<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV" />CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p>Livingstone walked up town. It would, he felt, do his head good. He
needed exercise. He had been working rather too hard of late. However,
he was worth—yes, all that!—Out in the snow the sum was before him in
cold facsimile.</p>
<p>He had not gone far before he wished he had ridden. The street was
thronged with people: some streaming along; others stopping in front of
the big shop-windows, blocking the way and forcing such as were in a
hurry to get off the sidewalk. The shop-windows were all brilliantly
dressed and lighted. Every conception of fertile brains was there to
arrest the attention and delight the imagination. And the interest of
the throngs outside and in testified the shopkeepers' success.</p>
<p>Here Santa Claus, the last survivor of the old benefactors, who has
outlasted whole hierarchies of outworn myths and, yet firm in the
devotion of the heart of childhood, snaps his fingers alike at arid
science and blighting stupidity, was driving his reindeer, his teeming
sleigh filled with wonders from every region: dolls that walked and
talked and sang, fit for princesses; sleds fine enough for princes;
drums and trumpets and swords for young heroes; horses that looked as
though they were alive and would spring next moment from their rockers;
bats and balls that almost started of themselves from their places;
little uniforms, and frocks; skates; tennis-racquets; baby caps and
rattles; tiny engines and coaches; railway trains; animals that ran
about; steamships; books; pictures—everything to delight the soul of
childhood and gratify the affection of age.</p>
<p>There Kris Kringle, Santa Claus's other self, with snowy beard, and fur
coat hoary with the frost of Arctic travel from the land of unfailing
snow and unfailing toys, stood beside his tree glittering with crystal
and shining with the fruits of every industry and every clime.</p>
<p>These were but a part of the dazzling display that was ever repeated
over and over and filled the windows for squares and squares. Science
and Art appeared to have combined to pay tribute to childhood. The very
street seemed to have blossomed with Christmas.</p>
<p>But Livingstone saw nothing of it. He was filled with anger that his way
should be blocked. The crowds were gay and cheery. Strangers in sheer
good-will clapped each other on the shoulder and exchanged views,
confidences and good wishes. The truck-drivers, usually so surly, drew
out of each others' way and shouted words of cheer after their smiling
fellows.</p>
<p>The soul of Christmas was abroad on the air.</p>
<p>Livingstone did not even recall what day it was. All he saw was a crowd
of fools that impeded his progress. He tried the middle of the street;
but the carriages and delivery-wagons were so thick, that he turned off,
growling, and took a less frequented thoroughfare, a back street of mean
houses and small shops where a poorer class of people dwelt and dealt.</p>
<p>Here, however, he was perhaps even more incommoded than he had been
before. This street was, if anything, more crowded than the other and
with a more noisy and hilarious throng. Here, instead of fine shops,
there were small ones; but their windows were every bit as attractive to
the crowds on the street as those Livingstone had left. People of a much
poorer class surged in and out of the doors; small gamins, some in
ragged overcoats, more in none, gabbled with and shouldered each other
boisterously at the windows and pressed their red noses to the frosty
panes, to see through the blurred patches made by their warm breath the
wondrous marvels within. The little pastry-shops and corner-groceries
vied with the toy-shops and confectionaries, and were packed with a
population that hummed like bees, the busy murmur broken every now and
then by jests and calls and laughter, as the customers squeezed in
empty-handed, or slipped out with carefully-wrapped parcels hugged close
to their cheery bosoms or carried in their arms with careful pride.</p>
<p>Livingstone finally was compelled to get off the sidewalk again and take
to the street. Here, at least, there were no fine carriages to block his
way.</p>
<p>As he began to approach a hill, he was aware of yells of warning ahead
of him, and, with shouts of merriment, a swarm of sleds began to shoot
by him, some with dark objects lying flat on their little stomachs,
kicking their heels high in the air; others with small single or double
or triple headed monsters seated upright and all screaming at the top of
their merry voices. All were unmindful of the falling snow and nipping
air, their blood hot with the ineffable fire of youth that flames in the
warm heart of childhood, glows in that of youth, and cools only with the
cooling brain and chilling pulse.</p>
<p>Before Livingstone could press back into the almost solid mass on the
sidewalk he had come near being run down a score of times. He felt that
it was an outrage. He fairly flamed with indignation. He, a large
taxpayer, a generous contributor to asylums and police funds, a
supporter of hospitals,—that he should be almost killed!</p>
<p>He looked around for a policeman—</p>
<div class="center">
<SPAN name='fig3' id='fig3'></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/fig3.jpg" alt="Livingstone had to dodge for his life." title="" /></div>
<p>"Whoop! Look out! Get out the way!" Swish! Swish! Swish! they shot by.
