Corporal Sam and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Corporal Sam and Other Stories.

Corporal Sam and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Corporal Sam and Other Stories.

‘Ah, but you’ll catch the spirit of it!’ he assured me:  and then, rubbing his hands, he appeared to muse for a moment.  ‘I ought,’ said he, with a glance towards the fireplace, ’I really ought to send Father Christmas down by way of the chimney.  The flue opens just above here, and I believe it would accommodate you; but I am not very sure if my housekeeper had it swept last spring.  No,’ he decided, ’the music has ceased, and we must lose no time.  I will spare you the chimney.’

He called to his rabbits, picked them up as they came hopping from behind the curtains, popped them into his hat, shut it with a snap, and lo! they had vanished.

‘You’ll excuse me,’ I ventured, as he stepped to the door; ’but—­but the—­the few articles here in the bag—­’

’Oh, bring them along with you:  bring them along by all means!  We may have a present or two to make, down below.’

From the head of the staircase we looked down into a hall gaily lit with paper lanterns.  Holly and ivy wreathed the broad balustrade, and the old pictures around the walls.  A bunch of mistletoe hung from a great chandelier that sparkled with hundreds of glass prisms, and under it a couple of footmen in gilt liveries and powder crossed at that moment with trays of jellies and syllabubs.

They were well-trained footmen, too; for at sight of me descending the stairs in my idiotic outfit they betrayed no surprise at all.  One of them set his tray down on a table, stepped neatly ahead as Mr Felix reached the lowest stair, and opened a door for us on the right.  I found myself at a stand on the threshold, blinking at a blaze of light, and staring up a perspective of waxed floor at a miniature stage which filled the far end of the room.  Light, as every one knows, travels farther than sound:  were it not so, I should say that almost ahead of the blaze there broke on us a din of voices—­of happy children’s voices.  Certainly it stunned my ears before I had time to blink.

The room was lined with children—­scores of children:  and some of them were gathered in little groups, and some of them, panting and laughing from their dance, had dropped into the chairs ranged along the walls.  But these were the minority.  The most of the guests lay in cots, or sat with crutches beside them, or with hands dropped in their laps.  These last were the blind ones.  I do not set up to be a lover of children:  but the discovery that the most of these small guests were crippled hit me with a kind of pitiful awe; and right on top of it came a second and worse shock, to note how many of them were blind.

To me these blind eyes were the only merciful ones, as Mr Felix beckoned Father Christmas to follow him up to the stage between the two lines of curious gazers.  ‘O—­oh!’ had been their first cry as they caught sight of me in the doorway:  and ‘O—­oh!’ I heard them murmuring, child after child, in long-drawn fugue, as we made our way up the long length of the room that winked detection from every candle, every reflector, every foot of its polished floor.

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Project Gutenberg
Corporal Sam and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.