Various - Christmas Stories And Legends
V >>
Various >> Christmas Stories And Legends
Pages:
1 |
2 | 3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9
How excited she was, and how glad the children were when she first
stepped into the garden! She wore her best dress, a long,
bright-colored woolen skirt and a white waist. Round her neck was a
string of beads, and on her feet were little wooden shoes. It would
seem very strange to us--would it not?--to wear wooden shoes; but
Piccola and her mother had never worn anything else, and never had any
money to buy stockings. Piccola almost always ran about barefooted,
like the kittens and the chickens and the little ducks. What a good
time they had that day, and how glad Piccola's mother was that her
little girl could have such a pleasant, safe place to play in, while
she was away at work!
By and by December came, and the little Americans began to talk about
Christmas. One day, when Piccola's curly head and bright eyes came
peeping through the hole in the wall, and they ran to her and helped
her in; and as they did so, they all asked her at once what she
thought she would have for a Christmas present. "A Christmas present!"
said Piccola. "Why, what is that?"
All the children looked surprised at this, and Rose said, rather
gravely, "Dear Piccola, don't you know what Christmas is?"
Oh, yes, Piccola knew it was the happy day when the baby Christ was
born, and she had been to church on that day and heard the beautiful
singing, and had seen the picture of the Babe lying in the manger,
with cattle and sheep sleeping round about. Oh, yes, she knew all that
very well, but what was a Christmas present?
Then the children began to laugh and to answer her all together. There
was such a clatter of tongues that she could hear only a few of the
words now and then, such as "chimney," "Santa Claus," "stockings,"
"reindeer," "Christmas Eve," "candies and toys." Piccola put her hands
over her ears and said, "Oh, I can't understand one word. You tell me,
Rose." Then Rose told her all about jolly Santa Claus, with his red
cheeks and white beard and fur coat, and about his reindeer and sleigh
full of toys. "Every Christmas Eve," said Rose, "he comes down the
chimney, and fills the stockings of all the good children; so,
Piccola, you hang up your stocking, and who knows what a beautiful
Christmas present you will find when morning comes!" Of course Piccola
thought this was a delightful plan, and was very pleased to hear about
it. Then all the children told her of every Christmas Eve they could
remember, and of the presents they had had; so that she went home
thinking of nothing but dolls and hoops and balls and ribbons and
marbles and wagons and kites.
She told her mother about Santa Claus, and her mother seemed to think
that perhaps he did not know there was any little girl in that house,
and very likely he would not come at all. But Piccola felt very sure
Santa Claus would remember her, for her little friends had promised to
send a letter up the chimney to remind him.
Christmas Eve came at last. Piccola's mother hurried home from her
work; they had their little supper of soup and bread, and soon it was
bedtime,--time to get ready for Santa Claus. But oh! Piccola
remembered then for the first time that the children had told her she
must hang up her stocking, and she hadn't any, and neither had her
mother.
How sad, how sad it was! Now Santa Claus would come, and perhaps be
angry because he couldn't find any place to put the present.
The poor little girl stood by the fireplace, and the big tears began
to run down her cheeks. Just then her mother called to her, "Hurry,
Piccola; come to bed." What should she do? But she stopped crying, and
tried to think; and in a moment she remembered her wooden shoes, and
ran off to get one of them. She put it close to the chimney, and said
to herself, "Surely Santa Claus will know what it's there for. He will
know I haven't any stockings, so I gave him the shoe instead."
Then she went off happily to her bed, and was asleep almost as soon as
she had nestled close to her mother's side.
The sun had only just begun to shine, next morning, when Piccola
awoke. With one jump she was out on the floor and running toward the
chimney. The wooden shoe was lying where she had left it, but you
could never, never guess what was in it.
Piccola had not meant to wake her mother, but this surprise was more
than any little girl could bear and yet be quiet; so she danced to the
bed with the shoe in her hand, calling, "Mother, mother! look, look!
see the present Santa Claus brought me!"
Her mother raised her head and looked into the shoe. "Why, Piccola,"
she said, "a little chimney swallow nestling in your shoe? What a good
Santa Claus to bring you a bird!"
"Good Santa Claus, dear Santa Claus!" cried Piccola; and she kissed
her mother and kissed the bird and kissed the shoe, and even threw
kisses up the chimney, she was so happy.
