“Dear Mr. Riis:
“A little chap of six on the
Western frontier writes to us:
“’Will
you please tell me if there is a Santa
Claus?
Papa says not.’
“Won’t you answer him?”
That was the message that came to
me from an editor last December just as I was going
on a journey. Why he sent it to me I don’t
know. Perhaps it was because, when I was a little
chap, my home was way up toward that white north where
even the little boys ride in sleds behind reindeer,
as they are the only horses they have. Perhaps
it was because when I was a young lad I knew Hans
Christian Andersen, who surely ought to know, and
spoke his tongue. Perhaps it was both. I
will ask the editor when I see him. Meanwhile,
here was his letter, with Christmas right at the door,
and, as I said, I was going on a journey.
I buttoned it up in my great coat
along with a lot of other letters I didn’t have
time to read, and I thought as I went to the depot
what a pity it was that my little friend’s papa
should have forgotten about Santa Claus. We big
people do forget the strangest way, and then we haven’t
got a bit of a good time any more.
No Santa Claus! If you had
asked that car full of people I would have liked to
hear the answers they would have given you. No
Santa Claus! Why, there was scarce a man in the
lot who didn’t carry a bundle that looked as
if it had just tumbled out of his sleigh. I felt
of one slyly, and it was a boy’s sled a
“flexible flyer,” I know, because he left
one at our house the Christmas before; and I distinctly
heard the rattling of a pair of skates in that box
in the next seat. They were all good-natured,
every one, though the train was behind time that
is a sure sign of Christmas. The brakeman wore
a piece of mistletoe in his cap and a broad grin on
his face, and he said “Merry Christmas”
in a way to make a man feel good all the rest of the
day. No Santa Claus, is there? You just
ask him!
And then the train rolled into the
city under the big gray dome to which George Washington
gave his name, and by-and-by I went through a doorway
which all American boys would rather see than go to
school a whole week, though they love their teacher
dearly. It is true that last winter my own little
lad told the kind man whose house it is that he would
rather ride up and down in the elevator at the hotel,
but that was because he was so very little at the
time and didn’t know things rightly, and, besides,
it was his first experience with an elevator.
As I was saying, I went through the
door into a beautiful white hall with lofty pillars,
between which there were regular banks of holly with
the red berries shining through, just as if it were
out in the woods! And from behind one of them
there came the merriest laugh you could ever think
of. Do you think, now, it was that letter in my
pocket that gave that guilty little throb against
my heart when I heard it, or what could it have been?
I hadn’t even time to ask myself the question,
for there stood my host all framed in holly, and with
the heartiest handclasp.
“Come in,” he said, and
drew me after. “The coffee is waiting.”
And he beamed upon the table with the veriest Christmas
face as he poured it out himself, one cup for his
dear wife and one for me. The children ah!
you should have asked them if there was a Santa
Claus!
And so we sat and talked, and
I told my kind friends that my own dear old mother,
whom I have not seen for years, was very, very sick
in far-away Denmark and longing for her boy, and a
mist came into my hostess’s gentle eyes and
she said, “Let us cable over and tell her how
much we think of her,” though she had never seen
her. And it was no sooner said than done.
In came a man with a writing-pad, and while we drank
our coffee this message sped under the great stormy
sea to the far-away country where the day was shading
into evening already though the sun was scarce two
hours high in Washington:
Thewhite house.
Mrs. Riis, Ribe, Denmark:
Your son is breakfasting
with us. We send you our
love and sympathy.
Theodoreand Edith Roosevelt
For, you see, the house with the holly
in the hall was the White House, and my host was the
President of the United States. I have to tell
it to you, or you might easily fall into the same
error I came near falling into. I had to pinch
myself to make sure the President was not Santa Claus
himself. I felt that he had in that moment given
me the very greatest Christmas gift any man ever received:
my little mother’s life. For really what
ailed her was that she was very old, and I know that
when she got the President’s dispatch she must
have become immediately ten years younger and got
right out of bed. Don’t you know mothers
are that way when any one makes much of their boys?
I think Santa Claus must have brought them all in
the beginning the mothers, I mean.
I would just give anything to see
what happened in that old town that is full of blessed
memories to me, when the telegraph ticked off that
message. I will warrant the town hurried out,
burgomaster, bishop, beadle and all, to do honor to
my gentle old mother. No Santa Claus, eh?
What was that, then, that spanned two oceans with a
breath of love and cheer, I should like to know.
Tell me that!
