 |
O
Christmas Tree! O Christmas Tree!
How richly God has decked thee!
Thou bidst us true and faithful
be,
And trust in God unchangingly.
O Christmas Tree! O Christmas
Tree!
How richly God has decked
thee!
What
would Christmas be without a
brightly decorated fir tree? Many
of our most precious holiday
memories and associations are
bound up in its branches. Dickens
was as affectionately enamored of
it as many of us. Both the sweet
memories of old it conjured up,
and the new ones it created, were
near and dear to him (as well as
the occasional childish horrors).
Here is a story in which he
brings to vivid life a Victorian
Christmas tree and the customs
that were a part of it.
|
A
Christmas Tree
by Charles
Dickens
I have been
looking on, this evening, at a merry
company of children assembled round that
pretty German toy, a Christmas Tree. The
tree was planted in the middle of a great
round table, and towered high above their
heads. It was brilliantly lighted by a
multitude of little tapers; and
everywhere sparkled and glittered with
bright objects. There were rosy-cheeked
dolls, hiding behind the green leaves;
and there were real watches (with movable
hands, at least, and an endless capacity
of being wound up) dangling from
innumerable twigs; there were
French-polished tables, chairs,
bedsteads, wardrobes, eight-day clocks,
and various other articles of domestic
furniture (wonderfully made, in tin, at
Wolverhampton), perched among the boughs,
as if in preparation for some fairy
housekeeping; there were jolly,
broad-faced little men, much more
agreeable in appearance than many real
men--and no wonder, for their heads took
off, and showed them to be full of
sugar-plums; there were fiddles and
drums; there were tambourines, books,
work-boxes, paint-boxes, sweetmeat-boxes,
peep-show boxes, and all kinds of boxes;
there were trinkets for the elder girls,
far brighter than any grown-up gold and
jewels; there were baskets and
pincushions in all devices; there were
guns, swords, and banners; there were
witches standing in enchanted rings of
pasteboard, to tell fortunes; there were
teetotums, humming-tops, needle-cases,
pen-wipers, smelling-bottles,
conversation-cards, bouquet-holders; real
fruit, made artificially dazzling with
gold leaf; imitation apples, pears, and
walnuts, crammed with surprises; in
short, as a pretty child, before me,
delightedly whispered to another pretty
child, her bosom friend, "There was
everything, and more." This motley
collection of odd objects, clustering on
the tree like magic fruit, and flashing
back the bright looks directed towards it
from every side--some of the diamond-eyes
admiring it were hardly on a level with
the table, and a few were languishing in
timid wonder on the bosoms of pretty
mothers, aunts, and nurses--made a lively
realisation of the fancies of childhood;
and set me thinking how all the trees
that grow and all the things that come
into existence on the earth, have their
wild adornments at that well-remembered
time.
Being
now at home again, and alone, the
only person in the house awake,
my thoughts are drawn back, by a
fascination which I do not care
to resist, to my own childhood. I
begin to consider, what do we all
remember best upon the branches
of the Christmas Tree of our own
young Christmas days, by which we
climbed to real life. Straight, in
the middle of the room, cramped
in the freedom of its growth by
no encircling walls or
soon-reached ceiling, a shadowy
tree arises; and, looking up into
the dreamy brightness of its
top-- for I observe in this tree
the singular property that it
appears to grow downward towards
the earth--I look into my
youngest Christmas recollections!
|
 |
 |
All
toys at first, I find. Up yonder,
among the green holly and red
berries, is the Tumbler with his
hands in his pockets, who
wouldn't lie down, but whenever
he was put upon the floor,
persisted in rolling his fat body
about, until he rolled himself
still, and brought those lobster
eyes of his to bear upon me--when
I affected to laugh very much,
but in my heart of hearts was
extremely doubtful of him. |
Close beside him is
that infernal snuff-box, out of which
there sprang a demoniacal Counsellor in a
black gown, with an obnoxious head of
hair, and a red cloth mouth, wide open,
who was not to be endured on any terms,
but could not be put away either; for he
used suddenly, in a highly magnified
state, to fly out of Mammoth Snuff-boxes
in dreams, when least expected. Nor is
the frog with cobbler's wax on his tail,
far off; for there was no knowing where
he wouldn't jump; and when he flew over
the candle, and came upon one's hand with
that spotted back--red on a green
ground--he was horrible. The cardboard
lady in a blue-silk skirt, who was stood
up against the candlestick to dance, and
whom I see on the same branch, was
milder, and was beautiful; but I can't
say as much for the larger cardboard man,
who used to be hung against the wall and
pulled by a string; there was a sinister
expression in that nose of his; and when
he got his legs round his neck (which he
very often did), he was ghastly, and not
a creature to be alone with.
