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      The Children's Book of Christmas Stories, by Various
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<h2 id="pgepubid00052">
      XXX. MR. BLUFF'S EXPERIENCES OF HOLIDAYS*
    </h2>
<p>
      * Reprinted by permission of Moffat, Yird &amp; Co., from Christmas. R.H.
      Schauffler, Editor.
    </p>
<p>
      OLIVER BELL BUNCE
    </p>
<p>
      "I hate holidays," said Bachelor Bluff to me, with some little irritation,
      on a Christmas a few years ago. Then he paused an instant, after which he
      resumed: "I don't mean to say that I hate to see people enjoying
      themselves. But I hate holidays, nevertheless, because to me they are
      always the saddest and dreariest days of the year. I shudder at the name
      of holiday. I dread the approach of one, and thank heaven when it is over.
      I pass through, on a holiday, the most horrible sensations, the bitterest
      feelings, the most oppressive melancholy; in fact, I am not myself at
      holiday-times."
    </p>
<p>
      "Very strange," I ventured to interpose.
    </p>
<p>
      "A plague on it!" said he, almost with violence. "I'm not inhuman. I don't
      wish anybody harm. I'm glad people can enjoy themselves. But I hate
      holidays all the same. You see, this is the reason: I am a bachelor; I am
      without kin; I am in a place that did not know me at birth. And so, when
      holidays come around, there is no place anywhere for me. I have friends,
      of course; I don't think I've been a very sulky, shut-in, reticent fellow;
      and there is many a board that has a place for me—but not at
      Christmastime. At Christmas, the dinner is a family gathering; and I've no
      family. There is such a gathering of kindred on this occasion, such a
      reunion of family folk, that there is no place for a friend, even if the
      friend be liked. Christmas, with all its kindliness and charity and
      good-will, is, after all, deuced selfish. Each little set gathers within
      its own circle; and people like me, with no particular circle, are left in
      the lurch. So you see, on the day of all the days in the year that my
      heart pines for good cheer, I'm without an invitation.
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, it's because I pine for good cheer," said the bachelor, sharply,
      interrupting my attempt to speak, "that I hate holidays. If I were an
      infernally selfish fellow, I wouldn't hate holidays. I'd go off and have
      some fun all to myself, somewhere or somehow. But, you see, I hate to be
      in the dark when all the rest of the world is in light. I hate holidays
      because I ought to be merry and happy on holidays and can't.
    </p>
<p>
      "Don't tell me," he cried, stopping the word that was on my lips; "I tell
      you, I hate holidays. The shops look merry, do they, with their bright
      toys and their green branches? The pantomime is crowded with merry hearts,
      is it? The circus and the show are brimful of fun and laughter, are they?
      Well, they all make me miserable. I haven't any pretty-faced girls or
      bright-eyed boys to take to the circus or the show, and all the nice girls
      and fine boys of my acquaintance have their uncles or their grand-dads or
      their cousins to take them to those places; so, if I go, I must go alone.
      But I don't go. I can't bear the chill of seeing everybody happy, and
      knowing myself so lonely and desolate. Confound it, sir, I've too much
      heart to be happy under such circumstances! I'm too humane, sir! And the
      result is, I hate holidays. It's miserable to be out, and yet I can't stay
      at home, for I get thinking of Christmases past. I can't read—the
      shadow of my heart makes it impossible. I can't walk—for I see
      nothing but pictures through the bright windows, and happy groups of
      pleasure-seekers. The fact is, I've nothing to do but to hate holidays.
      But will you not dine with me?"
    </p>
<p>
      Of course, I had to plead engagement with my own family circle, and I
      couldn't quite invite Mr. Bluff home that day, when Cousin Charles and his
      wife, and Sister Susan and her daughter, and three of my wife's kin had
      come in from the country, all to make a merry Christmas with us. I felt
      sorry, but it was quite impossible, so I wished Mr. Bluff a "Merry
      Christmas," and hurried homeward through the cold and nipping air.
    </p>
<p>
      I did not meet Bachelor Bluff again until a week after Christmas of the
      next year, when I learned some strange particulars of what occurred to him
      after our parting on the occasion just described. I will let Bachelor
      Bluff tell his adventure for himself.
    </p>
<p>
      "I went to church," said he, "and was as sad there as everywhere else. Of
      course, the evergreens were pretty, and the music fine; but all around me
      were happy groups of people, who could scarcely keep down merry Christmas
      long enough to do reverence to sacred Christmas. And nobody was alone but
      me. Every happy paterfamilias in his pew tantalized me, and the whole
      atmosphere of the place seemed so much better suited to every one else
      than me that I came away hating holidays worse than ever. Then I went to
      the play, and sat down in a box all alone by myself. Everybody seemed on
      the best of terms with everybody else, and jokes and banter passed from
      one to another with the most good-natured freedom. Everybody but me was in
      a little group of friends. I was the only person in the whole theatre that
      was alone. And then there was such clapping of hands, and roars of
      laughter, and shouts of delight at all the fun going on upon the stage,
      all of which was rendered doubly enjoyable by everybody having somebody
      with whom to share and interchange the pleasure, that my loneliness got
      simply unbearable, and I hated holidays infinitely worse than ever.
    </p>
<p>
      "By five o'clock the holiday became so intolerable that I said I'd go and
      get a dinner. The best dinner the town could provide. A sumptuous dinner
      for one. A dinner with many courses, with wines of the finest brands, with
      bright lights, with a cheerful fire, with every condition of comfort—and
      I'd see if I couldn't for once extract a little pleasure out of a holiday!
    </p>
<p>
      "The handsome dining-room at the club looked bright, but it was empty. Who
      dines at this club on Christmas but lonely bachelors? There was a flutter
      of surprise when I ordered a dinner, and the few attendants were, no
      doubt, glad of something to break the monotony of the hours.
    </p>
<p>
      "My dinner was well served. The spacious room looked lonely; but the
      white, snowy cloths, the rich window hangings, the warm tints of the
      walls, the sparkle of the fire in the steel grate, gave the room an air of
      elegance and cheerfulness; and then the table at which I dined was close
      to the window, and through the partly drawn curtains were visible centres
      of lonely, cold streets, with bright lights from many a window, it is
      true, but there was a storm, and snow began whirling through the street. I
      let my imagination paint the streets as cold and dreary as it would, just
      to extract a little pleasure by way of contrast from the brilliant room of
      which I was apparently sole master.
    </p>
<p>
      "I dined well, and recalled in fancy old, youthful Christmases, and
      pledged mentally many an old friend, and my melancholy was mellowing into
      a low, sad undertone, when, just as I was raising a glass of wine to my
      lips, I was startled by a picture at the windowpane. It was a pale, wild,
      haggard face, in a great cloud of black hair, pressed against the glass.
      As I looked it vanished. With a strange thrill at my heart, which my lips
      mocked with a derisive sneer, I finished the wine and set down the glass.
      It was, of course, only a beggar-girl that had crept up to the window and
      stole a glance at the bright scene within; but still the pale face
      troubled me a little, and threw a fresh shadow on my heart. I filled my
      glass once more with wine, and was again about to drink, when the face
      reappeared at the window. It was so white, so thin, with eyes so large,
      wild, and hungry-looking, and the black, unkempt hair, into which the snow
      had drifted, formed so strange and weird a frame to the picture, that I
      was fairly startled. Replacing, untasted, the liquor on the table, I rose
      and went close to the pane. The face had vanished, and I could see no
      object within many feet of the window. The storm had increased, and the
      snow was driving in wild gusts through the streets, which were empty, save
      here and there a hurrying wayfarer. The whole scene was cold, wild, and
      desolate, and I could not repress a keen thrill of sympathy for the child,
      whoever it was, whose only Christmas was to watch, in cold and storm, the
      rich banquet ungratefully enjoyed by the lonely bachelor. I resumed my
      place at the table; but the dinner was finished, and the wine had no
      further relish. I was haunted by the vision at the window, and began, with
      an unreasonable irritation at the interruption, to repeat with fresh
      warmth my detestation of holidays. One couldn't even dine alone on a
      holiday with any sort of comfort, I declared. On holidays one was
      tormented by too much pleasure on one side, and too much misery on the
      other. And then, I said, hunting for justification of my dislike of the
      day, 'How many other people are, like me, made miserable by seeing the
      fullness of enjoyment others possess!'
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, yes, I know," sarcastically replied the bachelor to a comment of
      mine; "of course, all magnanimous, generous, and noble-souled people
      delight in seeing other people made happy, and are quite content to accept
      this vicarious felicity. But I, you see, and this dear little girl—"
    </p>
<p>
      "Dear little girl?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, I forgot," said Bachelor Bluff, blushing a little, in spite of a
      desperate effort not to do so. "I didn't tell you. Well, it was so absurd!
      I kept thinking, thinking of the pale, haggard, lonely little girl on the
      cold and desolate side of the window-pane, and the over-fed, discontented,
      lonely old bachelor on the splendid side of the window-pane, and I didn't
      get much happier thinking about it, I can assure you. I drank glass after
      glass of the wine—not that I enjoyed its flavour any more, but
      mechanically, as it were, and with a sort of hope thereby to drown
      unpleasant reminders. I tried to attribute my annoyance in the matter to
      holidays, and so denounced them more vehemently than ever. I rose once in
      a while and went to the window, but could see no one to whom the pale face
      could have belonged.
    </p>
<p>
      "At last, in no very amiable mood, I got up, put on my wrappers, and went
      out; and the first thing I did was to run against a small figure crouching
      in the doorway. A face looked up quickly at the rough encounter, and I saw
      the pale features of the window-pane. I was very irritated and angry, and
      spoke harshly; and then, all at once, I am sure I don't know how it
      happened, but it flashed upon me that I, of all men, had no right to utter
      a harsh word to one oppressed with so wretched a Christmas as this poor
      creature was. I couldn't say another word, but began feeling in my pocket
      for some money, and then I asked a question or two, and then I don't quite
      know how it came about—isn't it very warm here?" exclaimed Bachelor
      Bluff, rising and walking about, and wiping the perspiration from his
      brow.
