely one as she is, I don't know but I almost
+wish he was."
+
+"Poor Jim!" said Mary, with a little laugh as she put up her hand to
+stroke his rough cheek. "I guess you're tired."
+
+"And I should say," he added, stretching out his long legs toward the
+few red sparks in the bottom of the grate, "I should say she had tears
+in her eyes, too, but I was that near crying myself I couldn't be sure."
+
+The little room was sweet with the odour of English violets. Asleep in
+the bed lay the boy, a toy horse clasped close to his breast.
+
+"Bless her heart!" said Mary, softly.
+
+
+"Well, Miss Williams," said Walter Harris, as he sprang to meet a
+snow-covered figure coming swiftly along the sidewalk. "I can see that
+you found him. You've lost the first number, but they won't scold
+you--not this time."
+
+The girl turned a radiant face upon him. "Thank you," she said, shaking
+the snowy crystals from her skirt. "I don't care now if they do. I
+should have lost more than that if I had stayed."
+
+
+
+VIII. TOINETTE AND THE ELVES*
+
+* Published by arrangement with Little, Brown & Co.
+
+SUSAN COOLIDGE
+
+The winter's sun was nearing the horizon's edge. Each moment the tree
+shadows grew longer in the forest; each moment the crimson light on the
+upper boughs became more red and bright. It was Christmas Eve, or would
+be in half an hour, when the sun should be fairly set; but it did not
+feel like Christmas, for the afternoon was mild and sweet, and the wind
+in the leafless boughs sang, as it moved about, as though to imitate
+the vanished birds. Soft trills and whistles, odd little shakes and
+twitters--it was astonishing what pretty noises the wind made, for it
+was in good humor, as winds should be on the Blessed Night; all its
+storm-tones and bass-notes were for the moment laid aside, and gently
+as though hushing a baby to sleep, it cooed and rustled and brushed to
+and fro in the leafless woods.
+
+Toinette stood, pitcher in hand, beside the well. "Wishing Well," the
+people called it, for they believed that if any one standing there
+bowed to the East, repeated a certain rhyme and wished a wish, the wish
+would certainly come true. Unluckily, nobody knew exactly what the
+rhyme should be. Toinette did not; she was wishing that she did, as she
+stood with her eyes fixed on the bubbling water. How nice it would be!
+she thought. What beautiful things should be hers, if it were only to
+wish and to have. She would be beautiful, rich, good--oh, so good. The
+children should love her dearly, and never be disagreeable. Mother
+should not work so hard--they should all go back to France--which
+mother said was si belle. Oh, dear, how nice it would be. Meantime, the
+sun sank lower, and mother at home was waiting for the water, but
+Toinette forgot that.
+
+Suddenly she started. A low sound of crying met her ear, and something
+like a tiny moan. It seemed close by but she saw nothing.
+
+Hastily she filled her pitcher and turned to go. But again the sound
+came, an unmistakable sob, right under her feet. Toinette stopped short.
+
+"What is the matter?" she called out bravely. "Is anybody there? and if
+there is, why don't I see you?"
+
+A third sob--and all at once, down on the ground beside her, a tiny
+figure became visible, so small that Toinette had to kneel and stoop
+her head to see it plainly. The figure was that of an odd little man.
+He wore a garb of green bright and glancing as the scales of a beetle.
+In his mite of a hand was a cap, out of which stuck a long pointed
+feather. Two specks of tears stood on his cheeks and he fixed on
+Toinette a glance so sharp and so sad that it made her feel sorry and
+frightened and confused all at once.
+
+"Why how funny this is!" she said, speaking to herself out loud.
+
+"Not at all," replied the little man, in a voice as dry and crisp as
+the chirr of a grasshopper. "Anything but funny. I wish you wouldn't
+use such words. It hurts my feelings, Toinette."
+
+"Do you know my name, then?" cried Toinette, astonished. "That's
+strange. But what is the matter? Why are you crying so, little man?"
+
+"I'm not a little man. I'm an elf," responded the dry voice; "and I
+think you'd cry if you had an engagement out to tea, and found yourself
+spiked on a great bayonet, so that you couldn't move an inch. Look!" He
+turned a little as he spoke and Toinette saw a long rose-thorn sticking
+through the back of the green robe. The little man could by no means
+reach the thorn, and it held him fast prisoner to the place.
+
+"Is that all? I'll take it out for you," she said.
+
+"Be careful--oh, be careful," entreated the little man. "This is my new
+dress, you know--my Christmas suit, and it's got to last a year. If
+there is a hole in it, Peascod will tickle me and Bean Blossom tease,
+till I shall wish myself dead." He stamped with vexation at the thought.
+
+"Now, you mustn't do that," said Toinette, in a motherly tone, "else
+you'll tear it yourself, you know." She broke off the thorn as she
+spoke, and gently drew it out. The elf anxiously examined the stuff. A
+tiny puncture only was visible and his face brightened.
+
+"You're a good child," he said. "I'll do as much for you some day,
+perhaps."
+
+"I would have come before if I had seen you," remarked Toinette,
+timidly. "But I didn't see you a bit."
+
+"No, because I had my cap on," cried the elf. He placed it on his head
+as he spoke, and hey, presto! nobody was there, only a voice which
+laughed and said: "Well--don't stare so. Lay your finger on me now."
+
+"Oh," said Toinette, with a gasp. "How wonderful. What fun it must be
+to do that. The children wouldn't see me. I should steal in and
+surprise them; they would go on talking, and never guess that I was
+there. I should so like it. Do elves ever lend their caps to anybody? I
+wish you'd lend me yours. It must be so nice to be invisible."
+
+"Ho," cried the elf, appearing suddenly again. "Lend my cap, indeed!
+Why it wouldn't stay on the very tip of your ear, it's so small. As for
+nice, that depends. Sometimes it is, and sometimes it isn't. No, the
+only way for mortal people to be invisible is to gather the fern-seed
+and put it in their shoes."
+
+"Gather it? Where? I never saw any seed to the ferns," said Toinette,
+staring about her.
+
+"Of course not--we elves take care of that," replied the little man.
+"Nobody finds the fern-seed but ourselves. I'll tell you what, though.
+You were such a nice child to take out the thorn so cleverly, that I'll
+give you a little of the seed. Then you can try the fun of being
+invisible, to your heart's content."
+
+"Will you really? How delightful. May I have it now?"
+
+"Bless me. Do you think I carry my pockets stuffed with it?" said the
+elf. "Not at all. Go home, say not a word to any one, but leave your
+bedroom window open to night, and you'll see what you'll see."
+
+He laid his finger on his nose as he spoke, gave a jump like a
+grasshopper, clapping on his cap as he went, and vanished. Toinette
+lingered a moment, in hopes that he might come back, then took her
+pitcher and hurried home. The woods were very dusky by this time; but
+full of her strange adventures, she did not remember to feel afraid.
+
+"How long you have been," said her mother. "It's late for a little maid
+like you to be up. You must make better speed another time, my child."
+
+Toinette pouted as she was apt to do when reproved. The children
+clamoured to know what had kept her, and she spoke pettishly and
+crossly; so that they too became cross, and presently went away into
+the outer kitchen to play by themselves. The children were apt to creep
+away when Toinette came. It made her angry and unhappy at times that
+they should do so, but she did not realize that it was in great part
+her own fault, and so did not set herself to mend it.
+
+"Tell me a 'tory," said baby Jeanneton, creeping to her knee a little
+later. But Toinette's head was full of the elf; she had no time to
+spare for Jeanneton.
+
+"Oh, not to-night," she replied. "Ask mother to tell you one."
+
+"Mother's busy," said Jeanneton wistfully.
+
+Toinette took no notice and the little one crept away disconsolately.
+
+Bedtime at last. Toinette set the casement open, and lay a long time
+waiting and watching; then she fell asleep. She waked with a sneeze and
+jump and sat up in bed. Behold, on the coverlet stood her elfin friend,
+with a long train of other elves beside him, all clad in the
+beetle-wing green, and wearing little pointed caps. More were coming in
+at the window; outside a few were drifting about in the moon rays,
+which lit their sparkling robes till they glittered like so many
+fireflies. The odd thing was, that though the caps were on, Toinette
+could see the elves distinctly and this surprised her so much, that
+again she thought out loud and said, "How funny."
+
+"You mean about the caps," replied her special elf, who seemed to have
+the power of reading thought.
+
+"Yes, you can see us to-night, caps and all. Spells lose their value on
+Christmas Eve, always. Peascod, where is the box? Do you still wish to
+try the experiment of being invisible, Toinette?"
+
+"Oh, yes--indeed I do."
+
+"Very well; so let it be."
+
+As he spoke he beckoned, and two elves puffing and panting like little
+men with a heavy load, dragged forward a droll little box about the
+size of a pumpkin-seed.
+
+One of them lifted the cover.
+
+"Pay the porter, please, ma'am," he said giving Toinette's ear a
+mischievous tweak with his sharp fingers.
+
+"Hands off, you bad Peascod!" cried Toinette's elf. "This is my girl.
+She shan't be pinched!" He dealt Peascod a blow with his tiny hand as
+he spoke and looked so brave and warlike that he seemed at least an
+inch taller than he had before. Toinette admired him very much; and
+Peascod slunk away with an abashed giggle muttering that Thistle
+needn't be so ready with his fist.
+
+Thistle--for thus, it seemed, Toinette's friend was named--dipped his
+fingers in the box, which was full of fine brown seeds, and shook a
+handful into each of Toinette's shoes, as they stood, toes together by
+the bedside.
+
+"Now you have your wish," he said, and can go about and do what you
+like, no one seeing. The charm will end at sunset. Make the most of it
+while you can; but if you want to end it sooner, shake the seeds from
+the shoes and then you are just as usual."
+
+"Oh, I shan't want to," protested Toinette; "I'm sure I shan't."
+
+"Good-bye," said Thistle, with a mocking little laugh.
+
+"Good-bye, and thank you ever so much," replied Toinette.
+
+"Good-bye, good-bye," replied the other elves, in shrill chorus. They
+clustered together, as if in consultation; then straight out of the
+window they flew like a swarm of gauzy-winged bees, and melted into the
+moonlight. Toinette jumped up and ran to watch them but the little men
+were gone--not a trace of them was to be seen; so she shut the window,
+went back to bed and presently in the midst of her amazed and excited
+thoughts fell asleep.
+
+She waked in the morning, with a queer, doubtful feeling. Had she
+dreamed, or had it really happened? She put on her best petticoat and
+laced her blue bodice; for she thought the mother would perhaps take
+them across the wood to the little chapel for the Christmas service.
+Her long hair smoothed and tied, her shoes trimly fastened, downstairs
+she ran. The mother was stirring porridge over the fire. Toinette went
+close to her, but she did not move or turn her head.
+
+"How late the children are," she said at last, lifting the boiling pot
+on the hob. Then she went to the stair-foot and called, "Marc,
+Jeanneton, Pierre, Marie. Breakfast is ready, my children.
+Toinette--but where, then, is Toinette? She is used to be down long
+before this."
+
+"Toinette isn't upstairs," said Marie from above.
+
+"Her door is wide open, and she isn't there."
+
+"That is strange," said the mother. "I have been here an hour, and she
+has not passed this way since." She went to the outer door and called,
+"Toinette! Toinette!" passing close to Toinette as she did so. And
+looking straight at her with unseeing eyes. Toinette, half frightened,
+half pleased, giggled low to herself. She really was invisible, then.
+How strange it seemed and what fun it was going to be.
+
+The children sat down to breakfast, little Jeanneton, as the youngest,
+saying grace. The mother distributed the porridge and gave each a spoon
+but she looked anxious.
+
+"Where can Toinette have gone?" she said to herself. Toinette was
+conscious-pricked. She was half inclined to dispel the charm on the
+spot. But just then she caught a whisper from Pierre to Marc which so
+surprised her as to put the idea out of her head.
+
+"Perhaps a wolf has eaten her up--a great big wolf like the 'Capuchon
+Rouge,' you know." This was what Pierre said; and Marc answered
+unfeelingly:
+
+"If he has, I shall ask mother to let me have her room for my own."
+
+Poor Toinette, her cheeks burned and her eyes filled with tears at
+this. Didn't the boys love her a bit then? Next she grew angry, and
+longed to box Marc's ears, only she recollected in time that she was
+invisible. What a bad boy he was, she thought.
+
+The smoking porridge reminded her that she was hungry; so brushing away
+the tears she slipped a spoon off the table and whenever she found the
+chance, dipped it into the bowl for a mouthful. The porridge
+disappeared rapidly.
+
+"I want some more," said Jeanneton.
+
+"Bless me, how fast you have eaten," said the mother, turning to the
+bowl.
+
+This made Toinette laugh, which shook her spoon, and a drop of the hot
+mixture fell right on the tip of Marie's nose as she sat with upturned
+face waiting her turn for a second helping. Marie gave a little scream.
+
+"What is it?" said the mother.
+
+"Hot water! Right in my face!" sputtered Marie.
+
+"Water!" cried Marc. "It's porridge."
+
+"You spattered with your spoon. Eat more carefully, my child," said the
+mother, and Toinette laughed again as she heard her. After all, there
+was some fun in being invisible.
+
+The morning went by. Constantly the mother went to the door, and,
+shading her eyes with her hand, looked out, in hopes of seeing a little
+figure come down the wood-path, for she thought perhaps the child went
+to the spring after water, and fell asleep there. The children played
+happily, meanwhile. They were used to doing without Toinette and did
+not seem to miss her, except that now and then baby Jeanneton said:
+"Poor Toinette gone--not here--all gone."
+
+"Well, what if she has?" said Marc at last looking up from the wooden
+cup he was carving for Marie's doll. "We can play all the better."
+
+Marc was a bold, outspoken boy, who always told his whole mind about
+things.
+
+"If she were here," he went on," she'd only scold and interfere.
+Toinette almost always scolds. I like to have her go away. It makes it
+pleasanter."
+
+"It is rather pleasanter," admitted Marie, "only I'd like her to be
+having a nice time somewhere else."
+
+"Bother about Toinette," cried Pierre.
+
+"Let's play 'My godmother has cabbage to sell.'"
+
+I don't think Toinette had ever felt so unhappy in her life, as when
+she stood by unseen, and heard the children say these words. She had
+never meant to be unkind to them, but she was quick-tempered, dreamy,
+wrapped up in herself. She did not like being interrupted by them, it
+put her out, and she spoke sharply and was cross. She had taken it for
+granted that the others must love her, by a sort of right, and the
+knowledge that they did not grieved over very much. Creeping away, she
+hid herself in the woods. It was a sparkling day, but the sun did not
+look so bright as usual. Cuddled down under a rosebush, Toinette sat
+sobbing as if her heart would break at the recollection of the speeches
+she had overheard.
+
+By and by a little voice within her woke up and began to make itself
+audible. All of us know this little voice. We call it conscience.
+
+"Jeanneton missed me," she thought. "And, oh, dear! I pushed her away
+only last night and wouldn't tell her a story. And Marie hoped I was
+having a pleasant time somewhere. I wish I hadn't slapped Marie last
+Friday. And I wish I hadn't thrown Marc's ball into the fire that day I
+was angry with him. How unkind he was to say that--but I wasn't always
+kind to him. And once I said that I wished a bear would eat Pierre up.
+That was because he broke my cup. Oh, dear, oh, dear. What a bad girl
+I've been to them all."
+
+"But you could be better and kinder if you tried, couldn't you?" said
+the inward voice. "I think you could."
+
+And Toinette clasped her hands tight and said out loud: "I could.
+Yes--and I will."
+
+The first thing to be done was to get rid of the fern-seed which she
+now regarded as a hateful thing. She untied her shoes and shook it out
+in the grass. It dropped and seemed to melt into the air, for it
+instantly vanished. A mischievous laugh sounded close behind, and a
+beetle-green coat-tail was visible whisking under a tuft of rushes. But
+Toinette had had enough of the elves, and, tying her shoes, took the
+road toward home, running with all her might.
+
+"Where have you been all day, Toinette?" cried the children, as,
+breathless and panting, she flew in at the gate. But Toinette could not
+speak. She made slowly for her mother, who stood in the doorway, flung
+herself into her arms and burst into a passion of tears.
+
+"Ma cherie, what is it, whence hast thou come?" asked the good mother
+alarmed. She lifted Toinette into her arms as she spoke, and hastened
+indoors. The other children followed, whispering and peeping, but the
+mother sent them away, and sitting down by the fire with Toinette in
+her lap, she rocked and hushed and comforted, as though Toinette had
+been again a little baby. Gradually the sobs ceased. For a while
+Toinette lay quiet, with her head on her mother's breast. Then she
+wiped her wet eyes, put her arms around her mother's neck, and told her
+all from the very beginning, keeping not a single thing back. The dame
+listened with alarm.
+
+"Saints protect us," she muttered. Then feeling Toinette's hands and
+head, "Thou hast a fever," she said. "I will make thee a tisane, my
+darling, and thou must at once go to bed." Toinette vainly protested;
+to bed she went and perhaps it was the wisest thing, for the warm drink
+threw her into a long sound sleep and when she woke she was herself
+again, bright and well, hungry for dinner, and ready to do her usual
+tasks.
+
+Herself--but not quite the same Toinette that she had been before.
+Nobody changes from bad to better in a minute. It takes time for that,
+time and effort, and a long struggle with evil habits and tempers. But
+there is sometimes a certain minute or day in which people begin to
+change, and thus it was with Toinette. The fairy lesson was not lost
+upon her. She began to fight with herself, to watch her faults and try
+to conquer them. It was hard work; often she felt discouraged, but she
+kept on. Week after week and month after month she grew less selfish,
+kinder, more obliging than she used to be. When she failed and her old
+fractious temper got the better of her, she was sorry and begged every
+one's pardon so humbly that they could not but forgive. The mother
+began to think that the elves really had bewitched her child. As for
+the children they learned to love Toinette as never before, and came to
+her with all their pains and pleasures, as children should to a kind
+older sister. Each fresh proof of this, every kiss from Jeanneton,
+every confidence from Marc, was a comfort to Toinette, for she never
+forgot Christmas Day, and felt that no trouble was too much to wipe out
+that unhappy recollection. "I think they like me better than they did
+then," she would say; but then the thought came, "Perhaps if I were
+invisible again, if they did not know I was there, I might hear
+something to make me feel as badly as I did that morning." These sad
+thoughts were part of the bitter fruit of the fairy fern-seed.
+
+So with doubts and fears the year went by, and again it was Christmas
+Eve. Toinette had been asleep some hours when she was roused by a sharp
+tapping at the window pane. Startled, and only half awake, she sat up
+in bed and saw by the moonlight a tiny figure outside which she
+recognized. It was Thistle drumming with his knuckles on the glass.
+
+"Let me in," cried the dry little voice. So Toinette opened the
+casement, and Thistle flew in and perched as before on the coverlet.
+
+"Merry Christmas, my girl." he said, "and a Happy New Year when it
+comes. I've brought you a present;" and, dipping into a pouch tied
+round his waist, he pulled out a handful of something brown. Toinette
+knew what it was in a moment.
+
+"Oh, no," she cried shrinking back. "Don't give me any fern-seeds. They
+frighten me. I don't like them."
+
+"Don't be silly," said Thistle, his voice sounding kind this time, and
+earnest. "It wasn't pleasant being invisible last year, but perhaps
+this year it will be. Take my advice, and try it. You'll not be sorry."
+
+"Sha'n't I?" said Toinette, brightening. "Very well, then, I will." She
+leaned out of bed, and watched Thistle strew the fine dustlike grains
+in each shoe.
+
+"I'll drop in to-morrow night, and just see how you like it," he said.
+Then, with a nod, he was gone.
+
+The old fear came back when she woke in the morning, and she tied on
+her shoes with a tremble at her heart. Downstairs she stole. The first
+thing she saw was a wooden ship standing on her plate. Marc had made
+the ship, but Toinette had no idea it was for her.
+
+The little ones sat round the table with their eyes on the door,
+watching till Toinette should come in and be surprised.
+
+"I wish she'd hurry," said Pierre, drumming on his bowl with a spoon.
+
+"We all want Toinette, don't we?" said the mother, smiling as she
+poured the hot porridge.
+
+"It will be fun to see her stare," declared Marc.
+
+"Toinette is jolly when she stares. Her eyes look big and her cheeks
+grow pink. Andre Brugen thinks his sister Aline is prettiest, but I
+don't. Our Toinette is ever so pretty."
+
+"She is ever so nice, too," said Pierre. "She's as good to play with
+as--as--a boy," finished triumphantly.
+
+"Oh, I wish my Toinette would come," said Jeanneton.
+
+Toinette waited no longer, but sped upstairs with glad tears in her
+eyes. Two minutes, and down she came again visible this time. Her heart
+was light as a feather.
+
+"Merry Christmas!" clamoured the children. The ship was presented,
+Toinette was duly surprised, and so the happy day began.
+
+That night Toinette left the window open, and lay down in her clothes;
+for she felt, as Thistle had been so kind, she ought to receive him
+politely. He came at midnight, and with him all the other little men in
+green.
+
+"Well, how was it?" asked Thistle.
+
+"Oh, I liked it this time," declared Toinette, with shining eyes, "and
+I thank you so much."
+
+"I'm glad you did," said the elf. "And I'm glad you are thankful, for
+we want you to do something for us."
+
+"What can it be?" inquired Toinette, wondering.
+
+"You must know," went on Thistle, "that there is no dainty in the world
+which we elves enjoy like a bowl of fern-seed broth. But it has to be
+cooked over a real fire, and we dare not go near fire, you know, lest
+our wings scorch. So we seldom get any fern-seed broth. Now, Toinette,
+will you make us some?"
+
+"Indeed, I will!" cried Toinette, "only you must tell me how."
+
+"It is very simple," said Peascod; "only seed and honey dew, stirred
+from left to right with a sprig of fennel. Here's the seed and the
+fennel, and here's the dew. Be sure and stir from the left; if you
+don't, it curdles, and the flavour will be spoiled."
+
+Down into the kitchen they went, and Toinette, moving very softly,
+quickened the fire, set on the smallest bowl she could find, and spread
+the doll's table with the wooden saucers which Marc had made for
+Jeanneton to play with. Then she mixed and stirred as the elves bade,
+and when the soup was done, served it to them smoking hot. How they
+feasted! No bumblebee, dipping into a flower-cup, ever sipped and
+twinkled more rapturously than they.
+
+When the last drop was eaten, they made ready to go. Each in turn
+kissed Toinette's hand, and said a word of farewell. Thistle brushed
+his feathered cap over the doorpost as he passed.
+
+"Be lucky, house," he said, "for you have received and entertained the
+luck-bringers. And be lucky, Toinette. Good temper is good luck, and
+sweet words and kind looks and peace in the heart are the fairest of
+fortunes. See that you never lose them again, my girl." With this, he,
+too, kissed Toinette's hand, waved his feathered cap, and--whir! they
+all were gone, while Toinette, covering the fire with ashes and putting
+aside the little cups, stole up to her bed a happy child.
+
+
+
+IX. THE VOYAGE OF THE WEE RED CAP
+
+*Published originally in the Outlook. Reprinted here by arrangement
+with the author.
+
+RUTH SAWYER DURAND
+
+It was the night of St. Stephen, and Teig sat alone by his fire with
+naught in his cupboard but a pinch of tea and a bare mixing of meal,
+and a heart inside of him as soft and warm as the ice on the
+water-bucket outside the door. The tuft was near burnt on the hearth--a
+handful of golden cinders left, just; and Teig took to counting them
+greedily on his fingers.
+
+"There's one, two, three, an' four an' five," he laughed. "Faith, there
+be more bits o' real gold hid undther the loose clay in the corner."
+
+It was the truth; and it was the scraping and scrooching for the last
+piece that had left Teig's cupboard bare of a Christmas dinner.
+
+"Gold is betther nor eatin' an' dthrinkin'. An' if ye have naught to
+give, there'll be naught asked of ye;" and he laughed again.
+
+He was thinking of the neighbours, and the doles of food and piggins of
+milk that would pass over their thresholds that night to the vagabonds
+and paupers who were sure to come begging. And on the heels of that
+thought followed another: who would be giving old Barney his dinner?
+Barney lived a stone's throw from Teig, alone, in a wee tumbled-in
+cabin; and for a score of years past Teig had stood on the doorstep
+every Christmas Eve, and, making a hollow of his two hands, had called
+across the road:
+
+"Hey, there, Barney, will ye come over for a sup?"
+
+And Barney had reached for his crutches--there being but one leg to
+him--and had come.
+
+"Faith," said Teig, trying another laugh, "Barney can fast for the
+once; 'twill be all the same in a month's time." And he fell to
+thinking of the gold again. A knock came at the door. Teig pulled
+himself down in his chair where the shadow would cover him, and held
+his tongue.
+
+"Teig, Teig!" It was the widow O'Donnelly's voice. "If ye are there,
+open your door. I have not got the pay for the spriggin' this month,
+an' the childher are needin' food."
+
+But Teig put the leash on his tongue, and never stirred till he heard
+the tramp of her feet going on to the next cabin. Then he saw to it
+that the door was tight-barred. Another knock came, and it was a
+stranger's voice this time:
+
+"The other cabins are filled; not one but has its hearth crowded; will
+ye take us in--the two of us? The wind bites mortal sharp, not a morsel
+o' food have ne tasted this day. Masther, will ye take us in?"
+
+But Teig sat on, a-holding his tongue; and the tramp of the strangers'
+feet passed down the road. Others took their place--small feet,
+running. It was the miller's wee Cassie, and she called out as she ran
+by.
+
+"Old Barney's watchin' for ye. Ye'll not be forgettin' him, will ye,
+Teig?"
+
+And then the child broke into a song, sweet and clear, as she passed
+down the road:
+
+"Listen all ye, 'tis the Feast o' St. Stephen,
+Mind that ye keep it, this holy even.
+Open your door an' greet ye the stranger--
+For ye mind that the wee Lord had naught but a manger.
+ Mhuire as truagh!
+
+"Feed ye the hungry an' rest ye the weary,
+This ye must do for the sake of Our Mary.
+'Tis well that ye mind--ye who sit by the fire--
+That the Lord he was born in a dark and cold byre.
+ Mhuire as truagh!"
+
+Teig put his fingers deep in his ears. "A million murdthering curses on
+them that won't let me be! Can't a man try to keep what is his without
+bein' pesthered by them that has only idled an' wasted their days?"
+
+And then the strange thing happened: hundreds and hundreds of wee
+lights began dancing outside the window, making the room bright; the
+hands of the clock began chasing each other round the dial, and the
+bolt of the door drew itself out. Slowly, without a creak or a cringe,
+the door opened, and in there trooped a crowd of the Good People. Their
+wee green cloaks were folded close about them, and each carried a rush
+candle.
+
+Teig was filled with a great wonderment, entirely, when he saw the
+fairies, but when they saw him they laughed.
+
+"We are takin' the loan o' your cabin this night, Teig," said they. "Ye
+are the only man hereabout with an empty hearth, an' we're needin' one."
+
+Without saying more, they bustled about the room making ready. They
+lengthened out the table and spread and set it; more of the Good People
+trooped in, bringing stools and food and drink. The pipers came last,
+and they sat themselves around the chimney-piece a-blowing their
+chanters and trying the drones. The feasting began and the pipers
+played and never had Teig seen such a sight in his life. Suddenly a wee
+man sang out:
+
+"Clip, clap, clip, clap, I wish I had my wee red cap!" And out of the
+air there tumbled the neatest cap Teig ever laid his two eyes on. The
+wee man clapped it on his head, crying:
+
+"I wish I was in Spain!" and--whist--up the chimney he went, and away
+out of sight.
+
+It happened just as I am telling it. Another wee man called for his
+cap, and away he went after the first. And then another and another
+until the room was empty and Teig sat alone again.
+
+"By my soul," said Teig, "I'd like to thravel that way myself! It's a
+grand savin' of tickets an' baggage; an' ye get to a place before ye've
+had time to change your mind. Faith there is no harm done if I thry it."
+
+So he sang the fairies' rhyme and out of the air dropped a wee cap for
+him. For a moment the wonder had him, but the next he was clapping the
+cap on his head and crying:
+
+"Spain!"
+
+Then--whist--up the chimney he went after the fairies, and before he
+had time to let out his breath he was standing in the middle of Spain,
+and strangeness all about him.
+
+He was in a great city. The doorways of the houses were hung with
+flowers and the air was warm and sweet with the smell of them. Torches
+burned along the streets, sweetmeat-sellers went about crying their
+wares, and on the steps of the cathedral crouched a crowd of beggars.
+
+"What's the meanin' o' that?" asked Teig of one of the fairies. "They
+are waiting for those that are hearing mass. When they come out, they
+give half of what they have to those that have nothing, so on this
+night of all the year there shall be no hunger and no cold."
+
+And then far down the street came the sound of a child's voice, singing:
+
+"Listen all ye, 'tis the Feast o' St. Stephen,
+Mind that ye keep it, this holy even".
+
+"Curse it!" said Teig; "can a song fly afther ye?"
+
+And then he heard the fairies cry "Holland!" and cried "Holland!" too.
+
+In one leap he was over France, and another over Belgium; and with the
+third he was standing by long ditches of water frozen fast, and over
+them glided hundreds upon hundreds of lads and maids. Outside each door
+stood a wee wooden shoe empty. Teig saw scores of them as he looked
+down the ditch of a street.
+
+"What is the meanin' o' those shoes? " he asked the fairies.
+
+"Ye poor lad!" answered the wee man next to him; "are ye not knowing
+anything? This is the Gift Night of the year, when every man gives to
+his neighbour."
+
+A child came to the window of one of the houses, and in her hand was a
+lighted candle. She was singing as she put the light down close to the
+glass, and Teig caught the words:
+
+"Open your door an' greet ye the stranger--
+For ye mind that the wee Lord had naught but a manger.
+ Mhuire as truagh!"
+
+"'Tis the de'il's work!" cried Teig, and he set the red cap more firmly
+on his head.
+
+"I'm for another country."
+
+I cannot be telling you a half of the adventures Teig had that night,
+nor half the sights that he saw. But he passed by fields that held
+sheaves of grain for the birds and doorsteps that held bowls of
+porridge for the wee creatures. He saw lighted trees, sparkling and
+heavy with gifts; and he stood outside the churches and watched the
+crowds pass in, bearing gifts to the Holy Mother and Child.
+
+At last the fairies straightened their caps and cried, "Now for the
+great hall in the King of England's palace!"
+
+Whist--and away they went, and Teig after them; and the first thing he
+knew he was in London, not an arm's length from the King's throne. It
+was a grander sight than he had seen in any other country. The hall was
+filled entirely with lords and ladies; and the great doors were open
+for the poor and the homeless to come in and warm themselves by the
+King's fire and feast from the King's table. And many a hungry soul did
+the King serve with his own hands.
+
+Those that had anything to give gave it in return. It might be a bit of
+music played on a harp or a pipe, or it might be a dance or a song; but
+more often it was a wish, just, for good luck and safekeeping.
+
+Teig was so taken up with the watching that he never heard the fairies
+when they wished themselves on; moreover, he never saw the wee girl
+that was fed, and went laughing away. But he heard a bit of her song as
+she passed through the door:
+
+"Feed ye the hungry an' rest ye the weary,
+This ye must do for the sake of Our Mary."
+
+Then the anger had Teig. "I'll stop your pestherin' tongue, once an'
+for all time!" and, catching the cap from his head, he threw it after
+her. No sooner was the cap gone than every soul in the hall saw him.
+The next moment they were about him, catching at his coat and crying:
+
+"Where is he from, what does he here? Bring him before the King!" And
+Teig was dragged along by a hundred hands to the throne where the King
+sat.
+
+"He was stealing food," cried one.
+
+"He was robbing the King's jewels," cried another.
+
+"He looks evil," cried a third. "Kill him!"
+
+And in a moment all the voices took it up and the hall rang with: "Aye,
+kill him, kill him!"
+
+Teig's legs took to trembling, and fear put the leash on his tongue;
+but after a long silence he managed to whisper:
+
+"I have done evil to no one--no one!"
+
+"Maybe," said the King; "but have ye done good? Come, tell us, have ye
+given aught to any one this night? If ye have, we will pardon ye."
+
+Not a word could Teig say--fear tightened the leash--for he was knowing
+full well there was no good to him that night.
+
+"Then ye must die," said the King. "Will ye try hanging or beheading?"
+
+"Hanging, please, your Majesty," said Teig.
+
+The guards came rushing up and carried him off.
+
+But as he was crossing the threshold of the hall a thought sprang at
+him and held him.
+
+"Your Majesty," he called after him, "will ye grant me a last request?"
+
+"I will," said the King.
+
+"Thank ye. There's a wee red cap that I'm mortal fond of, and I lost it
+a while ago; if I could be hung with it on, I would hang a deal more
+comfortable."
+
+The cap was found and brought to Teig.
+
+"Clip, clap, clip, clap, for my wee red cap, I wish I was home," he
+sang.
+
+Up and over the heads of the dumfounded guard he flew, and--whist--and
+away out of sight. When he opened his eyes again, he was sitting dose
+by his own hearth, with the fire burnt low. The hands of the clock were
+still, the bolt was fixed firm in the door. The fairies' lights were
+gone, and the only bright thing was the candle burning in old Barney's
+cabin across the road.
+
+A running of feet sounded outside, and then the snatch of a song
+
+"'Tis well that ye mind--ye who sit by the fire-
+That the Lord he was born in a dark and cold byre.
+ Mhuire as traugh!"
+
+"Wait ye, whoever ye are!" and Teig was away to the corner, digging
+fast at the loose clay, as a terrier digs at a bone. He filled his
+hands full of the shining gold, then hurried to the door, unbarring it.
+
+The miller's wee Cassie stood there, peering at him out of the darkness.
+
+"Take those to the widow O'Donnelly, do ye hear? And take the rest to
+the store. Ye tell Jamie to bring up all that he has that is eatable
+an' dhrinkable; and to the neighbours ye say, 'Teig's keepin' the feast
+this night.' Hurry now!"
+
+Teig stopped a moment on the threshold until the tramp of her feet had
+died away; then he made a hollow of his two hands and called across the
+road:
+
+"Hey there, Barney, will ye come over for a sup?"
+
+
+
+X. A STORY OF THE CHRIST-CHILD*
+
+*Reprinted by permission of the author from her collection,
+"Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College.
+
+A German legend for Christmas Eve as told by
+
+ELIZABETH HARKISON
+
+Once upon a time, a long, long time ago, on the night before Christmas,
+a little child was wandering all alone through the streets of a great
+city. There were many people on the street, fathers and mothers,
+sisters and brothers, uncles and aunts, and even gray-haired
+grandfathers and grandmothers, all of whom were hurrying home with
+bundles of presents for each other and for their little ones. Fine
+carriages rolled by, express wagons rattled past, even old carts were
+pressed into service, and all things seemed in a hurry and glad with
+expectation of the coming Christmas morning.
+
+From some of the windows bright lights were already beginning to stream
+until it was almost as bright as day. But the little child seemed to
+have no home, and wandered about listlessly from street to street. No
+one took any notice of him except perhaps Jack Frost, who bit his bare
+toes and made the ends of his fingers tingle. The north wind, too,
+seemed to notice the child, for it blew against him and pierced his
+ragged garments through and through, causing him to shiver with cold.
+Home after home he passed, looking with longing eyes through the
+windows, in upon the glad, happy children, most of whom were helping to
+trim the Christmas trees for the coming morrow.
+
+"Surely," said the child to himself, "where there is so must gladness
+and happiness, some of it may be for me." So with timid steps he
+approached a large and handsome house. Through the windows, he could
+see a tall and stately Christmas tree already lighted. Many presents
+hung upon it. Its green boughs were trimmed with gold and silver
+ornaments. Slowly he climbed up the broad steps and gently rapped at
+the door. It was opened by a large man-servant. He had a kindly face,
+although his voice was deep and gruff. He looked at the little child
+for a moment, then sadly shook his head and said, "Go down off the
+steps. There is no room here for such as you." He looked sorry as he
+spoke; possibly he remembered his own little ones at home, and was glad
+that they were not out in this cold and bitter night. Through the open
+door a bright light shone, and the warm air, filled with fragrance of
+the Christmas pine, rushed out from the inner room and greeted the
+little wanderer with a kiss. As the child turned back into the cold and
+darkness, he wondered why the footman had spoken thus, for surely,
+thought he, those little children would love to have another companion
+join them in their joyous Christmas festival. But the little children
+inside did not even know that he had knocked at the door.
+
+The street grew colder and darker as the child passed on. He went sadly
+forward, saying to himself, "Is there no one in all this great city who
+will share the Christmas with me?" Farther and farther down the street
+he wandered, to where the homes were not so large and beautiful. There
+seemed to be little children inside of nearly all the houses. They were
+dancing and frolicking about. Christmas trees could be seen in nearly
+every window, with beautiful dolls and trumpets and picture-books and
+balls and tops and other dainty toys hung upon them. In one window the
+child noticed a little lamb made of soft white wool. Around its neck
+was tied a red ribbon. It had evidently been hung on the tree for one
+of the children. The little stranger stopped before this window and
+looked long and earnestly at the beautiful things inside, but most of
+all was he drawn toward the white lamb. At last creeping up to the
+window-pane, he gently tapped upon it. A little girl came to the window
+and looked out into the dark street where the snow had now begun to
+fall. She saw the child, but she only frowned and shook her head and
+said, "Go away and come some other time. We are too busy to take care
+of you now." Back into the dark, cold streets he turned again. The wind
+was whirling past him and seemed to say, "Hurry on, hurry on, we have
+no time to stop. 'Tis Christmas Eve and everybody is in a hurry
+to-night."
+
+Again and again the little child rapped softly at door or window-pane.
+At each place he was refused admission. One mother feared he might have
+some ugly disease which her darlings would catch; another father said
+he had only enough for his own children and none to spare for beggars.
+Still another told him to go home where he belonged, and not to trouble
+other folks.
+
+The hours passed; later grew the night, and colder grew the wind, and
+darker seemed the street. Farther and farther the little one wandered.
+There was scarcely any one left upon the street by this time, and the
+few who remained did not seem to see the child, when suddenly ahead of
+him there appeared a bright, single ray of light. It shone through the
+darkness into the child's eyes. He looked up smilingly and said, "I
+will go where the small light beckons, perhaps they will share their
+Christmas with me."
+
+Hurrying past all the other houses, he soon reached the end of the
+street and went straight up to the window from which the light was
+streaming. It was a poor, little, low house, but the child cared not
+for that. The light seemed still to call him in. From what do you
+suppose the light came? Nothing but a tallow candle which had been
+placed in an old cup with a broken handle, in the window, as a glad
+token of Christmas Eve. There was neither curtain nor shade to the
+small, square window and as the little child looked in he saw standing
+upon a neat wooden table a branch of a Christmas tree. The room was
+plainly furnished but it was very clean. Near the fireplace sat a
+lovely faced mother with a little two-year-old on her knee and an older
+child beside her. The two children were looking into their mother's
+face and listening to a story. She must have been telling them a
+Christmas story, I think. A few bright coals were burning in the
+fireplace, and all seemed light and warm within.
