I am a novelist, and I suppose I have made up this story. I write
"I suppose," though I know for a fact that I have made it up, but yet
I keep fancying that it must have happened somewhere at some time, that it must
have happened on Christmas Eve in some great town in a time of terrible frost.
I have a vision of a boy, a little boy, six years old or even
younger. This boy woke up that morning in a cold damp cellar. He was dressed in
a sort of little dressing-gown and was shivering with cold. There was a cloud
of white steam from his breath, and sitting on a box in the corner, he blew the
steam out of his mouth and amused himself in his dullness watching it float
away. But he was terribly hungry. Several times that morning he went up to the
plank bed where his sick mother was lying on a mattress as thin as a pancake,
with some sort of bundle under her head for a pillow. How had she come here?
She must have come with her boy from some other town and suddenly fallen ill.
The landlady who let the "corners" had been taken two days before to
the police station, the lodgers were out and about as the holiday was so near,
and the only one left had been lying for the last twenty-four hours dead drunk,
not having waited for Christmas. In another corner of the room a wretched old
woman of eighty, who had once been a children's nurse but was now left to die
friendless, was moaning and groaning with rheumatism, scolding and grumbling at
the boy so that he was afraid to go near her corner. He had got a drink of
water in the outer room, but could not find a crust anywhere, and had been on
the point of waking his mother a dozen times. He felt frightened at last in the
darkness: it had long[152] been dusk, but no light was kindled.
Touching his mother's face, he was surprised that she did not move at all, and
that she was as cold as the wall. "It is very cold here," he thought.
He stood a little, unconsciously letting his hands rest on the dead woman's
shoulders, then he breathed on his fingers to warm them, and then quietly fumbling
for his cap on the bed, he went out of the cellar. He would have gone earlier,
but was afraid of the big dog which had been howling all day at the neighbour's
door at the top of the stairs. But the dog was not there now, and he went out
into the street.
Mercy on us, what a town! He had never seen anything like it
before. In the town from which he had come, it was always such black darkness
at night. There was one lamp for the whole street, the little, low-pitched,
wooden houses were closed up with shutters, there was no one to be seen in the
street after dusk, all the people shut themselves up in their houses, and there
was nothing but the howling of packs of dogs, hundreds and thousands of them
barking and howling all night. But there it was so warm and he was given food,
while here—oh, dear, if he only had something to eat! And what a noise and
rattle here, what light and what people, horses and carriages, and what a
frost! The frozen steam hung in clouds over the horses, over their warmly
breathing mouths; their hoofs clanged against the stones through the powdery
snow, and every one pushed so, and—oh, dear, how he longed for some morsel to
eat, and how wretched he suddenly felt. A policeman walked by and turned away
to avoid seeing the boy.
Here was another street—oh, what a wide one, here he would be run
over for certain; how everyone was shouting, racing and driving along, and the
light, the light! And what was this? A huge glass window, and through the
window a tree reaching up to the ceiling; it was a fir tree, and on it were
ever so many lights, gold papers and apples and little dolls and horses; and
there were children clean and dressed[153] in their best running about the room,
laughing and playing and eating and drinking something. And then a little girl
began dancing with one of the boys, what a pretty little girl! And he could
hear the music through the window. The boy looked and wondered and laughed,
though his toes were aching with the cold and his fingers were red and stiff so
that it hurt him to move them. And all at once the boy remembered how his toes
and fingers hurt him, and began crying, and ran on; and again through another
window-pane he saw another Christmas tree, and on a table cakes of all
sorts—almond cakes, red cakes and yellow cakes, and three grand young ladies
were sitting there, and they gave the cakes to any one who went up to them, and
the door kept opening, lots of gentlemen and ladies went in from the street.
The boy crept up, suddenly opened the door and went in. Oh, how they shouted at
him and waved him back! One lady went up to him hurriedly and slipped a kopeck
into his hand, and with her own hands opened the door into the street for him!