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, you see," he resumed nervously, "it was very absurd, but I did
      believe the girl's story—the old story, you know, of privation and
      suffering, and just thought I'd go home with the brat and see if what she
      said was all true. And then I remembered that all the shops were closed,
      and not a purchase could be made. I went back and persuaded the steward to
      put up for me a hamper of provisions, which the half-wild little youngster
      helped me carry through the snow, dancing with delight all the way. And
      isn't this enough?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Not a bit, Mr. Bluff. I must have the whole story."
    </p>
<p>
      "I declare," said Bachelor Bluff, "there's no whole story to tell. A widow
      with children in great need, that was what I found; and they had a feast
      that night, and a little money to buy them a load of wood and a garment or
      two the next day; and they were all so bright, and so merry, and so
      thankful, and so good, that, when I got home that night, I was mightily
      amazed that, instead of going to bed sour at holidays, I was in a state of
      great contentment in regard to holidays. In fact, I was really merry. I
      whistled. I sang. I do believe I cut a caper. The poor wretches I had left
      had been so merry over their unlooked-for Christmas banquet that their
      spirits infected mine.
    </p>
<p>
      "And then I got thinking again. Of course, holidays had been miserable to
      me, I said. What right had a well-to-do, lonely old bachelor hovering
      wistfully in the vicinity of happy circles, when all about there were so
      many people as lonely as he, and yet oppressed with want? 'Good gracious!'
      I exclaimed, 'to think of a man complaining of loneliness with thousands
      of wretches yearning for his help and comfort, with endless opportunities
      for work and company, with hundreds of pleasant and delightful things to
      do. Just to think of it! It put me in a great fury at myself to think of
      it. I tried pretty hard to escape from myself and began inventing excuses
      and all that sort of thing, but I rigidly forced myself to look squarely
      at my own conduct. And then I reconciled my confidence by declaring that,
      if ever after that day I hated a holiday again, might my holidays end at
      once and forever!
    </p>
<p>
      "Did I go and see my proteges again? What a question! Why—well, no
      matter. If the widow is comfortable now, it is because she has found a way
      to earn without difficulty enough for her few wants. That's no fault of
      mine. I would have done more for her, but she wouldn't let me. But just
      let me tell you about New Year's—the New-Year's day that followed
      the Christmas I've been describing. It was lucky for me there was another
      holiday only a week off. Bless you! I had so much to do that day I was
      completely bewildered, and the hours weren't half long enough. I did make
      a few social calls, but then I hurried them over; and then hastened to my
      little girl, whose face had already caught a touch of colour; and she,
      looking quite handsome in her new frock and her ribbons, took me to other
      poor folk, and,—well, that's about the whole story.
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, as to the next Christmas. Well, I didn't dine alone, as you may
      guess. It was up three stairs, that's true, and there was none of that
      elegance that marked the dinner of the year before; but it was merry, and
      happy, and bright; it was a generous, honest, hearty Christmas dinner,
      that it was, although I do wish the widow hadn't talked so much about the
      mysterious way a turkey had been left at her door the night before. And
      Molly—that's the little girl—and I had a rousing appetite. We
      went to church early; then we had been down to the Five Points to carry
      the poor outcasts there something for their Christmas dinner; in fact, we
      had done wonders of work, and Molly was in high spirits, and so the
      Christmas dinner was a great success.
    </p>
<p>
      "Dear me, sir, no! Just as you say. Holidays are not in the least
      wearisome any more. Plague on it! When a man tells me now that he hates
      holidays, I find myself getting very wroth. I pin him by the buttonhole at
      once, and tell him my experience. The fact is, if I were at dinner on a
      holiday, and anybody should ask me for a sentiment, I should say, 'God
      bless all holidays!'"
    </p>
<p>
<a id="link2H_4_0032">
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<h2 id="pgepubid00053">
      XXXI. MASTER SANDY'S SNAPDRAGON*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00054">
      * This story was first published in Wide Awake, vol. 26.
    </h3>
<p>
      ELDRIDGE S. BROOKS
    </p>
<p>
      There was just enough of December in the air and of May in the sky to make
      the Yuletide of the year of grace 1611 a time of pleasure and delight to
      every boy and girl in "Merrie England" from the princely children in
      stately Whitehall to the humblest pot-boy and scullery-girl in the hall of
      the country squire.
    </p>
<p>
      And in the palace at Whitehall even the cares of state gave place to the
      sports of this happy season. For that "Most High and Mighty Prince James,
      by the Grace of God King of Great Britain, France, and Ireland"—as
      you will find him styled in your copy of the Old Version, or what is known
      as "King James' Bible"—loved the Christmas festivities, cranky,
      crabbed, and crusty though he was. And this year he felt especially
      gracious. For now, first since the terror of the Guy Fawkes plot which had
      come to naught full seven years before, did the timid king feel secure on
      his throne; the translation of the Bible, on which so many learned men had
      been for years engaged, had just been issued from the press of Master
      Robert Baker; and, lastly, much profit was coming into the royal treasury
      from the new lands in the Indies and across the sea.
    </p>
<p>
      So it was to be a Merry Christmas in the palace at Whitehall. Great were
      the preparations for its celebration, and the Lord Henry, the handsome,
      wise and popular young Prince of Wales, whom men hoped some day to hail as
      King Henry of England, was to take part in a jolly Christmas mask, in
      which, too, even the little Prince Charles was to perform for the
      edification of the court when the mask should be shown in the new and
      gorgeous banqueting hall of the palace.
    </p>
<p>
      And to-night it was Christmas Eve. The Little Prince Charles and the
      Princess Elizabeth could scarcely wait for the morrow, so impatient were
      they to see all the grand devisings that were in store for them. So good
      Master Sandy, under-tutor to the Prince, proposed to wise Archie
      Armstrong, the King's jester, that they play at snapdragon for the
      children in the royal nursery.
    </p>
<p>
      The Prince and Princess clamoured for the promised game at once, and soon
      the flicker from the flaming bow lighted up the darkened nursery as,
      around the witchlike caldron, they watched their opportunity to snatch the
      lucky raisin. The room rang so loudly with fun and laughter that even the
      King himself, big of head and rickety of legs, shambled in good-humouredly
      to join in the sport that was giving so much pleasure to the royal boy he
      so dearly loved, and whom he always called "Baby Charles."
    </p>
<p>
      But what was snapdragon, you ask? A simple enough game, but dear for many
      and many a year to English children. A broad and shallow bowl or dish
      half-filled with blazing brandy, at the bottom of which lay numerous
      toothsome raisins—a rare tidbit in those days—and one of
      these, pierced with a gold button, was known as the "lucky raisin." Then,
      as the flaming brandy flickered and darted from the yawning bowl, even as
      did the flaming poison tongues of the cruel dragon that St. George of
      England conquered so valiantly, each one of the revellers sought to snatch
      a raisin from the burning bowl without singe or scar. And he who drew out
      the lucky raisin was winner and champion, and could claim a boon or reward
      for his superior skill. Rather a dangerous game, perhaps it seems, but
      folks were rough players in those old days and laughed at a burn or a
      bruise, taking them as part of the fun.
    </p>
<p>
      So around Master Sandy's Snapdragon danced the royal children, and even
      the King himself condescended to dip his royal hands in the flames, while
      Archie Armstrong the jester cried out: "Now fair and softly, brother
      Jamie, fair and softly, man. There's ne'er a plum in all that plucking so
      worth the burning as there was in Signer Guy Fawkes' snapdragon when ye
      proved not to be his lucky raisin." For King's jesters were privileged
      characters in the old days, and jolly Archie Armstrong could joke with the
      King on this Guy Fawkes scare as none other dared.
    </p>
<p>
      And still no one brought out the lucky raisin, though the Princess
      Elizabeth's fair arm was scotched and good Master Sandy's peaked beard was
      singed, and my Lord Montacute had dropped his signet ring in the fiery
      dragon's mouth, and even His Gracious Majesty the King was nursing one of
      his royal fingers.
    </p>
<p>
      But just as through the parted arras came young Henry, Prince of Wales,
      little Prince Charles gave a boyish shout of triumph.
    </p>
<p>
      "Hey, huzzoy!" he cried, "'tis mine, 'tis mine! Look, Archie; see, dear
      dad; I have the lucky raisin! A boon, good folk; a boon for me!" And the
      excited lad held aloft the lucky raisin in which gleamed the golden
      button.
    </p>
<p>
      "Rarely caught, young York," cried Prince Henry, clapping his hands in
      applause. "I came in right in good time, did I not, to give you luck,
      little brother? And now, lad, what is the boon to be?"
    </p>
<p>
      And King James, greatly pleased at whatever his dear "Baby Charles" said
      or did, echoed his eldest son's question. "Ay lad, 'twas a rare good dip;
      so crave your boon. What does my bonny boy desire?"
    </p>
<p>
      But the boy hesitated. What was there that a royal prince, indulged as was
      he, could wish for or desire? He really could think of nothing, and
      crossing quickly to his elder brother, whom, boy-fashion, he adored, he
      whispered, "Ud's fish, Hal, what DO I want?"
    </p>
<p>
      Prince Henry placed his hand upon his brother's shoulder and looked
      smilingly into his questioning eyes, and all within the room glanced for a
      moment at the two lads standing thus.
    </p>
<p>
      And they were well worth looking at. Prince Henry of Wales, tall, comely,
      open-faced, and well-built, a noble lad of eighteen who called to men's
      minds, so "rare Ben Jonson" says, the memory of the hero of Agincourt,
      that other
    </p>
<pre>
           thunderbolt of war,
     Harry the Fifth, to whom in face you are
     So like, as Fate would have you so in worth;
</pre>
<p>
      Prince Charles, royal Duke of York, Knight of the Garter and of the Bath,
      fair in face and form, an active, manly, daring boy of eleven—the
      princely brothers made so fair a sight that the King, jealous and
      suspicious of Prince Henry's popularity though he was, looked now upon
      them both with loving eyes. But how those loving eyes would have grown dim
      with tears could this fickle, selfish, yet indulgent father have foreseen
      the sad and bitter fates of both his handsome boys.
    </p>
<p>
      But, fortunately, such foreknowledge is not for fathers or mothers,
      whatever their rank or station, and King James's only thought was one of
      pride in the two brave lads now whispering together in secret confidence.
      And into this he speedily broke.
