A Little Book of Profitable Tales
that Christmas eve, turning umbrellas inside out, driving the snow in fitful gusts before it,
ra, with a shiver, as she drew her tattered li
the wind; "but why are you out in this sto
ghed bitterly, and something like a tiny pearl
treet to throw a handful of snow in the face of an old man who wa
ighted on Barbara's shoulder. "I heard grand music, and saw bea
g at the cathedral?
e snowflake. "I supposed everybody kne
mas eve," said Barbara, "and t
kind and gentle he was, and how he loved the little children; but her mother was dead now, an
" said Barbara, "for I have heard
en him, but I heard the pines and the firs singing
sterously to where Barbara stood. "I've been looking
snowflake and hurried it along the street and led it
glitter of the lights and the sparkle of the vast array of beautiful Christmas toys quite dazzle
it cannot be," she said to herself,
here!" said
hings if you stand before the window? Be o
a savage box on the ear that sent her reel
of a spacious room,-a beautiful Christmas tree ablaze with red and green lights, and heavy with toys and stars and glass balls, and other beautiful things that children love. There was a merry throng a
Barbara. "How I would like to see his face and hear his voice
storm, shivering and disconsol
" she asked of the wi
great people are flocking there, and I will
whirled away and chased the
arbara. "It is a beautiful place, and the people will pay
iests made eloquent prayers; and the music, and the songs, and the prayers were all about the prince and his expected coming. The throng that swept in and out of the
sit inside?" inquired
n important occasion with the sexton, and he h
quiet," pleaded Barbara. "Ple
u, and don't be blocking up the doorway!" So the sexton gave Barbara an angry push, and the child fell half-way down the icy steps
s cheek. It was the same little snowflake that had clung to her shawl a
a, in tears; "but what
e. "Go to the forest and you shall see him, for the
In the forest she could behold the prince coming on his way; and h
luttered Barbara's tattered shawl, and set her hair to streaming in every direct
gate the watchman stopped her, and held his big lantern in
am going into the for
watchman, "and in this storm?
will not let me watch for him in the church, nor in any
was a kindly man; he thought o
forest," said he, "for you
the watchman's grasp and ran as fast a
ried the watchman; "you w
not stay her, nor did the cutting blast. She thought on
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