By Richard Paul Evans
On a snowy Christmas Eve a young man made his way along a dark,
deserted cobblestone street. His name was Thomas, and he was wrapped in a
woolen cloak, a knapsack flung across his back. In his hand hung a tin candle
lantern. Behind the lantern’s glass panes sat the remains of a spent
candle.
When he saw the glow of candlelight through the shop window of the
chandler, the village candle maker, he hurried his steps, turning onto the
snow-covered pathway. In Thomas’s way stood a beggar, shaking his cup for coins.
Thomas pushed him aside impatiently and opened the door to the shop.
Inside the shop, metal pots filled with tallow and beeswax hung
from a stone hearth. The old chandler stood with his sculptor’s tools in his
hands, surrounded by the beautiful creations he had made out of wax.
“I am lucky to find you
here,” Thomas said. “The town is empty.”
The old man gazed silently at Thomas as the young man glanced about
at the rows of sculpted candles. There were sprites and fairies, angels with
see-through wings, and fragile princesses in gowns as delicate as lace. They
smelled of myrrh and frankincense and meadow flowers.
“You are a foolish old man,”
Thomas said. “You spend hours making beautiful things that devour themselves.
How long before the flame melts an angel into an ugly clump of wax?” He pointed
to a row of simpler candles. “I only need light. I will take one of those.”
The chandler looked steadily at Thomas. “The Christmas candles are
of no good to you.”
Thomas was startled by the stern response, but he laughed. “It
would do me much good not to stumble in the dark. Are you playing me, old man?
I will not pay more for your candle than it is worth.”
“It is only four coppers….but you may find it costly.” The old
man’s words were strangely serious.
“I have money! Give me the
candle!” Thomas shouted. “It is late, and my family is waiting for me. I need
illumination to find my way.”
“Then it is illumination you
desire?” the chandler asked softly.
“That is what I need,”
Thomas replied.
The candle maker nodded slowly. “So you do.” He took a candle,
dipped it over a flame, then placed it inside the lantern’s tin frame.
Thomas dropped some coins on the counter and walked to the door.
The old man’s lips pursed in an odd, amused smile. “Merry Christmas,
my brother,” he said.
The farewell surprised Thomas. “To you, as well,” he stammered.
Then he hastily stepped out into the darkness, the lantern lighting the road
ahead.
Thomas had traveled only a short distance when a shadow emerged
from an alleyway. A robber, he thought fearfully. He held out his lantern.
“Who’s there?” he called. Then, in the light of the candle, he saw it was only
a frail woman huddled against the cold.
“Sir,” cried the woman. “A
pence, please?”
His eyes narrowed in contempt at the beggar. Then, as he looked at
her more closely, he gasped. He knew her face well! It was his own mother!
“Mother! What is this prank?
Why do you greet me as a beggar!"
The woman stared at him. “Just a ha’ pence, Sir?”
“Why are you here? Where are
my brothers? My sister?” Thomas asked. He reached out to her, but she pulled
away. “Mother, how peculiar you act. You will catch a chill. Here, take my
cloak.” He removed it and held it out to her.
Cautiously, the woman came forward, then snatched the coat and
retreated into the shadow.
But as she moved from the lantern’s light, her appearance changed.
She was not his mother, but a beggar indeed! With Thomas’s cloak in hand, she
disappeared into the darkness.
“A strange trick,” he said
to himself. He wrapped his arms around his chest, wishing he had kept his
cloak. “It is I who will catch a chill.”
Thomas walked on, quickening his pace against the frigid air. As he
passed beneath the awning of a darkened inn, the candle revealed another form,
lying in the gutter. He held out the candle and again gasped. “Has the universe
gone mad? Elin, my brother! Are you sick?”
He set the lantern down, and pulled his brother’s limp arm around
his shoulder, struggling to lift him. “Elin, I cannot carry you.”
He pounded on the inn’s door, which was opened by a grim-faced
woman.
“My brother is sick and I
fear he will freeze before I can come back for him. May I bring him inside?”
“For the price of a night,”
she cackled. “A shilling.”
“A shilling?” Thomas reached
into his pocket. “I have only sixpence.”
The old woman scowled and began to shut the door.
“Wait! My knapsack is worth
more than a shilling!” Thomas cried. “And the trousers inside are newly
tailored. I will give you everything.”
The old innkeeper looked at the bundle and reached out a fat hand.
Thomas flung his knapsack from his back and handed it to her with
the last of his money. She opened the door. “Bring him in.”
Leaving the lantern on the curb, Thomas dragged the man into the
inn’s foyer. As he gently laid him on the wooden floor he suddenly saw that the
man’s face, like the beggar’s had changed.
“So it is your brother who lay in the gutter?” croaked the woman.
“You are mad,” she muttered and shoved him out the door.
Outside, Thomas picked up the lantern.
He looked into its glass panes. “There is something strange about
your light,” he whispered.
Thomas had just glimpsed the bright lights of home when he came
across a little girl shivering in the cold.
“Have your anything to eat,
Sir?” she asked in a faint voice.
Thomas felt a stir in his chest. This child was tiny, no bigger
than his sister…..Suddenly he pulled the lantern away. He wouldn’t shine it in
her face. He could guess its trick. And what could he do for this poor waif? He
had no food or money left to give.
“I have nothing,” Thomas
murmured as he left her, willing himself not to turn around.
Penniless and cold, Thomas trudged onward, hardly glancing at the
familiar houses of his childhood.
His own home was dressed for the season, and music and laughter
came from inside. As he entered the foyer, his mother greeted him with great
excitement. “Thomas,” she exclaimed, “you have arrived!”
Hearing her cry, his sister and brothers rushed into the room to
welcome his arrival.
When the joviality had begun to settle his mother looked at him
peculiarly. “Thomas, where is your cloak?”
“Yes,” said his brother
Elin, “and why have you no pack?"
Thomas gazed solemnly into their bewildered faces. “I….gave everything
away,” he said.
“To whom?” his mother asked,
puzzled.
Thomas looked down at the waning Christmas candle. “The old man
spoke the truth. You are costly….” A smile of understanding slowly spread
across his face.
“…..but of great worth.”
“What is this riddle? What
old man?” his sister asked.
“A wise man who sculpts candles,” Thomas replied as he gazed at the
face of his sister. And just then, in his mind, her bright face became the
woeful, hungry face of the poor child in the cold.
Thomas looked at the sumptuous banquet laid out on the table.
Suddenly he turned to the door.
“Thomas, where are you going?” his sister asked.
“I must see about another
member of our family,” he said.
And
as he left the warm, fragrant house for the cold night, Thomas’s heart was warm
with joy. For that Christmas Eve, a lesson was learned and taken to heart: If
we will see things as they truly are, we will find that all, from great to
small, belong to one family. And this truth, known from the beginning of time,
is perhaps seen best in the joyous illumination of Christmas.