When the birdling was taken out of the shoe, they found that he did
not try to fly, only to hop about the room; and as they looked closer,
they could see that one of his wings was hurt a little. But the mother
bound it up carefully, so that it did not seem to pain him, and he was
so gentle that he took a drink of water from a cup, and even ate
crumbs and seeds out of Piccola's hands. She was a proud little girl
when she took her Christmas present to show the children in the
garden. They had had a great many gifts,--dolls that could say
"mamma," bright picture books, trains of cars, toy pianos; but not one
of their playthings was alive, like Piccola's birdling. They were as
pleased as she, and Rose hunted about the house until she found a
large wicker cage that belonged to a blackbird she once had. She gave
the cage to Piccola, and the swallow seemed to make himself quite at
home in it at once, and sat on the perch winking his bright eyes at
the children. Rose had saved a bag of candies for Piccola, and when
she went home at last, with the cage and her dear swallow safely
inside it, I am sure there was not a happier little girl in the whole
country of Italy.
[*] From "The Story Hour," by Wiggins and Smith. Published by consent
of the authors and also the publishers--Houghton, Mifflin and Company.
THE SHEPHERD'S STORY[*]
Washington Gladden
"Bring hither that sheepskin, Joseph, and lay it down on this bank of
dry earth, under this shelving rock. The wind blows chilly from the
west, but the rock will shelter us. The sky is fair and the moon is
rising, and we can sit here and watch the flocks on the hillside
below. Your young blood and your father's coat of skins will keep you
warm for one watch, I am sure. At midnight, my son, your father,
Reuben, and his brother James will take our places; for the first
watch the old man and the boy will tend the sheep."
"Yes, grandfather; you shall sit in that snug corner of the rock,
where you can lean back and take your comfort. I will lie here at your
feet. Now and then I will run to see whether the sheep are wandering,
and that will warm me, if I grow cold."
"Have you never been out on the hills at night with your father?"
"Never, grandfather. I have often begged him to let me come; but he
kept saying that I must wait until I was twelve years old. On the last
full moon was my birthday and today, when he returned from Bethlehem
to the flocks, he brought me with him."
"So this is the lad's first night with the sheep in the fields, and
the old man's last night, I fear," said the aged shepherd, sadly. "It
is not often in these days that I venture out to keep the watches of
the flock; but this one night of the year I have spent upon these
hills these many years, and I always shall as long as I have strength
to walk so far."
"Was your father, too, a shepherd?"
"Yes, and all his fathers before him for many generations. On these
hills my ancestors have kept their sheep for I know not how long."
Joseph was still for a moment. His eyes wandered away over the silent
hills, lit by the rising moon. His face was troubled. At length, he
said gently:
"Grandfather, I heard Rabbi Eliezer saying, the other day, in the
synagogue, that a shepherd's life is not a noble life. He was reading
from one of the old doctors, who said: 'Let no one make his son a
camel-driver, a barber, a sailor, a shepherd, or a shopkeeper. They
are dishonest callings.' I was angry when he read it; but I held my
peace."
"You did well, my son, to hold your peace. I myself have often heard
such words, of late, from the doctors in the synagogues; but it is not
wise to answer them. Where they got their notions, I know not. From
the Egyptians, I think, more than from the prophets. All Egyptians
hate shepherds, and can never speak of them without sneering. Perhaps
they have not yet forgotten how the shepherds conquered and ruled them
for generations. Nevertheless, there is some reason why the calling of
the shepherds should be despised. Many of them are rude and fierce
men. Living out of doors so constantly makes their manners rough and
their temper harsh. They are often quarrelsome. Such bloody fights as
I used to see among them, at the wells in the south country, where
they brought their flocks to water and each one wanted the first
chance at the well, I hope you will never look upon."
"But all shepherds are not so," protested Joseph.
"No, indeed. Brave men they must be; fleet of foot and strong of limb
and stout of heart; but brave men are not always quarrelsome. Many a
shepherd whom I have known had a heart as pure and gentle as a
child's. And the godliest men that I have known have been among them.
If the shepherd has but learned to think, to commune with his own
soul, he has time for thought and time for prayer. More than one with
whom I have watched upon these hills knew all the Psalms of David by
heart and many of the books of the prophets. The doctors in the
synagogues teach only the law; the shepherds love best the Psalms and
the prophets. They do not forget that King David was himself a
shepherd's lad. It was upon these very hills that he kept his father's
sheep. It was in that ravine over yonder, on that hillside, that he, a
mere stripling, caught by the beard and killed the lion and the bear
that attacked the sheep. It was on that slope, just a little to the
south, that the messenger found him with his flocks when he was called
home to be anointed by Samuel the prophet. When the doctors talk so
contemptuously about the shepherds, I wonder if they do not remember
that the great king wrote: 'The Lord is my Shepherd.' How can our
calling be so mean as they say, when David, who was called from the
sheepfolds, praises the Eternal One himself as his Shepherd? But hark!
what noise is that I hear? There is some trouble among the sheep."