After the coffee we sat together in
the President’s office for a little while while
he signed commissions, each and every one of which
was just Santa Claus’s gift to a grown-up boy
who had been good in the year that was going; and
before we parted the President had lifted with so many
strokes of his pen clouds of sorrow and want that weighed
heavily on homes I knew of to which Santa Claus had
had hard work finding his way that Christmas.
It seemed to me as I went out of the
door, where the big policeman touched his hat and
wished me a Merry Christmas, that the sun never shone
so brightly in May as it did then. I quite expected
to see the crocuses and the jonquils, that make the
White House garden so pretty, out in full bloom.
They were not, I suppose, only because they are official
flowers and have a proper respect for the calendar
that runs Congress and the Executive Department, too.
I stopped on the way down the avenue
at Uncle Sam’s paymaster’s to see what
he thought of it. And there he was, busy as could
be, making ready for the coming of Santa Claus.
No need of my asking any questions here. Men
stood in line with bank-notes in their hands asking
for gold, new gold-pieces, they said, most every one.
The paymaster, who had a sprig of Christmas green
fixed in his desk just like any other man, laughed
and shook his head and said “Santa Claus?”
and the men in the line laughed too and nodded and
went away with their old.
One man who went out just ahead
of me I saw stoop over a poor woman on the corner
and thrust something into her hand, then walk hastily
away. It was I who caught the light in the woman’s
eye and the blessing upon her poor wan lips, and the
grass seemed greener in the Treasury dooryard, and
the sky bluer than it had been before, even on that
bright day. Perhaps well, never mind!
if any one says anything to you about principles and
giving alms, you tell him that Santa Claus takes care
of the principles at Christmas, and not to be afraid.
As for him, if you want to know, just ask the old
woman on the Treasury corner.
And so, walking down that Avenue of
Good-will, I came to my train again and went home.
And when I had time to think it all over I remembered
the letters in my pocket which I had not opened.
I took them out and read them, and among them were
two sent to me in trust for Santa Claus himself which
I had to lay away with the editor’s message until
I got the dew rubbed off my spectacles. One was
from a great banker, and it contained a check for
a thousand dollars to help buy a home for some poor
children of the East Side tenements in New York, where
the chimneys are so small and mean that scarce even
a letter will go up through them, so that ever so
many little ones over there never get on Santa Claus’s
books at all.
The other letter was from a lonely
old widow, almost as old as my dear mother in Denmark,
and it contained a two-dollar bill. For years,
she wrote, she had saved and saved, hoping some time
to have five dollars, and then she would go with me
to the homes of the very poor and be Santa Claus herself.
“And wherever you decided it was right to leave
a trifle, that should be the place where it would
be left,” read the letter. But now she
was so old that she could no longer think of such a
trip and so she sent the money she had saved.
And I thought of a family in one of those tenements
where father and mother are both lying ill, with a
boy, who ought to be in school, fighting all alone
to keep the wolf from the door, and winning the fight.
I guess he has been too busy to send any message up
the chimney, if indeed there is one in his house; but
you ask him, right now, whether he thinks there is
a Santa Claus or not.
No Santa Claus? Yes, my
little man, there is a Santa Claus, thank God!
Your father had just forgotten. The world would
indeed be poor without one. It is true that he
does not always wear a white beard and drive a reindeer
team not always, you know but
what does it matter? He is Santa Claus with the
big, loving, Christmas heart, for all that; Santa
Claus with the kind thoughts for every one that make
children and grown-up people beam with happiness all
day long. And shall I tell you a secret which
I did not learn at the post-office, but it is true
all the same of how you can always be sure
your letters go to him straight by the chimney route?
It is this: send along with them a friendly thought
for the boy you don’t like: for Jack who
punched you, or Jim who was mean to you. The
meaner he was the harder do you resolve to make it
up: not to bear him a grudge. That is the
stamp for the letter to Santa. Nobody can stop
it, not even a cross-draught in the chimney, when it
has that on.
Because don’t you
know, Santa Claus is the spirit of Christmas:
and ever and ever so many years ago when the dear
little Baby was born after whom we call Christmas,
and was cradled in a manger out in the stable because
there was not room in the inn, that Spirit came into
the world to soften the hearts of men and make them
love one another. Therefore, that is the mark
of the Spirit to this day. Don’t let anybody
or anything rub it out. Then the rest doesn’t
matter. Let them tear Santa’s white beard
off at the Sunday-school festival and growl in his
bearskin coat. These are only his disguises.
The steps of the real Santa Claus you can trace all
through the world as you have done here with me, and
when you stand in the last of his tracks you will find
the Blessed Babe of Bethlehem smiling a welcome to
you. For then you will be home.