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The Life and Adventures of Santa Clause



by L. Frank Baum



May 1996 [Etext #520]





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The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus



by L. Frank Baum







Contents



YOUTH

1.  Burzee

2.  The Child of the Forest

3.  The Adoption

4.  Claus

5.  The Master Woodsman

6.  Claus Discovers Humanity

7.  Claus Leaves the Forest



MANHOOD

1.  The Laughing Valley

2.  How Claus Made the First Toy

3.  How the Ryls Colored the Toys

4.  How Little Mayrie Became Frightened

5.  How Bessie Blithesome Came to the Laughing Valley

6.  The Wickedness of the Awgwas

7.  The Great Battle Between Good and Evil

8.  The First Journey with the Reindeer

9.  "Santa Claus!"

10.  Christmas Eve

11.  How the First Stockings Were Hung by the Chimneys

12.  The First Christmas Tree



OLD AGE

1.  The Mantle of Immortality

2.  When the World Grew Old

3.  The Deputies of Santa Claus









YOUTH







1.  Burzee





Have you heard of the great Forest of Burzee?  Nurse used to sing of

it when I was a child.  She sang of the big tree-trunks, standing

close together, with their roots intertwining below the earth and

their branches intertwining above it; of their rough coating of bark

and queer, gnarled limbs; of the bushy foliage that roofed the entire

forest, save where the sunbeams found a path through which to touch

the ground in little spots and to cast weird and curious shadows over

the mosses, the lichens and the drifts of dried leaves.



The Forest of Burzee is mighty and grand and awesome to those who

steal beneath its shade.  Coming from the sunlit meadows into its

mazes it seems at first gloomy, then pleasant, and afterward filled

with never-ending delights.



For hundreds of years it has flourished in all its magnificence, the

silence of its inclosure unbroken save by the chirp of busy chipmunks,

the growl of wild beasts and the songs of birds.



Yet Burzee has its inhabitants--for all this.  Nature peopled it in

the beginning with Fairies, Knooks, Ryls and Nymphs.  As long as the

Forest stands it will be a home, a refuge and a playground to these

sweet immortals, who revel undisturbed in its depths.



Civilization has never yet reached Burzee.  Will it ever, I wonder?







2.  The Child of the Forest





Once, so long ago our great-grandfathers could scarcely have heard it

mentioned, there lived within the great Forest of Burzee a wood-nymph

named Necile.  She was closely related to the mighty Queen Zurline,

and her home was beneath the shade of a widespreading oak.  Once every

year, on Budding Day, when the trees put forth their new buds, Necile

held the Golden Chalice of Ak to the lips of the Queen, who drank

therefrom to the prosperity of the Forest.  So you see she was a nymph

of some importance, and, moreover, it is said she was highly regarded

because of her beauty and grace.



When she was created she could not have told; Queen Zurline could not

have told; the great Ak himself could not have told.  It was long ago

when the world was new and nymphs were needed to guard the forests

and to minister to the wants of the young trees.  Then, on some day

not remembered, Necile sprang into being; radiant, lovely, straight

and slim as the sapling she was created to guard.



Her hair was the color that lines a chestnut-bur; her eyes were blue

in the sunlight and purple in the shade; her cheeks bloomed with the

faint pink that edges the clouds at sunset; her lips were full red,

pouting and sweet.  For costume she adopted oak-leaf green; all the

wood-nymphs dress in that color and know no other so desirable.  Her

dainty feet were sandal-clad, while her head remained bare of covering

other than her silken tresses.



Necile's duties were few and simple.  She kept hurtful weeds from

growing beneath her trees and sapping the earth-food required by her

charges.  She frightened away the Gadgols, who took evil delight in

flying against the tree-trunks and wounding them so that they drooped

and died from the poisonous contact.  In dry seasons she carried

water from the brooks and pools and moistened the roots of her

thirsty dependents.



That was in the beginning.  The weeds had now learned to avoid the

forests where wood-nymphs dwelt; the loathsome Gadgols no longer dared

come nigh; the trees had become old and sturdy and could bear the

drought better than when fresh-sprouted.  So Necile's duties were

lessened, and time grew laggard, while succeeding years became more

tiresome and uneventful than the nymph's joyous spirit loved.



Truly the forest-dwellers did not lack amusement.  Each full moon they

danced in the Royal Circle of the Queen.  There were also the Feast of

Nuts, the Jubilee of Autumn Tintings, the solemn ceremony of Leaf

Shedding and the revelry of Budding Day.  But these periods of

enjoyment were far apart, and left many weary hours between.



That a wood-nymph should grow discontented was not thought of by

Necile's sisters.  It came upon her only after many years of brooding.

But when once she had settled in her mind that life was irksome she

had no patience with her condition, and longed to do something of real

interest and to pass her days in ways hitherto undreamed of by forest

nymphs.  The Law of the Forest alone restrained her from going forth

in search of adventure.



While this mood lay heavy upon pretty Necile it chanced that the great

Ak visited the Forest of Burzee and allowed the wood-nymphs as was

their wont--to lie at his feet and listen to the words of wisdom that

fell from his lips.  Ak is the Master Woodsman of the world; he sees

everything, and knows more than the sons of men.



That night he held the Queen's hand, for he loved the nymphs as a

father loves his children; and Necile lay at his feet with many of her

sisters and earnestly harkened as he spoke.



"We live so happily, my fair ones, in our forest glades," said Ak,

stroking his grizzled beard thoughtfully, "that we know nothing of the

sorrow and misery that fall to the lot of those poor mortals who

inhabit the open spaces of the earth.  They are not of our race, it is

true, yet compassion well befits beings so fairly favored as

ourselves.  Often as I pass by the dwelling of some suffering mortal I

am tempted to stop and banish the poor thing's misery.  Yet suffering,

in moderation, is the natural lot of mortals, and it is not our place

to interfere with the laws of Nature."



"Nevertheless," said the fair Queen, nodding her golden head at the

Master Woodsman, "it would not be a vain guess that Ak has often

assisted these hapless mortals."



Ak smiled.



"Sometimes," he replied, "when they are very young--'children,' the

mortals call them--I have stopped to rescue them from misery.  The men

and women I dare not interfere with; they must bear the burdens Nature

has imposed upon them.  But the helpless infants, the innocent

children of men, have a right to be happy until they become full-grown

and able to bear the trials of humanity.  So I feel I am justified in

assisting them.  Not long ago--a year, maybe--I found four poor

children huddled in a wooden hut, slowly freezing to death.  Their

parents had gone to a neighboring village for food, and had left a

fire to warm their little ones while they were absent.  But a storm

arose and drifted the snow in their path, so they were long on the

road.  Meantime the fire went out and the frost crept into the bones

of the waiting children."



"Poor things!" murmured the Queen softly.  "What did you do?"



"I called Nelko, bidding him fetch wood from my forests and breathe

upon it until the fire blazed again and warmed the little room where

the children lay.  Then they ceased shivering and fell asleep until

their parents came."



"I am glad you did thus," said the good Queen, beaming upon the

Master; and Necile, who had eagerly listened to every word, echoed in

a whisper: "I, too, am glad!"



"And this very night," continued Ak, "as I came to the edge of Burzee I

heard a feeble cry, which I judged came from a human infant.  I looked

about me and found, close to the forest, a helpless babe, lying quite

naked upon the grasses and wailing piteously.  Not far away, screened

by the forest, crouched Shiegra, the lioness, intent upon devouring

the infant for her evening meal."



"And what did you do, Ak?" asked the Queen, breathlessly.



"Not much, being in a hurry to greet my nymphs.  But I commanded

Shiegra to lie close to the babe, and to give it her milk to quiet its

hunger.  And I told her to send word throughout the forest, to all

beasts and reptiles, that the child should not be harmed."



"I am glad you did thus," said the good Queen again, in a tone of

relief; but this time Necile did not echo her words, for the nymph,

filled with a strange resolve, had suddenly stolen away from the group.



Swiftly her lithe form darted through the forest paths until she

reached the edge of mighty Burzee, when she paused to gaze curiously

about her.  Never until now had she ventured so far, for the Law of

the Forest had placed the nymphs in its inmost depths.



Necile knew she was breaking the Law, but the thought did not give

pause to her dainty feet.  She had decided to see with her own eyes

this infant Ak had told of, for she had never yet beheld a child of

man.  All the immortals are full-grown; there are no children among

them.  Peering through the trees Necile saw the child lying on the

grass.  But now it was sweetly sleeping, having been comforted by the

milk drawn from Shiegra.  It was not old enough to know what peril

means; if it did not feel hunger it was content.



Softly the nymph stole to the side of the babe and knelt upon the

sward, her long robe of rose leaf color spreading about her like a

gossamer cloud.  Her lovely countenance expressed curiosity and

surprise, but, most of all, a tender, womanly pity.  The babe was

newborn, chubby and pink.  It was entirely helpless.  While the nymph

gazed the infant opened its eyes, smiled upon her, and stretched out

two dimpled arms.  In another instant Necile had caught it to her

breast and was hurrying with it through the forest paths.







3.  The Adoption





The Master Woodsman suddenly rose, with knitted brows.  "There is a

strange presence in the Forest," he declared.  Then the Queen and her

nymphs turned and saw standing before them Necile, with the sleeping

infant clasped tightly in her arms and a defiant look in her deep

blue eyes.



And thus for a moment they remained, the nymphs filled with surprise

and consternation, but the brow of the Master Woodsman gradually

clearing as he gazed intently upon the beautiful immortal who had

wilfully broken the Law.  Then the great Ak, to the wonder of all,

laid his hand softly on Necile's flowing locks and kissed her on her

fair forehead.



"For the first time within my knowledge," said he, gently, "a nymph

has defied me and my laws; yet in my heart can I find no word of

chiding.  What is your desire, Necile?"



"Let me keep the child!" she answered, beginning to tremble and

falling on her knees in supplication.



"Here, in the Forest of Burzee, where the human race has never yet

penetrated?" questioned Ak.



"Here, in the Forest of Burzee," replied the nymph, boldly.  "It is my

home, and I am weary for lack of occupation.  Let me care for the

babe!  See how weak and helpless it is.  Surely it can not harm Burzee

nor the Master Woodsman of the World!"



"But the Law, child, the Law!" cried Ak, sternly.



"The Law is made by the Master Woodsman," returned Necile; "if he bids

me care for the babe he himself has saved from death, who in all the

world dare oppose me?"  Queen Zurline, who had listened intently

to this conversation, clapped her pretty hands gleefully at the

nymph's answer.



"You are fairly trapped, O Ak!" she exclaimed, laughing.  "Now, I pray

you, give heed to Necile's petition."



The Woodsman, as was his habit when in thought, stroked his grizzled

beard slowly.  Then he said:



"She shall keep the babe, and I will give it my protection.  But I

warn you all that as this is the first time I have relaxed the Law, so

shall it be the last time.  Never more, to the end of the World, shall

a mortal be adopted by an immortal.  Otherwise would we abandon our

happy existence for one of trouble and anxiety.  Good night, my nymphs!"



Then Ak was gone from their midst, and Necile hurried away to her

bower to rejoice over her new-found treasure.







4.  Claus





Another day found Necile's bower the most popular place in the Forest.

The nymphs clustered around her and the child that lay asleep in her

lap, with expressions of curiosity and delight.  Nor were they wanting

in praises for the great Ak's kindness in allowing Necile to keep the

babe and to care for it.  Even the Queen came to peer into the

innocent childish face and to hold a helpless, chubby fist in her own

fair hand.



"What shall we call him, Necile?" she asked, smiling.  "He must have a

name, you know."



"Let him be called Claus," answered Necile, "for that means

'a little one.'"



"Rather let him be called Neclaus,"** returned the Queen, "for that

will mean 'Necile's little one.'"



The nymphs clapped their hands in delight, and Neclaus became the

infant's name, although Necile loved best to call him Claus, and in

afterdays many of her sisters followed her example.



Necile gathered the softest moss in all the forest for Claus to lie

upon, and she made his bed in her own bower.  Of food the infant had

no lack.  The nymphs searched the forest for bell-udders, which grow

upon the goa-tree and when opened are found to be filled with sweet

milk.  And the soft-eyed does willingly gave a share of their milk to

support the little stranger, while Shiegra, the lioness, often crept

stealthily into Necile's bower and purred softly as she lay beside the

babe and fed it.



So the little one flourished and grew big and sturdy day by day, while

Necile taught him to speak and to walk and to play.



His thoughts and words were sweet and gentle, for the nymphs knew no

evil and their hearts were pure and loving.  He became the pet of the

forest, for Ak's decree had forbidden beast or reptile to molest him,

and he walked fearlessly wherever his will guided him.



Presently the news reached the other immortals that the nymphs of

Burzee had adopted a human infant, and that the act had been

sanctioned by the great Ak.  Therefore many of them came to visit the

little stranger, looking upon him with much interest.  First the Ryls,

who are first cousins to the wood-nymphs, although so differently

formed.  For the Ryls are required to watch over the flowers and

plants, as the nymphs watch over the forest trees.  They search the

wide world for the food required by the roots of the flowering plants,

while the brilliant colors possessed by the full-blown flowers are due

to the dyes placed in the soil by the Ryls, which are drawn through

the little veins in the roots and the body of the plants, as they

reach maturity.  The Ryls are a busy people, for their flowers bloom

and fade continually, but they are merry and light-hearted and are

very popular with the other immortals.



Next came the Knooks, whose duty it is to watch over the beasts of the

world, both gentle and wild.  The Knooks have a hard time of it, since

many of the beasts are ungovernable and rebel against restraint.  But

they know how to manage them, after all, and you will find that

certain laws of the Knooks are obeyed by even the most ferocious

animals.  Their anxieties make the Knooks look old and worn and

crooked, and their natures are a bit rough from associating with wild

creatures continually; yet they are most useful to humanity and to the

world in general, as their laws are the only laws the forest beasts

recognize except those of the Master Woodsman.



Then there were the Fairies, the guardians of mankind, who were much

interested in the adoption of Claus because their own laws forbade

them to become familiar with their human charges.  There are instances

on record where the Fairies have shown themselves to human beings, and

have even conversed with them; but they are supposed to guard the

lives of mankind unseen and unknown, and if they favor some people

more than others it is because these have won such distinction fairly,

as the Fairies are very just and impartial.  But the idea of adopting

a child of men had never occurred to them because it was in every way

opposed to their laws;  so their curiosity was intense to behold the

little stranger adopted by Necile and her sister nymphs.



Claus looked upon the immortals who thronged around him with fearless

eyes and smiling lips.  He rode laughingly upon the shoulders of the

merry Ryls; he mischievously pulled the gray beards of the low-browed

Knooks;  he rested his curly head confidently upon the dainty bosom of

the Fairy Queen herself.  And the Ryls loved the sound of his laughter;

the Knooks loved his courage; the Fairies loved his innocence.



The boy made friends of them all, and learned to know their laws

intimately.  No forest flower was trampled beneath his feet, lest the

friendly Ryls should be grieved.  He never interfered with the beasts

of the forest, lest his friends the Knooks should become angry.  The

Fairies he loved dearly, but, knowing nothing of mankind, he could not

understand that he was the only one of his race admitted to friendly

intercourse with them.



Indeed, Claus came to consider that he alone, of all the forest

people, had no like nor fellow.  To him the forest was the world.

He had no idea that millions of toiling, striving human

creatures existed.



And he was happy and content.





** Some people have spelled this name Nicklaus and others Nicolas,

   which is the reason that Santa Claus is still known in some lands

   as St. Nicolas.  But, of course, Neclaus is his right name, and

   Claus the nickname given him by his adopted mother, the fair nymph

   Necile.







5.  The Master Woodsman





Years pass swiftly in Burzee, for the nymphs have no need to regard

time in any way.  Even centuries make no change in the dainty creatures;

ever and ever they remain the same, immortal and unchanging.



Claus, however, being mortal, grew to manhood day by day.  Necile was

disturbed, presently, to find him too big to lie in her lap, and he

had a desire for other food than milk.  His stout legs carried him far

into Burzee's heart, where he gathered supplies of nuts and berries,

as well as several sweet and wholesome roots, which suited his stomach

better than the belludders.  He sought Necile's bower less frequently,

till finally it became his custom to return thither only to sleep.



The nymph, who had come to love him dearly, was puzzled to comprehend

the changed nature of her charge, and unconsciously altered her own

mode of life to conform to his whims.  She followed him readily

through the forest paths, as did many of her sister nymphs, explaining

as they walked all the mysteries of the gigantic wood and the habits

and nature of the living things which dwelt beneath its shade.



The language of the beasts became clear to little Claus; but he

never could understand their sulky and morose tempers.  Only the

squirrels, the mice and the rabbits seemed to possess cheerful and

merry natures; yet would the boy laugh when the panther growled, and

stroke the bear's glossy coat while the creature snarled and bared its

teeth menacingly.  The growls and snarls were not for Claus, he well

knew, so what did they matter?



He could sing the songs of the bees, recite the poetry of the

wood-flowers and relate the history of every blinking owl in Burzee.

He helped the Ryls to feed their plants and the Knooks to keep order

among the animals.  The little immortals regarded him as a privileged

person, being especially protected by Queen Zurline and her nymphs and

favored by the great Ak himself.



One day the Master Woodsman came back to the forest of Burzee.  He had

visited, in turn, all his forests throughout the world, and they were

many and broad.