+
+The little wanderer crept closer and closer to the window-pane. So
+sweet was the mother's face, so loving seemed the little children, that
+at last he took courage and tapped gently, very gently on the door. The
+mother stopped talking, the little children looked up. "What was that,
+mother?" asked the little girl at her side. "I think it was some one
+tapping on the door," replied the mother. "Run as quickly as you can
+and open it, dear, for it is a bitter cold night to keep any one
+waiting in this storm." "Oh, mother, I think it was the bough of the
+tree tapping against the window-pane," said the little girl. "Do please
+go on with our story." Again the little wanderer tapped upon the door.
+"My child, my child," exclaimed the mother, rising, "that certainly was
+a rap on the door. Run quickly and open it. No one must be left out in
+the cold on our beautiful Christmas Eve."
+
+The child ran to the door and threw it wide open. The mother saw the
+ragged stranger standing without, cold and shivering, with bare head
+and almost bare feet. She held out both hands and drew him into the
+warm, bright room. "You poor, dear child," was all she said, and
+putting her arms around him, she drew him close to her breast. "He is
+very cold, my children," she exclaimed. "We must warm him." "And,"
+added the little girl, "we must love him and give him some of our
+Christmas, too." "Yes," said the mother, "but first let us warm him--"
+
+The mother sat down by the fire with the little child on her lap, and
+her own little ones warmed his half-frozen hands in theirs. The mother
+smoothed his tangled curls, and, bending low over his head, kissed the
+child's face. She gathered the three little ones in her arms and the
+candle and the fire light shone over them. For a moment the room was
+very still. By and by the little girl said softly, to her mother, "May
+we not light the Christmas tree, and let him see how beautiful it
+looks?" "Yes," said the mother. With that she seated the child on a low
+stool beside the fire, and went herself to fetch the few simple
+ornaments which from year to year she had saved for her children's
+Christmas tree. They were soon so busy that they did not notice the
+room had filled with a strange and brilliant light. They turned and
+looked at the spot where the little wanderer sat. His ragged clothes
+had changed to garments white and beautiful; his tangled curls seemed
+like a halo of golden light about his head; but most glorious of all
+was his face, which shone with a light so dazzling that they could
+scarcely look upon it.
+
+In silent wonder they gazed at the child. Their little room seemed to
+grow larger and larger, until it was as wide as the whole world, the
+roof of their low house seemed to expand and rise, until it reached to
+the sky.
+
+With a sweet and gentle smile the wonderful child looked upon them for
+a moment, and then slowly rose and floated through the air, above the
+treetops, beyond the church spire, higher even than the clouds
+themselves, until he appeared to them to be a shining star in the sky
+above. At last he disappeared from sight. The astonished children
+turned in hushed awe to their mother, and said in a whisper, "Oh,
+mother, it was the Christ-Child, was it not?" And the mother answered
+in a low tone, "Yes."
+
+And it is said, dear children, that each Christmas Eve the little
+Christ-Child wanders through some town or village, and those who
+receive him and take him into their homes and hearts have given to them
+this marvellous vision which is denied to others.
+
+
+
+XI. JIMMY SCARECROW'S CHRISTMAS
+
+MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN
+
+Jimmy Scarecrow led a sad life in the winter. Jimmy's greatest grief
+was his lack of occupation. He liked to be useful, and in winter he was
+absolutely of no use at all.
+
+He wondered how many such miserable winters he would have to endure. He
+was a young Scarecrow, and this was his first one. He was strongly
+made, and although his wooden joints creaked a little when the wind
+blew he did not grow in the least rickety. Every morning, when the
+wintry sun peered like a hard yellow eye across the dry corn-stubble,
+Jimmy felt sad, but at Christmas time his heart nearly broke.
+
+On Christmas Eve Santa Claus came in his sledge heaped high with
+presents, urging his team of reindeer across the field. He was on his
+way to the farmhouse where Betsey lived with her Aunt Hannah.
+
+Betsey was a very good little girl with very smooth yellow curls, and
+she had a great many presents. Santa Claus had a large wax doll-baby
+for her on his arm, tucked up against the fur collar of his coat. He
+was afraid to trust it in the pack, lest it get broken.
+
+When poor Jimmy Scarecrow saw Santa Claus his heart gave a great leap.
+"Santa Claus! Here I am!" he cried out, but Santa Claus did not hear
+him.
+
+"Santa Claus, please give me a little present. I was good all summer
+and kept the crows out of the corn," pleaded the poor Scarecrow in his
+choking voice, but Santa Claus passed by with a merry halloo and a
+great clamour of bells.
+
+Then Jimmy Scarecrow stood in the corn-stubble and shook with sobs
+until his joints creaked. "I am of no use in the world, and everybody
+has forgotten me," he moaned. But he was mistaken.
+
+The next morning Betsey sat at the window holding her Christmas
+doll-baby, and she looked out at Jimmy Scarecrow standing alone in the
+field amidst the corn-stubble.
+
+"Aunt Hannah?" said she. Aunt Hannah was making a crazy patchwork
+quilt, and she frowned hard at a triangular piece of red silk and
+circular piece of pink, wondering how to fit them together. "Well?"
+said she.
+
+"Did Santa Claus bring the Scarecrow any Christmas present?"
+
+"No, of course he didn't."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because he's a Scarecrow. Don't ask silly questions."
+
+"I wouldn't like to be treated so, if I was a Scarecrow," said Betsey,
+but her Aunt Hannah did not hear her. She was busy cutting a triangular
+snip out of the round piece of pink silk so the piece of red silk could
+be feather-stitched into it.
+
+It was snowing hard out of doors, and the north wind blew. The
+Scarecrow's poor old coat got whiter and whiter with snow. Sometimes he
+almost vanished in the thick white storm. Aunt Hannah worked until the
+middle of the afternoon on her crazy quilt. Then she got up and spread
+it out over the sofa with an air of pride.
+
+"There," said she, "that's done, and that makes the eighth. I've got
+one for every bed in the house, and I've given four away. I'd give this
+away if I knew of anybody that wanted it."
+
+Aunt Hannah put on her hood and shawl, and drew some blue yarn
+stockings on over her shoes, and set out through the snow to carry a
+slice of plum-pudding to her sister Susan, who lived down the road.
+Half an hour after Aunt Hannah had gone Betsey put her little red plaid
+shawl over her head, and ran across the field to Jimmy Scarecrow. She
+carried her new doll-baby smuggled up under her shawl.
+
+"Wish you Merry Christmas!" she said to Jimmy Scarecrow.
+
+"Wish you the same," said Jimmy, but his voice was choked with sobs,
+and was also muffled, for his old hat had slipped down to his chin.
+Betsey looked pitifully at the old hat fringed with icicles, like
+frozen tears, and the old snow-laden coat. "I've brought you a
+Christmas present," said she, and with that she tucked her doll-baby
+inside Jimmy Scarecrow's coat, sticking its tiny feet into a pocket.
+
+"Thank you," said Jimmy Scarecrow faintly.
+
+"You're welcome," said she. "Keep her under your overcoat, so the snow
+won't wet her, and she won't catch cold, she's delicate."
+
+"Yes, I will," said Jimmy Scarecrow, and he tried hard to bring one of
+his stiff, outstretched arms around to clasp the doll-baby.
+
+"Don't you feel cold in that old summer coat?" asked Betsey.
+
+"If I bad a little exercise, I should be warm," he replied. But he
+shivered, and the wind whistled through his rags.
+
+"You wait a minute," said Betsey, and was off across the field.
+
+Jimmy Scarecrow stood in the corn-stubble, with the doll-baby under his
+coat and waited, and soon Betsey was back again with Aunt Hannah's
+crazy quilt trailing in the snow behind her.
+
+"Here," said she, "here is something to keep you warm," and she folded
+the crazy quilt around the Scarecrow and pinned it.
+
+"Aunt Hannah wants to give it away if anybody wants it," she explained.
+"She's got so many crazy quilts in the house now she doesn't know what
+to do with them. Good-bye--be sure you keep the doll-baby covered up."
+And with that she ran cross the field, and left Jimmy Scarecrow alone
+with the crazy quilt and the doll-baby.
+
+The bright flash of colours under Jimmy's hat-brim dazzled his eyes,
+and he felt a little alarmed. "I hope this quilt is harmless if it IS
+crazy," he said. But the quilt was warm, and he dismissed his fears.
+Soon the doll-baby whimpered, but he creaked his joints a little, and
+that amused it, and he heard it cooing inside his coat.
+
+Jimmy Scarecrow had never felt so happy in his life as he did for an
+hour or so. But after that the snow began to turn to rain, and the
+crazy quilt was soaked through and through: and not only that, but his
+coat and the poor doll-baby. It cried pitifully for a while, and then
+it was still, and he was afraid it was dead.
+
+It grew very dark, and the rain fell in sheets, the snow melted, and
+Jimmy Scarecrow stood halfway up his old boots in water. He was saying
+to himself that the saddest hour of his life had come, when suddenly he
+again heard Santa Claus' sleigh-bells and his merry voice talking to
+his reindeer. It was after midnight, Christmas was over, and Santa was
+hastening home to the North Pole.
+
+"Santa Claus! dear Santa Claus!" cried Jimmy Scarecrow with a great
+sob, and that time Santa Claus heard him and drew rein.
+
+"Who's there?" he shouted out of the darkness.
+
+"It's only me," replied the Scarecrow.
+
+"Who's me?" shouted Santa Claus.
+
+"Jimmy Scarecrow!"
+
+Santa got out of his sledge and waded up. "Have you been standing here
+ever since corn was ripe?" he asked pityingly, and Jimmy replied that
+he had.
+
+"What's that over your shoulders?" Santa Claus continued, holding up
+his lantern.
+
+"It's a crazy quilt."
+
+"And what are you holding under your coat?"
+
+"The doll-baby that Betsey gave me, and I'm afraid it's dead," poor
+Jimmy Scarecrow sobbed.
+
+"Nonsense!" cried Santa Claus. "Let me see it!" And with that he pulled
+the doll-baby out from under the Scarecrow's coat, and patted its back,
+and shook it a little, and it began to cry, and then to crow. "It's all
+right," said Santa Claus. "This is the doll-baby I gave Betsey, and it
+is not at all delicate. It went through the measles, and the
+chicken-pox, and the mumps, and the whooping-cough, before it left the
+North Pole. Now get into the sledge, Jimmy Scarecrow, and bring the
+doll-baby and the crazy quilt. I have never had any quilts that weren't
+in their right minds at the North Pole, but maybe I can cure this one.
+Get in!" Santa chirruped to his reindeer, and they drew the sledge up
+close in a beautiful curve.
+
+"Get in, Jimmy Scarecrow, and come with me to the North Pole!" he cried.
+
+"Please, how long shall I stay?" asked Jimmy Scarecrow.
+
+"Why, you are going to live with me," replied Santa Claus. "I've been
+looking for a person like you for a long time."
+
+"Are there any crows to scare away at the North Pole? I want to be
+useful," Jimmy Scarecrow said, anxiously.
+
+"No," answered Santa Claus, "but I don't want you to scare away crows.
+I want you to scare away Arctic Explorers. I can keep you in work for a
+thousand years, and scaring away Arctic Explorers from the North Pole
+is much more important than scaring away crows from corn. Why, if they
+found the Pole, there wouldn't be a piece an inch long left in a week's
+time, and the earth would cave in like an apple without a core! They
+would whittle it all to pieces, and carry it away in their pockets for
+souvenirs. Come along; I am in a hurry."
+
+"I will go on two conditions," said Jimmy. "First, I want to make a
+present to Aunt Hannah and Betsey, next Christmas."
+
+"You shall make them any present you choose. What else?"
+
+"I want some way provided to scare the crows out of the corn next
+summer, while I am away," said Jimmy.
+
+"That is easily managed," said Santa Claus. "Just wait a minute."
+
+Santa took his stylographic pen out of his pocket, went with his
+lantern close to one of the fence-posts, and wrote these words upon it:
+
+ NOTICE TO CROWS
+
+Whichever crow shall hereafter hop, fly, or flop into this field during
+the absence of Jimmy Scarecrow, and therefrom purloin, steal, or
+abstract corn, shall be instantly, in a twinkling and a trice, turned
+snow-white, and be ever after a disgrace, a byword and a reproach to
+his whole race.
+ Per order of Santa Claus.
+
+"The corn will be safe now," said Santa Claus, "get in." Jimmy got into
+the sledge and they flew away over the fields, out of sight, with merry
+halloos and a great clamour of bells.
+
+The next morning there was much surprise at the farmhouse, when Aunt
+Hannah and Betsey looked out of the window and the Scarecrow was not in
+the field holding out his stiff arms over the corn stubble. Betsey had
+told Aunt Hannah she had given away the crazy quilt and the doll-baby,
+but had been scolded very little.
+
+"You must not give away anything of yours again without asking
+permission," said Aunt Hannah. "And you have no right to give anything
+of mine, even if you know I don't want it. Now both my pretty quilt and
+your beautiful doll-baby are spoiled."
+
+That was all Aunt Hannah had said. She thought she would send John
+after the quilt and the doll-baby next morning as soon as it was light.
+
+But Jimmy Scarecrow was gone, and the crazy quilt and the doll-baby
+with him. John, the servant-man, searched everywhere, but not a trace
+of them could he find. "They must have all blown away, mum," he said to
+Aunt Hannah.
+
+"We shall have to have another scarecrow next summer," said she.
+
+But the next summer there was no need of a scarecrow, for not a crow
+came past the fence-post on which Santa Claus had written his notice to
+crows. The cornfield was never so beautiful, and not a single grain was
+stolen by a crow, and everybody wondered at it, for they could not read
+the crow-language in which Santa had written.
+
+"It is a great mystery to me why the crows don't come into our
+cornfield, when there is no scarecrow," said Aunt Hannah.
+
+But she had a still greater mystery to solve when Christmas came round
+again. Then she and Betsey had each a strange present. They found them
+in the sitting-room on Christmas morning. Aunt Hannah's present was her
+old crazy quilt, remodelled, with every piece cut square and true, and
+matched exactly to its neighbour.
+
+"Why, it's my old crazy quilt, but it isn't crazy now!" cried Aunt
+Hannah, and her very spectacles seemed to glisten with amazement.
+
+Betsey's present was her doll-baby of the Christmas before; but the
+doll was a year older. She had grown an inch, and could walk and say,
+"mamma," and "how do?" She was changed a good deal, but Betsey knew her
+at once. "It's my doll-baby!" she cried, and snatched her up and kissed
+her.
+
+But neither Aunt Hannah nor Betsey ever knew that the quilt and the
+doll were Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas presents to them.
+
+
+
+XII. WHY THE CHIMES RANG*
+
+* Copyright, 1906. Used by special permission of the publishers, the
+Bobbs-Merrill Company.
+
+RAYMOND MC ALDEN
+
+There was once in a faraway country where few people have ever
+travelled, a wonderful church. It stood on a high hill in the midst of
+a great city; and every Sunday, as well as on sacred days like
+Christmas, thousands of people climbed the hill to its great archways,
+looking like lines of ants all moving in the same direction.
+
+When you came to the building itself, you found stone columns and dark
+passages, and a grand entrance leading to the main room of the church.
+This room was so long that one standing at the doorway could scarcely
+see to the other end, where the choir stood by the marble altar. In the
+farthest corner was the organ; and this organ was so loud, that
+sometimes when it played, the people for miles around would close their
+shutters and prepare for a great thunderstorm. Altogether, no such
+church as this was ever seen before, especially when it was lighted up
+for some festival, and crowded with people, young and old. But the
+strangest thing about the whole building was the wonderful chime of
+bells.
+
+At one corner of the church was a great gray tower, with ivy growing
+over it as far up as one could see. I say as far as one could see,
+because the tower was quite great enough to fit the great church, and
+it rose so far into the sky that it was only in very fair weather that
+any one claimed to be able to see the top. Even then one could not be
+certain that it was in sight. Up, and up, and up climbed the stones and
+the ivy; and as the men who built the church had been dead for hundreds
+of years, every one had forgotten how high the tower was supposed to be.
+
+Now all the people knew that at the top of the tower was a chime of
+Christmas bells. They had hung there ever since the church had been
+built, and were the most beautiful bells in the world. Some thought it
+was because a great musician had cast them and arranged them in their
+place; others said it was because of the great height, which reached up
+where the air was clearest and purest; however that might be no one who
+had ever heard the chimes denied that they were the sweetest in the
+world. Some described them as sounding like angels far up in the sky;
+others as sounding like strange winds singing through the trees.
+
+But the fact was that no one had heard them for years and years. There
+was an old man living not far from the church who said that his mother
+had spoken of hearing them when she was a little girl, and he was the
+only one who was sure of as much as that. They were Christmas chimes,
+you see, and were not meant to be played by men or on common days. It
+was the custom on Christmas Eve for all the people to bring to the
+church their offerings to the Christ-Child; and when the greatest and
+best offering was laid on the altar there used to come sounding through
+the music of the choir the Christmas chimes far up in the tower. Some
+said that the wind rang them, and others, that they were so high that
+the angels could set them swinging. But for many long years they had
+never been heard. It was said that people had been growing less careful
+of their gifts for the Christ-Child, and that no offering was brought
+great enough to deserve the music of the chimes.
+
+Every Christmas Eve the rich people still crowded to the altar, each
+one trying to bring some better gift than any other, without giving
+anything that he wanted for himself, and the church was crowded with
+those who thought that perhaps the wonderful bells might be heard
+again. But although the service was splendid, and the offerings plenty,
+only the roar of the wind could be heard, far up in the stone tower.
+
+Now, a number of miles from the city, in a little country village,
+where nothing could be seen of the great church but glimpses of the
+tower when the weather was fine, lived a boy named Pedro, and his
+little brother. They knew very little about the Christmas chimes, but
+they had heard of the service in the church on Christmas Eve, and had a
+secret plan which they had often talked over when by themselves, to go
+to see the beautiful celebration.
+
+"Nobody can guess, Little Brother," Pedro would say; "all the fine
+things there are to see and hear; and I have even heard it said that
+the Christ-Child sometimes comes down to bless the service. What if we
+could see Him?"
+
+The day before Christmas was bitterly cold, with a few lonely
+snowflakes flying in the air, and a hard white crust on the ground.
+Sure enough Pedro and Little Brother were able to slip quietly away
+early in the afternoon; and although the walking was hard in the frosty
+air, before nightfall they had trudged so far, hand in hand, that they
+saw the lights of the big city just ahead of them. Indeed they were
+about to enter one of the great gates in the wall that surrounded it,
+when they saw something dark on the snow near their path, and stepped
+aside to look at it.
+
+It was a poor woman, who had fallen just outside the city, too sick and
+tired to get in where she might have found shelter. The soft snow made
+of a drift a sort of pillow for her, and she would soon be so sound
+asleep, in the wintry air, that no one could ever waken her again. All
+this Pedro saw in a moment and he knelt down beside her and tried to
+rouse her, even tugging at her arm a little, as though he would have
+tried to carry her away. He turned her face toward him, so that he
+could rub some of the snow on it, and when he had looked at her
+silently a moment he stood up again, and said:
+
+"It's no use, Little Brother. You will have to go on alone."
+
+"Alone?" cried Little Brother. "And you not see the Christmas festival?"
+
+"No," said Pedro, and he could not keep back a bit of a choking sound
+in his throat. "See this poor woman. Her face looks like the Madonna in
+the chapel window, and she will freeze to death if nobody cares for
+her. Every one has gone to the church now, but when you come back you
+can bring some one to help her. I will rub her to keep her from
+freezing, and perhaps get her to eat the bun that is left in my pocket."
+
+"But I cannot bear to leave you, and go on alone," said Little Brother.
+
+"Both of us need not miss the service," said Pedro. "and it had better
+be I than you. You can easily find your way to church; and you must see
+and hear everything twice, Little Brother--once for you and once for
+me. I am sure the Christ-Child must know how I should love to come with
+you and worship Him; and oh! if you get a chance, Little Brother, to
+slip up to the altar without getting in any one's way, take this little
+silver piece of mine, and lay it down for my offering, when no one is
+looking. Do not forget where you have left me, and forgive me for not
+going with you."
+
+In this way he hurried Little Brother off to the city and winked hard
+to keep back the tears, as he heard the crunching footsteps sounding
+farther and farther away in the twilight. It was pretty hard to lose
+the music and splendour of the Christmas celebration that he had been
+planning for so long, and spend the time instead in that lonely place
+in the snow.
+
+The great church was a wonderful place that night. Every one said that
+it had never looked so bright and beautiful before. When the organ
+played and the thousands of people sang, the walls shook with the
+sound, and little Pedro, away outside the city wall, felt the earth
+tremble around them.
+
+At the close of the service came the procession with the offerings to
+be laid on the altar. Rich men and great men marched proudly up to lay
+down their gifts to the Christ-Child. Some brought wonderful jewels,
+some baskets of gold so heavy that they could scarcely carry them down
+the aisle. A great writer laid down a book that he had been making for
+years and years. And last of all walked the king of the country, hoping
+with all the rest to win for himself the chime of the Christmas bells.
+There went a great murmur through the church as the people saw the king
+take from his head the royal crown, all set with precious stones, and
+lay it gleaming on the altar, as his offering to the Holy Child.
+"Surely," every one said, "we shall hear the bells now, for nothing
+like this has ever happened before."
+
+But still only the cold old wind was heard in the tower and the people
+shook their heads; and some of them said, as they had before, that they
+never really believed the story of the chimes, and doubted if they ever
+rang at all.
+
+The procession was over, and the choir began the closing hymn. Suddenly
+the organist stopped playing; and every one looked at the old minister,
+who was standing by the altar, holding up his hand for silence. Not a
+sound could be heard from any one in the church, but as all the people
+strained their ears to listen, there came softly, but distinctly,
+swinging through the air, the sound of the chimes in the tower. So far
+away, and yet so clear the music seemed--so much sweeter were the notes
+than anything that had been heard before, rising and falling away up
+there in the sky, that the people in the church sat for a moment as
+still as though something held each of them by the shoulders. Then they
+all stood up together and stared straight at the altar, to see what
+great gift had awakened the long silent bells.
+
+But all that the nearest of them saw was the childish figure of Little
+Brother, who had crept softly down the aisle when no one was looking,
+and had laid Pedro's little piece of silver on the altar.
+
+
+
+XIII. THE BIRDS' CHRISTMAS
+
+"From "In the Child's World," by Emilie Poulssen, Milton Bradley Co.
+Publishers. Used by permission.
+
+F. E. MANN
+
+Founded on fact.
+
+"Chickadee-dee-dee-dee! Chickadee-dee-dee-dee! Chicka--" "Cheerup,
+cheerup, chee-chee! Cheerup, cheerup, chee-chee!" "Ter-ra-lee,
+ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee!"
+
+"Rap-atap-atap-atap!" went the woodpecker; "Mrs. Chickadee may speak
+first."
+
+"Friends," began Mrs. Chickadee, "why do you suppose I called you
+together?"
+
+"Because it's the day before Christmas," twittered Snow Bunting. "And
+you're going to give a Christmas party," chirped the Robin. "And you
+want us all to come!" said Downy Woodpecker. "Hurrah! Three cheers for
+Mrs. Chickadee!"
+
+"Hush!" said Mrs. Chickadee, "and I'll tell you all about it. To-morrow
+IS Christmas Day, but I don't want to give a party."
+
+"Chee, chee, chee!" cried Robin Rusty-breast; "chee, chee, chee!"
+
+"Just listen to my little plan," said Mrs. Chickadee, "for, indeed, I
+want you all to help. How many remember Thistle Goldfinch--the happy
+little fellow who floated over the meadows through the summer and fall?"
+
+"Cheerup, chee-chee, cheerup, chee-chee, I do," sang the Robin; "how he
+loved to sway on thistletops!"
+
+"Yes," said Downy Woodpecker, "and didn't he sing? All about blue
+skies, and sunshine and happy days, with his
+'Swee-e-et-sweet-sweet-sweet-a-twitter-witter-witter-witter-wee-twea!'"
+
+"Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee," said Snow Bunting. "We've all heard of
+Thistle Goldfinch, but what can he have to do with your Christmas
+party? He's away down South now, and wouldn't care if you gave a dozen
+parties."
+
+"Oh, but he isn't; he's right in these very woods!"
+
+"Why, you don't mean--"
+
+"Indeed I do mean it, every single word. Yesterday I was flitting about
+among the trees, peeking at a dead branch here, and a bit of moss
+there, and before I knew it I found myself away over at the other side
+of the woods! 'Chickadee-dee-dee, chickadee-dee-dee!' I sang, as I
+turned my bill toward home. Just then I heard the saddest little voice
+pipe out: 'Dear-ie me! Dear-ie me!' and there on the sunny side of a
+branch perched a lonesome bit of yellowish down. I went up to see what
+it was, and found dear little Thistle Goldfinch! He was very glad to
+see me, and soon told his short story. Through the summer Papa and
+Mamma Goldfinch and all the brothers and sisters had a fine time,
+singing together, fluttering over thistletops, or floating through the
+balmy air. But when 'little Jack Frost walked through the trees,' Papa
+Goldfinch said: 'It is high time we went South!' All were ready but
+Thistle; he wanted to stay through the winter, and begged so hard that
+Papa Goldfinch soberly said: 'Try it, my son, but do find a warm place
+to stay in at night.' Then off they flew, and Thistle was alone. For a
+while he was happy. The sun shone warm through the middle of the day,
+and there were fields and meadows full of seeds. You all remember how
+sweetly he sang for us then. But by and by the cold North Wind came
+whistling through the trees, and chilly Thistle woke up one gray
+morning to find the air full of whirling snowflakes He didn't mind the
+light snows, golden-rod and some high grasses were too tall to be
+easily covered, and he got seeds from them. But now that the heavy
+snows have come, the poor little fellow is almost starved, and if he
+doesn't have a warm place to sleep in these cold nights, he'll surely
+die!"
+
+Mrs. Chickadee paused a minute. The birds were so still one could hear
+the pine trees whisper. Then she went on: "I comforted the poor little
+fellow as best I could, and showed him where to find a few seeds; then
+I flew home, for it was bedtime. I tucked my head under my wing to keep
+it warm, and thought, and thought, and thought; and here's my plan:
+
+"We Chickadees have a nice warm home here in the spruce trees, with
+their thick, heavy boughs to shut out the snow and cold. There is
+plenty of room, so Thistle could sleep here all winter. We would let
+him perch on a branch, when we Chickadees would nestle around him until
+he was as warm as in the lovely summer tine. These cones are so full of
+seeds that we could spare him a good many; and I think that you Robins
+might let him come over to your pines some day and share your seeds.
+Downy Woodpecker must keep his eyes open as he hammers the trees, and
+if he spies a supply of seeds he will let us know at once. Snow Bunting
+is only a visitor, so I don't expect him to help, but I wanted him to
+hear my plan with the rest of you. Now you WILL try, won't you, EVERY
+ONE?"
+
+"Cheerup, cheerup, ter-ra-lee! Indeed we'll try; let's begin right
+away! Don't wait until to-morrow; who'll go and find Thistle?"
+
+"I will," chirped Robin Rusty-breast, and off he flew to the place
+which Mrs. Chickadee had told of, at the other side of the wood. There,
+sure enough, he found Thistle Goldfinch sighing: "Dear-ie me! dear-ie
+me! The winter is so cold and I'm here all alone!" "Cheerup,
+chee-chee!" piped the Robin:
+
+"Cheerup, cheerup, I'm here!
+I'm here and I mean to stay.
+What if the winter is drear--
+Cheerup, cheerup, anyway!"
+
+"But the snow is so deep," said Thistle, and the Robin replied:
+
+"Soon the snows'll be over and gone,
+Run and rippled away;
+What's the use of looking forlorn?
+Cheerup, cheerup, I say!"
+
+Then he told Thistle all their plans, and wasn't Thistle surprised?
+Why, he just couldn't believe a word of it till they reached Mrs.
+Chickadee's and she said it was all true. They fed him and warmed him,
+then settled themselves for a good night's rest.
+
+Christmas morning they were chirping gaily, and Thistle was trying to
+remember the happy song he sang in the summer time, when there came a
+whirr of wings as Snow Bunting flew down.
+
+"Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee," said he, "can you fly a little
+way?"
+
+"Oh, yes," replied Thistle. "I THINK I could fly a LONG way."
+
+"Come on, then," said Snow Bunting. "Every one who wants a Christmas
+dinner, follow me!" That was every word he would say, so what could
+they do but follow?
+
+Soon they came to the edge of the wood, and then to a farmhouse. Snow
+Bunting flew straight up to the piazza, and there stood a dear little
+girl in a warm hood and cloak, with a pail of bird-seed on her arm, and
+a dish of bread crumbs in her hand. As they flew down, she said:
+
+"And here are some more birdies who have come for a Christmas dinner.
+Of course you shall have some, you dear little things!" and she laughed
+merrily to see them dive for the crumbs.
+
+After they had finished eating, Elsie (that was the little girl's name)
+said: "Now, little birds, it is going to be a cold winter, you would
+better come here every day to get your dinner. I'll always be glad to
+see you."
+
+"Cheerup chee-chee, cheerup chee-chee! thank you, thank you," cried the
+Robins.
+"Ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee, ter-ra-lee! thank you, thank you!" twittered
+Snow Bunting.
+
+"Chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee, chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee,
+chick-a-dee-dee-dee-dee-dee! how kind you are!" sang the Chickadees.
+
+And Thistle Goldfinch? Yes, he remembered his summer song, for he sang
+as they flew away:
+
+"Swee-e-et-sweet-sweet-sweet-a-twitter-witter-witter-witter--wee-twea!"
+
+notes.--l. The Robin's song is from "Bird Talks," by Mrs. A.D.T.
+Whitney.
+2. The fact upon which this story is based--that is of the other birds
+adopting and warming the solitary Thistle Goldfinch--was observed near
+Northampton, Mass., where robins and other migratory birds sometimes
+spend the winter in the thick pine woods.
+
+
+
+XIV. THE LITTLE SISTER'S VACATION*
+
+* This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 77.
+
+WINIFRED M. KIRKLAND
+
+It was to be a glorious Christmas at Doctor Brower's. All "the
+children"--little Peggy and her mother always spoke of the grown-up
+ones as "the children"--were coming home. Mabel was coming from Ohio
+with her big husband and her two babies, Minna and little Robin, the
+year-old grandson whom the home family had never seen; Hazen was coming
+all the way from the Johns Hopkins Medical School, and Arna was coming
+home from her teaching in New York. It was a trial to Peggy that
+vacation did not begin until the very day before Christmas, and then
+continued only one niggardly week. After school hours she had helped
+her mother in the Christmas preparations every day until she crept into
+bed at night with aching arms and tired feet, to lie there tossing
+about, whether from weariness or glad excitement she did not know.
+
+"Not so hard, daughter," the doctor said to her once.
+
+"Oh, papa," protested her mother, "when we're so busy, and Peggy is so
+handy!"
+
+"Not so hard," he repeated, with his eyes on fifteen-year-old Peggy's
+delicate face, as, wearing her braids pinned up on her head and a
+pinafore down to her toes, she stoned raisins and blanched almonds,
+rolled bread crumbs and beat eggs, dusted and polished and made ready
+for the children.
+
+Finally, after a day of flying about, helping with the many last thing,
+Peggy let down her braids and put on her new crimson shirtwaist, and
+stood with her mother in the front doorway, for it was Christmas Eve at
+last, and the station 'bus was rattling up with the first homecomers,
+Arna and Hazen.
+
+Then there were voices ringing up and down the dark street, and there
+were happy tears in the mother's eyes, and Arna had taken Peggy's face
+in her two soft-gloved hands and lifted it up and kissed it, and Hazen
+had swung his little sister up in the air just as of old. Peggy's tired
+feet were dancing for joy. She was helping Arna take off her things,
+was carrying her bag upstairs--would have carried Hazen's heavy grip,
+too, only her father took it from her.
+
+"Set the kettle to boil, Peggy," directed her mother; "then run
+upstairs and see if Arna wants anything. We'll wait supper till the
+rest come."
+
+The rest came on the nine o'clock train, such a load of them--the big,
+bluff brother-in-law, Mabel, plump and laughing, as always, Minna,
+elfin and bright-eyed, and sleepy Baby Robin. Such hugging, such a
+hubbub of baby talk! How many things there seemed to be to do for those
+precious babies right away!
+
+Peggy was here and there and everywhere. Everything was in joyous
+confusion. Supper was to be set on, too. While the rest ate, Peggy sat
+by, holding Robin, her own little nephew, and managing at the same time
+to pick up the things--napkin, knife, spoon, bread--that Minna,
+hilarious with the late hour, flung from her high chair.
+
+It seemed as if they would never be all stowed away for the night. Some
+of them wanted pitchers of warm water, some of them pitchers of cold,
+and the alcohol stove must be brought up for heating the baby's milk at
+night. The house was crowded, too. Peggy had given up her room to
+Hazen, and slept on a cot in the sewing room with Minna.
+
+The cot had been enlarged by having three chairs piled with pillows,
+set along the side. But Minna preferred to sleep in the middle of the
+cot, or else across it, her restless little feet pounding at Peggy's
+ribs; and Peggy was unused to any bedfellow.
+
+She lay long awake thinking proudly of the children; of Hazen, the tall
+brother, with his twinkling eyes, his drolleries, his teasing; of
+graceful Arna who dressed so daintily, talked so cleverly, and had been
+to college. Arna was going to send Peggy to college, too--it was so
+good of Arna! But for all Peggy's admiration for Arna, it was Mabel,
+the eldest sister, who was the more approachable. Mabel did not pretend
+even to as much learning as Peggy had herself; she was happy-go-lucky
+and sweet-tempered. Then her husband was a great jolly fellow, with
+whom it was impossible to be shy, and the babies--there never were such
+cunning babies, Peggy thought. Just here her niece gave her a
+particularly vicious kick, and Peggy opposed to her train of admiring
+thoughts, "But I'm so tired."
+
+It did not seem to Peggy that she had been asleep at all when she was
+waked with a vigorous pounding on her chest and a shrill little voice
+in her ear:
+
+"Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus! It's mornin'! It's Ch'is'mus!"
+
+"Oh, no, it isn't, Minna!" pleaded Peggy, struggling with sleepiness.
+"It's all dark still."
+
+"Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus, Ch'is'mus!" reiterated Minna continuing to pound.
+
+"Hush, dear! You'll wake Aunt Arna, and she's feed after being all day
+on the chou-chou cars."
+
+"Merry Ch'is'mus, Aunty Arna!" shouted the irrepressible Minna.
+
+"Oh, darling, be quiet! We'll play little pig goes to market. I'll tell
+you a story, only be quiet a little while."
+
+It took Peggy's utmost effort to keep the little wriggler still for the
+hour from five to six. Then, however, her shrill, "Merry Ch'is'mus!"
+roused the household. Protests were of no avail. Minna was the only
+granddaughter. Dark as it was, people must get up.
+
+Peggy must dress Minna and then hurry down to help get breakfast--not
+so easy a task with Minna ever at one's heels. The quick-moving sprite
+seemed to be everywhere--into the sugar-bowl, the cooky jar, the
+steaming teakettle--before one could turn about. Urged on by the
+impatient little girl, the grown-ups made short work of breakfast.
+
+After the meal, according to time-honoured Brower custom, they formed
+in procession, single file, Minna first, then Ben with Baby Robin. They
+each held aloft a sprig of holly, and they all kept time as they sang,
+"God rest you, merry gentlemen," in their march from the dining-room to
+the office. And there they must form in circle about the tree, and
+dance three times round, singing "The Christmas-tree is an evergreen,"
+before they could touch a single present.
+
+The presents are done up according to custom, packages of every shape
+and size, but all in white paper and tied with red ribbon, and all
+marked for somebody with somebody else's best love. They all fall to
+opening, and the babies' shouts are not the only ones to be heard.
+
+Passers-by smile indulgently at the racket, remembering that all the
+Browers are home for Christmas, and the Browers were ever a jovial
+company.
+
+Peggy gazes at her gifts quietly, but with shining eyes--little gold
+cuff pins from Hazen, just like Arna's; a set of furs from Mabel and
+Ben; but she likes Arna's gift best of all, a complete set of her
+favourite author.
+
+But much as they would like to linger about the Christmas tree, Peggy
+and her mother, at least, must remember that the dishes must be washed
+and the beds made, and that the family must get ready for church. Peggy
+does not go to church, and nobody dreams how much she wants to go. She
+loves the Christmas music. No hymn rings so with joy as:
+
+Jerusalem triumphs, Messiah is king.
+
+The choir sings it only once a year, on the Christmas morning. Besides,
+her chum Esther will be at church, and Peggy has been too busy to go to
+see her since she came home from boarding-school for the holidays. But
+somebody must stay at home, and that somebody who but Peggy? Somebody
+must baste the turkey and prepare the vegetables and take care of the
+babies.
+
+Peggy is surprised to find how difficult it is to combine
+dinner-getting with baby-tending. When she opens the oven-door, there
+is Minna's head thrust up under her arm, the inquisitive little nose in
+great danger by reason of sputtering gravy.
+
+"Minna," protests Peggy, "you mustn't eat another bit of candy!" and
+Minna opens her mouth in a howl, prolonged, but without tears and
+without change of colour. Robin joins in, he does not know why. Peggy
+is a doting aunt, but an honest one. She is vexed by a growing
+conviction that Mabel's babies are sadly spoiled. Peggy is ashamed of
+herself; surely she ought to be perfectly happy playing with Minna and
+Robin. Instead, she finds that the thing she would like best of all to
+be doing at this moment, next to going to church, would be to be lying
+on her father's couch in the office, all by herself, reading.
+
+The dinner is a savoury triumph for Peggy and her mother. The gravy and
+the mashed potato are entirely of Peggy's workmanship, and Peggy has
+had a hand in most of the other dishes, too, as the mother proudly
+tells. How that merry party can eat! Peggy is waitress, and it is long
+before the passing is over, and she can sit down in her own place. She
+is just as fond of the unusual Christmas good things as are the rest,
+but somehow, before she is well started at her turkey, it is time for
+changing plates for dessert, and before she has tasted her nuts and
+raisins the babies have succumbed to sleepiness, and it is Peggy who
+must carry them upstairs for their nap--just in the middle of one of
+Hazen's funniest stories, too.
+
+And all the time the little sister is so ready, so quickly serviceable,
+that somehow nobody notices--nobody but the doctor. It is he who finds
+Peggy, half as hour later, all alone in the kitchen. The mother and the
+older daughters are gathered about the sitting-room hearth, engaged in
+the dear, delicious talk about the little things that are always left
+out of letters.
+
+The doctor interrupts them.
+
+"Peggy is all alone," he says.
+
+"But we're having such a good talk," the mother pleads, "and Peggy will
+be done in no time! Peggy is so handy!"
+
+"Well, girls?" is all the doctor says, with quiet command in his eyes,
+and Peggy is not left to wash the Christmas dishes all alone. Because
+she is smiling and her cheeks are bright, her sisters do not notice
+that her eyes are wet, for Peggy is hotly ashamed of certain thoughts
+and feelings that she cannot down. She forgets them for a while,
+however, sitting on the hearth-rug, snuggled against her father's knee
+in the Christmas twilight.
+
+Yet the troublesome thoughts came back in the evening, when Peggy sat
+upstairs in the dark with Minna, vainly trying to induce the excited
+little girl to go to sleep, while bursts of merriment from the family
+below were always breaking in upon the two in their banishment.
