|
|
|
Home | Site Map | Tell A Friend | Contact Us | Advertise On This Site | Press Room | Donate To Operation Santa Claus
Operation Santa Claus | Santa's Newsletter Signup |
Santa's Blog | Sign Santa's Guestbook | Santa's Village Shops | Santa's Kitchen | Holiday Kid Zone | Halloween | Thanksgiving | New YearsThe Christmas Guest
![]()
Helen Steiner Rice

It happened one day at the
year's white end,
Two neighbors called on an old-time friend
And they found his shop so
meager and mean,
Made gay with a thousand boughs of green,
And Conrad was sitting with
face a-shine
When he suddenly stopped as he stitched a twine
And said, "Old friends,
at dawn today,
When the cock was crowing the night away,
The Lord appeared in a dream
to me
And said, 'I am coming your guest to be'.
So I've been busy with feet
astir,
Strewing my shop with branches of fir,
The table is spread and the
kettle is shined
And over the rafters the holly is twined,
And now I will wait for my
Lord to appear
And listen closely so I will hear
His step as He nears my
humble place,
And I open the door and look in His face. . ."
So his friends went home and
left Conrad alone,
For this was the happiest day he had known,
For, long since, his family
had passed away
And Conrad has spent a sad Christmas Day.
But he knew with the Lord as
his Christmas guest
This Christmas would be the dearest and best,
And he listened with only joy
in his heart.
And with every sound he would rise with a start
And look for the Lord to be
standing there
In answer to his earnest prayer
So he ran to the window after
hearing a sound,
But all that he saw on the snow-covered ground
Was a shabby beggar whose
shoes were torn
And all of his clothes were ragged and worn.
So Conrad was touched and
went to the door
And he said, "Your feet must be frozen and sore,
And I have some shoes in my
shop for you
And a coat that will keep you warmer, too."
So with grateful heart the
man went away,
But as Conrad noticed the time of day
He wondered what made the
dear Lord so late
And how much longer he'd have to wait,
When he heard a knock and ran
to the door,
But it was only a stranger once more,
A bent, old crone with a
shawl of black,
A bundle of faggots piled on her back.
She asked for only a place to
rest,
But that was reserved for Conrad's Great Guest.
But her voice seemed to
plead, "Don't send me away
Let me rest awhile on Christmas day."
So Conrad brewed her a
steaming cup
And told her to sit at the table and sip.
But after she left he was
filled with dismay
For he saw that the hours were passing away
And the Lord had not come as
He said He would,
And Conrad felt sure he had misunderstood.
When out of the stillness he
heard a cry,
"Please help me and tell me where am I."
So again he opened his
friendly door
And stood disappointed as twice before,
It was only a child who had
wandered away
And was lost from her family on Christmas Day. .
Again Conrad's heart was
heavy and sad,
But he knew he should make this little child glad,
So he called her in and wiped
her tears
And quieted her childish fears.
Then he led her back to her
home once more
But as he entered his own darkened door,
He knew that the Lord was not
coming today
For the hours of Christmas had passed away.
So he went to his room and
knelt down to pray
And he said, "Dear Lord, why did you delay,
What kept You from coming to
call on me,
For I wanted so much Your face to see. . ."
When soft in the silence a
voice he heard,
"Lift up your head for I kept My word--
Three times My shadow crossed
your floor--
Three times I came to your lonely door--
For I was the beggar with
bruised, cold feet,
I was the woman you gave to eat,
And I was the child on the homeless street."
Please consider donating to Operation Letters To Santa. Your donation helps us to bring Christmas to needy children in our nation.