    </p>
<p>
      "Come, come, Baby Charles," he cried, "stand no more parleying, but out
      and over with the boon ye crave as guerdon for your lucky plum. Ud's fish,
      lad, out with it; we'd get it for ye though it did rain jeddert staves
      here in Whitehall."
    </p>
<p>
      "So please your Grace," said the little Prince, bowing low with true
      courtier-like grace and suavity, "I will, with your permission, crave my
      boon as a Christmas favor at wassail time in to-morrow's revels."
    </p>
<p>
      And then he passed from the chamber arm-in-arm with his elder brother,
      while the King, chuckling greatly over the lad's show of courtliness and
      ceremony, went into a learned discussion with my lord of Montacute and
      Master Sandy as to the origin of the snapdragon, which he, with his
      customary assumption of deep learning, declared was "but a modern
      paraphrase, my lord, of the fable which telleth how Dan Hercules did kill
      the flaming dragon of Hesperia and did then, with the apple of that famous
      orchard, make a fiery dish of burning apple brandy which he did name
      'snapdragon.'"
    </p>
<p>
      For King James VI of Scotland and I of England was, you see, something too
      much of what men call a pendant.
    </p>
<p>
      Christmas morning rose bright and glorious. A light hoarfrost whitened the
      ground and the keen December air nipped the noses as it hurried the
      song-notes of the score of little waifs who, gathered beneath the windows
      of the big palace, sung for the happy awaking of the young Prince Charles
      their Christmas carol and their Christmas noel:
    </p>
<pre>
     A child this day is born,
     A child of great renown;
     Most worthy of a sceptre,
     A sceptre and a crown.

     Noel, noel, noel,
     Noel sing we may
     Because the King of all Kings
     Was born this blessed day.

     These tidings shepherds heard
     In field watching their fold,
     Were by an angel unto them
     At night revealed and told.

     Noel, noel, noel,
     Noel sing we may
     Because the King of all Kings
     Was born this blessed day.

     He brought unto them tidings
     Of gladness and of mirth,
     Which cometh to all people by
     This holy infant's birth.

     Noel, noel, noel,
     Noel sing we may
     Because the King of all Kings
     Was born this blessed day.
</pre>
<p>
      The "blessed day" wore on. Gifts and sports filled the happy hours. In the
      royal banqueting hall the Christmas dinner was royally set and served, and
      King and Queen and Princes, with attendant nobles and holiday guests,
      partook of the strong dishes of those old days of hearty appetites.
    </p>
<p>
      "A shield of brawn with mustard, boyl'd capon, a chine of beef roasted, a
      neat's tongue roasted, a pig roasted, chewets baked, goose, swan and
      turkey roasted, a haunch of venison roasted, a pasty of venison, a kid
      stuffed with pudding, an olive-pye, capons and dowsets, sallats and
      fricases"—all these and much more, with strong beer and spiced ale
      to wash the dinner down, crowned the royal board, while the great boar's
      head and the Christmas pie, borne in with great parade, were placed on the
      table joyously decked with holly and rosemary and bay. It was a great
      ceremony—this bringing in of the boar's head. First came an
      attendant, so the old record tells us,
    </p>
<p>
      "attyr'd in a horseman's coat with a Boares-speare in his hande; next to
      him another huntsman in greene, with a bloody faulchion drawne; next to
      him two pages in tafatye sarcenet, each of them with a messe of mustard;
      next to whom came hee that carried the Boareshead, crosst with a greene
      silk scarfe, by which hunge the empty scabbard of the faulchion which was
      carried before him."
    </p>
<p>
      After the dinner—the boar's head having been wrestled for by some of
      the royal yeomen—came the wassail or health-drinking. Then the King
      said:
    </p>
<p>
      "And now, Baby Charles, let us hear the boon ye were to crave of us at
      wassail as the guerdon for the holder of the lucky raisin in Master
      Sandy's snapdragon."
    </p>
<p>
      And the little eleven-year-old Prince stood up before the company in all
      his brave attire, glanced at his brother Prince Henry, and then facing the
      King said boldly:
    </p>
<p>
      "I pray you, my father and my Hege, grant me as the boon I ask—the
      freeing of Walter Raleigh."
    </p>
<p>
      At this altogether startling and unlooked-for request, amazement and
      consternation appeared on the faces around the royal banqueting board, and
      the King put down his untasted tankard of spiced ale, while surprise,
      doubt and anger quickly crossed the royal face. For Sir Walter Raleigh,
      the favourite of Queen Elizabeth, the lord-proprietor and colonizer of the
      American colonies, and the sworn foe to Spain, had been now close prisoner
      in the Tower for more than nine years, hated and yet dreaded by this
      fickle King James, who dared not put him to death for fear of the people
      to whom the name and valour of Raleigh were dear.
    </p>
<p>
      "Hoot, chiel!" cried the King at length, spluttering wrathfully in the
      broadest of his native Scotch, as was his habit when angered or surprised.
      "Ye reckless fou, wha hae put ye to sic a jackanape trick? Dinna ye ken
      that sic a boon is nae for a laddie like you to meddle wi'? Wha hae put ye
      to't, I say?"
    </p>
<p>
      But ere the young Prince could reply, the stately and solemn-faced
      ambassador of Spain, the Count of Gondemar, arose in the place of honour
      he filled as a guest of the King.
    </p>
<p>
      "My Lord King," he said, "I beg your majesty to bear in memory your pledge
      to my gracious master King Philip of Spain, that naught save grave cause
      should lead you to liberate from just durance that arch enemy of Spain,
      the Lord Raleigh."
    </p>
<p>
      "But you did promise me, my lord," said Prince Charles, hastily, "and you
      have told me that the royal pledge is not to be lightly broken."
    </p>
<p>
      "Ma certie, lad," said King James, "ye maunay learn that there is nae rule
      wi'out its aicciptions." And then he added, "A pledge to a boy in play,
      like to ours of yester-eve, Baby Charles, is not to be kept when matters
      of state conflict." Then turning to the Spanish ambassador, he said: "Rest
      content, my lord count. This recreant Raleigh shall not yet be loosed."
    </p>
<p>
      "But, my liege," still persisted the boy prince, "my brother Hal did say—"
    </p>
<p>
      The wrath of the King burst out afresh.
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay, said you so? Brother Hal, indeed!" he cried.
    </p>
<p>
      "I thought the wind blew from that quarter," and he angrily faced his
      eldest son. "So, sirrah; 'twas you that did urge this foolish boy to work
      your traitorous purpose in such coward guise!"
    </p>
<p>
      "My liege," said Prince Henry, rising in his place, "traitor and coward
      are words I may not calmly hear even from my father and my king. You wrong
      me foully when you use them thus. For though I do bethink me that the
      Tower is but a sorry cage in which to keep so grandly plumed a bird as my
      Lord of Raleigh, I did but seek—"
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay, you did but seek to curry favour with the craven crowd," burst out
      the now thoroughly angry King, always jealous of the popularity of this
      brave young Prince of Wales. "And am I, sirrah, to be badgered and
      browbeaten in my own palace by such a thriftless ne'er-do-weel as you,
      ungrateful boy, who seekest to gain preference with the people in this
      realm before your liege lord the King? Quit my presence, sirrah, and that
      instanter, ere that I do send you to spend your Christmas where your
      great-grandfather, King Henry, bade his astrologer spend his—in the
      Tower, there to keep company with your fitting comrade, Raleigh, the
      traitor!"
    </p>
<p>
      Without a word in reply to this outburst, with a son's submission, but
      with a royal dignity, Prince Henry bent his head before his father's
      decree and withdrew from the table, followed by the gentlemen of his
      household.
    </p>
<p>
      But ere he could reach the arrased doorway, Prince Charles sprang to his
      side and cried, valiantly: "Nay then, if he goes so do I! 'Twas surely but
      a Christmas joke and of my own devising. Spoil not our revel, my gracious
      liege and father, on this of all the year's red-letter days, by turning my
      thoughtless frolic into such bitter threatening. I did but seek to test
      the worth of Master Sandy's lucky raisin by asking for as wildly great a
      boon as might be thought upon. Brother Hal too, did but give me his
      advising in joke even as I did seek it. None here, my royal father, would
      brave your sovereign displeasure by any unknightly or unloyal scheme."
    </p>
<p>
      The gentle and dignified words of the young prince—for Charles
      Stuart, though despicable as a king, was ever loving and loyal as a friend—were
      as oil upon the troubled waters. The ruffled temper of the ambassador of
      Spain—who in after years really did work Raleigh's downfall and
      death—gave place to courtly bows, and the King's quick anger melted
      away before the dearly loved voice of his favourite son.
    </p>
<p>
      "Nay, resume your place, son Hal," he said, "and you, gentlemen all,
      resume your seats, I pray. I too did but jest as did Baby Charles here—a
      sad young wag, I fear me, is this same young Prince."
    </p>
<p>
      But as, after the wassail, came the Christmas mask, in which both Princes
      bore their parts, Prince Charles said to Archie Armstrong, the King's
      jester:
    </p>
<p>
      "Faith, good Archie; now is Master Sandy's snapdragon but a false beast
      withal, and his lucky raisin is but an evil fruit that pays not for the
      plucking."
    </p>
<p>
      And wise old Archie only wagged his head and answered, "Odd zooks, Cousin
      Charlie, Christmas raisins are not the only fruit that burns the fingers
      in the plucking, and mayhap you too may live to know that a mettlesome
      horse never stumbleth but when he is reined."
    </p>
<p>
      Poor "Cousin Charlie" did not then understand the full meaning of the wise
      old jester's words, but he did live to learn their full intent. For when,
      in after years, his people sought to curb his tyrannies with a revolt that
      ended only with his death upon the scaffold, outside this very banqueting
      house at Whitehall, Charles Stuart learned all too late that a "mettlesome
      horse" needed sometimes to be "reined," and heard, too late as well, the
      stern declaration of the Commons of England that "no chief officer might
      presume for the future to contrive the enslaving and destruction of the
      nation with impunity."