When did that
dreadful Mask first look at me? Who put
it on, and why was I so frightened that
the sight of it is an era in my life? It
is not a hideous visage in itself; it is
even meant to be droll, why then were its
stolid features so intolerable? Surely
not because it hid the wearer's face. An
apron would have done as much; and though
I should have preferred even the apron
away, it would not have been absolutely
insupportable, like the mask. Was it the
immovability of the mask? The doll's face
was immovable, but I was not afraid of
HER. Perhaps that fixed and set change
coming over a real face, infused into my
quickened heart some remote suggestion
and dread of the universal change that is
to come on every face, and make it still?
Nothing reconciled me to it. No drummers,
from whom proceeded a melancholy chirping
on the turning of a handle; no regiment
of soldiers, with a mute band, taken out
of a box, and fitted, one by one, upon a
stiff and lazy little set of lazy-tongs;
no old woman, made of wires and a
brown-paper composition, cutting up a pie
for two small children; could give me a
permanent comfort, for a long time. Nor
was it any satisfaction to be shown the
Mask, and see that it was made of paper,
or to have it locked up and be assured
that no one wore it. The mere
recollection of that fixed face, the mere
knowledge of its existence anywhere, was
sufficient to awake me in the night all
perspiration and horror, with, "O I
know it's coming! O the mask!"

I never
wondered what the dear old donkey with
the panniers--there he is! was made of,
then! His hide was real to the touch, I
recollect. And the great black horse with
the round red spots all over him--the
horse that I could even get upon--I never
wondered what had brought him to that
strange condition, or thought that such a
horse was not commonly seen at Newmarket.
The four horses of no colour, next to
him, that went into the waggon of
cheeses, and could be taken out and
stabled under the piano, appear to have
bits of fur-tippet for their tails, and
other bits for their manes, and to stand
on pegs instead of legs, but it was not
so when they were brought home for a
Christmas present. They were all right,
then; neither was their harness
unceremoniously nailed into their chests,
as appears to be the case now. The
tinkling works of the music- cart, I DID
find out, to be made of quill tooth-picks
and wire; and I always thought that
little tumbler in his shirt sleeves,
perpetually swarming up one side of a
wooden frame, and coming down, head
foremost, on the other, rather a
weak-minded person--though good-natured;
but the Jacob's Ladder, next him, made of
little squares of red wood, that went
flapping and clattering over one another,
each developing a different picture, and
the whole enlivened by small bells, was a
mighty marvel and a great delight.

Ah! The Doll's
house!--of which I was not proprietor,
but where I visited. I don't admire the
Houses of Parliament half so much as that
stone-fronted mansion with real glass
windows, and door-steps, and a real
balcony--greener than I ever see now,
except at watering places; and even they
afford but a poor imitation. And though
it DID open all at once, the entire
house-front (which was a blow, I admit,
as cancelling the fiction of a
staircase), it was but to shut it up
again, and I could believe. Even open,
there were three distinct rooms in it: a
sitting-room and bed-room, elegantly
furnished, and best of all, a kitchen,
with uncommonly soft fire- irons, a
plentiful assortment of diminutive
utensils--oh, the warming-pan!--and a tin
man-cook in profile, who was always going
to fry two fish. What Barmecide justice
have I done to the noble feasts wherein
the set of wooden platters figured, each
with its own peculiar delicacy, as a ham
or turkey, glued tight on to it, and
garnished with something green, which I
recollect as moss! Could all the
Temperance Societies of these later days,
united, give me such a tea-drinking as I
have had through the means of yonder
little set of blue crockery, which really
would hold liquid (it ran out of the
small wooden cask, I recollect, and
tasted of matches), and which made tea,
nectar. And if the two legs of the
ineffectual little sugar-tongs did tumble
over one another, and want purpose, like
Punch's hands, what does it matter? And
if I did once shriek out, as a poisoned
child, and strike the fashionable company
with consternation, by reason of having
drunk a little teaspoon, inadvertently
dissolved in too hot tea, I was never the
worse for it, except by a powder!

