A Great Emergency and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 242 pages of information about A Great Emergency and Other Tales.

A Great Emergency and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 242 pages of information about A Great Emergency and Other Tales.

To the end of her life Madam Liberality never forgot that Christmas-box.  It did not come from her godmother, and the name of the giver she never knew.  The first thing in it was a card, on which was written—­“A Christmas-box from an unknown friend;” and the second thing in it was the set of china tea-things with the green rim; and the third thing was a box of doll’s furniture.

“Oh, Mother!” cried Madam Liberality, “they’re the very things I was counting over in the bazaar, when the shopman heard me.”

“Did anybody else hear you?” asked her mother.

“There was a lady, who said, ’I think the little girl said the box of beasts.’  And, oh!  Mother, Mother! here is the box of beasts!  They’re not common beasts, you know—­not wooden ones, painted; they’re rough, something like hair.  And feel the old elephant’s ears, they’re quite leathery, and the lion has real long hair for his mane and the tip of his tail.  They are such thorough beasts.  Oh, how the boys will like them!  Tom shall have the darling brown bear.  I do think he is the very best beast of all; his mouth is a little open, you know, and you can see his tongue, and it’s red.  And, Mother! the sheep are curly!  And oh, what a dog! with real hair.  I think I must keep the dog.  And I shall make him a paper collar, and print ‘Faithful’ on it, and let him always stand on the drawers by our bed, and he’ll be Darling’s and my watch-dog.”

Happiness is sometimes very wholesome, but it does not cure a quinsy off hand.  Darling cried that night when the big pillow was brought out, which Madam Liberality always slept against in her quinsies, to keep her from choking.  She did not know of that consolatory Christmas-box in the cupboard.

On Christmas Day Madam Liberality was speechless.  The quinsy had progressed very rapidly.

“It generally breaks the day I have to write on my slate,” Madam Liberality wrote, looking up at her mother with piteous eyes.

She was conscious that she had been greatly to blame for what she was suffering, and was anxious to “behave well about it” as an atonement.  She begged—­on her slate—­that no one would stay away from church on her account, but her mother would not leave her.

“And now the others are gone,” said Mother, “since you won’t let the Christmas-tree be put off, I propose that we have it up, and I dress it under your orders, whilst the others are out, and then it can be moved into the little book-room, all ready for to-night.”

Madam Liberality nodded like a china Mandarin.

“But you are in sad pain, I fear?” said her mother,

“One can’t have everything,” wrote Madam Liberality on her slate.  Many illnesses had made her a very philosophical little woman; and, indeed, if the quinsy broke and she were at ease, the combination of good things would be more than any one could reasonably expect, even at Christmas.

Every beast was labelled, and hung up by her orders.  The box of furniture was addressed to herself and Darling, as a joint possession, and the sweetmeats were tied in bags of muslin.  The tree looked charming.  The very angel at the top seemed proud of it.

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A Great Emergency and Other Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.