Livingstone had to dodge for his life. Of course, no policeman was in
sight!</p>
<p>Livingstone pushed his way on to the top of the ascent, and a square
further on he found an officer inspecting silently a group of noisy
urchins squabbling over the division of two sticks of painted candy. His
back was towards the hill from which were coming the shouts of the
sliding miscreants.</p>
<p>Livingstone accosted him:</p>
<p>"That sliding, back there, must be stopped. It is a nuisance," he
asserted.—It was dangerous, he declared; he himself had almost been
struck by one or more of those sleds and if it had run him down it might
have killed him.</p>
<p>The officer, after a long look at him, turned silently and walked slowly
in the direction of the hill. He moved so deliberately and with such
evident reluctance that Livingstone's blood boiled. He hurried after
him.</p>
<p>"Here," he said, as he overtook him, "I am going to see that you stop
that sliding and enforce the law, or I shall report you for failure to
perform your duty. I see your number—268."</p>
<p>"All right, sir. You can do as you please about that," said the officer,
rather surlily, but politely.</p>
<p>Livingstone walked close after him to the hilltop. The officer spoke a
few words in a quiet tone to the boys who were at the summit, and
instantly every sled stopped. Not so the tongues. Babel broke loose.
Some went off in silence; others crowded about the officer,
expostulating, cajoling, grumbling. It was "the first snow;" they
"always slid on that hill;" "it did not hurt anybody;" "nobody cared,"
etc.</p>
<p>"This gentleman has complained, and you must stop," said the officer.</p>
<p>They all turned on Livingstone with sudden hate.</p>
<p>"Arr-oh-h!" they snarled in concert. "We ain't a-hurtin' him! What's he
got to do wid us anyhow!"</p>
<p>One more apt archer than the rest, shouted, "He ain't no gentleman—a
<i>gentleman</i> don't never interfere wid poor little boys what ain't a-done
him no harm!"</p>
<p>But they stopped, and the more timid or impatient stole off to find new
and less inconveniently guarded inclines.</p>
<p>Livingstone passed on. He did not know that the moment he left and the
officer turned his back, the whole hillside swarmed again into life and
fun and joy. He did not know this; but he bore off with him a new thorn
which even his feeling of civic virtue could not keep from rankling. His
head ached, and he grew crosser and crosser with every step.</p>
<p>He had never seen so many beggars. It was insufferable. For this
evening, at least, every one was giving—except Livingstone. Want was
stretching out its withered hand even to Poverty and found it filled.
But Livingstone took no part in it. The chilly and threadbare
street-venders of shoe-strings, pencils and cheap flowers, who to-night
were offering in their place tin toys, mistletoe and holly-boughs, he
pushed roughly out of his way; he snapped angrily at beggars who had the
temerity to accost him.</p>
<p>"Confound them! They ought to be run in by the police!"</p>
<p>A red-faced, collarless man fell into the same gait with him, and in a
cajoling tone began to mutter something of his distress.</p>
<p>"Be off. Go to the Associated Charities," snarled Livingstone, conscious
of the biting sarcasm of his speech.</p>
<p>"Go where, sir?"</p>
<p>"Go to the devil!"</p>
<p>The man stopped in his tracks.</p>
<p>A ragged, meagre boy slid in through the crowd just ahead of
Livingstone, to a woman who was toiling along with a large bundle.
Holding out a pinched hand, he offered to carry the parcel for her. The
woman hesitated.</p>
<p>—"For five cents," he pleaded.</p>
<p>She was about to yield, for the bundle was heavy. But the boy was just
in front of Livingstone and in his eagerness brushed against him.
Livingstone gave him a shove which sent him spinning away across the
sidewalk; the stream of passers-by swept in between them, and the boy
lost his job and the woman his service.</p>
<p>The man of success passed on.</p>
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