Not until he entered the glade where the Queen and her nymphs were

assembled to greet him did Ak remember the child he had permitted

Necile to adopt.  Then he found, sitting familiarly in the circle of

lovely immortals, a broad-shouldered, stalwart youth, who, when erect,

stood fully as high as the shoulder of the Master himself.



Ak paused, silent and frowning, to bend his piercing gaze upon Claus.

The clear eyes met his own steadfastly, and the Woodsman gave a sigh

of relief as he marked their placid depths and read the youth's brave

and innocent heart.  Nevertheless, as Ak sat beside the fair Queen, and

the golden chalice, filled with rare nectar, passed from lip to lip,

the Master Woodsman was strangely silent and reserved, and stroked his

beard many times with a thoughtful motion.



With morning he called Claus aside, in kindly fashion, saying:



"Bid good by, for a time, to Necile and her sisters; for you shall

accompany me on my journey through the world."



The venture pleased Claus, who knew well the honor of being companion

of the Master Woodsman of the world.  But Necile wept for the first

time in her life, and clung to the boy's neck as if she could not bear

to let him go.  The nymph who had mothered this sturdy youth was still

as dainty, as charming and beautiful as when she had dared to face Ak

with the babe clasped to her breast; nor was her love less great.  Ak

beheld the two clinging together, seemingly as brother and sister to

one another, and again he wore his thoughtful look.







6.  Claus Discovers Humanity





Taking Claus to a small clearing in the forest, the Master said:

"Place your hand upon my girdle and hold fast while we journey through

the air; for now shall we encirle the world and look upon many of the

haunts of those men from whom you are descended."



These words caused Claus to marvel, for until now he had thought himself

the only one of his kind upon the earth; yet in silence he grasped firmly

the girdle of the great Ak, his astonishment forbidding speech.



Then the vast forest of Burzee seemed to fall away from their feet,

and the youth found himself passing swiftly through the air at a

great height.



Ere long there were spires beneath them, while buildings of many

shapes and colors met their downward view.  It was a city of men, and

Ak, pausing to descend, led Claus to its inclosure.  Said the Master:



"So long as you hold fast to my girdle you will remain unseen by all

mankind, though seeing clearly yourself.  To release your grasp will

be to separate yourself forever from me and your home in Burzee."



One of the first laws of the Forest is obedience, and Claus had no

thought of disobeying the Master's wish.  He clung fast to the girdle

and remained invisible.



Thereafter with each moment passed in the city the youth's wonder

grew.  He, who had supposed himself created differently from all

others, now found the earth swarming with creatures of his own kind.



"Indeed," said Ak, "the immortals are few; but the mortals are many."



Claus looked earnestly upon his fellows.  There were sad faces, gay

and reckless faces, pleasant faces, anxious faces and kindly faces,

all mingled in puzzling disorder.  Some worked at tedious tasks; some

strutted in impudent conceit; some were thoughtful and grave while

others seemed happy and content.  Men of many natures were there, as

everywhere, and Claus found much to please him and much to make him sad.



But especially he noted the children--first curiously, then eagerly,

then lovingly.  Ragged little ones rolled in the dust of the streets,

playing with scraps and pebbles.  Other children, gaily dressed, were

propped upon cushions and fed with sugar-plums.  Yet the children of

the rich were not happier than those playing with the dust and

pebbles, it seemed to Claus.



"Childhood is the time of man's greatest content," said Ak, following

the youth's thoughts.  "'Tis during these years of innocent pleasure

that the little ones are most free from care."



"Tell me," said Claus, "why do not all these babies fare alike?"



"Because they are born in both cottage and palace," returned the

Master.  "The difference in the wealth of the parents determines the

lot of the child.  Some are carefully tended and clothed in silks and

dainty linen; others are neglected and covered with rags."



"Yet all seem equally fair and sweet," said Claus, thoughtfully.



"While they are babes--yes;" agreed Ak.  "Their joy is in being alive,

and they do not stop to think.  In after years the doom of mankind

overtakes them, and they find they must struggle and worry, work and

fret, to gain the wealth that is so dear to the hearts of men.  Such

things are unknown in the Forest where you were reared."  Claus was

silent a moment.  Then he asked:



"Why was I reared in the forest, among those who are not of my race?"



Then Ak, in gentle voice, told him the story of his babyhood: how he

had been abandoned at the forest's edge and left a prey to wild

beasts, and how the loving nymph Necile had rescued him and brought

him to manhood under the protection of the immortals.



"Yet I am not of them," said Claus, musingly.



"You are not of them," returned the Woodsman.  "The nymph who cared

for you as a mother seems now like a sister to you; by and by, when

you grow old and gray, she will seem like a daughter.  Yet another

brief span and you will be but a memory, while she remains Necile."



"Then why, if man must perish, is he born?" demanded the boy.



"Everything perishes except the world itself and its keepers,"

answered Ak.  "But while life lasts everything on earth has its use.

The wise seek ways to be helpful to the world, for the helpful ones

are sure to live again."



Much of this Claus failed to understand fully, but a longing seized

him to become helpful to his fellows, and he remained grave and

thoughtful while they resumed their journey.



They visited many dwellings of men in many parts of the world,

watching farmers toil in the fields, warriors dash into cruel fray,

and merchants exchange their goods for bits of white and yellow metal.

And everywhere the eyes of Claus sought out the children in love and

pity, for the thought of his own helpless babyhood was strong within

him and he yearned to give help to the innocent little ones of his

race even as he had been succored by the kindly nymph.



Day by day the Master Woodsman and his pupil traversed the earth, Ak

speaking but seldom to the youth who clung steadfastly to his girdle,

but guiding him into all places where he might become familiar with

the lives of human beings.



And at last they returned to the grand old Forest of Burzee, where the

Master set Claus down within the circle of nymphs, among whom the

pretty Necile anxiously awaited him.



The brow of the great Ak was now calm and peaceful; but the brow of

Claus had become lined with deep thought.  Necile sighed at the change

in her foster-son, who until now had been ever joyous and smiling, and

the thought came to her that never again would the life of the boy be

the same as before this eventful journey with the Master.







7.  Claus Leaves the Forest





When good Queen Zurline had touched the golden chalice with her fair

lips and it had passed around the circle in honor of the travelers'

return, the Master Woodsman of the World, who had not yet spoken,

turned his gaze frankly upon Claus and said:



"Well?"



The boy understood, and rose slowly to his feet beside Necile.  Once

only his eyes passed around the familiar circle of nymphs, every one

of whom he remembered as a loving comrade; but tears came unbidden to

dim his sight, so he gazed thereafter steadfastly at the Master.



"I have been ignorant," said he, simply, "until the great Ak in his

kindness taught me who and what I am.  You, who live so sweetly in

your forest bowers, ever fair and youthful and innocent, are no fit

comrades for a son of humanity.  For I have looked upon man, finding

him doomed to live for a brief space upon earth, to toil for the

things he needs, to fade into old age, and then to pass away as the

leaves in autumn.  Yet every man has his mission, which is to leave

the world better, in some way, than he found it.  I am of the race of

men, and man's lot is my lot.  For your tender care of the poor,

forsaken babe you adopted, as well as for your loving comradeship

during my boyhood, my heart will ever overflow with gratitude.  My

foster-mother," here he stopped and kissed Necile's white forehead, "I

shall love and cherish while life lasts.  But I must leave you, to

take my part in the endless struggle to which humanity is doomed, and

to live my life in my own way."



"What will you do?" asked the Queen, gravely.



"I must devote myself to the care of the children of mankind, and try

to make them happy," he answered.  "Since your own tender care of a

babe brought to me happiness and strength, it is just and right that

I devote my life to the pleasure of other babes.  Thus will the memory

of the loving nymph Necile be planted within the hearts of thousands

of my race for many years to come, and her kindly act be recounted in song

and in story while the world shall last.  Have I spoken well, O Master?"



"You have spoken well," returned Ak, and rising to his feet he

continued: "Yet one thing must not be forgotten.  Having been adopted

as the child of the Forest, and the playfellow of the nymphs, you have

gained a distinction which forever separates you from your kind.

Therefore, when you go forth into the world of men you shall retain

the protection of the Forest, and the powers you now enjoy will remain

with you to assist you in your labors.  In any need you may call upon

the Nymphs, the Ryls, the Knooks and the Fairies, and they will serve

you gladly.  I, the Master Woodsman of the World, have said it, and my

Word is the Law!"



Claus looked upon Ak with grateful eyes.



"This will make me mighty among men," he replied.  "Protected by these

kind friends I may be able to make thousands of little children happy.

I will try very hard to do my duty, and I know the Forest people will

give me their sympathy and help."



"We will!" said the Fairy Queen, earnestly.



"We will!" cried the merry Ryls, laughing.



"We will!" shouted the crooked Knooks, scowling.



"We will!" exclaimed the sweet nymphs, proudly.  But Necile said

nothing.  She only folded Claus in her arms and kissed him tenderly.



"The world is big," continued the boy, turning again to his loyal

friends, "but men are everywhere.  I shall begin my work near my

friends, so that if I meet with misfortune I can come to the Forest

for counsel or help."



With that he gave them all a loving look and turned away.  There was

no need to say good by, by for him the sweet, wild life of the Forest

was over.  He went forth bravely to meet his doom--the doom of the

race of man--the necessity to worry and work.



But Ak, who knew the boy's heart, was merciful and guided his steps.





Coming through Burzee to its eastern edge Claus reached the Laughing

Valley of Hohaho.  On each side were rolling green hills, and a brook

wandered midway between them to wind afar off beyond the valley.  At

his back was the grim Forest; at the far end of the valley a broad

plain.  The eyes of the young man, which had until now reflected his

grave thoughts, became brighter as he stood silent, looking out upon

the Laughing Valley.  Then on a sudden his eyes twinkled, as stars do

on a still night, and grew merry and wide.



For at his feet the cowslips and daisies smiled on him in friendly

regard; the breeze whistled gaily as it passed by and fluttered the

locks on his forehead; the brook laughed joyously as it leaped over

the pebbles and swept around the green curves of its banks; the bees

sang sweet songs as they flew from dandelion to daffodil; the beetles

chirruped happily in the long grass, and the sunbeams glinted

pleasantly over all the scene.



"Here," cried Claus, stretching out his arms as if to embrace the

Valley, "will I make my home!"



That was many, many years ago.  It has been his home ever since.  It

is his home now.









MANHOOD







1.  The Laughing Valley





When Claus came the Valley was empty save for the grass, the brook,

the wildflowers, the bees and the butterflies.  If he would make his

home here and live after the fashion of men he must have a house.

This puzzled him at first, but while he stood smiling in the sunshine

he suddenly found beside him old Nelko, the servant of the Master

Woodsman.  Nelko bore an ax, strong and broad, with blade that gleamed

like burnished silver.  This he placed in the young man's hand, then

disappeared without a word.



Claus understood, and turning to the Forest's edge he selected a

number of fallen tree-trunks, which he began to clear of their dead

branches.  He would not cut into a living tree.  His life among the

nymphs who guarded the Forest had taught him that a live tree is

sacred, being a created thing endowed with feeling.  But with the dead

and fallen trees it was different.  They had fulfilled their destiny,

as active members of the Forest community, and now it was fitting that

their remains should minister to the needs of man.



The ax bit deep into the logs at every stroke.  It seemed to have a

force of its own, and Claus had but to swing and guide it.



When shadows began creeping over the green hills to lie in the Valley

overnight, the young man had chopped many logs into equal lengths and

proper shapes for building a house such as he had seen the poorer

classes of men inhabit.  Then, resolving to await another day before

he tried to fit the logs together, Claus ate some of the sweet roots

he well knew how to find, drank deeply from the laughing brook, and

lay down to sleep on the grass, first seeking a spot where no flowers

grew, lest the weight of his body should crush them.



And while he slumbered and breathed in the perfume of the wondrous

Valley the Spirit of Happiness crept into his heart and drove out all

terror and care and misgivings.  Never more would the face of Claus be

clouded with anxieties; never more would the trials of life weigh him

down as with a burden.  The Laughing Valley had claimed him for its own.



Would that we all might live in that delightful place!--but then,

maybe, it would become overcrowded.  For ages it had awaited a tenant.

Was it chance that led young Claus to make his home in this happy

vale?  Or may we guess that his thoughtful friends, the immortals, had

directed his steps when he wandered away from Burzee to seek a home in

the great world?



Certain it is that while the moon peered over the hilltop and flooded

with its soft beams the body of the sleeping stranger, the Laughing

Valley was filled with the queer, crooked shapes of the friendly

Knooks.  These people spoke no words, but worked with skill and

swiftness.  The logs Claus had trimmed with his bright ax were carried

to a spot beside the brook and fitted one upon another, and during the

night a strong and roomy dwelling was built.



The birds came sweeping into the Valley at daybreak, and their songs,

so seldom heard in the deep wood, aroused the stranger.  He rubbed the

web of sleep from his eyelids and looked around.  The house met his gaze.



"I must thank the Knooks for this," said he, gratefully.  Then he

walked to his dwelling and entered at the doorway.  A large room faced

him, having a fireplace at the end and a table and bench in the

middle.  Beside the fireplace was a cupboard.  Another doorway was

beyond.  Claus entered here, also, and saw a smaller room with a bed

against the wall and a stool set near a small stand.  On the bed were

many layers of dried moss brought from the Forest.



"Indeed, it is a palace!" exclaimed the smiling Claus.  "I must thank

the good Knooks again, for their knowledge of man's needs as well as

for their labors in my behalf."



He left his new home with a glad feeling that he was not quite alone

in the world, although he had chosen to abandon his Forest life.

Friendships are not easily broken, and the immortals are everywhere.



Upon reaching the brook he drank of the pure water, and then sat down

on the bank to laugh at the mischievous gambols of the ripples as they

pushed one another against rocks or crowded desperately to see which

should first reach the turn beyond.  And as they raced away he

listened to the song they sang:





	"Rushing, pushing, on we go!

	 Not a wave may gently flow--

	   All are too excited.

	   Ev'ry drop, delighted,

	Turns to spray in merry play

	As we tumble on our way!"





Next Claus searched for roots to eat, while the daffodils turned their

little eyes up to him laughingly and lisped their dainty song:





"Blooming fairly, growing rarely,

   Never flowerets were so gay!

 Perfume breathing, joy bequeathing,

   As our colors we display."





It made Claus laugh to hear the little things voice their happiness as

they nodded gracefully on their stems.  But another strain caught his

ear as the sunbeams fell gently across his face and whispered:





"Here is gladness, that our rays

   Warm the valley through the days;

 Here is happiness, to give

   Comfort unto all who live!"





"Yes!" cried Claus in answer, "there is happiness and joy in all

things here.  The Laughing Valley is a valley of peace and good-will."



He passed the day talking with the ants and beetles and exchanging

jokes with the light-hearted butterflies.  And at night he lay on his

bed of soft moss and slept soundly.



Then came the Fairies, merry but noiseless, bringing skillets and pots

and dishes and pans and all the tools necessary to prepare food and to

comfort a mortal.  With these they filled cupboard and fireplace,

finally placing a stout suit of wool clothing on the stool by the bedside.



When Claus awoke he rubbed his eyes again, and laughed, and spoke

aloud his thanks to the Fairies and the Master Woodsman who had sent

them.  With eager joy he examined all his new possessions, wondering

what some might be used for.  But, in the days when he had clung to

the girdle of the great Ak and visited the cities of men, his eyes

had been quick to note all the manners and customs of the race to

which he belonged; so he guessed from the gifts brought by the

Fairies that the Master expected him hereafter to live in the fashion

of his fellow-creatures.



"Which means that I must plow the earth and plant corn," he reflected;

"so that when winter comes I shall have garnered food in plenty."



But, as he stood in the grassy Valley, he saw that to turn up the

earth in furrows would be to destroy hundreds of pretty, helpless

flowers, as well as thousands of the tender blades of grass.  And this

he could not bear to do.



Therefore he stretched out his arms and uttered a peculiar whistle he

had learned in the Forest, afterward crying:



"Ryls of the Field Flowers--come to me!"



Instantly a dozen of the queer little Ryls were squatting upon the

ground before him, and they nodded to him in cheerful greeting.



Claus gazed upon them earnestly.



"Your brothers of the Forest," he said, "I have known and loved many

years.  I shall love you, also, when we have become friends.  To me

the laws of the Ryls, whether those of the Forest or of the field, are

sacred.  I have never wilfully destroyed one of the flowers you tend

so carefully; but I must plant grain to use for food during the cold

winter, and how am I to do this without killing the little creatures

that sing to me so prettily of their fragrant blossoms?"



The Yellow Ryl, he who tends the buttercups, made answer:



"Fret not, friend Claus.  The great Ak has spoken to us of you.  There

is better work for you in life than to labor for food, and though, not

being of the Forest, Ak has no command over us, nevertheless are we

glad to favor one he loves.  Live, therefore, to do the good work you

are resolved to undertake.  We, the Field Ryls, will attend to your

food supplies."



After this speech the Ryls were no longer to be seen, and Claus drove

from his mind the thought of tilling the earth.



When next he wandered back to his dwelling a bowl of fresh milk stood

upon the table; bread was in the cupboard and sweet honey filled a

dish beside it.  A pretty basket of rosy apples and new-plucked grapes

was also awaiting him.  He called out "Thanks, my friends!" to the

invisible Ryls, and straightway began to eat of the food.



