The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Goblins' Christmas
Title: The Goblins' Christmas
Author: Elizabeth Anderson
Illustrator: Alexander Sharp
Release date: June 9, 2007 [eBook #21784]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Edwards, Jana Srna and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from scans of public domain material
produced by Microsoft for their Live Search Books site.)
THE GOBLINS' CHRISTMAS
Copyright, 1908, by M. E. Anderson
The Goblins' Christmas
By
Elizabeth Anderson
Illustrated by Alexander Sharp
Los Angeles
Segnogram Publishing Co.
1908
If a Goblin should continue angry he would take on some visible form. Perhaps he would become a toad or a squirrel, or some other little animal, and would have to live here on the Earth-plane forevermore. But, if he keeps good natured, he can come here and have his fun, and not be seen by any one except a Seer, or very wise person.
The Goblins are gracious to the wise people now, but they were not always so. A long, long time ago, on a Christmas-eve, the Fairy-folk were having great sport. All the little people of the Unseen-world had gathered together in the Earth-realm. There were Brownies, and Gnomes, and Elves;
Now this is the tale of "The Goblins' Christmas" that the moonbeams told, as they heard it from the Fairy-Queen, who declares that every word of it is perfectly true.
Illustrations.
| "Down the Milky way" | 17 |
| "The big black caldron" | 21 |
| "As through the air they flew" | 25 |
| "They climbed the sleigh" | 27 |
| "'Playthings rare,' he said" | 31 |
| "For his Christmas treat" | 41 |
| Preface | 6 |
| Presentation | 9 |
| Fairy Queen | 12 |
| Sprite and Toadstool | 18 |
| Boy and Rabbit | 35 |
| Witch with Broom | 37 |
| Elf and Spider | 38 |
To EARL and GEORGIA:
Who love the Fairies in the glade,
Who see them in the tangled grass
The Gnomes and Brownies, as they pass,
Who hear the Sprites from Elf-land call
Go, frolic with these Brownies small,
And join these merry sporting Elves,
But ever be your own sweet selves.
In a densely darkened sky;
The tall pines swayed, and mocked, and groaned;
The mountains grew so high
That the Man-in-the-Moon came out and said,
"Ho! Spooks, for a merry dance."
The winds blow hard, the caverns roar,
While o'er the earth they prance.
Out from the sky they sprung;
And down the milky way they slid,
And over a chasm swung.
The streams around ran witches' broth,
The fumes were strong and rank.
These Elfin creatures all were wroth,
While of the stuff they drank.
With a shrill and sneering jibe;
Her soul grew fat to see them chaffed,
This mad and elfish tribe.
The big black caldron boiled so high
With food for these queer mites,
That it lit the world throughout the sky,
And down came all the Sprites.
As through the air they flew:
It cringed in fear, and shot afar,
And fell where no one knew.
Orion's sword was broke in bits,
Corona's crown was gone,
Capella seemed to lose her wits,
While all so longed for dawn.
Of sleigh-bells ringing sweet;
Out of the chaos came a man—
Kris Kringle—for his Christmas treat.
"Ho! Kris!" they cried, "We'll have some fun,
We'll bind the old man down,
We'll tie him up, and toss him o'er
Into our Goblin-town."
To bind his hands and feet;
A hundred strong they clambered in
Our good old Kris to meet.
He sat quite still, with twinkling eyes,
Then seized his mystic wand,
He raised it up, and waved it round
Stilled was this chattering band.
Clad in elfish clothes;
Some were wax, and some were wood,
One had crushed his nose.
"Playthings rare," he said and smiled,
"For children rich and poor;
Some I'll leave the crippled child,
And some at the orphan's door."
To bear him swiftly on.
Full well it knew its Master's need
To hurry e'er the dawn.
From house to house they scampered down,
Their sleigh-bells ringing clear,
Through chimneys in the sleepy town—
Good Kris and his reindeer.
A tale so strange and queer.
They told how at night, in dire affright
The Moon had hid in fear.
Of spooks and witches gay,
Each Elfin child, by glee beguiled,
Brought scores of others, they say.
In a sled with a reindeer fleet;
They gathered about with din and shout,
To bind him hands and feet.
While he held his sides in mirth,
To see old Kris in a plight like this,
Toiling o'er the earth.
For Kris is a hero of old,
Yes, Kris is a seer; with his small reindeer,
He captured the Goblins bold.
To toys, for his Christmas cheer.
The big dolls stare with a goblin air,
The small ones cringe with fear.
Of hoofs on the chimney side;
Then out on the snow I gaze below,
"Hurrah! it's Kris Kringle," I cried.
And hung up his treasures so gay.
Then out with a dash, he sped like a flash,
Into the night, and away.