
Here is another story in Library Lady’s Christmas Stories series.
HOLLY
By Ada M. Marzials
Edited by Jane Mouttet
Highty-tighty, Paradighty,
Clothèd all in green.
The King could not read it
No more could the Queen.
They sent for a Wise Man out of the East,
Who said it had horns but was not a beast.
(Old Riddle.)
Once upon a time, there was a very warlike kingdom where they had never heard of Christmas. The men spent all their days fighting, and the women spent their days urging the warriors to further their deeds of valor.
This had continued for a long time, and no one had ever said he was tired of it. There was but one person in the whole kingdom who had openly declared that war was hateful, but as she was only the Youngest Princess, nobody paid any heed to her.
Then came a time, just before our Christmas Day, when the King was preparing a great campaign against a far-off country. He called together his Council of War—grave old warriors dressed entirely in armor.
“My friends,” said he, “we are about to wage war on the distant kingdoms of Zowega. Until this time, the people of that country have been our very good friends, but as we have now conquered all our enemies, there seems no one but our friends left to fight, and of these, the King of the Zowegians is chief.
“You will remember that his youngest son, Prince Moldo, spent some of his boyhood at our court to gain instruction in feats of arms and that the Prince left us to travel over the world. A few months ago, his father sent word to me that the Prince had returned home, bringing with him the news of a Pearl of Great Price, which contained the Secret of Happiness. It is this Pearl that I have made the reason for war, for I have demanded it in payment for the services we rendered to Prince Moldo. In my message, I have said that if the Pearl and its Secret are not brought and revealed to us within the next five days, our troops will descend upon the kingdom of Zowega and wipe it off the face of the earth.”
Loud and long cheered the Council at the speech of their King, as, indeed, was their duty, though in their hearts of hearts, they had no wish to fight against the King of the Zowegians, who was their very good friend. The Queen and the Princesses smiled graciously upon them, except the Youngest Princess, who had been Prince Moldo’s playfellow. She disgraced herself by bursting into passionate tears and was ordered out of the Council Hall.
At the end of five days, the Council assembled to await the messenger’s arrival with the answer from the King of Zowega.
The day was bright and cold, with snow on the ground. The King and Queen were wrapped in thick fur cloaks. The Princesses were also assembled, even the Youngest, dressed in ermine and looked as pale as death.
It was Christmas Eve, but no Christmas trees and no presents were prepared. No one was thinking of hanging his stockings up. The Hall and the churches were not decorated; indeed, there were no churches to decorate, for, as you remember, the people in this kingdom knew nothing about Christmas.
The Council sat and waited in the big bare Hall.
At last, the great doors were flung open, there was a blast of trumpets, and the messenger appeared.
He was tall and fair and held himself proudly. His eyes were bright and shining, and he had a smile on his face. Completely dressed in bright green, the Council noted with astonishment that he was without any armor. He wore neither breastplate, shield, nor helmet; he had neither sword by his side nor spurs on his feet. He was bare-headed, and, in his right hand, he carried something green, horny, and prickly with little red dots on it.
Looking neither right nor left, he walked with firm and steady steps up the long Hall between the rows of armed warriors.
She blushed deeply as he passed the Youngest Princess, but he did not seem to notice her.
When he reached the throne, he bowed low before the King and Queen and laid the prickly object on the table before them.
“Your Majesty,” said he in a clear, ringing voice. “From the King of Zowega, greeting! He sends you this token. It is the symbol of the Secret of Happiness.”
The King stared, and so did the Queen.
They had expected a Pearl of Great Price, accompanied by a scroll on which the Secret of Happiness was written, and the King of Zowega had sent them this!
Amid dead silence, the King took the token up in his hands to examine it more carefully.
He dropped it hastily, for it pricked him, and little drops of blood were seen starting from his hand.
“Highty-tighty!” said he. “’Tis surely some kind of beast and a symbol of war, for it pricked me right smartly. Truly, the King of Zowega deals in riddles that I, for one, cannot read! Take it, my dear,” added he to the Queen and pointing to the token, “perchance your quick wits may be able to understand this mystery.”
She picked up the token and examined it carefully.
It resembled the branch of a tree, but the leaves were thick and resisting and edged with very sharp spikes, and there was a cluster of round, bright red objects like tiny balls on it. But even as it had pricked the King, so did it prick her, and she dropped it hastily into the lap of the Eldest Princess sitting beside her.
