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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1908)
HORNING, DECEMBER J 3, 1908 IS M a -sw-sj m aw m i -ti k r x. -vm aw asa. u r u ii ii i iii iii iii ii ri ii it ii iiii ,i ii ii ii if ii ii WIST mSSlll KfUtOro&r .iiV Js OIIiMiJlU w : CfC J71 ASIUONS change so, it's hard' to fi keep track of them. A few years ?o n? ar a7 or disillusionizing childhood, on the principle that it is a hard world at best, and the quicker the children realized that they were facing harsh facts the better for them. And now, the good old saint has come into his own again; and the children are to be handed back their sweet faith as a toy too popular to be flung aside among the other wrecks made by the modern iconoclastn. When Santa Claus comes around this year he will find himself confronted by the penalties he must pay for his more than lavish munificence in the past. It is glorious, indeed, to have a 'perennial treasure house of play things wherewith to buy the jubilant laughter of the young; but it costs more in the future to spoil a child than it does to-do the spoiling , in the present if the children of today are not spoiled it must be only because they'rp all so very, very good that it's impossible to spoil them. Never in the world's history has childhood reveled in such gorgeous Christmastides, when, for the rich, wealth in fortunes is often times -laid out and, for the poor, the charities of thousands and the investments of millions join with untold talent and inventive skill in the endeavor to supply to Santa Claus the playthings he must work with. 1 7; . l't . : Mm 9 But soon there developed an ascending gcale of en tertainment, from the magic lantern that waa, twenty year a ago, what the cinematograph la now, to the extravagantly planned affair where the children are the audience, while hired performers give a whole vaudeville ehow and th youthful critic are nicely particular aa to the quality of the legerdemain and the eklll of per forming animals. Of late years the ajood sense of English society has been turning away from such formal entertainments, "1". !"vertmT to those features of children's parties in which the young people themselves make their pleasure. v So children's (fames have come more and more Into vogue, and that hostess has been most highly esteemed who could devise the form of enjoyment that should be most absorbing, most picturesque and moat harmless In its excitement. One charming Idea, which Is every little while re vived at the CliriHtmas Eve party, Is called "The Spider's Web." A Christmas Eve partv would be a delusion and snare if it failed to supply gifts to the guests. What Is Christmas Eve for, anyway. If not for those glorious surprises? The Christmas tree, however, has been flour ishing so long as far back as the days of the Druids that even in conservative Kngland it sometimes wears an air of sameness. So, In place of the. tree, the spider's web comes in. When the hour for the gifts arrives the children are admitted to oome large room where, from the ceiling, an immense spider hangs, usually made of wire, although his spldership often presents the tints of the rainbow because of the parti-colored ribbons that cover his monstrous body. Attached to his many leg are spools or spindles, every one holding the end of a thread or ribbon, to be wound upon It as the child progresses to a greater distance from the spider. At the other end of the thread is fastened the gift its holder Is to receive. Simple, Isn't It? Not a bit of it very Intricate and complicated, even under the mildest of conditions. The threads have been led in and around all the articles of farnlture, up and down and around, to the utmost extent of the grown-ups' Ingenuity, so that often, although manv of the gifts are plainly in sight, no child ran distinguish which Is the one belonging to his or her particular string. Above evervthlne-. tumultuous though the game may he, It is a mortal sin if any child overturn or disturb a single piece of furniture. That's a game for you, on a Christmas Eve! But the spider's web loses its novelty, too. And It Isn't nearly so gorgeous as many people expect, these in tender thraldom and redeems the grorgeousness of the festival in America, its luxurious refinement ta England, and its poor simplicity amid the poverty or the Black Forest and the want of the Apennines, Seen or unseen beside the burly Joviality of Santa Onus, there is always present the radiant, sanctifying presence of the Child. - - . TftollbaE travel In tber Hav8 HRiSTMAS travel In thT old stage coach days! How few there are who remember the combined discomforts - and Joy of those long-gone day. , In the cities, electrlo cars, electrically warm ed, snatch us up from pavements so scrupulous ly scraped, under the dras tic penalties of local ordi nances, that within a few hours of a snowfall, boys have hard work finding snow enough for a bob sled; and those cars shuat us to the doors of dwell Insra that need only an extra shovel