<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII" />CHAPTER VII</h2>
<p>Livingstone, at this moment, was not feeling as wealthy as the row of
figures in clean-cut lines that were now beginning to be almost
constantly before his eyes might have seemed to warrant. He was sitting
sunk deep in his cushioned arm-chair. The tweaks in his forehead that
had annoyed him earlier in the evening had changed to twinges, and the
twinges had now given place to a dull, steady ache. And every thought of
his wealth brought that picture of seven staring figures before his
eyes, whilst, in place of the glow which they had brought at first, he
now at every recollection of them had a cold thrill of apprehension lest
they might appear.</p>
<p>James's inquiry, "Shall you be dining at home to-morrow?" had recurred
to him and now disturbed him. It was a simple question; nothing
remarkable in it. It now came to him that to-morrow was Christmas Day,
and he had forgotten it. This was remarkable. He had never forgotten it
before, but this year he had been working so hard and had been so
engrossed he had not thought of it. Even this reflection brought the
spectral figures back sharply outlined before his eyes. They stayed
longer now. He must think of something else.</p>
<p>He thought of Christmas. This was the first Christmas he had ever been
at home by himself. A Christmas dinner alone! Who had ever heard of such
a thing! He must go out to dinner, of course. He glanced over at his
table where James always put his mail. Everything was in perfect order:
the book he had read the night before; the evening paper and the last
financial quotation were all there; but not a letter. James must have
forgot them.</p>
<p>He turned to rise and ring the bell and glanced across the room towards
it. What a dark room it was! What miserable gas!</p>
<p>He turned up the light at his hand. It did not help perceptibly. He sank
back. What selfish dogs people were, he reflected. Of all the hosts of
people he knew,—people who had entertained him and whom he had
entertained,—not one had thought to invite him to the Christmas dinner.
A dozen families at whose houses he had often been entertained flashed
across his mind. Why, years ago he used to have a half-dozen invitations
to Christmas dinner, and now he had not one! Even Mrs. Wright, to whom
he had just sent a contribution for—Hello! that lantern-slide again! It
would not do to think of figures.—Even she had not thought of him.</p>
<p>There must be some reason? he pondered. Yes, Christmas dinners were
always family reunions—that was the reason he was left out and
forgotten;—yes, forgotten. A list of the people who he knew would have
such reunions came to him; almost every one of his acquaintances had a
family;—even Clark had a family and would have a Christmas dinner.</p>
<p>At the thought, a pang almost of envy of Clark smote him.</p>
<p>Suddenly his own house seemed to grow vast and empty and lonely; he felt
perfectly desolate,—abandoned—alone—ill! He glanced around at his
pictures. They were cold, staring, stony, dead! The reflection of the
cross lights made them look ghastly.</p>
<p>As he gazed at them the figures they had cost shot before his eyes. My
God! he could not stand this! He sprang to his feet. Even the pain of
getting up was a relief. He stared around him. Dead silence and stony
faces were all about him. The capacious room seemed a vast, empty
cavern, and as he stood he saw stretching before him his whole future
life spent in this house, as lonely, silent, and desolate as this. It
was unbearable.</p>
<p>He walked through to his drawing-room. The furniture was sheeted, the
room colder and lonelier a thousand-fold than the other;—on into the
dining-room;—the bare table in the dim light looked like ice; the
sideboard with its silver and glass, bore sheets of ice. "Pshaw!" He
turned up the lights. He would take a drink of brandy and go to bed.</p>
<p>He took a decanter, poured out a drink and drained it off. His hand
trembled, but the stimulant helped him a little. It enabled him to
collect his ideas and think. But his thoughts still ran on Christmas and
his loneliness.</p>
<p>Why should not he give a Christmas dinner and invite his friends? Yes,
that was what he would do. Whom should he ask? His mind began to run
over the list. Every one he knew had his own house; and as to
friends—why, he didn't have any friends! He had only acquaintances. He
stopped suddenly, appalled by the fact. He had not a friend in the
world! Why was it? In answer to the thought the seven figures flashed
