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oes round in endless abundance and laughter and song make interludes for the varied narratives. CONTENTS OF BOOK I. The Three Kings of Cologne _A modern version of an old English Chronicle._ _By Harrison S. Morris._ The Three Christmas Masses _From the French of Alphonse Daudet._ _By Harrison S. Morris._ A Russian Christmas Party[A] _By Count Leon Tolstoi._ Two Christmases _From the German of Georg Schuster._ A Tale of a Turkey _By Harrison S. Morris._ A Still Christmas[B] _By Agnes Repplier._ Thrond _From the Norwegian of Bjoernson._ Christmas in the Desert _By Matilda Betham Edwards._ [A] By courtesy of Messrs. W. S. Gottsberger & Co. [B] By courtesy of "The Catholic World." ILLUSTRATIONS, BOOK I. The Yule-log Glow Frontispiece. Sonia The Cavalier From France My Little Sister Mary _A Tale Spoken by a Graybeard Out of the East._ "Gracious powers! Perhaps you _are_ a hundred years old, now I think of it! You look more than a hundred. Yes, you may be a thousand years old for what I know." _Thackeray._ THE THREE KINGS OF COLOGNE. A CHRISTMAS TALE FROM AN OLD ENGLISH CHRONICLE. (Written by John of Hildesheim in the Fourteenth Century.) Here followeth the manner and form of seeking and offering; and also of the burying and translations of the three Holy and Worshipful Kings of Cologne: Jaspar, Melchior, and Balthazar. Now when the Children of Israel were gone out of Egypt and had won and made subject to them Jerusalem and all the land lying about, so that no man durst set against them in all that country for dread that they had of them; then was there a little hill called Vaws, which was also called the Hill of Victory, and on this hill the ward of them of Ind was ordained and kept by divers sentinels by night and by day against the Children of Israel, and afterward against the Romans; so that if any people at any time purposed with strong hand to enter into the country of the Kingdom of Ind, anon, sentinels of other hills about, through tokens, warned the keepers on the hill of Vaws. And by night they made a great fire and by day they made a great smoke, for that hill Vaws passeth the height of all other hills in all the East. Wherefore, when any such token was seen, then all manner of men made ready to defend themselves from the enemy that approached. Now in the time when Balaam p
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