The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,672 pages of information about The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner.

The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,672 pages of information about The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner.
has been a reaction of popular sentiment and people have wished the man were alive.  We prosecute everything so vigorously that we speedily either wear it out or wear ourselves out on it, whether it is a game, or a festival, or a holiday.  We can use up any sport or game ever invented quicker than any other people.  We can practice anything, like a vegetable diet, for instance, to an absurd conclusion with more vim than any other nation.  This trait has its advantages; nowhere else will a delusion run so fast, and so soon run up a tree—­another of our happy phrases.  There is a largeness and exuberance about us which run even into our ordinary phraseology.  The sympathetic clergyman, coming from the bedside of a parishioner dying of dropsy, says, with a heavy sigh, “The poor fellow is just swelling away.”

Is Christmas swelling away?  If it is not, it is scarcely our fault.  Since the American nation fairly got hold of the holiday—­in some parts of the country, as in New England, it has been universal only about fifty years—­we have made it hum, as we like to say.  We have appropriated the English conviviality, the German simplicity, the Roman pomp, and we have added to it an element of expense in keeping with our own greatness.  Is anybody beginning to feel it a burden, this sweet festival of charity and good-will, and to look forward to it with apprehension?  Is the time approaching when we shall want to get somebody to play it for us, like base-ball?  Anything that interrupts the ordinary flow of life, introduces into it, in short, a social cyclone that upsets everything for a fortnight, may in time be as hard to bear as that festival of housewives called housecleaning, that riot of cleanliness which men fear as they do a panic in business.  Taking into account the present preparations for Christmas, and the time it takes to recover from it, we are beginning—­are we not?—­to consider it one of the most serious events of modern life.

The Drawer is led into these observations out of its love for Christmas.  It is impossible to conceive of any holiday that could take its place, nor indeed would it seem that human wit could invent another so adapted to humanity.  The obvious intention of it is to bring together, for a season at least, all men in the exercise of a common charity and a feeling of good-will, the poor and the rich, the successful and the unfortunate, that all the world may feel that in the time called the Truce of God the thing common to all men is the best thing in life.  How will it suit this intention, then, if in our way of exaggerated ostentation of charity the distinction between rich and poor is made to appear more marked than on ordinary days?  Blessed are those that expect nothing.  But are there not an increasing multitude of persons in the United States who have the most exaggerated expectations of personal profit on Christmas Day?  Perhaps it is not quite so bad as this, but it is safe to say that what the children alone expect to

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The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.