"Let me run and see," answers the boy, "and I will come and bring you
word."
So saying, Joseph cast off his father's shaggy coat, seized the sling
in his left hand and the crook in his right and ran swiftly out to the
brow of the hill. He was a strong lad, large of frame and a swift
runner, and the sling in his hand was a sure weapon. The old man
looked after him with pride, as he bounded over the rocks, and said to
himself:
"Some evil beast, I doubt not. But the lad's heart is brave and he
must learn to face dangers. I will wait a moment."
Presently the sheep came huddling round the hill in terror. The quick,
faint bleat of the ewes showed that they had seen a foe. The old man
arose and hurried in the direction in which the lad had disappeared.
Joseph was just returning, breathless, from the ravine below.
"It was a wolf, grandfather. The sheep on this side of the ledge had
seen him and were flying. Just as I reached the brow of the hill, he
was creeping round the end of the ledge below, ready to spring upon a
ewe that was feeding near. The first thing he knew a stone from my
sling hit him, and he went howling down the hill. I think I broke his
leg, for he went on three legs and I gained on him as I ran after him;
but he crawled into a narrow place among the rocks in the gorge down
yonder, and I could not follow him."
"Well done, my lad," said the ancient Stephanus proudly. "You will
make a good shepherd. These single wolves are cowards. It is always
safe to face them. When they come in packs, it is quite another thing.
But this fellow will keep at a safe distance for the rest of the
night, you may depend. Let us go back to our shelter and call the
sheep together."
It was several minutes before Stephanus and Joseph could collect the
sheep that the wolf had scattered; but at length, with the aid of the
dog, who was not a very brave specimen, and who had taken to his heels
when he saw the wolf coming, they succeeded in driving them into a
safe neighborhood, and then, with their blood quickened by the
adventure, they sat down again beneath the overhanging rock.
"You said, grandfather, that you always spent this night with the
flocks in the fields. Why this night?" asked the boy.
"Do you not know, my boy, that this is the night of the year on which
the Lord Christ was born?"
"Oh! yes," answered the lad. "My father told me as we were walking
hither today, but I had forgotten it. And you were with the sheep that
night?"
"Aye."
"Where was it?"
"Here, on this very spot."
The boy's eyes began to grow and fill with wonder and there was a
slight tremor in his voice as he hurriedly plied the aged man with his
eager questions. Stephanus drew his shepherd's cloak around him, and
leaned forward a little, and looked out upon the silent moonlit hills,
and then up into the sky.
"How long ago was that, grandfather?"
"Just fifty years ago this night."
"And how old were you then?"
"Fourteen, and a stout boy for my age. I had been for two years in
the fields with my father, and had tasted to the full the hardships
and dangers of the shepherd's life."
"Who were with you on that night?"
"My father, and his brother, James, and Hosea, the son of John, a
neighbor and kinsman of ours. On that year, as on this year and often,
there came in the midwinter a dry and warm season between the early
and the latter rain. We had driven forth our flocks from Bethlehem and
were dwelling by night in the shelter of the tower on the hillside
yonder, watching and sleeping two and two. My father and I were wont
to keep the early watches. At midnight we would call James and Hosea,
and they would watch till the morning. But that night, when the sun
went down and the stars came out, we were sitting here, upon this
hillside, talking of the troubles of Israel and of the promises of
deliverance spoken by the prophets; and James and Hosea were asking my
father questions, and he was answering them, for he was older than
they, and all the people of Bethlehem reverenced him as a wise and
devout man. Some even said that, if the people of Israel had not
ceased to look for prophets, they would have counted him a prophet. I
remember well that, when he rose in the synagogue, it seemed as if
some wisdom from on high touched his lips, and he would speak with
such hope and courage of the light that should yet shine in our
darkness and of the help that should yet arise to Judah, that the
people's faces would glow with joyful expectation."
Stephanus paused a moment and started forward, as his eye was turned
toward his own shadow upon the rock, cast by the rising moon. Did the
old man's figure that he saw remind him of the patriarch of whom he
was talking?