of coal to feel like conservatories. In the country, trains that are swift processions of luxury whisk us to farmhouses or suburban residences where the old-fashioned open fireplace is either an arrheologlcal specimen or a modern affectation. Ilka those red glass coals we see chillingly illuminated on the illusive stage. Where Is the Alfred flwynne Vanderbilt whd. evan with such a record .as his recent Brighton coaching; season behind him, would choose the box seat of an old-fashioned stage coach for his Christmas journey from New York to Tuxedo, and where are the hardy passengers who would book places, inside or out. for the trip from Lake Hopatcong to New Yorkf That is as much an Impossible freak of "luxury" today as It was a matter of necessity seventy years o F COURSE, the most elaborate aspects of all this gorgeousness have developed In the one land where nobody expects1 to be happy unless he is happier than anybody else In the United States. If we were to betake ourselves to the early home of Santa Claus, and If we wars to take along with us the average American child on whom the good saint has bestowed his gifts for only the. few years necessary to cement youthful loyalty to his patronage, we should see one child at least euddimly afflicted with grave doubts of the saintly perfection that ought to belong to him. Surely, Santa Claus' charity ought to begin at home. An American child in Germany would be astonished at the moderate supply of Christmas playthings, and the modest character they bear, when compared with the wealth of toys Santa lavishes on this aide of the ocean. It does seem strange that, with such a vast store of gifts, he can't afford to treat the simple, faithful Ger man children best of all. But he doesn't. He doesn't treat any of them so well as he does these very shrewd-eyed, shrewd-tongued little) skeptics over here, tha last of all the world to com under his loving, generous guardianship. Can it be because) we materialistic Americans hava all but forgotten that he is a Christian saint. Instead of some sort of pagan providence, or god of good luck; and that, eager for the tangible unrealities we crave, we have lost the intangible realities that should be, after all, Christmas' most valued gifts? For the toys our children see and feel and play with. "Indestructible" as we try to make them, last but a little while in comparison with the unseen, intangible spirit of Christmas itself, which, after all. Is the only reaj reality that entera into the soul of childhood. Perhaps the poorest, least lavish Christmas of the world, in the material sense in which we regard the festival. Is that which occurs in Italy; yet It is precisely there, more than in any other country, that the beautiful reality of Christmas Christianity is most faithfully commemorated. It is there that Santa Claus comes always with a guide, companion and friend no less a personage than the Divine Child Himself, returned for this one night to earth in the form of a little boy, in order that He, who bade the children come unto Him, shall direct the saint in preparing their celebration over the anniversary of His birth. No child in Italy would dream of Banta Claus finding his home and his playroom without the aid of the holy Christ Child, any more than an American child would dream of Santa being accompanied by any living being except his nimble reindeer. NEVER FORGETS THE DONOR So the Italian child and, for that matter, many more children of other nations on the European conti nentmay break his toys and eat his Christmas cake; but he never forgets the divine face of the other Child who guided the Jovial donor to his door, however cruelly In after years the world may break his manhood's toys and gnaw at his manhood's heart. Here, poor Santa has been separated from the One Child whose love inspired him in his chosen work sep s rated ever since hard Plymouth Rock was landed on by the harder Pilgrim Fathers, who feared that the tough fiber of their religion might be warped by even the most lovely fanciea of the faiths they sought to put behind them. He has grown up with us into a distinctly unpoetlo Santa, very much like the big, generous father who gives us the nickel for ourselves when we get the nickel for the missionary box, and paoks us off indulgently to Sunday school, while be leans back to the comfort of his cigar. But what a generosity, whenever he isn't so strapped himself that he has to worry about the bread and butter. A George Gould, who happens to have the cash to 'spare, has no trouble In arranging with Santa to act as chauf feur for a tiny auto that has been specially built for the Christmas trips of the Gould . children not a toy auto, but a real, working machine that runs by its own power and operates aa readily as papa's' big touring car. It is one of those magnificent Christmas gifts whose practicability for road use raises them beyond the level of mere, toys and makes Santa Claus look like a captain of industry. He Is relatively as munificent to the son of some clerk on one of the Gould railroads, who, in the light of his iather's modest Income, receives a gift even more gener ates In the form of the foot treadle auto. It may cost enly IS, against the children's real machine worth JSOO; but the gorgeousness is there in a higher proportion than that In which the millionaire employer indulges his family Santa and himself. There are rich men's children here who have received whole railroads as Christmas gifts, not the rolling stock and miles of tracks In which their parents act as direct- ' ors, but railroads in miniature and. not nearly so small is rt 1 iT JOW'-iSW" A. 3(3 of;'' srV fir' ft V ' tl 7,' -a si,fc 7? 