Upon the next
branches of the tree, lower down, hard by
the green roller and miniature
gardening-tools, how thick the books
begin to hang. Thin books, in themselves,
at first, but many of them, and with
deliciously smooth covers of bright red
or green. What fat black letters to begin
with! "A was an archer, and shot at
a frog." Of course he was. He was an
apple-pie also, and there he is! He was a
good many things in his time, was A, and
so were most of his friends, except X,
who had so little versatility, that I
never knew him to get beyond Xerxes or
Xantippe--like Y, who was always confined
to a Yacht or a Yew Tree; and Z condemned
for ever to be a Zebra or a Zany. But,
now, the very tree itself changes, and
becomes a bean-stalk--the marvellous
bean-stalk up which Jack climbed to the
Giant's house! And now, those dreadfully
interesting, double-headed giants, with
their clubs over their shoulders, begin
to stride along the boughs in a perfect
throng, dragging knights and ladies home
for dinner by the hair of their heads.
And Jack--how noble, with his sword of
sharpness, and his shoes of swiftness!
Again those old meditations come upon me
as I gaze up at him; and I debate within
myself whether there was more than one
Jack (which I am loth to believe
possible), or only one genuine original
admirable Jack, who achieved all the
recorded exploits.
Good for
Christmas-time is the ruddy colour of the
cloak, in which-- the tree making a
forest of itself for her to trip through,
with her basket--Little Red Riding-Hood
comes to me one Christmas Eve to give me
information of the cruelty and treachery
of that dissembling Wolf who ate her
grandmother, without making any
impression on his appetite, and then ate
her, after making that ferocious joke
about his teeth. She was my first love. I
felt that if I could have married Little
Red Riding-Hood, I should have known
perfect bliss. But, it was not to be; and
there was nothing for it but to look out
the Wolf in the Noah's Ark there, and put
him late in the procession on the table,
as a monster who was to be degraded. O
the wonderful Noah's Ark! It was not
found seaworthy when put in a
washing-tub, and the animals were crammed
in at the roof, and needed to have their
legs well shaken down before they could
be got in, even there- -and then, ten to
one but they began to tumble out at the
door, which was but imperfectly fastened
with a wire latch--but what was THAT
against it! Consider the noble fly, a
size or two smaller than the elephant:
the lady-bird, the butterfly--all
triumphs of art! Consider the goose,
whose feet were so small, and whose
balance was so indifferent, that he
usually tumbled forward, and knocked down
all the animal creation. Consider Noah
and his family, like idiotic
tobacco-stoppers; and how the leopard
stuck to warm little fingers; and how the
tails of the larger animals used
gradually to resolve themselves into
frayed bits of string!

Hush! Again a
forest, and somebody up in a tree--not
Robin Hood, not Valentine, not the Yellow
Dwarf (I have passed him and all Mother
Bunch's wonders, without mention), but an
Eastern King with a glittering scimitar
and turban. By Allah! two Eastern Kings,
for I see another, looking over his
shoulder! Down upon the grass, at the
tree's foot, lies the full length of a
coal-black Giant, stretched asleep, with
his head in a lady's lap; and near them
is a glass box, fastened with four locks
of shining steel, in which he keeps the
lady prisoner when he is awake. I see the
four keys at his girdle now. The lady
makes signs to the two kings in the tree,
who softly descend. It is the setting-in
of the bright Arabian Nights.
Oh, now all
common things become uncommon and
enchanted to me. All lamps are wonderful;
all rings are talismans. Common
flower-pots are full of treasure, with a
little earth scattered on the top; trees
are for Ali Baba to hide in; beef-steaks
are to throw down into the Valley of
Diamonds, that the precious stones may
stick to them, and be carried by the
eagles to their nests, whence the
traders, with loud cries, will scare
them. Tarts are made, according to the
recipe of the Vizier's son of Bussorah,
who turned pastrycook after he was set
down in his drawers at the gate of
Damascus; cobblers are all Mustaphas, and
in the habit of sewing up people cut into
four pieces, to whom they are taken
blind-fold.

