<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000">
She forgot, I am sure, how many long years had gone by. She looked in vain for the Christ-child<br />
in His manger-cradle. She spent all<br />
her little savings in toys and candy so as<br />
to make friends with little children, that they might<br />
not run away when she<br />
came hobbling into their nurseries. Now<br />
you know for whom she is sadly seeking when she pushes back the bed-curtains and bends down over each baby's<br />
<br />
pillow. Sometimes, when the old grandmother sits nodding by the fire, and the bigger children sleep in their beds, old Babouscka<br />
comes hobbling into the room, and whispers softly, "Is the young Child<br />
here?" Ah, no; she has come too late, too late. But the little children know her and love her.<br />
<br />
Two thousand years ago she lost the chance of finding Him. Crooked, wrinkled, old,<br />
<br />
sick and sorry, she yet lives on, looking into each baby's face--always disappointed, always<br />
seeking. Will she find Him at last? THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT SELMA LAGERLOeF Far away, in a desert in the East, there grew, many years ago, a palm that was very, very old, and<br />
very, very tall. No one passing through the desert could help stopping to look at it,<br />
<br />
for it was much higher than other palms, and people said of it that<br />
it would surely grow to be higher than the Obelisks and Pyramids. This great palm, standing in its loneliness, and looking over the desert, one day saw something which caused its huge crown of leaves to wave to and fro with surprise on its slender stem. On the outskirts of the desert two lonely persons were<br />
wandering. They were still so far away<br />
that even a camel would have looked no larger than an ant at that distan <img src="cid:0c8a-Wr3X5dC"> ce, but they were assuredly human beings, two who were<br />
strangers to the desert--for the palm knew the people of the desert--a<br />
<br />
man and a woman, who had neither guide, nor beasts of burden, nor tent, nor water-bag. "Verily," said the palm to itself, "these two have come hither to die." The palm looked quickly around. "I am surprised," it said, "that the lions have not already gone out to<br />
<br />
seize<br />
their prey. But I do n
</body>
</html>