“Paradighty!” exclaimed the Queen. “It is certainly a beast. See, it has horns!” and she pointed to the spikes.
“But I certainly cannot read the riddle—if riddle it be.”
Then, it was passed to all the Princesses, but they could not read the token any more than the King and Queen could. At last, it reached the Youngest Princess, and though it pricked her little hands sorely, she took it up tenderly and kissed it.
“’Tis a token of love,” said she.
The messenger turned his shining eyes full upon her.
“The Princess has read the riddle of the token aright,” he said, stepping forward as though to kiss her hand.
“Stay!” said the King, imperiously springing to his feet. “A token of love, indeed! But I sent the King of Zowega a Declaration of War! What does he mean by sending me a token of love? The Princess must certainly be mistaken—and as for you,” he continued, turning fiercely to the messenger, “you shall be marched off to prison until we have had time to consult with our Wise Men about the real meaning of this extraordinary token.”
So there and then, the messenger was marched off to spend the night in prison, and all the Wise Men in the kingdom were bidden to appear in the Council Chamber the very next day, especially one very old Wise Man from the East who was reputed to be wiser than all the others put together.
The next day, of course, was Christmas Day, but, as these people had never heard of Christmas, no bells were ringing, no carols were being sung, and there was neither holly, ivy, nor mistletoe upon the walls.
Slowly and painfully, the Wise Men began to arrive.
They were all dressed alike, in black flowing robes, and on their heads, they wore long, pointed black caps covered with weird devices.
The very old Wise Man from the East wore a red pointed cap but was dressed just like the others in all other respects.
They assembled around a large circular table at one end of the Hall. The token was placed in the middle of the table.
At the other end of the Hall, the warriors gathered, and above them, on a double throne, sat the King and Queen, with the Princesses grouped on either side of the platform.
The Wise Men examined the token in silence.
“’Tis a curious beast,” said one of them at last.
“Of a new and quite unheard-of species,” said another.
“It has neither legs nor tail,” said a third.
“Yet it has several globular red eyes,” said a fourth.
“And it certainly has horns,” said a fifth.
And so said they all, until the turn of the very old Wise Man from the East came.
He looked long at the token.
“It has horns,” said he at last, “but it is not a beast.”
“Not a beast!” said they, one to the other.
“But what is it then?”
“It is a token of love,” said he.
“Highty-tighty,” interrupted the King. “Read us then the full meaning of the token.”
“I cannot,” said the very old Wise Man, “but let the youth who carried it be brought here. He will be able to explain it more fully than I.”
“Paradighty!” said the Queen. “Why did we not think of that before? Fetch him back again at once!”
So, two of the warriors fetched the youth from prison, and he was soon standing before the Assembly with his head held as high and his eyes as bright and shining as before.
“Read us the token!” commanded the King.
The youth bowed low. “The Princess read it correctly yesterday. It is a token of love.”
“Explain yourself!” said the King. “How can a beast with horns be a token of love?”
The youth drew himself up to his full height.
“It is not a beast,” said he. “It is the branch of a holly tree. On this day of the year, which in my country we call Christmas Day, our people decorate their houses with branches of this holly or holy tree as a token of love, peace, and goodwill. This is the message that I have brought to you—a message that we in our country know very well but which you have never heard before.”
The King and the Warriors, the Wise Men, the Queen, and the Princesses all listened silently to his words.
When he had ended, there was a long pause.
“And in what particular way does your message affect us?” said the King at last.
“Thus, your Majesty,” answered the youth, approaching the Youngest Princess and taking both her hands in his, “on this day, I, Prince Moldo, would have peace and goodwill between my kingdom and your kingdom, and I would seal it forever by taking the Youngest Princess home with me as my bride. You, O King, recognized me not, for I have much changed since I lived here with her for playfellow, but in all my wanderings, I found a Pearl of no greater price than this, and I would proclaim to all the world that the Secret of Happiness is Love.”
So, on that Christmas Day, they were married amid great rejoicings, and war ceased throughout the kingdom. And on every Christmas Day forever after, the people of that country decorated their houses with holly, the symbol of love and peace and goodwill, and wished each other a Merry Christmas, even as I do now to you.

Purchase a PDF of this story – https://payhip.com/b/dwkKq