    </p>
<p>
      But though many a merry and many a happy day had the young Prince Charles
      before the dark tragedy of his sad and sorry manhood, he lost all faith in
      lucky raisins. Not for three years did Sir Walter Raleigh—whom both
      the Princes secretly admired—obtain release from the Tower, and ere
      three more years were past his head fell as a forfeit to the stern demands
      of Spain. And Prince Charles often declared that naught indeed could come
      from meddling with luck saving burnt fingers, "even," he said, "as came to
      me that profitless night when I sought a boon for snatching the lucky
      raisin from good Master Sandy's Christmas snapdragon."
    </p>
<p>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00055">
      XXXII. A CHRISTMAS FAIRY*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00056">
      * Reprinted with the permission of the Henry Altemus Company.
    </h3>
<p>
      JOHN STRANGE WINTER
    </p>
<p>
      It was getting very near to Christmas time, and all the boys at Miss
      Ware's school were talking about going home for the holidays.
    </p>
<p>
      "I shall go to the Christmas festival," said Bertie Fellows, "and my
      mother will have a party, and my Aunt will give another. Oh! I shall have
      a splendid time at home."
    </p>
<p>
      "My Uncle Bob is going to give me a pair of skates," remarked Harry
      Wadham.
    </p>
<p>
      "My father is going to give me a bicycle," put in George Alderson.
    </p>
<p>
      "Will you bring it back to school with you?" asked Harry.
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh! yes, if Miss Ware doesn't say no."
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, Tom," cried Bertie, "where are you going to spend your holidays?"
    </p>
<p>
      "I am going to stay here," answered Tom in a very forlorn voice.
    </p>
<p>
      "Here—at school—oh, dear! Why can't you go home?"
    </p>
<p>
      "I can't go home to India," answered Tom.
    </p>
<p>
      "Nobody said you could. But haven't you any relatives anywhere?"
    </p>
<p>
      Tom shook his head. "Only in India," he said sadly.
    </p>
<p>
      "Poor fellow! That's hard luck for you. I'll tell you what it is, boys, if
      I couldn't go home for the holidays, especially at Christmas—I think
      I would just sit down and die."
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, no, you wouldn't," said Tom. "You would get ever so homesick, but you
      wouldn't die. You would just get through somehow, and hope something would
      happen before next year, or that some kind fairy would—"
    </p>
<p>
      "There are no fairies nowadays," said Bertie.
    </p>
<p>
      "See here, Tom, I'll write and ask my mother to invite you to go home with
      me for the holidays."
    </p>
<p>
      "Will you really?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Yes, I will. And if she says yes, we shall have such a splendid time. We
      live in London, you know, and have lots of parties and fun."
    </p>
<p>
      "Perhaps she will say no?" suggested poor little Tom.
    </p>
<p>
      "My mother isn't the kind that says no," Bertie declared loudly.
    </p>
<p>
      In a few days' time a letter arrived from Bertie's mother. The boy opened
      it eagerly. It said:
    </p>
<p>
      My own dear Bertie:
    </p>
<p>
      I am very sorry to tell you that little Alice is ill with scarlet fever.
      And so you cannot come for your holidays. I would have been glad to have
      you bring your little friend with you if all had been well here.
    </p>
<p>
      Your father and I have decided that the best thing that you can do is to
      stay at Miss Ware's. We shall send your Christmas present to you as well
      as we can.
    </p>
<p>
      It will not be like coming home, but I am sure you will try to be happy,
      and make me feel that you are helping me in this sad time.
    </p>
<p>
      Dear little Alice is very ill, very ill indeed. Tell Tom that I am sending
      you a box for both of you, with two of everything. And tell him that it
      makes me so much happier to know that you will not be alone.
    </p>
<pre>
          Your own mother.
</pre>
<p>
      When Bertie Fellows received this letter, which ended all his Christmas
      hopes and joys, he hid his face upon his desk and sobbed aloud. The lonely
      boy from India, who sat next to him, tried to comfort his friend in every
      way he could think of. He patted his shoulder and whispered many kind
      words to him.
    </p>
<p>
      At last Bertie put the letter into Tom's hands. "Read it," he sobbed.
    </p>
<p>
      So then Tom understood the cause of Bertie's grief. "Don't fret over it,"
      he said at last. "It might be worse. Why, your father and mother might be
      thousands of miles away, like mine are. When Alice is better, you will be
      able to go home. And it will help your mother if she thinks you are almost
      as happy as if you could go now."
    </p>
<p>
      Soon Miss Ware came to tell Bertie how sorry she was for him.
    </p>
<p>
      "After all," said she, smiling down on the two boys, "it is an ill wind
      that blows nobody good. Poor Tom has been expecting to spend his holidays
      alone, and now he will have a friend with him—Try to look on the
      bright side, Bertie, and to remember how much worse it would have been if
      there had been no boy to stay with you."
    </p>
<p>
      "I can't help being disappointed, Miss Ware," said Bertie, his eyes
      filling with tears.
    </p>
<p>
      "No; you would be a strange boy if you were not. But I want you to try to
      think of your poor mother, and write her as cheerfully as you can."
    </p>
<p>
      "Yes," answered Bertie; but his heart was too full to say more.
    </p>
<p>
      The last day of the term came, and one by one, or two by two, the boys
      went away, until only Bertie and Tom were left in the great house. It had
      never seemed so large to either of them before.
    </p>
<p>
      "It's miserable," groaned poor Bertie, as they strolled into the
      schoolroom. "Just think if we were on our way home now—how
      different."
    </p>
<p>
      "Just think if I had been left here by myself," said Tom.
    </p>
<p>
      "Yes," said Bertie, "but you know when one wants to go home he never
      thinks of the boys that have no home to go to."
    </p>
<p>
      The evening passed, and the two boys went to bed. They told stories to
      each other for a long time before they could go to sleep. That night they
      dreamed of their homes, and felt very lonely. Yet each tried to be brave,
      and so another day began.
    </p>
<p>
      This was the day before Christmas. Quite early in the morning came the
      great box of which Bertie's mother had spoken in her letter. Then, just as
      dinner had come to an end, there was a peal of the bell, and a voice was
      heard asking for Tom Egerton.
    </p>
<p>
      Tom sprang to his feet, and flew to greet a tall, handsome lady, crying,
      "Aunt Laura! Aunt Laura!"
    </p>
<p>
      And Laura explained that she and her husband had arrived in London only
      the day before. "I was so afraid, Tom," she said, "that we should not get
      here until Christmas Day was over and that you would be disappointed. So I
      would not let your mother write you that we were on our way home. You must
      get your things packed up at once, and go back with me to London. Then
      uncle and I will give you a splendid time."
    </p>
<p>
      For a minute or two Tom's face shone with delight. Then he caught sight of
      Bertie and turned to his aunt.
    </p>
<p>
      "Dear Aunt Laura," he said, "I am very sorry, but I can't go."
    </p>
<p>
      "Can't go? and why not?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Because I can't go and leave Bertie here all alone," he said stoutly.
      "When I was going to be alone he wrote and asked his mother to let me go
      home with him. She could not have either of us because Bertie's sister has
      scarlet fever. He has to stay here, and he has never been away from home
      at Christmas time before, and I can't go away and leave him by himself,
      Aunt Laura."
    </p>
<p>
      For a minute Aunt Laura looked at the boy as if she could not believe him.
      Then she caught him in her arms and kissed him.
    </p>
<p>
      "You dear little boy, you shall not leave him. You shall bring him along,
      and we shall all enjoy ourselves together. Bertie, my boy, you are not
      very old yet, but I am going to teach you a lesson as well as I can. It is
      that kindness is never wasted in this world."
    </p>
<p>
      And so Bertie and Tom found that there was such a thing as a fairy after
      all.
    </p>
<p>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00057">
      XXXIII. THE GREATEST OF THESE*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00058">
      *This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, vol. 76.
    </h3>
<p>
      JOSEPH MILLS HANSON
    </p>
<p>
      The outside door swung open suddenly, letting a cloud of steam into the
      small, hot kitchen. Charlie Moore, a milk pail in one hand, a lantern in
      the other, closed the door behind him with a bang, set the pail on the
      table and stamped the snow from his feet.
    </p>
<p>
      "There's the milk, and I near froze gettin' it," said he, addressing his
      partner, who was chopping potatoes in a pan on the stove.
    </p>
<p>
      "Dose vried bodadoes vas burnt," said the other, wielding his knife
      vigorously.
    </p>
<p>
      "Are, eh? Why didn't you watch 'em instead of readin' your old
      Scandinavian paper?" answered Charlie, hanging his overcoat and cap behind
      the door and laying his mittens under the stove to dry. Then he drew up a
      chair and with much exertion pulled off his heavy felt boots and stood
      them beside his mittens.
    </p>
<p>
      "Why didn't you shut the gate after you came in from town? The cows got
      out and went up to Roney's an' I had to chase 'em; 'tain't any joke
      runnin' round after cows such a night as this." Having relieved his mind
      of its grievance, Charlie sat down before the oven door, and, opening it,
      laid a stick of wood along its outer edge and thrust his feet into the hot
      interior, propping his heels against the stick.
    </p>
<p>
      "Look oud for dese har biscuits!" exclaimed his partner, anxiously.
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, hang the biscuits!" was Charlie's hasty answer. "I'll watch 'em. Why
      didn't you?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay tank Ay fergit hem."
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, you don't want to forget. A feller forgot his clothes once, an' he
      got froze."
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay gass dose taller vas ketch in a sbring snowstorm. Vas dose biscuits
      done, Sharlie?"
    </p>
<p>
      "You bet they are, Nels," replied Charlie, looking into the pan.
    </p>
<p>
      "Dan subbar vas ready. Yom on!"
    </p>
<p>
      Nels picked up the frying-pan and Charlie the biscuits, and set them on
      the oilcloth-covered table, where a plate of butter, a jar of plum jelly,
      and a coffee-pot were already standing.
    </p>
<p>
      Outside the frozen kitchen window the snow-covered fields and meadows
      stretched, glistening and silent, away to the dark belt of timber by the
      river. Along the deep-rutted road in front a belated lumber-wagon passed
      slowly, the wheels crunching through the packed snow with a wavering,
      incessant shriek.