Thereafter, when hungry, he had but to look into the cupboard to find

goodly supplies brought by the kindly Ryls.  And the Knooks cut and

stacked much wood for his fireplace.  And the Fairies brought him warm

blankets and clothing.



So began his life in the Laughing Valley, with the favor and

friendship of the immortals to minister to his every want.







2.  How Claus Made the First Toy





Truly our Claus had wisdom, for his good fortune but strengthened his

resolve to befriend the little ones of his own race.  He knew his plan

was approved by the immortals, else they would not have favored him

so greatly.



So he began at once to make acquaintance with mankind.  He walked

through the Valley to the plain beyond, and crossed the plain in many

directions to reach the abodes of men.  These stood singly or in

groups of dwellings called villages, and in nearly all the houses,

whether big or little, Claus found children.



The youngsters soon came to know his merry, laughing face and the kind

glance of his bright eyes; and the parents, while they regarded the

young man with some scorn for loving children more than their elders,

were content that the girls and boys had found a playfellow who seemed

willing to amuse them.



So the children romped and played games with Claus, and the boys rode

upon his shoulders, and the girls nestled in his strong arms, and the

babies clung fondly to his knees.  Wherever the young man chanced to

be, the sound of childish laughter followed him; and to understand

this better you must know that children were much neglected in those

days and received little attention from their parents, so that it

became to them a marvel that so goodly a man as Claus devoted his time

to making them happy.  And those who knew him were, you may be sure,

very happy indeed.  The sad faces of the poor and abused grew bright

for once; the cripple smiled despite his misfortune; the ailing ones

hushed their moans and the grieved ones their cries when their merry

friend came nigh to comfort them.



Only at the beautiful palace of the Lord of Lerd and at the frowning

castle of the Baron Braun was Claus refused admittance.  There were

children at both places; but the servants at the palace shut the door

in the young stranger's face, and the fierce Baron threatened to hang

him from an iron hook on the castle walls.  Whereupon Claus sighed and

went back to the poorer dwellings where he was welcome.



After a time the winter drew near.



The flowers lived out their lives and faded and disappeared; the

beetles burrowed far into the warm earth; the butterflies deserted the

meadows; and the voice of the brook grew hoarse, as if it had taken cold.



One day snowflakes filled all the air in the Laughing Valley, dancing

boisterously toward the earth and clothing in pure white raiment the

roof of Claus's dwelling.



At night Jack Frost rapped at the door.



"Come in!" cried Claus.



"Come out!" answered Jack, "for you have a fire inside."



So Claus came out.  He had known Jack Frost in the Forest, and liked

the jolly rogue, even while he mistrusted him.



"There will be rare sport for me to-night, Claus!" shouted the sprite.

"Isn't this glorious weather?  I shall nip scores of noses and ears

and toes before daybreak."



"If you love me, Jack, spare the children," begged Claus.



"And why?" asked the other, in surprise.



"They are tender and helpless," answered Claus.



"But I love to nip the tender ones!" declared Jack.  "The older ones

are tough, and tire my fingers."



"The young ones are weak, and can not fight you," said Claus.



"True," agreed Jack, thoughtfully.  "Well, I will not pinch a child

this night--if I can resist the temptation," he promised.  "Good

night, Claus!"



"Good night."



The young man went in and closed the door, and Jack Frost ran on to

the nearest village.



Claus threw a log on the fire, which burned up brightly.  Beside the

hearth sat Blinkie, a big cat give him by Peter the Knook.  Her fur

was soft and glossy, and she purred never-ending songs of contentment.



"I shall not see the children again soon," said Claus to the cat, who

kindly paused in her song to listen.  "The winter is upon us, the snow

will be deep for many days, and I shall be unable to play with my

little friends."



The cat raised a paw and stroked her nose thoughtfully, but made no

reply.  So long as the fire burned and Claus sat in his easy chair by

the hearth she did not mind the weather.



So passed many days and many long evenings.  The cupboard was always

full, but Claus became weary with having nothing to do more than to

feed the fire from the big wood-pile the Knooks had brought him.



One evening he picked up a stick of wood and began to cut it with his

sharp knife.  He had no thought, at first, except to occupy his time,

and he whistled and sang to the cat as he carved away portions of the

stick.  Puss sat up on her haunches and watched him, listening at the

same time to her master's merry whistle, which she loved to hear even

more than her own purring songs.



Claus glanced at puss and then at the stick he was whittling, until

presently the wood began to have a shape, and the shape was like the

head of a cat, with two ears sticking upward.



Claus stopped whistling to laugh, and then both he and the cat looked

at the wooden image in some surprise.  Then he carved out the eyes and

the nose, and rounded the lower part of the head so that it rested

upon a neck.



Puss hardly knew what to make of it now, and sat up stiffly, as if

watching with some suspicion what would come next.



Claus knew.  The head gave him an idea.  He plied his knife carefully

and with skill, forming slowly the body of the cat, which he made to

sit upon its haunches as the real cat did, with her tail wound around

her two front legs.



The work cost him much time, but the evening was long and he had

nothing better to do.  Finally he gave a loud and delighted laugh at

the result of his labors and placed the wooden cat, now completed,

upon the hearth opposite the real one.



Puss thereupon glared at her image, raised her hair in anger, and

uttered a defiant mew.  The wooden cat paid no attention, and Claus,

much amused, laughed again.



Then Blinkie advanced toward the wooden image to eye it closely and

smell of it intelligently:  Eyes and nose told her the creature was

wood, in spite of its natural appearance; so puss resumed her seat and

her purring, but as she neatly washed her face with her padded paw she

cast more than one admiring glance at her clever master.  Perhaps she

felt the same satisfaction we feel when we look upon good photographs

of ourselves.



The cat's master was himself pleased with his handiwork, without

knowing exactly why.  Indeed, he had great cause to congratulate

himself that night, and all the children throughout the world should

have joined him rejoicing.  For Claus had made his first toy.







3.  How the Ryls Colored the Toys





A hush lay on the Laughing Valley now.  Snow covered it like a white

spread and pillows of downy flakes drifted before the dwelling where

Claus sat feeding the blaze of the fire.  The brook gurgled on beneath

a heavy sheet of ice and all living plants and insects nestled close

to Mother Earth to keep warm.  The face of the moon was hid by dark

clouds, and the wind, delighting in the wintry sport, pushed and

whirled the snowflakes in so many directions that they could get no

chance to fall to the ground.



Claus heard the wind whistling and shrieking in its play and thanked

the good Knooks again for his comfortable shelter.  Blinkie washed her

face lazily and stared at the coals with a look of perfect content.

The toy cat sat opposite the real one and gazed straight ahead, as toy

cats should.



Suddenly Claus heard a noise that sounded different from the voice of

the wind.  It was more like a wail of suffering and despair.



He stood up and listened, but the wind, growing boisterous, shook the

door and rattled the windows to distract his attention.  He waited

until the wind was tired and then, still listening, he heard once more

the shrill cry of distress.



Quickly he drew on his coat, pulled his cap over his eyes and opened

the door.  The wind dashed in and scattered the embers over the

hearth, at the same time blowing Blinkie's fur so furiously that she

crept under the table to escape.  Then the door was closed and Claus

was outside, peering anxiously into the darkness.



The wind laughed and scolded and tried to push him over, but he stood

firm.  The helpless flakes stumbled against his eyes and dimmed his

sight, but he rubbed them away and looked again.  Snow was everywhere,

white and glittering.  It covered the earth and filled the air.



The cry was not repeated.



Claus turned to go back into the house, but the wind caught him

unawares and he stumbled and fell across a snowdrift.  His hand

plunged into the drift and touched something that was not snow.

This he seized and, pulling it gently toward him, found it to be

a child. The next moment he had lifted it in his arms and carried

it into the house.



The wind followed him through the door, but Claus shut it out quickly.

He laid the rescued child on the hearth, and brushing away the snow he

discovered it to be Weekum, a little boy who lived in a house beyond

the Valley.



Claus wrapped a warm blanket around the little one and rubbed the

frost from its limbs.  Before long the child opened his eyes and,

seeing where he was, smiled happily.  Then Claus warmed milk and fed

it to the boy slowly, while the cat looked on with sober curiosity.

Finally the little one curled up in his friend's arms and sighed and

fell asleep, and Claus, filled with gladness that he had found the

wanderer, held him closely while he slumbered.



The wind, finding no more mischief to do, climbed the hill and swept

on toward the north.  This gave the weary snowflakes time to settle

down to earth, and the Valley became still again.



The boy, having slept well in the arms of his friend, opened his eyes

and sat up.  Then, as a child will, he looked around the room and saw

all that it contained.



"Your cat is a nice cat, Claus," he said, at last.  "Let me hold it."



But puss objected and ran away.



"The other cat won't run, Claus," continued the boy.  "Let me hold

that one."  Claus placed the toy in his arms, and the boy held it

lovingly and kissed the tip of its wooden ear.



"How did you get lost in the storm, Weekum?" asked Claus.



"I started to walk to my auntie's house and lost my way," answered Weekum.



"Were you frightened?"



"It was cold," said Weekum, "and the snow got in my eyes, so I could

not see.  Then I kept on till I fell in the snow, without knowing

where I was, and the wind blew the flakes over me and covered me up."



Claus gently stroked his head, and the boy looked up at him and smiled.



"I'm all right now," said Weekum.



"Yes," replied Claus, happily.  "Now I will put you in my warm bed, and

you must sleep until morning, when I will carry you back to your mother."



"May the cat sleep with me?" asked the boy.



"Yes, if you wish it to," answered Claus.



"It's a nice cat!" Weekum said, smiling, as Claus tucked the blankets

around him; and presently the little one fell asleep with the wooden

toy in his arms.



When morning came the sun claimed the Laughing Valley and flooded it

with his rays; so Claus prepared to take the lost child back to its mother.



"May I keep the cat, Claus?" asked Weekum.  "It's nicer than real

cats.  It doesn't run away, or scratch or bite.  May I keep it?"



"Yes, indeed," answered Claus, pleased that the toy he had made could

give pleasure to the child.  So he wrapped the boy and the wooden cat

in a warm cloak, perching the bundle upon his own broad shoulders, and

then he tramped through the snow and the drifts of the Valley and

across the plain beyond to the poor cottage where Weekum's mother lived.



"See, mama!" cried the boy, as soon as they entered, "I've got a cat!"



The good woman wept tears of joy over the rescue of her darling and

thanked Claus many times for his kind act.  So he carried a warm and

happy heart back to his home in the Valley.



That night he said to puss: "I believe the children will love the

wooden cats almost as well as the real ones, and they can't hurt them

by pulling their tails and ears.  I'll make another."



So this was the beginning of his great work.



The next cat was better made than the first.  While Claus sat

whittling it out the Yellow Ryl came in to make him a visit, and so

pleased was he with the man's skill that he ran away and brought

several of his fellows.



There sat the Red Ryl, the Black Ryl, the Green Ryl, the Blue Ryl and

the Yellow Ryl in a circle on the floor, while Claus whittled and

whistled and the wooden cat grew into shape.



"If it could be made the same color as the real cat, no one would know

the difference," said the Yellow Ryl, thoughtfully.



"The little ones, maybe, would not know the difference," replied

Claus, pleased with the idea.



"I will bring you some of the red that I color my roses and tulips

with," cried the Red Ryl; "and then you can make the cat's lips and

tongue red."



"I will bring some of the green that I color my grasses and leaves with,"

said the Green Ryl; "and then you can color the cat's eyes green."



"They will need a bit of yellow, also," remarked the Yellow Ryl; "I

must fetch some of the yellow that I use to color my buttercups and

goldenrods with."



"The real cat is black," said the Black Ryl; "I will bring some of the

black that I use to color the eyes of my pansies with, and then you

can paint your wooden cat black."



"I see you have a blue ribbon around Blinkie's neck," added the Blue

Ryl.  "I will get some of the color that I use to paint the bluebells

and forget-me-nots with, and then you can carve a wooden ribbon on the

toy cat's neck and paint it blue."



So the Ryls disappeared, and by the time Claus had finished carving

out the form of the cat they were all back with the paints and brushes.



They made Blinkie sit upon the table, that Claus might paint the toy

cat just the right color, and when the work was done the Ryls declared

it was exactly as good as a live cat.



"That is, to all appearances," added the Red Ryl.



Blinkie seemed a little offended by the attention bestowed upon the

toy, and that she might not seem to approve the imitation cat she

walked to the corner of the hearth and sat down with a dignified air.



But Claus was delighted, and as soon as morning came he started out

and tramped through the snow, across the Valley and the plain, until

he came to a village.  There, in a poor hut near the walls of the

beautiful palace of the Lord of Lerd, a little girl lay upon a

wretched cot, moaning with pain.



Claus approached the child and kissed her and comforted her, and then

he drew the toy cat from beneath his coat, where he had hidden it, and

placed it in her arms.



Ah, how well he felt himself repaid for his labor and his long walk

when he saw the little one's eyes grow bright with pleasure!  She

hugged the kitty tight to her breast, as if it had been a precious

gem, and would not let it go for a single moment.  The fever was quieted,

the pain grew less, and she fell into a sweet and refreshing sleep.



Claus laughed and whistled and sang all the way home.  Never had he

been so happy as on that day.



When he entered his house he found Shiegra, the lioness, awaiting him.

Since his babyhood Shiegra had loved Claus, and while he dwelt in the

Forest she had often come to visit him at Necile's bower.  After Claus

had gone to live in the Laughing Valley Shiegra became lonely and ill

at ease, and now she had braved the snow-drifts, which all lions

abhor, to see him once more.  Shiegra was getting old and her teeth

were beginning to fall out, while the hairs that tipped her ears and

tail had changed from tawny-yellow to white.



Claus found her lying on his hearth, and he put his arms around the

neck of the lioness and hugged her lovingly.  The cat had retired into

a far corner.  She did not care to associate with Shiegra.



Claus told his old friend about the cats he had made, and how much

pleasure they had given Weekum and the sick girl.  Shiegra did not

know much about children; indeed, if she met a child she could

scarcely be trusted not to devour it.  But she was interested in

Claus' new labors, and said:



"These images seem to me very attractive.  Yet I can not see why you

should make cats, which are very unimportant animals.  Suppose, now

that I am here, you make the image of a lioness, the Queen of all

beasts.  Then, indeed, your children will be happy--and safe at the

same time!"



Claus thought this was a good suggestion.  So he got a piece of wood

and sharpened his knife, while Shiegra crouched upon the hearth at his

feet.  With much care he carved the head in the likeness of the

lioness, even to the two fierce teeth that curved over her lower lip

and the deep, frowning lines above her wide-open eyes.



When it was finished he said:



"You have a terrible look, Shiegra."



"Then the image is like me," she answered; "for I am indeed terrible

to all who are not my friends."



Claus now carved out the body, with Shiegra's long tail trailing

behind it.  The image of the crouching lioness was very life-like.



"It pleases me," said Shiegra, yawning and stretching her body

gracefully.  "Now I will watch while you paint."



He brought the paints the Ryls had given him from the cupboard and

colored the image to resemble the real Shiegra.



The lioness placed her big, padded paws upon the edge of the table

and raised herself while she carefully examined the toy that was

her likeness.



"You are indeed skillful!" she said, proudly.  "The children will like

that better than cats, I'm sure."



Then snarling at Blinkie, who arched her back in terror and whined

fearfully, she walked away toward her forest home with stately strides.







4.  How Little Mayrie Became Frightened





The winter was over now, and all the Laughing Valley was filled with

joyous excitement.  The brook was so happy at being free once again

that it gurgled more boisterously than ever and dashed so recklessly

against the rocks that it sent showers of spray high in the air.  The

grass thrust its sharp little blades upward through the mat of dead

stalks where it had hidden from the snow, but the flowers were yet too

timid to show themselves, although the Ryls were busy feeding their

roots.  The sun was in remarkably good humor, and sent his rays

dancing merrily throughout the Valley.



Claus was eating his dinner one day when he heard a timid knock

on his door.



"Come in!" he called.



No one entered, but after a pause came another rapping.



Claus jumped up and threw open the door.  Before him stood a small

girl holding a smaller brother fast by the hand.



"Is you Tlaus?" she asked, shyly.



"Indeed I am, my dear!" he answered, with a laugh, as he caught both

children in his arms and kissed them.  "You are very welcome, and you

have come just in time to share my dinner."



He took them to the table and fed them with fresh milk and nut-cakes.

When they had eaten enough he asked:



"Why have you made this long journey to see me?"



"I wants a tat!" replied little Mayrie; and her brother, who had not

yet learned to speak many words, nodded his head and exclaimed like an

echo: "Tat!"



"Oh, you want my toy cats, do you?" returned Claus, greatly pleased to

discover that his creations were so popular with children.



The little visitors nodded eagerly.



"Unfortunately," he continued, "I have but one cat now ready, for I

carried two to children in the town yesterday.  And the one I have

shall be given to your brother, Mayrie, because he is the smaller; and

the next one I make shall be for you."



The boy's face was bright with smiles as he took the precious toy

Claus held out to him; but little Mayrie covered her face with her arm

and began to sob grievously.



"I--I--I wants a t--t--tat now!" she wailed.



Her disappointment made Claus feel miserable for a moment.  Then he

suddenly remembered Shiegra.



"Don't cry, darling!" he said, soothingly; "I have a toy much nicer

than a cat, and you shall have that."