Any iron ring
let into stone is the entrance to a cave
which only waits for the magician, and
the little fire, and the necromancy, that
will make the earth shake. All the dates
imported come from the same tree as that
unlucky date, with whose shell the
merchant knocked out the eye of the
genie's invisible son. All olives are of
the stock of that fresh fruit, concerning
which the Commander of the Faithful
overheard the boy conduct the fictitious
trial of the fraudulent olive merchant;
all apples are akin to the apple
purchased (with two others) from the
Sultan's gardener for three sequins, and
which the tall black slave stole from the
child. All dogs are associated with the
dog, really a transformed man, who jumped
upon the baker's counter, and put his paw
on the piece of bad money. All rice
recalls the rice which the awful lady,
who was a ghoule, could only peck by
grains, because of her nightly feasts in
the burial-place. My very
rocking-horse,--there he is, with his
nostrils turned completely inside-out,
indicative of Blood!--should have a peg
in his neck, by virtue thereof to fly
away with me, as the wooden horse did
with the Prince of Persia, in the sight
of all his father's Court.
Yes, on
every object that I recognise
among those upper branches of my
Christmas Tree, I see this fairy
light! When I wake in bed, at
daybreak, on the cold, dark,
winter mornings, the white snow
dimly beheld, outside, through
the frost on the window-pane, I
hear Dinarzade. "Sister,
sister, if you are yet awake, I
pray you finish the history of
the Young King of the Black
Islands." Scheherazade
replies, "If my lord the
Sultan will suffer me to live
another day, sister, I will not
only finish that, but tell you a
more wonderful story yet."
Then, the gracious Sultan goes
out, giving no orders for the
execution, and we all three
breathe again. |
 |
At this
height of my tree I begin to see,
cowering among the leaves- -it may be
born of turkey, or of pudding, or mince
pie, or of these many fancies, jumbled
with Robinson Crusoe on his desert
island, Philip Quarll among the monkeys,
Sandford and Merton with Mr. Barlow,
Mother Bunch, and the Mask--or it may be
the result of indigestion, assisted by
imagination and over-doctoring--a
prodigious nightmare. It is so
exceedingly indistinct, that I don't know
why it's frightful--but I know it is. I
can only make out that it is an immense
array of shapeless things, which appear
to be planted on a vast exaggeration of
the lazy-tongs that used to bear the toy
soldiers, and to be slowly coming close
to my eyes, and receding to an
immeasurable distance. When it comes
closest, it is worse. In connection with
it I descry remembrances of winter nights
incredibly long; of being sent early to
bed, as a punishment for some small
offence, and waking in two hours, with a
sensation of having been asleep two
nights; of the laden hopelessness of
morning ever dawning; and the oppression
of a weight of remorse.
 |
And
now, I see a wonderful row of
little lights rise smoothly out
of the ground, before a vast
green curtain. Now, a bell
rings--a magic bell, which still
sounds in my ears unlike all
other bells--and music plays,
amidst a buzz of voices, and a
fragrant smell of orange-peel and
oil. Anon, the magic bell
commands the music to cease, and
the great green curtain rolls
itself up majestically, and The
Play begins! The devoted dog of
Montargis avenges the death of
his master, foully murdered in
the Forest of Bondy; and a
humorous Peasant with a red nose
and a very little hat, whom I
take from this hour forth to my
bosom as a friend (I think he was
a Waiter or an Hostler at a
village Inn, but many years have
passed since he and I have met),
remarks that the sassigassity of
that dog is indeed surprising;
and evermore this jocular conceit
will live in my remembrance fresh
and unfading, overtopping all
possible jokes, unto the end of
time. |
Or now, I learn with
bitter tears how poor Jane Shore, dressed
all in white, and with her brown hair
hanging down, went starving through the
streets; or how George Barnwell killed
the worthiest uncle that ever man had,
and was afterwards so sorry for it that
he ought to have been let off. Comes
swift to comfort me, the
Pantomime--stupendous Phenomenon!--when
clowns are shot from loaded mortars into
the great chandelier, bright
constellation that it is; when
Harlequins, covered all over with scales
of pure gold, twist and sparkle, like
amazing fish; when Pantaloon (whom I deem
it no irreverence to compare in my own
mind to my grandfather) puts red-hot
pokers in his pocket, and cries
"Here's somebody coming!" or
taxes the Clown with petty larceny, by
saying, "Now, I sawed you do
it!" when Everything is capable,
with the greatest ease, of being changed
into Anything; and "Nothing is, but
thinking makes it so." Now, too, I
perceive my first experience of the
dreary sensation-- often to return in
after-life--of being unable, next day, to
get back to the dull, settled world; of
wanting to live for ever in the bright
atmosphere I have quitted; of doting on
the little Fairy, with the wand like a
celestial Barber's Pole, and pining for a
Fairy immortality along with her. Ah, she
comes back, in many shapes, as my eye
wanders down the branches of my Christmas
Tree, and goes as often, and has never
yet stayed by me!