    </p>
<p>
      The two men hitched their chairs up to the table, and without ceremony
      helped themselves liberally to the steaming food. For a few moments they
      seemed oblivious to everything but the demands of hunger. The potatoes and
      biscuits disappeared with surprising rapidity, washed down by large drafts
      of coffee. These men, labouring steadily through the short daylight hours
      in the dry, cold air of the Dakota winter, were like engines whose fires
      had burned low—they were taking fuel. Presently, the first keen edge
      of appetite satisfied, they ate more slowly, and Nels, straightening up
      with a sigh, spoke:
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay seen Seigert in town ta-day. Ha vants von hundred fifty fer dose
      team."
    </p>
<p>
      "Come down, eh?" commented Charlie. "Well, they're worth that. We'd better
      take 'em, Nels. We'll need 'em in the spring if we break the north forty."
    </p>
<p>
      "Yas, et's a nice team," agreed Nels. "Ha vas driven ham ta-day."
    </p>
<p>
      "Is he haulin' corn?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Na; he had his kids oop gettin' Christmas bresents."
    </p>
<p>
      "Chris—By gracious! to-morrow's Christmas!"
    </p>
<p>
      Nels nodded solemnly, as one possessing superior knowledge. Charlie became
      thoughtful.
    </p>
<p>
      "We'll come in sort of slim on it here, I reckon, Nels. Christmas ain't
      right, somehow, out here. Back in Wisconsin, where I came from, there's
      where you get your Christmas!" Charlie spoke with the unswerving prejudice
      of mankind for the land of his birth.
    </p>
<p>
      "Yas, dose been right. En da ol' kontry dey havin' gret times Christmas."
    </p>
<p>
      Their thoughts were all bent now upon the holiday scenes of the past. As
      they finished the meal and cleared away and washed the dishes they related
      incidents of their boyhood's time, compared, reiterated, and embellished.
      As they talked they grew jovial, and laughed often.
    </p>
<p>
      "The skee broke an' you went over kerplunk, hey? Haw, haw! That reminds me
      of one time in Wisconsin—"
    </p>
<p>
      Something of the joyous spirit of the Christmastide seemed to have entered
      into this little farmhouse set in the midst of the lonely, white fields.
      In the hearts of these men, moving about in their dim-lighted room, was
      reechoed the joyous murmur of the great world without: the gayety of the
      throngs in city streets, where the brilliant shop-windows, rich with
      holiday spoils, smile out upon the passing crowd, and the clang of
      street-cars and roar of traffic mingle with the cries of street-venders.
      The work finished, they drew their chairs to the stove, and filled their
      pipes, still talking.
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, well," said Charlie, after the laugh occasioned by one of Nels'
      droll stories had subsided. "It's nice to think of those old times. I'd
      hate to have been one of these kids that can't have any fun. Christmas or
      any other time."
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay gass dere ain't anybody much dot don'd have someding dis tams a year."
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, yes, there are, Nels! You bet there are!"
    </p>
<p>
      Charlie nodded at his partner with serious conviction.
    </p>
<p>
      "Now, there's the Roneys," he waved his pipe over his shoulder. "The old
      man told me to-night when I was up after the cows that he's sold all the
      crops except what they need for feedin'—wheat, and corn, and
      everything, and some hogs besides—and ain't got hardly enough now
      for feed and clothes for all that family. The rent and the lumber he had
      to buy to build the new barn after the old one burnt ate up the money like
      fury. He kind of laughed, and said he guessed the children wouldn't get
      much Christmas this year. I didn't think about it's being so close when he
      told me."
    </p>
<p>
      "No Christmas!" Nels' round eyes widened with astonishment. "Ay tank dose
      been pooty bad!" He studied the subject for a few moments, his stolid face
      suddenly grown thoughtful. Charlie stared at the stove. Far away by the
      river a lonely coyote set up his quick, howling yelp.
    </p>
<p>
      "Dere's been seven kids oop dere," said Nels at last, glancing up as it
      for corroboration.
    </p>
<p>
      "Yes, seven," agreed Charlie.
    </p>
<p>
      "Say, do ve need Seigert's team very pad?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, now that depends," said Charlie. "Why not?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Nothin', only Ay vas tankin' ve might tak' some a das veat we vas goin'
      to sell and—and—"
    </p>
<p>
      "Yep, what?"
    </p>
<p>
      "And dumb it on Roney's granary floor to-night after dere been asleeb."
    </p>
<p>
      Charlie stared at his companion for a moment in silence. Then he rose,
      and, approaching Nels, examined his partner's face with solemn scrutiny.
    </p>
<p>
      "By the great horn spoon," he announced, finally, "you've got a head on
      you like a balloon, my boy! Keep on gettin' ideas like that, and you'll
      land in Congress or the poor-farm before many years!"
    </p>
<p>
      Then, abandoning his pretense of gravity, he slapped the other on the
      back.
    </p>
<p>
      "Why didn't I think of that? It's the best yet. Seigert's team? Oh, hang
      Seigert's team. We don't need it. We'll have a little merry Christmas out
      of this yet. Only they mustn't know where it came from. I'll write a note
      and stick it under the door, 'You'll find some merry wheat—'No, that
      ain't it. 'You'll find some wheat in the granary to give the kids a merry
      Christmas with,' signed, 'Santa Claus.'"
    </p>
<p>
      He wrote out the message in the air with a pointing forefinger. He had
      entered into the spirit of the thing eagerly.
    </p>
<p>
      "It's half-past nine now," he went on, looking at the clock. "It'll be
      eleven time we get the stuff loaded and hauled up there. Let's go out and
      get at it. Lucky the bobs are on the wagon; they don't make such a racket
      as wheels."
    </p>
<p>
      He took the lantern from its nail behind the door and lighted it, after
      which he put on his boots, cap, and mittens, and flung his overcoat across
      his shoulders. Nels, meanwhile, had put on his outer garments, also.
    </p>
<p>
      "Shut up the stove, Nels." Charlie blew out the light and opened the door.
      "There, hang it!" he exclaimed, turning back. "I forgot the note. Ought to
      be in ink, I suppose. Well, never mind now; we won't put on any style
      about it."
    </p>
<p>
      He took down a pencil from the shelf, and, extracting a bit of wrapping
      paper from a bundle behind the woodbox, wrote the note by the light of the
      lantern.
    </p>
<p>
      "There, I guess that will do," he said, finally. "Come on!"
    </p>
<p>
      Outside, the night air was cold and bracing, and in the black vault of the
      sky the winter constellations flashed and throbbed. The shadows of the two
      men, thrown by the lantern, bobbed huge and grotesque across the snow and
      among the bare branches of the cottonwoods, as they moved toward the barn.
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay tank ve put on dose extra side poards and make her an even fifty
      pushel," said Nels, after they had backed the wagon up to the granary
      door. "Ve might as vell do it oop right, skence ve're at it."
    </p>
<p>
      Having carried out this suggestion, the two shovelled steadily, with short
      intervals of rest, for three quarters of an hour, the dark pile of grain
      in the wagon-box rising gradually until it stood flush with the top.
    </p>
<p>
      Good it was to look upon, cold and soft and yielding to the touch, this
      heaped-up wealth from the inexhaustible treasure-house of the mighty West.
      Charlie and Nels felt something of this as they viewed the results of
      their labours for a moment before hitching up the team.
    </p>
<p>
      "It's A number one hard," said Charlie, picking up a handful and sifting
      it slowly through his fingers, "and it'll fetch seventy-four cents. But
      you can't raise any worse on this old farm of ours if you try," he added,
      a little proudly. "Nor anywhere else in the Jim River Valley, for that
      matter."
    </p>
<p>
      As they approached the Roney place, looking dim and indistinct in the
      darkness, their voices hushed apprehensively, and the noise of the
      sled-runners slipping through the snow seemed to them to increase from a
      purr to a roar.
    </p>
<p>
      "Here, stob a minute!" whispered Nels, in agony of discovery. "Ve're
      magin' an awful noise. Ay'll go und take a beek."
    </p>
<p>
      He slipped away and cautiously approached the house. "Et's all right," he
      whispered, hoarsely, returning after a moment; "dere all asleeb. But go
      easy; Ay tank ve pest go easy." They seemed burdened all at once with the
      consciences of criminals, and went forward with almost guilty timidity.
    </p>
<p>
      "Thunder, dere's a bump! Vy don'd you drive garefuller, Sharlie?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Drive yourself, if you think you can do any better!" As they came into
      the yard a dog suddenly ran out from the barn, barking furiously. Charlie
      reined up with an ejaculation of despair; "Look there, the dog! We're done
      for now, sure! Stop him, Nels! Throw somethin' at 'im!"
    </p>
<p>
      The noise seemed to their excited ears louder than the crash of artillery.
      Nels threw a piece of snow crust. The dog ran back a few steps, but his
      barking did not diminish.
    </p>
<p>
      "Here, hold the lines. I'll try to catch 'im." Charlie jumped from the
      wagon and approached the dog with coaxing words: "Come, doggie, good
      doggie, nice boy, come!"
    </p>
<p>
      His manoeuvre, however, merely served to increase the animal's frenzy. As
      Charlie approached the dog retired slowly toward the house, his head
      thrown back, and his rapid barking increased to a long-drawn howl.
    </p>
<p>
      "Good boy, come! Bother the brute! He'll wake up the whole household! Nice
      doggie! Phe-e—"
    </p>
<p>
      The noise, however, had no apparent effect upon the occupants of the
      house. All remained as dark and silent as ever.
    </p>
<p>
      "Sharlie, Sharlie, let him go!" cried Nels, in a voice smothered with
      laughter. "Ay go in dose parn; maype ha'll chase me."
    </p>
<p>
      His hope was well founded. The dog, observing this treacherous occupation
      by the enemy of his last harbour of refuge, gave pursuit and disappeared
      within the door, which Charlie, hard behind him, closed with a bang. There
      was the sound of a hurried scuffle within. The dog's barking gave place to
      terrified whinings, which in turn were suddenly quenched to a choking
      murmur.
    </p>
<p>
      "Gome in, Sharlie, kvick!"
    </p>
<p>
      "You got him?" queried Charlie, opening the door cautiously. "Did he bite
      you?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Na, yust ma mitten. Gat a sack or someding da die him oop in."