He went to the cupboard and drew out the image of the lioness, which

he placed on the table before Mayrie.



The girl raised her arm and gave one glance at the fierce teeth and

glaring eyes of the beast, and then, uttering a terrified scream, she

rushed from the house.  The boy followed her, also screaming lustily,

and even dropping his precious cat in his fear.



For a moment Claus stood motionless, being puzzled and astonished.

Then he threw Shiegra's image into the cupboard and ran after the

children, calling to them not to be frightened.



Little Mayrie stopped in her flight and her brother clung to her

skirt; but they both cast fearful glances at the house until Claus had

assured them many times that the beast had been locked in the cupboard.



"Yet why were you frightened at seeing it?" he asked.  "It is only a

toy to play with!"



"It's bad!" said Mayrie, decidedly, "an'--an'--just horrid, an' not a

bit nice, like tats!"



"Perhaps you are right," returned Claus, thoughtfully.  "But if you

will return with me to the house I will soon make you a pretty cat."



So they timidly entered the house again, having faith in their

friend's words; and afterward they had the joy of watching Claus carve

out a cat from a bit of wood and paint it in natural colors.  It did

not take him long to do this, for he had become skillful with his knife

by this time, and Mayrie loved her toy the more dearly because she had

seen it made.



After his little visitors had trotted away on their journey homeward

Claus sat long in deep thought.  And he then decided that such fierce

creatures as his friend the lioness would never do as models from

which to fashion his toys.



"There must be nothing to frighten the dear babies," he reflected;

"and while I know Shiegra well, and am not afraid of her, it is but

natural that children should look upon her image with terror.

Hereafter I will choose such mild-mannered animals as squirrels and

rabbits and deer and lambkins from which to carve my toys, for then

the little ones will love rather than fear them."



He began his work that very day, and before bedtime had made a wooden

rabbit and a lamb.  They were not quite so lifelike as the cats had

been, because they were formed from memory, while Blinkie had sat very

still for Claus to look at while he worked.



But the new toys pleased the children nevertheless, and the fame of

Claus' playthings quickly spread to every cottage on plain and in

village.  He always carried his gifts to the sick or crippled

children, but those who were strong enough walked to the house in the

Valley to ask for them, so a little path was soon worn from the plain

to the door of the toy-maker's cottage.



First came the children who had been playmates of Claus, before he

began to make toys.  These, you may be sure, were well supplied.  Then

children who lived farther away heard of the wonderful images and made

journeys to the Valley to secure them.  All little ones were welcome,

and never a one went away empty-handed.



This demand for his handiwork kept Claus busily occupied, but he was

quite happy in knowing the pleasure he gave to so many of the dear

children.  His friends the immortals were pleased with his success and

supported him bravely.



The Knooks selected for him clear pieces of soft wood, that his knife

might not be blunted in cutting them; the Ryls kept him supplied with

paints of all colors and brushes fashioned from the tips of timothy

grasses; the Fairies discovered that the workman needed saws and

chisels and hammers and nails, as well as knives, and brought him a

goodly array of such tools.



Claus soon turned his living room into a most wonderful workshop.  He

built a bench before the window, and arranged his tools and paints so

that he could reach everything as he sat on his stool.  And as he

finished toy after toy to delight the hearts of little children he

found himself growing so gay and happy that he could not refrain from

singing and laughing and whistling all the day long.



"It's because I live in the Laughing Valley, where everything else

laughs!" said Claus.



But that was not the reason.







5.  How Bessie Blithesome Came to the Laughing Valley





One day, as Claus sat before his door to enjoy the sunshine while

he busily carved the head and horns of a toy deer, he looked up

and discovered a glittering cavalcade of horsemen approaching through

the Valley.



When they drew nearer he saw that the band consisted of a score of

men-at-arms, clad in bright armor and bearing in their hands spears

and battle-axes.  In front of these rode little Bessie Blithesome, the

pretty daughter of that proud Lord of Lerd who had once driven Claus

from his palace.  Her palfrey was pure white, its bridle was covered

with glittering gems, and its saddle draped with cloth of gold,

richly broidered.  The soldiers were sent to protect her from harm

while she journeyed.



Claus was surprised, but he continued to whittle and to sing until the

cavalcade drew up before him.  Then the little girl leaned over the

neck of her palfrey and said:



"Please, Mr. Claus, I want a toy!"



Her voice was so pleading that Claus jumped up at once and stood

beside her.  But he was puzzled how to answer her request.



"You are a rich lord's daughter," said he, "and have all that

you desire."



"Except toys," added Bessie.  "There are no toys in all the world

but yours."



"And I make them for the poor children, who have nothing else to amuse

them," continued Claus.



"Do poor children love to play with toys more than rich ones?"

asked Bessie.



"I suppose not," said Claus, thoughtfully.



"Am I to blame because my father is a lord?  Must I be denied the

pretty toys I long for because other children are poorer than I?" she

inquired earnestly.



"I'm afraid you must, dear," he answered; "for the poor have nothing

else with which to amuse themselves.  You have your pony to ride, your

servants to wait on you, and every comfort that money can procure."



"But I want toys!" cried Bessie, wiping away the tears that forced

themselves into her eyes.  "If I can not have them, I shall be

very unhappy."



Claus was troubled, for her grief recalled to him the thought that his

desire was to make all children happy, without regard to their

condition in life.  Yet, while so many poor children were clamoring

for his toys he could not bear to give one to them to Bessie

Blithesome, who had so much already to make her happy.



"Listen, my child," said he, gently; "all the toys I am now making are

promised to others.  But the next shall be yours, since your heart

so longs for it.  Come to me again in two days and it shall be ready

for you."



Bessie gave a cry of delight, and leaning over her pony's neck she

kissed Claus prettily upon his forehead.  Then, calling to her

men-at-arms, she rode gaily away, leaving Claus to resume his work.



"If I am to supply the rich children as well as the poor ones," he

thought, "I shall not have a spare moment in the whole year!  But is

it right I should give to the rich?  Surely I must go to Necile and

talk with her about this matter."



So when he had finished the toy deer, which was very like a deer

he had known in the Forest glades, he walked into Burzee and made

his way to the bower of the beautiful Nymph Necile, who had been

his foster mother.



She greeted him tenderly and lovingly, listening with interest to his

story of the visit of Bessie Blithesome.



"And now tell me," said he, "shall I give toys to rich children?"



"We of the Forest know nothing of riches," she replied.  "It seems to

me that one child is like another child, since they are all made of

the same clay, and that riches are like a gown, which may be put on or

taken away, leaving the child unchanged.  But the Fairies are

guardians of mankind, and know mortal children better than I.  Let us

call the Fairy Queen."



This was done, and the Queen of the Fairies sat beside them and heard

Claus relate his reasons for thinking the rich children could get

along without his toys, and also what the Nymph had said.



"Necile is right," declared the Queen; "for, whether it be rich or

poor, a child's longings for pretty playthings are but natural.  Rich

Bessie's heart may suffer as much grief as poor Mayrie's; she can be

just as lonely and discontented, and just as gay and happy.  I think,

friend Claus, it is your duty to make all little ones glad, whether

they chance to live in palaces or in cottages."



"Your words are wise, fair Queen," replied Claus, "and my heart tells

me they are as just as they are wise.  Hereafter all children may

claim my services."



Then he bowed before the gracious Fairy and, kissing Necile's red

lips, went back into his Valley.



At the brook he stopped to drink, and afterward he sat on the bank and

took a piece of moist clay in his hands while he thought what sort of

toy he should make for Bessie Blithesome.  He did not notice that his

fingers were working the clay into shape until, glancing downward, he

found he had unconsciously formed a head that bore a slight resemblance

to the Nymph Necile!



At once he became interested.  Gathering more of the clay from the

bank he carried it to his house.  Then, with the aid of his knife and

a bit of wood he succeeded in working the clay into the image of a toy

nymph.  With skillful strokes he formed long, waving hair on the head

and covered the body with a gown of oakleaves, while the two feet

sticking out at the bottom of the gown were clad in sandals.



But the clay was soft, and Claus found he must handle it gently to

avoid ruining his pretty work.



"Perhaps the rays of the sun will draw out the moisture and cause the

clay to become hard," he thought.  So he laid the image on a flat

board and placed it in the glare of the sun.



This done, he went to his bench and began painting the toy deer, and

soon he became so interested in the work that he forgot all about the

clay nymph.  But next morning, happening to notice it as it lay on the

board, he found the sun had baked it to the hardness of stone, and it

was strong enough to be safely handled.



Claus now painted the nymph with great care in the likeness of Necile,

giving it deep-blue eyes, white teeth, rosy lips and ruddy-brown hair.

The gown he colored oak-leaf green, and when the paint was dry Claus

himself was charmed with the new toy.  Of course it was not nearly so

lovely as the real Necile; but, considering the material of which it

was made, Claus thought it was very beautiful.



When Bessie, riding upon her white palfrey, came to his dwelling next

day, Claus presented her with the new toy.  The little girl's eyes

were brighter than ever as she examined the pretty image, and she

loved it at once, and held it close to her breast, as a mother does to

her child.



"What is it called, Claus?" she asked.



Now Claus knew that Nymphs do not like to be spoken of by mortals, so

he could not tell Bessie it was an image of Necile he had given her.

But as it was a new toy he searched his mind for a new name to call it

by, and the first word he thought of he decided would do very well.



"It is called a dolly, my dear," he said to Bessie.



"I shall call the dolly my baby," returned Bessie, kissing it fondly;

"and I shall tend it and care for it just as Nurse cares for me.

Thank you very much, Claus; your gift has made me happier than I have

ever been before!"



Then she rode away, hugging the toy in her arms, and Claus, seeing her

delight, thought he would make another dolly, better and more natural

than the first.



He brought more clay from the brook, and remembering that Bessie had

called the dolly her baby he resolved to form this one into a baby's

image.  That was no difficult task to the clever workman, and soon the

baby dolly was lying on the board and placed in the sun to dry.  Then,

with the clay that was left, he began to make an image of Bessie

Blithesome herself.



This was not so easy, for he found he could not make the silken robe

of the lord's daughter out of the common clay.  So he called the

Fairies to his aid, and asked them to bring him colored silks with

which to make a real dress for the clay image.  The Fairies set off at

once on their errand, and before nightfall they returned with a

generous supply of silks and laces and golden threads.



Claus now became impatient to complete his new dolly, and instead of

waiting for the next day's sun he placed the clay image upon his

hearth and covered it over with glowing coals.  By morning, when he

drew the dolly from the ashes, it had baked as hard as if it had lain

a full day in the hot sun.



Now our Claus became a dressmaker as well as a toymaker.  He cut the

lavender silk, and nearly sewed it into a beautiful gown that just

fitted the new dolly.  And he put a lace collar around its neck and

pink silk shoes on its feet.  The natural color of baked clay is a

light gray, but Claus painted the face to resemble the color of flesh,

and he gave the dolly Bessie's brown eyes and golden hair and rosy cheeks.



It was really a beautiful thing to look upon, and sure to bring joy to

some childish heart.  While Claus was admiring it he heard a knock at

his door, and little Mayrie entered.  Her face was sad and her eyes

red with continued weeping.



"Why, what has grieved you, my dear?" asked Claus, taking the child in

his arms.



"I've--I've--bwoke my tat!" sobbed Mayrie.



"How?" he inquired, his eyes twinkling.



"I--I dwopped him, an' bwoke off him's tail; an'--an'--then I dwopped

him an' bwoke off him's ear!  An'--an' now him's all spoilt!"



Claus laughed.



"Never mind, Mayrie dear," he said.  "How would you like this new

dolly, instead of a cat?"



Mayrie looked at the silk-robed dolly and her eyes grew big

with astonishment.



"Oh, Tlaus!" she cried, clapping her small hands together with

rapture; "tan I have 'at boo'ful lady?"



"Do you like it?" he asked.



"I love it!" said she.  "It's better 'an tats!"



"Then take it, dear, and be careful not to break it."



Mayrie took the dolly with a joy that was almost reverent, and her

face dimpled with smiles as she started along the path toward home.







6.  The Wickedness of the Awgwas





I must now tell you something about the Awgwas, that terrible race of

creatures which caused our good Claus so much trouble and nearly

succeeded in robbing the children of the world of their earliest and

best friend.



I do not like to mention the Awgwas, but they are a part of this

history, and can not be ignored.  They were neither mortals nor

immortals, but stood midway between those classes of beings.  The

Awgwas were invisible to ordinary people, but not to immortals.  They

could pass swiftly through the air from one part of the world to

another, and had the power of influencing the minds of human beings to

do their wicked will.



They were of gigantic stature and had coarse, scowling countenances

which showed plainly their hatred of all mankind.  They possessed no

consciences whatever and delighted only in evil deeds.



Their homes were in rocky, mountainous places, from whence they

sallied forth to accomplish their wicked purposes.



The one of their number that could think of the most horrible deed

for them to do was always elected the King Awgwa, and all the race

obeyed his orders.  Sometimes these creatures lived to become a

hundred years old, but usually they fought so fiercely among

themselves that many were destroyed in combat, and when they died that

was the end of them.  Mortals were powerless to harm them and the

immortals shuddered when the Awgwas were mentioned, and always avoided

them.  So they flourished for many years unopposed and accomplished

much evil.



I am glad to assure you that these vile creatures have long since

perished and passed from earth; but in the days when Claus was making

his first toys they were a numerous and powerful tribe.



One of the principal sports of the Awgwas was to inspire angry

passions in the hearts of little children, so that they quarreled and

fought with one another.  They would tempt boys to eat of unripe

fruit, and then delight in the pain they suffered; they urged little

girls to disobey their parents, and then would laugh when the children

were punished.  I do not know what causes a child to be naughty in

these days, but when the Awgwas were on earth naughty children were

usually under their influence.



Now, when Claus began to make children happy he kept them out of the

power of the Awgwas; for children possessing such lovely playthings as

he gave them had no wish to obey the evil thoughts the Awgwas tried to

thrust into their minds.



Therefore, one year when the wicked tribe was to elect a new King,

they chose an Awgwa who proposed to destroy Claus and take him away

from the children.



"There are, as you know, fewer naughty children in the world since

Claus came to the Laughing Valley and began to make his toys," said

the new King, as he squatted upon a rock and looked around at the

scowling faces of his people.  "Why, Bessie Blithesome has not stamped

her foot once this month, nor has Mayrie's brother slapped his

sister's face or thrown the puppy into the rain-barrel.  Little Weekum

took his bath last night without screaming or struggling, because his

mother had promised he should take his toy cat to bed with him!  Such

a condition of affairs is awful for any Awgwa to think of, and the

only way we can direct the naughty actions of children is to take this

person Claus away from them."



"Good! good!" cried the big Awgwas, in a chorus, and they clapped

their hands to applaud the speech of the King.



"But what shall we do with him?" asked one of the creatures.



"I have a plan," replied the wicked King; and what his plan was you

will soon discover.



That night Claus went to bed feeling very happy, for he had completed

no less than four pretty toys during the day, and they were sure, he

thought, to make four little children happy.  But while he slept the

band of invisible Awgwas surrounded his bed, bound him with stout

cords, and then flew away with him to the middle of a dark forest in

far off Ethop, where they laid him down and left him.



When morning came Claus found himself thousands of miles from any

human being, a prisoner in the wild jungle of an unknown land.



From the limb of a tree above his head swayed a huge python, one of

those reptiles that are able to crush a man's bones in their coils.  A

few yards away crouched a savage panther, its glaring red eyes fixed

full on the helpless Claus.  One of those monstrous spotted spiders

whose sting is death crept stealthily toward him over the matted

leaves, which shriveled and turned black at its very touch.



But Claus had been reared in Burzee, and was not afraid.



"Come to me, ye Knooks of the Forest!" he cried, and gave the low,

peculiar whistle that the Knooks know.



The panther, which was about to spring upon its victim, turned and

slunk away.  The python swung itself into the tree and disappeared

among the leaves.  The spider stopped short in its advance and hid

beneath a rotting log.



Claus had no time to notice them, for he was surrounded by a band of

harsh-featured Knooks, more crooked and deformed in appearance than

any he had ever seen.



"Who are you that call on us?" demanded one, in a gruff voice.



"The friend of your brothers in Burzee," answered Claus.  "I have been

brought here by my enemies, the Awgwas, and left to perish miserably.

Yet now I implore your help to release me and to send me home again."



"Have you the sign?" asked another.



"Yes," said Claus.



They cut his bonds, and with his free arms he made the secret sign of

the Knooks.



Instantly they assisted him to stand upon his feet, and they brought

him food and drink to strengthen him.



"Our brothers of Burzee make queer friends," grumbled an ancient Knook

whose flowing beard was pure white.  "But he who knows our secret sign

and signal is entitled to our help, whoever he may be.  Close your

eyes, stranger, and we will conduct you to your home.  Where shall we

seek it?"



"'Tis in the Laughing Valley," answered Claus, shutting his eyes.



"There is but one Laughing Valley in the known world, so we can not go

astray," remarked the Knook.



As he spoke the sound of his voice seemed to die away, so Claus opened

his eyes to see what caused the change.  To his astonishment he found

himself seated on the bench by his own door, with the Laughing Valley

spread out before him.  That day he visited the Wood-Nymphs and

related his adventure to Queen Zurline and Necile.



"The Awgwas have become your enemies," said the lovely Queen,

thoughtfully; "so we must do all we can to protect you from

their power."