How frightened he was. And the kopeck rolled away and clinked upon the steps;
he could not bend his red fingers to hold it tight. The boy ran away and went
on, where he did not know. He was ready to cry again but he was afraid, and ran
on and on and blew his fingers. And he was miserable because he felt suddenly
so lonely and terrified, and all at once, mercy on us! What was this again?
People were standing in a crowd admiring. Behind a glass window there were
three little dolls, dressed in red and green dresses, and exactly, exactly as
though they were alive. One was a little old man sitting and playing a big
violin, the two others were standing close by and playing little violins and
nodding in time, and looking at one another, and their lips moved, they were
speaking, actually speaking, only one couldn't hear through the glass. And at first
the boy thought they were alive, and when he grasped that they were dolls he
laughed. He had never seen such dolls before, and had no idea there were such[154] dolls!
And he wanted to cry, but he felt amused, amused by the dolls. All at once he
fancied that some one caught at his smock behind: a wicked big boy was standing
beside him and suddenly hit him on the head, snatched off his cap and tripped
him up. The boy fell down on the ground, at once there was a shout, he was numb
with fright, he jumped up and ran away. He ran, and not knowing where he was
going, ran in at the gate of some one's courtyard, and sat down behind a stack
of wood: "They won't find me here, besides it's dark!"
He sat huddled up and was breathless from fright, and all at once,
quite suddenly, he felt so happy: his hands and feet suddenly left off aching
and grew so warm, as warm as though he were on a stove; then he shivered all
over, then he gave a start, why, he must have been asleep. How nice to have a
sleep here! "I'll sit here a little and go and look at the dolls
again," said the boy, and smiled thinking of them. "Just as though
they were alive!..." And suddenly he heard his mother singing over him.
"Mammy, I am asleep; how nice it is to sleep here!"
"Come to my Christmas tree, little one," a soft voice
suddenly whispered over his head.
He thought that this was still his mother, but no, it was not she.
Who it was calling him, he could not see, but some one bent over and embraced
him in the darkness; and he stretched out his hands to him, and ... and all at
once—oh, what a bright light! Oh, what a Christmas tree! And yet it was not a
fir tree, he had never seen a tree like that! Where was he now? Everything was
bright and shining, and all round him were dolls; but no, they were not dolls,
they were little boys and girls, only so bright and shining. They all came
flying round him, they all kissed him, took him and carried him along with
them, and he was flying himself, and he saw that his mother was looking at him
and laughing joyfully. "Mammy, Mammy; oh, how nice it is here,
Mammy!" And again he kissed the children and wanted to tell them at[155] once
of those dolls in the shop window. "Who are you, boys? Who are you,
girls?" he asked, laughing and admiring them.
"This is Christ's Christmas tree," they answered.
"Christ always has a Christmas tree on this day, for the little children
who have no tree of their own...." And he found out that all these little
boys and girls were children just like himself; that some had been frozen in
the baskets in which they had as babies been laid on the doorsteps of
well-to-do Petersburg people, others had been boarded out with Finnish women by
the Foundling and had been suffocated, others had died at their starved
mother's breasts (in the Samara famine), others had died in the third-class
railway carriages from the foul air; and yet they were all here, they were all
like angels about Christ, and He was in the midst of them and held out His
hands to them and blessed them and their sinful mothers.... And the mothers of
these children stood on one side weeping; each one knew her boy or girl, and
the children flew up to them and kissed them and wiped away their tears with
their little hands, and begged them not to weep because they were so happy.
And down below in the morning the porter found the little dead
body of the frozen child on the woodstack; they sought out his mother too....
She had died before him. They met before the Lord God in heaven.
Why have I made up such a story, so out of keeping with an
ordinary diary, and a writer's above all? And I promised two stories dealing
with real events! But that is just it, I keep fancying that all this may have
happened really—that is, what took place in the cellar and on the woodstack;
but as for Christ's Christmas tree, I cannot tell you whether that could have
happened or not.
Read at gutenberg.org
Read at gutenberg.org
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