    </p>
<p>
      A sack was procured from somewhere, into which the dog, now silenced from
      sheer exhaustion and fright, was unceremoniously thrust, after which the
      sack was tied and flung into the wagon. This formidable obstacle overcome
      and the Roneys still slumbering peacefully, the rest was easy. The granary
      door was pried open and the wheat shovelled hurriedly in upon the empty
      floor. Charlie then crept up to the house and slipped his note under the
      door.
    </p>
<p>
      The sack was lifted from the now empty wagon and opened before the barn,
      whereupon its occupant slipped meekly out and retreated at once to a far
      corner, seemingly too much incensed at his discourteous treatment even to
      fling a volley of farewell barks at his departing captors.
    </p>
<p>
      "Vell," remarked Nels, with a sigh of relief as they gained the road, "Ay
      tank dose Roneys pelieve en Santa Claus now. Dose peen funny vay fer Santa
      Claus to coom."
    </p>
<p>
      Charlie's laugh was good to hear. "He didn't exactly come down the
      chimney, that's a fact, but it'll do at a pinch. We ought to have told
      them to get a present for the dog—collar and chain. I reckon he
      wouldn't hardly be thankful for it, though, eh?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Ay gass not. Ha liges ta haf hes nights ta hemself."
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, we had our fun, anyway. Sort of puts me in mind of old Wisconsin,
      somehow."
    </p>
<p>
      From far off over the valley, with its dismantled cornfields and
      snow-covered haystacks, beyond the ice-bound river, floated slow, and
      sonorous, the mellow clanging of church bells. They were ushering in the
      Christmas morn. Overhead the starlit heavens glistened, brooding and
      mysterious, looking down with luminous, loving eyes upon these humble sons
      of men doing a good deed, from the impulse of simple, generous hearts, as
      upon that other Christmas morning, long ago, when the Jewish shepherds,
      guarding their flocks by night, read in their shining depths that in
      Bethlehem of Judea the Christ-Child was born.
    </p>
<p>
      The rising sun was touching the higher hilltops with a faint rush of
      crimson the next morning when the back door of the Roney house opened with
      a creak, and Mr. Roney, still heavy-eyed with sleep, stumbled out upon the
      porch, stretched his arms above his head, yawned, blinked at the dazzling
      snow, and then shambled off toward the barn. As he approached, the dog ran
      eagerly out, gambolled meekly around his feet and caressed his boots. The
      man patted him kindly.
    </p>
<p>
      "Hello, old boy! What were you yappin' around so for last night, huh?
      Grain-thieves? You needn't worry about them. There ain't nothin' left for
      them to steal. No, sir! If they got into that granary they'd have to take
      a lantern along to find a pint of wheat. I don't suppose," he added,
      reflectively, "that I could scrape up enough to feed the chickens this
      mornin', but I guess I might's well see."
    </p>
<p>
      He passed over to the little building. What he saw when he looked within
      seemed for a moment to produce no impression upon him whatever. He stared
      at the hillock of grain in motionless silence. Finally Mr. Roney gave
      utterance to a single word, "Geewhilikins!" and started for the house on a
      run. Into the kitchen, where his wife was just starting the fire, the
      excited man burst like a whirlwind.
    </p>
<p>
      "Come out here, Mary!" he cried. "Come out here, quick!"
    </p>
<p>
      The worthy woman, unaccustomed to such demonstrations, looked at him in
      amazement.
    </p>
<p>
      "For goodness sake, what's come over you, Peter Roney?" she exclaimed.
      "Are you daft? Don't make such a noise! You'll wake the young ones, and I
      don't want them waked till need be, with no Christmas for 'em, poor little
      things!"
    </p>
<p>
      "Never mind the young 'uns," he replied. "Come on!"
    </p>
<p>
      As they passed out he noticed the slip of paper under the door and picked
      it up, but without comment.
    </p>
<p>
      He charged down upon the granary, his wife, with a shawl over her head,
      close behind.
    </p>
<p>
      She peered in, apprehensively at first, then with eyes of widening wonder.
    </p>
<p>
      "Why, Peter!" she said, turning to him. "Why, Peter! What does—I
      thought—"
    </p>
<p>
      "You thought!" he broke in. "Me, too. But it ain't so. It means that we've
      got some of the best neighbours that ever was, a thinkin' of our young
      'uns this way! Read that!" and he thrust the paper into her hand.
    </p>
<p>
      "Why, Peter!" she ejaculated again, weakly. Then suddenly she turned, and
      laying her head on his shoulder, began to sob softly.
    </p>
<p>
      "There, there," he said, patting her arm awkwardly.
    </p>
<p>
      "Don't you go and cry now. Let's just be thankful to the good Lord for
      puttin' such fellers into the world as them fellers down the road. And now
      you run in and hurry up breakfast while I do up the chores. Then we'll
      hitch up and get into town 'fore the stores close. Tell the young 'uns
      Santy didn't get round last night with their things, but we've got word to
      meet him in town. Hey? Yes, I saw just the kind of sled Pete wants when I
      was up yesterday, and that china doll for Mollie. Yes, tell 'em anything
      you want. Twon't be too big. Santy Claus has come to Roney's ranch this
      year, sure!"
    </p>
<p>
<a id="link2H_4_0035">
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</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
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<h2 id="pgepubid00059">
      XXXIV. LITTLE GRETCHEN AND THE WOODEN SHOE*
    </h2>
<p>
      * From "Christmastide," published by the Chicago Kindergarten College,
      copyright 1902.
    </p>
<p>
      ELIZABETH HARRISON
    </p>
<p>
      The following story is one of many which has drifted down to us from the
      story-loving nurseries and hearthstones of Germany. I cannot recall when I
      first had it told to me as a child, varied, of course, by different
      tellers, but always leaving that sweet, tender impression of God's loving
      care for the least of his children. I have since read different versions
      of it in at least a half-dozen story books for children.
    </p>
<p>
      Once upon a time, a long time ago, far away across the great ocean, in a
      country called Germany, there could be seen a small log hut on the edge of
      a great forest, whose fir-trees extended for miles and miles to the north.
      This little house, made of heavy hewn logs, had but one room in it. A
      rough pine door gave entrance to this room, and a small square window
      admitted the light. At the back of the house was built an old-fashioned
      stone chimney, out of which in winter usually curled a thin, blue smoke,
      showing that there was not very much fire within.
    </p>
<p>
      Small as the house was, it was large enough for the two people who lived
      in it. I want to tell you a story to-day about these two people. One was
      an old, gray-haired woman, so old that the little children of the village,
      nearly half a mile away, often wondered whether she had come into the
      world with the huge mountains, and the great fir-trees, which stood like
      giants back of her small hut. Her face was wrinkled all over with deep
      lines, which, if the children could only have read aright, would have told
      them of many years of cheerful, happy, self-sacrifice, of loving, anxious
      watching beside sick-beds, of quiet endurance of pain, of many a day of
      hunger and cold, and of a thousand deeds of unselfish love for other
      people; but, of course, they could not read this strange handwriting. They
      only knew that she was old and wrinkled, and that she stooped as she
      walked. None of them seemed to fear her, for her smile was always
      cheerful, and she had a kindly word for each of them if they chanced to
      meet her on her way to and from the village. With this old, old woman
      lived a very little girl. So bright and happy was she that the travellers
      who passed by the lonesome little house on the edge of the forest often
      thought of a sunbeam as they saw her. These two people were known in the
      village as Granny Goodyear and Little Gretchen.
    </p>
<p>
      The winter had come and the frost had snapped off many of the smaller
      branches from the pine-trees in the forest. Gretchen and her Granny were
      up by daybreak each morning. After their simple breakfast of oatmeal,
      Gretchen would run to the little closet and fetch Granny's old woollen
      shawl, which seemed almost as old as Granny herself. Gretchen always
      claimed the right to put the shawl over her Granny's head, even though she
      had to climb onto the wooden bench to do it. After carefully pinning it
      under Granny's chin, she gave her a good-bye kiss, and Granny started out
      for her morning's work in the forest. This work was nothing more nor less
      than the gathering up of the twigs and branches which the autumn winds and
      winter frosts had thrown upon the ground. These were carefully gathered
      into a large bundle which Granny tied together with a strong linen band.
      She then managed to lift the bundle to her shoulder and trudged off to the
      village with it. Here she sold the fagots for kindling wood to the people
      of the village. Sometimes she would get only a few pence each day, and
      sometimes a dozen or more, but on this money little Gretchen and she
      managed to live; they had their home, and the forest kindly furnished the
      wood for the fire which kept them warm in cold weather.
    </p>
<p>
      In the summer time Granny had a little garden at the back of the hut where
      she raised, with little Gretchen's help, a few potatoes and turnips and
      onions. These she carefully stored away for winter use. To this meagre
      supply, the pennies, gained by selling the twigs from the forest, added
      the oatmeal for Gretchen and a little black coffee for Granny. Meat was a
      thing they never thought of having. It cost too much money. Still, Granny
      and Gretchen were very happy, because they loved each other dearly.
      Sometimes Gretchen would be left alone all day long in the hut, because
      Granny would have some work to do in the village after selling her bundle
      of sticks and twigs. It was during these long days that little Gretchen
      had taught herself to sing the song which the wind sang to the pine
      branches. In the summer time she learned the chirp and twitter of the
      birds, until her voice might almost be mistaken for a bird's voice; she
      learned to dance as the swaying shadows did, and even to talk to the stars
      which shone through the little square window when Granny came home too
      late or too tired to talk.
    </p>
<p>
      Sometimes, when the weather was fine, or her Granny had an extra bundle of
      newly knitted stockings to take to the village, she would let little
      Gretchen go along with her. It chanced that one of these trips to the town
      came just the week before Christmas, and Gretchen's eyes were delighted by
      the sight of the lovely Christmas-trees which stood in the window of the
      village store. It seemed to her that she would never tire of looking at
      the knit dolls, the woolly lambs, the little wooden shops with their
      queer, painted men and women in them, and all the other fine things. She
      had never owned a plaything in her whole life; therefore, toys which you
      and I would not think much of, seemed to her to be very beautiful.