+
+There was another restless night of it with the little niece, and
+another too early waking. Everybody but Minna was sleepy enough, and
+breakfast was a protracted meal, to which the "children" came down
+slowly one by one. Arna did not appear at all, and Peggy carried up to
+her the daintiest of trays, all of her own preparing. Arna's kiss of
+thanks was great reward. It was dinner-time before Peggy realized it,
+and she had hoped to find a quiet hour for her Latin.
+
+The dreadful regent's examination was to come the next week, and Peggy
+wanted to study for it. She had once thought of asking Arna to help
+her, but Arna seemed so tired.
+
+In the afternoon Esther came to see her chum, and to take her home with
+her to spend the night. The babies, fretful with
+after-Christmas-crossness, were tumbling over their aunt, and sadly
+interrupting confidences, while Peggy explained that she could not go
+out that evening. All the family were going to the church sociable, and
+she must put the babies to bed.
+
+"I think it's mean," Esther broke in. "Isn't it your vacation as well
+as theirs? Do make that child stop pulling your hair!"
+
+If Esther's words had only not echoed through Peggy's head as they did
+that night! "But it is so mean of me, so mean of me, to want my own
+vacation!" sobbed Peggy in the darkness. "I ought just to be glad
+they're all at home."
+
+Her self-reproach made her readier than ever to wait on them all the
+next morning. Nobody could make such buckwheat cakes as could Mrs.
+Brower; nobody could turn them as could Peggy. They were worth coming
+from New York and Baltimore and Ohio to eat. Peggy stood at the griddle
+half an hour, an hour, two hours. Her head was aching. Hazen, the
+latest riser, was joyously calling for more.
+
+At eleven o'clock Peggy realized that she had had no breakfast herself,
+and that her mother was hurrying her off to investigate the lateness of
+the butcher. Her head ached more and more, and she seemed strangely
+slow in her dinner-getting and dish-washing. Her father was away, and
+there was no one to help in the clearing-up. It was three before she
+had finished.
+
+Outside the sleigh-bells sounded enticing. It was the first sleighing
+of the season. Mabel and Ben had been off for a ride, and Arna and
+Hazen, too. How Peggy longed to be skimming over the snow instead of
+polishing knives all alone in the kitchen. Sue Cummings came that
+afternoon to invite Peggy to her party, given in Esther's honour. Sue
+enumerated six other gatherings that were being given that week in
+honour of Esther's visit home. Sue seemed to dwell much on the subject.
+Presently Peggy, with hot cheeks, understood why. Everybody was giving
+Esther a party, everybody but Peggy herself. Esther's own chum, and all
+the other girls, were talking about it.
+
+Peggy stood at the door to see Sue out, and watched the sleighs fly by.
+Out in the sitting-room she heard her mother saying, "Yes, of course we
+can have waffles for supper. Where's Peggy?" Then Peggy ran away.
+
+In the wintry dusk the doctor came stamping in, shaking the snow from
+his bearskins. As always, "Where's Peggy?" was his first question.
+
+Peggy was not to be found, they told him. They had been all over the
+house, calling her. They thought she must have gone out with Sue. The
+doctor seemed to doubt this. He went through the upstairs rooms,
+calling her softly. But Peggy was not in any of the bedrooms, or in any
+of the closets, either. There was still the kitchen attic to be tried.
+
+There came a husky little moan out of its depths, as he whispered,
+"Daughter!"
+He groped his way to her, and sitting down on a trunk, folded her into
+his bearskin coat.
+
+"Now tell father all about it," he said. And it all came out with many
+sobs--the nights and dawns with Minna, the Latin, the sleighing,
+Esther's party, breakfast, the weariness, the headache; and last the
+waffles, which had moved the one unbearable thing.
+
+"And it is so mean of me, so mean of me!" sobbed Peggy. "But, oh,
+daddy, I do want a vacation!"
+
+"And you shall have one," he answered.
+
+He carried her straight into her own room, laid her down on her own
+bed, and tumbled Hazen's things into the hall. Then he went downstairs
+and talked to his family.
+
+Presently the mother came stealing in. bearing a glass of medicine the
+doctor-father had sent. Then she undressed Peggy and put her to bed as
+if she had been a baby, and sat by, smoothing her hair, until she fell
+asleep.
+
+It seemed to Peggy that she had slept a long, long time. The sun was
+shining bright. Her door opened a crack and Arna peeped in, and seeing
+her awake, came to the bed and kissed her good morning.
+
+"I'm so sorry, little sister!" she said.
+
+"Sorry for what?" asked the wondering Peggy.
+
+"Because I didn't see," said Arna. "But now I'm going to bring up your
+breakfast."
+
+"Oh, no!" cried Peggy, sitting up.
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Arna, with quiet authority. It was as dainty cooking as
+Peggy's own, and Arna sat by to watch her eat.
+
+"You're so good to me, Arna!" said Peggy.
+
+"Not very," answered Arna, dryly. "When you've finished this you must
+lie up here away from the children and read."
+
+"But who will take care of Minna?" questioned Peggy.
+
+"Minna's mamma," answered a voice from the next room, where Mabel was
+pounding pillows. She came to the door to look in on Peggy in all her
+luxury of orange marmalade to eat, Christmas books to read, and Arna to
+wait upon her.
+
+"I think mothers, not aunts, were meant to look after babies," said
+Mabel. "I'm so sorry, dear!"
+
+"Oh, I wish you two wouldn't talk like that!" cried Peggy. "I'm so
+ashamed."
+
+"All right, we'll stop talking," said Mabel quickly, "but we'll
+remember."
+
+They would not let Peggy lift her hand to any of the work that day.
+Mabel managed the babies masterfully. Arna moved quietly about,
+accomplishing wonders.
+
+"But aren't you tired, Arna?" queried Peggy.
+
+"Not a bit of it, and I'll have time to help you with your Caesar
+before--"
+
+"Before what?" asked Peggy, but got no answer. They had been
+translating famously, when, in the late afternoon, there came a ring of
+the doorbell. Peggy found Hazen bowing low, and craving "Mistress
+Peggy's company." A sleigh and two prancing horses stood at the gate.
+
+It was a glorious drive. Peggy's eyes danced and her laugh rang out at
+Hazen's drolleries. The world stretched white all about them, and their
+horses flew on and on like the wind. They rode till dark, then turned
+back to the village, twinkling with lights.
+
+The Brower house was alight in every window, and there was the sound of
+many voices in the hall. The door flew open upon a laughing crowd of
+boys and girls. Peggy, all glowing and rosy with the wind, stood
+utterly bewildered until Esther rushed forward and hugged and shook her.
+
+"It's a party!" she exclaimed. "One of your mother's waffle suppers!
+We're all here! Isn't it splendid?"
+
+"But, but, but--" stammered Peggy.
+
+"'But, but, but,'" mimicked Esther. "But this is your vacation, don't
+you see?"
+
+
+
+XV. LITTLE WOLFF'S WOODEN SHOES
+
+A CHRISTMAS STORY BY FRANCOIS COPPEE; ADAPTED AND TRANSLATED BY ALMA J.
+FOSTER
+
+Once upon a time--so long ago that everybody has forgotten the date--in
+a city in the north of Europe--with such a hard name that nobody can
+ever remember it--there was a little seven-year-old boy named Wolff,
+whose parents were dead, who lived with a cross and stingy old aunt,
+who never thought of kissing him more than once a year and who sighed
+deeply whenever she gave him a bowlful of soup.
+
+But the poor little fellow had such a sweet nature that in spite of
+everything, he loved the old woman, although he was terribly afraid of
+her and could never look at her ugly old face without shivering.
+
+As this aunt of little Wolff was known to have a house of her own and
+an old woollen stocking full of gold, she had not dared to send the boy
+to a charity school; but, in order to get a reduction in the price, she
+had so wrangled with the master of the school, to which little Wolff
+finally went, that this bad man, vexed at having a pupil so poorly
+dressed and paying so little, often punished him unjustly, and even
+prejudiced his companions against him, so that the three boys, all sons
+of rich parents, made a drudge and laughing stock of the little fellow.
+
+The poor little one was thus as wretched as a child could be and used
+to hide himself in corners to weep whenever Christmas time came.
+
+It was the schoolmaster's custom to take all his pupils to the midnight
+mass on Christmas Eve, and to bring them home again afterward.
+
+Now, as the winter this year was very bitter, and as heavy snow had
+been falling for several days, all the boys came well bundled up in
+warm clothes, with fur caps pulled over their ears, padded jackets,
+gloves and knitted mittens, and strong, thick-soled boots. Only little
+Wolff presented himself shivering in the poor clothes he used to wear
+both weekdays and Sundays and having on his feet only thin socks in
+heavy wooden shoes.
+
+His naughty companions noticing his sad face and awkward appearance,
+made many jokes at his expense; but the little fellow was so busy
+blowing on his fingers, and was suffering so much with chilblains, that
+he took no notice of them. So the band of youngsters, walking two and
+two behind the master, started for the church.
+
+It was pleasant in the church which was brilliant with lighted candles;
+and the boys excited by the warmth took advantage of the music of the
+choir and the organ to chatter among themselves in low tones. They
+bragged about the fun that was awaiting them at home. The mayor's son
+had seen, just before starting off, an immense goose ready stuffed and
+dressed for cooking. At the alderman's home there was a little
+pine-tree with branches laden down with oranges, sweets, and toys. And
+the lawyer's cook had put on her cap with such care as she never
+thought of taking unless she was expecting something very good!
+
+Then they talked, too, of all that the Christ-Child was going to bring
+them, of all he was going to put in their shoes which, you might be
+sure, they would take good care to leave in the chimney place before
+going to bed; and the eyes of these little urchins, as lively as a cage
+of mice, were sparkling in advance over the joy they would have when
+they awoke in the morning and saw the pink bag full of sugar-plums, the
+little lead soldiers ranged in companies in their boxes, the menageries
+smelling of varnished wood, and the magnificent jumping-jacks in purple
+and tinsel.
+
+Alas! Little Wolff knew by experience that his old miser of an aunt
+would send him to bed supperless, but, with childlike faith and certain
+of having been, all the year, as good and industrious as possible, he
+hoped that the Christ-Child would not forget him, and so he, too,
+planned to place his wooden shoes in good time in the fireplace.
+
+Midnight mass over, the worshippers departed, eager for their fun, and
+the band of pupils always walking two and two, and following the
+teacher, left the church.
+
+Now, in the porch and seated on a stone bench set in the niche of a
+painted arch, a child was sleeping--a child in a white woollen garment,
+but with his little feet bare, in spite of the cold. He was not a
+beggar, for his garment was white and new, and near him on the floor
+was a bundle of carpenter's tools.
+
+In the clear light of the stars, his face, with its closed eyes, shone
+with an expression of divine sweetness, and his long, curling, blond
+locks seemed to form a halo about his brow. But his little child's
+feet, made blue by the cold of this bitter December night, were pitiful
+to see!
+
+The boys so well clothed for the winter weather passed by quite
+indifferent to the unknown child; several of them, sons of the notables
+of the town, however, cast on the vagabond looks in which could be read
+all the scorn of the rich for the poor, of the well-fed for the hungry.
+
+But little Wolff, coming last out of the church, stopped, deeply
+touched, before the beautiful sleeping child.
+
+"Oh, dear!" said the little fellow to himself, "this is frightful! This
+poor little one has no shoes and stockings in this bad weather--and,
+what is still worse, he has not even a wooden shoe to leave near him
+to-night while he sleeps, into which the little Christ-Child can put
+something good to soothe his misery."
+
+And carried away by his loving heart, Wolff drew the wooden shoe from
+his right foot, laid it down before the sleeping child, and, as best he
+could, sometimes hopping, sometimes limping with his sock wet by the
+snow, he went home to his aunt.
+
+"Look at the good-for-nothing!" cried the old woman, full of wrath at
+the sight of the shoeless boy. "What have you done with your shoe, you
+little villain?"
+
+Little Wolff did not know how to lie, so, although trembling with
+terror when he saw the rage of the old shrew, he tried to relate his
+adventure.
+
+But the miserly old creature only burst into a frightful fit of
+laughter.
+
+"Aha! So my young gentleman strips himself for the beggars. Aha! My
+young gentleman breaks his pair of shoes for a bare-foot! Here is
+something new, forsooth. Very well, since it is this way, I shall put
+the only shoe that is left into the chimney-place, and I'll answer for
+it that the Christ-Child will put in something to-night to beat you
+with in the morning! And you will have only a crust of bread and water
+to-morrow. And we shall see if the next time, you will be giving your
+shoes to the first vagabond that happens along."
+
+And the wicked woman having boxed the ears of the poor little fellow,
+made him climb up into the loft where he had his wretched cubbyhole.
+
+Desolate, the child went to bed in the dark and soon fell asleep, but
+his pillow was wet with tears.
+
+But behold! the next morning when the old woman, awakened early by the
+cold, went downstairs--oh, wonder of wonders--she saw the big chimney
+filled with shining toys, bags of magnificent bonbons, and riches of
+every sort, and standing out in front of all this treasure, was the
+right wooden shoe which the boy had given to the little vagabond, yes,
+and beside it, the one which she had placed in the chimney to hold the
+bunch of switches.
+
+As little Wolff, attracted by the cries of his aunt, stood in an
+ecstasy of childish delight before the splendid Christmas gifts, shouts
+of laughter were heard outside. The woman and child ran out to see what
+all this meant, and behold! all the gossips of the town were standing
+around the public fountain. What could have happened? Oh, a most
+ridiculous and extraordinary thing! The children of the richest men in
+the town, whom their parents had planned to surprise with the most
+beautiful presents had found only switches in their shoes!
+
+Then the old woman and the child thinking of all the riches in their
+chimney were filled with fear. But suddenly they saw the priest appear,
+his countenance full of astonishment. Just above the bench placed near
+the door of the church, in the very spot where, the night before, a
+child in a white garment and with bare feet, in spite of the cold, had
+rested his lovely head, the priest had found a circlet of gold imbedded
+in the old stones.
+
+Then, they all crossed themselves devoutly, perceiving that this
+beautiful sleeping child with the carpenter's tools had been Jesus of
+Nazareth himself, who had come back for one hour just as he had been
+when he used to work in the home of his parents; and reverently they
+bowed before this miracle, which the good God had done to reward the
+faith and the love of a little child.
+
+
+
+XVI. CHRISTMAS IN THE ALLEY*
+
+* From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904.
+
+OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+
+"I declare for 't, to-morrow is Christmas Day an' I clean forgot all
+about it," said old Ann, the washerwoman, pausing in her work and
+holding the flatiron suspended in the air.
+
+"Much good it'll do us," growled a discontented voice from the coarse
+bed in the corner.
+
+"We haven't much extra, to be sure," answered Ann cheerfully, bringing
+the iron down onto the shirt-bosom before her, "but at least we've
+enough to eat, and a good fire, and that's more'n some have, not a
+thousand miles from here either."
+
+"We might have plenty more," said the fretful voice, "if you didn't
+think so much more of strangers than you do of your own folk's comfort,
+keeping a houseful of beggars, as if you was a lady!"
+
+"Now, John," replied Ann, taking another iron from the fire, "you're
+not half so bad as you pretend. You wouldn't have me turn them poor
+creatures into the streets to freeze, now, would you?"
+
+"It's none of our business to pay rent for them," grumbled John. "Every
+one for himself, I say, these hard times. If they can't pay you'd ought
+to send 'em off; there's plenty as can."
+
+"They'd pay quick enough if they could get work," said Ann. "They're
+good honest fellows, every one, and paid me regular as long as they had
+a cent. But when hundreds are out o' work in the city, what can they
+do?"
+
+"That's none o' your business, you can turn 'em out!" growled John.
+
+"And leave the poor children to freeze as well as starve?" said Ann.
+"Who'd ever take 'em in without money, I'd like to know? No, John,"
+bringing her iron down as though she meant it, "I'm glad I'm well
+enough to wash and iron, and pay my rent, and so long as I can do that,
+and keep the hunger away from you and the child, I'll never turn the
+poor souls out, leastways, not in this freezing winter weather."
+
+"An' here's Christmas," the old man went on whiningly, "an' not a penny
+to spend, an' I needin' another blanket so bad, with my rhumatiz, an'
+haven't had a drop of tea for I don't know how long!"
+
+"I know it," said Ann, never mentioning that she too had been without
+tea, and not only that, but with small allowance of food of any kind,
+"and I'm desperate sorry I can't get a bit of something for Katey. The
+child never missed a little something in her stocking before."
+
+"Yes," John struck in, "much you care for your flesh an' blood. The
+child ha'n't had a thing this winter."
+
+"That's true enough," said Ann, with a sigh, "an' it's the hardest
+thing of all that I've had to keep her out o' school when she was doing
+so beautiful."
+
+"An' her feet all on the ground," growled John.
+
+"I know her shoes is bad," said Ann, hanging the shirt up on a line
+that stretched across the room, and was already nearly full of freshly
+ironed clothes, "but they're better than the Parker children's."
+
+"What's that to us?" almost shouted the weak old man, shaking his fist
+at her in his rage.
+
+"Well, keep your temper, old man," said Ann. "I'm sorry it goes so hard
+with you, but as long as I can stand on my feet, I sha'n't turn anybody
+out to freeze, that's certain."
+
+"How much'll you get for them?" said the miserable old man, after a few
+moments' silence, indicating by his hand the clean clothes on the line.
+
+"Two dollars," said Ann, "and half of it must go to help make up next
+month's rent. I've got a good bit to make up yet, and only a week to do
+it in, and I sha'n't have another cent till day after to-morrow."
+
+"Well, I wish you'd manage to buy me a little tea," whined the old man;
+"seems as if that would go right to the spot, and warm up my old bones
+a bit."
+
+"I'll try," said Ann, revolving in her mind how she could save a few
+pennies from her indispensable purchases to get tea and sugar, for
+without sugar he would not touch it.
+
+Wearied with his unusual exertion, the old man now dropped off to
+sleep, and Ann went softly about, folding and piling the clothes into a
+big basket already half full. When they were all packed in, and nicely
+covered with a piece of clean muslin, she took an old shawl and hood
+from a nail in the corner, put them on, blew out the candle, for it
+must not burn one moment unnecessarily, and, taking up her basket, went
+out into the cold winter night, softly closing the door behind her.
+
+The house was on an alley, but as soon as she turned the corner she was
+in the bright streets, glittering with lamps and gay people. The shop
+windows were brilliant with Christmas displays, and thousands of warmly
+dressed buyers were lingering before them, laughing and chatting, and
+selecting their purchases. Surely it seemed as if there could be no
+want here.
+
+As quickly as her burden would let her, the old washerwoman passed
+through the crowd into a broad street and rang the basement bell of a
+large, showy house.
+
+"Oh, it's the washerwoman!" said a flashy-looking servant who answered
+the bell; "set the basket right m here. Mrs. Keithe can't look them
+over to-night. There's company in the parlour--Miss Carry's Christmas
+party."
+
+"Ask her to please pay me--at least a part," said old Ann hastily. "I
+don't see how I can do without the money. I counted on it."
+
+"I'll ask her," said the pert young woman, turning to go upstairs; "but
+it's no use."
+
+Returning in a moment, she delivered the message. "She has no change
+to-night; you're to come in the morning."
+
+"Dear me!" thought Ann, as she plodded back through the streets, "it'll
+be even worse than I expected, for there's not a morsel to eat in the
+house, and not a penny to buy one with. Well--well--the Lord will
+provide, the Good Book says, but it's mighty dark days, and it's hard
+to believe."
+
+Entering the house, Ann sat down silently before the expiring fire. She
+was tired, her bones ached, and she was faint for want of food.
+
+Wearily she rested her head on her hands, and tried to think of some
+way to get a few cents. She had nothing she could sell or pawn,
+everything she could do without had gone before, in similar
+emergencies. After sitting there some time, and revolving plan after
+plan, only to find them all impossible, she was forced to conclude that
+they must go supperless to bed.
+
+Her husband grumbled, and Katey--who came in from a neighbour's--cried
+with hunger, and after they were asleep old Ann crept into bed to keep
+warm, more disheartened than she had been all winter.
+
+If we could only see a little way ahead! All this time--the darkest the
+house on the alley had seen--help was on the way to them. A
+kind-hearted city missionary, visiting one of the unfortunate families
+living in the upper rooms of old Ann's house, had learned from them of
+the noble charity of the humble old washerwoman. It was more than
+princely charity, for she not only denied herself nearly every comfort,
+but she endured the reproaches of her husband, and the tears of her
+child.
+
+Telling the story to a party of his friends this Christmas Eve, their
+hearts were troubled, and they at once emptied their purses into his
+hands for her. And the gift was at that very moment in the pocket of
+the missionary, waiting for morning to make her Christmas happy.
+Christmas morning broke clear and cold. Ann was up early, as usual,
+made her fire, with the last of her coal, cleared up her two rooms,
+and, leaving her husband and Katey in bed, was about starting out to
+try and get her money to provide a breakfast for them. At the door she
+met the missionary.
+
+"Good-morning, Ann," said he. "I wish you a Merry Christmas."
+
+"Thank you, sir," said Ann cheerfully; "the same to yourself."
+
+"Have you been to breakfast already?" asked the missionary.
+
+"No, sir," said Ann. "I was just going out for it."
+
+"I haven't either," said he, "but I couldn't bear to wait until I had
+eaten breakfast before I brought you your Christmas present--I suspect
+you haven't had any yet."
+
+Ann smiled. "Indeed, sir, I haven't had one since I can remember."
+
+"Well, I have one for you. Come in, and I'll tell you about it."
+
+Too much amazed for words, Ann led him into the room. The missionary
+opened his purse, and handed her a roll of bills.
+
+"Why--what!" she gasped, taking it mechanically.
+
+"Some friends of mine heard of your generous treatment of the poor
+families upstairs," he went on, "and they send you this, with their
+respects and best wishes for Christmas. Do just what you please with
+it--it is wholly yours. No thanks," he went on, as she struggled to
+speak. "It's not from me. Just enjoy it--that's all. It has done them
+more good to give than it can you to receive," and before she could
+speak a word he was gone.
+
+What did the old washerwoman do?
+
+Well, first she fell on her knees and buried her agitated face in the
+bedclothes. After a while she became aware of a storm of words from her
+husband, and she got up, subdued as much as possible her agitation, and
+tried to answer his frantic questions.
+
+"How much did he give you, old stupid?" he screamed; "can't you speak,
+or are you struck dumb? Wake up! I just wish I could reach you! I'd
+shake you till your teeth rattled!"
+
+His vicious looks were a sign, it was evident that he only lacked the
+strength to be as good as his word. Ann roused herself from her stupour
+and spoke at last.
+
+"I don't know. I'll count it." She unrolled the bills and began.
+
+"O Lord!" she exclaimed excitedly, "here's ten-dollar bills! One, two,
+three, and a twenty-that makes five--and five are
+fifty-five--sixty--seventy--eighty--eighty-five--ninety--one
+hundred--and two and five are seven, and two and one are ten,
+twenty--twenty-five--one hundred and twenty-five! Why, I'm rich!" she
+shouted. "Bless the Lord! Oh, this is the glorious Christmas Day! I
+knew He'd provide. Katey! Katey!" she screamed at the door of the other
+room, where the child lay asleep. "Merry Christmas to you, darlin'! Now
+you can have some shoes! and a new dress! and--and--breakfast, and a
+regular Christmas dinner! Oh! I believe I shall go crazy!"
+
+But she did not. Joy seldom hurts people, and she was brought back to
+everyday affairs by the querulous voice of her husband.
+
+"Now I will have my tea, an' a new blanket, an' some tobacco--how I
+have wanted a pipe!" and he went on enumerating his wants while Ann
+bustled about, putting away most of her money, and once more getting
+ready to go out.
+
+"I'll run out and get some breakfast," she said, "but don't you tell a
+soul about the money."
+
+"No! they'll rob us!" shrieked the old man.
+
+"Nonsense! I'll hide it well, but I want to keep it a secret for
+another reason. Mind, Katey, don't you tell?"
+
+"No!" said Katey, with wide eyes. "But can I truly have a new frock,
+Mammy, and new shoes--and is it really Christmas?"
+
+"It's really Christmas, darlin'," said Ann, "and you'll see what
+mammy'll bring home to you, after breakfast."
+
+The luxurious meal of sausages, potatoes, and hot tea was soon smoking
+on the table, and was eagerly devoured by Katey and her father. But Ann
+could not eat much. She was absent-minded, and only drank a cup of tea.
+As soon as breakfast was over, she left Katey to wash the dishes, and
+started out again.
+
+She walked slowly down the street, revolving a great plan in her mind.
+
+"Let me see," she said to herself. "They shall have a happy day for
+once. I suppose John'll grumble, but the Lord has sent me this money,
+and I mean to use part of it to make one good day for them."
+
+Having settled this in her mind, she walked on more quickly, and
+visited various shops in the neighbourhood. When at last she went home,
+her big basket was stuffed as full as it could hold, and she carried a
+bundle besides.
+
+"Here's your tea, John," she said cheerfully, as she unpacked the
+basket, "a whole pound of it, and sugar, and tobacco, and a new pipe."
+
+"Give me some now," said the old man eagerly; "don't wait to take out
+the rest of the things."
+
+"And here's a new frock for you, Katey," old Ann went on, after making
+John happy with his treasures, "a real bright one, and a pair of shoes,
+and some real woollen stockings; oh! how warm you'll be!"
+
+"Oh, how nice, Mammy!" cried Katey, jumping about. "When will you make
+my frock?"
+
+"To-morrow," answered the mother, "and you can go to school again."
+
+"Oh, goody!" she began, but her face fell. "If only Molly Parker could
+go too!"
+
+"You wait and see," answered Ann, with a knowing look. "Who knows what
+Christmas will bring to Molly Parker?"
+
+"Now here's a nice big roast," the happy woman went on, still
+unpacking, "and potatoes and turnips and cabbage and bread and butter
+and coffee and--"
+
+"What in the world! You goin' to give a party?" asked the old man
+between the puffs, staring at her in wonder.
+
+"I'll tell you just what I am going to do," said Ann firmly, bracing
+herself for opposition, "and it's as good as done, so you needn't say a
+word about it. I'm going to have a Christmas dinner, and I'm going to
+invite every blessed soul in this house to come. They shall be warm and
+full for once in their lives, please God! And, Katey," she went on
+breathlessly, before the old man had sufficiently recovered from his
+astonishment to speak, "go right upstairs now, and invite every one of
+'em from the fathers down to Mrs. Parker's baby to come to dinner at
+three o'clock; we'll have to keep fashionable hours, it's so late now;
+and mind, Katey, not a word about the money. And hurry back, child, I
+want you to help me."
+
+To her surprise, the opposition from her husband was less than she
+expected. The genial tobacco seemed to have quieted his nerves, and
+even opened his heart. Grateful for this, Ann resolved that his pipe
+should never lack tobacco while she could work.
+
+But now the cares of dinner absorbed her. The meat and vegetables were
+prepared, the pudding made, and the long table spread, though she had
+to borrow every table in the house, and every dish to have enough to go
+around.
+
+At three o'clock when the guests came in, it was really a very pleasant
+sight. The bright warm fire, the long table, covered with a
+substantial, and, to them, a luxurious meal, all smoking hot. John, in
+his neatly brushed suit, in an armchair at the foot of the table, Ann
+in a bustle of hurry and welcome, and a plate and a seat for every one.
+
+How the half-starved creatures enjoyed it; how the children stuffed and
+the parents looked on with a happiness that was very near to tears; how
+old John actually smiled and urged them to send back their plates again
+and again, and how Ann, the washerwoman, was the life and soul of it
+all, I can't half tell.
+
+After dinner, when the poor women lodgers insisted on clearing up, and
+the poor men sat down by the fire to smoke, for old John actually
+passed around his beloved tobacco, Ann quietly slipped out for a few
+minutes, took four large bundles from a closet under the stairs, and
+disappeared upstairs. She was scarcely missed before she was back again.
+
+Well, of course it was a great day in the house on the alley, and the
+guests sat long into the twilight before the warm fire, talking of
+their old homes in the fatherland, the hard winter, and prospects for
+work in the spring.
+
+When at last they returned to the chilly discomfort of their own rooms,
+each family found a package containing a new warm dress and pair of
+shoes for every woman and child in the family.
+
+"And I have enough left,"' said Ann the washerwoman, to herself, when
+she was reckoning up the expenses of the day, "to buy my coal and pay
+my rent till spring, so I can save my old bones a bit. And sure John
+can't grumble at their staying now, for it's all along of keeping them
+that I had such a blessed Christmas day at all."
+
+
+
+XVII. A CHRISTMAS STAR*
+
+* Published by permission of the American Book Co.
+
+KATHERINE PYLE
+
+"Come now, my dear little stars," said Mother Moon, "and I will tell
+you the Christmas story."
+
+Every morning for a week before Christmas, Mother Moon used to call all
+the little stars around her and tell them a story.
+
+It was always the same story, but the stars never wearied of it. It was
+the story of the Christmas star--the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+When Mother Moon had finished the story the little stars always said:
+"And the star is shining still, isn't it, Mother Moon, even if we can't
+see it?"
+
+And Mother Moon would answer: "Yes, my dears, only now it shines for
+men's hearts instead of their eyes."
+
+Then the stars would bid the Mother Moon good-night and put on their
+little blue nightcaps and go to bed in the sky chamber; for the stars'
+bedtime is when people down on the earth are beginning to waken and see
+that it is morning.
+
+But that particular morning when the little stars said good-night and
+went quietly away, one golden star still lingered beside Mother Moon.
+
+"What is the matter, my little star?" asked the Mother Moon. "Why don't
+you go with your little sisters?"
+
+"Oh, Mother Moon," said the golden star. "I am so sad! I wish I could
+shine for some one's heart like that star of wonder that you tell us
+about."
+
+"Why, aren't you happy up here in the sky country?" asked Mother Moon.
+
+"Yes, I have been very happy," said the star; "but to-night it seems
+just as if I must find some heart to shine for."
+
+"Then if that is so," said Mother Moon, "the time has come, my little
+star, for you to go through the Wonder Entry."
+
+"The Wonder Entry? What is that?" asked the star. But the Mother Moon
+made no answer.
+
+Rising, she took the little star by the hand and led it to a door that
+it had never seen before.
+
+The Mother Moon opened the door, and there was a long dark entry; at
+the far end was shining a little speck of light.
+
+"What is this?" asked the star.
+
+"It is the Wonder Entry; and it is through this that you must go to
+find the heart where you belong," said the Mother Moon.
+
+Then the little star was afraid.
+
+It longed to go through the entry as it had never longed for anything
+before; and yet it was afraid and clung to the Mother Moon.
+
+But very gently, almost sadly, the Mother Moon drew her hand away. "Go,
+my child," she said.
+
+Then, wondering and trembling, the little star stepped into the Wonder
+Entry, and the door of the sky house closed behind it.
+
+The next thing the star knew it was hanging in a toy shop with a whole
+row of other stars blue and red and silver. It itself was gold. The
+shop smelled of evergreen, and was full of Christmas shoppers, men and
+women and children; but of them all, the star looked at no one but a
+little boy standing in front of the counter; for as soon as the star
+saw the child it knew that he was the one to whom it belonged.
+
+The little boy was standing beside a sweet-faced woman in a long black
+veil and he was not looking at anything in particular.
+
+The star shook and trembled on the string that held it, because it was
+afraid lest the child would not see it, or lest, if he did, he would
+not know it as his star.
+
+The lady had a number of toys on the counter before her, and she was
+saying: "Now I think we have presents for every one: There's the doll
+for Lou, and the game for Ned, and the music box for May; and then the
+rocking horse and the sled."
+
+Suddenly the little boy caught her by the arm. "Oh, mother," he said.
+He had seen the star.
+
+"Well, what is it, darling?" asked the lady.
+
+"Oh, mother, just see that star up there! I wish--oh, I do wish I had
+it."
+
+"Oh, my dear, we have so many things for the Christmas-tree," said the
+mother.
+
+"Yes, I know, but I do want the star," said the child.
+
+"Very well," said the mother, smiling; "then we will take that, too."
+
+So the star was taken down from the place where it hung and wrapped up
+in a piece of paper, and all the while it thrilled with joy, for now it
+belonged to the little boy.
+
+It was not until the afternoon before Christmas, when the tree was
+being decorated, that the golden star was unwrapped and taken out from
+the paper.
+
+"Here is something else," said the sweet-faced lady. "We must hang this
+on the tree. Paul took such a fancy to it that I had to get it for him.
+He will never be satisfied unless we hang it on too."
+
+"Oh, yes," said some one else who was helping to decorate the tree; "we
+will hang it here on the very top."
+
+So the little star hung on the highest branch of the Christmas-tree.
+
+That evening all the candles were lighted on the Christmas-tree, and
+there were so many that they fairly dazzled the eyes; and the gold and
+silver balls, the fairies and the glass fruits, shone and twinkled in
+the light; and high above them all shone the golden star.
+
+At seven o'clock a bell was rung, and then the folding doors of the
+room where the Christmas-tree stood were thrown open, and a crowd of
+children came trooping in.
+
+They laughed and shouted and pointed, and all talked together, and
+after a while there was music, and presents were taken from the tree
+and given to the children.
+
+How different it all was from the great wide, still sky house!
+
+But the star had never been so happy in all its life; for the little
+boy was there.
+
+He stood apart from the other children, looking up at the star, with
+his hands clasped behind him, and he did not seem to care for the toys
+and the games.
+
+At last it was all over. The lights were put out, the children went
+home, and the house grew still.
+
+Then the ornaments on the tree began to talk among themselves.
+
+"So that is all over," said a silver ball. "It was very gay this
+evening--the gayest Christmas I remember."
+
+"Yes," said a glass bunch of grapes; "the best of it is over. Of course
+people will come to look at us for several days yet, but it won't be
+like this evening."
+
+"And then I suppose we'll be laid away for another year," said a paper
+fairy. "Really it seems hardly worth while. Such a few days out of the
+year and then to be shut up in the dark box again. I almost wish I were
+a paper doll."
+
+The bunch of grapes was wrong in saying that people would come to look
+at the Christmas-tree the next few days, for it stood neglected in the
+library and nobody came near it. Everybody in the house went about very
+quietly, with anxious faces; for the little boy was ill.
+
+At last, one evening, a woman came into the room with a servant. The
+woman wore the cap and apron of a nurse.
+
+"That is it," she said, pointing to the golden star. The servant
+climbed up on some steps and took down the star and put it in the
+nurse's hand, and she carried it out into the hall and upstairs to a
+room where the little boy lay.
+
+The sweet-faced lady was sitting by the bed, and as the nurse came in
+she held out her hand for the star.
+
+"Is this what you wanted, my darling?" she asked, bending over the
+little boy.
+
+The child nodded and held out his hands for the star; and as he clasped
+it a wonderful, shining smile came over his face.
+
+The next morning the little boy's room was very still and dark.
+
+The golden piece of paper that had been the star lay on a table beside
+the bed, its five points very sharp and bright.
+
+But it was not the real star, any more than a person's body is the real
+person.
+
+The real star was living and shining now in the little boy's heart, and
+it had gone out with him into a new and more beautiful sky country than
+it had ever known before--the sky country where the little child angels
+live, each one carrying in its heart its own particular star.
+
+
+
+XVIII. THE QUEEREST CHRISTMAS*
+
+* This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 83.
+
+GRACE MARGARET GALLAHER
+
+Betty stood at her door, gazing drearily down the long, empty corridor
+in which the breakfast gong echoed mournfully. All the usual brisk
+scenes of that hour, groups of girls in Peter Thomson suits or starched
+shirt-waists, or a pair of energetic ones, red-cheeked and shining-eyed
+from a run in the snow, had vanished as by the hand of some evil
+magician. Silent and lonely was the corridor.
+
+"And it's the day before Christmas!" groaned Betty. Two chill little
+tears hung on her eyelashes.
+
+The night before, in the excitement of getting the girls off with all
+their trunks and packages intact, she had not realized the homesickness
+of the deserted school. Now it seemed to pierce her very bones.
+
+"Oh, dear, why did father have to lose his money? 'Twas easy enough
+last September to decide I wouldn't take the expensive journey home
+these holidays, and for all of us to promise we wouldn't give each
+other as much as a Christmas card. But now!" The two chill tears
+slipped over the edge of her eyelashes. "Well, I know how I'll spend
+this whole day; I'll come right up here after breakfast and cry and cry
+and cry!" Somewhat fortified by this cheering resolve, Betty went to
+breakfast.
+
+Whatever the material joys of that meal might be, it certainly was not
+"a feast of reason and a flow of soul." Betty, whose sense of humour
+never perished, even in such a frost, looked round the table at the
+eight grim-faced girls doomed to a Christmas in school, and quoted
+mischievously to herself: "On with the dance, let joy be unconfined."
+
+Breakfast bolted, she lagged back to her room, stopping to stare out of
+the corridor windows.
+
+She saw nothing of the snowy landscape, however. Instead, a picture,
+the gayest medley of many colours and figures, danced before her eyes:
+Christmas-trees thumping in through the door, mysterious bundles
+scurried into dark corners, little brothers and sisters flying about
+with festoons of mistletoe, scarlet ribbon and holly, everywhere sound
+and laughter and excitement. The motto of Betty's family was: "Never do
+to-day what you can put off till to-morrow"; therefore the preparations
+of a fortnight were always crowded into a day.
+
+The year before, Betty had rushed till her nerves were taut and her
+temper snapped, had shaken the twins, raged at the housemaid, and had
+gone to bed at midnight weeping with weariness. But in memory only the
+joy of the day remained.
+
+"I think I could endure this jail of a school, and not getting one
+single present, but it breaks my heart not to give one least little
+thing to any one! Why, who ever heard of such a Christmas!"
+
+"Won't you hunt for that blue--"
+
+"Broken my thread again!"
+
+"Give me those scissors!"
+
+Betty jumped out of her day-dream. She had wandered into "Cork" and the
+three O'Neills surrounded her, staring.
+
+"I beg your pardon--I heard you--and it was so like home the day before
+Christmas--"
+
+"Did you hear the heathen rage?" cried Katherine.
+
+"Dolls for Aunt Anne's mission," explained Constance.
+
+"You're so forehanded that all your presents went a week ago, I
+suppose," Eleanor swept clear a chair. "The clan O'Neill is never
+forehanded."
+
+"You'd think I was from the number of thumbs I've grown this morning.
+Oh, misery!" Eleanor jerked a snarl of thread out on the floor.
+
+Betty had never cared for "Cork" but now the hot worried faces of its
+girls appealed to her. "Let me help. I'm a regular silkworm."
+
+The O'Neills assented with eagerness, and Betty began to sew in a
+capable, swift way that made the others stare and sigh with relief.
+
+The dolls were many, the O'Neills slow. Betty worked till her feet
+twitched on the floor; yet she enjoyed the morning, for it held an
+entirely new sensation, that of helping some one else get ready for
+Christmas.
+
+"Done!"
+
+"We never should have finished if you hadn't helped! Thank you, Betty
+Luther, very, VERY much! You're a duck! Let's run to luncheon together,
+quick."
+
+Somehow the big corridors did not seem half so bleak echoing to those
+warm O'Neill voices.
+
+"This morning's just spun by, but, oh, this long, dreary afternoon!"
+sighed Betty, as she wandered into the library. "Oh, me, there goes
+Alice Johns with her arms loaded with presents to mail, and I can't
+give a single soul anything!"
+
+"Do you know where 'Quotations for Occasions' has gone?" Betty turned
+to face pretty Rosamond Howitt, the only senior left behind.