Out of
this delight springs the
toy-theatre,--there it is, with
its familiar proscenium, and
ladies in feathers, in the
boxes!--and all its attendant
occupation with paste and glue,
and gum, and water colours, in
the getting-up of The Miller and
his Men, and Elizabeth, or the
Exile of Siberia. In spite of a
few besetting accidents and
failures (particularly an
unreasonable disposition in the
respectable Kelmar, and some
others, to become faint in the
legs, and double up, at exciting
points of the drama), a teeming
world of fancies so suggestive
and all-embracing, that, far
below it on my Christmas Tree, I
see dark, dirty, real Theatres in
the day-time, adorned with these
associations as with the freshest
garlands of the rarest flowers,
and charming me yet. |
 |
But hark! The
Waits are playing, and they break my
childish sleep! What images do I
associate with the Christmas music as I
see them set forth on the Christmas Tree?
Known before all the others, keeping far
apart from all the others, they gather
round my little bed. An angel, speaking
to a group of shepherds in a field; some
travellers, with eyes uplifted, following
a star; a baby in a manger; a child in a
spacious temple, talking with grave men;
a solemn figure, with a mild and
beautiful face, raising a dead girl by
the hand; again, near a city gate,
calling back the son of a widow, on his
bier, to life; a crowd of people looking
through the opened roof of a chamber
where he sits, and letting down a sick
person on a bed, with ropes; the same, in
a tempest, walking on the water to a
ship; again, on a sea-shore, teaching a
great multitude; again, with a child upon
his knee, and other children round;
again, restoring sight to the blind,
speech to the dumb, hearing to the deaf,
health to the sick, strength to the lame,
knowledge to the ignorant; again, dying
upon a Cross, watched by armed soldiers,
a thick darkness coming on, the earth
beginning to shake, and only one voice
heard, "Forgive them, for they know
not what they do."
 |
Still, on
the lower and maturer branches of
the Tree, Christmas associations
cluster thick. School-books shut
up; Ovid and Virgil silenced; the
Rule of Three, with its cool
impertinent inquiries, long
disposed of; Terence and Plautus
acted no more, in an arena of
huddled desks and forms, all
chipped, and notched, and inked;
cricket-bats, stumps, and balls,
left higher up, with the smell of
trodden grass and the softened
noise of shouts in the evening
air; the tree is still fresh,
still gay. If I no more come home
at Christmas-time, there will be
boys and girls (thank Heaven! )
while the World lasts; and they
do! Yonder they dance and play
upon the branches of my Tree, God
bless them, merrily, and my heart
dances and plays too! |
And I do come
home at Christmas. We all do, or we all
should. We all come home, or ought to
come home, for a short holiday--the
longer, the better--from the great
boarding-school, where we are for ever
working at our arithmetical slates, to
take, and give a rest. As to going a
visiting, where can we not go, if we
will; where have we not been, when we
would; starting our fancy from our
Christmas Tree!

Away into the
winter prospect. There are many such upon
the tree! On, by low-lying, misty
grounds, through fens and fogs, up long
hills, winding dark as caverns between
thick plantations, almost shutting out
the sparkling stars; so, out on broad
heights, until we stop at last, with
sudden silence, at an avenue. The
gate-bell has a deep, half-awful sound in
the frosty air; the gate swings open on
its hinges; and, as we drive up to a
great house, the glancing lights grow
larger in the windows, and the opposing
rows of trees seem to fall solemnly back
on either side, to give us place. At
intervals, all day, a frightened hare has
shot across this whitened turf; or the
distant clatter of a herd of deer
trampling the hard frost, has, for the
minute, crushed the silence too. Their
watchful eyes beneath the fern may be
shining now, if we could see them, like
the icy dewdrops on the leaves; but they
are still, and all is still. And so, the
lights growing larger, and the trees
falling back before us, and closing up
again behind us, as if to forbid retreat,
we come to the house.