Soon he went on.
"Ah! but they should have heard my father talking here by night, under
the stars. It was here upon these hills where the royal shepherd used
to sing, that his tongue was loosed and he spoke wonderful words. So
it was that night, fifty years ago. I remember it as if it were
yesterday. My father sat in this very niche, where I am sitting now;
James and Hosea were on either side of him. I was lying at their feet,
as you now lie at mine. Their faces kindled and the tremor of deep
feeling was in their voices as they talked together; and the other two
had lingered here three or four hours after the sun had set. It was
not a moonlit night like this, but all the stars were out and all the
winds were still.
"Suddenly I saw my father rise to his feet. Then the other men sprang
up, with astonishment and wonder upon their faces. It had grown light
all at once, lighter than the brightest moon; and as I turned my face
in the direction in which the others were looking, I saw, standing
there upon that level place, a figure majestic and beautiful beyond
all the power of words to tell."
"Were you not afraid, grandfather?"
"Indeed, I was, my boy. My heart stopped beating. The others were
standing, but I had no power to rise. I lay there motionless upon the
earth. My eyes were fixed upon that wonderful face; upon those clear,
shining eyes; upon that brow that seemed to beam with the purity of
the soul within. It was not a smile with which that face was lighted.
It was something too noble and exalted to call by that name. It was a
look that told of power and peace, of joy and triumph."
"Did you know that it was an angel?"
"I knew not anything. I only knew that what I saw was glorious, too
glorious for mortal eyes to look upon. Yet, while I gazed, and in far
less time than I have now taken to tell you of what I saw, the
terribleness of the look began to disappear, the sweetness and grace
of the soul shone forth, and I had almost ceased to tremble before the
angel opened his mouth. And when he spoke, his voice, clearer than any
trumpet and sweeter than any lute, charmed away all my fears."
"'Be not afraid' he said, 'for behold I bring you good tidings of
great joy which shall be to all people. For there is born to you this
day, in the City of David, a Savior, which is Messiah, the King. And
this is the sign unto you. Ye shall find a babe wrapped in swaddling
clothes and lying in a manger.'
"Oh! that voice, my boy! It makes my heart beat now to remember its
sweetness. It seemed to carry these words into our innermost hearts;
to print them on our memory, so that we never could forget one
syllable of what he said. And then, before we had time to make reply,
he turned aside a little and lifted his face toward heaven, and, in a
tone far louder than that in which he had spoken to us, but yet so
sweet that it did not startle us at all, came forth from his lips the
first strain of the great song:
"'Glory to God in the highest!'
"When he had uttered that, he paused a moment, and the echoes, one
after another, from hills that were near and hills that were far away,
came flying home to us; so that I knew for once what the prophet meant
when he said that all the mountains and the hills should break forth
into singing. But before the echoes had all faded we began to hear
other voices above our heads, a great chorus, taking up the strain
that the angel first had sung. At first it seemed dim and far away;
but gradually it came nearer, and filled all the air, filled all the
earth, filled all our souls with a most entrancing sweetness. Glory to
God in the highest!--that was the grandest part. It seemed as though
there could be no place so high that that strain would not mount up to
it, and no place so happy that that voice would not make it thrill
with new gladness. But then came the softer tones, less grand, but
even sweeter: 'Peace on earth; good will to men.'
"Oh! my boy, if you had heard that music as I did, you would not
wonder when I tell you that it has been hard for me to wait here, in
the midst of the dreary noises of earth, for fifty years before
hearing it again. But earth that night was musical as heaven. You
should have heard the echoes that came back, when the angels' chorus
ceased, from all these mountains and all these little hills on every
side. There is music enough even in this world, if one can only call
it forth; chords divine that will vibrate with wonderful harmony. It
only needs an angel's hand to touch the trembling strings."
"Did you see the choir of angels overhead, grandfather?"
"Nay, I saw nothing. The brightness was too dazzling for mortal eyes.
We all stood there, with downcast eyes, listening spell-bound to the
wonderful melody, until the chorus ceased, and the echoes, one after
another, died away, and the glory faded out of the sky and the stars
came back again, and no sound was heard but the faint voice of a young
lamb, calling for its mother.
"The first to break the silence was my father. 'Come,' he said, in a
solemn voice. 'Let us go at once to Bethlehem, and see this thing
which is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto us.'