+
+"Gone to be rebound. I heard Miss Dyce say so."
+
+"Oh, dear, I needed it so."
+
+"Could I help? I know a lot of rhymes and tags of proverbs and things
+like that."
+
+"Oh, if you would help me, I'd be so grateful! Won't you come to my
+room? You see, I promised a friend in town, who is to have a Christmas
+dinner, and who's been very kind to me, that I'd paint the place cards
+and write some quotation appropriate to each guest. I'm shamefully late
+over it, my own gifts took such a time; but the painting, at least, is
+done."
+
+Rosamond led the way to her room, and there displayed the cards which
+she had painted.
+
+"You can't think of my helplessness! If it were a Greek verb now, or a
+lost and strayed angle--but poetry!"
+
+Betty trotted back and forth between the room and the library, delved
+into books, and even evolved a verse which she audaciously tagged "old
+play," in imitation of Sir Walter Scott.
+
+"I think they are really and truly very bright, and I know Mrs. Fernell
+will be delighted." Rosamond wrapped up the cards carefully. "I can't
+begin to tell you how you've helped me. It was sweet in you to give me
+your whole afternoon."
+
+The dinner-bell rang at that moment, and the two went down together.
+
+"Come for a little run; I haven't been out all day," whispered
+Rosamond, slipping her hand into Betty's as they left the table.
+
+A great round moon swung cold and bright over the pines by the lodge.
+
+"Down the road a bit--just a little way--to the church," suggested
+Betty.
+
+They stepped out into the silent country road.
+
+"Why, the little mission is as gay as--as Christmas! I wonder why?"
+
+Betty glanced at the bright windows of the small plain church. "Oh,
+some Christmas-eve doings," she answered.
+
+Some one stepped quickly out from the church door.
+
+"Oh, Miss Vernon, I am relieved! I had begun to fear you could not
+come."
+
+The girls saw it was the tall old rector, his white hair shining silver
+bright in the moonbeams.
+
+"We're just two girls from the school, sir," said Rosamond.
+
+"Dear, dear!" His voice was both impatient and distressed. "I hoped you
+were my organist. We are all ready for our Christmas-eve service, but
+we can do nothing without the music."
+
+"I can play the organ a little," said Betty. "I'd be glad to help."
+
+"You can? My dear child, how fortunate! But--do you know the service?"
+
+"Yes, sir, it's my church."
+
+No vested choir stood ready to march triumphantly chanting into the
+choir stalls. Only a few boys and girls waited in the dim old choir
+loft, where Rosamond seated herself quietly.
+
+Betty's fingers trembled so at first that the music sounded dull and
+far away; but her courage crept back to her in the silence of the
+church, and the organ seemed to help her with a brave power of its own.
+In the dark church only the altar and a great gold star above it shone
+bright. Through an open window somewhere behind her she could hear the
+winter wind rattling the ivy leaves and bending the trees. Yet,
+somehow, she did not feel lonesome and forsaken this Christmas eve, far
+away from home, but safe and comforted and sheltered. The voice of the
+old rector reached her faintly in pauses; habit led her along the
+service, and the star at the altar held her eyes.
+
+Strange new ideas and emotions flowed in upon her brain. Tears stole
+softly into her eyes, yet she felt in her heart a sweet glow. Slowly
+the Christmas picture that had flamed and danced before her all day,
+painted in the glory of holly and mistletoe and tinsel, faded out, and
+another shaped itself, solemn and beautiful in the altar light.
+
+"My dear child, I thank you very much!" The old rector held Betty's
+hand in both his. "I cannot have a Christmas morning service--our
+people have too much to do to come then--but I was especially anxious
+that our evening service should have some message, some inspiration for
+them, and your music has made it so. You have given me great aid. May
+your Christmas be a blessed one."
+
+"I was glad to play, sir. Thank you!" answered Betty, simply.
+
+"Let's run!" she cried to Rosamond, and they raced back to school.
+
+She fell asleep that night without one smallest tear.
+
+The next morning Betty dressed hastily, and catching up her mandolin,
+set out into the corridor.
+
+Something swung against her hand as she opened the door. It was a great
+bunch of holly, glossy green leaves and glowing berries, and hidden in
+the leaves a card: "Betty, Merry Christmas," was all, but only one girl
+wrote that dainty hand.
+
+"A winter rose," whispered Betty, happily, and stuck the bunch into the
+ribbon of her mandolin.
+
+Down the corridor she ran until she faced a closed door. Then, twanging
+her mandolin, she burst out with all her power into a gay Christmas
+carol. High and sweet sang her voice in the silent corridor all through
+the gay carol. Then, sweeter still, it changed into a Christmas hymn.
+Then from behind the closed doors sounded voices:
+
+"Merry Christmas, Betty Luther!"
+
+Then Constance O'Neill's deep, smooth alto flowed into Betty's soprano;
+and at the last all nine girls joined in "Adeste Fideles." Christmas
+morning began with music and laughter.
+
+"This is your place, Betty. You are lord of Christmas morning."
+
+Betty stood, blushing, red as the holly in her hand, before the
+breakfast table. Miss Hyle, the teacher at the head of the table, had
+given up her place.
+
+The breakfast was a merry one. After it somebody suggested that they
+all go skating on the pond.
+
+Betty hesitated and glanced at Miss Hyle and Miss Thrasher, the two
+sad-looking teachers.
+
+She approached them and said, "Won't you come skating, too?"
+
+Miss Thrasher, hardly older than Betty herself, and pretty in a white
+frightened way, refused, but almost cheerfully. "I have a Christmas box
+to open and Christmas letters to write. Thank you very much."
+
+Betty's heart sank as she saw Miss Hyle's face. "Goodness, she's
+coming!"
+
+Miss Hyle was the most unpopular teacher in school. Neither
+ill-tempered nor harsh, she was so cold, remote and rigid in face,
+voice, and manner that the warmest blooded shivered away from her, the
+least sensitive shrank.
+
+"I have no skates, but I should like to borrow a pair to learn, if I
+may. I have never tried," she said.
+
+The tragedies of a beginner on skates are to the observers, especially
+if such be school-girls, subjects for unalloyed mirth. The nine girls
+choked and turned their backs and even giggled aloud as Miss Hyle went
+prone, now backward with a whack, now forward in a limp crumple.
+
+But amusement became admiration. Miss Hyle stumbled, fell, laughed
+merrily, scrambled up, struck out, and skated. Presently she was
+swinging up the pond in stroke with Betty and Eleanor O'Neill.
+
+"Miss Hyle, you're great!" cried Betty, at the end of the morning.
+"I've taught dozens and scores to skate, but never anybody like you.
+You've a genius for skating."
+
+Miss Hyle's blue eyes shot a sudden flash at Betty that made her whole
+severe face light up. "I've never had a chance to learn--at home there
+never is any ice--but I have always been athletic."
+
+"Where is your home, Miss Hyle?" asked Betty.
+
+"Cawnpore, India."
+
+"India?" gasped Eleanor. "How delightful! Oh, won't you tell us about
+it, Miss Hyle?"
+
+So it was that Miss Hyle found herself talking about something besides
+triangles to girls who really wanted to hear, and so it was that the
+flash came often into her eyes.
+
+"I have had a happy morning, thank you, Betty--and all." She said it
+very simply, yet a quick throb of pity and liking beat in Betty's heart.
+
+"How stupid we are about judging people!" she thought. Yet Betty had
+always prided herself on her character-reading.
+
+"Hurrah, the mail and express are in!" The girls ran excitedly to their
+rooms.
+
+Betty alone went to hers without interest. "Why, Hilma, what's
+happened?"
+
+The little round-faced Swedish maid mopped the big tears with her
+duster, and choked out:
+
+"Nothings, ma'am!"
+
+"Of course there is! You're crying like everything."
+
+Hilma wept aloud. "Christmas Day it is, and mine family and mine
+friends have party, now, all day."
+
+"Where?"
+
+Hilma jerked her head toward the window.
+
+"Oh, you mean in town? Why can't you go?"
+
+"I work. And never before am I from home Christmas day."
+
+Betty shivered. "Never before am _I_ from home Christmas day," she
+whispered.
+
+She went close to the girl, very tall and slim and bright beside the
+dumpy, flaxen Hilma.
+
+"What work do you do?"
+
+"The cook, he cooks the dinner and the supper; I put it on and wait it
+on the young ladies and wash the dishes. The others all are gone."
+
+Betty laughed suddenly. "Hilma, go put on your best clothes, quick, and
+go down to your party. I'm going to do your work."
+
+Hilma's eyes rounded with amazement. "The cook, he be mad."
+
+"No, he won't. He won't care whether it's Hilma or Betty, if things get
+done all right. I know how to wait on table and wash dishes. There's no
+housekeeper here to object. Run along, Hilma; be back by nine
+o'clock--and--Merry Christmas!"
+
+Hilma's face beamed through her tears. She was speechless with joy, but
+she seized Betty's slim brown hand and kissed it loudly.
+
+"What larks!" "Is it a joke?" "Betty, you're the handsomest butler!"
+
+Betty, in a white shirt-waist suit, a jolly red bow pinned on her white
+apron, and a little cap cocked on her dark hair, waved them to their
+seats at the holly-decked table.
+
+"Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas!"
+
+"Nobody is ill, Betty?" Rosamond asked, anxiously.
+
+"If I had three guesses, I should use every one that our maid wanted to
+go into town for the day, and Betty took her place." It was Miss Hyle's
+calm voice.
+
+Betty blushed. It was her turn now to flash back a glance; and those
+two sparks kindled the fire of friendship.
+
+It was a jolly Christmas dinner, with the "butler" eating with the
+family.
+
+"And now the dishes!" thought Betty. It must be admitted the "washing
+up" after a Christmas dinner of twelve is not a subject for much joy.
+
+"I propose we all help Betty wash the dishes!" cried Rosamond Howitt.
+
+Out in the kitchen every one laughed and talked and got in the way, and
+had a good time; and if the milk pitcher was knocked on the floor and
+the pudding bowl emptied in Betty's lap--why, it was all "Merry
+Christmas."
+
+After that they all skated again. When they came in, little Miss
+Thrasher, looking almost gay in a rose-red gown, met them in the
+corridor.
+
+"I thought it would be fun," she said, shyly, "to have supper in my
+room. I have a big box from home. I couldn't possible eat all the
+things myself, and if you'll bring chafing-dishes and spoons, and those
+things, I'll cook it, and we can sit round my open fire."
+
+Miss Thrasher's room was homelike, with its fire of white-birch and its
+easy chairs, and Miss Thrasher herself proved to be a pleasant hostess.
+
+After supper Miss Hyle told a tale of India, Miss Thrasher gave a Rocky
+Mountain adventure, and the girls contributed ghost and burglar stories
+till each guest was in a thrill of delightful horror.
+
+"We've had really a fine day!"
+
+"I expected to die of homesickness, but it's been jolly!"
+
+"So did I, but I have actually been happy."
+
+Thus the girls commented as they started for bed.
+
+"I have enjoyed my day," said little Miss Thrasher, "very much."
+
+"Yes, indeed, it's been a merry Christmas." Miss Hyle spoke almost
+eagerly.
+
+Betty gave a little jump; she realized each one of them was holding her
+hand and pressing it a little. "Thank you, it's been a lovely evening.
+Goodnight."
+
+Rosamond had invited Betty to share her roommate's bed, but both girls
+were too tired and sleepy for any confidence.
+
+"It's been the queerest Christmas!" thought Betty, as she drifted
+toward sleep. "Why, I haven't given one single soul one single present!"
+
+Yet she smiled, drowsily happy, and then the room seemed to fill with a
+bright, warm light, and round the bed there danced a great Christmas
+wreath, made up of the faces of the three O'Neills, and the thin old
+rector, with his white hair, and pretty Rosamond, and frightened Miss
+Thrasher and the homesick girls, and lonely Miss Hyle, and tear-dimmed
+Hilma.
+
+And all the faces smiled and nodded, and called, "Merry Christmas,
+Betty, Merry Christmas!"
+
+
+
+XIX. OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS
+
+J.H. EWING
+
+"The custom of Christmas-trees came from Germany. I can remember when
+they were first introduced into England, and what wonderful things we
+thought them. Now, every village school has its tree, and the scholars
+openly discuss whether the presents have been 'good,' or 'mean,' as
+compared with other trees in former years. The first one that I ever
+saw I believed to have come from Good Father Christmas himself; but
+little boys have grown too wise now to be taken in for their own
+amusement. They are not excited by secret and mysterious preparations
+in the back drawing-room; they hardly confess to the thrill--which I
+feel to this day--when the folding doors are thrown open, and amid the
+blaze of tapers, mamma, like a Fate, advances with her scissors to give
+every one what falls to his lot.
+
+"Well, young people, when I was eight years old I had not seen a
+Christmas-tree, and the first picture of one I ever saw was the picture
+of that held by Old Father Christmas in my godmother's picture-book.
+
+'"What are those things on the tree?' I asked.
+
+"'Candles,' said my father.
+
+"'No, father, not the candles; the other things?'
+
+"'Those are toys, my son.'
+
+"'Are they ever taken off?'
+
+"'Yes, they are taken off, and given to the children who stand around
+the tree.'
+
+"Patty and I grasped each other by the hand, and with one voice
+murmured; 'How kind of Old Father Christmas!'
+
+"By and by I asked, 'How old is Father Christmas?'
+
+"My father laughed, and said, 'One thousand eight hundred and thirty
+years, child,' which was then the year of our Lord, and thus one
+thousand eight hundred and thirty years since the first great Christmas
+Day.
+
+"'He LOOKS very old,' whispered Patty.
+
+"And I, who was, for my age, what Kitty called 'Bible-learned,' said
+thoughtfully, and with some puzzledness of mind, 'Then he's older than
+Methuselah.'
+
+"But my father had left the room, and did not hear my difficulty.
+
+"November and December went by, and still the picture-book kept all its
+charm for Patty and me; and we pondered on and loved Old Father
+Christmas as children can love and realize a fancy friend. To those who
+remember the fancies of their childhood I need say no more.
+
+"Christmas week came, Christmas Eve came. My father and mother were
+mysteriously and unaccountably busy in the parlour (we had only one
+parlour), and Patty and I were not allowed to go in. We went into the
+kitchen, but even here was no place of rest for as. Kitty was 'all over
+the place,' as she phrased it, and cakes, mince pies, and puddings were
+with her. As she justly observed, 'There was no place there for
+children and books to sit with their toes in the fire, when a body
+wanted to be at the oven all along. The cat was enough for HER temper,'
+she added.
+
+"As to puss, who obstinately refused to take a hint which drove her out
+into the Christmas frost, she returned again and again with soft steps,
+and a stupidity that was, I think, affected, to the warm hearth, only
+to fly at intervals, like a football, before Kitty's hasty slipper.
+
+"We had more sense, or less courage. We bowed to Kitty's behests, and
+went to the back door.
+
+"Patty and I were hardy children, and accustomed to 'run out' in all
+weathers, without much extra wrapping up. We put Kitty's shawl over our
+two heads, and went outside. I rather hoped to see something of Dick,
+for it was holiday time; but no Dick passed. He was busy helping his
+father to bore holes in the carved seats of the church, which were to
+hold sprigs of holly for the morrow--that was the idea of church
+decoration in my young days. You have improved on your elders there,
+young people, and I am candid enough to allow it. Still, the sprigs of
+red and green were better than nothing, and, like your lovely wreaths
+and pious devices, they made one feel as if the old black wood were
+bursting into life and leaf again for very Christmas joy; and, if only
+one knelt carefully, they did not scratch his nose.
+
+"Well, Dick was busy, and not to be seen. We ran across the little yard
+and looked over the wall at the end to see if we could see anything or
+anybody. From this point there was a pleasant meadow field sloping
+prettily away to a little hill about three quarters of a mile distant;
+which, catching some fine breezes from the moors beyond, was held to be
+a place of cure for whooping-cough, or kincough, as it was vulgarly
+called. Up to the top of this Kitty had dragged me, and carried Patty,
+when we were recovering from the complaint, as I well remember. It was
+the only 'change of air' we could afford, and I dare say it did as well
+as if we had gone into badly drained lodgings at the seaside.
+
+"This hill was now covered with snow and stood off against the gray
+sky. The white fields looked vast and dreary in the dusk. The only gay
+things to be seen were the berries on the holly hedge, in the little
+lane--which, running by the end of our back-yard, led up to the
+Hall--and the fat robin, that was staring at me. I was looking at the
+robin, when Patty, who had been peering out of her corner of Kitty's
+shawl, gave a great jump that dragged the shawl from our heads, and
+cried:
+
+"'Look!'
+
+"I looked. An old man was coming along the lane. His hair and beard
+were as white as cotton-wool. He had a face like the sort of apple that
+keeps well in winter; his coat was old and brown. There was snow about
+him in patches, and he carried a small fir-tree.
+
+"The same conviction seized upon us both. With one breath, we
+exclaimed, 'IT'S OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS!'
+
+"I know now that it was only an old man of the place, with whom we did
+not happen to be acquainted and that he was taking a little fir-tree up
+to the Hall, to be made into a Christmas-tree. He was a very
+good-humoured old fellow, and rather deaf, for which he made up by
+smiling and nodding his head a good deal, and saying, 'aye, aye, to be
+sure!' at likely intervals.
+
+"As he passed us and met our earnest gaze, he smiled and nodded so
+earnestly that I was bold enough to cry, 'Good-evening, Father
+Christmas!'
+
+"'Same to you!' said he, in a high-pitched voice.
+
+"'Then you ARE Father Christmas?' said Patty.
+
+"'And a happy New Year,' was Father Christmas's reply, which rather put
+me out. But he smiled in such a satisfactory manner that Patty went on,
+'You're very old, aren't you?'
+
+"'So I be, miss, so I be,' said Father Christmas, nodding.
+
+"'Father says you're eighteen hundred and thirty years old,' I muttered.
+
+"'Aye, aye, to be sure,' said Father Christmas. 'I'm a long age.'
+
+"A VERY long age, thought I, and I added, 'You're nearly twice as old
+as Methuselah, you know,' thinking that this might have struck him.
+
+"'Aye, aye,' said Father Christmas; but he did not seem to think
+anything of it. After a pause he held up the tree, and cried, 'D'ye
+know what this is, little miss?'
+
+"'A Christmas-tree,' said Patty.
+
+"And the old man smiled and nodded.
+
+"I leant over the wall, and shouted, 'But there are no candles.'
+
+"'By and by,' said Father Christmas, nodding as before. 'When it's dark
+they'll all be lighted up. That'll be a fine sight!'
+
+'"Toys, too,there'll be, won't there?' said Patty.
+
+"Father Christmas nodded his head. 'And sweeties,' he added,
+expressively.
+
+"I could feel Patty trembling, and my own heart beat fast. The thought
+which agitated us both was this: 'Was Father Christmas bringing the
+tree to us?' But very anxiety, and some modesty also, kept us from
+asking outright.
+
+"Only when the old man shouldered his tree, and prepared to move on, I
+cried in despair, 'Oh, are you going?'
+
+"'I'm coming back by and by,' said he.
+
+"'How soon?' cried Patty.
+
+"'About four o'clock,' said the old man smiling. 'I'm only going up
+yonder.'
+
+"'Up yonder!' This puzzled us. Father Christmas had pointed, but so
+indefinitely that he might have been pointing to the sky, or the
+fields, or the little wood at the end of the Squire's grounds. I
+thought the latter, and suggested to Patty that perhaps he had some
+place underground like Aladdin's cave, where he got the candles, and
+all the pretty things for the tree. This idea pleased us both, and we
+amused ourselves by wondering what Old Father Christmas would choose
+for us from his stores in that wonderful hole where he dressed his
+Christmas-trees.
+
+"'I wonder, Patty,' said I, 'why there's no picture of Father
+Christmas's dog in the book.' For at the old man's heels in the lane
+there crept a little brown and white spaniel looking very dirty in the
+snow.
+
+"'Perhaps it's a new dog that he's got to take care of his cave,' said
+Patty.
+
+"When we went indoors we examined the picture afresh by the dim light
+from the passage window, but there was no dog there.
+
+"My father passed us at this moment, and patted my head. 'Father,' said
+I, 'I don't know, but I do think Old Father Christmas is going to bring
+us a Christmas-tree to-night.'
+
+"'Who's been telling you that?' said my father.
+
+But he passed on before I could explain that we had seen Father
+Christmas himself, and had had his word for it that he would return at
+four o'clock, and that the candles on his tree would be lighted as soon
+as it was dark.
+
+"We hovered on the outskirts of the rooms till four o'clock came. We
+sat on the stairs and watched the big clock, which I was just learning
+to read; and Patty made herself giddy with constantly looking up and
+counting the four strokes, toward which the hour hand slowly moved. We
+put our noses into the kitchen now and then, to smell the cakes and get
+warm, and anon we hung about the parlour door, and were most unjustly
+accused of trying to peep. What did we care what our mother was doing
+in the parlour?--we, who had seen Old Father Christmas himself, and
+were expecting him back again every moment!
+
+"At last the church clock struck. The sounds boomed heavily through the
+frost, and Patty thought there were four of them. Then, after due
+choking and whirring, our own clock struck, and we counted the strokes
+quite clearly--one! two! three! four! Then we got Kitty's shawl once
+more, and stole out into the backyard. We ran to our old place, and
+peeped, but could see nothing.
+
+"'We'd better get up on to the wall,' I said; and with some difficulty
+and distress from rubbing her bare knees against the cold stone, and
+getting the snow up her sleeves, Patty got on to the coping of the
+little wall. I was just struggling after her, when something warm and
+something cold coming suddenly against the bare calves of my legs made
+me shriek with fright. I came down 'with a run' and bruised my knees,
+my elbows, and my chin; and the snow that hadn't gone up Patty's
+sleeves went down my neck. Then I found that the cold thing was a dog's
+nose and the warm thing was his tongue; and Patty cried from her post
+of observation, 'It's Father Christmas's dog and he's licking your
+legs.'
+
+"It really was the dirty little brown and white spaniel, and he
+persisted in licking me, and jumping on me, and making curious little
+noises, that must have meant something if one had known his language. I
+was rather harassed at the moment. My legs were sore, I was a little
+afraid of the dog, and Patty was very much afraid of sitting on the
+wall without me.
+
+'"You won't fall,' I said to her. 'Get down, will you?' I said to the
+dog.
+
+"'Humpty Dumpty fell off a wall,' said Patty.
+
+"'Bow! wow!' said the dog.
+
+"I pulled Patty down, and the dog tried to pull me down; but when my
+little sister was on her feet, to my relief, he transferred his
+attentions to her. When he had jumped at her, and licked her several
+times, he turned around and ran away.
+
+"'He's gone,' said I; 'I'm so glad.'
+
+"But even as I spoke he was back again, crouching at Patty's feet, and
+glaring at her with eyes the colour of his ears.
+
+"Now, Patty was very fond of animals, and when the dog looked at her
+she looked at the dog, and then she said to me, 'He wants us to go with
+him.'
+
+"On which (as if he understood our language, though we were ignorant of
+his) the spaniel sprang away, and went off as hard as he could; and
+Patty and I went after him, a dim hope crossing my mind--'Perhaps
+Father Christmas has sent him for us.'
+
+"The idea was rather favoured by the fact he led us up the lane. Only a
+little way; then he stopped by something lying in the ditch--and once
+more we cried in the same breath, 'It's Old Father Christmas!'
+
+"Returning from the Hall, the old man had slipped upon a bit of ice,
+and lay stunned in the snow.
+
+"Patty began to cry. 'I think he's dead!' she sobbed.
+
+"'He is so very old, I don't wonder,' I murmured; 'but perhaps he's
+not. I'll fetch father.'
+
+"My father and Kitty were soon on the spot. Kitty was as strong as a
+man; and they carried Father Christmas between them into the kitchen.
+There he quickly revived.
+
+"I must do Kitty the justice to say that she did not utter a word of
+complaint at the disturbance of her labours; and that she drew the old
+man's chair close up to the oven with her own hand. She was so much
+affected by the behaviour of his dog that she admitted him even to the
+hearth; on which puss, being acute enough to see how matters stood, lay
+down with her back so close to the spaniel's that Kitty could not expel
+one without kicking both.
+
+"For our parts, we felt sadly anxious about the tree; otherwise we
+could have wished for no better treat than to sit at Kitty's round
+table taking tea with Father Christmas. Our usual fare of thick bread
+and treacle was to-night exchanged for a delicious variety of cakes,
+which were none the worse to us for being 'tasters and wasters'--that
+is, little bits of dough, or shortbread, put in to try the state of the
+oven, and certain cakes that had got broken or burnt in the baking.
+
+"Well, there we sat, helping Old Father Christmas to tea and cake, and
+wondering in our hearts what could have become of the tree.
+
+"Patty and I felt a delicacy in asking Old Father Christmas about the
+tree. It was not until we had had tea three times round, with tasters
+and wasters to match, that Patty said very gently: 'It's quite dark
+now.' And then she heaved a deep sigh.
+
+"Burning anxiety overcame me. I leaned toward Father Christmas, and
+shouted--I had found out that it was needful to shout--"'I suppose the
+candles are on the tree now?'
+
+"'Just about putting of 'em on,' said Father Christmas.
+
+"'And the presents, too?' said Patty.
+
+"'Aye, aye, TO be sure,' said Father Christmas, and he smiled
+delightfully.
+
+"I was thinking what further questions I might venture upon, when he
+pushed his cup toward Patty saying, 'Since you are so pressing, miss,
+I'll take another dish.'
+
+"And Kitty, swooping on us from the oven, cried, 'Make yourself at
+home, sir; there's more where these came from. Make a long arm, Miss
+Patty, and hand them cakes.'
+
+"So we had to devote ourselves to the duties of the table; and Patty,
+holding the lid with one hand and pouring with the other, supplied
+Father Christmas's wants with a heavy heart.
+
+"At last he was satisfied. I said grace, during which he stood, and,
+indeed, he stood for some time afterward with his eyes shut--I fancy
+under the impression that I was still speaking. He had just said a
+fervent 'amen,' and reseated himself, when my father put his head into
+the kitchen, and made this remarkable statement:
+
+"'Old Father Christmas has sent a tree to the young people.'
+
+"Patty and I uttered a cry of delight, and we forthwith danced round
+the old man, saying, 'How nice; Oh, how kind of you!' which I think
+must have bewildered him, but he only smiled and nodded.
+
+"'Come along,' said my father. 'Come, children. Come, Reuben. Come,
+Kitty.'
+
+"And he went into the parlour, and we all followed him.
+
+"My godmother's picture of a Christmas-tree was very pretty; and the
+flames of the candles were so naturally done in red and yellow that I
+always wondered that they did not shine at night. But the picture was
+nothing to the reality. We had been sitting almost in the dark, for, as
+Kitty said, 'Firelight was quite enough to burn at meal-times.' And
+when the parlour door was thrown open, and the tree, with lighted
+tapers on all the branches, burst upon our view, the blaze was
+dazzling, and threw such a glory round the little gifts, and the bags
+of coloured muslin, with acid drops and pink rose drops and comfits
+inside, as I shall never forget. We all got something; and Patty and I,
+at any rate, believed that the things came from the stores of Old
+Father Christmas. We were not undeceived even by his gratefully
+accepting a bundle of old clothes which had been hastily put together
+to form his present.
+
+"We were all very happy; even Kitty, I think, though she kept her
+sleeves rolled up, and seemed rather to grudge enjoying herself (a weak
+point in some energetic characters). She went back to her oven before
+the lights were out and the angel on the top of the tree taken down.
+She locked up her present (a little work-box) at once. She often showed
+it off afterward, but it was kept in the same bit of tissue paper till
+she died. Our presents certainly did not last so long!
+
+"The old man died about a week afterward, so we never made his
+acquaintance as a common personage. When he was buried, his little dog
+came to us. I suppose he remembered the hospitality he had received.
+Patty adopted him, and he was very faithful. Puss always looked on him
+with favour. I hoped during our rambles together in the following
+summer that he would lead us at last to the cave where Christmas-trees
+are dressed. But he never did.
+
+"Our parents often spoke of his late master as 'old Reuben,' but
+children are not easily disabused of a favourite fancy, and in Patty's
+thoughts and in mine the old man was long gratefully remembered as Old
+Father Christmas."
+
+
+
+XX. A CHRISTMAS CAROL
+
+CHARLES DICKENS
+
+Master Peter, and the two ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the
+goose, with which they soon returned in high procession.
+
+Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of
+all birds; a feathered phenomenon, to which a black swan was a matter
+of course--and in truth it was something very like it in that house.
+Mrs. Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little saucepan)
+hissing hot; Master Peter mashed the potatoes with incredible vigour;
+Miss Belinda sweetened up the apple-sauce; Martha dusted the hot
+plates; Bob took Tiny Tim beside him in a tiny corner at the table; the
+two young Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting
+themselves, and mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into
+their mouths, lest they should shriek for goose before their turn came
+to be helped. At last the dishes were set on, and grace was said. It
+was succeeded by a breathless pause, as Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly
+all along the carving-knife, prepared to plunge it in the breast; but
+when she did, and when the long expected gush of stuffing issued forth,
+one murmur of delight arose all round the board, and even Tiny Tim,
+excited by the two young Cratchits, beat on the table with the handle
+of his knife, and feebly cried Hurrah!
+
+There never was such a goose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was
+such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness,
+were the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by the apple-sauce
+and mashed potatoes, it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family;
+indeed, as Mrs. Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small
+atom of a bone upon the dish), they hadn't ate it all at last! Yet
+every one had had enough, and the youngest Cratchits in particular,
+were steeped in sage and onion to the eyebrows! But now, the plates
+being changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs. Cratchit left the room alone--too
+nervous to bear witnesses--to take the pudding up and bring it in.
+
+Suppose it should not be done enough! Suppose it should break in
+turning out. Suppose somebody should have got over the wall of the
+back-yard and stolen it, while they were merry with the goose--a
+supposition at which the two young Cratchits became livid! All sorts of
+horrors were supposed.
+
+Hallo! A great deal of steam! The pudding was out of the copper. A
+smell like a washing-day! That was the cloth. A smell like an
+eating-house and a pastrycook's next door to each other, with a
+laundress's next door to that! That was the pudding! In half a minute
+Mrs. Cratchit entered--flushed, but smiling proudly--with the pudding,
+like a speckled cannon-ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half of
+half-a-quartern of ignited brandy, and bedight with Christmas holly
+stuck into the top.
+
+Oh, a wonderful pudding! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly too, that he
+regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since
+their marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that now the weight was off her
+mind, she would confess she had had her doubts about the quantity of
+flour. Everybody had something to say about it, but nobody said or
+thought it was at all a small pudding for a large family. It would have
+been, flat heresy to do so. Any Cratchit would have blushed to hint at
+such a thing.
+
+At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the hearth
+swept, and the fire made up. The compound in the jug being tasted, and
+considered perfect, apples and oranges were put upon the table, and a
+shovel-full of chestnuts on the fire. Then all the Cratchit family drew
+round the hearth, in what Bob Cratchit called a circle, meaning half a
+one; and at Bob Cratchit's elbow stood the family display of glasses.
+Two tumblers, and a custard-cup without a handle.
+
+These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as golden
+goblets would have done; and Bob served it out with beaming looks,
+while the chestnuts on the fire sputtered and cracked noisily. Then Bob
+proposed:
+
+"A Merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us!"
+
+Which all the family re-echoed.
+
+"God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim, the last of all.
+
+
+
+XXI. HOW CHRISTMAS CAME TO THE SANTA MARIA FLATS*
+
+* From "Ickery Ann and Other Girls and Boys," by Elia W. Peattie.
+Copyright, 1898, by Herbert S. Stone & Co., Duffield & Co., successors.
+
+ELIA W. PEATTIE
+
+There were twenty-six flat children, and none of them had ever been
+flat children until that year. Previously they had all been home
+children. and as such had, of course, had beautiful Christmases, in
+which their relations with Santa Claus had been of the most intimate
+and personal nature.
+
+Now, owing to their residence in the Santa Maria flats, and the Lease,
+all was changed. The Lease was a strange forbiddance, a ukase issued by
+a tyrant, which took from children their natural liberties and rights.
+
+Though, to be sure--as every one of the flat children knew--they were
+in the greatest kind of luck to be allowed to live at all, and
+especially were they fortunate past the lot of children to be permitted
+to live in a flat. There were many flats in the great city, so polished
+and carved and burnished and be-lackeyed that children were not allowed
+to enter within the portals, save on visits of ceremony in charge of
+parents or governesses. And in one flat, where Cecil de Koven le Baron
+was born--just by accident and without intending any harm--he was
+evicted, along with his parents, by the time he reached the age where
+he seemed likely to be graduated from the go-cart. And yet that flat
+had not nearly so imposing a name as the Santa Maria.
+
+The twenty-six children of the Santa Maria flats belonged to twenty
+families. All of these twenty families were peculiar, as you might
+learn any day by interviewing the families concerning one another. But
+they bore with each other's peculiarities quite cheerfully and spoke in
+the hall when they met. Sometimes this tolerance would even extend to
+conversation about the janitor, a thin creature who did the work of
+five men. The ladies complained that he never smiled.
+
+"I wouldn't so much mind the hot water pipes leaking now and then," the
+ladies would remark in the vestibule, rustling their skirts to show
+that they wore silk petticoats, "if only the janitor would smile. But
+he looks like a cemetery."
+
+"I know it," would be the response. "I told Mr. Wilberforce last night
+that if he would only get a cheerful janitor I wouldn't mind our having
+rubber instead of Axminster on the stairs."
+
+"You know we were promised Axminster when we moved in," would be the
+plaintive response. The ladies would stand together for a moment
+wrapped in gloomy reflection, and then part.
+
+The kitchen and nurse maids felt on the subject, too.
+
+"If Carl Carlsen would only smile," they used to exclaim in sibilant
+whispers, as they passed on the way to the laundry. "If he'd come in
+an' joke while we wus washin'!"
+
+Only Kara Johnson never said anything on the subject because she knew
+why Carlsen didn't smile, and was sorry for it, and would have made it
+all right--if it hadn't been for Lars Larsen.
+
+Dear, dear, but this is a digression from the subject of the Lease.
+That terrible document was held over the heads of the children as the
+Herodian pronunciamento concerning small boys was over the heads of the
+Israelites.
+
+It was in the Lease not to run--not to jump--not to yell. It was in the
+Lease not to sing in the halls, not to call from story to story, not to
+slide down the banisters. And there were blocks of banisters so smooth
+and wide and beautiful that the attraction between them and the seats
+of the little boy's trousers was like the attraction of a magnet for a
+nail. Yet not a leg, crooked or straight, fat or thin, was ever to be
+thrown over these polished surfaces!
+
+It was in the Lease, too, that no peddler or agent, or suspicious
+stranger was to enter the Santa Maria, neither by the front door nor
+the back. The janitor stood in his uniform at the rear, and the lackey
+in his uniform at the front, to prevent any such intrusion upon the
+privacy of the aristocratic Santa Marias. The lackey, who politely
+directed people, and summoned elevators, and whistled up tubes and rang
+bells, thus conducting the complex social life of those favoured
+apartments, was not one to make a mistake, and admit any person not
+calculated to ornament the front parlours of the flatters.
+
+It was this that worried the children.
+
+For how could such a dear, disorderly, democratic rascal as the
+children's saint ever hope to gain a pass to that exclusive entrance
+and get up to the rooms of the flat children?
+
+"You can see for yourself," said Ernest, who lived on the first floor,
+to Roderick who lived on the fourth, "that if Santa Claus can't get up
+the front stairs, and can't get up the back stairs, that all he can do
+is to come down the chimney. And he can't come down the chimney--at
+least, he can't get out of the fireplace."
+
+"Why not?" asked Roderick, who was busy with an "all-day sucker" and
+not inclined to take a gloomy view of anything.
+
+"Goosey!" cried Ernest, in great disdain. "I'll show you!" and he led
+Roderick, with his sucker, right into the best parlour, where the
+fireplace was, and showed him an awful thing.
+
+Of course, to the ordinary observer, there was nothing awful about the
+fireplace. Everything in the way of bric-a-brac possessed by the Santa
+Maria flatters was artistic. It may have been in the Lease that only
+people with esthetic tastes were to be admitted to the apartments.
+However that may be, the fireplace, with its vases and pictures and
+trinkets, was something quite wonderful. Indian incense burned in a
+mysterious little dish, pictures of purple ladies were hung in odd
+corners, calendars in letters nobody could read, served to decorate, if
+not to educate, and glass vases of strange colours and extraordinary
+shapes stood about filled with roses. None of these things were awful.
+At least no one would have dared say they were. But what was awful was
+the formation of the grate. It was not a hospitable place with
+andirons, where noble logs of wood could be laid for the burning, nor
+did it have a generous iron basket where honest anthracite could glow
+away into the nights. Not a bit of it. It held a vertical plate of
+stuff that looked like dirty cotton wool, on which a tiny blue flame
+leaped when the gas was turned on and ignited.
+
+"You can see for yourself!" said Ernest tragically.
+
+Roderick could see for himself. There was an inch-wide opening down
+which the Friend of the Children could squeeze himself, and, as
+everybody knows, he needs a good deal of room now, for he has grown
+portly with age, and his pack every year becomes bigger, owing to the
+ever-increasing number of girls and boys he has to supply
+
+"Gimini!" said Roderick, and dropped his all-day sucker on the old
+Bokara rug that Ernest's mamma had bought the week before at a
+fashionable furnishing shop, and which had given the sore throat to all
+the family, owing to some cunning little germs that had come over with
+the rug to see what American throats were like.
+
+Oh, me, yes! but Roderick could see! Anybody could see! And a boy could
+see better than anybody.
+
+"Let's go see the Telephone Boy," said Roderick. This seemed the wisest
+thing to do. When in doubt, all the children went to the Telephone Boy,
+who was the most fascinating person, with knowledge of the most
+wonderful kind and of a nature to throw that of Mrs. Scheherazade
+quite, quite in the shade--which, considering how long that loquacious
+lady had been a Shade, is perhaps not surprising.
+
+The Telephone Boy knew the answers to all the conundrums in the world,
+and a way out of nearly all troubles such as are likely to overtake
+boys and girls. But now he had no suggestions to offer and could speak
+no comfortable words.
+
+"He can't git inter de front, an' he can't git inter de back, an' he
+can't come down no chimney in dis here house, an' I tell yer dose," he
+said, and shut his mouth grimly, while cold apprehension crept around
+Ernest's heart and took the sweetness out of Roderick's sucker.
+
+Nevertheless, hope springs eternal, and the boys each and individually
+asked their fathers--tremendously wise and good men--if they thought
+there was any hope that Santa Claus would get into the Santa Maria
+flats, and each of the fathers looked up from his paper and said he'd
+be blessed if he did!
+
+And the words sunk deep and deep and drew the tears when the doors were
+closed and the soft black was all about and nobody could laugh because
+a boy was found crying! The girls cried too--for the awful news was
+whistled up tubes and whistled down tubes, till all the twenty-six flat
+children knew about it. The next day it was talked over in the brick
+court, where the children used to go to shout and race. But on this day
+there was neither shouting nor racing. There was, instead, a shaking of
+heads, a surreptitious dropping of tears, a guessing and protesting and
+lamenting. All the flat mothers congratulated themselves on the fact
+that their children were becoming so quiet and orderly, and wondered
+what could have come over them when they noted that they neglected to
+run after the patrol wagon as it whizzed round the block.