 |
There is
probably a smell of roasted
chestnuts and other good
comfortable things all the time,
for we are telling Winter
Stories-- Ghost Stories, or more
shame for us--round the Christmas
fire; and we have never stirred,
except to draw a little nearer to
it. But, no matter for that. We
came to the house, and it is an
old house, full of great chimneys
where wood is burnt on ancient
dogs upon the hearth, and grim
portraits (some of them with grim
legends, too) lower distrustfully
from the oaken panels of the
walls. We are a middle-aged
nobleman, and we make a generous
supper with our host and hostess
and their guests--it being
Christmas-time, and the old house
full of company--and then we go
to bed. |
Our room is a very
old room. It is hung with tapestry. We
don't like the portrait of a cavalier in
green, over the fireplace. There are
great black beams in the ceiling, and
there is a great black bedstead,
supported at the foot by two great black
figures, who seem to have come off a
couple of tombs in the old baronial
church in the park, for our particular
accommodation. But, we are not a
superstitious nobleman, and we don't
mind. Well! we dismiss our servant, lock
the door, and sit before the fire in our
dressing-gown, musing about a great many
things. At length we go to bed. Well! we
can't sleep. We toss and tumble, and
can't sleep. The embers on the hearth
burn fitfully and make the room look
ghostly. We can't help peeping out over
the counterpane, at the two black figures
and the cavalier--that wicked- looking
cavalier--in green. In the flickering
light they seem to advance and retire:
which, though we are not by any means a
superstitious nobleman, is not agreeable.
Well! we get nervous-- more and more
nervous. We say "This is very
foolish, but we can't stand this; we'll
pretend to be ill, and knock up
somebody." Well! we are just going
to do it, when the locked door opens, and
there comes in a young woman, deadly
pale, and with long fair hair, who glides
to the fire, and sits down in the chair
we have left there, wringing her hands.
Then, we notice that her clothes are wet.
Our tongue cleaves to the roof of our
mouth, and we can't speak; but, we
observe her accurately. Her clothes are
wet; her long hair is dabbled with moist
mud; she is dressed in the fashion of two
hundred years ago; and she has at her
girdle a bunch of rusty keys. Well! there
she sits, and we can't even faint, we are
in such a state about it. Presently she
gets up, and tries all the locks in the
room with the rusty keys, which won't fit
one of them; then, she fixes her eyes on
the portrait of the cavalier in green,
and says, in a low, terrible voice,
"The stags know it!" After
that, she wrings her hands again, passes
the bedside, and goes out at the door. We
hurry on our dressing-gown, seize our
pistols (we always travel with pistols),
and are following, when we find the door
locked. We turn the key, look out into
the dark gallery; no one there. We wander
away, and try to find our servant. Can't
be done. We pace the gallery till
daybreak; then return to our deserted
room, fall asleep, and are awakened by
our servant (nothing ever haunts him) and
the shining sun. Well! we make a wretched
breakfast, and all the company say we
look queer. After breakfast, we go over
the house with our host, and then we take
him to the portrait of the cavalier in
green, and then it all comes out. He was
false to a young housekeeper once
attached to that family, and famous for
her beauty, who drowned herself in a
pond, and whose body was discovered,
after a long time, because the stags
refused to drink of the water. Since
which, it has been whispered that she
traverses the house at midnight (but goes
especially to that room where the
cavalier in green was wont to sleep),
trying the old locks with the rusty keys.
Well! we tell our host of what we have
seen, and a shade comes over his
features, and he begs it may be hushed
up; and so it is. But, it's all true; and
we said so, before we died (we are dead
now) to many responsible people.

There is no end
to the old houses, with resounding
galleries, and dismal state-bedchambers,
and haunted wings shut up for many years,
through which we may ramble, with an
agreeable creeping up our back, and
encounter any number of ghosts, but (it
is worthy of remark perhaps) reducible to
a very few general types and classes;
for, ghosts have little originality, and
"walk" in a beaten track. Thus,
it comes to pass, that a certain room in
a certain old hall, where a certain bad
lord, baronet, knight, or gentleman, shot
himself, has certain planks in the floor
from which the blood WILL NOT be taken
out. You may scrape and scrape, as the
present owner has done, or plane and
plane, as his father did, or scrub and
scrub, as his grandfather did, or burn
and burn with strong acids, as his great-
grandfather did, but, there the blood
will still be--no redder and no paler--no
more and no less--always just the same.