"It was cowardly to bind him while he slept," remarked Necile,

with indignation.



"The evil ones are ever cowardly," answered Zurline, "but our friend's

slumber shall not be disturbed again."



The Queen herself came to the dwelling of Claus that evening and

placed her Seal on every door and window, to keep out the Awgwas.  And

under the Seal of Queen Zurline was placed the Seal of the Fairies and

the Seal of the Ryls and the Seals of the Knooks, that the charm might

become more powerful.



And Claus carried his toys to the children again, and made many more

of the little ones happy.



You may guess how angry the King Awgwa and his fierce band were when

it was known to them that Claus had escaped from the Forest of Ethop.



They raged madly for a whole week, and then held another meeting among

the rocks.



"It is useless to carry him where the Knooks reign," said the King,

"for he has their protection.  So let us cast him into a cave of our

own mountains, where he will surely perish."



This was promptly agreed to, and the wicked band set out that night to

seize Claus.  But they found his dwelling guarded by the Seals of the

Immortals and were obliged to go away baffled and disappointed.



"Never mind," said the King; "he does not sleep always!"



Next day, as Claus traveled to the village across the plain, where he

intended to present a toy squirrel to a lame boy, he was suddenly set

upon by the Awgwas, who seized him and carried him away to the mountains.



There they thrust him within a deep cavern and rolled many huge rocks

against the entrance to prevent his escape.



Deprived thus of light and food, and with little air to breathe, our

Claus was, indeed, in a pitiful plight.  But he spoke the mystic words

of the Fairies, which always command their friendly aid, and they came

to his rescue and transported him to the Laughing Valley in the

twinkling of an eye.



Thus the Awgwas discovered they might not destroy one who had earned

the friendship of the immortals; so the evil band sought other means

of keeping Claus from bringing happiness to children and so making

them obedient.



Whenever Claus set out to carry his toys to the little ones an Awgwa,

who had been set to watch his movements, sprang upon him and snatched

the toys from his grasp.  And the children were no more disappointed

than was Claus when he was obliged to return home disconsolate.  Still

he persevered, and made many toys for his little friends and started

with them for the villages.  And always the Awgwas robbed him as soon

as he had left the Valley.



They threw the stolen playthings into one of their lonely caverns, and

quite a heap of toys accumulated before Claus became discouraged and

gave up all attempts to leave the Valley.  Then children began coming

to him, since they found he did not go to them; but the wicked Awgwas

flew around them and caused their steps to stray and the paths to

become crooked, so never a little one could find a way into the

Laughing Valley.



Lonely days now fell upon Claus, for he was denied the pleasure of

bringing happiness to the children whom he had learned to love.  Yet

he bore up bravely, for he thought surely the time would come when the

Awgwas would abandon their evil designs to injure him.



He devoted all his hours to toy-making, and when one plaything had

been completed he stood it on a shelf he had built for that purpose.

When the shelf became filled with rows of toys he made another one,

and filled that also.  So that in time he had many shelves filled with

gay and beautiful toys representing horses, dogs, cats, elephants,

lambs, rabbits and deer, as well as pretty dolls of all sizes and

balls and marbles of baked clay painted in gay colors.



Often, as he glanced at this array of childish treasures, the heart of

good old Claus became sad, so greatly did he long to carry the toys to

his children.  And at last, because he could bear it no longer,

he ventured to go to the great Ak, to whom he told the story of his

persecution by the Awgwas, and begged the Master Woodsman to assist him.







7.  The Great Battle Between Good and Evil





Ak listened gravely to the recital of Claus, stroking his beard the

while with the slow, graceful motion that betokened deep thought.  He

nodded approvingly when Claus told how the Knooks and Fairies had

saved him from death, and frowned when he heard how the Awgwas had

stolen the children's toys.  At last he said:



"From the beginning I have approved the work you are doing among the

children of men, and it annoys me that your good deeds should be

thwarted by the Awgwas.  We immortals have no connection whatever with

the evil creatures who have attacked you.  Always have we avoided

them, and they, in turn, have hitherto taken care not to cross our

pathway.  But in this matter I find they have interfered with one of

our friends, and I will ask them to abandon their persecutions, as you

are under our protection."



Claus thanked the Master Woodsman most gratefully and returned to his

Valley, while Ak, who never delayed carrying out his promises, at once

traveled to the mountains of the Awgwas.



There, standing on the bare rocks, he called on the King and his

people to appear.



Instantly the place was filled with throngs of the scowling Awgwas,

and their King, perching himself on a point of rock, demanded fiercely:



"Who dares call on us?"



"It is I, the Master Woodsman of the World," responded Ak.



"Here are no forests for you to claim," cried the King, angrily.

"We owe no allegiance to you, nor to any immortal!"



"That is true," replied Ak, calmly.  "Yet you have ventured to

interfere with the actions of Claus, who dwells in the Laughing Valley,

and is under our protection."



Many of the Awgwas began muttering at this speech, and their King

turned threateningly on the Master Woodsman.



"You are set to rule the forests, but the plains and the valleys are

ours!" he shouted.  "Keep to your own dark woods!  We will do as we

please with Claus."



"You shall not harm our friend in any way!" replied Ak.



"Shall we not?" asked the King, impudently.  "You will see!  Our

powers are vastly superior to those of mortals, and fully as great as

those of immortals."



"It is your conceit that misleads you!" said Ak, sternly.  "You are a

transient race, passing from life into nothingness.  We, who live

forever, pity but despise you.  On earth you are scorned by all, and

in Heaven you have no place!  Even the mortals, after their earth

life, enter another existence for all time, and so are your superiors.

How then dare you, who are neither mortal nor immortal, refuse to

obey my wish?"



The Awgwas sprang to their feet with menacing gestures, but their King

motioned them back.



"Never before," he cried to Ak, while his voice trembled with rage,

"has an immortal declared himself the master of the Awgwas!  Never

shall an immortal venture to interfere with our actions again!  For we

will avenge your scornful words by killing your friend Claus within

three days.  Nor you, nor all the immortals can save him from our

wrath.  We defy your powers!  Begone, Master Woodsman of the World!

In the country of the Awgwas you have no place."



"It is war!" declared Ak, with flashing eyes.



"It is war!" returned the King, savagely.  "In three days your friend

will be dead."



The Master turned away and came to his Forest of Burzee, where he

called a meeting of the immortals and told them of the defiance of the

Awgwas and their purpose to kill Claus within three days.



The little folk listened to him quietly.



"What shall we do?" asked Ak.



"These creatures are of no benefit to the world," said the Prince of

the Knooks; "we must destroy them."



"Their lives are devoted only to evil deeds," said the Prince of the

Ryls.  "We must destroy them."



"They have no conscience, and endeavor to make all mortals as bad as

themselves," said the Queen of the Fairies.  "We must destroy them."



"They have defied the great Ak, and threaten the life of our adopted

son," said beautiful Queen Zurline.  "We must destroy them."



The Master Woodsman smiled.



"You speak well," said he.  "These Awgwas we know to be a powerful

race, and they will fight desperately; yet the outcome is certain.

For we who live can never die, even though conquered by our enemies,

while every Awgwa who is struck down is one foe the less to oppose us.

Prepare, then, for battle, and let us resolve to show no mercy to

the wicked!"



Thus arose that terrible war between the immortals and the spirits of

evil which is sung of in Fairyland to this very day.



The King Awgwa and his band determined to carry out the threat to

destroy Claus.  They now hated him for two reasons: he made children

happy and was a friend of the Master Woodsman.  But since Ak's visit

they had reason to fear the opposition of the immortals, and they

dreaded defeat.  So the King sent swift messengers to all parts of the

world to summon every evil creature to his aid.



And on the third day after the declaration of war a mighty army was at

the command of the King Awgwa.  There were three hundred Asiatic

Dragons, breathing fire that consumed everything it touched.  These

hated mankind and all good spirits.  And there were the three-eyed

Giants of Tatary, a host in themselves, who liked nothing better than

to fight.  And next came the Black Demons from Patalonia, with great

spreading wings like those of a bat, which swept terror and misery

through the world as they beat upon the air.  And joined to these were

the Goozzle-Goblins, with long talons as sharp as swords, with which

they clawed the flesh from their foes.  Finally, every mountain Awgwa in

the world had come to participate in the great battle with the immortals.



The King Awgwa looked around upon this vast army and his heart beat

high with wicked pride, for he believed he would surely triumph over

his gentle enemies, who had never before been known to fight.  But the

Master Woodsman had not been idle.  None of his people was used to

warfare, yet now that they were called upon to face the hosts of evil

they willingly prepared for the fray.



Ak had commanded them to assemble in the Laughing Valley, where Claus,

ignorant of the terrible battle that was to be waged on his account,

was quietly making his toys.



Soon the entire Valley, from hill to hill, was filled with the little

immortals.  The Master Woodsman stood first, bearing a gleaming ax

that shone like burnished silver.  Next came the Ryls, armed with

sharp thorns from bramblebushes.  Then the Knooks, bearing the spears

they used when they were forced to prod their savage beasts into

submission.  The Fairies, dressed in white gauze with rainbow-hued

wings, bore golden wands, and the Wood-nymphs, in their uniforms of

oak-leaf green, carried switches from ash trees as weapons.



Loud laughed the Awgwa King when he beheld the size and the arms of

his foes.  To be sure the mighty ax of the Woodsman was to be dreaded,

but the sweet-faced Nymphs and pretty Fairies, the gentle Ryls and

crooked Knooks were such harmless folk that he almost felt shame at

having called such a terrible host to oppose them.



"Since these fools dare fight," he said to the leader of the Tatary

Giants, "I will overwhelm them with our evil powers!"



To begin the battle he poised a great stone in his left hand and cast

it full against the sturdy form of the Master Woodsman, who turned it

aside with his ax.  Then rushed the three-eyed Giants of Tatary upon

the Knooks, and the Goozzle-Goblins upon the Ryls, and the

firebreathing Dragons upon the sweet Fairies.  Because the Nymphs were

Ak's own people the band of Awgwas sought them out, thinking to

overcome them with ease.



But it is the Law that while Evil, unopposed, may accomplish terrible

deeds, the powers of Good can never be overthrown when opposed to

Evil.  Well had it been for the King Awgwa had he known the Law!



His ignorance cost him his existence, for one flash of the ax borne by

the Master Woodsman of the World cleft the wicked King in twain and

rid the earth of the vilest creature it contained.



Greatly marveled the Tatary Giants when the spears of the little

Knooks pierced their thick walls of flesh and sent them reeling to the

ground with howls of agony.



Woe came upon the sharp-taloned Goblins when the thorns of the Ryls

reached their savage hearts and let their life-blood sprinkle all the

plain.  And afterward from every drop a thistle grew.



The Dragons paused astonished before the Fairy wands, from whence

rushed a power that caused their fiery breaths to flow back on

themselves so that they shriveled away and died.



As for the Awgwas, they had scant time to realize how they were

destroyed, for the ash switches of the Nymphs bore a charm unknown

to any Awgwa, and turned their foes into clods of earth at the

slightest touch!



When Ak leaned upon his gleaming ax and turned to look over the field

of battle he saw the few Giants who were able to run disappearing over

the distant hills on their return to Tatary.  The Goblins had perished

every one, as had the terrible Dragons, while all that remained of the

wicked Awgwas was a great number of earthen hillocks dotting the plain.



And now the immortals melted from the Valley like dew at sunrise, to

resume their duties in the Forest, while Ak walked slowly and

thoughtfully to the house of Claus and entered.



"You have many toys ready for the children," said the Woodsman, "and

now you may carry them across the plain to the dwellings and the

villages without fear."



"Will not the Awgwas harm me?" asked Claus, eagerly.



"The Awgwas," said Ak, "have perished!"





Now I will gladly have done with wicked spirits and with fighting and

bloodshed.  It was not from choice that I told of the Awgwas and their

allies, and of their great battle with the immortals.  They were part

of this history, and could not be avoided.







8.  The First Journey with the Reindeer





Those were happy days for Claus when he carried his accumulation of

toys to the children who had awaited them so long.  During his

imprisonment in the Valley he had been so industrious that all his

shelves were filled with playthings, and after quickly supplying the

little ones living near by he saw he must now extend his travels to

wider fields.



Remembering the time when he had journeyed with Ak through all the

world, he know children were everywhere, and he longed to make as many

as possible happy with his gifts.



So he loaded a great sack with all kinds of toys, slung it upon his

back that he might carry it more easily, and started off on a longer

trip than he had yet undertaken.



Wherever he showed his merry face, in hamlet or in farmhouse, he

received a cordial welcome, for his fame had spread into far lands.

At each village the children swarmed about him, following his

footsteps wherever he went; and the women thanked him gratefully for

the joy he brought their little ones; and the men looked upon him

curiously that he should devote his time to such a queer occupation as

toy-making.  But every one smiled on him and gave him kindly words,

and Claus felt amply repaid for his long journey.



When the sack was empty he went back again to the Laughing Valley and

once more filled it to the brim.  This time he followed another road,

into a different part of the country, and carried happiness to many

children who never before had owned a toy or guessed that such a

delightful plaything existed.



After a third journey, so far away that Claus was many days walking

the distance, the store of toys became exhausted and without delay he

set about making a fresh supply.



From seeing so many children and studying their tastes he had acquired

several new ideas about toys.



The dollies were, he had found, the most delightful of all playthings

for babies and little girls, and often those who could not say "dolly"

would call for a "doll" in their sweet baby talk.  So Claus resolved

to make many dolls, of all sizes, and to dress them in bright-colored

clothing.  The older boys--and even some of the girls--loved the

images of animals, so he still made cats and elephants and horses.

And many of the little fellows had musical natures, and longed for

drums and cymbals and whistles and horns.  So he made a number of toy

drums, with tiny sticks to beat them with; and he made whistles from

the willow trees, and horns from the bog-reeds, and cymbals from bits

of beaten metal.



All this kept him busily at work, and before he realized it the winter

season came, with deeper snows than usual, and he knew he could not

leave the Valley with his heavy pack.  Moreover, the next trip would

take him farther from home than every before, and Jack Frost was

mischievous enough to nip his nose and ears if he undertook the long

journey while the Frost King reigned.  The Frost King was Jack's

father and never reproved him for his pranks.



So Claus remained at his work-bench; but he whistled and sang as

merrily as ever, for he would allow no disappointment to sour his

temper or make him unhappy.



One bright morning he looked from his window and saw two of the deer

he had known in the Forest walking toward his house.



Claus was surprised; not that the friendly deer should visit him, but

that they walked on the surface of the snow as easily as if it were

solid ground, notwithstanding the fact that throughout the Valley the

snow lay many feet deep.  He had walked out of his house a day or two

before and had sunk to his armpits in a drift.



So when the deer came near he opened the door and called to them:



"Good morning, Flossie!  Tell me how you are able to walk on the snow

so easily."



"It is frozen hard," answered Flossie.



"The Frost King has breathed on it," said Glossie, coming up, "and the

surface is now as solid as ice."



"Perhaps," remarked Claus, thoughtfully, "I might now carry my pack of

toys to the children."



"Is it a long journey?" asked Flossie.



"Yes; it will take me many days, for the pack is heavy," answered Claus.



"Then the snow would melt before you could get back," said the deer.

"You must wait until spring, Claus."



Claus sighed.  "Had I your fleet feet," said he, "I could make the

journey in a day."



"But you have not," returned Glossie, looking at his own slender legs

with pride.



"Perhaps I could ride upon your back," Claus ventured to remark, after

a pause.



"Oh no; our backs are not strong enough to bear your weight," said

Flossie, decidedly.  "But if you had a sledge, and could harness us to

it, we might draw you easily, and your pack as well."



"I'll make a sledge!" exclaimed Claus.  "Will you agree to draw me if

I do?"



"Well," replied Flossie, "we must first go and ask the Knooks, who are

our guardians, for permission; but if they consent, and you can make a

sledge and harness, we will gladly assist you."



"Then go at once!" cried Claus, eagerly.  "I am sure the friendly

Knooks will give their consent, and by the time you are back I shall be

ready to harness you to my sledge."



Flossie and Glossie, being deer of much intelligence, had long wished

to see the great world, so they gladly ran over the frozen snow to ask

the Knooks if they might carry Claus on his journey.



Meantime the toy-maker hurriedly began the construction of a sledge,

using material from his wood-pile.  He made two long runners that

turned upward at the front ends, and across these nailed short boards,

to make a platform.  It was soon completed, but was as rude in

appearance as it is possible for a sledge to be.



The harness was more difficult to prepare, but Claus twisted strong

cords together and knotted them so they would fit around the necks of

the deer, in the shape of a collar.  From these ran other cords to

fasten the deer to the front of the sledge.



Before the work was completed Glossie and Flossie were back from the

Forest, having been granted permission by Will Knook to make the

journey with Claus provided they would to Burzee by daybreak the

next morning.



"That is not a very long time," said Flossie; "but we are swift and

strong, and if we get started by this evening we can travel many miles

during the night."



Claus decided to make the attempt, so he hurried on his preparations

as fast as possible.  After a time he fastened the collars around the

necks of his steeds and harnessed them to his rude sledge.  Then he

placed a stool on the little platform, to serve as a seat, and filled

a sack with his prettiest toys.



"How do you intend to guide us?" asked Glossie.  "We have never been

out of the Forest before, except to visit your house, so we shall not

know the way."