+
+It was decided, after a solemn talk, that every child should go to its
+own fireplace and investigate. In the event of any fireplace being
+found with an opening big enough to admit Santa Claus, a note could be
+left directing him along the halls to the other apartments. A spirit of
+universal brotherhood had taken possession of the Santa Maria flatters.
+Misery bound them together. But the investigation proved to be
+disheartening. The cruel asbestos grates were everywhere. Hope lay
+strangled!
+
+As time went on, melancholy settled upon the flat children. The parents
+noted it, and wondered if there could be sewer gas in the apartments.
+One over-anxious mother called in a physician, who gave the poor little
+child some medicine which made it quite ill. No one suspected the
+truth, though the children were often heard to say that it was evident
+that there was to be no Christmas for them! But then, what more natural
+for a child to say, thus hoping to win protestations--so the mothers
+reasoned, and let the remark pass.
+
+The day before Christmas was gray and dismal. There was no
+wind--indeed, there was a sort of tightness in the air, as if the
+supply of freshness had given out. People had headaches--even the
+Telephone Boy was cross--and none of the spirit of the time appeared to
+enliven the flat children. There appeared to be no stir--no mystery. No
+whisperings went on in the corners--or at least, so it seemed to the
+sad babies of the Santa Maria.
+
+"It's as plain as a monkey on a hand-organ," said the Telephone Boy to
+the attendants at his salon in the basement, "that there ain't to be no
+Christmas for we--no, not for we!"
+
+Had not Dorothy produced, at this junction, from the folds of her
+fluffy silken skirts several substantial sticks of gum, there is no
+saying to what depths of discouragement the flat children would have
+fallen!
+
+About six o'clock it seemed as if the children would smother for lack
+of air! It was very peculiar. Even the janitor noticed it. He spoke
+about it to Kara at the head of the back stairs, and she held her hand
+so as to let him see the new silver ring on her fourth finger, and he
+let go of the rope on the elevator on which he was standing and dropped
+to the bottom of the shaft, so that Kara sent up a wild hallo of alarm.
+But the janitor emerged as melancholy and unruffled as ever, only
+looking at his watch to see if it had been stopped by the concussion.
+
+The Telephone Boy, who usually got a bit of something hot sent down to
+him from one of the tables, owing to the fact that he never ate any
+meal save breakfast at home, was quite forgotten on this day, and dined
+off two russet apples, and drew up his belt to stop the ache--for the
+Telephone Boy was growing very fast indeed, in spite of his poverty,
+and couldn't seem to stop growing somehow, although he said to himself
+every day that it was perfectly brutal of him to keep on that way when
+his mother had so many mouths to feed.
+
+Well, well, the tightness of the air got worse. Every one was cross at
+dinner and complained of feeling tired afterward, and of wanting to go
+to bed. For all of that it was not to get to sleep, and the children
+tossed and tumbled for a long time before they put their little hands
+in the big, soft shadowy clasp of the Sandman, and trooped away after
+him to the happy town of sleep.
+
+It seemed to the flat children that they had been asleep but a few
+moments when there came a terrible burst of wind that shook even that
+great house to its foundations. Actually, as they sat up in bed and
+called to their parents or their nurses, their voices seemed smothered
+with roar. Could it be that the wind was a great wild beast with a
+hundred tongues which licked at the roof of the building? And how many
+voices must it have to bellow as it did?
+
+Sounds of falling glass, of breaking shutters, of crashing chimneys
+greeted their ears--not that they knew what all these sounds meant.
+They only knew that it seemed as if the end of the world had come.
+Ernest, miserable as he was, wondered if the Telephone Boy had gotten
+safely home, or if he were alone in the draughty room in the basement;
+and Roderick hugged his big brother, who slept with him and said, "Now
+I lay me," three times running, as fast as ever his tongue would say it.
+
+After a terrible time the wind settled down into a steady howl like a
+hungry wolf, and the children went to sleep, worn out with fright and
+conscious that the bedclothes could not keep out the cold.
+
+Dawn came. The children awoke, shivering. They sat up in bed and looked
+about them--yes, they did, the whole twenty-six of them in their
+different apartments and their different homes. And what do you suppose
+they saw--what do you suppose the twenty-six flat children saw as they
+looked about them?
+
+Why, stockings, stuffed full, and trees hung full, and boxes packed
+full! Yes, they did! It was Christmas morning, and the bells were
+ringing, and all the little flat children were laughing, for Santa
+Claus had come! He had really come! In the wind and wild weather, while
+the tongues of the wind licked hungrily at the roof, while the wind
+howled like a hungry wolf, he had crept in somehow and laughing, no
+doubt, and chuckling, without question, he had filled the stockings and
+the trees and the boxes! Dear me, dear me, but it was a happy time! It
+makes me out of breath to think what a happy time it was, and how
+surprised the flat children were, and how they wondered how it could
+ever have happened.
+
+But they found out, of course! It happened in the simplest way! Every
+skylight in the place was blown off and away, and that was how the wind
+howled so, and how the bedclothes would not keep the children warm, and
+how Santa Claus got in. The wind corkscrewed down into these holes, and
+the reckless children with their drums and dolls, their guns and toy
+dishes, danced around in the maelstrom and sang:
+
+"Here's where Santa Claus came!
+This is how he got in-
+We should count it a sin
+Yes, count it a shame,
+If it hurt when he fell on the floor."
+
+Roderick's sister, who was clever for a child of her age, and who had
+read Monte Cristo ten times, though she was only eleven, wrote this
+poem, which every one thought very fine.
+
+And of course all the parents thought and said that Santa Claus must
+have jumped down the skylights. By noon there were other skylights put
+in, and not a sign left of the way he made his entrance--not that the
+way mattered a bit, no, not a bit.
+
+Perhaps you think the Telephone Boy didn't get anything! Maybe you
+imagine that Santa Claus didn't get down that far. But you are
+mistaken. The shaft below one of the skylights went away to the bottom
+of the building, and it stands to reason that the old fellow must have
+fallen way through. At any rate there was a copy of "Tom Sawyer," and a
+whole plum pudding, and a number of other things, more useful but not
+so interesting, found down in the chilly basement room. There were,
+indeed.
+
+In closing it is only proper to mention that Kara Johnson crocheted a
+white silk four-in-hand necktie for Carl Carlsen, the janitor--and the
+janitor smiled!
+
+
+
+XX. THE LEGEND OF BABOUSCKA*
+
+*From "The Children's Hour," published by the Milton Bradley Co.
+
+ADAPTED FROM THE RUSSIAN
+
+It was the night the dear Christ-Child came to Bethlehem. In a country
+far away from Him, an old, old woman named Babouscka sat in her snug
+little house by her warm fire. The wind was drifting the snow outside
+and howling down the chimney, but it only made Babouscka's fire burn
+more brightly.
+
+"How glad I am that I may stay indoors," said Babouscka, holding her
+hands out to the bright blaze.
+
+But suddenly she heard a loud rap at her door. She opened it and her
+candle shone on three old men standing outside in the snow. Their
+beards were as white as the snow, and so long that they reached the
+ground. Their eyes shone kindly in the light of Babouscka's candle, and
+their arms were full of precious things--boxes of jewels, and
+sweet-smelling oils, and ointments.
+
+"We have travelled far, Babouscka," they said, "and we stop to tell you
+of the Baby Prince born this night in Bethlehem. He comes to rule the
+world and teach all men to be loving and true. We carry Him gifts. Come
+with us, Babouscka."
+
+But Babouscka looked at the drifting snow, and then inside at her cozy
+room and the crackling fire. "It is too late for me to go with you,
+good sirs," she said, "the weather is too cold." She went inside again
+and shut the door, and the old men journeyed on to Bethlehem without
+her. But as Babouscka sat by her fire, rocking, she began to think
+about the Little Christ-Child, for she loved all babies.
+
+"To-morrow I will go to find Him," she said; "to-morrow, when it is
+light, and I will carry Him some toys."
+
+So when it was morning Babouscka put on her long cloak and took her
+staff, and filled her basket with the pretty things a baby would
+like--gold balls, and wooden toys, and strings of silver cobwebs--and
+she set out to find the Christ-Child.
+
+But, oh, Babouscka had forgotten to ask the three old men the road to
+Bethlehem, and they travelled so far through the night that she could
+not overtake them. Up and down the road she hurried, through woods and
+fields and towns, saying to whomsoever she met: "I go to find the
+Christ-Child. Where does He lie? I bring some pretty toys for His sake."
+
+But no one could tell her the way to go, and they all said: "Farther
+on, Babouscka, farther on." So she travelled on and on and on for years
+and years--but she never found the little Christ-Child.
+
+They say that old Babouscka is travelling still, looking for Him. When
+it comes Christmas Eve, and the children are lying fast asleep,
+Babouscka comes softly through the snowy fields and towns, wrapped in
+her long cloak and carrying her basket on her arm. With her staff she
+raps gently at the doors and goes inside and holds her candle close to
+the little children's faces.
+
+"Is He here?" she asks. "Is the little Christ-Child here?" And then she
+turns sorrowfully away again, crying: "Farther on, farther on!" But
+before she leaves she takes a toy from her basket and lays it beside
+the pillow for a Christmas gift. "For His sake," she says softly, and
+then hurries on through the years and forever in search of the little
+Christ-Child.
+
+
+
+XXIII. CHRISTMAS IN THE BARN*
+
+* From "In the Child's World," by Emilie Poulssen, Milton Bradley Co.,
+Publishers. Used by permission.
+
+F. ARNSTEIN
+
+Only two more days and Christmas would be here! It had been snowing
+hard, and Johnny was standing at the window, looking at the soft, white
+snow which covered the ground half a foot deep. Presently he heard the
+noise of wheels coming up the road, and a wagon turned in at the gate
+and came past the window. Johnny was very curious to know what the
+wagon could be bringing. He pressed his little nose close to the cold
+window pane, and to his great surprise, saw two large Christmas-trees.
+Johnny wondered why there were TWO trees, and turned quickly to run and
+tell mamma all about it; but then remembered that mamma was not at
+home. She had gone to the city to buy some Christmas presents and would
+not return until quite late. Johnny began to feel that his toes and
+fingers had grown quite cold from standing at the window so long; so he
+drew his own little chair up to the cheerful grate fire and sat there
+quietly thinking. Pussy, who had been curled up like a little bundle of
+wool, in the very warmest corner, jumped up, and, going to Johnny,
+rubbed her head against his knee to attract his attention. He patted
+her gently and began to talk to her about what was in his thoughts.
+
+He had been puzzling over the TWO trees which had come, and at last had
+made up his mind about them. "I know now, Pussy," said he, "why there
+are two trees. This morning when I kissed Papa good-bye at the gate he
+said he was going to buy one for me, and mamma, who was busy in the
+house, did not hear him say so; and I am sure she must have bought the
+other. But what shall we do with two Christmas-trees?"
+
+Pussy jumped into his lap and purred and purred. A plan suddenly
+flashed into Johnny's mind. "Would you like to have one, Pussy?" Pussy
+purred more loudly, and it seemed almost as though she had said yes.
+
+"Oh! I will, I will! if mamma will let me. I'll have a Christmas-tree
+out in the bam for you, Pussy, and for all the pets; and then you'll
+all be as happy as I shall be with my tree in the parlour."
+
+By this time it had grown quite late. There was a ring at the
+door-bell; and quick as a flash Johnny ran, with happy, smiling face,
+to meet papa and mamma and gave them each a loving kiss. During the
+evening he told them all that he had done that day and also about the
+two big trees which the man had brought. It was just as Johnny had
+thought. Papa and mamma had each bought one, and as it was so near
+Christmas they thought they would not send either of them back. Johnny
+was very glad of this, and told them of the happy plan he had made and
+asked if he might have the extra tree. Papa and mamma smiled a little
+as Johnny explained his plan but they said he might have the tree, and
+Johnny went to bed feeling very happy.
+
+That night his papa fastened the tree into a block of wood so that it
+would stand firmly and then set it in the middle of the barn floor. The
+next day when Johnny had finished his lessons he went to the kitchen,
+and asked Annie, the cook, if she would save the bones and potato
+parings and all other leavings from the day's meals and give them to
+him the following morning. He also begged her to give him several
+cupfuls of salt and cornmeal, which she did, putting them in paper bags
+for him. Then she gave him the dishes he asked for--a few chipped ones
+not good enough to be used at table--and an old wooden bowl. Annie
+wanted to know what Johnny intended to do with all these things, but he
+only said: "Wait until to-morrow, then you shall see." He gathered up
+all the things which the cook had given him and carried them to the
+barn, placing them on a shelf in one corner, where he was sure no one
+would touch them and where they would be all ready for him to use the
+next morning.
+
+Christmas morning came, and, as soon as he could, Johnny hurried out to
+the barn, where stood the Christmas-tree which he was going to trim for
+all his pets. The first thing he did was to get a paper bag of oats;
+this he tied to one of the branches of the tree, for Brownie the mare.
+Then he made up several bundles of hay and tied these on the other side
+of the tree, not quite so high up, where White Face, the cow, could
+reach them; and on the lowest branches some more hay for Spotty, the
+calf.
+
+Next Johnny hurried to the kitchen to get the things Annie had promised
+to save for him. She had plenty to give. With his arms and hands full
+he went back to the barn. He found three "lovely" bones with plenty of
+meat on them; these he tied together to another branch of the tree, for
+Rover, his big black dog. Under the tree he placed the big wooden bowl,
+and filled it well with potato parings, rice, and meat, left from
+yesterday's dinner; this was the "full and tempting trough" for
+Piggywig. Near this he placed a bowl of milk for Pussy, on one plate
+the salt for the pet lamb, and on another the cornmeal for the dear
+little chickens. On the top of the tree he tied a basket of nuts; these
+were for his pet squirrel; and I had almost forgotten to tell you of
+the bunch of carrots tied very low down where soft white Bunny could
+reach them.
+
+When all was done, Johnny stood off a little way to look at this
+wonderful Christmas-tree. Clapping his hands with delight, he ran to
+call papa and mamma and Annie, and they laughed aloud when they saw
+what he had done. It was the funniest Christmas-tree they had ever
+seen. They were sure the pets would like the presents Johnny had chosen.
+
+Then there was a busy time in the barn. Papa and mamma and Annie helped
+about bringing in the animals, and before long, Brownie, White Face,
+Spotty, Rover, Piggywig, Pussy, Lambkin, the chickens, the squirrel and
+Bunny, the rabbit, had been led each to his own Christmas breakfast on
+and under the tree. What a funny sight it was to see them all standing
+around looking happy and contented, eating and drinking with such an
+appetite!
+
+While watching them Johnny had another thought, and he ran quickly to
+the house, and brought out the new trumpet which papa had given him for
+Christmas. By this time the animals had all finished their breakfast
+and Johnny gave a little toot on his trumpet as a signal that the tree
+festival was over. Brownie went, neighing and prancing, to her stall,
+White Face walked demurely off with a bellow, which Spotty, the calf,
+running at her heels, tried to imitate; the little lamb skipped
+bleating away; Piggywig walked off with a grunt; Pussy jumped on the
+fence with a mew; the squirrel still sat up in the tree cracking her
+nuts; Bunny hopped to her snug little quarters; while Rover, barking
+loudly, chased the chickens back to their coop. Such a hubbub of
+noises! Mamma said it sounded as if they were trying to say "Merry
+Christmas to you, Johnny! Merry Christmas to all."
+
+
+
+XXIV. THE PHILANTHROPIST'S CHRISTMAS*
+
+This story was first published in the Youth's Companion, vol. 82.
+
+JAMES WEBER LINN
+
+"Did you see this committee yesterday, Mr. Mathews?" asked the
+philanthropist.
+
+His secretary looked up.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"You recommend them then?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"For fifty thousand?"
+
+"For fifty thousand--yes, sir."
+
+"Their corresponding subscriptions are guaranteed?"
+
+"I went over the list carefully, Mr. Carter. The money is promised, and
+by responsible people."
+
+"Very well," said the philanthropist. "You may notify them, Mr.
+Mathews, that my fifty thousand will be available as the bills come in."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Old Mr. Carter laid down the letter he had been reading, and took up
+another. As he perused it his white eyebrows rose in irritation.
+
+"Mr. Mathews!" he snapped.
+
+"Yes, sir?"
+
+"You are careless, sir!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mr. Carter?" questioned the secretary, his face
+flushing.
+
+The old gentleman tapped impatiently the letter he held in his hand.
+"Do you pay no attention, Mr. Mathews, to my rule that NO personal
+letters containing appeals for aid are to reach me? How do you account
+for this, may I ask?"
+
+"I beg your pardon," said the secretary again. "You will see, Mr.
+Carter, that that letter is dated three weeks ago. I have had the
+woman's case carefully investigated. She is undoubtedly of good
+reputation, and undoubtedly in need; and as she speaks of her father as
+having associated with you, I thought perhaps you would care to see her
+letter."
+
+"A thousand worthless fellows associated with me," said the old man,
+harshly. "In a great factory, Mr. Mathews, a boy works alongside of the
+men he is put with; he does not pick and choose. I dare say this woman
+is telling the truth. What of it? You know that I regard my money as a
+public trust. Were my energy, my concentration, to be wasted by
+innumerable individual assaults, what would become of them? My fortune
+would slip through my fingers as unprofitably as sand. You understand,
+Mr. Mathews? Let me see no more individual letters. You know that Mr.
+Whittemore has full authority to deal with them. May I trouble you to
+ring? I am going out."
+
+A man appeared very promptly in answer to the bell.
+
+"Sniffen, my overcoat," said the philanthropist.
+
+"It is 'ere, sir," answered Sniffen, helping the thin old man into the
+great fur folds.
+
+"There is no word of the dog, I suppose, Sniffen?"
+
+"None, sir. The police was here again yesterday sir, but they said as
+'ow--"
+
+"The police!" The words were fierce with scorn. "Eight thousand
+incompetents!" He turned abruptly and went toward the door, where he
+halted a moment.
+
+"Mr. Mathews, since that woman's letter did reach me, I suppose I must
+pay for my carelessness--or yours. Send her--what does she say--four
+children?-- send her a hundred dollars. But, for my sake, send it
+anonymously. Write her that I pay no attention to such claims." He went
+out, and Sniffen closed the door behind him.
+
+"Takes losin' the little dog 'ard, don't he?" remarked Sniffen, sadly,
+to the secretary. "I'm afraid there ain't a chance of findin' 'im now.
+'E ain't been stole, nor 'e ain't been found, or they'd 'ave brung him
+back for the reward. 'E's been knocked on the 'ead, like as not. 'E
+wasn't much of a dog to look at, you see--just a pup, I'd call 'im. An'
+after 'e learned that trick of slippin' 'is collar off--well, I fancy
+Mr. Carter's seen the last of 'im. I do, indeed."
+
+Mr. Carter meanwhile was making his way slowly down the snowy avenue,
+upon his accustomed walk. The walk, however, was dull to-day, for
+Skiddles, his little terrier, was not with him to add interest and
+excitement. Mr. Carter had found Skiddles in the country a year and a
+half before. Skiddles, then a puppy, was at the time in a most
+undignified and undesirable position, stuck in a drain tile, and unable
+either to advance or to retreat. Mr. Carter had shoved him forward,
+after a heroic struggle, whereupon Skiddles had licked his hand.
+Something in the little dog's eye, or his action, had induced the rich
+philanthropist to bargain for him and buy him at a cost of half a
+dollar. Thereafter Skiddles became his daily companion, his chief
+distraction, and finally the apple of his eye.
+
+Skiddles was of no known parentage, hardly of any known breed, but he
+suited Mr. Carter. What, the millionaire reflected with a proud
+cynicism, were his own antecedents, if it came to that? But now
+Skiddles had disappeared.
+
+As Sniffen said, he had learned the trick of slipping free from his
+collar. One morning the great front doors had been left open for two
+minutes while the hallway was aired. Skiddles must have slipped down
+the marble steps unseen, and dodged round the corner. At all events, he
+had vanished, and although the whole police force of the city had been
+roused to secure his return, it was aroused in vain. And for three
+weeks, therefore, a small, straight, white bearded man in a fur
+overcoat had walked in mournful irritation alone.
+
+He stood upon a corner uncertainly. One way led to the park, and this
+he usually took; but to-day he did not want to go to the park--it was
+too reminiscent of Skiddles. He looked the other way. Down there, if
+one went far enough, lay "slums," and Mr. Carter hated the sight of
+slums; they always made him miserable and discontented. With all his
+money and his philanthropy, was there still necessity for such misery
+in the world? Worse still came the intrusive question at times: Had all
+his money anything to do with the creation of this misery? He owned no
+tenements; he paid good wages in every factory; he had given sums such
+as few men have given in the history of philanthropy. Still--there were
+the slums. However, the worst slums lay some distance off, and he
+finally turned his back on the park and walked on.
+
+It was the day before Christmas. You saw it in people's faces; you saw
+it in the holly wreaths that hung in windows; you saw it, even as you
+passed the splendid, forbidding houses on the avenue, in the green that
+here and there banked massive doors; but most of all, you saw it in the
+shops. Up here the shops were smallish, and chiefly of the provision
+variety, so there was no bewildering display of gifts; but there were
+Christmas-trees everywhere, of all sizes. It was astonishing how many
+people in that neighbourhood seemed to favour the old-fashioned idea of
+a tree.
+
+Mr. Carter looked at them with his irritation softening. If they made
+him feel a trifle more lonely, they allowed him to feel also a trifle
+less responsible--for, after all, it was a fairly happy world.
+
+At this moment he perceived a curious phenomenon a short distance
+before him--another Christmas-tree, but one which moved, apparently of
+its own volition, along the sidewalk. As Mr. Carter overtook it, he
+saw that it was borne, or dragged, rather by a small boy who wore a
+bright red flannel cap and mittens of the same peculiar material. As
+Mr. Carter looked down at him, he looked up at Mr. Carter, and spoke
+cheerfully:
+
+"Goin' my way, mister?"
+
+"Why," said the philanthropist, somewhat taken back, "I WAS!"
+
+"Mind draggin' this a little way?" asked the boy, confidently, "my
+hands is cold."
+
+"Won't you enjoy it more if you manage to take it home by yourself? "
+
+"Oh, it ain't for me!" said the boy.
+
+"Your employer," said the philanthropist, severely, "is certainly
+careless if he allows his trees to be delivered in this fashion."
+
+"I ain't deliverin' it, either," said the boy. "This is Bill's tree."
+
+"Who is Bill?"
+
+"He's a feller with a back that's no good."
+
+"Is he your brother?"
+
+"No. Take the tree a little way, will you, while I warm myself?"
+
+The philanthropist accepted the burden--he did not know why. The boy,
+released, ran forward, jumped up and down, slapped his red flannel
+mittens on his legs, and then ran back again. After repeating these
+manoeuvres two or three times, he returned to where the old gentleman
+stood holding the tree.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "Say, mister, you look like Santa Claus yourself,
+standin' by the tree, with your fur cap and your coat. I bet you don't
+have to run to keep warm, hey?" There was high admiration in his look.
+Suddenly his eyes sparkled with an inspiration.
+
+"Say, mister," he cried, "will you do something for me? Come in to
+Bill's--he lives only a block from here--and just let him see you. He's
+only a kid, and he'll think he's seen Santa Claus, sure. We can tell
+him you're so busy to-morrow you have to go to lots of places to-day.
+You won't have to give him anything. We're looking out for all that.
+Bill got hurt in the summer, and he's been in bed ever since. So we are
+giving him a Christmas--tree and all. He gets a bunch of things--an air
+gun, and a train that goes around when you wind her up. They're great!"
+
+"You boys are doing this?"
+
+"Well, it's our club at the settlement, and of course Miss Gray thought
+of it, and she's givin' Bill the train. Come along, mister."
+
+But Mr. Carter declined.
+
+"All right," said the boy. "I guess, what with Pete and all, Bill will
+have Christmas enough."
+
+"Who is Pete?"
+
+"Bill's dog. He's had him three weeks now--best little pup you ever
+saw!"
+
+A dog which Bill had had three weeks--and in a neighbourhood not a
+quarter of a mile from the avenue. It was three weeks since Skiddles
+had disappeared. That this dog was Skiddles was of course most
+improbable, and yet the philanthropist was ready to grasp at any clue
+which might lead to the lost terrier.
+
+"How did Bill get this dog?" he demanded.
+
+"I found him myself. Some kids had tin-canned him, and he came into our
+entry. He licked my hand, and then sat up on his hind legs. Somebody'd
+taught him that, you know. I thought right away, 'Here's a dog for
+Bill!' And I took him over there and fed him, and they kept him in
+Bill's room two or three days, so he shouldn't get scared again and run
+off; and now he wouldn't leave Bill for anybody. Of course, he ain't
+much of a dog, Pete ain't," he added "he's just a pup, but he's mighty
+friendly!"
+
+"Boy," said Mr. Carter, "I guess I'll just go round and"--he was about
+to add," have a look at that dog," but fearful of raising suspicion, he
+ended--"and see Bill."
+
+The tenements to which the boy led him were of brick, and reasonably
+clean. Nearly every window showed some sign of Christmas.
+
+The tree-bearer led the way into a dark hall, up one flight--Mr. Carter
+assisting with the tree--and down another dark hall, to a door, on
+which he knocked. A woman opened it.
+
+"Here's the tree!" said the boy, in a loud whisper. "Is Bill's door
+shut?"
+
+Mr. Carter stepped forward out of the darkness. "I beg your pardon,
+madam," he said. "I met this young man in the street, and he asked me
+to come here and see a playmate of his who is, I understand, an
+invalid. But if I am intruding--"
+
+"Come in," said the woman, heartily, throwing the door open. "Bill will
+be glad to see you, sir."
+
+The philanthropist stepped inside.
+
+The room was decently furnished and clean. There was a sewing machine
+in the corner, and in both the windows hung wreaths of holly. Between
+the windows was a cleared space, where evidently the tree, when
+decorated, was to stand.
+
+"Are all the things here?" eagerly demanded the tree-bearer.
+
+"They're all here, Jimmy," answered Mrs. Bailey. "The candy just came."
+
+"Say," cried the boy, pulling off his red flannel mittens to blow on
+his fingers, "won't it be great? But now Bill's got to see Santa Claus.
+I'll just go in and tell him, an' then, when I holler, mister, you come
+on, and pretend you're Santa Claus." And with incredible celerity the
+boy opened the door at the opposite end of the room and disappeared.
+
+"Madam," said Mr. Carter, in considerable embarrassment, "I must say
+one word. I am Mr. Carter, Mr. Allan Carter. You may have heard my
+name?"
+
+She shook her head. "No, sir."
+
+"I live not far from here on the avenue. Three weeks ago I lost a
+little dog that I valued very much I have had all the city searched
+since then, in vain. To-day I met the boy who has just left us. He
+informed me that three weeks ago he found a dog, which is at present in
+the possession of your son. I wonder--is it not just possible that this
+dog may be mine?"
+
+Mrs. Bailey smiled. "I guess not, Mr. Carter. The dog Jimmy found
+hadn't come off the avenue--not from the look of him. You know there's
+hundreds and hundreds of dogs without homes, sir. But I will say for
+this one, he has a kind of a way with him."
+
+"Hark!" said Mr. Carter.
+
+There was a rustling and a snuffing at the door at the far end of the
+room, a quick scratching of feet. Then:
+
+"Woof! woof! woof!" sharp and clear came happy impatient little barks.
+The philanthropist's eyes brightened. "Yes," he said, "that is the dog."
+
+"I doubt if it can be, sir," said Mrs. Bailey, deprecatingly.
+
+"Open the door, please," commanded the philanthropist, "and let us
+see." Mrs. Bailey complied. There was a quick jump, a tumbling rush,
+and Skiddles, the lost Skiddles, was in the philanthropist's arms. Mrs.
+Bailey shut the door with a troubled face.
+
+"I see it's your dog, sir," she said, "but I hope you won't be thinking
+that Jimmy or I--"
+
+"Madam," interrupted Mr. Carter, "I could not be so foolish. On the
+contrary, I owe you a thousand thanks."
+
+Mrs. Bailey looked more cheerful. "Poor little Billy!" she said. "It'll
+come hard on him, losing Pete just at Christmas time. But the boys are
+so good to him, I dare say he'll forget it."
+
+"Who are these boys?" inquired the philanthropist. "Isn't their
+action--somewhat unusual?"
+
+"It's Miss Gray's club at the settlement, sir," explained Mrs. Bailey.
+"Every Christmas they do this for somebody. It's not charity; Billy and
+I don't need charity, or take it. It's just friendliness. They're good
+boys."
+
+"I see," said the philanthropist. He was still wondering about it,
+though, when the door opened again, and Jimmy thrust out a face shining
+with anticipation.
+
+"All ready, mister!" he said. "Bill's waitin' for you!"
+
+"Jimmy," began Mrs. Bailey, about to explain, "the gentleman--"
+
+But the philanthropist held up his hand, interrupting her. "You'll let
+me see your son, Mrs. Bailey?" he asked, gently.
+
+"Why, certainly, sir."
+
+Mr. Carter put Skiddles down and walked slowly into the inner room. The
+bed stood with its side toward him. On it lay a small boy of seven,
+rigid of body, but with his arms free and his face lighted with joy.
+"Hello, Santa Claus!" he piped, in a voice shrill with excitement.
+
+"Hello, Bill!" answered the philanthropist, sedately.
+
+The boy turned his eyes on Jimmy.
+
+"He knows my name," he said, with glee.
+
+"He knows everybody's name," said Jimmy. "Now you tell him what you
+want, Bill, and he'll bring it to-morrow.
+
+"How would you like," said the philanthropist, reflectively, "an--an--"
+he hesitated, it seemed so incongruous with that stiff figure on the
+bed--"an airgun?"
+
+"I guess yes," said Bill, happily.
+
+"And a train of cars," broke in the impatient Jimmy, "that goes like
+sixty when you wind her?"
+
+"Hi!" said Bill.
+
+The philanthropist solemnly made notes of this.
+
+"How about," he remarked, inquiringly, "a tree?"
+
+"Honest? "said Bill.
+
+"I think it can be managed," said Santa Claus. He advanced to the
+bedside.
+
+"I'm glad to have seen you, Bill. You know how busy I am, but I hope--I
+hope to see you again."
+
+"Not till next year, of course, " warned Jimmy.
+
+"Not till then, of course," assented Santa Claus. "And now, good-bye."
+
+"You forgot to ask him if he'd been a good boy," suggested Jimmy.
+
+"I have," said Bill. "I've been fine. You ask mother."
+
+"She gives you--she gives you both a high character," said Santa Claus.
+"Good-bye again," and so saying he withdrew. Skiddles followed him out.
+The philanthropist closed the door of the bedroom, and then turned to
+Mrs. Bailey.
+
+She was regarding him with awestruck eyes.
+
+"Oh, sir," she said, "I know now who you are--the Mr. Carter that gives
+so much away to people!"
+
+The philanthropist nodded, deprecatingly.
+
+"Just so, Mrs. Bailey," he said. "And there is one gift--or loan
+rather--which I should like to make to you. I should like to leave the
+little dog with you till after the holidays. I'm afraid I'll have to
+claim him then; but if you'll keep him till after Christmas--and let me
+find, perhaps, another dog for Billy--I shall be much obliged."
+
+Again the door of the bedroom opened, and Jimmy emerged quietly.
+
+"Bill wants the pup," he explained.
+
+"Pete! Pete!" came the piping but happy voice from the inner room.
+
+Skiddles hesitated. Mr. Carter made no sign.
+
+"Pete! Pete!" shrilled the voice again.
+
+Slowly, very slowly, Skiddles turned and went back into the bedroom.
+
+"You see," said Mr. Carter, smiling, "he won't be too unhappy away from
+me, Mrs. Bailey."
+
+On his way home the philanthropist saw even more evidences of Christmas
+gaiety along the streets than before. He stepped out briskly, in spite
+of his sixty-eight years; he even hummed a little tune.
+
+When he reached the house on the avenue he found his secretary still at
+work.
+
+"Oh, by the way, Mr. Mathews," he said, "did you send that letter to
+the woman, saying I never paid attention to personal appeals? No? Then
+write her, please, enclosing my check for two hundred dollars, and wish
+her a very Merry Christmas in my name, will you? And hereafter will you
+always let me see such letters as that one--of course after careful
+investigation? I fancy perhaps I may have been too rigid in the past."
+
+"Certainly, sir," answered the bewildered secretary. He began fumbling
+excitedly for his note-book.
+
+"I found the little dog," continued the philanthropist. "You will be
+glad to know that."
+
+"You have found him?" cried the secretary. "Have you got him back, Mr.
+Carter? Where was he?"
+
+"He was--detained--on Oak Street, I believe," said the philanthropist.
+"No, I have not got him back yet. I have left him with a young boy till
+after the holidays."
+
+He settled himself to his papers, for philanthropists must toil even on
+the twenty-fourth of December, but the secretary shook his head in a
+daze. "I wonder what's happened?" he said to himself.
+
+
+
+XXV. THE FIRST CHRISTMAS-TREE
+
+BY LUCY WHEELOCK
+
+Two little children were sitting by the fire one cold winter's night.
+All at once they heard a timid knock at the door and one ran to open it.
+
+There, outside in the cold and darkness, stood a child with no shoes
+upon his feet and clad in thin, ragged garments. He was shivering with
+cold, and he asked to come in and warm himself.
+
+"Yes, come in," cried both the children. "You shall have our place by
+the fire. Come in."
+
+They drew the little stranger to their warm seat and shared their
+supper with him, and gave him their bed, while they slept on a hard
+bench.
+
+In the night they were awakened by strains of sweet music, and looking
+out, they saw a band of children in shining garments, approaching the
+house. They were playing on golden harps and the air was full of melody.
+
+Suddenly the Strange Child stood before them: no longer cold and
+ragged, but clad in silvery light.
+
+His soft voice said: "I was cold and you took Me in. I was hungry and
+you fed Me. I was tired and you gave Me your bed. I am the
+Christ-Child, wandering through the world to bring peace and happiness
+to all good children. As you have given to Me, so may this tree every
+year give rich fruit to you."
+
+So saying, He broke a branch from the fir-tree that grew near the door,
+and He planted it in the ground and disappeared. And the branch grew
+into a great tree, and every year it bore wonderful fruit for the kind
+children.
+
+
+
+XXVI. THE FIRST NEW ENGLAND CHRISTMAS*
+
+"From Stone and Fickett's "Every Day Life in the Colonies;" copyrighted
+1905, by D. C. Heath & Co. Used by permission.
+
+G. L. STONE AND M. G. FICKETT
+
+It was a warm and pleasant Saturday--that twenty-third of December,
+1620. The winter wind had blown itself away in the storm of the day
+before, and the air was clear and balmy. The people on board the
+Mayflower were glad of the pleasant day. It was three long months since
+they had started from Plymouth, in England, to seek a home across the
+ocean. Now they had come into a harbour that they named New Plymouth,
+in the country of New England.
+
+Other people called these voyagers Pilgrims, which means wanderers. A
+long while before, the Pilgrims had lived in England; later they made
+their home with the Dutch in Holland; finally they had said goodbye to
+their friends in Holland and in England, and had sailed away to America.
+
+There were only one hundred and two of the Pilgrims on the Mayflower,
+but they were brave and strong and full of hope. Now the Mayflower was
+the only home they had; yet if this weather lasted they might soon have
+warm log-cabins to live in. This very afternoon the men had gone ashore
+to cut down the large trees.
+
+The women of the Mayflower were busy, too. Some were spinning, some
+knitting, some sewing. It was so bright and pleasant that Mistress Rose
+Standish had taken out her knitting and had gone to sit a little while
+on deck. She was too weak to face rough weather, and she wanted to
+enjoy the warm sunshine and the clear salt air. By her side was
+Mistress Brewster, the minister's wife. Everybody loved Mistress
+Standish and Mistress Brewster, for neither of them ever spoke unkindly.
+
+The air on deck would have been warm even on a colder day, for in one
+corner a bright fire was burning. It would seem strange now, would it
+not, to see a fire on the deck of a vessel? But in those days, when the
+weather was pleasant, people on shipboard did their cooking on deck.
+
+The Pilgrims had no stoves, and Mistress Carver's maid had built this
+fire on a large hearth covered with sand. She had hung a great kettle
+on the crane over the fire, where the onion soup for supper was now
+simmering slowly.
+
+Near the fire sat a little girl, busily playing and singing to herself.
+Little Remember Allerton was only six years old, but she liked to be
+with Hannah, Mistress Carver's maid. This afternoon Remember had been
+watching Hannah build the fire and make the soup. Now the little girl
+was playing with the Indian arrowheads her father had brought her the
+night before. She was singing the words of the old psalm:
+
+"Shout to Jehovah, all the earth,
+Serve ye Jehovah with gladness; before
+Him bow with singing mirth."
+
+"Ah, child, methinks the children of Old England are singing different
+words from those to-day," spoke Hannah at length, with a faraway look
+in her eyes.
+
+"Why, Hannah? What songs are the little English children singing now?"
+questioned Remember in surprise.
+
+"It lacks but two days of Christmas, child, and in my old home
+everybody is singing Merry Christmas songs."
+
+"But thou hast not told me what is Christmas!' persisted the child.
+
+"Ah, me! Thou dost not know, 'tis true. Christmas, Remember, is the
+birthday of the Christ-Child, of Jesus, whom thou hast learned to
+love," Hannah answered softly.
+
+"But what makes the English children so happy then? And we are English,
+thou hast told me, Hannah. Why don't we keep Christmas, too?"
+
+"In sooth we are English, child. But the reason why we do not sing the
+Christmas carols or play the Christmas games makes a long, long story,
+Remember. Hannah cannot tell it so that little children will
+understand. Thou must ask some other, child."
+
+Hannah and the little girl were just then near the two women on the
+deck, and Remember said:
+
+"Mistress Brewster, Hannah sayeth she knoweth not how to tell why Love
+and Wrestling and Constance and the others do not sing the Christmas
+songs or play the Christmas games. But thou wilt tell me wilt thou
+not?" she added coaxingly.
+
+A sad look came into Mistress Brewster's eyes, and Mistress Standish
+looked grave, too. No one spoke for a few seconds, until Hannah said
+almost sharply:
+
+"Why could we not burn a Yule log Monday, and make some meal into
+little cakes for the children?"
+
+"Nay, Hannah," answered the gentle voice of Mistress Brewster. "Such
+are but vain shows and not for those of us who believe in holier
+things. But," she added, with a kind glance at little Remember,
+"wouldst thou like to know why we have left Old England and do not keep
+the Christmas Day? Thou canst not understand it all, child, and yet it
+may do thee no harm to hear the story. It may help thee to be a brave
+and happy little girl in the midst of our hard life."
+
+"Surely it can do no harm, Mistress Brewster," spoke Rose Standish,
+gently. "Remember is a little Pilgrim now, and she ought, methinks, to
+know something of the reason for our wandering. Come here, child, and
+sit by me, while good Mistress Brewster tells thee how cruel men have
+made us suffer. Then will I sing thee one of the Christmas carols."
+
+With these words she held out her hands to little Remember, who ran
+quickly to the side of Mistress Standish, and eagerly waited for the
+story to begin.
+
+"We have not always lived in Holland, Remember. Most of us were born in
+England, and England is the best country in the world. 'Tis a land to
+be proud of, Remember, though some of its rulers have been wicked and
+cruel.
