Lills Travels in Santa Claus Land | Page 3

Ella Farman
could want,
growing in the greatest profusion. Some of the clothes had fallen, and
there were funny-looking girls picking them up, and packing them in
trunks and boxes. 'These are all ripe,' said Santa Claus, stopping to
shake a tree, and the clothes came tumbling down so fast that the
workers were busier than ever. The grove was on a hill, so that we had
a beautiful view of the country. First there was a park filled with
reindeer, and beyond that was the town, and at one side a large
farm-yard filled with animals of all sorts.
"But as Santa Claus seemed in a hurry I did not stop long to look. Our
path led through the park, and we stopped to call 'Prancer' and 'Dancer'
and 'Donder' and 'Blitzen,' and Santa Claus fed them with lumps of
sugar from his pocket. He pointed out 'Comet' and 'Cupid' in a distant
part of the park; 'Dasher' and 'Vixen' were nowhere to be seen.
"Here I found most of the houses were Swiss cottages, but there were
some fine churches and public buildings, all of beautifully illustrated
building blocks, and we stopped for a moment at a long depot, in which
a locomotive was just smashing up.
"Santa Claus' house stood in the middle of the town. It was an
old-fashioned looking house, very broad and low, with an enormous
chimney. There was a wide step in front of the door, shaded by a
fig-tree and grape-vine, and morning-glories and scarlet beans
clambered by the side of the latticed windows; and there were great
round rose-bushes, with great, round roses, on either side of the walk
leading to the door."
"O! it must have smelled like a party," said Effie, and then subsided, as
she remembered that she was interrupting.
"Inside, the house was just cozy and comfortable, a real grandfatherly
sort of a place. A big chair was drawn up in front of the window, and a
big book was open on a table in front of the chair. A great pack half
made up was on the floor, and Santa Claus stopped to add a few things
from his pocket. Then he went to the kitchen, and brought me a lunch
of milk and strawberries and cookies, for he said I must be tired after

my long walk.
"After I had rested a little while, he said if I liked I might go with him
to the observatory. But just as we were starting a funny little fellow
stopped at the door with a wheelbarrow full of boxes of dishes. After
Santa Claus had taken the boxes out and put them in the pack he said
slowly,--
"'Let me see!'
"He laid his finger beside his nose as he said it, and looked at me
attentively, as if I were a sum in addition, and he was adding me up. I
guess I must have come out right, for he looked satisfied, and said I'd
better go to the mine first, and then join him in the observatory. Now I
am afraid he was not exactly polite not to go with me himself," added
Lill, gravely, "but then he apologized by saying he had some work to
do. So I followed the little fellow with the wheelbarrow, and we soon
came to what looked like the entrance of a cave, but I suppose it was
the mine. I followed my guide to the interior without stopping to look
at the boxes and piles of dishes outside. Here I found other funny little
people, busily at work with picks and shovels, taking out wooden
dishes from the bottom of the cave, and china and glass from the top
and sides, for the dishes hung down just like stalactites in Mammoth
Cave."
Here Lill opened the book she had been reading, and showed Effie a
picture of the stalactites.
"It was so curious and so pretty that I should have remained longer,"
said Lill, "only I remembered the observatory and Santa Claus.
"When I went outside I heard his voice calling out, 'Lilian! Lilian!' It
sounded a great way off, and yet somehow it seemed to fill the air just
as the wind does. I only had to look for a moment, for very near by was
a high tower. I wonder I did not see it before; but in these queer
countries you are sure to see something new every time you look about.
Santa Claus was standing up at a window near the top, and I ran to the
entrance and commenced climbing the stairs. It was a long journey, and

I was quite out of breath when I came to the end of it. But here there
was such a cozy, luxurious little room, full of stuffed chairs and
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