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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">XI</span></h2>
<p id="p0214"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">During</span></span> the week
before Christmas, Jake was the most important person of our household,
for he was to go to town and do all our Christmas shopping. But on the
21st of December, the snow began to fall. The flakes came down so
thickly that from the sitting-room windows I could not see beyond the
windmill—its frame looked dim and gray, unsubstantial like a
shadow. The snow did not stop falling all day, or during the night
that followed. The cold was not severe, but the storm was quiet and
resistless. The men could not go farther than the barns and corral.
They sat about the house most of the day as if it were Sunday;
greasing their boots, mending their suspenders, plaiting
whiplashes.</p>
<p id="p0215">On the morning of the 22d, grandfather announced at
breakfast that it would be impossible to go to Black Hawk for
Christmas purchases. Jake was sure he could get through on horseback,
and bring home our things in saddle-bags; but grandfather told him the
roads would be obliterated, and a newcomer
in the country would be lost ten times over. Anyway, he would never
allow one of his horses to be put to such a strain.</p>
<p id="p0216">We decided to have a country Christmas, without any
help from town. I had wanted to get some picture-books for Yulka and
Ántonia; even Yulka was able to read a little now. Grandmother
took me into the ice-cold storeroom, where she had some bolts of
gingham and sheeting. She cut squares of cotton cloth and we sewed
them together into a book. We bound it between pasteboards, which I
covered with brilliant calico, representing scenes from a circus. For
two days I sat at the dining-room table, pasting this book full of
pictures for Yulka. We had files of those good old family magazines
which used to publish colored lithographs of popular paintings, and I
was allowed to use some of these. I took “Napoleon Announcing
the Divorce to Josephine” for my frontispiece. On the white
pages I grouped Sunday-School cards and advertising cards which I had
brought from my “old country.” Fuchs got out the old
candle-moulds and made tallow candles. Grandmother hunted up her fancy
cake-cutters and baked gingerbread men and roosters,
which we decorated with burnt sugar and red cinnamon drops.</p>
<p id="p0217">On the day before Christmas, Jake packed the things
we were sending to the Shimerdas in his saddle-bags and set off on
grandfather’s gray gelding. When he mounted his horse at the
door, I saw that he had a hatchet slung to his belt, and he gave
grandmother a meaning look which told me he was planning a surprise
for me. That afternoon I watched long and eagerly from the
sitting-room window. At last I saw a dark spot moving on the west
hill, beside the half-buried cornfield, where the sky was taking on a
coppery flush from the sun that did not quite break through. I put on
my cap and ran out to meet Jake. When I got to the pond I could see
that he was bringing in a little cedar tree across his pommel. He used
to help my father cut Christmas trees for me in Virginia, and he had
not forgotten how much I liked them.</p>
<p id="p0218">By the time we had placed the cold, fresh-smelling
little tree in a corner of the sitting-room, it was already Christmas
Eve. After supper we all gathered there, and even grandfather, reading
his paper by the table, looked up with friendly interest now and then.
The cedar was about five feet high and very shapely. We hung it with
the gingerbread animals, strings of popcorn, and bits of candle which
Fuchs had fitted into pasteboard sockets. Its real splendors, however,
came from the most unlikely place in the world—from
Otto’s cowboy trunk. I had never seen anything in that trunk but
old boots and spurs and pistols, and a fascinating mixture of yellow
leather thongs, cartridges, and shoemaker’s wax. From under the
lining he now produced a collection of brilliantly colored paper
figures, several inches high and stiff enough to stand alone. They had
been sent to him year after year, by his old mother in Austria. There
was a bleeding heart, in tufts of paper lace; there were the three
kings, gorgeously appareled, and the ox and the ass and the shepherds;
there was the Baby in the manger, and a group of angels, singing;
there were camels and leopards, held by the black slaves of the three
kings. Our tree became the talking tree of the fairy tale; legends and
stories nestled like birds in its branches. Grandmother said it
reminded her of the Tree of Knowledge. We put sheets of cotton wool
under it for a snow-field, and Jake’s pocket-mirror for a frozen
lake.</p>
<p id="p0219">I can see them now, exactly as they looked, working
about the table in the lamplight: Jake with his heavy features, so
rudely moulded that his face seemed, somehow, unfinished; Otto with
his half-ear and the savage scar that made his upper lip curl so
ferociously under his twisted mustache. As I remember them, what
unprotected faces they were; their very roughness and violence made
them defenseless. These boys had no practiced manner behind which they
could retreat and hold people at a distance. They had only their hard
fists to batter at the world with. Otto was already one of those
drifting, case-hardened laborers who never marry or have children of
their own. Yet he was so fond of children!</p>
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