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.
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