Thus, in such another house there is a
haunted door, that never will keep open;
or another door that never will keep
shut, or a haunted sound of a
spinning-wheel, or a hammer, or a
footstep, or a cry, or a sigh, or a
horse's tramp, or the rattling of a
chain. Or else, there is a turret-clock,
which, at the midnight hour, strikes
thirteen when the head of the family is
going to die; or a shadowy, immovable
black carriage which at such a time is
always seen by somebody, waiting near the
great gates in the stable-yard. Or thus,
it came to pass how Lady Mary went to pay
a visit at a large wild house in the
Scottish Highlands, and, being fatigued
with her long journey, retired to bed
early, and innocently said, next morning,
at the breakfast-table, "How odd, to
have so late a party last night, in this
remote place, and not to tell me of it,
before I went to bed!" Then, every
one asked Lady Mary what she meant? Then,
Lady Mary replied, "Why, all night
long, the carriages were driving round
and round the terrace, underneath my
window!" Then, the owner of the
house turned pale, and so did his Lady,
and Charles Macdoodle of Macdoodle signed
to Lady Mary to say no more, and every
one was silent. After breakfast, Charles
Macdoodle told Lady Mary that it was a
tradition in the family that those
rumbling carriages on the terrace
betokened death. And so it proved, for,
two months afterwards, the Lady of the
mansion died. And Lady Mary, who was a
Maid of Honour at Court, often told this
story to the old Queen Charlotte; by this
token that the old King always said,
"Eh, eh? What, what? Ghosts, ghosts?
No such thing, no such thing!" And
never left off saying so, until he went
to bed.
Or, a friend
of somebody's whom most of us know, when
he was a young man at college, had a
particular friend, with whom he made the
compact that, if it were possible for the
Spirit to return to this earth after its
separation from the body, he of the twain
who first died, should reappear to the
other. In course of time, this compact
was forgotten by our friend; the two
young men having progressed in life, and
taken diverging paths that were wide
asunder. But, one night, many years
afterwards, our friend being in the North
of England, and staying for the night in
an inn, on the Yorkshire Moors, happened
to look out of bed; and there, in the
moonlight, leaning on a bureau near the
window, steadfastly regarding him, saw
his old college friend! The appearance
being solemnly addressed, replied, in a
kind of whisper, but very audibly,
"Do not come near me. I am dead. I
am here to redeem my promise. I come from
another world, but may not disclose its
secrets!" Then, the whole form
becoming paler, melted, as it were, into
the moonlight, and faded away.
Or,
there was the daughter of the
first occupier of the picturesque
Elizabethan house, so famous in
our neighbourhood. You have heard
about her? No! Why, SHE went out
one summer evening at twilight,
when she was a beautiful girl,
just seventeen years of age, to
gather flowers in the garden; and
presently came running,
terrified, into the hall to her
father, saying, "Oh, dear
father, I have met myself!"
He took her in his arms, and told
her it was fancy, but she said,
"Oh no! I met myself in the
broad walk, and I was pale and
gathering withered flowers, and I
turned my head, and held them
up!" And, that night, she
died; and a picture of her story
was begun, though never finished,
and they say it is somewhere in
the house to this day, with its
face to the wall. |
 |
Or, the uncle
of my brother's wife was riding home on
horseback, one mellow evening at sunset,
when, in a green lane close to his own
house, he saw a man standing before him,
in the very centre of a narrow way.
"Why does that man in the cloak
stand there!" he thought. "Does
he want me to ride over him?" But
the figure never moved. He felt a strange
sensation at seeing it so still, but
slackened his trot and rode forward. When
he was so close to it, as almost to touch
it with his stirrup, his horse shied, and
the figure glided up the bank, in a
curious, unearthly manner--backward, and
without seeming to use its feet--and was
gone. The uncle of my brother's wife,
exclaiming, "Good Heaven! It's my
cousin Harry, from Bombay!" put
spurs to his horse, which was suddenly in
a profuse sweat, and, wondering at such
strange behaviour, dashed round to the
front of his house. There, he saw the
same figure, just passing in at the long
French window of the drawing-room,
opening on the ground. He threw his
bridle to a servant, and hastened in
after it. His sister was sitting there,
alone. "Alice, where's my cousin
Harry?" "Your cousin Harry,
John?" "Yes. From Bombay. I met
him in the lane just now, and saw him
enter here, this instant." Not a
creature had been seen by any one; and in
that hour and minute, as it afterwards
appeared, this cousin died in India.
