The Golden Cobwebs
From the telling of katlaughing
Here is the story my grandma always read to us at Chritsmastime; then my mom, then I read it to my kids, and am now making a tape for my grandsons. It is from a precious book my grandma used as a schoolteacher in the early 1900's, called How to Tell Stories to Children by Sara Cone Bryant. Last time I was at www.bibliofind.com, they had several editions and copies available. I can't remember, but I think a version of this may have a fairly recent copyright. The book I am quoting the story from was published in 1905. My grandma gave me her copy when I was only 8 years old, and it has remained a treasured possession. It has many favourite stories in it, including Why the Sea is Salt; Billy Beg and his Bull; Raggylug; The Story of Wylie; and, Fulfilled: A Legend of Christmas, as well as many others. I can still hear my grandma's voice, holding us spellbound as she read this with great Victorian drama and authority. Here, then, is:
The Golden Cobwebs: A story to tell by the Christmas tree
Author's note: This story was told me in the mother-tongue of a German
friend, at the kindly instance of a common friend of both; the narrator had
heard it at home from the lips of a father of story-loving children for whom he
often invented such little tales. The present adaptation has passed by hearsay
through so many minds that it is perhaps little like the original, but I venture
to hope it has a touch of the original fancy, at least.
I am going to tell you a story about a something that happened to a Christmas
tree like this; ever and ever so long ago, when it was once upon a time.
It was before Christmas, and the tree was all trimmed with pop-corn (sic) and
silver nuts and (name the trimmings of the tree before you), and stood safely
out of sight in a room where the doors were locked, so that the children
should not see it before it was time. But ever so many other little
house-people had seen it. The big black pussy saw it with her great green
eyes; the little gray kitty saw it with her little blue eyes; the kind house dog
saw it with his steady brown eyes; the yellow canary saw it with his wise,
bright eyes, Even the wee, wee mice that were so afraid of the cat had peeped
one peek when no one was by.
But there was some one who hadn't see the Christmas tree. It was the little
gray spider!
You see, the spiders lived in the corners -- the corners of the sunny attic and
the dark corners of the nice cellar. And they were expecting to see the
Christmas Tree as much as anybody. But just before Christmas a great
cleaning-up began in the house. The house-mother came sweeping and
dusting and wiping and scrubbing, to make everything grand and clean for the
Christ-child's birthday. Her broom went into all the corners, poke, poke -- and
of course the spiders had to run. Dear, dear, HOW the spiders had to run! Not
one could stay in the house while the Christmas cleanness lasted. So, you see,
they couldn't see the Christmas Tree.
Spiders like to know all about everything, and see all there is to see, and they
were very sad. So at last they went to the Christ-child and told him all about
it.
"All the others see the Christmas Tree, dear Christ-child," they said; "but we,
who are so domestic and so fond of beautiful things, we are cleaned UP!
We cannot see it, at all."
The Christ-child was sorry for the little spiders when he heard this, and he
said they should see the Christmas Tree.
The day before Christmas, when nobody was noticing, he let them all go in,
to look as long as ever they liked.
They came creepy, creepy, down the attic stairs, creepy, creepy, up the cellar
stairs, creepy, creepy, along the halls, -- and into the beautiful room. The fat
mother spiders and the old papa spiders were there, and all the little teenty,
tonty, curly spiders, the baby ones. And then they looked! Round and round
the tree they crawled, and looked and looked. Oh, what a good time they had!
They thought it was perfectly beautiful. And when they had looked at
everything they could see from the floor they started up the tree to see more.
All over the tree they ran, creepy, crawly, looking at every single thing. Up
and down, in and out, over every branch and twig, the little spiders ran, and
saw every one of the pretty things up close.
They stayed till they had seen all there was to see, you may sure, and then
they went away at last quite happy.
Then, in the still, dark night before Christmas Day, the dear Christ-child
came, to bless the tree for the children. But when he looked at it --what do
you suppose? -- it was covered with cobwebs! Everywhere the little spiders
had been they had left a spider-web; and you know they had been just
everywhere. So the tree was covered from its trunk to its tip with
spider-webs, all hanging from the branches and looped around the twigs; it
was a strange sight.
What could the Christ-child do? He knew house-mothers do not like
cobwebs; it would never, never do to have a Christmas Tree covered with
those. No, indeed.
So the dear Christ-child touched the spiders' webs and turned them all to
gold! Wasn't that a lovely trimming? They shone and shone, all over the
beautiful tree. And that is the way the Christmas Tress came to have golden
cobwebs on it.
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