THE DOLLS' CHRISTMAS PARTY.
It was the week before Christmas, and the dolls In the
toy-shop played together all night. The biggest one was from
Paris.
One night she said, "We ought to have a party before Santa
Claus carries us away to the little girls. I can dance, and I
will show you how."
"I can dance myself if you will pull the string," said a
"Jim Crow" doll.
"What shall we have for supper?" piped a little boy-doll in
a Jersey suit. He was always thinking about eating.
"Oh, dear," cried the French lady, "I don't know what we
shall do for supper!"
"I can get the supper," added a big rag doll. The other
dolls had never liked her very well, but they thanked her now.
She had taken lessons at a cooking-school, and knew how to make
cake and candy. She gave French names to everything she made,
and this made it taste better. Old Mother Hubbard was there,
and she said the rag doll did not know how to cook
anything.
They danced in one of the great shop-windows. They opened a
toy piano, and a singing-doll played "Comin' through the Rye,"
The dolls did not find that a good tune to dance by; but the
lady did not know any other, although she was the most costly
doll in the shop. Then they wound up a music-box, and danced by
that. This did very well for some tunes; but they had to walk
around when it played "Hail Columbia," and wait for something
else.
The "Jim Crow" doll had to dance by himself, for he could do
nothing but a "break-down." He would not dance at all unless
some one pulled his string. A toy monkey did this; but he would
not stop when the dancer was tired.
They had supper on one of the counters. The rag doll placed
some boxes for tables. The supper was of candy, for there was
nothing in the shop to eat but sugar hearts and eggs. The dolls
like candy better than anything else, and the supper was
splendid. Patsy McQuirk said he could not eat candy. He wanted
to know what kind of a supper it was without any potatoes. He
got very angry, put his hands into his pockets, and smoked his
pipe. It was very uncivil for him to do so in company. The
smoke made the little ladies sick, and they all tried to climb
into a "horn of plenty" to get out
of the way.
Mother Hubbard and the two black waiters tried to sing "I
love Little Pussy;" but the tall one in a brigand hat opened
his mouth wide, that the small dollies were afraid they might
fall into it. The clown raised both arms in wonder, and Jack in
the Box sprang up as high as me could to look down into the
fellow's throat.
All the baby-dolls in caps and long dresses had been put to
bed. They woke up when the others were at supper, and began to
cry. The big doll brought them some candy, and that kept them
quiet for some time.
The next morning a little girl found the toy piano open. She
was sure the dolls had been playing on it. The
grown-up people thought it
had been left open the night before; but they do not
understand dolls as well as little people do.
VIOLA ROSEBOROUGH