Or, it was a
certain sensible old maiden lady, who
died at ninety- nine, and retained her
faculties to the last, who really did see
the Orphan Boy; a story which has often
been incorrectly told, but, of which the
real truth is this--because it is, in
fact, a story belonging to our
family--and she was a connexion of our
family. When she was about forty years of
age, and still an uncommonly fine woman
(her lover died young, which was the
reason why she never married, though she
had many offers), she went to stay at a
place in Kent, which her brother, an
Indian-Merchant, had newly bought. There
was a story that this place had once been
held in trust by the guardian of a young
boy; who was himself the next heir, and
who killed the young boy by harsh and
cruel treatment. She knew nothing of
that. It has been said that there was a
Cage in her bedroom in which the guardian
used to put the boy. There was no such
thing. There was only a closet. She went
to bed, made no alarm whatever in the
night, and in the morning said composedly
to her maid when she came in, "Who
is the pretty forlorn-looking child who
has been peeping out of that closet all
night?" The maid replied by giving a
loud scream, and instantly decamping. She
was surprised; but she was a woman of
remarkable strength of mind, and she
dressed herself and went downstairs, and
closeted herself with her brother.
"Now, Walter," she said,
"I have been disturbed all night by
a pretty, forlorn-looking boy, who has
been constantly peeping out of that
closet in my room, which I can't open.
This is some trick." "I am
afraid not, Charlotte," said he,
"for it is the legend of the house.
It is the Orphan Boy. What did he
do?" "He opened the door
softly," said she, "and peeped
out. Sometimes, he came a step or two
into the room. Then, I called to him, to
encourage him, and he shrunk, and
shuddered, and crept in again, and shut
the door." "The closet has no
communication, Charlotte," said her
brother, "with any other part of the
house, and it's nailed up." This was
undeniably true, and it took two
carpenters a whole forenoon to get it
open, for examination. Then, she was
satisfied that she had seen the Orphan
Boy. But, the wild and terrible part of
the story is, that he was also seen by
three of her brother's sons, in
succession, who all died young. On the
occasion of each child being taken ill,
he came home in a heat, twelve hours
before, and said, Oh, Mamma, he had been
playing under a particular oak-tree, in a
certain meadow, with a strange boy--a
pretty, forlorn-looking boy, who was very
timid, and made signs! From fatal
experience, the parents came to know that
this was the Orphan Boy, and that the
course of that child whom he chose for
his little playmate was surely run.

Legion is the
name of the German castles, where we sit
up alone to wait for the Spectre--where
we are shown into a room, made
comparatively cheerful for our
reception--where we glance round at the
shadows, thrown on the blank walls by the
crackling fire--where we feel very lonely
when the village innkeeper and his pretty
daughter have retired, after laying down
a fresh store of wood upon the hearth,
and setting forth on the small table such
supper-cheer as a cold roast capon,
bread, grapes, and a flask of old Rhine
wine- -where the reverberating doors
close on their retreat, one after
another, like so many peals of sullen
thunder--and where, about the small hours
of the night, we come into the knowledge
of divers supernatural mysteries. Legion
is the name of the haunted German
students, in whose society we draw yet
nearer to the fire, while the schoolboy
in the corner opens his eyes wide and
round, and flies off the footstool he has
chosen for his seat, when the door
accidentally blows open. Vast is the crop
of such fruit, shining on our Christmas
Tree; in blossom, almost at the very top;
ripening all down the boughs!
 |
Among
the later toys and fancies
hanging there--as idle often and
less pure--be the images once
associated with the sweet old
Waits, the softened music in the
night, ever unalterable!
Encircled by the social thoughts
of Christmas-time, still let the
benignant figure of my childhood
stand unchanged! In every
cheerful image and suggestion
that the season brings, may the
bright star that rested above the
poor roof, be the star of all the
Christian World! A moment's
pause, O vanishing tree, of which
the lower boughs are dark to me
as yet, and let me look once
more! I know there are blank
spaces on thy branches, where
eyes that I have loved have shone
and smiled; from which they are
departed. But, far above, I see
the raiser of the dead girl, and
the Widow's Son; and God is good!
If Age be hiding for me in the
unseen portion of thy downward
growth, O may I, with a grey
head, turn a child's heart to
that figure yet, and a child's
trustfulness and confidence! |
Now,
the tree is decorated with bright
merriment, and song, and dance,
and cheerfulness. And they are
welcome. Innocent and welcome be
they ever held, beneath the
branches of the Christmas Tree,
which cast no gloomy shadow! But,
as it sinks into the ground, I
hear a whisper going through the
leaves. "This, in
commemoration of the law of love
and kindness, mercy and
compassion. This, in remembrance
of Me!" |
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