"So the sheep were quietly gathered into the fold at the tower, and we
hastened to Bethlehem. Never shall I forget that journey by night. We
spake not many words, as we traveled swiftly the twenty furlongs; talk
seemed altogether tame; but now and then my father broke forth in a
song, and the others joined in the chorus. We were not so spent with
running but that we could find voice for singing; and such words as
these of the prophet were the only ones that could give voice to our
swelling hearts:
"'Sing, O heavens; and be joyful, O earth;
And break forth into singing, O mountains;
For the Lord hath comforted His people,
And will have mercy on His afflicted.
"'How beautiful upon the mountains
Are the feet of Him that bringeth good tidings,
That publisheth peace,
That bringeth good tidings of good,
That publisheth salvation.'
"It was midnight when we climbed the hill to the little city of
Bethlehem; the constellation Cesil, called by the Greeks Orion, was
just setting in the west. We knew not whither to go. We had only the
sign of the angel by which we should know the infant Messiah. He was a
babe of one day. He was lying in a manger.
"'Let us go to the inn Chimham,' said my father. 'It stands on the
very spot where King David was born. Peradvanture we shall find him
there.'
"Over the entrance to the court of the inn a lantern was swinging from
a rope stretched across from post to post. Guided by its light, we
entered, and found the courtyard full of beasts of burden, showing
that the inn was crowded with travelers. In the arched shelter of the
hostelry as many as could find room were lying; some who could not
sleep were sitting up and waiting drearily for the morning. Two aged
women near the entrance, were talking in a low tone.
"'Peace be unto you!' said my father.
"'The Lord be gracious unto thee,' answered the oldest woman, in a
solemn voice, as she looked upon my father's white beard; 'but,' she
quickly added, 'there is scanty cheer in this place for late comers.'
"'We seek not lodging,' said my father; 'but know you whether among
these guests is an infant born this day?'
"'Verily there is,' answered the aged dame; 'a man-child more
beautiful than any my eyes have ever beheld. He is lying in a manger
there in the cave that serves for stable.'
"We hastened to the mouth of the cave, and there beheld our King. The
oxen and the asses were lying near, and a strong man, with a grave and
benignant face, was leaning on his staff above the manger. A beautiful
young mother lay close beside it, her cheek resting on her hands, that
were clasped over the edge of the rock-hewn crib. Into this a little
straw had been thrown, and over it a purple robe had been cast,
whereon the infant lay. A lamp, set upon a projection of the wall of
the cave, burned brightly near. The great eyes of the wonderful child
were wandering about the room; his hand touched his mother's lips. I
waited to hear him open his mouth and speak.
"There was a moment of silence after we entered the cave. My father
broke it with his salutation:
"'Hail, thou blessed among women!' he cried. 'This child of thine is a
Prince and a Savior.'
"And then we all bowed low upon our faces before him and worshipped
him with praise and gladness.
"The two aged women, with whom we had spoken, had followed us to the
door of the stable, and, seeing us worshipping there, had run to call
others who were awake in the inn, so that when we arose quite a
company were standing at the door, or just within, gazing upon the
King in his beauty and listening to our thanksgiving with great
wonder.
"Then my father told them all the things that we had heard and
seen--the message of the angel, the song in the air, the glory of the
Lord that had appeared to us--and how we had quickly come to
Bethlehem, and had found things as the angel had told us. 'And it is
even,' he cried, 'as the prophet himself hath spoken: "Thou Bethlehem
Ephratah, though thou be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out
of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel,
whose going forth hast been of old; even from everlasting."'
"All that heard were full of astonishment--all save the mother. I saw
no wonder on her face; the great things that my father told caused her
no astonishment; she listened with a quiet and solemn joy, like one
who was saying in her heart: 'I knew it all before.'
"When my father had finished speaking, we all bowed low again before
the young child; and the mother lifted him in her arms and placed his
cheek against her own, smiling graciously on us, but uttering no word.
And we came forth from the stable and stood again beneath the stars in
the courtyard of the inn. By this time many of the travelers were
awake, and an eager company had gathered around us, all of whom
desired to be told of the sign that had been shown to us. To one and
another we rehearsed our story, lingering long to make known the good
tidings, until the morning star appeared and the dawn began to kindle
over the eastern hills. Then we hastened to our own homes in the city,
and told our kindred what had happened unto us. In the early morning
we came back again unto our pastures and our flocks, rejoicing to
stand again in the place where the glory of God had shone and the
music of heaven had filled the air."
Pages:
1 |
2 | 3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9