'A 4 1 ii t if- vk" 'A K if h days. One hostess decided that the animated dinner would come pretty close to satisfying eyes that are always bigger than stomachs; and she tried it, with supreme success. So the animated dinner has become popular. On the table the originator of the idea set an enor mous papier mache turkey, in which was the roast turkey of toothsome reality; an enormous plum pudding, big enough for a regiment, and containing the real pudding that was to be eaten; and all the other viands, on a scale proportionate. Then she provided bonbons big enough for a child to walk In; Christmas stockings, filled with gifts, that would have fitted the famous seven-league boots of tbs it, and of familiarising them with the practical working of the calling for which it was intended they should be qualified as men. The doll's house, that edifice dear to the soul of every girl and next in her affections to tho doll Itself, has been made the prototype of a Christmas gift so costly that only a mansion occupied by people of the wealthier class could vie with it in outlay. There have been dolls' houses which were large enough and substantial enough 'to admit the doll's own little mother in all their apartments, with furnishings of the utmost splendor made to a corresponding scale in sire, while the grounds around them, laid out on the paternal acres, were parked and terraced with as much skill as though the whole human family expected to be suddenly dwarfed into HU'iputian stature and must re move forthwith into the residence Santa had provided for Yuletide. It has been some time since New York welcomed Its pioneer Christmas plays, those trade adventures In the socialism of amusement; but American childhood has taken to the delights of the theater with all the xest it puts Into a diversion that Is supremely splendid. TAKING LESSONS FROM ENGLAND That is only one feature of the broader, more gor geous Christmas brought by these later years to the pleasuring of Uncle Sam's young ones. The children's party is growing into the dignity of an American social institution, a function" that has about it as much of the form and ceremony as the ambitious elders feel they dare load upon a rising generation already more than amply sophisticated. It is here to stay, an illuminating sign of the added measure of enjoyment which Santa Claus. by reason of his steadily increased munificence, is called upon to provide.. . i...H?Iei hwYfT' Africa is only taking apprentice Yu'etldo pleasu,res from England, where, for y'a, y'ar"i the Christmas festivities have been ceMmonfal completely ordered as aourt ..J,HKi,E?n,1., L eJ?M cou,a Imagine Christmas coming sround without the Christmas pantomime. The traditions. ih.rV... TZ noary wan legends of the marvels I'M PA0&0mi fir in) M)j i Mmsm 13 ,2jJx-j:Mtx .1 ago. The traditions of those Jovial rides linger far less splendidly in this country than in England. They managed it better there, for in those days we were Bttll the raw and poor pioneers, .who put up with our crude realities, and drew our romance from abroad. The Liverpool coach, the Chester coach, the Chel tenham coach, the Norwich coach all the famous, futile apologies for adequate transportation which in clement England held in those times before steam had worked out its destiny played a part in Christmas cheer they never can play again. And when the long, adventurous miles traversed at last with their desperate chances of snowdrift and, flood the Christmas guest descended at the crossroads., he was driven to manor house or country home, where the struggle against the elements still went on by night as well as day. No hot-water or steam pfpes left the open fireplace or the glowing grate to lag superfluous in room and hall. They had Ao glow ana roar, or everybody froze to death. It was glorious, but was it comfort? Surely not as we know our comforts, with the mistress of the house ready to discharge the man-of-all-work if the ther mometer in the tiled bathroom shows one degree below or above the sacred 70. : 1 Some of the cheeriest of Christmas traditions linger about those old stage coaching days, when tha end of a Journey was never in sight,' figuratively and liter ally, until the lumbering coach drew up at its destine tlon. But there were as merry Chrlstmases after thost trips through storm and snowdrifts as have ever been