Showing posts with label Poems about Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poems about Christmas. Show all posts

Friday, December 25, 2020

Christmas Day in the Covid-Time - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Christmas Day in the Covid-Time

 

There are no children around the tree this year

To make Christmas complete with their happiness

No Barbie dolls, electric trains, or bikes -

We are distanced in everything but love

 

No relatives come and go, not even the one

Who will park his pickup truck on the lawn

No fruitcakes given and received, no hugs -

We are distanced in everything but love

 

But still there is the fire, the dog, and us -

We are distanced in everything but love

Thursday, December 24, 2020

The Turning of the Year - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

The Turning of the Year

 

It was Christmas night in the Castle of the Forest Sauvage…There was skating on the moat… while hot chestnuts and spiced mead were served on the bank to all and sundry. The owls hooted. The cooks put out plenty of crumbs for the small birds. The villagers brought out their red mufflers. Sir Ector’s face shone redder even than these. And reddest of all shone the cottage fires down the main street of an evening.

 

T. H. White, The Once and Future King

 

From the first Sunday in Advent to Plough (or Plow) Monday after the Feast of the Epiphany we live within the turning of the year.

 

Advent begins the new liturgical year with final harvest activities and customs giving way to preparing spiritually and, through the Incarnation, physically for Christmas. Christmas itself begins at midnight on the 24th of December and concludes with the Feast of the Epiphany on the 6th of January. In England the first Monday after the Epiphany is Plough Monday, when, by tradition, the soil is turned in anticipation of spring, blending the leaf-mould into the soil, enriching it, and becoming part of it.

 

The unhappy Puritans banned Christmas in the English-speaking world for generations, and when it was restored in the 19th century it was an odd  Dickens sort of thing, amusing but pale, not based in the faith or in the annual cycle of nature given to this world by God. The cliché that we must put Christ back into Christmas is inverted; it is the Mass – religious observance – that needs putting back into Christmas, not more noise.

 

Christmas has long been discussed, but not amended, for the tension, unhappiness, and even near-hysteria which attends it – compulsive shopping and forced merriment in which people who don’t much care for each other for the rest of the year are made by the secular liturgies and advertisements of unreasonable expectations and closeness to despise each other.

 

A Christmas which does not end with tears and sulks and slammed doors is an unusual one, but that is the fault of Charles Dickens and his successors, and of ourselves, not of Christ.

 

But all bad things come to an end, and some of the most joyful and peaceful days fall after the 25th, when the gifts have lost their mystery but not their newness and leftover turkey is still on the menu. Even the tree seems at peace, giving us light on dark afternoons while we doze over a new book or perk up with a cup of pinon coffee from New Mexico. Visits from friends – forbidden this year - are free from any expectations other than conversations about the kids and prospects for the new year.

 

Hundreds of thousands have died this year, and the government has collapsed, all because of the New Men – and the New Women - who, unlike Sir Ector, grasp at power and ignore their duties.

 

By the grace of God a great many good, sturdy people in service to humanity are on duty through all this, health care workers from great surgeons to the nice lady who cleans up after them, police officers, firefights, and the watchers of gauges and the wielders of wrenches who keep everything going.

 

Is this, then, a time for anyone to drowse before a warm fire?

 

Well, we can only hope that all will soon be able sit in a comfortable chair and look out their own windows at the cardinals Christmas-feasting at the feeder, and maybe a squirrel loping across the frost for its share of seeds, and with no shopping to be accomplished and no work for a day or two, and no immediate obligations except tending the fire.

 

The year is turning, and for a day or two we may quietly enjoy the mystery.

 

-30-

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

For Our Mothers on Christmas - poem (a re-post)

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

(I wrote this the first Christmas after my mother died)

For Our Mothers on Christmas

Beyond all other nights, on this strange Night,
A strangers’ star, a silent, seeking star,
Helps set the wreckage of our souls aright:
It leads us to a stable door ajar.

And we are not alone in peeking in:
An ox, an ass, a lamb, some shepherds, too -
Bright star without; a brighter Light within
We children see the Truth the Wise Men knew.

For we are children there in Bethlehem
Soft-shivering in that winter long ago
We watch and listen there, in star-light dim,
In cold Judea, in a soft, soft snow.

The Stable and the Star, yes, we believe:
Our mothers take us there each Christmas Eve.

Monday, December 23, 2019

Christmas is Awkward - a poem for Christmas Eve-Eve

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Christmas is Awkward

(Don’t forget the codfish and oysters)

A stagecoach rattles its way to Dingley Dell
Along ice-rutted roads, with bugle calls
To alert the station ahead of needs
Especially horses and brandy hot

A coach-top ride in the cold of dawn is better
Than traffic jams along the interstate
Mandatory merriment on the radio
Desperate greetings at the old home place

The door is hardly closed when an auntie asks,
“And is there someone special in your life?”

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

The Robin's Christmas Dinner - a merriment (a bit rough on the worms, though)

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


The Robin’s Christmas Dinner

(ripped from the pages of the Middle Ages – “Sumer is icumen in”)

Merrily he eats the worms
Pull them from the ground!
Their heads pop up
On them he sups
As they squirm around
Chirp, robin!

The squirrels are eating all the seeds
The cardinal’s head’s a-bobbin’
The doves are cooing
The cows are mooing
Chirp merrily, robin!

Robin, robin
How well you chirp
Now eat the worms and burp!

Burp, burp, burp!


On seeing dozens of robins, a squirrel, a woodpecker, a cardinal, and a dove outside my window on Christmas morning.

But the Animals were First - Poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


But the Animals were First

“We read in Isaiah: ‘The ox knows its owner,
and the ass the master’s crib….’”

-Papa Benedict, The Blessings of Christmas

The ox and ass are in the Stable set
In service divine, as good Isaiah writes
A congregation of God’s creatures met
In honor of their King this Night of nights

And there they wait for us, for we are late
Breathless in the narthex of eternity
A star, a road, a town, an inn, a gate
Have led us to this holy liturgy

Long centuries and seasons pass, and yet
The ox and ass are in the Stable set

Monday, December 24, 2018

For Our Mothers on Christmasd Eve - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

For our Mothers on Christmas Eve

For Katherine Mattie Bevil Blanchette Hall, 1922 – 2010
and all our mothers

Beyond all other nights, on this strange Night,
A strangers’ Star, a silent, seeking Star,
Helps set the wreckage of our souls aright:
It leads us to a stable door ajar

And we are not alone in peeking in:
An ox, an ass, a lamb, some shepherds, too -
Bright Star without; a brighter Light within
We children see the Truth those Wise Men knew

For we are children there in Bethlehem
Soft-shivering in that winter long ago
We watch and listen there, in star-light dim,
In cold Judea, in a soft, soft snow

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Winter Solstice - The Year's Compline - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


Winter Solstice – The Year’s Compline

The winter solstice is the year withdrawing
From all the busy-ness of being-ness,
And life in all its transfigurations
Seems lost beyond this cold, mist-haunted world

Time almost stops. Low-orbiting, the sun
Drifts dimly, drably through Orion’s realm
Morning becomes deep dusk; there is no noon
Four candles are the guardians of failing light

Until that Night when they too disappear
Beneath a Star, before a greater Light