    </p>
<p>
      That night, after their supper of baked potatoes was over, and little
      Gretchen had cleared away the dishes and swept up the hearth, because
      Granny dear was so tired, she brought her own small wooden stool and
      placed it very near Granny's feet and sat down upon it, folding her hands
      on her lap. Granny knew that this meant she wanted to talk about
      something, so she smilingly laid away the large Bible which she had been
      reading, and took up her knitting, which was as much as to say: "Well,
      Gretchen, dear, Granny is ready to listen."
    </p>
<p>
      "Granny," said Gretchen slowly, "it's almost Christmas time, isn't it?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Yes, dearie," said Granny, "only five more days now," and then she
      sighed, but little Gretchen was so happy that she did not notice Granny's
      sigh.
    </p>
<p>
      "What do you think, Granny, I'll get this Christmas?" said she, looking up
      eagerly into Granny's face.
    </p>
<p>
      "Ah, child, child," said Granny, shaking her head, "you'll have no
      Christmas this year. We are too poor for that."
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, but, Granny," interrupted little Gretchen, "think of all the
      beautiful toys we saw in the village to-day. Surely Santa Claus has sent
      enough for every little child."
    </p>
<p>
      "Ah, dearie," said Granny, "those toys are for people who can pay money
      for them, and we have no money to spend for Christmas toys."
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, Granny," said Gretchen, "perhaps some of the little children who
      live in the great house on the hill at the other end of the village will
      be willing to share some of their toys with me. They will be so glad to
      give some to a little girl who has none."
    </p>
<p>
      "Dear child, dear child," said Granny, leaning forward and stroking the
      soft, shiny hair of the little girl, "your heart is full of love. You
      would be glad to bring a Christmas to every child; but their heads are so
      full of what they are going to get that they forget all about anybody else
      but themselves." Then she sighed and shook her head.
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, Granny," said Gretchen, her bright, happy tone of voice growing a
      little less joyous, "perhaps the dear Santa Claus will show some of the
      village children how to make presents that do not cost money, and some of
      them may surprise me Christmas morning with a present. And, Granny, dear,"
      added she, springing up from her low stool, "can't I gather some of the
      pine branches and take them to the old sick man who lives in the house by
      the mill, so that he can have the sweet smell of our pine forest in his
      room all Christmas day?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Yes, dearie," said Granny, "you may do what you can to make the Christmas
      bright and happy, but you must not expect any present yourself."
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, but, Granny," said little Gretchen, her face brightening, "you forget
      all about the shining Christmas angels, who came down to earth and sang
      their wonderful song the night the beautiful Christ-Child was born! They
      are so loving and good that they will not forget any little child. I shall
      ask my dear stars to-night to tell them of us. You know," she added, with
      a look of relief, "the stars are so very high that they must know the
      angels quite well, as they come and go with their messages from the loving
      God."
    </p>
<p>
      Granny sighed, as she half whispered, "Poor child, poor child!" but
      Gretchen threw her arm around Granny's neck and gave her a hearty kiss,
      saying as she did so: "Oh, Granny, Granny, you don't talk to the stars
      often enough, else you wouldn't be sad at Christmas time." Then she danced
      all around the room, whirling her little skirts about her to show Granny
      how the wind had made the snow dance that day. She looked so droll and
      funny that Granny forgot her cares and worries and laughed with little
      Gretchen over her new snow-dance. The days passed on, and the morning
      before Christmas Eve came. Gretchen having tidied up the little room—for
      Granny had taught her to be a careful little housewife—was off to
      the forest, singing a birdlike song, almost as happy and free as the birds
      themselves. She was very busy that day, preparing a surprise for Granny.
      First, however, she gathered the most beautiful of the fir branches within
      her reach to take the next morning to the old sick man who lived by the
      mill. The day was all too short for the happy little girl. When Granny
      came trudging wearily home that night, she found the frame of the doorway
      covered with green pine branches.
    </p>
<p>
      "It's to welcome you, Granny! It's to welcome you!" cried Gretchen; "our
      old dear home wanted to give you a Christmas welcome. Don't you see, the
      branches of evergreen make it look as if it were smiling all over, and it
      is trying to say, 'A happy Christmas' to you, Granny!"
    </p>
<p>
      Granny laughed and kissed the little girl, as they opened the door and
      went in together. Here was a new surprise for Granny. The four posts of
      the wooden bed, which stood in one corner of the room, had been trimmed by
      the busy little fingers, with smaller and more flexible branches of the
      pine-trees. A small bouquet of red mountain-ash berries stood at each side
      of the fireplace, and these, together with the trimmed posts of the bed,
      gave the plain old room quite a festival look. Gretchen laughed and
      clapped her hands and danced about until the house seemed full of music to
      poor, tired Granny, whose heart had been sad as she turned toward their
      home that night, thinking of the disappointment which must come to loving
      little Gretchen the next morning.
    </p>
<p>
      After supper was over little Gretchen drew her stool up to Granny's side,
      and laying her soft, little hands on Granny's knee, asked to be told once
      again the story of the coming of the Christ-Child; how the night that he
      was born the beautiful angels had sung their wonderful song, and how the
      whole sky had become bright with a strange and glorious light, never seen
      by the people of earth before. Gretchen had heard the story many, many
      times before, but she never grew tired of it, and now that Christmas Eve
      had come again, the happy little child wanted to hear it once more.
    </p>
<p>
      When Granny had finished telling it the two sat quiet and silent for a
      little while thinking it over; then Granny rose and said that it was time
      for them to go to bed. She slowly took off her heavy wooden shoes, such as
      are worn in that country, and placed them beside the hearth. Gretchen
      looked thoughtfully at them for a minute or two, and then she said,
      "Granny, don't you think that somebody in all this wide world will think
      of us to-night?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Nay, Gretchen," said Granny, "I don't think any one will."
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, then, Granny," said Gretchen, "the Christmas angels will, I know;
      so I am going to take one of your wooden shoes, and put it on the
      windowsill outside, so that they may see it as they pass by. I am sure the
      stars will tell the Christmas angels where the shoe is."
    </p>
<p>
      "Ah, you foolish, foolish child," said Granny, "you are only getting ready
      for a disappointment To-morrow morning there will be nothing whatever in
      the shoe. I can tell you that now."
    </p>
<p>
      But little Gretchen would not listen. She only shook her head and cried
      out: "Ah, Granny, you don't talk enough to the stars." With this she
      seized the shoe, and, opening the door, hurried out to place it on the
      windowsill. It was very dark without, and something soft and cold seemed
      to gently kiss her hair and face. Gretchen knew by this that it was
      snowing, and she looked up to the sky, anxious to see if the stars were in
      sight, but a strong wind was tumbling the dark, heavy snow-clouds about
      and had shut away all else.
    </p>
<p>
      "Never mind," said Gretchen softly to herself, "the stars are up there,
      even if I can't see them, and the Christmas angels do not mind
      snowstorms."
    </p>
<p>
      Just then a rough wind went sweeping by the little girl, whispering
      something to her which she could not understand, and then it made a sudden
      rush up to the snow-clouds and parted them, so that the deep, mysterious
      sky appeared beyond, and shining down out of the midst of it was
      Gretchen's favourite star.
    </p>
<p>
      "Ah, little star, little star!" said the child, laughing aloud, "I knew
      you were there, though I couldn't see you. Will you whisper to the
      Christmas angels as they come by that little Gretchen wants so very much
      to have a Christmas gift to-morrow morning, if they have one to spare, and
      that she has put one of Granny's shoes upon the windowsill ready for it?"
    </p>
<p>
      A moment more and the little girl, standing on tiptoe, had reached the
      windowsill and placed the shoe upon it, and was back again in the house
      beside Granny and the warm fire.
    </p>
<p>
      The two went quietly to bed, and that night as little Gretchen knelt to
      pray to the Heavenly Father, she thanked him for having sent the
      Christ-Child into the world to teach all mankind how to be loving and
      unselfish, and in a few moments she was quietly sleeping, dreaming of the
      Christmas angels.
    </p>
<p>
      The next morning, very early, even before the sun was up, little Gretchen
      was awakened by the sound of sweet music coming from the village. She
      listened for a moment and then she knew that the choir-boys were singing
      the Christmas carols in the open air of the village street. She sprang up
      out of bed and began to dress herself as quickly as possible, singing as
      she dressed. While Granny was slowly putting on her clothes, little
      Gretchen, having finished dressing herself, unfastened the door and
      hurried out to see what the Christmas angels had left in the old wooden
      shoe.
    </p>
<p>
      The white snow covered everything—trees, stumps, roads, and pastures—until
      the whole world looked like fairyland. Gretchen climbed up on a large
      stone which was beneath the window and carefully lifted down the wooden
      shoe. The snow tumbled off of it in a shower over the little girl's hands,
      but she did not heed that; she ran hurriedly back into the house, putting
      her hand into the toe of the shoe as she ran.
    </p>
<p>
      "Oh, Granny! Oh, Granny!" she exclaimed, "you didn't believe the Christmas
      angels would think about us, but see, they have, they have! Here is a dear
      little bird nestled down in the toe of your shoe! Oh, isn't he beautiful?"
    </p>
<p>
      Granny came forward and looked at what the child was holding lovingly in
      her hand. There she saw a tiny chick-a-dee, whose wing was evidently
      broken by the rough and boisterous winds of the night before, and who had
      taken shelter in the safe, dry toe of the old wooden shoe. She gently took
      the little bird out of Gretchen's hands, and skilfully bound his broken
      wing to his side, so that he need not hurt himself by trying to fly with
      it. Then she showed Gretchen how to make a nice warm nest for the little
      stranger, close beside the fire, and when their breakfast was ready she
      let Gretchen feed the little bird with a few moist crumbs.
    </p>
<p>
      Later in the day Gretchen carried the fresh, green boughs to the old sick
      man by the mill, and on her way home stopped to see and enjoy the
      Christmas toys of some other children whom she knew, never once wishing
      that they were hers. When she reached home she found that the little bird
      had gone to sleep. Soon, however, he opened his eyes and stretched his
      head up, saying just as plain as a bird could say, "Now, my new friends, I
      want you to give me something more to eat." Gretchen gladly fed him again,
      and then, holding him in her lap, she softly and gently stroked his gray
      feathers until the little creature seemed to lose all fear of her. That
      evening Granny taught her a Christmas hymn and told her another beautiful
      Christmas story. Then Gretchen made up a funny little story to tell to the
      birdie. He winked his eyes and turned his head from side to side in such a
      droll fashion that Gretchen laughed until the tears came.