Claus thought about that for a moment.  Then he brought more cords and

fastened two of them to the spreading antlers of each deer, one on the

right and the other on the left.



"Those will be my reins," said Claus, "and when I pull them to the

right or to the left you must go in that direction.  If I do not pull

the reins at all you may go straight ahead."



"Very well," answered Glossie and Flossie; and then they asked: "Are

you ready?"



Claus seated himself upon the stool, placed the sack of toys at his

feet, and then gathered up the reins.



"All ready!" he shouted; "away we go!"



The deer leaned forward, lifted their slender limbs, and the next

moment away flew the sledge over the frozen snow.  The swiftness of

the motion surprised Claus, for in a few strides they were across the

Valley and gliding over the broad plain beyond.



The day had melted into evening by the time they started; for, swiftly

as Claus had worked, many hours had been consumed in making his

preparations.  But the moon shone brightly to light their way,

and Claus soon decided it was just as pleasant to travel by night

as by day.



The deer liked it better; for, although they wished to see something

of the world, they were timid about meeting men, and now all the

dwellers in the towns and farmhouses were sound asleep and could not

see them.



Away and away they sped, on and on over the hills and through the

valleys and across the plains until they reached a village where Claus

had never been before.



Here he called on them to stop, and they immediately obeyed.  But a

new difficulty now presented itself, for the people had locked their

doors when they went to bed, and Claus found he could not enter the

houses to leave his toys.



"I am afraid, my friends, we have made our journey for nothing," said

he, "for I shall be obliged to carry my playthings back home again

without giving them to the children of this village."



"What's the matter?" asked Flossie.



"The doors are locked," answered Claus, "and I can not get in."



Glossie looked around at the houses.  The snow was quite deep in that

village, and just before them was a roof only a few feet above the

sledge.  A broad chimney, which seemed to Glossie big enough to admit

Claus, was at the peak of the roof.



"Why don't you climb down that chimney?" asked Glossie.



Claus looked at it.



"That would be easy enough if I were on top of the roof," he answered.



"Then hold fast and we will take you there," said the deer, and they

gave one bound to the roof and landed beside the big chimney.



"Good!" cried Claus, well pleased, and he slung the pack of toys over

his shoulder and got into the chimney.



There was plenty of soot on the bricks, but he did not mind that, and

by placing his hands and knees against the sides he crept downward

until he had reached the fireplace.  Leaping lightly over the

smoldering coals he found himself in a large sitting-room, where a dim

light was burning.



From this room two doorways led into smaller chambers.  In one a woman

lay asleep, with a baby beside her in a crib.



Claus laughed, but he did not laugh aloud for fear of waking the baby.

Then he slipped a big doll from his pack and laid it in the crib.  The

little one smiled, as if it dreamed of the pretty plaything it was to

find on the morrow, and Claus crept softly from the room and entered

at the other doorway.



Here were two boys, fast asleep with their arms around each other's

neck.  Claus gazed at them lovingly a moment and then placed upon the

bed a drum, two horns and a wooden elephant.



He did not linger, now that his work in this house was done, but

climbed the chimney again and seated himself on his sledge.



"Can you find another chimney?" he asked the reindeer.



"Easily enough," replied Glossie and Flossie.



Down to the edge of the roof they raced, and then, without pausing,

leaped through the air to the top of the next building, where a huge,

old-fashioned chimney stood.



"Don't be so long, this time," called Flossie, "or we shall never get

back to the Forest by daybreak."



Claus made a trip down this chimney also and found five children

sleeping in the house, all of whom were quickly supplied with toys.



When he returned the deer sprang to the next roof, but on descending

the chimney Claus found no children there at all.  That was not often

the case in this village, however, so he lost less time than you might

suppose in visiting the dreary homes where there were no little ones.



When he had climbed down the chimneys of all the houses in that

village, and had left a toy for every sleeping child, Claus found that

his great sack was not yet half emptied.



"Onward, friends!" he called to the deer; "we must seek another village."



So away they dashed, although it was long past midnight, and in a

surprisingly short time they came to a large city, the largest Claus

had ever visited since he began to make toys.  But, nothing daunted by

the throng of houses, he set to work at once and his beautiful steeds

carried him rapidly from one roof to another, only the highest being

beyond the leaps of the agile deer.



At last the supply of toys was exhausted and Claus seated himself in

the sledge, with the empty sack at his feet, and turned the heads of

Glossie and Flossie toward home.



Presently Flossie asked:



"What is that gray streak in the sky?"



"It is the coming dawn of day," answered Claus, surprised to find that

it was so late.



"Good gracious!" exclaimed Glossie; "then we shall not be home by

daybreak, and the Knooks will punish us and never let us come again."



"We must race for the Laughing Valley and make our best speed,"

returned Flossie; "so hold fast, friend Claus!"



Claus held fast and the next moment was flying so swiftly over the

snow that he could not see the trees as they whirled past.  Up hill

and down dale, swift as an arrow shot from a bow they dashed, and

Claus shut his eyes to keep the wind out of them and left the deer to

find their own way.



It seemed to him they were plunging through space, but he was not at

all afraid.  The Knooks were severe masters, and must be obeyed at all

hazards, and the gray streak in the sky was growing brighter every moment.



Finally the sledge came to a sudden stop and Claus, who was taken

unawares, tumbled from his seat into a snowdrift.  As he picked

himself up he heard the deer crying:



"Quick, friend, quick!  Cut away our harness!"



He drew his knife and rapidly severed the cords, and then he wiped

the moisture from his eyes and looked around him.



The sledge had come to a stop in the Laughing Valley, only a few feet,

he found, from his own door.  In the East the day was breaking, and

turning to the edge of Burzee he saw Glossie and Flossie just

disappearing in the Forest.







9.  "Santa Claus!"





Claus thought that none of the children would ever know where the toys

came from which they found by their bedsides when they wakened the

following morning.  But kindly deeds are sure to bring fame, and fame

has many wings to carry its tidings into far lands; so for miles and

miles in every direction people were talking of Claus and his

wonderful gifts to children.  The sweet generousness of his work

caused a few selfish folk to sneer, but even these were forced to

admit their respect for a man so gentle-natured that he loved to

devote his life to pleasing the helpless little ones of his race.



Therefore the inhabitants of every city and village had been eagerly

watching the coming of Claus, and remarkable stories of his beautiful

playthings were told the children to keep them patient and contented.



When, on the morning following the first trip of Claus with his deer,

the little ones came running to their parents with the pretty toys

they had found, and asked from whence they came, they was but one

reply to the question.



"The good Claus must have been here, my darlings; for his are the only

toys in all the world!"



"But how did he get in?" asked the children.



At this the fathers shook their heads, being themselves unable to

understand how Claus had gained admittance to their homes; but the

mothers, watching the glad faces of their dear ones, whispered that

the good Claus was no mortal man but assuredly a Saint, and they

piously blessed his name for the happiness he had bestowed upon

their children.



"A Saint," said one, with bowed head, "has no need to unlock doors if

it pleases him to enter our homes."



And, afterward, when a child was naughty or disobedient, its mother

would say:



"You must pray to the good Santa Claus for forgiveness.  He does not

like naughty children, and, unless you repent, he will bring you no

more pretty toys."



But Santa Claus himself would not have approved this speech.  He

brought toys to the children because they were little and helpless,

and because he loved them.  He knew that the best of children were

sometimes naughty, and that the naughty ones were often good.  It is

the way with children, the world over, and he would not have changed

their natures had he possessed the power to do so.



And that is how our Claus became Santa Claus.  It is possible for any

man, by good deeds, to enshrine himself as a Saint in the hearts of

the people.







10.  Christmas Eve





The day that broke as Claus returned from his night ride with Glossie

and Flossie brought to him a new trouble.  Will Knook, the chief

guardian of the deer, came to him, surly and ill-tempered, to complain

that he had kept Glossie and Flossie beyond daybreak, in opposition to

his orders.



"Yet it could not have been very long after daybreak," said Claus.



"It was one minute after," answered Will Knook, "and that is as bad as

one hour.  I shall set the stinging gnats on Glossie and Flossie, and

they will thus suffer terribly for their disobedience."



"Don't do that!" begged Claus.  "It was my fault."



But Will Knook would listen to no excuses, and went away grumbling and

growling in his ill-natured way.



For this reason Claus entered the Forest to consult Necile about

rescuing the good deer from punishment.  To his delight he found his

old friend, the Master Woodsman, seated in the circle of Nymphs.



Ak listened to the story of the night journey to the children and of

the great assistance the deer had been to Claus by drawing his sledge

over the frozen snow.



"I do not wish my friends to be punished if I can save them," said the

toy-maker, when he had finished the relation.  "They were only one

minute late, and they ran swifter than a bird flies to get home

before daybreak."



Ak stroked his beard thoughtfully a moment, and then sent for the

Prince of the Knooks, who rules all his people in Burzee, and also for

the Queen of the Fairies and the Prince of the Ryls.



When all had assembled Claus told his story again, at Ak's command,

and then the Master addressed the Prince of the Knooks, saying:



"The good work that Claus is doing among mankind deserves the support

of every honest immortal.  Already he is called a Saint in some of the

towns, and before long the name of Santa Claus will be lovingly known

in every home that is blessed with children.  Moreover, he is a son of

our Forest, so we owe him our encouragement.  You, Ruler of the

Knooks, have known him these many years; am I not right in saying he

deserves our friendship?"



The Prince, crooked and sour of visage as all Knooks are, looked only

upon the dead leaves at his feet and muttered: "You are the Master

Woodsman of the World!"



Ak smiled, but continued, in soft tones: "It seems that the deer which

are guarded by your people can be of great assistance to Claus, and as

they seem willing to draw his sledge I beg that you will permit him to

use their services whenever he pleases."



The Prince did not reply, but tapped the curled point of his sandal

with the tip of his spear, as if in thought.



Then the Fairy Queen spoke to him in this way: "If you consent to Ak's

request I will see that no harm comes to your deer while they are away

from the Forest."



And the Prince of the Ryls added: "For my part I will allow to every

deer that assists Claus the privilege of eating my casa plants, which

give strength, and my grawle plants, which give fleetness of foot, and

my marbon plants, which give long life."



And the Queen of the Nymphs said: "The deer which draw the sledge of

Claus will be permitted to bathe in the Forest pool of Nares, which

will give them sleek coats and wonderful beauty."



The Prince of the Knooks, hearing these promises, shifted uneasily on

his seat, for in his heart he hated to refuse a request of his fellow

immortals, although they were asking an unusual favor at his hands,

and the Knooks are unaccustomed to granting favors of any kind.

Finally he turned to his servants and said:



"Call Will Knook."



When surly Will came and heard the demands of the immortals he

protested loudly against granting them.



"Deer are deer," said he, "and nothing but deer.  Were they horses it

would be right to harness them like horses.  But no one harnesses deer

because they are free, wild creatures, owing no service of any sort to

mankind.  It would degrade my deer to labor for Claus, who is only a

man in spite of the friendship lavished on him by the immortals."



"You have heard," said the Prince to Ak.  "There is truth in what

Will says."



"Call Glossie and Flossie," returned the Master.



The deer were brought to the conference and Ak asked them if they

objected to drawing the sledge for Claus.



"No, indeed!" replied Glossie; "we enjoyed the trip very much."



"And we tried to get home by daybreak," added Flossie, "but were

unfortunately a minute too late."



"A minute lost at daybreak doesn't matter," said Ak.  "You are

forgiven for that delay."



"Provided it does not happen again," said the Prince of the

Knooks, sternly.



"And will you permit them to make another journey with me?" asked

Claus, eagerly.



The Prince reflected while he gazed at Will, who was scowling, and at

the Master Woodsman, who was smiling.



Then he stood up and addressed the company as follows:



"Since you all urge me to grant the favor I will permit the deer to go

with Claus once every year, on Christmas Eve, provided they always

return to the Forest by daybreak.  He may select any number he

pleases, up to ten, to draw his sledge, and those shall be known among

us as Reindeer, to distinguish them from the others.  And they shall

bathe in the Pool of Nares, and eat the casa and grawle and marbon

plants and shall be under the especial protection of the Fairy Queen.

And now cease scowling, Will Knook, for my words shall be obeyed!"



He hobbled quickly away through the trees, to avoid the thanks of

Claus and the approval of the other immortals, and Will, looking as

cross as ever, followed him.



But Ak was satisfied, knowing that he could rely on the promise of the

Prince, however grudgingly given; and Glossie and Flossie ran home,

kicking up their heels delightedly at every step.



"When is Christmas Eve?" Claus asked the Master.



"In about ten days," he replied.



"Then I can not use the deer this year," said Claus, thoughtfully,

"for I shall not have time enough to make my sackful of toys."



"The shrewd Prince foresaw that," responded Ak, "and therefore named

Christmas Eve as the day you might use the deer, knowing it would

cause you to lose an entire year."



"If I only had the toys the Awgwas stole from me," said Claus, sadly,

"I could easily fill my sack for the children."



"Where are they?" asked the Master.



"I do not know," replied Claus, "but the wicked Awgwas probably hid

them in the mountains."



Ak turned to the Fairy Queen.



"Can you find them?" he asked.



"I will try," she replied, brightly.



Then Claus went back to the Laughing Valley, to work as hard as he

could, and a band of Fairies immediately flew to the mountain that had

been haunted by the Awgwas and began a search for the stolen toys.



The Fairies, as we well know, possess wonderful powers; but the

cunning Awgwas had hidden the toys in a deep cave and covered the

opening with rocks, so no one could look in.  Therefore all search for

the missing playthings proved in vain for several days, and Claus, who

sat at home waiting for news from the Fairies, almost despaired of

getting the toys before Christmas Eve.



He worked hard every moment, but it took considerable time to carve

out and to shape each toy and to paint it properly, so that on the

morning before Christmas Eve only half of one small shelf above the

window was filled with playthings ready for the children.



But on this morning the Fairies who were searching in the mountains

had a new thought.  They joined hands and moved in a straight line

through the rocks that formed the mountain, beginning at the topmost

peak and working downward, so that no spot could be missed by their

bright eyes.  And at last they discovered the cave where the toys had

been heaped up by the wicked Awgwas.



It did not take them long to burst open the mouth of the cave, and

then each one seized as many toys as he could carry and they all flew

to Claus and laid the treasure before him.



The good man was rejoiced to receive, just in the nick of time, such a

store of playthings with which to load his sledge, and he sent word to

Glossie and Flossie to be ready for the journey at nightfall.



With all his other labors he had managed to find time, since the last

trip, to repair the harness and to strengthen his sledge, so that when

the deer came to him at twilight he had no difficulty in harnessing them.



"We must go in another direction to-night," he told them, "where we

shall find children I have never yet visited.  And we must travel fast

and work quickly, for my sack is full of toys and running over the brim!"



So, just as the moon arose, they dashed out of the Laughing Valley and

across the plain and over the hills to the south.  The air was sharp

and frosty and the starlight touched the snowflakes and made them

glitter like countless diamonds.  The reindeer leaped onward with

strong, steady bounds, and Claus' heart was so light and merry that he

laughed and sang while the wind whistled past his ears:





   "With a ho, ho, ho!

    And a ha, ha, ha!

And a ho, ho! ha, ha, hee!

    Now away we go

    O'er the frozen snow,

As merry as we can be!"





Jack Frost heard him and came racing up with his nippers, but when he

saw it was Claus he laughed and turned away again.



The mother owls heard him as he passed near a wood and stuck their

heads out of the hollow places in the tree-trunks; but when they saw

who it was they whispered to the owlets nestling near them that it was

only Santa Claus carrying toys to the children.  It is strange how

much those mother owls know.



Claus stopped at some of the scattered farmhouses and climbed down the

chimneys to leave presents for the babies.  Soon after he reached a

village and worked merrily for an hour distributing playthings among the

sleeping little ones.  Then away again he went, signing his joyous carol:





   "Now away we go

    O'er the gleaming snow,

While the deer run swift and free!

    For to girls and boys

    We carry the toys

That will fill their hearts with glee!"





The deer liked the sound of his deep bass voice and kept time to the

song with their hoofbeats on the hard snow; but soon they stopped at

another chimney and Santa Claus, with sparkling eyes and face brushed

red by the wind, climbed down its smoky sides and left a present for

every child the house contained.



It was a merry, happy night.  Swiftly the deer ran, and busily their

driver worked to scatter his gifts among the sleeping children.



But the sack was empty at last, and the sledge headed homeward; and

now again the race with daybreak began.  Glossie and Flossie had no

mind to be rebuked a second time for tardiness, so they fled with a

swiftness that enabled them to pass the gale on which the Frost King

rode, and soon brought them to the Laughing Valley.



It is true when Claus released his steeds from their harness the

eastern sky was streaked with gray, but Glossie and Flossie were deep

in the Forest before day fairly broke.



Claus was so wearied with his night's work that he threw himself upon

his bed and fell into a deep slumber, and while he slept the Christmas

sun appeared in the sky and shone upon hundreds of happy homes where

the sound of childish laughter proclaimed that Santa Claus had made

them a visit.



God bless him!  It was his first Christmas Eve, and for hundreds of

years since then he has nobly fulfilled his mission to bring happiness

to the hearts of little children.







