About This Book
The narrator receives a child's question about whether Santa Claus exists and reflects on Christmas generosity during a winter journey. He describes festive scenes on trains and in public offices, a visit to the presidential residence where the leader and his wife send a comforting cable to the narrator's ill mother and authorize compassionate acts, and encounters that reveal private gifts, public charity, and small personal sacrifices—a banker's large donation and a widow's modest savings earmarked to help poor children. He concludes that Santa Claus survives as the spirit of giving and recommends sending a friendly thought for someone one dislikes as the truest stamp of charity.
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