Analysis of Christmas,1870

Alfred Austin 1835 (Leeds) – 1913 (Ashford)



Heaven strews the earth with snow,
That neither friend nor foe
May break the sleep of the fast-dying year;
A world arrayed in white,
Late dawns, and shrouded light,
Attest to us once more that Christmas-tide is here.

And yet, and yet I hear
No strains of pious cheer,
No children singing round the Yule-log fire;
No carol's sacred notes,
Warbled by infant throats,
On brooding mother's lap, or knee of pleasèd sire.

Comes with the hallowed time
No sweet accustomed chime,
No peal of bells athwart the midnight air;
No mimes or jocund waits
Within wide-opened gates,
Loud laughter in the hall, or glee of children fair.

No loving cup sent round?
No footing of the ground?
No sister's kiss under the berried bough?
No chimney's joyous roar,
No hospitable store,
Though it be Christmas-tide, to make us note it now?

No! only human hate,
And fear, and death, and fate,
And fierce hands locked in fratricidal strife;
The distant hearth stripped bare
By the gaunt guest, Despair,
Pale groups of pining babes round lonely-weeping wife.

Can it be Christmas-tide?
The snow with blood is dyed,
From human hearts wrung out by human hands.
Hark! did not sweet bells peal?
No! 'twas the ring of steel,
The clang of armèd men and shock of murderous bands.

Didst Thou, then, really come?-
Silence that dreadful drum!-
Christ! Saviour! Babe, of lowly Virgin born!
If Thou, indeed, Most High,
Didst in a manger lie,
Then be the Prince of Peace, and save us from Hell's scorn.

We weep if men deny
That Thou didst live and die,
Didst ever walk upon this mortal sphere;
Yet of Thy Passion, Lord!
What know these times abhorred,
Save the rude soldier's stripes, sharp sponge, and piercing spear?

Therefore we, Father, plead,
Grant us in this our need
Another Revelation from Thy throne,
That we may surely know
We are not sons of woe,
Forgotten and cast off, but verily Thine own.

Yet if He came anew,
Where, where would shelter due
Be found for load divine and footsteps sore?
Here, not the inns alone,
But fold and stable groan
With sterner guests than drove sad Mary from the door.

And thou, 'mong women blest,
Who laidst, with awe-struck breast,
Thy precious babe upon the lowly straw,
Now for thy new-born Son
Were nook and cradle none,
If not in bloody trench or cannon's smoking jaw.

Round her what alien rites,
What savage sounds and sights-
The plunging war-horse and sulphureous match.
Than such as these, alas!
Better the ox, the ass,
The manger's crib secure and peace-bestowing thatch.

The trumpet's challenge dire
Would hush the angelic choir,
The outpost's oath replace the Shepherd's vow;
No frankincense or myrrh
Would there be brought to her,
For Wise Men kneel no more-Kings are not humble now.

O Lord! O Lord! how long?
Thou that art good, art strong,
Put forth Thy strength, Thy ruling love declare;
Stay Thou the smiting hand,
Invert the flaming brand,
And teach the proud to yield, the omnipotent to spare.

Renew our Christmas-tide!
Let weeping eyes be dried,
Love bloom afresh, bloodshed and frenzy cease!
And at Thy bidding reign,
As in the heavenly strain,
Glory to God on high! on earth perpetual peace!

*********************************** ***********above ready for slurp  


Scheme AABCCD DBEFFE GGHIIH JJKLLK MMNHHN OOPQQP RRSTTS TTBUUB VVWAAW XXLWWL YYZ1 1 Z 2 2 3 4 4 3 XEKEEK 5 5 H6 6 H OO7 8 8 7 X
Poetic Form
Metre 1010111 110111 1101101101 010101 110101 011111110111 010111 111101 11010101110 110101 101101 1101011111110 110101 110101 111101011 11111 011101 110001111101 110111 110101 110110011 11101 111001 111101111111 110101 010101 0111011 010111 101101 111101110101 111101 011111 1101111101 111111 110111 0111110111001 111101 101101 111110101 110111 100101 110111011111 111101 111101 1101011101 111101 111101 101101110101 11101 1101101 010010111 111101 111111 0100111111 111101 111101 111101011 110101 110101 110111110101 011101 111111 1101010101 111111 010101 110101110101 1011001 110101 01011011 111101 100101 01101010101 01101 1101010 01110101 11011 111110 111111111101 111111 111111 1111110101 11011 010101 0101110010011 0110101 110111 110110101 011101 1001001 1011111101001 011011
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,099
Words 552
Sentences 40
Stanzas 16
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 1
Lines Amount 91
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 153
Words per stanza (avg) 34
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:49 min read
60

Alfred Austin

Alfred Austin DL was an English poet who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1896 upon the death of Alfred, Lord Tennyson. more…

All Alfred Austin poems | Alfred Austin Books

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