The Poetry Corner

To Santa Claus

By James Whitcomb Riley

Most tangible of all the gods that be, O Santa Claus - our own since Infancy! As first we scampered to thee - now, as then, Take us as children to thy heart again. Be wholly good to us, just as of old: As a pleased father, let thine arms infold Us, homed within the haven of thy love, And all the cheer and wholesomeness thereof. Thou lone reality, when O so long Life's unrealities have wrought us wrong: Ambition hath allured us, fame likewise, And all that promised honor in men's eyes. Throughout the world's evasions, wiles, and shifts, Thou only bidest stable as thy gifts: A grateful king re-ruleth from thy lap, Crowned with a little tinselled soldier-cap: A mighty general - a nation's pride - Thou givest again a rocking-horse to ride, And wildly glad he groweth as the grim Old jurist with the drum thou givest him: The sculptor's chisel, at thy mirth's command, Is as a whistle in his boyish hand; The painters model fadeth utterly, And there thou standest, and he painteth thee: Most like a winter pippin, sound and fine And tingling-red that ripe old face of thine, Set in thy frosty beard of cheek and chin As midst the snows the thaws of spring set in. Ho! Santa Claus - our own since Infancy - Most tangible of all the gods that be! As first we scampered to thee - now, as then, Take us as children to thy heart again.