11.  How the First Stockings Were Hung by the Chimneys





When you remember that no child, until Santa Claus began his travels,

had ever known the pleasure of possessing a toy, you will understand

how joy crept into the homes of those who had been favored with a

visit from the good man, and how they talked of him day by day in

loving tones and were honestly grateful for his kindly deeds.  It is

true that great warriors and mighty kings and clever scholars of that

day were often spoken of by the people; but no one of them was so

greatly beloved as Santa Claus, because none other was so unselfish as

to devote himself to making others happy.  For a generous deed lives

longer than a great battle or a king's decree of a scholar's essay,

because it spreads and leaves its mark on all nature and endures

through many generations.



The bargain made with the Knook Prince changed the plans of Claus for

all future time; for, being able to use the reindeer on but one night

of each year, he decided to devote all the other days to the

manufacture of playthings, and on Christmas Eve to carry them to the

children of the world.



But a year's work would, he knew, result in a vast accumulation of

toys, so he resolved to build a new sledge that would be larger and

stronger and better-fitted for swift travel than the old and clumsy one.



His first act was to visit the Gnome King, with whom he made a bargain

to exchange three drums, a trumpet and two dolls for a pair of fine

steel runners, curled beautifully at the ends.  For the Gnome King had

children of his own, who, living in the hollows under the earth, in

mines and caverns, needed something to amuse them.



In three days the steel runners were ready, and when Claus brought the

playthings to the Gnome King, his Majesty was so greatly pleased with

them that he presented Claus with a string of sweet-toned

sleigh-bells, in addition to the runners.



"These will please Glossie and Flossie," said Claus, as he jingled the

bells and listened to their merry sound.  "But I should have two

strings of bells, one for each deer."



"Bring me another trumpet and a toy cat," replied the King, "and you

shall have a second string of bells like the first."



"It is a bargain!" cried Claus, and he went home again for the toys.



The new sledge was carefully built, the Knooks bringing plenty of

strong but thin boards to use in its construction.  Claus made a high,

rounding dash-board to keep off the snow cast behind by the fleet

hoofs of the deer; and he made high sides to the platform so that many

toys could be carried, and finally he mounted the sledge upon the

slender steel runners made by the Gnome King.



It was certainly a handsome sledge, and big and roomy.  Claus painted

it in bright colors, although no one was likely to see it during his

midnight journeys, and when all was finished he sent for Glossie and

Flossie to come and look at it.



The deer admired the sledge, but gravely declared it was too big and

heavy for them to draw.



"We might pull it over the snow, to be sure," said Glossie; "but we

would not pull it fast enough to enable us to visit the far-away

cities and villages and return to the Forest by daybreak."



"Then I must add two more deer to my team," declared Claus, after a

moment's thought.



"The Knook Prince allowed you as many as ten.  Why not use them all?"

asked Flossie.  "Then we could speed like the lightning and leap to

the highest roofs with ease."



"A team of ten reindeer!" cried Claus, delightedly.  "That will be

splendid.  Please return to the Forest at once and select eight other

deer as like yourselves as possible.  And you must all eat of the casa

plant, to become strong, and of the grawle plant, to become fleet of

foot, and of the marbon plant, that you may live long to accompany me

on my journeys.  Likewise it will be well for you to bathe in the Pool

of Nares, which the lovely Queen Zurline declares will render you

rarely beautiful.  Should you perform these duties faithfully there is

no doubt that on next Christmas Eve my ten reindeer will be the most

powerful and beautiful steeds the world has ever seen!"



So Glossie and Flossie went to the Forest to choose their mates, and

Claus began to consider the question of a harness for them all.



In the end he called upon Peter Knook for assistance, for Peter's

heart is as kind as his body is crooked, and he is remarkably shrewd,

as well.  And Peter agreed to furnish strips of tough leather

for the harness.



This leather was cut from the skins of lions that had reached such an

advanced age that they died naturally, and on one side was tawny hair

while the other side was cured to the softness of velvet by the deft

Knooks.  When Claus received these strips of leather he sewed them

neatly into a harness for the ten reindeer, and it proved strong and

serviceable and lasted him for many years.



The harness and sledge were prepared at odd times, for Claus devoted

most of his days to the making of toys.  These were now much better

than the first ones had been, for the immortals often came to his

house to watch him work and to offer suggestions.  It was Necile's

idea to make some of the dolls say "papa" and "mama."  It was a

thought of the Knooks to put a squeak inside the lambs, so that when a

child squeezed them they would say "baa-a-a-a!"  And the Fairy Queen

advised Claus to put whistles in the birds, so they could be made to

sing, and wheels on the horses, so children could draw them around.

Many animals perished in the Forest, from one cause or another, and

their fur was brought to Claus that he might cover with it the small

images of beasts he made for playthings.  A merry Ryl suggested that

Claus make a donkey with a nodding head, which he did, and afterward

found that it amused the little ones immensely.  And so the toys grew

in beauty and attractiveness every day, until they were the wonder of

even the immortals.



When another Christmas Eve drew near there was a monster load of

beautiful gifts for the children ready to be loaded upon the big

sledge.  Claus filled three sacks to the brim, and tucked every corner

of the sledge-box full of toys besides.



Then, at twilight, the ten reindeer appeared and Flossie introduced

them all to Claus.  They were Racer and Pacer, Reckless and Speckless,

Fearless and Peerless, and Ready and Steady, who, with Glossie and

Flossie, made up the ten who have traversed the world these hundreds

of years with their generous master.  They were all exceedingly

beautiful, with slender limbs, spreading antlers, velvety dark eyes

and smooth coats of fawn color spotted with white.



Claus loved them at once, and has loved them ever since, for they are

loyal friends and have rendered him priceless service.



The new harness fitted them nicely and soon they were all fastened to

the sledge by twos, with Glossie and Flossie in the lead.  These wore

the strings of sleigh-bells, and were so delighted with the music they

made that they kept prancing up and down to make the bells ring.



Claus now seated himself in the sledge, drew a warm robe over his

knees and his fur cap over his ears, and cracked his long whip as a

signal to start.



Instantly the ten leaped forward and were away like the wind, while

jolly Claus laughed gleefully to see them run and shouted a song in

his big, hearty voice:





   "With a ho, ho, ho!

    And a ha, ha, ha!

And a ho, ho, ha, ha, hee!

    Now away we go

    O'er the frozen snow,

As merry as we can be!





    There are many joys

    In our load of toys,

As many a child will know;

    We'll scatter them wide

    On our wild night ride

O'er the crisp and sparkling snow!"





Now it was on this same Christmas Eve that little Margot and her

brother Dick and her cousins Ned and Sara, who were visiting at

Margot's house, came in from making a snow man, with their clothes

damp, their mittens dripping and their shoes and stockings wet through

and through.  They were not scolded, for Margot's mother knew the snow

was melting, but they were sent early to bed that their clothes might

be hung over chairs to dry.  The shoes were placed on the red tiles of

the hearth, where the heat from the hot embers would strike them, and

the stockings were carefully hung in a row by the chimney, directly

over the fireplace.  That was the reason Santa Claus noticed them when

he came down the chimney that night and all the household were fast

asleep.  He was in a tremendous hurry and seeing the stockings all

belonged to children he quickly stuffed his toys into them and dashed

up the chimney again, appearing on the roof so suddenly that the

reindeer were astonished at his agility.



"I wish they would all hang up their stockings," he thought, as he

drove to the next chimney.  "It would save me a lot of time and I

could then visit more children before daybreak."



When Margot and Dick and Ned and Sara jumped out of bed next morning

and ran downstairs to get their stockings from the fireplace they were

filled with delight to find the toys from Santa Claus inside them.  In

face, I think they found more presents in their stockings than any

other children of that city had received, for Santa Claus was in a

hurry and did not stop to count the toys.



Of course they told all their little friends about it, and of course

every one of them decided to hang his own stockings by the fireplace

the next Christmas Eve.  Even Bessie Blithesome, who made a visit to

that city with her father, the great Lord of Lerd, heard the story

from the children and hung her own pretty stockings by the chimney

when she returned home at Christmas time.



On his next trip Santa Claus found so many stockings hung up in

anticipation of his visit that he could fill them in a jiffy and be

away again in half the time required to hunt the children up and place

the toys by their bedsides.



The custom grew year after year, and has always been a great help to

Santa Claus.  And, with so many children to visit, he surely needs all

the help we are able to give him.







12.  The First Christmas Tree





Claus had always kept his promise to the Knooks by returning to the

Laughing Valley by daybreak, but only the swiftness of his reindeer

has enabled him to do this, for he travels over all the world.



He loved his work and he loved the brisk night ride on his sledge and

the gay tinkle of the sleigh-bells.  On that first trip with the ten

reindeer only Glossie and Flossie wore bells; but each year thereafter

for eight years Claus carried presents to the children of the Gnome

King, and that good-natured monarch gave him in return a string of

bells at each visit, so that finally every one of the ten deer was

supplied, and you may imagine what a merry tune the bells played as

the sledge sped over the snow.



The children's stockings were so long that it required a great many

toys to fill them, and soon Claus found there were other things

besides toys that children love.  So he sent some of the Fairies, who

were always his good friends, into the Tropics, from whence they

returned with great bags full of oranges and bananas which they had

plucked from the trees.  And other Fairies flew to the wonderful

Valley of Phunnyland, where delicious candies and bonbons grow thickly

on the bushes, and returned laden with many boxes of sweetmeats for

the little ones.  These things Santa Claus, on each Christmas Eve,

placed in the long stockings, together with his toys, and the children

were glad to get them, you may be sure.



There are also warm countries where there is no snow in winter, but

Claus and his reindeer visited them as well as the colder climes, for

there were little wheels inside the runners of his sledge which

permitted it to run as smoothly over bare ground as on the snow.  And

the children who lived in the warm countries learned to know the name

of Santa Claus as well as those who lived nearer to the Laughing Valley.



Once, just as the reindeer were ready to start on their yearly trip, a

Fairy came to Claus and told him of three little children who lived

beneath a rude tent of skins on a broad plain where there were no

trees whatever.  These poor babies were miserable and unhappy, for

their parents were ignorant people who neglected them sadly.  Claus

resolved to visit these children before he returned home, and during

his ride he picked up the bushy top of a pine tree which the wind had

broken off and placed it in his sledge.



It was nearly morning when the deer stopped before the lonely tent of

skins where the poor children lay asleep.  Claus at once planted the

bit of pine tree in the sand and stuck many candles on the branches.

Then he hung some of his prettiest toys on the tree, as well as

several bags of candies.  It did not take long to do all this, for

Santa Claus works quickly, and when all was ready he lighted the

candles and, thrusting his head in at the opening of the tent,

he shouted:



"Merry Christmas, little ones!"



With that he leaped into his sledge and was out of sight before the

children, rubbing the sleep from their eyes, could come out to see who

had called them.



You can imagine the wonder and joy of those little ones, who had never

in their lives known a real pleasure before, when they saw the tree,

sparkling with lights that shone brilliant in the gray dawn and hung

with toys enough to make them happy for years to come!  They joined

hands and danced around the tree, shouting and laughing, until they

were obliged to pause for breath.  And their parents, also, came out

to look and wonder, and thereafter had more respect and consideration

for their children, since Santa Claus had honored them with such

beautiful gifts.



The idea of the Christmas tree pleased Claus, and so the following

year he carried many of them in his sledge and set them up in the

homes of poor people who seldom saw trees, and placed candles and toys

on the branches.  Of course he could not carry enough trees in one

load of all who wanted them, but in some homes the fathers were able to

get trees and have them all ready for Santa Claus when he arrived; and

these the good Claus always decorated as prettily as possible and hung

with toys enough for all the children who came to see the tree lighted.



These novel ideas and the generous manner in which they were carried

out made the children long for that one night in the year when their

friend Santa Claus should visit them, and as such anticipation is very

pleasant and comforting the little ones gleaned much happiness by

wondering what would happen when Santa Claus next arrived.



Perhaps you remember that stern Baron Braun who once drove Claus from

his castle and forbade him to visit his children?  Well, many years

afterward, when the old Baron was dead and his son ruled in his

place, the new Baron Braun came to the house of Claus with his train

of knights and pages and henchmen and, dismounting from his charger,

bared his head humbly before the friend of children.



"My father did not know your goodness and worth," he said, "and

therefore threatened to hang you from the castle walls.  But I have

children of my own, who long for a visit from Santa Claus, and I have

come to beg that you will favor them hereafter as you do other children."



Claus was pleased with this speech, for Castle Braun was the only

place he had never visited, and he gladly promised to bring presents

to the Baron's children the next Christmas Eve.



The Baron went away contented, and Claus kept his promise faithfully.



Thus did this man, through very goodness, conquer the hearts of all;

and it is no wonder he was ever merry and gay, for there was no home

in the wide world where he was not welcomed more royally than any king.









OLD AGE







1.  The Mantle of Immortality





And now we come to a turning-point in the career of Santa Claus, and

it is my duty to relate the most remarkable that has happened since

the world began or mankind was created.



We have followed the life of Claus from the time he was found a

helpless infant by the Wood-Nymph Necile and reared to manhood in the

great Forest of Burzee.  And we know how he began to make toys for

children and how, with the assistance and goodwill of the immortals,

he was able to distribute them to the little ones throughout the world.



For many years he carried on this noble work; for the simple,

hard-working life he led gave him perfect health and strength.

And doubtless a man can live longer in the beautiful Laughing Valley,

where there are no cares and everything is peaceful and merry,

than in any other part of the world.



But when many years had rolled away Santa Claus grew old.  The long

beard of golden brown that once covered his cheeks and chin gradually

became gray, and finally turned to pure white.  His hair was white,

too, and there were wrinkles at the corners of his eyes, which showed

plainly when he laughed.  He had never been a very tall man, and now

he became fat, and waddled very much like a duck when he walked.  But

in spite of these things he remained as lively as ever, and was just

as jolly and gay, and his kind eyes sparkled as brightly as they did

that first day when he came to the Laughing Valley.



Yet a time is sure to come when every mortal who has grown old and

lived his life is required to leave this world for another; so it is

no wonder that, after Santa Claus had driven his reindeer on many and

many a Christmas Eve, those stanch friends finally whispered among

themselves that they had probably drawn his sledge for the last time.



Then all the Forest of Burzee became sad and all the Laughing Valley

was hushed; for every living thing that had known Claus had used to

love him and to brighten at the sound of his footsteps or the notes of

his merry whistle.



No doubt the old man's strength was at last exhausted, for he made no

more toys, but lay on his bed as in a dream.



The Nymph Necile, she who had reared him and been his foster-mother,

was still youthful and strong and beautiful, and it seemed to her but

a short time since this aged, gray-bearded man had lain in her arms

and smiled on her with his innocent, baby lips.



In this is shown the difference between mortals and immortals.



It was fortunate that the great Ak came to the Forest at this time.

Necile sought him with troubled eyes and told him of the fate that

threatened their friend Claus.



At once the Master became grave, and he leaned upon his ax and stroked

his grizzled beard thoughtfully for many minutes.  Then suddenly he

stood up straight, and poised his powerful head with firm resolve, and

stretched out his great right arm as if determined on doing some

mighty deed.  For a thought had come to him so grand in its conception

that all the world might well bow before the Master Woodsman and honor

his name forever!



It is well known that when the great Ak once undertakes to do a

thing he never hesitates an instant.  Now he summoned his fleetest

messengers, and sent them in a flash to many parts of the earth.

And when they were gone he turned to the anxious Necile and

comforted her, saying:



"Be of good heart, my child; our friend still lives.  And now run to

your Queen and tell her that I have summoned a council of all the

immortals of the world to meet with me here in Burzee this night.  If

they obey, and harken unto my words, Claus will drive his reindeer for

countless ages yet to come."



At midnight there was a wondrous scene in the ancient Forest of

Burzee, where for the first time in many centuries the rulers of the

immortals who inhabit the earth were gathered together.



There was the Queen of the Water Sprites, whose beautiful form was as

clear as crystal but continually dripped water on the bank of moss

where she sat.  And beside her was the King of the Sleep Fays, who

carried a wand from the end of which a fine dust fell all around, so

that no mortal could keep awake long enough to see him, as mortal eyes

were sure to close in sleep as soon as the dust filled them.  And next

to him sat the Gnome King, whose people inhabit all that region under

the earth's surface, where they guard the precious metals and the

jewel stones that lie buried in rock and ore.  At his right hand stood

the King of the Sound Imps, who had wings on his feet, for his people

are swift to carry all sounds that are made.  When they are busy they

carry the sounds but short distances, for there are many of them; but

sometimes they speed with the sounds to places miles and miles away

from where they are made.  The King of the Sound Imps had an anxious

and careworn face, for most people have no consideration for his Imps

and, especially the boys and girls, make a great many unnecessary sounds

which the Imps are obliged to carry when they might be better employed.



The next in the circle of immortals was the King of the Wind Demons,

slender of frame, restless and uneasy at being confined to one place

for even an hour.  Once in a while he would leave his place and circle

around the glade, and each time he did this the Fairy Queen was

obliged to untangle the flowing locks of her golden hair and tuck

them back of her pink ears.  But she did not complain, for it was not

often that the King of the Wind Demons came into the heart of the

Forest.  After the Fairy Queen, whose home you know was in old Burzee,

came the King of the Light Elves, with his two Princes, Flash and

Twilight, at his back.  He never went anywhere without his Princes,

for they were so mischievous that he dared not let them wander alone.