    </p>
<p>
      As Granny and she got ready for bed that night, Gretchen put her arms
      softly around Granny's neck, and whispered: "What a beautiful Christmas we
      have had to-day, Granny! Is there anything in the world more lovely than
      Christmas?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Nay, child, nay," said Granny, "not to such loving hearts as yours."
    </p>
<p>
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<h2 id="pgepubid00060">
      XXXV. CHRISTMAS ON BIG RATTLE*
    </h2>
<h3 id="pgepubid00061">
      * This story was first printed in the Youth's Companion, Dec. 14, 1905.
    </h3>
<p>
      THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
    </p>
<p>
      Archer sat by the rude hearth of his Big Rattle camp, brooding in a sort
      of tired contentment over the spitting fagots of var and glowing coals of
      birch.
    </p>
<p>
      It was Christmas Eve. He had been out on his snowshoes all that day, and
      all the day before, springing his traps along the streams and putting his
      deadfalls out of commission—rather queer work for a trapper to be
      about.
    </p>
<p>
      But Archer, despite all his gloomy manner, was really a sentimentalist,
      who practised what he felt.
    </p>
<p>
      "Christmas is a season of peace on earth," he had told himself, while
      demolishing the logs of a sinister deadfall with his axe; and now the
      remembrance of his quixotic deed added a brightness to the fire and to the
      rough, undecorated walls of the camp.
    </p>
<p>
      Outside, the wind ran high in the forest, breaking and sweeping tidelike
      over the reefs of treetops. The air was bitterly cold. Another voice,
      almost as fitful as the sough of the wind, sounded across the night. It
      was the waters of Stone Arrow Falls, above Big Rattle.
    </p>
<p>
      The frosts had drawn their bonds of ice and blankets of silencing snow
      over all the rest of the stream, but the white and black face of the falls
      still flashed from a window in the great house of crystal, and threw out a
      voice of desolation.
    </p>
<p>
      Sacobie Bear, a full-blooded Micmac, uttered a grunt of relief when his
      ears caught the bellow of Stone Arrow Falls. He stood still, and turned
      his head from side to side, questioningly.
    </p>
<p>
      "Good!" he said. "Big Rattle off there, Archer's camp over there. I go
      there. Good 'nough!"
    </p>
<p>
      He hitched his old smooth-bore rifle higher under his arm and continued
      his journey. Sacobie had tramped many miles—all the way from
      ice-imprisoned Fox Harbor. His papoose was sick. His squaw was hungry.
      Sacobie's belt was drawn tight.
    </p>
<p>
      During all that weary journey his old rifle had not banged once, although
      few eyes save those of timberwolf and lynx were sharper in the hunt than
      Sacobie's. The Indian was reeling with hunger and weakness, but he held
      bravely on.
    </p>
<p>
      A white man, no matter how courageous and sinewy, would have been prone in
      the snow by that time.
    </p>
<p>
      But Sacobie, with his head down and his round snowshoes padding! padding!
      like the feet of a frightened duck, raced with death toward the haven of
      Archer's cabin.
    </p>
<p>
      Archer was dreaming of a Christmas-time in a great faraway city when he
      was startled by a rattle of snowshoes at his threshold and a soft beating
      on his door, like weak blows from mittened hands. He sprang across the
      cabin and pulled open the door.
    </p>
<p>
      A short, stooping figure shuffled in and reeled against him. A rifle in a
      woollen case clattered at his feet.
    </p>
<p>
      "Mer' Christmas! How-do?" said a weary voice.
    </p>
<p>
      "Merry Christmas, brother!" replied Archer. Then, "Bless me, but it's
      Sacobie Bear! Why, what's the matter, Sacobie?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Heap tired! Heap hungry!" replied the Micmac, sinking to the floor.
    </p>
<p>
      Archer lifted the Indian and carried him over to the bunk at the farther
      end of the room. He filled his iron-pot spoon with brandy, and inserted
      the point of it between Sacobie's unresisting jaws. Then he loosened the
      Micmac's coat and shirt and belt.
    </p>
<p>
      He removed his moccasins and stockings and rubbed the straight thin feet
      with brandy.
    </p>
<p>
      After a while Sacobie Bear opened his eyes and gazed up at Archer.
    </p>
<p>
      "Good!" he said. "John Archer, he heap fine man, anyhow. Mighty good to
      poor Injun Sacobie, too. Plenty tobac, I s'pose. Plenty rum, too."
    </p>
<p>
      "No more rum, my son," replied Archer, tossing what was left in the mug
      against the log wall, and corking the bottle, "and no smoke until you have
      had a feed. What do you say to bacon and tea! Or would tinned beef suit
      you better?"
    </p>
<p>
      "Bacum," replied Sacobie.
    </p>
<p>
      He hoisted himself to his elbow, and wistfully sniffed the fumes of brandy
      that came from the direction of his bare feet. "Heap waste of good rum, me
      t'ink," he said.
    </p>
<p>
      "You ungratefu' little beggar!" laughed Archer, as he pulled a frying pan
      from under the bunk.
    </p>
<p>
      By the time the bacon was fried and the tea steeped, Sacobie was
      sufficiently revived to leave the bunk and take a seat by the fire.
    </p>
<p>
      He ate as all hungry Indians do; and Archer looked on in wonder and
      whimsical regret, remembering the miles and miles he had tramped with that
      bacon on his back.
    </p>
<p>
      "Sacobie, you will kill yourself!" he protested.
    </p>
<p>
      "Sacobie no kill himself now," replied the Micmac, as he bolted a brown
      slice and a mouthful of hard bread. "Sacobie more like to kill himself
      when he empty. Want to live when he chock-full. Good fun. T'ank you for
      more tea."
    </p>
<p>
      Archer filled the extended mug and poured in the molasses—"long
      sweet'nin'" they call it in that region.
    </p>
<p>
      "What brings you so far from Fox Harbor this time of year?" inquired
      Archer.
    </p>
<p>
      "Squaw sick. Papoose sick. Bote empty. Wan' good bacum to eat."
    </p>
<p>
      Archer smiled at the fire. "Any luck trapping?" he asked.
    </p>
<p>
      His guest shook his head and hid his face behind the upturned mug.
    </p>
<p>
      "Not much," he replied, presently.
    </p>
<p>
      He drew his sleeve across his mouth, and then produced a clay pipe from a
      pocket in his shirt.
    </p>
<p>
      "Tobac?" he inquired.
    </p>
<p>
      Archer passed him a dark and heavy plug of tobacco.
    </p>
<p>
      "Knife?" queried Sacobie.
    </p>
<p>
      "Try your own knife on it," answered Archer, grinning.
    </p>
<p>
      With a sigh Sacobie produced his sheath-knife.
    </p>
<p>
      "You t'ink Sacobie heap big t'ief," he said, accusingly.
    </p>
<p>
      "Knives are easily lost—in people's pockets," replied Archer.
    </p>
<p>
      The two men talked for hours. Sacobie Bear was a great gossip for one of
      his race. In fact, he had a Micmac nickname which, translated, meant "the
      man who deafens his friends with much talk." Archer, however, was pleased
      with his ready chatter and unforced humour.
    </p>
<p>
      But at last they both began to nod. The white man made up a bed on the
      floor for Sacobie with a couple of caribou skins and a heavy blanket. Then
      he gathered together a few plugs of tobacco, some tea, flour, and dried
      fish.
    </p>
<p>
      Sacobie watched him with freshly aroused interest.
    </p>
<p>
      "More tobac, please," he said. "Squaw, he smoke, too."
    </p>
<p>
      Archer added a couple of sticks of the black leaf to the pile.
    </p>
<p>
      "Bacum, too," said the Micmac. "Bacum better nor fish, anyhow."
    </p>
<p>
      Archer shook his head.
    </p>
<p>
      "You'll have to do with the fish," he replied; "but I'll give you a tin of
      condensed milk for the papoose."
    </p>
<p>
      "Ah, ah! Him good stuff!" exclaimed Sacobie.
    </p>
<p>
      Archer considered the provisions for a second or two. Then, going over to
      a dunnage bag near his bunk, he pulled its contents about until he found a
      bright red silk handkerchief and a red flannel shirt. Their colour was too
      gaudy for his taste. "These things are for your squaw," he said.
    </p>
<p>
      Sacobie was delighted. Archer tied the articles into a neat pack and stood
      it in the corner, beside his guest's rifle.
    </p>
<p>
      "Now you had better turn in," he said, and blew out the light.
    </p>
<p>
      In ten minutes both men slept the sleep of the weary. The fire, a great
      mass of red coals, faded and flushed like some fabulous jewel. The wind
      washed over the cabin and fingered the eaves, and brushed furtive hands
      against the door.
    </p>
<p>
      It was dawn when Archer awoke. He sat up in his bunk and looked about the
      quiet, gray-lighted room. Sacobie Bear was nowhere to be seen.
    </p>
<p>
      He glanced at the corner by the door. Rifle and pack were both gone. He
      looked up at the rafter where his slab of bacon was always hung. It, too,
      was gone.
    </p>
<p>
      He jumped out of his bunk and ran to the door. Opening it, he looked out.
      Not a breath of air stirred. In the east, saffron and scarlet, broke the
      Christmas morning, and blue on the white surface of the world lay the
      imprints of Sacobie's round snowshoes.
    </p>
<p>
      For a long time the trapper stood in the doorway in silence, looking out
      at the stillness and beauty.
    </p>
<p>
      "Poor Sacobie!" he said, after a while. "Well, he's welcome to the bacon,
      even if it is all I had."
    </p>
<p>
      He turned to light the fire and prepare breakfast. Something at the foot
      of his bunk caught his eye. He went over and took it up. It was a cured
      skin—a beautiful specimen of fox. He turned it over, and on the
      white hide an uncultured hand had written, with a charred stick, "Archer."
    </p>
<p>
      "Well, bless that old red-skin!" exclaimed the trapper, huskily. "Bless
      his puckered eyes! Who'd have thought that I should get a Christmas
      present?"
    </p>
<p>
<br/>
<br/>
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<br/>
</p>
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