+
+"Long before you were born, when your mother was a little girl, the
+English king said that everybody in the land ought to think as he
+thought, and go to a church like his. He said he would send us away
+from England if we did not do as he ordered. Now, we could not think as
+he did on holy matters, and it seemed wrong to us to obey him. So we
+decided to go to a country where we might worship as we pleased."
+
+"What became of that cruel king, Mistress Brewster?"
+
+"He ruleth England now. But thou must not think too hardly of him. He
+doth not understand, perhaps. Right will win some day, Remember, though
+there may be bloody war before peace cometh. And I thank God that we,
+at least, shall not be called on to live in the midst of the strife,"
+she went on, speaking more to herself than to the little girl.
+
+"We decided to go to Holland, out of the reach of the king. We were not
+sure whether it was best to move or not, but our hearts were set on
+God's ways. We trusted Him in whom we believed. Yes," she went on, "and
+shall we not keep on trusting Him?"
+
+And Rose Standish, remembering the little stock of food that was nearly
+gone, the disease that had come upon many of their number, and the five
+who had died that month, answered firmly: "Yes. He who has led us thus
+far will not leave us now."
+
+They were all silent a few seconds. Presently Remember said: "Then did
+ye go to Holland, Mistress Brewster?"
+
+"Yes," she said. "Our people all went over to Holland, where the Dutch
+folk live and the little Dutch children clatter about with their wooden
+shoes. There thou wast born, Remember, and my own children, and there
+we lived in love and peace."
+
+"And yet, we were not wholly happy. We could not talk well with the
+Dutch, and so we could not set right what was wrong among them. 'Twas
+so hard to earn money that many had to go back to England. And worst of
+all, Remember, we were afraid that you and little Bartholomew and Mary
+and Love and Wrestling and all the rest would not grow to be good girls
+and boys. And so we have come to this new country to teach our children
+to be pure and noble."
+
+After another silence Remember spoke again: "I thank thee, Mistress
+Brewster. And I will try to be a good girl. But thou didst not tell me
+about Christmas after all."
+
+"Nay, child, but now I will. There are long services on that day in
+every church where the king's friends go. But there are parts of these
+services which we cannot approve; and so we think it best not to follow
+the other customs that the king's friends observe on Christmas.
+
+"They trim their houses with mistletoe and holly so that everything
+looks gay and cheerful. Their other name for the Christmas time is the
+Yuletide, and the big log that is burned then is called the Yule log.
+The children like to sit around the hearth in front of the great,
+blazing Yule log, and listen to stories of long, long ago.
+
+"At Christmas there are great feasts in England, too. No one is allowed
+to go hungry, for the rich people on the day always send meat and cakes
+to the poor folk round about.
+
+"But we like to make all our days Christmas days, Remember. We try
+never to forget God's gifts to us, and they remind us always to be good
+to other people."
+
+"And the Christmas carols, Mistress Standish? What are they?"
+
+"On Christmas Eve and early on Christmas morning," Rose Standish
+answered, "little children go about from house to house, singing
+Christmas songs. 'Tis what I like best in all the Christmas cheer. And
+I promised to sing thee one, did I not?"
+
+Then Mistress Standish sang in her dear, sweet voice the quaint old
+English words:
+
+As Joseph was a-walking,
+He heard an angel sing:
+"This night shall be the birth-time
+Of Christ, the heavenly King.
+
+"He neither shall be born
+In housen nor in hall,
+Nor in the place of Paradise,
+But in an ox's stall.
+
+"He neither shall be clothed
+In purple nor in pall,
+But in the fair white linen
+That usen babies all.
+
+"He neither shall be rocked
+In silver nor in gold,
+But in a wooden manger
+That resteth in the mould."
+
+As Joseph was a-walking
+There did an angel sing,
+And Mary's child at midnight
+Was born to be our King.
+
+Then be ye glad, good people,
+This night of all the year,
+And light ye up your candles,
+For His star it shineth clear.
+
+Before the song was over, Hannah had come on deck again, and was
+listening eagerly. "I thank thee, Mistress Standish," she said, the
+tears filling her blue eyes. "'Tis long, indeed, since I have heard
+that song."
+
+"Would it be wrong for me to learn to sing those words, Mistress
+Standish?" gently questioned the little girl.
+
+"Nay, Remember, I trow not. The song shall be thy Christmas gift."
+
+Then Mistress Standish taught the little girl one verse after another
+of the sweet old carol, and it was not long before Remember could say
+it all.
+
+The next day was dull and cold, and on Monday, the twenty-fifth, the
+sky was still overcast. There was no bright Yule log in the Mayflower,
+and no holly trimmed the little cabin.
+
+The Pilgrims were true to the faith they loved. They held no special
+service. They made no gifts.
+
+Instead, they went again to the work of cutting the trees, and no one
+murmured at his hard lot.
+
+"We went on shore," one man wrote in his diary, "some to fell timber,
+some to saw, some to rive, and some to carry; so no man rested all that
+day."
+
+As for little Remember, she spent the day on board the Mayflower. She
+heard no one speak of England or sigh for the English home across the
+sea. But she did not forget Mistress Brewster's story; and more than
+once that day, as she was playing by herself, she fancied that she was
+in front of some English home, helping the English children sing their
+Christmas songs. And both Mistress Allerton and Mistress Standish, whom
+God was soon to call away from their earthly home, felt happier and
+stronger as they heard the little girl singing:
+
+He neither shall be born
+In housen nor in hall,
+Nor in the place of Paradise,
+But in an ox's stall.
+
+
+
+XXVI. THE CRATCHITS' CHRISTMAS DINNER
+
+(Adapted)
+
+CHARLES DICKENS
+
+Scrooge and the Ghost of Christmas Present stood in the city streets on
+Christmas morning, where (for the weather was severe) the people made a
+rough but brisk and not unpleasant kind of music, in scraping the snow
+from the pavement in front of their dwellings, and from the tops of
+their houses, whence it was mad delight to the boys to see it come
+plumping down into the road below, and splitting into artificial little
+snowstorms.
+
+The house fronts looked black enough, and the windows blacker,
+contrasting with the smooth white sheet of snow upon the roofs, and
+with the dirtier snow upon the ground, which last deposit had been
+ploughed up in deep furrows by the heavy wheels of carts and wagons;
+furrows that crossed and recrossed each other hundreds of times where
+the great streets branched off, and made intricate channels, hard to
+trace, in the thick yellow mud and icy water. The sky was gloomy, and
+the shortest streets were choked up with a dingy mist, half thawed,
+halF frozen, whose heavier particles descended in a shower of sooty
+atoms, as if all the chimneys in Great Britain had, by one consent,
+caught fire, and were blazing away to their dear heart's content. There
+was nothing very cheerful in the climate or the town, and yet was there
+an air of cheerfulness abroad that the dearest summer air and brightest
+summer sun might have endeavoured to diffuse in vain.
+
+For the people who were shovelling away on the housetops were jovial
+and full of glee, calling out to one another from the parapets, and now
+and then exchanging a facetious snowball--better-natured missile far
+than many a wordy jest--laughing heartily if it went right, and not
+less heartily if it went wrong. The poulterers' shops were still half
+open, and the fruiterers' were radiant in their glory. There were
+great, round, potbellied baskets of chestnuts, shaped like the
+waistcoats of jolly old gentlemen, lolling at the doors, and tumbling
+out into the street in their apoplectic opulence.
+
+There were ruddy, brown-faced, broad-girthed Spanish onions, shining in
+the fatness of their growth like Spanish friars, and winking, from
+their shelves, in wanton slyness at the girls as they went by, and
+glanced demurely at the hung-up mistletoe. There were pears and apples,
+clustering high in blooming pyramids; there were bunches of grapes,
+made, in the shop-keeper's benevolence, to dangle from conspicuous
+hooks, that people's mouths might water gratis as they passed; there
+were piles of filberts, mossy and brown, recalling, in their fragrance,
+ancient walks among the woods, and pleasant shufflings ankle deep
+through withered leaves; there were Norfolk biffins, squab and swarthy,
+setting off the yellow of the oranges and lemons, and, in the great
+compactness of their juicy persons, urgently entreating and beseeching
+to be carried home in paper bags and eaten after dinner. The very gold
+and silver fish, set forth among these choice fruits in a bowl, though
+members of a dull and stagnant-blooded race, appeared to know that
+there was something going on; and, to a fish, went gasping round and
+round their little world in slow and passionless excitement.
+
+The grocers'! oh, the grocers'! nearly closed, with perhaps two
+shutters down, or one; but through those gaps such glimpses! It was not
+alone that the scales descending on the counter made a merry sound, or
+that the twine and roller parted company so briskly, or that the
+canisters were rattled up and down like juggling tricks, or even that
+the blended scents of tea and coffee were so grateful to the nose, or
+even that the raisins were so plentiful and rare, the almonds so
+extremely white, the sticks of cinnamon so long and straight, the other
+spices so delicious, the candied fruits so caked and spotted with
+molten sugar as to make the coldest lookers-on feel faint, and
+subsequently bilious. Nor was it that the figs were moist and pulpy, or
+that the French plums blushed in modest tartness from their highly
+decorated boxes, or that everything was good to eat and in its
+Christmas dress; but the customers were all so hurried and so eager in
+the hopeful promise of the day that they tumbled up against each other
+at the door, crashing their wicker baskets wildly, and left their
+purchases upon the counter, and came running back to fetch them, and
+committed hundreds of the like mistakes, in the best humour possible;
+while the grocer and his people were so frank and fresh that the
+polished hearts with which they fastened their aprons behind might have
+been their own, worn outside for general inspection, and for Christmas
+daws to peck at, if they chose.
+
+But soon the steeples called good people all to church and chapel, and
+away they came, flocking through the streets in their best clothes, and
+with their gayest faces. And at the same time there emerged from scores
+of by-streets, lanes, and nameless turnings, innumerable people,
+carrying their dinners to the bakers' shops. The sight of these poor
+revellers appeared to interest the Spirit very much, for he stood, with
+Scrooge beside him, in a baker's doorway, and, taking off the covers as
+their bearers passed, sprinkled incense on their dinners from his
+torch. And it was a very uncommon kind of torch, for once or twice when
+there were angry words between some dinner-carriers who had jostled
+each other, he shed a few drops of water on them from it, and their
+good-humour was restored directly. For they said it was a shame to
+quarrel upon Christmas Day. And so it was! God love it, so it was!
+
+In time the bells ceased, and the bakers were shut up; and yet there
+was a genial shadowing forth of all these dinners, and the progress of
+their cooking, in the thawed blotch of wet above each baker's oven,
+where the pavement smoked as if its stones were cooking too.
+
+"Is there a peculiar flavour in what you sprinkle from your torch?"
+asked Scrooge.
+
+"There is. My own."
+
+"Would it apply to any kind of dinner on this day?" asked Scrooge.
+
+"To any kindly given. To a poor one most."
+
+"Why to a poor one most?" asked Scrooge.
+
+"Because it needs it most."
+
+They went on, invisible, as they had been before, into the suburbs of
+the town. It was a remarkable quality of the Ghost (which Scrooge had
+observed at the baker's) that, notwithstanding his gigantic size, he
+could accommodate himself to any place with ease; and that he stood
+beneath a low roof quite as gracefully, and like a supernatural
+creature, as it was possible he could have done in any lofty hall.
+
+And perhaps it was the pleasure the good Spirit had in showing off this
+power of his, or else it was his own kind, generous, hearty nature, and
+his sympathy with all poor men, that led him straight to Scrooge's
+clerk's; for there he went, and took Scrooge with him, holding to his
+robe; and on the threshold of the door the Spirit smiled, and stopped
+to bless Bob Cratchit's dwelling with the sprinklings of his torch.
+Think of that! Bob had but fifteen "bob" a week himself; he pocketed on
+Saturdays but fifteen copies of his Christian name; and yet the Ghost
+of Christmas Present blessed his four-roomed house!
+
+Then up rose Mrs. Cratchit, Cratchit's wife, dressed out but poorly in
+a twice-turned gown, but brave in ribbons, which are cheap and make a
+goodly show for sixpence; and she laid the cloth, assisted by Belinda
+Cratchit, second of her daughters, also brave in ribbons; while Master
+Peter Cratchit plunged a fork into the saucepan of potatoes, and
+getting the corners of his monstrous shirt-collar (Bob's private
+property, conferred upon his son and heir in honour of the day) into
+his mouth, rejoiced to find himself so gallantly attired, and yearned
+to show his linen in the fashionable parks. And now two smaller
+Cratchits, boy and girl, came tearing in, screaming that outside the
+baker's they had smelt the goose, and known it for their own, and,
+basking in luxurious thoughts of sage and onion, these young Cratchits
+danced about the table, and exalted Master Peter Cratchit to the skies,
+while he (not proud, although his collar nearly choked him) blew the
+fire, until the slow potatoes, bubbling up, knocked loudly at the
+saucepan lid to be let out and peeled.
+
+"What has ever got your precious father, then?" said Mrs. Cratchit.
+"And your brother, Tiny Tim? And Martha warn't as late last Christmas
+Day by half an hour!"
+
+"Here's Martha, mother!" said a girl, appearing as she spoke.
+
+"Here's Martha, mother!" cried the two young Cratchits. "Hurrah!
+There's such a goose, Martha!"
+
+"Why, bless your heart alive, my dear, how late you are!" said Mrs.
+Cratchit, kissing her a dozen times, and taking off her shawl and
+bonnet for her with officious zeal.
+
+"We'd a deal of work to finish up last night," replied the girl, "and
+had to clear away this morning, mother!"
+
+"Well, never mind so long as you are come," said Mrs. Cratchit. "Sit ye
+down before the fire, my dear, and have a warm, Lord bless ye!"
+
+"No, no! There's father coming!" cried the two young Cratchits, who
+were everywhere at once.
+
+"Hide, Martha, hide!"
+
+So Martha hid herself, and in came little Bob, the father, with at
+least three feet of comforter, exclusive of the fringe, hanging down
+before him, and his threadbare clothes darned up and brushed, to look
+seasonable; and Tiny Tim upon his shoulder. Alas for Tiny Tim, he bore
+a little crutch, and had his limbs supported by an iron frame!
+
+"Why, where's our Martha?" cried Bob Cratchit, looking around.
+
+"Not coming," said Mrs. Cratchit.
+
+"Not coming?" said Bob, with a sudden declension in his high spirits;
+for he had been Tim's blood horse all the way from the church, and had
+come home rampant. "Not coming upon Christmas Day?"
+
+Martha didn't like to see him disappointed, if it were only in joke; so
+she came out prematurely from behind the closet door, and ran into his
+arms, while the two young Cratchits hustled Tiny Tim, and bore him off
+into the wash-house, that he might hear the pudding singing in the
+copper.
+
+"And how did little Tim behave?" asked Mrs. Cratchit, when she had
+rallied Bob on his credulity, and Bob had hugged his daughter to his
+heart's content.
+
+"As good as gold," said Bob, "and better. Somehow he gets thoughtful,
+sitting by himself so much, and thinks the strangest things you ever
+heard. He told me, coming home, that he hoped the people saw him in the
+church, because he was a cripple, and it might be pleasant to them to
+remember, upon Christmas Day, who made lame beggars walk, and blind men
+see."
+
+Bob's voice was tremulous when he told them this, and trembled more
+when he said that Tiny Tim was growing strong and hearty.
+
+His active little crutch was heard upon the floor, and back came Tiny
+Tim before another word was spoken, escorted by his brother and sister
+to his stool beside the fire; and while Bob, turning up his cuffs--as
+if, poor fellow, they were capable of being made more
+shabby--compounded some hot mixture in a jug with gin and lemons, and
+stirred it round and round, and put it on the hob to simmer, Master
+Peter and the two ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the goose,
+with which they soon returned in high procession.
+
+Such a bustle ensued that you might have thought a goose the rarest of
+all birds--a feathered phenomenon, to which a black swan was a matter
+of course--and in truth it was something very like it in that house.
+Mrs. Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little saucepan)
+hissing hot; Master Peter mashed the potatoes with incredible vigour;
+Miss Belinda sweetened up the apple-sauce; Martha dusted the hot
+plates; Bob took Tiny Tim beside him in a tiny corner at the table; the
+two young Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting
+themselves, and, mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into
+their mouths, lest they should shriek for goose before their turn came
+to be helped. At last the dishes were set on. and grace was said. It
+was succeeded by a breathless pause, as Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly
+all along the carving knife, prepared to plunge it into the breast; but
+when she did, and when the long expected gush of stuffing issued forth,
+one murmur of delight arose all round the board, and even Tiny Tim,
+excited by the two young Cratchits, beat on the table with the handle
+of his knife, and feebly cried, "Hurrah!"
+
+There never was such a goose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was
+such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness,
+were the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by apple-sauce and
+mashed potatoes, it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family;
+indeed, as Mrs. Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small
+atom of a bone upon the dish), they hadn't ate it all at last! Yet
+every one had had enough, and the youngest Cratchits in particular were
+steeped in sage and onion to the eyebrows! But now, the plates being
+changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs. Cratchit left the room alone--too nervous
+to bear witnesses--to take the pudding up, and bring it in.
+
+Suppose it should not be done enough? Suppose it should break in
+turning out? Suppose somebody should have got over the wall of the
+backyard and stolen it, while they were merry with the goose--a
+supposition at which the two young Cratchits became livid! All sorts of
+horrors were supposed.
+
+Hallo! A great deal of steam! The pudding was out of the copper. A
+smell like a washing-day! That was the cloth. A smell like an eating
+house and a pastry-cook's next door to each other, with a laundress's
+next door to that! That was the pudding! In half a minute Mrs. Cratchit
+entered--flushed, but smiling proudly--with the pudding, like a
+speckled cannon-ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half of
+half-a-quartern of ignited brandy, and bedight with Christmas holly
+stuck into the top.
+
+Oh, a wonderful pudding! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly, too, that he
+regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since
+their marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that, now the weight was off her
+mind, she would confess she had her doubts about the quantity of flour.
+Everybody had something to say about it, but nobody thought or said it
+was at all a small pudding for a large family. It would have been flat
+heresy to do so. Any Cratchit would have blushed to hint at such a
+thing.
+
+At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the hearth
+swept, and the fire made up. The compound in the jug being tasted, and
+considered perfect, tipples and oranges were put upon the table, and a
+shovelful of chestnuts on the fire. Then all the Cratchit family drew
+round the hearth in what Bob Cratchit called a circle, meaning half a
+one; and at Bob Cratchit's elbow stood the family display of glass--two
+tumblers and a custard-cup without a handle.
+
+These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as golden
+goblets would have done; and Bob served it out with beaming looks,
+while the chestnuts on the fire sputtered and cracked noisily. Then Bob
+proposed:
+
+"A Merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us!"
+
+Which all the family reechoed.
+
+"God bless us every one!" said Tiny Tim, the last of all.
+
+
+
+XXVII. CHRISTMAS IN SEVENTEEN SEVENTY-SIX*
+
+*From "A Last Century Maid and Other Stories for Children," by A.H.W.
+Lippincott, 1895.
+
+ANNE HOLLINGSWORTH WHARTON
+
+"On Christmas day in Seventy-six,
+Our gallant troops with bayonets fixed,
+To Trenton marched away."
+
+Children, have any of you ever thought of what little people like you
+were doing in this country more than a hundred years ago, when the
+cruel tide of war swept over its bosom? From many homes the fathers
+were absent, fighting bravely for the liberty which we now enjoy, while
+the mothers no less valiantly struggled against hardships and
+discomforts in order to keep a home for their children, whom you only
+know as your great-grandfathers and great-grandmothers, dignified
+gentlemen and beautiful ladies, whose painted portraits hang upon the
+walls in some of your homes. Merry, romping children they were in those
+far-off times, yet their bright faces must have looked grave sometimes,
+when they heard the grown people talk of the great things that were
+happening around them. Some of these little people never forgot the
+wonderful events of which they heard, and afterward related them to
+their children and grandchildren, which accounts for some of the
+interesting stories which you may still hear, if you are good children.
+
+The Christmas story that I have to tell you is about a boy and girl who
+lived in Bordentown, New Jersey. The father of these children was a
+soldier in General Washington's army, which was encamped a few miles
+north of Trenton, on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River.
+Bordentown, as you can see by looking on your map, if you have not
+hidden them all away for the holidays, is about seven miles south of
+Trenton, where fifteen hundred Hessians and a troop of British light
+horse were holding the town. Thus you see that the British, in force,
+were between Washington's army and Bordentown, besides which there were
+some British and Hessian troops in the very town. All this seriously
+interfered with Captain Tracy's going home to eat his Christmas dinner
+with his wife and children. Kitty and Harry Tracy, who had not lived
+long enough to see many wars, could not imagine such a thing as
+Christmas without their father, and had busied themselves for weeks in
+making everything ready to have a merry time with him. Kitty, who loved
+to play quite as much as any frolicsome Kitty of to-day, had spent all
+her spare time in knitting a pair of thick woollen stockings, which
+seems a wonderful feat for a little girl only eight years old to
+perform! Can you not see her sitting by the great chimney-place, filled
+with its roaring, crackling logs, in her quaint, short-waisted dress,
+knitting away steadily, and puckering up her rosy, dimpled face over
+the strange twists and turns of that old stocking? I can see her, and I
+can also hear her sweet voice as she chatters away to her mother about
+"how 'sprised papa will be to find that his little girl can knit like a
+grown-up woman," while Harry spreads out on the hearth a goodly store
+of shellbarks that he has gathered and is keeping for his share of the
+'sprise.
+
+"What if he shouldn't come?" asks Harry, suddenly.
+
+"Oh, he'll come! Papa never stays away on Christmas," says Kitty,
+looking up into her mother's face for an echo to her words. Instead she
+sees something very like tears in her mother's eyes.
+
+"Oh, mamma, don't you think he'll come?"
+
+"He will come if he possibly can," says Mrs. Tracy; "and if he cannot,
+we will keep Christmas whenever dear papa does come home."
+
+"It won't be half so nice," said Kitty, "nothing's so nice as REALLY
+Christmas, and how's Kriss Kringle going to know about it if we change
+the day?"
+
+"We'll let him come just the same, and if he brings anything for papa
+we can put it away for him."
+
+This plan, still, seemed a poor one to Miss Kitty, who went to her bed
+in a sober mood that night, and was heard telling her dear dollie,
+Martha Washington. that "wars were mis'able, and that when she married
+she should have a man who kept a candy-shop for a husband, and not a
+soldier--no, Martha, not even if he's as nice as papa!" As Martha made
+no objection to this little arrangement, being an obedient child, they
+were both soon fast asleep. The days of that cold winter of 1776 wore
+on; so cold it was that the sufferings of the soldiers were great,
+their bleeding feet often leaving marks on the pure white snow over
+which they marched. As Christmas drew near there was a feeling among
+the patriots that some blow was about to be struck; but what it was,
+and from whence they knew not; and, better than all, the British had no
+idea that any strong blow could come from Washington's army, weak and
+out of heart, as they thought, after being chased through Jersey by
+Cornwallis.
+
+Mrs. Tracy looked anxiously each day for news of the husband and father
+only a few miles away, yet so separated by the river and the enemy's
+troops that they seemed like a hundred. Christmas Eve came, but brought
+with it few rejoicings. The hearts of the people were too sad to be
+taken up with merrymaking, although the Hessian soldiers in the town,
+good-natured Germans, who only fought the Americans because they were
+paid for it, gave themselves up to the feasting and revelry.
+
+"Shall we hang up our stockings?" asked Kitty, in rather a doleful
+voice.
+
+"Yes," said her mother, "Santa Claus won't forget you, I am sure,
+although he has been kept pretty busy looking after the soldiers this
+winter."
+
+"Which side is he on?" asked Harry.
+
+"The right side, of course," said Mrs. Tracy, which was the most
+sensible answer she could possibly have given. So:
+
+"The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,
+In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there."
+
+Two little rosy faces lay fast asleep upon the pillow when the good old
+soul came dashing over the roof about one o'clock, and after filling
+each stocking with red apples, and leaving a cornucopia of sugar-plums
+for each child, he turned for a moment to look at the sleeping faces,
+for St. Nicholas has a tender spot in his great big heart for a
+soldier's children. Then, remembering many other small folks waiting
+for him all over the land, he sprang up the chimney and was away in a
+trice.
+
+Santa Claus, in the form of Mrs. Tracy's farmer brother, brought her a
+splendid turkey; but because the Hessians were uncommonly fond of
+turkey, it came hidden under a load of wood. Harry was very fond of
+turkey, too, as well as of all other good things; but when his mother
+said, "It's such a fine bird, it seems too bad to eat it without
+father," Harry cried out, "Yes, keep it for papa!" and Kitty, joining
+in the chorus, the vote was unanimous, and the turkey was hung away to
+await the return of the good soldier, although it seemed strange, as
+Kitty told Martha Washington, "to have no papa and no turkey on
+Christmas Day."
+
+The day passed and night came, cold with a steady fall of rain and
+sleet. Kitty prayed that her "dear papa might not be out in the storm,
+and that he might come home and wear his beautiful blue stockings";
+"And eat his turkey," said Harry's sleepy voice; after which they were
+soon in the land of dreams. Toward morning the good people in
+Bordentown were suddenly aroused by firing in the distance, which
+became more and more distinct as the day wore on. There was great
+excitement in the town; men and women gathered together in little
+groups in the streets to wonder what it was all about, and neighbours
+came dropping into Mrs. Tracy's parlour, all day long, one after the
+other, to say what they thought of the firing. In the evening there
+came a body of Hessians flying into the town, to say that General
+Washington had surprised the British at Trenton, early that morning,
+and completely routed them, which so frightened the Hessians in
+Bordentown that they left without the slightest ceremony.
+
+It was a joyful hour to the good town people when the red-jackets
+turned their backs on them, thinking every moment that the patriot army
+would be after them. Indeed, it seemed as if wonders would never cease
+that day, for while rejoicings were still loud, over the departure of
+the enemy, there came a knock at Mrs. Tracy's door, and while she was
+wondering whether she dared open it, it was pushed ajar, and a tall
+soldier entered. What a scream of delight greeted that soldier, and how
+Kitty and Harry danced about him and clung to his knees, while Mrs.
+Tracy drew him toward the warm blaze, and helped him off with his damp
+cloak!
+
+Cold and tired Captain Tracy was, after a night's march in the streets
+and a day's fighting; but he was not too weary to smile at the dear
+faces around him, or to pat Kitty's head when she brought his warm
+stockings and would put them on the tired feet, herself.
+
+Suddenly there was a sharp, quick bark outside the door. "What's that?"
+cried Harry
+
+"Oh, I forgot. Open the door. Here, Fido, Fido!"
+
+Into the room there sprang a beautiful little King Charles spaniel,
+white, with tan spots, and ears of the longest, softest, and silkiest.
+
+"What a little dear!" exclaimed Kitty; "where did it come from?"
+
+"From the battle of Trenton," said her father. "His poor master was
+shot. After the red-coats had turned their backs, and I was hurrying
+along one of the streets where the fight had been the fiercest, I heard
+a low groan, and, turning, saw a British officer lying among a number
+of slain. I raised his head; he begged for some water, which I brought
+him, and bending down my ear I heard him whisper, 'Dying--last
+battle--say a prayer.' He tried to follow me in the words of a prayer,
+and then, taking my hand, laid it on something soft and warm, nestling
+close up to his breast--it was this little dog. The gentleman--for he
+was a real gentleman--gasped out, 'Take care of my poor Fido;
+good-night,' and was gone. It was as much as I could do to get the
+little creature away from his dead master; he clung to him as if he
+loved him better than life. You'll take care of him, won't you,
+children? I brought him home to you, for a Christmas present."
+
+"Pretty little Fido," said Kitty, taking the soft, curly creature in
+her arms; "I think it's the best present in the world, and to-morrow is
+to be real Christmas, because you are home, papa."
+
+"And we'll eat the turkey," said Harry, "and shellbarks, lots of them,
+that I saved for you. What a good time we'll have! And oh, papa, don't
+go to war any more, but stay at home, with mother and Kitty and Fido
+and me."
+
+"What would become of our country if we should all do that, my little
+man? It was a good day's work that we did this Christmas, getting the
+army all across the river so quickly and quietly that we surprised the
+enemy, and gained a victory, with the loss of few men."
+
+Thus it was that some of the good people of 1776 spent their Christmas,
+that their children and grandchildren might spend many of them as
+citizens of a free nation.
+
+
+
+XXVIII. CHRISTMAS UNDER THE SNOW*
+
+*From "Kristy's Queer Christmas," Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904.
+
+OLIVE THORNE MILLER
+
+It was just before Christmas, and Mr. Barnes was starting for the
+nearest village. The family were out at the door to see him start, and
+give him the last charges.
+
+"Don't forget the Christmas dinner, papa," said Willie.
+
+'"Specially the chickens for the pie!" put in Nora.
+
+"An' the waisins," piped up little Tot, standing on tiptoe to give papa
+a good-bye kiss.
+
+"I hate to have you go, George," said Mrs. Barnes anxiously. "It looks
+to me like a storm."
+
+"Oh, I guess it won't be much," said Mr. Barnes lightly; "and the
+youngsters must have their Christmas dinner, you know."
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Barnes, "remember this, George: if there is a bad
+storm don't try to come back. Stay in the village till it is over. We
+can get along alone for a few days, can't we, Willie?" turning to the
+boy who was giving the last touches to the harness of old Tim, the
+horse.
+
+"Oh, yes! Papa, I can take care of mamma," said Willie earnestly.
+
+"And get up the Christmas dinner out of nothing?" asked papa, smiling.
+
+"I don't know," said Willie, hesitating, as he remembered the proposed
+dinner, in which he felt a deep interest.
+
+"What could you do for the chicken pie?" went on papa with a roguish
+look in his eye, "or the plum-pudding?"
+
+"Or the waisins?" broke in Tot anxiously.
+
+"Tot has set her heart on the raisins," said papa, tossing the small
+maiden up higher than his head, and dropping her all laughing on the
+door-step, "and Tot shall have them sure, if papa can find them in S--.
+Now good-bye, all! Willie, remember to take care of mamma, and I depend
+on you to get up a Christmas dinner if I don't get back. Now, wife,
+don't worry!" were his last words as the faithful old horse started
+down the road.
+
+Mrs. Barnes turned one more glance to the west, where a low, heavy bank
+of clouds was slowly rising, and went into the little house to attend
+to her morning duties.
+
+"Willie," she said, when they were all in the snug little log-cabin in
+which they lived, "I'm sure there's going to be a storm, and it may be
+snow. You had better prepare enough wood for two or three days; Nora
+will help bring it in."
+
+"Me, too!" said grave little Tot.
+
+"Yes, Tot may help too," said mamma.
+
+This simple little home was a busy place, and soon every one was hard
+at work. It was late in the afternoon before the pile of wood, which
+had been steadily growing all day, was high enough to satisfy Willie,
+for now there was no doubt about the coming storm, and it would
+probably bring snow; no one could guess how much, in that country of
+heavy storms.
+
+"I wish the village was not so far off, so that papa could get back
+to-night," said Willie, as he came in with his last load.
+
+Mrs. Barnes glanced out of the window. Broad scattering snowflakes were
+silently falling; the advance guard, she felt them to be, of a numerous
+host.
+
+"So do I," she replied anxiously, "or that he did not have to come over
+that dreadful prairie, where it is so easy to get lost."
+
+"But old Tim knows the way, even in the dark," said Willie proudly. "I
+believe Tim knows more'n some folks."
+
+"No doubt he does, about the way home," said mamma, "and we won't worry
+about papa, but have our supper and go to bed. That'll make the time
+seem short."
+
+The meal was soon eaten and cleared away, the fire carefully covered up
+on the hearth, and the whole little family quietly in bed. Then the
+storm, which had been making ready all day, came down upon them in
+earnest.
+
+The bleak wind howled around the corners, the white flakes by millions
+and millions came with it, and hurled themselves upon that house. In
+fact, that poor little cabin alone on the wide prairie seemed to be the
+object of their sport. They sifted through the cracks in the walls,
+around the windows, and under the door, and made pretty little drifts
+on the floor. They piled up against it outside, covered the steps, and
+then the door, and then the windows, and then the roof, and at last
+buried it completely out of sight under the soft, white mass.
+
+And all the time the mother and her three children lay snugly covered
+up in their beds fast asleep, and knew nothing about it.
+
+The night passed away and morning came, but no light broke through the
+windows of the cabin. Mrs. Barnes woke at the usual time, but finding
+it still dark and perfectly quiet outside, she concluded that the storm
+was over, and with a sigh of relief turned over to sleep again. About
+eight o'clock, however, she could sleep no more, and became wide awake
+enough to think the darkness strange. At that moment the clock struck,
+and the truth flashed over her.
+
+Being buried under snow is no uncommon thing on the wide prairies, and
+since they had wood and cornmeal in plenty, she would not have been
+much alarmed if her husband had been home. But snow deep enough to bury
+them must cover up all landmarks, and she knew her husband would not
+rest till he had found them. To get lost on the trackless prairie was
+fearfully easy, and to suffer and die almost in sight of home was no
+unusual thing, and was her one dread in living there.
+
+A few moments she lay quiet in bed, to calm herself and get control of
+her own anxieties before she spoke to the children.
+
+"Willie," she said at last, "are you awake?"
+
+"Yes, mamma," said Willie; "I've been awake ever so long; isn't it most
+morning?"
+
+"Willie," said the mother quietly, "we mustn't be frightened, but I
+think--I'm afraid--we are snowed in."
+
+Willie bounded to his feet and ran to the door. "Don't open it!" said
+mamma hastily; "the snow may fall in. Light a candle and look out the
+window."
+
+In a moment the flickering rays of the candle fell upon the window.
+Willie drew back the curtain. Snow was tightly banked up against it to
+the top.
+
+"Why, mamma," he exclaimed, "so we are! and how can papa find us? and
+what shall we do?"
+
+"We must do the best we can," said mamma, in a voice which she tried to
+make steady, "and trust that it isn't very deep, and that Tim and papa
+will find us, and dig us out."
+
+By this time the little girls were awake and inclined to be very much
+frightened, but mamma was calm now, and Willie was brave and hopeful.
+They all dressed, and Willie started the fire. The smoke refused to
+rise, but puffed out into the room, and Mrs. Barnes knew that if the
+chimney were closed they would probably suffocate, if they did not
+starve or freeze.
+
+The smoke in a few minutes choked them, and, seeing that something must
+be done, she put the two girls, well wrapped in blankets, into the shed
+outside the back door, closed the door to keep out the smoke, and then
+went with Willie to the low attic, where a scuttle door opened onto the
+roof.
+
+"We must try," she said, "to get it open without letting in too much
+snow, and see if we can manage to clear the chimney."
+
+"I can reach the chimney from the scuttle with a shovel," said Willie.
+"I often have with a stick."
+
+After much labour, and several small avalanches of snow, the scuttle
+was opened far enough for Willie to stand on the top round of the short
+ladder, and beat a hole through to the light, which was only a foot
+above. He then shovelled off the top of the chimney, which was
+ornamented with a big round cushion of snow, and then by beating and
+shovelling he was able to clear the door, which he opened wide, and
+Mrs. Barnes came up on the ladder to look out. Dreary indeed was the
+scene! Nothing but snow as far as the eye could reach, and flakes still
+falling, though lightly.
+
+The storm was evidently almost over, but the sky was gray and overcast.
+
+They closed the door, went down, and soon had a fire, hoping that the
+smoke would guide somebody to them.
+
+Breakfast was taken by candle-light, dinner--in time--in the same way,
+and supper passed with no sound from the outside world.
+
+Many times Willie and mamma went to the scuttle door to see if any one
+was in sight, but not a shadow broke the broad expanse of white over
+which toward night the sun shone. Of course there were no signs of the
+roads, for through so deep snow none could be broken, and until the sun
+and frost should form a crust on top there was little hope of their
+being reached.
+
+The second morning broke, and Willie hurried up to his post of lookout
+the first thing. No person was in sight, but he found a light crust on
+the snow, and the first thing he noticed was a few half-starved birds
+trying in vain to pick up something to eat. They looked weak and almost
+exhausted, and a thought struck Willie.
+
+It was hard to keep up the courage of the little household. Nora had
+openly lamented that to-night was Christmas Eve, and no Christmas
+dinner to be had. Tot had grown very tearful about her "waisins," and
+Mrs. Barnes, though she tried to keep up heart, had become very pale
+and silent.
+
+Willie, though he felt unbounded faith in papa, and especially in Tim,
+found it hard to suppress his own complaints when he remembered that
+Christmas would probably be passed in the same dismal way, with fears
+for papa added to their own misery.
+
+The wood, too, was getting low, and mamma dared not let the fire go
+out, as that was the only sign of their existence to anybody; and
+though she did not speak of it, Willie knew, too, that they had not
+many candles, and in two days at farthest they would be left in the
+dark.
+
+The thought that struck Willie pleased him greatly, and he was sure it
+would cheer up the rest. He made his plans, and went to work to carry
+them out without saying anything about it.
+
+He brought out of a corner of the attic an old boxtrap he had used in
+the summer to catch birds and small animals, set it carefully on the
+snow, and scattered crumbs of corn-bread to attract the birds.
+
+In half an hour he went up again, and found to his delight he had
+caught bigger game--a poor rabbit which had come from no one knows
+where over the crust to find food.
+
+This gave Willie a new idea; they could save their Christmas dinner
+after all; rabbits made very nice pies.
+
+Poor Bunny was quietly laid to rest, and the trap set again. This time
+another rabbit was caught, perhaps the mate of the first. This was the
+last of the rabbits, but the next catch was a couple of snowbirds.
+These Willie carefully placed in a corner of the attic, using the trap
+for a cage, and giving them plenty of food and water.
+
+When the girls were fast asleep, with tears on their cheeks for the
+dreadful Christmas they were going to have, Willie told mamma about his
+plans. Mamma was pale and weak with anxiety, and his news first made
+her laugh and then cry. But after a few moments given to her long
+pent-up tears, she felt much better and entered into his plans heartily.
+
+The two captives up in the attic were to be Christmas presents to the
+girls, and the rabbits were to make the long anticipated pie. As for
+plum-pudding, of course that couldn't be thought of.
+
+"But don't you think, mamma," said Willie eagerly, "that you could make
+some sort of a cake out of meal, and wouldn't hickory nuts be good in
+it? You know I have some left up in the attic, and I might crack them
+softly up there, and don't you think they would be good?" he concluded
+anxiously.
+
+"Well, perhaps so," said mamma, anxious to please him and help him in
+his generous plans. "I can try. If I only had some eggs--but seems to
+me I have heard that snow beaten into cake would make it light--and
+there's snow enough, I'm sure," she added with a faint smile, the first
+Willie had seen for three days.
+
+The smile alone he felt to be a great achievement, and he crept
+carefully up the ladder, cracked the nuts to the last one, brought them
+down, and mamma picked the meats out, while he dressed the two rabbits
+which had come so opportunely to be their Christmas dinner. "Wish you
+Merry Christmas!" he called out to Nora and Tot when they waked. "See
+what Santa Claus has brought you!"
+
+Before they had time to remember what a sorry Christmas it was to be,
+they received their presents, a live bird, for each, a bird that was
+never to be kept in a cage, but fly about the house till summer came,
+and then to go away if it wished.
+
+Pets were scarce on the prairie, and the girls were delighted. Nothing
+papa could have brought them would have given them so much happiness.