into sight. He put his hand to his eyes to shut them out. He knew now
why. He had been too busy to make friends. He had given his youth and
his middle manhood to accumulate—those seven figures again!—And he had
given up his friendships. He was now almost aged.</p>
<p>He walked into his drawing-room and turned up the light—all the lights
to look at himself in a big mirror. He did look at himself and he was
confounded. He was not only no longer young—he was prepared for
this—but he was old. He would not have dreamed he could be so old. He
was gray and wrinkled.</p>
<p>As he faced himself his blood seemed suddenly to chill. He was conscious
of a sensible ebb as if the tide about his heart had suddenly sunk
lower. Perhaps, it was the cooling of the atmosphere as the fire in his
library died out,—or was it his blood?</p>
<p>He went back into his library not ten minutes, but ten years older than
when he left it.</p>
<p>He sank into his chair and insensibly began to scan his life. He had
just seen himself as he was; he now saw himself as he had been long ago,
and saw how he had become what he was. The whole past lay before him
like a slanting pathway.</p>
<p>He followed it back to where it began—in an old home far off in the
country.</p>
<p>He was a very little boy. All about was the bustle and stir of
preparation for Christmas. Cheer was in every face, for it was in every
heart. Boxes were coming from the city by every conveyance. The
store-room and closets were centres of unspeakable interest, shrouded in
delightful mystery. The kitchen was lighted by the roaring fire and
steaming from the numberless good things preparing for the next day's
feast. Friends were arriving from the distant railway and were greeted
with universal delight. The very rigor of the weather was deemed a part
of the Christmas joy, for it was known that Santa Claus with his
jingling sleigh came the better through the deeper snow. Everything gave
the little boy joy, particularly going with his father and mother to
bear good things to poor people who lived in smaller houses. They were
always giving; but Christmas was the season for a more general and
generous distribution. He recalled across forty years his father and
mother putting the presents into his hands to bestow, and his father's
words, "My boy, learn the pleasure of giving."</p>
<p>The rest was all blaze and light and glow, and his father and mother
moving about like shining spirits amid it all.</p>
<p>Then he was a schoolboy, measuring the lagging time by the coming
Christmas; counting the weeks, the days, the hours in an ecstasy of
impatience until he should be free from the drudgery of books and the
slavery of classes, and should be able to start for home with the
friends who had leave to go with him. How slowly the time crept by, and
how he told the other boys of the joys that would await them! And when
it had really gone, and they were free! how delicious it used to be!</p>
<p>As the scene appeared before him Livingstone could almost feel again the
thrill that set him quivering with delight; the boundless joy that
filled his veins as with an elixir.</p>
<p>The arrival at the station drifted before him and the pride of his
introduction of the servants whose faces shone with pleasure; the drive
home through the snow, which used somehow to be warming, not chilling,
in those days; and then, through the growing dusk, the first sight of
the home-light, set, he knew, by the mother in her window as a beacon
shining from the home and mother's heart. Then the last, toilsome climb
up the home-hill and the outpouring of welcome amid cheers and shouts
and laughter.</p>
<p>Oh, the joy of that time! And through all the festivity was felt, like a
sort of pervading warmth, the fact that that day Christ came into the
world and brought peace and good will and cheer to every one.</p>
<p>The boy Livingstone saw was now installed regularly as the bearer of
Christmas presents and good things to the poor, and the pleasure he took
then in his office flashed across Livingstone's mind like a sudden
light. It lit up the faces of many whom Livingstone had not thought of
for years. They were all beaming on him now with a kindliness to which
he had long been a stranger; that kindliness which belongs only to our
memory of our youth.</p>
<p>Was it possible that he could ever have had so many friends! The man in
the chair put his hand to his eyes to try and hold the beautiful vision,
but it faded away, shut out from view by another.</p>
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