WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
In the Morning cover

In the Morning

Chapter 23: CARLO’S CHRISTMAS.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A sequence of lyric poems that meditates on dawn, nature, and spiritual feeling, often deploying mountain, forest, and seaside imagery to probe grief, consolation, and renewal. Poems move among quiet pastorals, occasional and domestic verse, devotional hymns, translations, and lighter nonsense pieces, following seasonal rhythms and holiday observances. The voice shifts between elegiac introspection and bright affirmation, favoring sensory detail—birdsong, running water, sunlight—and a consolatory outlook that finds moral and emotional sustenance in simple scenes and ritual moments.

CARLO’S CHRISTMAS.

May I come to your side, dear Mistress?
I am only a dog, you see,
And the Christmas joy and gladness
Perhaps are not meant for me.
Yet I think the Master would let me,
If I only begged to eat
The crumbs that fell from His table,
And to lie at His blessèd feet.
I have heard the wonderful story
Of the sleeping flocks by night,
Of Bethlehem and the angels
And the one Star, shining bright;
And I’ve longed, when I heard the story,
A shepherd-dog to be,
For then it might seem that Christmas
Was partly meant for me.
But I only look up at the Master
With a life that is veiled and dumb,
Content to share with the sparrow
His love, and the falling crumb.
May I lie at your feet, dear Mistress?
I am only a dog, you see,
But if I may serve you and love you,
Why, that is Christmas for me!