+
+They thought no more of the dinner, but hurried to dress themselves and
+feed the birds, which were quite tame from hunger and weariness. But
+after a while they saw preparations for dinner, too. Mamma made a crust
+and lined a deep dish--the chicken pie dish--and then she brought a
+mysterious something out of the cupboard, all cut up so that it looked
+as if it might be chicken, and put it in the dish with other things,
+and then she tucked them all under a thick crust, and set it down in a
+tin oven before the fire to bake. And that was not all. She got out
+some more cornmeal, and made a batter, and put in some sugar and
+something else which she slipped in from a bowl, and which looked in
+the batter something like raisins; and at the last moment Willie
+brought her a cup of snow and she hastily beat it into the cake, or
+pudding, whichever you might call it, while the children laughed at the
+idea of making a cake out of snow. This went into the same oven and
+pretty soon it rose up light and showed a beautiful brown crust, while
+the pie was steaming through little fork holes on top, and sending out
+most delicious odours.
+
+At the last minute, when the table was set and everything ready to come
+up, Willie ran up to look out of the scuttle, as he had every hour of
+daylight since they were buried. In a moment came a wild shout down the
+ladder.
+
+"They're coming! Hurrah for old Tim!"
+
+Mamma rushed up and looked out, and saw--to be sure--old Tim slowly
+coming along over the crust, drawing after him a wood sled on which
+were two men.
+
+"It's papa!" shouted Willie, waving his arms to attract their attention.
+
+"Willie!" came back over the snow in tones of agony. "Is that you? Are
+all well?"
+
+"All well!" shouted Willie, "and just going to have our Christmas
+dinner."
+
+"Dinner?" echoed papa, who was now nearer.
+
+"Where is the house, then?"
+
+"Oh, down here!" said Willie, "under the snow; but we're all right,
+only we mustn't let the plum-pudding spoil."
+
+Looking into the attic, Willie found that mamma had fainted away, and
+this news brought to her aid papa and the other man, who proved to be a
+good friend who had come to help.
+
+Tim was tied to the chimney, whose thread of smoke had guided them
+home, and all went down into the dark room. Mrs. Barnes soon recovered,
+and while Willie dished up the smoking dinner, stories were told on
+both sides.
+
+Mr. Barnes had been trying to get through the snow and to find them all
+the time, but until the last night had made a stiff crust he had been
+unable to do so. Then Mrs. Barnes told her story, winding up with the
+account of Willie's Christmas dinner. "And if it hadn't been for his
+keeping up our hearts I don't know what would have become of us," she
+said at last.
+
+"Well, my son," said papa, "you did take care of mamma, and get up a
+dinner out of nothing, sure enough; and now we'll eat the dinner, which
+I am sure is delicious."
+
+So it proved to be; even the cake, or pudding, which Tot christened
+snow pudding, was voted very nice, and the hickory nuts as good as
+raisins. When they had finished, Mr. Barnes brought in his packages,
+gave Tot and the rest some "sure-enough waisins," and added his
+Christmas presents to Willie's; but though all were overjoyed, nothing
+was quite so nice in their eyes as the two live birds.
+
+After dinner the two men and Willie dug out passages from the doors,
+through the snow, which had wasted a good deal, uncovered the windows,
+and made a slanting way to his shed for old Tim. Then for two or three
+days Willie made tunnels and little rooms under the snow, and for two
+weeks, while the snow lasted, Nora and Tot had fine times in the little
+snow playhouses.
+
+
+
+XXIX. MR. BLUFF'S EXPERIENCES OF HOLIDAYS*
+
+* Reprinted by permission of Moffat, Yird & Co., from Christmas. R.H.
+Schauffler, Editor.
+
+OLIVER BELL BUNCE
+
+"I hate holidays," said Bachelor Bluff to me, with some little
+irritation, on a Christmas a few years ago. Then he paused an instant,
+after which he resumed: "I don't mean to say that I hate to see people
+enjoying themselves. But I hate holidays, nevertheless, because to me
+they are always the saddest and dreariest days of the year. I shudder
+at the name of holiday. I dread the approach of one, and thank heaven
+when it is over. I pass through, on a holiday, the most horrible
+sensations, the bitterest feelings, the most oppressive melancholy; in
+fact, I am not myself at holiday-times."
+
+"Very strange," I ventured to interpose.
+
+"A plague on it!" said he, almost with violence. "I'm not inhuman. I
+don't wish anybody harm. I'm glad people can enjoy themselves. But I
+hate holidays all the same. You see, this is the reason: I am a
+bachelor; I am without kin; I am in a place that did not know me at
+birth. And so, when holidays come around, there is no place anywhere
+for me. I have friends, of course; I don't think I've been a very
+sulky, shut-in, reticent fellow; and there is many a board that has a
+place for me--but not at Christmastime. At Christmas, the dinner is a
+family gathering; and I've no family. There is such a gathering of
+kindred on this occasion, such a reunion of family folk, that there is
+no place for a friend, even if the friend be liked. Christmas, with all
+its kindliness and charity and good-will, is, after all, deuced
+selfish. Each little set gathers within its own circle; and people like
+me, with no particular circle, are left in the lurch. So you see, on
+the day of all the days in the year that my heart pines for good cheer,
+I'm without an invitation.
+
+"Oh, it's because I pine for good cheer," said the bachelor, sharply,
+interrupting my attempt to speak, "that I hate holidays. If I were an
+infernally selfish fellow, I wouldn't hate holidays. I'd go off and
+have some fun all to myself, somewhere or somehow. But, you see, I hate
+to be in the dark when all the rest of the world is in light. I hate
+holidays because I ought to be merry and happy on holidays and can't.
+
+"Don't tell me," he cried, stopping the word that was on my lips; "I
+tell you, I hate holidays. The shops look merry, do they, with their
+bright toys and their green branches? The pantomime is crowded with
+merry hearts, is it? The circus and the show are brimful of fun and
+laughter, are they? Well, they all make me miserable. I haven't any
+pretty-faced girls or bright-eyed boys to take to the circus or the
+show, and all the nice girls and fine boys of my acquaintance have
+their uncles or their grand-dads or their cousins to take them to those
+places; so, if I go, I must go alone. But I don't go. I can't bear the
+chill of seeing everybody happy, and knowing myself so lonely and
+desolate. Confound it, sir, I've too much heart to be happy under such
+circumstances! I'm too humane, sir!
+And the result is, I hate holidays. It's miserable to be out, and yet I
+can't stay at home, for I get thinking of Christmases past. I can't
+read--the shadow of my heart makes it impossible. I can't walk--for I
+see nothing but pictures through the bright windows, and happy groups
+of pleasure-seekers. The fact is, I've nothing to do but to hate
+holidays. But will you not dine with me?"
+
+Of course, I had to plead engagement with my own family circle, and I
+couldn't quite invite Mr. Bluff home that day, when Cousin Charles and
+his wife, and Sister Susan and her daughter, and three of my wife's kin
+had come in from the country, all to make a merry Christmas with us. I
+felt sorry, but it was quite impossible, so I wished Mr. Bluff a "Merry
+Christmas," and hurried homeward through the cold and nipping air.
+
+I did not meet Bachelor Bluff again until a week after Christmas of the
+next year, when I learned some strange particulars of what occurred to
+him after our parting on the occasion just described. I will let
+Bachelor Bluff tell his adventure for himself.
+
+"I went to church," said he, "and was as sad there as everywhere else.
+Of course, the evergreens were pretty, and the music fine; but all
+around me were happy groups of people, who could scarcely keep down
+merry Christmas long enough to do reverence to sacred Christmas. And
+nobody was alone but me. Every happy paterfamilias in his pew
+tantalized me, and the whole atmosphere of the place seemed so much
+better suited to every one else than me that I came away hating
+holidays worse than ever. Then I went to the play, and sat down in a
+box all alone by myself. Everybody seemed on the best of terms with
+everybody else, and jokes and banter passed from one to another with
+the most good-natured freedom. Everybody but me was in a little group
+of friends. I was the only person in the whole theatre that was alone.
+And then there was such clapping of hands, and roars of laughter, and
+shouts of delight at all the fun going on upon the stage, all of which
+was rendered doubly enjoyable by everybody having somebody with whom to
+share and interchange the pleasure, that my loneliness got simply
+unbearable, and I hated holidays infinitely worse than ever.
+
+"By five o'clock the holiday became so intolerable that I said I'd go
+and get a dinner. The best dinner the town could provide. A sumptuous
+dinner for one. A dinner with many courses, with wines of the finest
+brands, with bright lights, with a cheerful fire, with every condition
+of comfort--and I'd see if I couldn't for once extract a little
+pleasure out of a holiday!
+
+"The handsome dining-room at the club looked bright, but it was empty.
+Who dines at this club on Christmas but lonely bachelors? There was a
+flutter of surprise when I ordered a dinner, and the few attendants
+were, no doubt, glad of something to break the monotony of the hours.
+
+"My dinner was well served. The spacious room looked lonely; but the
+white, snowy cloths, the rich window hangings, the warm tints of the
+walls, the sparkle of the fire in the steel grate, gave the room an air
+of elegance and cheerfulness; and then the table at which I dined was
+close to the window, and through the partly drawn curtains were visible
+centres of lonely, cold streets, with bright lights from many a window,
+it is true, but there was a storm, and snow began whirling through the
+street. I let my imagination paint the streets as cold and dreary as it
+would, just to extract a little pleasure by way of contrast from the
+brilliant room of which I was apparently sole master.
+
+"I dined well, and recalled in fancy old, youthful Christmases, and
+pledged mentally many an old friend, and my melancholy was mellowing
+into a low, sad undertone, when, just as I was raising a glass of wine
+to my lips, I was startled by a picture at the windowpane. It was a
+pale, wild, haggard face, in a great cloud of black hair, pressed
+against the glass. As I looked it vanished. With a strange thrill at my
+heart, which my lips mocked with a derisive sneer, I finished the wine
+and set down the glass. It was, of course, only a beggar-girl that had
+crept up to the window and stole a glance at the bright scene within;
+but still the pale face troubled me a little, and threw a fresh shadow
+on my heart. I filled my glass once more with wine, and was again about
+to drink, when the face reappeared at the window. It was so white, so
+thin, with eyes so large, wild, and hungry-looking, and the black,
+unkempt hair, into which the snow had drifted, formed so strange and
+weird a frame to the picture, that I was fairly startled. Replacing,
+untasted, the liquor on the table, I rose and went close to the pane.
+The face had vanished, and I could see no object within many feet of
+the window. The storm had increased, and the snow was driving in wild
+gusts through the streets, which were empty, save here and there a
+hurrying wayfarer. The whole scene was cold, wild, and desolate, and I
+could not repress a keen thrill of sympathy for the child, whoever it
+was, whose only Christmas was to watch, in cold and storm, the rich
+banquet ungratefully enjoyed by the lonely bachelor. I resumed my place
+at the table; but the dinner was finished, and the wine had no further
+relish. I was haunted by the vision at the window, and began, with an
+unreasonable irritation at the interruption, to repeat with fresh
+warmth my detestation of holidays. One couldn't even dine alone on a
+holiday with any sort of comfort, I declared. On holidays one was
+tormented by too much pleasure on one side, and too much misery on the
+other. And then, I said, hunting for justification of my dislike of the
+day, 'How many other people are, like me, made miserable by seeing the
+fullness of enjoyment others possess!'
+
+"Oh, yes, I know," sarcastically replied the bachelor to a comment of
+mine; "of course, all magnanimous, generous, and noble-souled people
+delight in seeing other people made happy, and are quite content to
+accept this vicarious felicity. But I, you see, and this dear little
+girl--"
+
+"Dear little girl?"
+
+"Oh, I forgot," said Bachelor Bluff, blushing a little, in spite of a
+desperate effort not to do so. "I didn't tell you. Well, it was so
+absurd! I kept thinking, thinking of the pale, haggard, lonely little
+girl on the cold and desolate side of the window-pane, and the
+over-fed, discontented, lonely old bachelor on the splendid side of the
+window-pane, and I didn't get much happier thinking about it, I can
+assure you. I drank glass after glass of the wine--not that I enjoyed
+its flavour any more, but mechanically, as it were, and with a sort of
+hope thereby to drown unpleasant reminders. I tried to attribute my
+annoyance in the matter to holidays, and so denounced them more
+vehemently than ever. I rose once in a while and went to the window,
+but could see no one to whom the pale face could have belonged.
+
+"At last, in no very amiable mood, I got up, put on my wrappers, and
+went out; and the first thing I did was to run against a small figure
+crouching in the doorway. A face looked up quickly at the rough
+encounter, and I saw the pale features of the window-pane. I was very
+irritated and angry, and spoke harshly; and then, all at once, I am
+sure I don't know how it happened, but it flashed upon me that I, of
+all men, had no right to utter a harsh word to one oppressed with so
+wretched a Christmas as this poor creature was. I couldn't say another
+word, but began feeling in my pocket for some money, and then I asked a
+question or two, and then I don't quite know how it came about--isn't
+it very warm here?" exclaimed Bachelor Bluff, rising and walking about,
+and wiping the perspiration from his brow.
+
+"Well, you see," he resumed nervously, "it was very absurd, but I did
+believe the girl's story--the old story, you know, of privation and
+suffering, and just thought I'd go home with the brat and see if what
+she said was all true. And then I remembered that all the shops were
+closed, and not a purchase could be made. I went back and persuaded the
+steward to put up for me a hamper of provisions, which the half-wild
+little youngster helped me carry through the snow, dancing with delight
+all the way. And isn't this enough?"
+
+"Not a bit, Mr. Bluff. I must have the whole story."
+
+"I declare," said Bachelor Bluff, "there's no whole story to tell. A
+widow with children in great need, that was what I found; and they had
+a feast that night, and a little money to buy them a load of wood and a
+garment or two the next day; and they were all so bright, and so merry,
+and so thankful, and so good, that, when I got home that night, I was
+mightily amazed that, instead of going to bed sour at holidays, I was
+in a state of great contentment in regard to holidays. In fact, I was
+really merry. I whistled. I sang. I do believe I cut a caper. The poor
+wretches I had left had been so merry over their unlooked-for Christmas
+banquet that their spirits infected mine.
+
+"And then I got thinking again. Of course, holidays had been miserable
+to me, I said. What right had a well-to-do, lonely old bachelor
+hovering wistfully in the vicinity of happy circles, when all about
+there were so many people as lonely as he, and yet oppressed with want?
+'Good gracious!' I exclaimed, 'to think of a man complaining of
+loneliness with thousands of wretches yearning for his help and
+comfort, with endless opportunities for work and company, with hundreds
+of pleasant and delightful things to do. Just to think of it! It put me
+in a great fury at myself to think of it. I tried pretty hard to escape
+from myself and began inventing excuses and all that sort of thing, but
+I rigidly forced myself to look squarely at my own conduct. And then I
+reconciled my confidence by declaring that, if ever after that day I
+hated a holiday again, might my holidays end at once and forever!
+
+"Did I go and see my proteges again? What a question! Why--well, no
+matter. If the widow is comfortable now, it is because she has found a
+way to earn without difficulty enough for her few wants. That's no
+fault of mine. I would have done more for her, but she wouldn't let me.
+But just let me tell you about New Year's--the New-Year's day that
+followed the Christmas I've been describing. It was lucky for me there
+was another holiday only a week off. Bless you! I had so much to do
+that day I was completely bewildered, and the hours weren't half long
+enough. I did make a few social calls, but then I hurried them over;
+and then hastened to my little girl, whose face had already caught a
+touch of colour; and she, looking quite handsome in her new frock and
+her ribbons, took me to other poor folk, and,--well, that's about the
+whole story.
+
+"Oh, as to the next Christmas. Well, I didn't dine alone, as you may
+guess. It was up three stairs, that's true, and there was none of that
+elegance that marked the dinner of the year before; but it was merry,
+and happy, and bright; it was a generous, honest, hearty Christmas
+dinner, that it was, although I do wish the widow hadn't talked so much
+about the mysterious way a turkey had been left at her door the night
+before. And Molly--that's the little girl--and I had a rousing
+appetite. We went to church early; then we had been down to the Five
+Points to carry the poor outcasts there something for their Christmas
+dinner; in fact, we had done wonders of work, and Molly was in high
+spirits, and so the Christmas dinner was a great success.
+
+"Dear me, sir, no! Just as you say. Holidays are not in the least
+wearisome any more. Plague on it! When a man tells me now that he hates
+holidays, I find myself getting very wroth. I pin him by the buttonhole
+at once, and tell him my experience. The fact is, if I were at dinner
+on a holiday, and anybody should ask me for a sentiment, I should say,
+'God bless all holidays!'"
+
+
+
+MASTER SANDY'S SNAPDRAGON*
+
+* This story was first published in Wide Awake, vol. 26.
+
+ELDRIDGE S. BROOKS
+
+There was just enough of December in the air and of May in the sky to
+make the Yuletide of the year of grace 1611 a time of pleasure and
+delight to every boy and girl in "Merrie England" from the princely
+children in stately Whitehall to the humblest pot-boy and scullery-girl
+in the hall of the country squire.
+
+And in the palace at Whitehall even the cares of state gave place to
+the sports of this happy season. For that "Most High and Mighty Prince
+James, by the Grace of God King of Great Britain, France, and
+Ireland"--as you will find him styled in your copy of the Old Version,
+or what is known as "King James' Bible"--loved the Christmas
+festivities, cranky, crabbed, and crusty though he was. And this year
+he felt especially gracious. For now, first since the terror of the Guy
+Fawkes plot which had come to naught full seven years before, did the
+timid king feel secure on his throne; the translation of the Bible, on
+which so many learned men had been for years engaged, had just been
+issued from the press of Master Robert Baker; and, lastly, much profit
+was coming into the royal treasury from the new lands in the Indies and
+across the sea.
+
+So it was to be a Merry Christmas in the palace at Whitehall. Great
+were the preparations for its celebration, and the Lord Henry, the
+handsome, wise and popular young Prince of Wales, whom men hoped some
+day to hail as King Henry of England, was to take part in a jolly
+Christmas mask, in which, too, even the little Prince Charles was to
+perform for the edification of the court when the mask should be shown
+in the new and gorgeous banqueting hall of the palace.
+
+And to-night it was Christmas Eve. The Little Prince Charles and the
+Princess Elizabeth could scarcely wait for the morrow, so impatient
+were they to see all the grand devisings that were in store for them.
+So good Master Sandy, under-tutor to the Prince, proposed to wise
+Archie Armstrong, the King's jester, that they play at snapdragon for
+the children in the royal nursery.
+
+The Prince and Princess clamoured for the promised game at once, and
+soon the flicker from the flaming bow lighted up the darkened nursery
+as, around the witchlike caldron, they watched their opportunity to
+snatch the lucky raisin. The room rang so loudly with fun and laughter
+that even the King himself, big of head and rickety of legs, shambled
+in good-humouredly to join in the sport that was giving so much
+pleasure to the royal boy he so dearly loved, and whom he always called
+"Baby Charles."
+
+But what was snapdragon, you ask? A simple enough game, but dear for
+many and many a year to English children. A broad and shallow bowl or
+dish half-filled with blazing brandy, at the bottom of which lay
+numerous toothsome raisins--a rare tidbit in those days--and one of
+these, pierced with a gold button, was known as the "lucky raisin."
+Then, as the flaming brandy flickered and darted from the yawning bowl,
+even as did the flaming poison tongues of the cruel dragon that St.
+George of England conquered so valiantly, each one of the revellers
+sought to snatch a raisin from the burning bowl without singe or scar.
+And he who drew out the lucky raisin was winner and champion, and could
+claim a boon or reward for his superior skill. Rather a dangerous game,
+perhaps it seems, but folks were rough players in those old days and
+laughed at a burn or a bruise, taking them as part of the fun.
+
+So around Master Sandy's Snapdragon danced the royal children, and even
+the King himself condescended to dip his royal hands in the flames,
+while Archie Armstrong the jester cried out: "Now fair and softly,
+brother Jamie, fair and softly, man. There's ne'er a plum in all that
+plucking so worth the burning as there was in Signer Guy Fawkes'
+snapdragon when ye proved not to be his lucky raisin." For King's
+jesters were privileged characters in the old days, and jolly Archie
+Armstrong could joke with the King on this Guy Fawkes scare as none
+other dared.
+
+And still no one brought out the lucky raisin, though the Princess
+Elizabeth's fair arm was scotched and good Master Sandy's peaked beard
+was singed, and my Lord Montacute had dropped his signet ring in the
+fiery dragon's mouth, and even His Gracious Majesty the King was
+nursing one of his royal fingers.
+
+But just as through the parted arras came young Henry, Prince of Wales,
+little Prince Charles gave a boyish shout of triumph.
+
+"Hey, huzzoy!" he cried, "'tis mine, 'tis mine! Look, Archie; see, dear
+dad; I have the lucky raisin! A boon, good folk; a boon for me!" And
+the excited lad held aloft the lucky raisin in which gleamed the golden
+button.
+
+"Rarely caught, young York," cried Prince Henry, clapping his hands in
+applause. "I came in right in good time, did I not, to give you luck,
+little brother? And now, lad, what is the boon to be?"
+
+And King James, greatly pleased at whatever his dear "Baby Charles"
+said or did, echoed his eldest son's question. "Ay lad, 'twas a rare
+good dip; so crave your boon. What does my bonny boy desire?"
+
+But the boy hesitated. What was there that a royal prince, indulged as
+was he, could wish for or desire? He really could think of nothing, and
+crossing quickly to his elder brother, whom, boy-fashion, he adored, he
+whispered, "Ud's fish, Hal, what DO I want?"
+
+Prince Henry placed his hand upon his brother's shoulder and looked
+smilingly into his questioning eyes, and all within the room glanced
+for a moment at the two lads standing thus.
+
+And they were well worth looking at. Prince Henry of Wales, tall,
+comely, open-faced, and well-built, a noble lad of eighteen who called
+to men's minds, so "rare Ben Jonson" says, the memory of the hero of
+Agincourt, that other
+
+ thunderbolt of war,
+Harry the Fifth, to whom in face you are
+So like, as Fate would have you so in worth;
+
+Prince Charles, royal Duke of York, Knight of the Garter and of the
+Bath, fair in face and form, an active, manly, daring boy of
+eleven--the princely brothers made so fair a sight that the King,
+jealous and suspicious of Prince Henry's popularity though he was,
+looked now upon them both with loving eyes. But how those loving eyes
+would have grown dim with tears could this fickle, selfish, yet
+indulgent father have foreseen the sad and bitter fates of both his
+handsome boys.
+
+But, fortunately, such foreknowledge is not for fathers or mothers,
+whatever their rank or station, and King James's only thought was one
+of pride in the two brave lads now whispering together in secret
+confidence. And into this he speedily broke.
+
+"Come, come, Baby Charles," he cried, "stand no more parleying, but out
+and over with the boon ye crave as guerdon for your lucky plum. Ud's
+fish, lad, out with it; we'd get it for ye though it did rain jeddert
+staves here in Whitehall."
+
+"So please your Grace," said the little Prince, bowing low with true
+courtier-like grace and suavity, "I will, with your permission, crave
+my boon as a Christmas favor at wassail time in to-morrow's revels."
+
+And then he passed from the chamber arm-in-arm with his elder brother,
+while the King, chuckling greatly over the lad's show of courtliness
+and ceremony, went into a learned discussion with my lord of Montacute
+and Master Sandy as to the origin of the snapdragon, which he, with his
+customary assumption of deep learning, declared was "but a modern
+paraphrase, my lord, of the fable which telleth how Dan Hercules did
+kill the flaming dragon of Hesperia and did then, with the apple of
+that famous orchard, make a fiery dish of burning apple brandy which he
+did name 'snapdragon.'"
+
+For King James VI of Scotland and I of England was, you see, something
+too much of what men call a pendant.
+
+Christmas morning rose bright and glorious. A light hoarfrost whitened
+the ground and the keen December air nipped the noses as it hurried the
+song-notes of the score of little waifs who, gathered beneath the
+windows of the big palace, sung for the happy awaking of the young
+Prince Charles their Christmas carol and their Christmas noel:
+
+A child this day is born,
+A child of great renown;
+Most worthy of a sceptre,
+A sceptre and a crown.
+
+Noel, noel, noel,
+Noel sing we may
+Because the King of all Kings
+Was born this blessed day.
+
+These tidings shepherds heard
+In field watching their fold,
+Were by an angel unto them
+At night revealed and told.
+
+Noel, noel, noel,
+Noel sing we may
+Because the King of all Kings
+Was born this blessed day.
+
+He brought unto them tidings
+Of gladness and of mirth,
+Which cometh to all people by
+This holy infant's birth.
+
+Noel, noel, noel,
+Noel sing we may
+Because the King of all Kings
+Was born this blessed day.
+
+The "blessed day" wore on. Gifts and sports filled the happy hours. In
+the royal banqueting hall the Christmas dinner was royally set and
+served, and King and Queen and Princes, with attendant nobles and
+holiday guests, partook of the strong dishes of those old days of
+hearty appetites.
+
+"A shield of brawn with mustard, boyl'd capon, a chine of beef roasted,
+a neat's tongue roasted, a pig roasted, chewets baked, goose, swan and
+turkey roasted, a haunch of venison roasted, a pasty of venison, a kid
+stuffed with pudding, an olive-pye, capons and dowsets, sallats and
+fricases"--all these and much more, with strong beer and spiced ale to
+wash the dinner down, crowned the royal board, while the great boar's
+head and the Christmas pie, borne in with great parade, were placed on
+the table joyously decked with holly and rosemary and bay. It was a
+great ceremony--this bringing in of the boar's head. First came an
+attendant, so the old record tells us,
+
+"attyr'd in a horseman's coat with a Boares-speare in his hande; next
+to him another huntsman in greene, with a bloody faulchion drawne; next
+to him two pages in tafatye sarcenet, each of them with a messe of
+mustard; next to whom came hee that carried the Boareshead, crosst with
+a greene silk scarfe, by which hunge the empty scabbard of the
+faulchion which was carried before him."
+
+After the dinner--the boar's head having been wrestled for by some of
+the royal yeomen--came the wassail or health-drinking. Then the King
+said:
+
+"And now, Baby Charles, let us hear the boon ye were to crave of us at
+wassail as the guerdon for the holder of the lucky raisin in Master
+Sandy's snapdragon."
+
+And the little eleven-year-old Prince stood up before the company in
+all his brave attire, glanced at his brother Prince Henry, and then
+facing the King said boldly:
+
+"I pray you, my father and my Hege, grant me as the boon I ask--the
+freeing of Walter Raleigh."
+
+At this altogether startling and unlooked-for request, amazement and
+consternation appeared on the faces around the royal banqueting board,
+and the King put down his untasted tankard of spiced ale, while
+surprise, doubt and anger quickly crossed the royal face. For Sir
+Walter Raleigh, the favourite of Queen Elizabeth, the lord-proprietor
+and colonizer of the American colonies, and the sworn foe to Spain, had
+been now close prisoner in the Tower for more than nine years, hated
+and yet dreaded by this fickle King James, who dared not put him to
+death for fear of the people to whom the name and valour of Raleigh
+were dear.
+
+"Hoot, chiel!" cried the King at length, spluttering wrathfully in the
+broadest of his native Scotch, as was his habit when angered or
+surprised. "Ye reckless fou, wha hae put ye to sic a jackanape trick?
+Dinna ye ken that sic a boon is nae for a laddie like you to meddle
+wi'? Wha hae put ye to't, I say?"
+
+But ere the young Prince could reply, the stately and solemn-faced
+ambassador of Spain, the Count of Gondemar, arose in the place of
+honour he filled as a guest of the King.
+
+"My Lord King," he said, "I beg your majesty to bear in memory your
+pledge to my gracious master King Philip of Spain, that naught save
+grave cause should lead you to liberate from just durance that arch
+enemy of Spain, the Lord Raleigh."
+
+"But you did promise me, my lord," said Prince Charles, hastily, "and
+you have told me that the royal pledge is not to be lightly broken."
+
+"Ma certie, lad," said King James, "ye maunay learn that there is nae
+rule wi'out its aicciptions." And then he added, "A pledge to a boy in
+play, like to ours of yester-eve, Baby Charles, is not to be kept when
+matters of state conflict." Then turning to the Spanish ambassador, he
+said: "Rest content, my lord count. This recreant Raleigh shall not yet
+be loosed."
+
+"But, my liege," still persisted the boy prince, "my brother Hal did
+say--"
+
+The wrath of the King burst out afresh.
+
+"Ay, said you so? Brother Hal, indeed!" he cried.
+
+"I thought the wind blew from that quarter," and he angrily faced his
+eldest son. "So, sirrah; 'twas you that did urge this foolish boy to
+work your traitorous purpose in such coward guise!"
+
+"My liege," said Prince Henry, rising in his place, "traitor and coward
+are words I may not calmly hear even from my father and my king. You
+wrong me foully when you use them thus. For though I do bethink me that
+the Tower is but a sorry cage in which to keep so grandly plumed a bird
+as my Lord of Raleigh, I did but seek--"
+
+"Ay, you did but seek to curry favour with the craven crowd," burst out
+the now thoroughly angry King, always jealous of the popularity of this
+brave young Prince of Wales. "And am I, sirrah, to be badgered and
+browbeaten in my own palace by such a thriftless ne'er-do-weel as you,
+ungrateful boy, who seekest to gain preference with the people in this
+realm before your liege lord the King? Quit my presence, sirrah, and
+that instanter, ere that I do send you to spend your Christmas where
+your great-grandfather, King Henry, bade his astrologer spend his--in
+the Tower, there to keep company with your fitting comrade, Raleigh,
+the traitor!"
+
+Without a word in reply to this outburst, with a son's submission, but
+with a royal dignity, Prince Henry bent his head before his father's
+decree and withdrew from the table, followed by the gentlemen of his
+household.
+
+But ere he could reach the arrased doorway, Prince Charles sprang to
+his side and cried, valiantly: "Nay then, if he goes so do I! 'Twas
+surely but a Christmas joke and of my own devising. Spoil not our
+revel, my gracious liege and father, on this of all the year's
+red-letter days, by turning my thoughtless frolic into such bitter
+threatening. I did but seek to test the worth of Master Sandy's lucky
+raisin by asking for as wildly great a boon as might be thought upon.
+Brother Hal too, did but give me his advising in joke even as I did
+seek it. None here, my royal father, would brave your sovereign
+displeasure by any unknightly or unloyal scheme."
+
+The gentle and dignified words of the young prince--for Charles Stuart,
+though despicable as a king, was ever loving and loyal as a
+friend--were as oil upon the troubled waters. The ruffled temper of the
+ambassador of Spain--who in after years really did work Raleigh's
+downfall and death--gave place to courtly bows, and the King's quick
+anger melted away before the dearly loved voice of his favourite son.
+
+"Nay, resume your place, son Hal," he said, "and you, gentlemen all,
+resume your seats, I pray. I too did but jest as did Baby Charles
+here--a sad young wag, I fear me, is this same young Prince."
+
+But as, after the wassail, came the Christmas mask, in which both
+Princes bore their parts, Prince Charles said to Archie Armstrong, the
+King's jester:
+
+"Faith, good Archie; now is Master Sandy's snapdragon but a false beast
+withal, and his lucky raisin is but an evil fruit that pays not for the
+plucking."
+
+And wise old Archie only wagged his head and answered, "Odd zooks,
+Cousin Charlie, Christmas raisins are not the only fruit that burns the
+fingers in the plucking, and mayhap you too may live to know that a
+mettlesome horse never stumbleth but when he is reined."
+
+Poor "Cousin Charlie" did not then understand the full meaning of the
+wise old jester's words, but he did live to learn their full intent.
+For when, in after years, his people sought to curb his tyrannies with
+a revolt that ended only with his death upon the scaffold, outside this
+very banqueting house at Whitehall, Charles Stuart learned all too late
+that a "mettlesome horse" needed sometimes to be "reined," and heard,
+too late as well, the stern declaration of the Commons of England that
+"no chief officer might presume for the future to contrive the
+enslaving and destruction of the nation with impunity."
+
+But though many a merry and many a happy day had the young Prince
+Charles before the dark tragedy of his sad and sorry manhood, he lost
+all faith in lucky raisins. Not for three years did Sir Walter
+Raleigh--whom both the Princes secretly admired--obtain release from
+the Tower, and ere three more years were past his head fell as a
+forfeit to the stern demands of Spain. And Prince Charles often
+declared that naught indeed could come from meddling with luck saving
+burnt fingers, "even," he said, "as came to me that profitless night
+when I sought a boon for snatching the lucky raisin from good Master
+Sandy's Christmas snapdragon."
+
+
+
+XXXI. A CHRISTMAS FAIRY*
+
+* Reprinted with the permission of the Henry Altemus Company.
+
+JOHN STRANGE WINTER
+
+It was getting very near to Christmas time, and all the boys at Miss
+Ware's school were talking about going home for the holidays.
+
+"I shall go to the Christmas festival," said Bertie Fellows," and my
+mother will have a party, and my Aunt will give another. Oh! I shall
+have a splendid time at home."
+
+"My Uncle Bob is going to give me a pair of skates," remarked Harry
+Wadham.
+
+"My father is going to give me a bicycle," put in George Alderson.
+
+"Will you bring it back to school with you?" asked Harry.
+
+"Oh! yes, if Miss Ware doesn't say no."
+
+"Well, Tom," cried Bertie, "where are you going to spend your holidays?"
+
+"I am going to stay here," answered Tom in a very forlorn voice.
+
+"Here--at school--oh, dear! Why can't you go home?"
+
+"I can't go home to India," answered Tom.
+
+"Nobody said you could. But haven't you any relatives anywhere?"
+
+Tom shook his head. "Only in India," he said sadly.
+
+"Poor fellow! That's hard luck for you. I'll tell you what it is, boys,
+if I couldn't go home for the holidays, especially at Christmas--I
+think I would just sit down and die."
+
+"Oh, no, you wouldn't," said Tom. "You would get ever so homesick, but
+you wouldn't die. You would just get through somehow, and hope
+something would happen before next year, or that some kind fairy
+would--"
+
+"There are no fairies nowadays," said Bertie.
+
+"See here, Tom, I'll write and ask my mother to invite you to go home
+with me for the holidays."
+
+"Will you really?"
+
+"Yes, I will. And if she says yes, we shall have such a splendid time.
+We live in London, you know, and have lots of parties and fun."
+
+"Perhaps she will say no?" suggested poor little Tom.
+
+"My mother isn't the kind that says no," Bertie declared loudly.
+
+In a few days' time a letter arrived from Bertie's mother. The boy
+opened it eagerly. It said:
+
+My own dear Bertie:
+
+I am very sorry to tell you that little Alice is ill with scarlet
+fever. And so you cannot come for your holidays. I would have been glad
+to have you bring your little friend with you if all had been well here.
+
+Your father and I have decided that the best thing that you can do is
+to stay at Miss Ware's. We shall send your Christmas present to you as
+well as we can.
+
+It will not be like coming home, but I am sure you will try to be
+happy, and make me feel that you are helping me in this sad time.
+
+Dear little Alice is very ill, very ill indeed. Tell Tom that I am
+sending you a box for both of you, with two of everything. And tell him
+that it makes me so much happier to know that you will not be alone.
+
+ Your own mother.
+
+When Bertie Fellows received this letter, which ended all his Christmas
+hopes and joys, he hid his face upon his desk and sobbed aloud. The
+lonely boy from India, who sat next to him, tried to comfort his friend
+in every way he could think of. He patted his shoulder and whispered
+many kind words to him.
+
+At last Bertie put the letter into Tom's hands. "Read it," he sobbed.
+
+So then Tom understood the cause of Bertie's grief. "Don't fret over
+it," he said at last. "It might be worse. Why, your father and mother
+might be thousands of miles away, like mine are. When Alice is better,
+you will be able to go home. And it will help your mother if she thinks
+you are almost as happy as if you could go now."
+
+Soon Miss Ware came to tell Bertie how sorry she was for him.
+
+"After all," said she, smiling down on the two boys, "it is an ill wind
+that blows nobody good. Poor Tom has been expecting to spend his
+holidays alone, and now he will have a friend with him--Try to look on
+the bright side, Bertie, and to remember how much worse it would have
+been if there had been no boy to stay with you."
+
+"I can't help being disappointed, Miss Ware," said Bertie, his eyes
+filling with tears.
+
+"No; you would be a strange boy if you were not. But I want you to try
+to think of your poor mother, and write her as cheerfully as you can."
+
+"Yes," answered Bertie; but his heart was too full to say more.
+
+The last day of the term came, and one by one, or two by two, the boys
+went away, until only Bertie and Tom were left in the great house. It
+had never seemed so large to either of them before.
+
+"It's miserable," groaned poor Bertie, as they strolled into the
+schoolroom. "Just think if we were on our way home now--how different."
+
+"Just think if I had been left here by myself," said Tom.
+
+"Yes," said Bertie, "but you know when one wants to go home he never
+thinks of the boys that have no home to go to."
+
+The evening passed, and the two boys went to bed. They told stories to
+each other for a long time before they could go to sleep. That night
+they dreamed of their homes, and felt very lonely. Yet each tried to be
+brave, and so another day began.
+
+This was the day before Christmas. Quite early in the morning came the
+great box of which Bertie's mother had spoken in her letter. Then, just
+as dinner had come to an end, there was a peal of the bell, and a voice
+was heard asking for Tom Egerton.
+
+Tom sprang to his feet, and flew to greet a tall, handsome lady,
+crying, "Aunt Laura! Aunt Laura!"
+
+And Laura explained that she and her husband had arrived in London only
+the day before. "I was so afraid, Tom," she said, "that we should not
+get here until Christmas Day was over and that you would be
+disappointed. So I would not let your mother write you that we were on
+our way home. You must get your things packed up at once, and go back
+with me to London. Then uncle and I will give you a splendid time."
+
+For a minute or two Tom's face shone with delight. Then he caught sight
+of Bertie and turned to his aunt.
+
+"Dear Aunt Laura," he said, "I am very sorry, but I can't go."
+
+"Can't go? and why not?"
+
+"Because I can't go and leave Bertie here all alone," he said stoutly.
+"When I was going to be alone he wrote and asked his mother to let me
+go home with him. She could not have either of us because Bertie's
+sister has scarlet fever. He has to stay here, and he has never been
+away from home at Christmas time before, and I can't go away and leave
+him by himself, Aunt Laura."
+
+For a minute Aunt Laura looked at the boy as if she could not believe
+him. Then she caught him in her arms and kissed him.
+
+"You dear little boy, you shall not leave him. You shall bring him
+along, and we shall all enjoy ourselves together. Bertie, my boy, you
+are not very old yet, but I am going to teach you a lesson as well as I
+can. It is that kindness is never wasted in this world."
+
+And so Bertie and Tom found that there was such a thing as a fairy
+after all.
+
+
+
+THE GREATEST OF THESE*
+
+*This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, vol. 76.
+
+JOSEPH MILLS HANSON
+
+The outside door swung open suddenly, letting a cloud of steam into the
+small, hot kitchen. Charlie Moore, a milk pail in one hand, a lantern
+in the other, closed the door behind him with a bang, set the pail on
+the table and stamped the snow from his feet.
+
+"There's the milk, and I near froze gettin' it," said he, addressing
+his partner, who was chopping potatoes in a pan on the stove.
+
+"Dose vried bodadoes vas burnt," said the other, wielding his knife
+vigorously.
