only it was splendidly lighted up with Christmas candles. I saw the 
babies were slyly eating a candy or two, so I tasted mine, and they were 
delicious--the real Christmas kind. After we had gone a little way, the
trees were smaller and not so close together, and here there were other 
funny little fellows who were climbing up on ladders and tying toys 
and bon-bons to the trees. The children stopped and delivered their 
packages, but I walked on, for there was something in the distance that 
I was curious to see. I could see that it was a large garden, that looked 
as if it might be well cared for, and had many things growing in it. But 
even in the distance it didn't look natural, and when I reached it I found 
it was a very uncommon kind of a garden indeed. I could scarcely 
believe my eyes, but there were dolls and donkeys and drays and cars 
and croquet coming up in long, straight rows, and ever so many other 
things beside. In one place the wooden dolls had only just started; their 
funny little heads were just above ground, and I thought they looked 
very much surprised at their surroundings. Farther on were china dolls, 
that looked quite grown up, and I suppose were ready to pull; and a 
gardener was hoeing a row of soldiers that didn't look in a very healthy 
condition, or as if they had done very well. 
"The gardener looked familiar, I thought, and as I approached him he 
stopped work and, leaning on his hoe he said, 'How do you do, Lilian? I 
am very glad to see you.' 
"The moment he raised his face I knew it was Santa Claus, for he 
looked exactly like the portrait we have of him. You can easily believe 
I was glad then! I ran and put both of my hands in his, fairly shouting 
that I was so glad to find him. 
"He laughed and said: 
"'Why, I am generally to be found here or hereabouts, for I work in the 
grounds every day.' 
"And I laughed too, because his laugh sounded so funny; like the brook 
going over stones, and the wind up in the trees. Two or three times, 
when I thought he had done he would burst out again, laughing the 
vowels in this way: 'Ha, ha, ha, ha! He, he, he, he, he! Hi, hi, hi, hi, hi! 
Ho, ho, ho, h-o-oo!'" 
Lill did it very well, and Effie laughed till the tears came to her eyes;
and she could quite believe Lill when she said, "It grew to be so funny 
that I couldn't stand, but fell over into one of the little chairs that were 
growing in a bed just beyond the soldiers. 
"When Santa Claus saw that he stopped suddenly, saying: 
"'There, that will do. I take a hearty laugh every day, for the sake of 
digestion.' 
"Then he added, in a whisper, 'That is the reason I live so long and 
don't grow old. I've been the same age ever since the chroniclers began 
to take notes, and those who are best able to judge think I'll continue to 
be this way for about one thousand eight hundred and seventy-six years 
longer,--they probably took a new observation at the Centennial, and 
they know exactly.' 
"I was greatly delighted to hear this, and I told him so. He nodded and 
winked and said it was 'all right,' and then asked if I'd like to see the 
place. I said I would, so he threw down the hoe with a sigh, saying, 'I 
don't believe I shall have more than half a crop of soldiers this season. 
They came up well, but the arms and legs seem to be weak. When I get 
to town I'll have to send out some girls with glue pots, to stick them 
fast.' 
"The town was at some distance, and our path took us by flower-beds 
where some exquisite little toys were growing, and a hot-bed where 
new varieties were being prop--propagated. Pretty soon we came to a 
plantation of young trees, with rattles, and rubber balls, and ivory rings 
growing on the branches, and as we went past they rang and bounded 
about in the merriest sort of a way. 
"'There's a nice growth,' said Santa Claus, and it was a nice growth for 
babies; but just beyond I saw something so perfectly splendid that I 
didn't care about the plantation." 
"Well," said Lill impressively, seeing that Effie was sufficiently 
expectant, "It was a lovely grove. The trees were large, with long 
drooping branches, and the branches were just loaded with dolls'
clothes. There were elegant silk dresses, with lovely sashes of every 
color--" 
Just here Effie couldn't help saying "O!"    
    
		
	
	
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