Prince Flash bore a lightning-bolt in his right hand and a horn of

gunpowder in his left, and his bright eyes roved constantly around, as

if he longed to use his blinding flashes.  Prince Twilight held a

great snuffer in one hand and a big black cloak in the other, and it

is well known that unless Twilight is carefully watched the snuffers

or the cloak will throw everything into darkness, and Darkness is the

greatest enemy the King of the Light Elves has.



In addition to the immortals I have named were the King of the Knooks,

who had come from his home in the jungles of India; and the King of the

Ryls, who lived among the gay flowers and luscious fruits of Valencia.

Sweet Queen Zurline of the Wood-Nymphs completed the circle of immortals.



But in the center of the circle sat three others who possessed powers

so great that all the Kings and Queens showed them reverence.



These were Ak, the Master Woodsman of the World, who rules the forests

and the orchards and the groves; and Kern, the Master Husbandman of

the World, who rules the grain fields and the meadows and the gardens;

and Bo, the Master Mariner of the World, who rules the seas and all

the craft that float thereon.  And all other immortals are more or

less subject to these three.



When all had assembled the Master Woodsman of the World stood up to

address them, since he himself had summoned them to the council.



Very clearly he told them the story of Claus, beginning at the time

when as a babe he had been adopted a child of the Forest, and telling

of his noble and generous nature and his life-long labors to make

children happy.



"And now," said Ak, "when he had won the love of all the world, the

Spirit of Death is hovering over him.  Of all men who have inhabited

the earth none other so well deserves immortality, for such a life can

not be spared so long as there are children of mankind to miss him and

to grieve over his loss.  We immortals are the servants of the world,

and to serve the world we were permitted in the Beginning to exist.

But what one of us is more worthy of immortality than this man Claus,

who so sweetly ministers to the little children?"



He paused and glanced around the circle, to find every immortal

listening to him eagerly and nodding approval.  Finally the King of

the Wind Demons, who had been whistling softly to himself, cried out:



"What is your desire, O Ak?"



"To bestow upon Claus the Mantle of Immortality!" said Ak, boldly.



That this demand was wholly unexpected was proved by the immortals

springing to their feet and looking into each other's face with dismay

and then upon Ak with wonder.  For it was a grave matter, this parting

with the Mantle of Immortality.



The Queen of the Water Sprites spoke in her low, clear voice, and the

words sounded like raindrops splashing upon a window-pane.



"In all the world there is but one Mantle of Immortality," she said.



The King of the Sound Fays added:



"It has existed since the Beginning, and no mortal has ever dared to

claim it."



And the Master Mariner of the World arose and stretched his limbs, saying:



"Only by the vote of every immortal can it be bestowed upon a mortal."



"I know all this," answered Ak, quietly.  "But the Mantle exists, and

if it was created, as you say, in the Beginning, it was because the

Supreme Master knew that some day it would be required.  Until now no

mortal has deserved it, but who among you dares deny that the good

Claus deserves it?  Will you not all vote to bestow it upon him?"



They were silent, still looking upon one another questioningly.



"Of what use is the Mantle of Immortality unless it is worn?" demanded

Ak.  "What will it profit any one of us to allow it to remain in its

lonely shrine for all time to come?"



"Enough!" cried the Gnome King, abruptly.  "We will vote on the

matter, yes or no.  For my part, I say yes!"



"And I!" said the Fairy Queen, promptly, and Ak rewarded her with a smile.



"My people in Burzee tell me they have learned to love him; therefore

I vote to give Claus the Mantle," said the King of the Ryls.



"He is already a comrade of the Knooks," announced the ancient King of

that band.  "Let him have immortality!"



"Let him have it--let him have it!" sighed the King of the Wind Demons.



"Why not?" asked the King of the Sleep Fays.  "He never disturbs the

slumbers my people allow humanity.  Let the good Claus be immortal!"



"I do not object," said the King of the Sound Imps.



"Nor I," murmured the Queen of the Water Sprites.



"If Claus does not receive the Mantle it is clear none other can ever

claim it," remarked the King of the Light Elves, "so let us have done

with the thing for all time."



"The Wood-Nymphs were first to adopt him," said Queen Zurline.  "Of

course I shall vote to make him immortal."



Ak now turned to the Master Husbandman of the World, who held up his

right arm and said "Yes!"



And the Master Mariner of the World did likewise, after which Ak, with

sparkling eyes and smiling face, cried out:



"I thank you, fellow immortals!  For all have voted 'yes,' and so to

our dear Claus shall fall the one Mantle of Immortality that it is in

our power to bestow!"



"Let us fetch it at once," said the Fay King; "I'm in a hurry."



They bowed assent, and instantly the Forest glade was deserted.  But

in a place midway between the earth and the sky was suspended a

gleaming crypt of gold and platinum, aglow with soft lights shed from

the facets of countless gems.  Within a high dome hung the precious

Mantle of Immortality, and each immortal placed a hand on the hem of

the splendid Robe and said, as with one voice:



"We bestow this Mantle upon Claus, who is called the Patron

Saint of Children!"



At this the Mantle came away from its lofty crypt, and they carried it

to the house in the Laughing Valley.



The Spirit of Death was crouching very near to the bedside of Claus,

and as the immortals approached she sprang up and motioned them back

with an angry gesture.  But when her eyes fell upon the Mantle they

bore she shrank away with a low moan of disappointment and quitted

that house forever.



Softly and silently the immortal Band dropped upon Claus the precious

Mantle, and it closed about him and sank into the outlines of his body

and disappeared from view.  It became a part of his being, and neither

mortal nor immortal might ever take it from him.



Then the Kings and Queens who had wrought this great deed dispersed to

their various homes, and all were well contented that they had added

another immortal to their Band.



And Claus slept on, the red blood of everlasting life coursing swiftly

through his veins; and on his brow was a tiny drop of water that had

fallen from the ever-melting gown of the Queen of the Water Sprites,

and over his lips hovered a tender kiss that had been left by the

sweet Nymph Necile.  For she had stolen in when the others were gone

to gaze with rapture upon the immortal form of her foster son.







2.  When the World Grew Old





The next morning, when Santa Claus opened his eyes and gazed around

the familiar room, which he had feared he might never see again, he

was astonished to find his old strength renewed and to feel the red

blood of perfect health coursing through his veins.  He sprang from

his bed and stood where the bright sunshine came in through his window

and flooded him with its merry, dancing rays.  He did not then

understand what had happened to restore to him the vigor of youth, but

in spite of the fact that his beard remained the color of snow and

that wrinkles still lingered in the corners of his bright eyes, old

Santa Claus felt as brisk and merry as a boy of sixteen, and was soon

whistling contentedly as he busied himself fashioning new toys.



Then Ak came to him and told of the Mantle of Immortality and how

Claus had won it through his love for little children.



It made old Santa look grave for a moment to think he had been so

favored; but it also made him glad to realize that now he need never

fear being parted from his dear ones.  At once he began preparations

for making a remarkable assortment of pretty and amusing playthings,

and in larger quantities than ever before; for now that he might

always devote himself to this work he decided that no child in the

world, poor or rich, should hereafter go without a Christmas gift if

he could manage to supply it.



The world was new in the days when dear old Santa Claus first began

toy-making and won, by his loving deeds, the Mantle of Immortality.

And the task of supplying cheering words, sympathy and pretty

playthings to all the young of his race did not seem a difficult

undertaking at all.  But every year more and more children were born

into the world, and these, when they grew up, began spreading slowly

over all the face of the earth, seeking new homes; so that Santa Claus

found each year that his journeys must extend farther and farther from

the Laughing Valley, and that the packs of toys must be made larger

and ever larger.



So at length he took counsel with his fellow immortals how his work

might keep pace with the increasing number of children that none might

be neglected.  And the immortals were so greatly interested in his

labors that they gladly rendered him their assistance.  Ak gave him

his man Kilter, "the silent and swift."  And the Knook Prince gave him

Peter, who was more crooked and less surly than any of his brothers.

And the Ryl Prince gave him Nuter, the sweetest tempered Ryl ever

known.  And the Fairy Queen gave him Wisk, that tiny, mischievous but

lovable Fairy who knows today almost as many children as does Santa

Claus himself.



With these people to help make the toys and to keep his house in order

and to look after the sledge and the harness, Santa Claus found it

much easier to prepare his yearly load of gifts, and his days began to

follow one another smoothly and pleasantly.



Yet after a few generations his worries were renewed, for it was

remarkable how the number of people continued to grow, and how many

more children there were every year to be served.  When the people

filled all the cities and lands of one country they wandered into

another part of the world; and the men cut down the trees in many of

the great forests that had been ruled by Ak, and with the wood they

built new cities, and where the forests had been were fields of grain

and herds of browsing cattle.



You might think the Master Woodsman would rebel at the loss of his

forests; but not so.  The wisdom of Ak was mighty and farseeing.



"The world was made for men," said he to Santa Claus, "and I have but

guarded the forests until men needed them for their use.  I am glad my

strong trees can furnish shelter for men's weak bodies, and warm them

through the cold winters.  But I hope they will not cut down all the

trees, for mankind needs the shelter of the woods in summer as much as

the warmth of blazing logs in winter.  And, however crowded the world

may grow, I do not think men will ever come to Burzee, nor to the

Great Black Forest, nor to the wooded wilderness of Braz; unless they

seek their shades for pleasure and not to destroy their giant trees."



By and by people made ships from the tree-trunks and crossed over

oceans and built cities in far lands; but the oceans made little

difference to the journeys of Santa Claus.  His reindeer sped over the

waters as swiftly as over land, and his sledge headed from east to

west and followed in the wake of the sun.  So that as the earth rolled

slowly over Santa Claus had all of twenty-four hours to encircle it

each Christmas Eve, and the speedy reindeer enjoyed these wonderful

journeys more and more.



So year after year, and generation after generation, and century after

century, the world grew older and the people became more numerous and

the labors of Santa Claus steadily increased.  The fame of his good

deeds spread to every household where children dwelt.  And all the

little ones loved him dearly; and the fathers and mothers honored him

for the happiness he had given them when they too were young; and the

aged grandsires and granddames remembered him with tender gratitude

and blessed his name.







3.  The Deputies of Santa Claus





However, there was one evil following in the path of civilization that

caused Santa Claus a vast amount of trouble before he discovered a way

to overcome it.  But, fortunately, it was the last trial he was forced

to undergo.



One Christmas Eve, when his reindeer had leaped to the top of a new

building, Santa Claus was surprised to find that the chimney had been

built much smaller than usual.  But he had no time to think about it

just then, so he drew in his breath and made himself as small as

possible and slid down the chimney.



"I ought to be at the bottom by this time," he thought, as he

continued to slip downward; but no fireplace of any sort met his view,

and by and by he reached the very end of the chimney, which was

in the cellar.



"This is odd!" he reflected, much puzzled by this experience.  "If

there is no fireplace, what on earth is the chimney good for?"



Then he began to climb out again, and found it hard work--the space

being so small.  And on his way up he noticed a thin, round pipe

sticking through the side of the chimney, but could not guess what it

was for.



Finally he reached the roof and said to the reindeer:



"There was no need of my going down that chimney, for I could find no

fireplace through which to enter the house.  I fear the children who

live there must go without playthings this Christmas."



Then he drove on, but soon came to another new house with a small

chimney.  This caused Santa Claus to shake his head doubtfully, but he

tried the chimney, nevertheless, and found it exactly like the other.

Moreover, he nearly stuck fast in the narrow flue and tore his jacket

trying to get out again; so, although he came to several such chimneys

that night, he did not venture to descend any more of them.



"What in the world are people thinking of, to build such useless

chimneys?" he exclaimed.  "In all the years I have traveled with my

reindeer I have never seen the like before."



True enough; but Santa Claus had not then discovered that stoves had

been invented and were fast coming into use.  When he did find it out

he wondered how the builders of those houses could have so little

consideration for him, when they knew very well it was his custom to

climb down chimneys and enter houses by way of the fireplaces.

Perhaps the men who built those houses had outgrown their own love for

toys, and were indifferent whether Santa Claus called on their

children or not.  Whatever the explanation might be, the poor children

were forced to bear the burden of grief and disappointment.



The following year Santa Claus found more and more of the

new-fashioned chimneys that had no fireplaces, and the next year still

more.  The third year, so numerous had the narrow chimneys become, he

even had a few toys left in his sledge that he was unable to give

away, because he could not get to the children.



The matter had now become so serious that it worried the good man

greatly, and he decided to talk it over with Kilter and Peter and

Nuter and Wisk.



Kilter already knew something about it, for it had been his duty to run

around to all the houses, just before Christmas, and gather up the

notes and letters to Santa Claus that the children had written,

telling what they wished put in their stockings or hung on their

Christmas trees.  But Kilter was a silent fellow, and seldom spoke of

what he saw in the cities and villages.  The others were very indignant.



"Those people act as if they do not wish their children to be made

happy!" said sensible Peter, in a vexed tone.  "The idea of shutting

out such a generous friend to their little ones!"



"But it is my intention to make children happy whether their parents

wish it or not," returned Santa Claus.  "Years ago, when I first

began making toys, children were even more neglected by their parents

than they are now; so I have learned to pay no attention to thoughtless

or selfish parents, but to consider only the longings of childhood."



"You are right, my master," said Nuter, the Ryl; "many children would

lack a friend if you did not consider them, and try to make them happy."



"Then," declared the laughing Wisk, "we must abandon any thought of

using these new-fashioned chimneys, but become burglars, and break

into the houses some other way."



"What way?" asked Santa Claus.



"Why, walls of brick and wood and plaster are nothing to Fairies.

I can easily pass through them whenever I wish, and so can Peter

and Nuter and Kilter.  Is it not so, comrades?"



"I often pass through the walls when I gather up the letters," said

Kilter, and that was a long speech for him, and so surprised Peter and

Nuter that their big round eyes nearly popped out of their heads.



"Therefore," continued the Fairy, "you may as well take us with you on

your next journey, and when we come to one of those houses with stoves

instead of fireplaces we will distribute the toys to the children

without the need of using a chimney."



"That seems to me a good plan," replied Santa Claus, well pleased at

having solved the problem.  "We will try it next year."



That was how the Fairy, the Pixie, the Knook and the Ryl all rode in

the sledge with their master the following Christmas Eve; and they had

no trouble at all in entering the new-fashioned houses and leaving

toys for the children that lived in them.



And their deft services not only relieved Santa Claus of much labor,

but enabled him to complete his own work more quickly than usual, so

that the merry party found themselves at home with an empty sledge a

full hour before daybreak.



The only drawback to the journey was that the mischievous Wisk

persisted in tickling the reindeer with a long feather, to see them

jump; and Santa Claus found it necessary to watch him every minute and

to tweak his long ears once or twice to make him behave himself.



But, taken all together, the trip was a great success, and to this day

the four little folk always accompany Santa Claus on his yearly ride

and help him in the distribution of his gifts.



But the indifference of parents, which had so annoyed the good Saint,

did not continue very long, and Santa Claus soon found they were

really anxious he should visit their homes on Christmas Eve and leave

presents for their children.



So, to lighten his task, which was fast becoming very difficult

indeed, old Santa decided to ask the parents to assist him.



"Get your Christmas trees all ready for my coming," he said to them;

"and then I shall be able to leave the presents without loss of time,

and you can put them on the trees when I am gone."



And to others he said: "See that the children's stockings are hung up

in readiness for my coming, and then I can fill them as quick as a wink."



And often, when parents were kind and good-natured, Santa Claus would

simply fling down his package of gifts and leave the fathers and

mothers to fill the stockings after he had darted away in his sledge.



"I will make all loving parents my deputies!" cried the jolly old

fellow, "and they shall help me do my work.  For in this way I shall

save many precious minutes and few children need be neglected for lack

of time to visit them."



Besides carrying around the big packs in his swift-flying sledge old

Santa began to send great heaps of toys to the toy-shops, so that if

parents wanted larger supplies for their children they could easily

get them; and if any children were, by chance, missed by Santa Claus

on his yearly rounds, they could go to the toy-shops and get enough to

make them happy and contented.  For the loving friend of the little

ones decided that no child, if he could help it, should long for toys

in vain.  And the toy-shops also proved convenient whenever a child

fell ill, and needed a new toy to amuse it; and sometimes, on

birthdays, the fathers and mothers go to the toy-shops and get pretty

gifts for their children in honor of the happy event.



Perhaps you will now understand how, in spite of the bigness of the

world, Santa Claus is able to supply all the children with beautiful

gifts.  To be sure, the old gentleman is rarely seen in these days;

but it is not because he tries to keep out of sight, I assure you.

Santa Claus is the same loving friend of children that in the old days

used to play and romp with them by the hour; and I know he would love

to do the same now, if he had the time.  But, you see, he is so busy

all the year making toys, and so hurried on that one night when he

visits our homes with his packs, that he comes and goes among us like

a flash; and it is almost impossible to catch a glimpse of him.



And, although there are millions and millions more children in the

world than there used to be, Santa Claus has never been known to

complain of their increasing numbers.



"The more the merrier!" he cries, with his jolly laugh; and the only

difference to him is the fact that his little workmen have to make

their busy fingers fly faster every year to satisfy the demands of so

many little ones.



"In all this world there is nothing so beautiful as a happy child,"

says good old Santa Claus; and if he had his way the children would

all be beautiful, for all would be happy.











The End of the Project Gutenberg Edit of Life/Adventures of Santa Claus



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