enjoyed since. . JtW as one would imagine should be the sise of a Christmas thThitvb1en,rrougnt. forf the flight f childhood, toy. , ' tal flf; i Au V a real a,rjr ta,e- -vnd lways a fairy PyL ... .. . ?i.?r 5? " .to the pantomime in London, at Those railroads have hat locomotives that . ware equipped with the boiler and tender and ail the mechan ical construction precisely like the huge monsters that draw the private cars of their elders in the family. The fift served the double, purpose ot supplying the Christ mas toy most ardently desired by tha bojsj who wanted Christmas; and there must be neither hread nor honn in InAf.0"" that cannot muster, the) price of some sort of In i past! pantomime before the Joyous season .JlJ?iri, ,,efnd dear to childhood, have been presented in Christmas pantomime there, during turntsd, with the handnomu fairies they elooed with later from "Little Julss Muflett," as gray old grandfathers escorting the fairies' grandchildren to the newest, most magnificent, most gorgeous, most marvelous, most spec tacular pantomime, entitled "Babes In the Wood." There, tq be strictly honest about it. is the true origin of the "Christmas play" on this side of the At lantic, which we imitators hava been making such an enthusiastic fuss about. It is the same with our children's Christmas parties. We are only following the English, with whom, since the middle age of Queen Victoria, the exaltation of the child and the child's interests has been an increasing fad. - " . It used to be that, on' Christmas Eve, a simple children's party, with a sufficient "refreshment" in the way of cakes, candy and lemonade, was all that was planned, and all that was expected by the children them selves. In those houses where unusual wealth does not exist, and : in those where children are still held to the old rule of some degree of repression, the Christmas Eve dance is regarded as enough in the way of relaxation and (un. ,." X '' ' ' . . " A . ' ' fairy tale; knives and forks und spoons that might' have been used by uie giant Fi-Fo-Fum. The head of the house garbed himself as good old Santa, some of the children were inserted in the bon bons, others were given the huge cutlery to carry, and others the stockings; and all. in Joyous procession, wended their way to the 3robdignagian table, there to enjoy the feact. The wealthy English child learns early the office ot charity, for there the Kiving of dole gracetully Is deemed part of the responsibilities of riches. Perhaps a little less avid aeisure of the wealth in the first place, and a little more regard for the claims of the poor might work better, aa making charity less needful: but those proposals are grim , socialism and. nasty revolution, out of place at Christmas time, when every one makes the best of what he has. And surely no poop waifs of the street, no Unsentl- : mental Tommies arid practical Grizels from the aNeyl ... 1 of London today will look In the mouth of the fascinat , ing gift horse and the rheautlfuT doll that the daughter of the rich spares to them from her paradise beyond. V ' After all. end afteV all:' it- is that infinitely sweet spirit of Christmas prsent which holds the whole world dfeasts for IRoigalt ; m w m vulju you u.e to mauigs in 'oval Christmas this VsV yr? It's far easier than jvu aiuKsmv tna ir immM expensive. First, put away from you the toothsome thought of the Christmas turkey. "Royal blrdr Tutl The royal bird is only and al ways the swan. i Call your young swan a cygnet, and you hays the royal Christmas dinner of, the king of England,' duly guaranteed by law and cus tom that date back to the ancient days when all game was royal perquisite, and mivhtv faw crftml thin, vS tn earth and waters escaped the royal teeth.; This year, at this time, the "king's swanmaster is directing the slaughter of thirty young swans, or cygnets, from among the royal birds, marked with the royal double diamond, that help to lend plctur esqueness to the Thames from Souihwark bridge u to Henley. They weigh from fifteen to twenty pound-, and are forwarded to Sandringham palace for tha' fitting fcYth of the royal Christmas table, as it is by royal precedent prescribed. All told. King Edward t thus supplied with between 500 and 00 pounds p? swan flesh, the royal delicacy par excellence durl centuries past. . , Many of the birds he sends, in his turn, to mcmbts of his immediate family. The rest go to his personal friends, to whom t receipt of a royal cygnet la the highest mark -f t royal favor. It Is at those tables, far m.,r tlia,i the rulers Christmas dinner, that the swan U m , highly, esteemed, for. to dine off royal swnn at ThrH- mastlde is almost equivalent to dlnlnir with r,JV,4 ,,, The ownership of the few swans now i , Thames Is'shared by the anrient ami liont.r W t '' -Company and the eqwally anctont and h'nrai-,i vs.. ners' Company, permission to keep rvKiu ti nr. i , stream having been a in on r the fmi.in ei.M i . -,t that made their forerunners in dyeing nn.i w) , , grandly loyal to the crown.