
In the modest town of Carthage, the morning after Christmas feels like a collective hangover, with families nursing the sting of gifts given and missed. Most households keep their celebrations private, swapping humble trinkets and worn‑out boots behind closed doors. Yet Mrs. U.S.G. Budlong makes a conspicuous exception, turning her back parlor into a glittering showcase that draws the whole neighborhood like moths to a lantern.
Under the glow of an oversized piano lamp, every present she receives becomes a trophy, and the townsfolk turn the act of giving into a silent contest. Neighbors scramble to out‑gift one another, hoping their offering will earn a coveted spot in Budlong’s elaborate tableau. The rivalry is equal parts satire and social experiment, exposing how pride and generosity can intertwine in the most unexpected ways.
As the season’s optimism fades, listeners are invited to watch the gentle absurdity unfold, wondering whether the true reward lies in the act of giving or in the spectacle it creates.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (73K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-07-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1872–1956
Best known for lively historical writing and a career that stretched across novels, film, music, and journalism, he was one of those early 20th-century figures who seemed to do everything. His biography of George Washington helped challenge old legends and brought a more human portrait of the first president to a wide audience.
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