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      The Children's Book of Christmas Stories, by Various
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<aside class="toc-sidebar"><nav class="epub-toc"><ul><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg5061-images-3_6893d973a6237&amp;file=OEBPS%2Fwrap0000.xhtml">The Children's Book of Christmas Stories - 1</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg5061-images-3_6893d973a6237&amp;file=OEBPS%2F244228934017343548_5061-h-0.htm.xhtml">The Children's Book of Christmas Stories - 2</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg5061-images-3_6893d973a6237&amp;file=OEBPS%2F244228934017343548_5061-h-1.htm.xhtml">The Children's Book of Christmas Stories - 3</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg5061-images-3_6893d973a6237&amp;file=OEBPS%2F244228934017343548_5061-h-2.htm.xhtml">The Children's Book of Christmas Stories - 4</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg5061-images-3_6893d973a6237&amp;file=OEBPS%2F244228934017343548_5061-h-3.htm.xhtml">The Children's Book of Christmas Stories - 5</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg5061-images-3_6893d973a6237&amp;file=OEBPS%2F244228934017343548_5061-h-4.htm.xhtml">The Children's Book of Christmas Stories - 6</a></li></ul></nav></aside>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00035">
      XIX. OLD FATHER CHRISTMAS
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00036">
      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—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.
    </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—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—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:
    </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?—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—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—'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—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'—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—I had found out that it was needful to shout—"'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—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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00037">
      XX. A CHRISTMAS CAROL
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00038">
      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—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—too nervous to bear witnesses—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—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—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.
    </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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00039">
      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—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.
    </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—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—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!
    </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—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—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—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!
    </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—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—so the mothers reasoned, and let
      the remark pass.
    </p>
<p>
      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.
    </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—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—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—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—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?
    </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>
     "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."
</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—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—and
      the janitor smiled!
    </p>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00040">
      XXII. THE LEGEND OF BABOUSCKA*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00041">
      *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—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—gold
      balls, and wooden toys, and strings of silver cobwebs—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—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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00042">
      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—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.
    </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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00043">
      XXIV. THE PHILANTHROPIST'S CHRISTMAS*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00044">
      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—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—"
    </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—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.
    </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—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."
    </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—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.
    </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—for, after all, it was a fairly happy world.
    </p>
<p>
      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:
    </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—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—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!"
    </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—best little pup you ever
      saw!"
    </p>
<p>
      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.
    </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"—he was
      about to add, "have a look at that dog," but fearful of raising suspicion,
      he ended—"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—Mr.
      Carter assisting with the tree—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—"
    </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—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—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—"
    </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—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—"
    </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—an—"
      he hesitated, it seemed so incongruous with that stiff figure on the bed—"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—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—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—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—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."
    </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—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—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."
    </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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00045">
      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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00046">
      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—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>
     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>
     He neither shall be born
     In housen nor in hall,
     Nor in the place of Paradise,
     But in an ox's stall.
</pre>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00047">
      XXVII. THE CRATCHITS' CHRISTMAS DINNER
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00048">
      (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—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.
    </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—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.
    </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—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—too nervous to bear witnesses—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—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—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.
    </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—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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00049">
      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>
     "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—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—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."
    </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>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00050">
      XXIX. CHRISTMAS UNDER THE SNOW*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00051">
      *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—.
      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—I'm
      afraid—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—in time—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—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—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.
    </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—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.
    </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—to be sure—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>
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