+
+"Are, eh? Why didn't you watch 'em instead of readin' your old
+Scandinavian paper?" answered Charlie, hanging his overcoat and cap
+behind the door and laying his mittens under the stove to dry. Then he
+drew up a chair and with much exertion pulled off his heavy felt boots
+and stood them beside his mittens.
+
+"Why didn't you shut the gate after you came in from town? The cows got
+out and went up to Roney's an' I had to chase 'em; 'tain't any joke
+runnin' round after cows such a night as this." Having relieved his
+mind of its grievance, Charlie sat down before the oven door, and,
+opening it, laid a stick of wood along its outer edge and thrust his
+feet into the hot interior, propping his heels against the stick.
+
+"Look oud for dese har biscuits!" exclaimed his partner, anxiously.
+
+"Oh, hang the biscuits!" was Charlie's hasty answer. "I'll watch 'em.
+Why didn't you?"
+
+"Ay tank Ay fergit hem."
+
+"Well, you don't want to forget. A feller forgot his clothes once, an'
+he got froze."
+
+"Ay gass dose taller vas ketch in a sbring snowstorm. Vas dose biscuits
+done, Sharlie?"
+
+"You bet they are, Nels," replied Charlie, looking into the pan.
+
+"Dan subbar vas ready. Yom on!"
+
+Nels picked up the frying-pan and Charlie the biscuits, and set them on
+the oilcloth-covered table, where a plate of butter, a jar of plum
+jelly, and a coffee-pot were already standing.
+
+Outside the frozen kitchen window the snow-covered fields and meadows
+stretched, glistening and silent, away to the dark belt of timber by
+the river. Along the deep-rutted road in front a belated lumber-wagon
+passed slowly, the wheels crunching through the packed snow with a
+wavering, incessant shriek.
+
+The two men hitched their chairs up to the table, and without ceremony
+helped themselves liberally to the steaming food. For a few moments
+they seemed oblivious to everything but the demands of hunger. The
+potatoes and biscuits disappeared with surprising rapidity, washed down
+by large drafts of coffee. These men, labouring steadily through the
+short daylight hours in the dry, cold air of the Dakota winter, were
+like engines whose fires had burned low--they were taking fuel.
+Presently, the first keen edge of appetite satisfied, they ate more
+slowly, and Nels, straightening up with a sigh, spoke:
+
+"Ay seen Seigert in town ta-day. Ha vants von hundred fifty fer dose
+team."
+
+"Come down, eh?" commented Charlie. "Well, they're worth that. We'd
+better take 'em, Nels. We'll need 'em in the spring if we break the
+north forty."
+
+"Yas, et's a nice team," agreed Nels. "Ha vas driven ham ta-day."
+
+"Is he haulin' corn?"
+
+"Na; he had his kids oop gettin' Christmas bresents."
+
+"Chris--By gracious! to-morrow's Christmas!"
+
+Nels nodded solemnly, as one possessing superior knowledge. Charlie
+became thoughtful.
+
+"We'll come in sort of slim on it here, I reckon, Nels. Christmas ain't
+right, somehow, out here. Back in Wisconsin, where I came from, there's
+where you get your Christmas!" Charlie spoke with the unswerving
+prejudice of mankind for the land of his birth.
+
+"Yas, dose been right. En da ol' kontry dey havin' gret times
+Christmas."
+
+Their thoughts were all bent now upon the holiday scenes of the past.
+As they finished the meal and cleared away and washed the dishes they
+related incidents of their boyhood's time, compared, reiterated, and
+embellished. As they talked they grew jovial, and laughed often.
+
+"The skee broke an' you went over kerplunk, hey? Haw, haw! That reminds
+me of one time in Wisconsin--"
+
+Something of the joyous spirit of the Christmastide seemed to have
+entered into this little farmhouse set in the midst of the lonely,
+white fields. In the hearts of these men, moving about in their
+dim-lighted room, was reechoed the joyous murmur of the great world
+without: the gayety of the throngs in city streets, where the brilliant
+shop-windows, rich with holiday spoils, smile out upon the passing
+crowd, and the clang of street-cars and roar of traffic mingle with the
+cries of street-venders. The work finished, they drew their chairs to
+the stove, and filled their pipes, still talking.
+
+"Well, well," said Charlie, after the laugh occasioned by one of Nels'
+droll stories had subsided. "It's nice to think of those old times. I'd
+hate to have been one of these kids that can't have any fun. Christmas
+or any other time,"
+
+"Ay gass dere ain't anybody much dot don'd have someding dis tams a
+year."
+
+"Oh, yes, there are, Nels! You bet there are!"
+
+Charlie nodded at his partner with serious conviction.
+
+"Now, there's the Roneys," he waved his pipe over his shoulder. "The
+old man told me to-night when I was up after the cows that he's sold
+all the crops except what they need for feedin'--wheat, and corn, and
+everything, and some hogs besides--and ain't got hardly enough now for
+feed and clothes for all that family. The rent and the lumber he had to
+buy to build the new barn after the old one burnt ate up the money like
+fury. He kind of laughed, and said he guessed the children wouldn't get
+much Christmas this year. I didn't think about it's being so close when
+he told me."
+
+"No Christmas!" Nels' round eyes widened with astonishment. "Ay tank
+dose been pooty bad!" He studied the subject for a few moments, his
+stolid face suddenly grown thoughtful. Charlie stared at the stove. Far
+away by the river a lonely coyote set up his quick, howling yelp.
+
+"Dere's been seven kids oop dere," said Nels at last, glancing up as it
+for corroboration.
+
+"Yes, seven," agreed Charlie.
+
+"Say, do ve need Seigert's team very pad?"
+
+"Well, now that depends," said Charlie. "Why not?"
+
+"Nothin', only Ay vas tankin' ve might tak' some a das veat we vas
+goin' to sell and--and--"
+
+"Yep, what?"
+
+"And dumb it on Roney's granary floor to-night after dere been asleeb."
+
+Charlie stared at his companion for a moment in silence. Then he rose,
+and, approaching Nels, examined his partner's face with solemn scrutiny.
+
+"By the great horn spoon," he announced, finally, "you've got a head on
+you like a balloon, my boy! Keep on gettin' ideas like that, and you'll
+land in Congress or the poor-farm before many years!"
+
+Then, abandoning his pretense of gravity, he slapped the other on the
+back.
+
+"Why didn't I think of that? It's the best yet. Seigert's team? Oh,
+hang Seigert's team. We don't need it. We'll have a little merry
+Christmas out of this yet. Only they mustn't know where it came from.
+I'll write a note and stick it under the door, 'You'll find some merry
+wheat--'No, that ain't it. 'You'll find some wheat in the granary to
+give the kids a merry Christmas with,' signed, 'Santa Claus.'"
+
+He wrote out the message in the air with a pointing forefinger. He had
+entered into the spirit of the thing eagerly.
+
+"It's half-past nine now," he went on, looking at the clock. "It'll be
+eleven time we get the stuff loaded and hauled up there. Let's go out
+and get at it. Lucky the bobs are on the wagon; they don't make such a
+racket as wheels."
+
+He took the lantern from its nail behind the door and lighted it, after
+which he put on his boots, cap, and mittens, and flung his overcoat
+across his shoulders. Nels, meanwhile, had put on his outer garments,
+also.
+
+"Shut up the stove, Nels." Charlie blew out the light and opened the
+door. "There, hang it!" he exclaimed, turning back. "I forgot the note.
+Ought to be in ink, I suppose. Well, never mind now; we won't put on
+any style about it."
+
+He took down a pencil from the shelf, and, extracting a bit of wrapping
+paper from a bundle behind the woodbox, wrote the note by the light of
+the lantern.
+
+"There, I guess that will do," he said, finally. "Come on!"
+
+Outside, the night air was cold and bracing, and in the black vault of
+the sky the winter constellations flashed and throbbed. The shadows of
+the two men, thrown by the lantern, bobbed huge and grotesque across
+the snow and among the bare branches of the cottonwoods, as they moved
+toward the barn.
+
+"Ay tank ve put on dose extra side poards and make her an even fifty
+pushel," said Nels, after they had backed the wagon up to the granary
+door. "Ve might as vell do it oop right, skence ve're at it."
+
+Having carried out this suggestion, the two shovelled steadily, with
+short intervals of rest, for three quarters of an hour, the dark pile
+of grain in the wagon-box rising gradually until it stood flush with
+the top.
+
+Good it was to look upon, cold and soft and yielding to the touch, this
+heaped-up wealth from the inexhaustible treasure-house of the mighty
+West. Charlie and Nels felt something of this as they viewed the
+results of their labours for a moment before hitching up the team.
+
+"It's A number one hard," said Charlie, picking up a handful and
+sifting it slowly through his fingers, "and it'll fetch seventy-four
+cents. But you can't raise any worse on this old farm of ours if you
+try," he added, a little proudly. "Nor anywhere else in the Jim River
+Valley, for that matter."
+
+As they approached the Roney place, looking dim and indistinct in the
+darkness, their voices hushed apprehensively, and the noise of the
+sled-runners slipping through the snow seemed to them to increase from
+a purr to a roar.
+
+"Here, stob a minute!" whispered Nels, in agony of discovery. "Ve're
+magin' an awful noise. Ay'll go und take a beek."
+
+He slipped away and cautiously approached the house. "Et's all right,"
+he whispered, hoarsely, returning after a moment; "dere all asleeb. But
+go easy; Ay tank ve pest go easy." They seemed burdened all at once
+with the consciences of criminals, and went forward with almost guilty
+timidity.
+
+"Thunder, dere's a bump! Vy don'd you drive garefuller, Sharlie?"
+
+"Drive yourself, if you think you can do any better!" As they came into
+the yard a dog suddenly ran out from the barn, barking furiously.
+Charlie reined up with an ejaculation of despair; "Look there, the dog!
+We're done for now, sure! Stop him, Nels! Throw somethin' at 'im!"
+
+The noise seemed to their excited ears louder than the crash of
+artillery. Nels threw a piece of snow crust. The dog ran back a few
+steps, but his barking did not diminish.
+
+"Here, hold the lines. I'll try to catch 'im." Charlie jumped from the
+wagon and approached the dog with coaxing words: "Come, doggie, good
+doggie, nice boy, come!"
+
+His manoeuvre, however, merely served to increase the animal's frenzy.
+As Charlie approached the dog retired slowly toward the house, his head
+thrown back, and his rapid barking increased to a long-drawn howl.
+
+"Good boy, come! Bother the brute! He'll wake up the whole household!
+Nice doggie! Phe-e--"
+
+The noise, however, had no apparent effect upon the occupants of the
+house. All remained as dark and silent as ever.
+
+"Sharlie, Sharlie, let him go!" cried Nels, in a voice smothered with
+laughter. "Ay go in dose parn; maype ha'll chase me."
+
+His hope was well founded. The dog, observing this treacherous
+occupation by the enemy of his last harbour of refuge, gave pursuit and
+disappeared within the door, which Charlie, hard behind him, closed
+with a bang. There was the sound of a hurried scuffle within. The dog's
+barking gave place to terrified whinings, which in turn were suddenly
+quenched to a choking murmur.
+
+"Gome in, Sharlie, kvick!"
+
+"You got him?" queried Charlie, opening the door cautiously. "Did he
+bite you?"
+
+"Na, yust ma mitten. Gat a sack or someding da die him oop in."
+
+A sack was procured from somewhere, into which the dog, now silenced
+from sheer exhaustion and fright, was unceremoniously thrust, after
+which the sack was tied and flung into the wagon. This formidable
+obstacle overcome and the Roneys still slumbering peacefully, the rest
+was easy. The granary door was pried open and the wheat shovelled
+hurriedly in upon the empty floor. Charlie then crept up to the house
+and slipped his note under the door.
+
+The sack was lifted from the now empty wagon and opened before the
+barn, whereupon its occupant slipped meekly out and retreated at once
+to a far corner, seemingly too much incensed at his discourteous
+treatment even to fling a volley of farewell barks at his departing
+captors.
+
+"Vell," remarked Nels, with a sigh of relief as they gained the road,
+"Ay tank dose Roneys pelieve en Santa Claus now. Dose peen funny vay
+fer Santa Claus to coom."
+
+Charlie's laugh was good to hear. "He didn't exactly come down the
+chimney, that's a fact, but it'll do at a pinch. We ought to have told
+them to get a present for the dog--collar and chain. I reckon he
+wouldn't hardly be thankful for it, though, eh?"
+
+"Ay gass not. Ha liges ta haf hes nights ta hemself."
+
+"Well, we had our fun, anyway. Sort of puts me in mind of old
+Wisconsin, somehow."
+
+From far off over the valley, with its dismantled cornfields and
+snow-covered haystacks, beyond the ice-bound river, floated slow, and
+sonorous, the mellow clanging of church bells. They were ushering in
+the Christmas morn. Overhead the starlit heavens glistened, brooding
+and mysterious, looking down with luminous, loving eyes upon these
+humble sons of men doing a good deed, from the impulse of simple,
+generous hearts, as upon that other Christmas morning, long ago, when
+the Jewish shepherds, guarding their flocks by night, read in their
+shining depths that in Bethlehem of Judea the Christ-Child was born.
+
+The rising sun was touching the higher hilltops with a faint rush of
+crimson the next morning when the back door of the Roney house opened
+with a creak, and Mr. Roney, still heavy-eyed with sleep, stumbled out
+upon the porch, stretched his arms above his head, yawned, blinked at
+the dazzling snow, and then shambled off toward the barn. As he
+approached, the dog ran eagerly out, gambolled meekly around his feet
+and caressed his boots. The man patted him kindly.
+
+"Hello, old boy! What were you yappin' around so for last night, huh?
+Grain-thieves? You needn't worry about them. There ain't nothin' left
+for them to steal. No, sir! If they got into that granary they'd have
+to take a lantern along to find a pint of wheat. I don't suppose," he
+added, reflectively, "that I could scrape up enough to feed the
+chickens this mornin', but I guess I might's well see."
+
+He passed over to the little building. What he saw when he looked
+within seemed for a moment to produce no impression upon him whatever.
+He stared at the hillock of grain in motionless silence. Finally Mr.
+Roney gave utterance to a single word, "Geewhilikins!" and started for
+the house on a run. Into the kitchen, where his wife was just starting
+the fire, the excited man burst like a whirlwind.
+
+"Come out here, Mary!" he cried. "Come out here, quick!"
+
+The worthy woman, unaccustomed to such demonstrations, looked at him in
+amazement.
+
+"For goodness sake, what's come over you, Peter Roney?" she exclaimed.
+"Are you daft? Don't make such a noise! You'll wake the young ones, and
+I don't want them waked till need be, with no Christmas for 'em, poor
+little things!"
+
+"Never mind the young 'uns," he replied. "Come on!"
+
+As they passed out he noticed the slip of paper under the door and
+picked it up, but without comment.
+
+He charged down upon the granary, his wife, with a shawl over her head,
+close behind.
+
+She peered in, apprehensively at first, then with eyes of widening
+wonder.
+
+"Why, Peter!" she said, turning to him. "Why, Peter! What does--I
+thought--"
+
+"You thought!" he broke in. "Me, too. But it ain't so. It means that
+we've got some of the best neighbours that ever was, a thinkin' of our
+young 'uns this way! Read that!" and he thrust the paper into her hand.
+
+"Why, Peter!" she ejaculated again, weakly. Then suddenly she turned,
+and laying her head on his shoulder, began to sob softly.
+
+"There, there," he said, patting her arm awkwardly.
+
+"Don't you go and cry now. Let's just be thankful to the good Lord for
+puttin' such fellers into the world as them fellers down the road. And
+now you run in and hurry up breakfast while I do up the chores. Then
+we'll hitch up and get into town 'fore the stores close. Tell the young
+'uns Santy didn't get round last night with their things, but we've got
+word to meet him in town. Hey? Yes, I saw just the kind of sled Pete
+wants when I was up yesterday, and that china doll for Mollie. Yes,
+tell 'em anything you want. Twon't be too big. Santy Claus has come to
+Roney's ranch this year, sure!"
+
+
+
+LITTLE GRETCHEN AND THE WOODEN SHOE*
+
+* From "Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College,
+copyright 1902.
+
+ELIZABETH HARRISON
+
+The following story is one of many which has drifted down to us from
+the story-loving nurseries and hearthstones of Germany. I cannot recall
+when I first had it told to me as a child, varied, of course, by
+different tellers, but always leaving that sweet, tender impression of
+God's loving care for the least of his children. I have since read
+different versions of it in at least a half-dozen story books for
+children.
+
+Once upon a time, a long time ago, far away across the great ocean, in
+a country called Germany, there could be seen a small log hut on the
+edge of a great forest, whose fir-trees extended for miles and miles to
+the north. This little house, made of heavy hewn logs, had but one room
+in it. A rough pine door gave entrance to this room, and a small square
+window admitted the light. At the back of the house was built an
+old-fashioned stone chimney, out of which in winter usually curled a
+thin, blue smoke, showing that there was not very much fire within.
+
+Small as the house was, it was large enough for the two people who
+lived in it. I want to tell you a story to-day about these two people.
+One was an old, gray-haired woman, so old that the little children of
+the village, nearly half a mile away, often wondered whether she had
+come into the world with the huge mountains, and the great fir-trees,
+which stood like giants back of her small hut. Her face was wrinkled
+all over with deep lines, which, if the children could only have read
+aright, would have told them of many years of cheerful, happy,
+self-sacrifice, of loving, anxious watching beside sick-beds, of quiet
+endurance of pain, of many a day of hunger and cold, and of a thousand
+deeds of unselfish love for other people; but, of course, they could
+not read this strange handwriting. They only knew that she was old and
+wrinkled, and that she stooped as she walked. None of them seemed to
+fear her, for her smile was always cheerful, and she had a kindly word
+for each of them if they chanced to meet her on her way to and from the
+village. With this old, old woman lived a very little girl. So bright
+and happy was she that the travellers who passed by the lonesome little
+house on the edge of the forest often thought of a sunbeam as they saw
+her. These two people were known in the village as Granny Goodyear and
+Little Gretchen.
+
+The winter had come and the frost had snapped off many of the smaller
+branches from the pine-trees in the forest. Gretchen and her Granny
+were up by daybreak each morning. After their simple breakfast of
+oatmeal, Gretchen would run to the little closet and fetch Granny's old
+woollen shawl, which seemed almost as old as Granny herself. Gretchen
+always claimed the right to put the shawl over her Granny's head, even
+though she had to climb onto the wooden bench to do it. After carefully
+pinning it under Granny's chin, she gave her a good-bye kiss, and
+Granny started out for her morning's work in the forest. This work was
+nothing more nor less than the gathering up of the twigs and branches
+which the autumn winds and winter frosts had thrown upon the ground.
+These were carefully gathered into a large bundle which Granny tied
+together with a strong linen band. She then managed to lift the bundle
+to her shoulder and trudged off to the village with it. Here she sold
+the fagots for kindling wood to the people of the village. Sometimes
+she would get only a few pence each day, and sometimes a dozen or more,
+but on this money little Gretchen and she managed to live; they had
+their home, and the forest kindly furnished the wood for the fire which
+kept them warm in cold weather.
+
+In the summer time Granny had a little garden at the back of the hut
+where she raised, with little Gretchen's help, a few potatoes and
+turnips and onions. These she carefully stored away for winter use. To
+this meagre supply, the pennies, gained by selling the twigs from the
+forest, added the oatmeal for Gretchen and a little black coffee for
+Granny. Meat was a thing they never thought of having. It cost too much
+money. Still, Granny and Gretchen were very happy, because they loved
+each other dearly. Sometimes Gretchen would be left alone all day long
+in the hut, because Granny would have some work to do in the village
+after selling her bundle of sticks and twigs. It was during these long
+days that little Gretchen had taught herself to sing the song which the
+wind sang to the pine branches. In the summer time she learned the
+chirp and twitter of the birds, until her voice might almost be
+mistaken for a bird's voice; she learned to dance as the swaying
+shadows did, and even to talk. to the stars which shone through the
+little square window when Granny came home too late or too tired to
+talk.
+
+Sometimes, when the weather was fine, or her Granny had an extra bundle
+of newly knitted stockings to take to the village, she would let little
+Gretchen go along with her. It chanced that one of these trips to the
+town came just the week before Christmas, and Gretchen's eyes were
+delighted by the sight of the lovely Christmas-trees which stood in the
+window of the village store. It seemed to her that she would never tire
+of looking at the knit dolls, the woolly lambs, the little wooden shops
+with their queer, painted men and women in them, and all the other fine
+things. She had never owned a plaything in her whole life; therefore,
+toys which you and I would not think much of, seemed to her to be very
+beautiful.
+
+That night, after their supper of baked potatoes was over, and little
+Gretchen had cleared away the dishes and swept up the hearth, because
+Granny dear was so tired, she brought her own small wooden stool and
+placed it very near Granny's feet and sat down upon it, folding her
+hands on her lap. Granny knew that this meant she wanted to talk about
+something, so she smilingly laid away the large Bible which she had
+been reading, and took up her knitting, which was as much as to say:
+"Well, Gretchen, dear, Granny is ready to listen."
+
+"Granny," said Gretchen slowly, "it's almost Christmas time, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, dearie," said Granny, "only five more days now," and then she
+sighed, but little Gretchen was so happy that she did not notice
+Granny's sigh.
+
+"What do you think, Granny, I'll get this Christmas?" said she, looking
+up eagerly into Granny's face.
+
+"Ah, child, child," said Granny, shaking her head, "you'll have no
+Christmas this year. We are too poor for that."
+
+"Oh, but, Granny," interrupted little Gretchen, "think of all the
+beautiful toys we saw in the village to-day. Surely Santa Claus has
+sent enough for every little child."
+
+"Ah, dearie," said Granny, "those toys are for people who can pay money
+for them, and we have no money to spend for Christmas toys."
+
+"Well, Granny," said Gretchen, "perhaps some of the little children who
+live in the great house on the hill at the other end of the village
+will be willing to share some of their toys with me. They will be so
+glad to give some to a little girl who has none."
+
+"Dear child, dear child," said Granny, leaning forward and stroking the
+soft, shiny hair of the little girl, "your heart is full of love. You
+would be glad to bring a Christmas to every child; but their heads are
+so full of what they are going to get that they forget all about
+anybody else but themselves." Then she sighed and shook her head.
+
+"Well, Granny," said Gretchen, her bright, happy tone of voice growing
+a little less joyous, "perhaps the dear Santa Claus will show some of
+the village children how to make presents that do not cost money, and
+some of them may surprise me Christmas morning with a present. And,
+Granny, dear," added she, springing up from her low stool, "can't I
+gather some of the pine branches and take them to the old sick man who
+lives in the house by the mill, so that he can have the sweet smell of
+our pine forest in his room all Christmas day?"
+
+"Yes, dearie," said Granny, "you may do what you can to make the
+Christmas bright and happy, but you must not expect any present
+yourself."
+
+"Oh, but, Granny," said little Gretchen, her face brightening, "you
+forget all about the shining Christmas angels, who came down to earth
+and sang their wonderful song the night the beautiful Christ-Child was
+born! They are so loving and good that they will not forget any little
+child. I shall ask my dear stars to-night to tell them of us. You
+know," she added, with a look of relief, "the stars are so very high
+that they must know the angels quite well, as they come and go with
+their messages from the loving God."
+
+Granny sighed, as she half whispered, "Poor child, poor child!" but
+Gretchen threw her arm around Granny's neck and gave her a hearty kiss,
+saying as she did so: "Oh, Granny, Granny, you don't talk to the stars
+often enough, else you wouldn't be sad at Christmas time." Then she
+danced all around the room, whirling her little skirts about her to
+show Granny how the wind had made the snow dance that day. She looked
+so droll and funny that Granny forgot her cares and worries and laughed
+with little Gretchen over her new snow-dance. The days passed on, and
+the morning before Christmas Eve came. Gretchen having tidied up the
+little room--for Granny had taught her to be a careful little
+housewife--was off to the forest, singing a birdlike song, almost as
+happy and free as the birds themselves. She was very busy that day,
+preparing a surprise for Granny. First, however, she gathered the most
+beautiful of the fir branches within her reach to take the next morning
+to the old sick man who lived by the mill. The day was all too short
+for the happy little girl. When Granny came trudging wearily home that
+night, she found the frame of the doorway covered with green pine
+branches.
+
+"It's to welcome you, Granny! It's to welcome you!" cried Gretchen;
+"our old dear home wanted to give you a Christmas welcome. Don't you
+see, the branches of evergreen make it look as if it were smiling all
+over, and it is trying to say, 'A happy Christmas' to you, Granny!"
+
+Granny laughed and kissed the little girl, as they opened the door and
+went in together. Here was a new surprise for Granny. The four posts of
+the wooden bed, which stood in one corner of the room, had been trimmed
+by the busy little fingers, with smaller and more flexible branches of
+the pine-trees. A small bouquet of red mountain-ash berries stood at
+each side of the fireplace, and these, together with the trimmed posts
+of the bed, gave the plain old room quite a festival look. Gretchen
+laughed and clapped her hands and danced about until the house seemed
+full of music to poor, tired Granny, whose heart had been sad as she
+turned toward their home that night, thinking of the disappointment
+which must come to loving little Gretchen the next morning.
+
+After supper was over little Gretchen drew her stool up to Granny's
+side, and laying her soft, little hands on Granny's knee, asked to be
+told once again the story of the coming of the Christ-Child; how the
+night that he was born the beautiful angels had sung their wonderful
+song, and how the whole sky had become bright with a strange and
+glorious light, never seen by the people of earth before. Gretchen had
+heard the story many, many times before, but she never grew tired of
+it, and now that Christmas Eve had come again, the happy little child
+wanted to hear it once more.
+
+When Granny had finished telling it the two sat quiet and silent for a
+little while thinking it over; then Granny rose and said that it was
+time for them to go to bed. She slowly took off her heavy wooden shoes,
+such as are worn in that country, and placed them beside the hearth.
+Gretchen looked thoughtfully at them for a minute or two, and then she
+said, "Granny, don't you think that somebody in all this wide world
+will think of us to-night?"
+
+"Nay, Gretchen," said Granny, "I don't think any one will."
+
+"Well, then, Granny," said Gretchen, "the Christmas angels will, I
+know; so I am going to take one of your wooden shoes, and put it on the
+windowsill outside, so that they may see it as they pass by. I am sure
+the stars will tell the Christmas angels where the shoe is."
+
+"Ah, you foolish, foolish child," said Granny, "you are only getting
+ready for a disappointment To-morrow morning there will be nothing
+whatever in the shoe. I can tell you that now."
+
+But little Gretchen would not listen. She only shook her head and cried
+out: "Ah, Granny, you don't talk enough to the stars." With this she
+seized the shoe, and, opening the door, hurried out to place it on the
+windowsill. It was very dark without, and something soft and cold
+seemed to gently kiss her hair and face. Gretchen knew by this that it
+was snowing, and she looked up to the sky, anxious to see if the stars
+were in sight, but a strong wind was tumbling the dark, heavy
+snow-clouds about and had shut away all else.
+
+"Never mind," said Gretchen softly to herself, "the stars are up there,
+even if I can't see them, and the Christmas angels do not mind
+snowstorms."
+
+Just then a rough wind went sweeping by the little girl, whispering
+something to her which she could not understand, and then it made a
+sudden rush up to the snow-clouds and parted them, so that the deep,
+mysterious sky appeared beyond, and shining down out of the midst of it
+was Gretchen's favourite star.
+
+"Ah, little star, little star!" said the child, laughing aloud, "I knew
+you were there, though I couldn't see you. Will you whisper to the
+Christmas angels as they come by that little Gretchen wants so very
+much to have a Christmas gift to-morrow morning, if they have one to
+spare, and that she has put one of Granny's shoes upon the windowsill
+ready for it?"
+
+A moment more and the little girl, standing on tiptoe, had reached the
+windowsill and placed the shoe upon it, and was back again in the house
+beside Granny and the warm fire.
+
+The two went quietly to bed, and that night as little Gretchen knelt to
+pray to the Heavenly Father, she thanked him for having sent the
+Christ-Child into the world to teach all mankind how to be loving and
+unselfish, and in a few moments she was quietly sleeping, dreaming of
+the Christmas angels.
+
+The next morning, very early, even before the sun was up, little
+Gretchen was awakened by the sound of sweet music coming from the
+village. She listened for a moment and then she knew that the
+choir-boys were singing the Christmas carols in the open air of the
+village street. She sprang up out of bed and began to dress herself as
+quickly as possible, singing as she dressed. While Granny was slowly
+putting on her clothes, little Gretchen, having finished dressing
+herself, unfastened the door and hurried out to see what the Christmas
+angels had left in the old wooden shoe.
+
+The white snow covered everything--trees, stumps, roads, and
+pastures--until the whole world looked like fairyland. Gretchen climbed
+up on a large stone which was beneath the window and carefully lifted
+down the wooden shoe. The snow tumbled off of it in a shower over the
+little girl's hands, but she did not heed that; she ran hurriedly back
+into the house, putting her hand into the toe of the shoe as she ran.
+
+"Oh, Granny! Oh, Granny!" she exclaimed, "you didn't believe the
+Christmas angels would think about us, but see, they have, they have!
+Here is a dear little bird nestled down in the toe of your shoe! Oh,
+isn't he beautiful?"
+
+Granny came forward and looked at what the child was holding lovingly
+in her hand. There she saw a tiny chick-a-dee, whose wing was evidently
+broken by the rough and boisterous winds of the night before, and who
+had taken shelter in the safe, dry toe of the old wooden shoe. She
+gently took the little bird out of Gretchen's hands, and skilfully
+bound his broken wing to his side, so that he need not hurt himself by
+trying to fly with it. Then she showed Gretchen how to make a nice warm
+nest for the little stranger, close beside the fire, and when their
+breakfast was ready she let Gretchen feed the little bird with a few
+moist crumbs.
+
+Later in the day Gretchen carried the fresh, green boughs to the old
+sick man by the mill, and on her way home stopped to see and enjoy the
+Christmas toys of some other children whom she knew, never once wishing
+that they were hers. When she reached home she found that the little
+bird had gone to sleep. Soon, however, he opened his eyes and stretched
+his head up, saying just as plain as a bird could say, "Now, my new
+friends, I want you to give me something more to eat." Gretchen gladly
+fed him again, and then, holding him in her lap, she softly and gently
+stroked his gray feathers until the little creature seemed to lose all
+fear of her. That evening Granny taught her a Christmas hymn and told
+her another beautiful Christmas story. Then Gretchen made up a funny
+little story to tell to the birdie. He winked his eyes and turned his
+head from side to side in such a droll fashion that Gretchen laughed
+until the tears came.
+
+As Granny and she got ready for bed that night, Gretchen put her arms
+softly around Granny's neck, and whispered: "What a beautiful Christmas
+we have had to-day, Granny! Is there anything in the world more lovely
+than Christmas?"
+
+"Nay, child, nay," said Granny, "not to such loving hearts as yours."
+
+
+
+XXXIV. CHRISTMAS ON BIG RATTLE*
+
+* This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, Dec. 14, 1905.
+
+THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
+
+Archer sat by the rude hearth of his Big Rattle camp, brooding in a
+sort of tired contentment over the spitting fagots of var and glowing
+coals of birch.
+
+It was Christmas Eve. He had been out on his snowshoes all that day,
+and all the day before, springing his traps along the streams and
+putting his deadfalls out of commission--rather queer work for a
+trapper to be about.
+
+But Archer, despite all his gloomy manner, was really a sentimentalist,
+who practised what he felt.
+
+"Christmas is a season of peace on earth," he had told himself, while
+demolishing the logs of a sinister deadfall with his axe; and now the
+remembrance of his quixotic deed added a brightness to the fire and to
+the rough, undecorated walls of the camp.
+
+Outside, the wind ran high in the forest, breaking and sweeping
+tidelike over the reefs of treetops. The air was bitterly cold. Another
+voice, almost as fitful as the sough of the wind, sounded across the
+night. It was the waters of Stone Arrow Falls, above Big Rattle.
+
+The frosts had drawn their bonds of ice and blankets of silencing snow
+over all the rest of the stream, but the white and black face of the
+falls still flashed from a window in the great house of crystal, and
+threw out a voice of desolation.
+
+Sacobie Bear, a full-blooded Micmac, uttered a grunt of relief when his
+ears caught the bellow of Stone Arrow Falls. He stood still, and turned
+his head from side to side, questioningly.
+
+"Good!" he said. "Big Rattle off there, Archer's camp over there. I go
+there. Good 'nough!"
+
+He hitched his old smooth-bore rifle higher under his arm and continued
+his journey. Sacobie had tramped many miles--all the way from
+ice-imprisoned Fox Harbor. His papoose was sick. His squaw was hungry.
+Sacobie's belt was drawn tight.
+
+During all that weary journey his old rifle had not banged once,
+although few eyes save those of timberwolf and lynx were sharper in the
+hunt than Sacobie's. The Indian was reeling with hunger and weakness,
+but he held bravely on.
+
+A white man, no matter how courageous and sinewy, would have been prone
+in the snow by that time.
+
+But Sacobie, with his head down and his round snowshoes padding!
+padding! like the feet of a frightened duck, raced with death toward
+the haven of Archer's cabin.
+
+Archer was dreaming of a Christmas-time in a great faraway city when he
+was startled by a rattle of snowshoes at his threshold and a soft
+beating on his door, like weak blows from mittened hands. He sprang
+across the cabin and pulled open the door.
+
+A short, stooping figure shuffled in and reeled against him. A rifle in
+a woollen case clattered at his feet.
+
+"Mer' Christmas! How-do?" said a weary voice.
+
+"Merry Christmas, brother!" replied Archer. Then, "Bless me, but it's
+Sacobie Bear! Why, what's the matter, Sacobie?"
+
+"Heap tired! Heap hungry!" replied the Micmac, sinking to the floor.
+
+Archer lifted the Indian and carried him over to the bunk at the
+farther end of the room. He filled his iron-pot spoon with brandy, and
+inserted the point of it between Sacobie's unresisting jaws. Then he
+loosened the Micmac's coat and shirt and belt.
+
+He removed his moccasins and stockings and rubbed the straight thin
+feet with brandy.
+
+After a while Sacobie Bear opened his eyes and gazed up at Archer.
+
+"Good!" he said. "John Archer, he heap fine man, anyhow. Mighty good to
+poor Injun Sacobie, too. Plenty tobac, I s'pose. Plenty rum, too."
+
+"No more rum, my son," replied Archer, tossing what was left in the mug
+against the log wall, and corking the bottle. "and no smoke until you
+have had a feed. What do you say to bacon and tea! Or would tinned beef
+suit you better?"
+
+"Bacum," replied Sacobie.
+
+He hoisted himself to his elbow, and wistfully sniffed the fumes of
+brandy that came from the direction of his bare feet. "Heap waste of
+good rum, me t'ink," he said.
+
+"You ungratefu' little beggar!" laughed Archer, as he pulled a frying
+pan from under the bunk.
+
+By the time the bacon was fried and the tea steeped, Sacobie was
+sufficiently revived to leave the bunk and take a seat by the fire.
+
+He ate as all hungry Indians do; and Archer looked on in wonder and
+whimsical regret, remembering the miles and miles he had tramped with
+that bacon on his back.
+
+"Sacobie, you will kill yourself!" he protested.
+
+"Sacobie no kill himself now," replied the Micmac, as he bolted a brown
+slice and a mouthful of hard bread. "Sacobie more like to kill himself
+when he empty. Want to live when he chock-full. Good fun. T'ank you for
+more tea."
+
+Archer filled the extended mug and poured in the molasses--"long
+sweet'nin'" they call it in that region.
+
+"What brings you so far from Fox Harbor this time of year?" inquired
+Archer.
+
+"Squaw sick. Papoose sick. Bote empty. Wan' good bacum to eat."
+
+Archer smiled at the fire. "Any luck trapping?" he asked.
+
+His guest shook his head and hid his face behind the upturned mug.
+
+"Not much," he replied, presently.
+
+He drew his sleeve across his mouth, and then produced a clay pipe from
+a pocket in his shirt.
+
+"Tobac?" he inquired.
+
+Archer passed him a dark and heavy plug of tobacco.
+
+"Knife?" queried Sacobie.
+
+"Try your own knife on it," answered Archer, grinning.
+
+With a sigh Sacobie produced his sheath-knife.
+
+"You t'ink Sacobie heap big t'ief," he said, accusingly.
+
+"Knives are easily lost--in people's pockets," replied Archer.
+
+The two men talked for hours. Sacobie Bear was a great gossip for one
+of his race. In fact, he had a Micmac nickname which, translated, meant
+"the man who deafens his friends with much talk." Archer, however, was
+pleased with his ready chatter and unforced humour.
+
+But at last they both began to nod. The white man made up a bed on the
+floor for Sacobie with a couple of caribou skins and a heavy blanket.
+Then he gathered together a few plugs of tobacco, some tea, flour, and
+dried fish.
+
+Sacobie watched him with freshly aroused interest.
+
+"More tobac, please," he said. "Squaw, he smoke, too."
+
+Archer added a couple of sticks of the black leaf to the pile.
+
+"Bacum, too," said the Micmac. "Bacum better nor fish, anyhow."
+
+Archer shook his head.
+
+"You'll have to do with the fish," he replied; "but I'll give you a tin
+of condensed milk for the papoose."
+
+"Ah, ah! Him good stuff!" exclaimed Sacobie.
+
+Archer considered the provisions for a second or two. Then, going over
+to a dunnage bag near his bunk, he pulled its contents about until he
+found a bright red silk handkerchief and a red flannel shirt. Their
+colour was too gaudy for his taste. "These things are for your squaw,"
+he said.
+
+Sacobie was delighted. Archer tied the articles into a neat pack and
+stood it in the corner, beside his guest's rifle.
+
+"Now you had better turn in," he said, and blew out the light.
+
+In ten minutes both men slept the sleep of the weary. The fire, a great
+mass of red coals, faded and flushed like some fabulous jewel. The wind
+washed over the cabin and fingered the eaves, and brushed furtive hands
+against the door.
+
+It was dawn when Archer awoke. He sat up in his bunk and looked about
+the quiet, gray-lighted room. Sacobie Bear was nowhere to be seen.
+
+He glanced at the corner by the door. Rifle and pack were both gone. He
+looked up at the rafter where his slab of bacon was always hung. It,
+too, was gone.
+
+He jumped out of his bunk and ran to the door. Opening it, he looked
+out. Not a breath of air stirred. In the east, saffron and scarlet,
+broke the Christmas morning, and blue on the white surface of the world
+lay the imprints of Sacobie's round snowshoes.
+
+For a long time the trapper stood in the doorway in silence, looking
+out at the stillness and beauty.
+
+"Poor Sacobie!" he said, after a while. "Well, he's welcome to the
+bacon, even if it is all I had."
+
+He turned to light the fire and prepare breakfast. Something at the
+foot of his bunk caught his eye. He went over and took it up. It was a
+cured skin --a beautiful specimen of fox. He turned it over, and on the
+white hide an uncultured hand had written, with a charred stick,
+"Archer."
+
+"Well, bless that old red-skin! "exclaimed the trapper, huskily. "Bless
+his puckered eyes! Who'd have thought that I should get a Christmas
+present?"
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, BOOK OF CHRISTMAS STORIES ***
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+This file should be named cbcst10.txt or cbcst10.zip
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