The Poetry Corner

Christmas

By Kate Seymour Maclean

The birth day of the Christ child dawneth slow Out of the opal east in rosy flame, As if a luminous picture in its frame-- A great cathedral window, toward the sun Lifted a form divine, which still below Stretched hands of benediction;--while the air Swayed the bright aureole of the flowing hair Which lit our upturned faces;--even so Look on us from the heavens, divinest One And let us hear through the slow moving years. Long centuries of wrongs, and crimes, and tears,-- The echo of the angel's song again, Peace and good will, good will and peace to men, A little space make silence,--that our ears, Filled with the din of toil and moil and pain May catch the jubilant rapture of the skies,-- The glories of the choirs of paradise. The hills still tremble when the thunders cease Of the loud diapason,--and again Through the rapt stillness steals the hymn of peace; Melodious and sweet its far refrain Dying in distance, as the shadows die Of white wings vanished up the morning sky, As farther still--and thinner--more remote-- A film of sound, the aerial voices float-- Peace and good will, good will and peace to men!