Our Willie



'T was merry Christmas when he came,
Our little boy beneath the sod;
And brighter burned the Christmas flame,
And merrier sped the Christmas game,
Because within the house there lay
A shape as tiny as a fay --
   The Christmas gift of God!
In wreaths and garlands on the walls
The holly hung its ruby balls,
   The mistletoe its pearls;
And a Christmas tree's fantastic fruits
Woke laughter like a choir of flutes
   From happy boys and girls.
For the mirth, which else had swelled as shrill
As a school let loose to its errant will,
   Was softened by the thought,
That in a dim hushed room above
A mother's pains in a mother's love
   Were only just forgot.
The jest, the tale, the toast, the glee,
All took a sober tone;
We spoke of the babe upstairs, as we
Held festival for him alone.
When the bells rang in the Christmas morn,
It scarcely seemed a sin to say
That they rang because that babe was born,
Not less than for the sacred day.
Ah! Christ forgive us for the crime
Which drowned the memories of the time
   In a merely mortal bliss!
We owned the error when the mirth
Of another Christmas lit the hearth
   Of every home but this.
When, in that lonely burial-ground,
With every Christmas sight and sound
Removed or shunned, we kept
A mournful Christmas by the mound
Where little Willie slept!

Ah, hapless mother! darling wife!
I might say nothing more,
And the dull cold world would hold
The story of that precious life
   As amply told!
Shall we, shall you and I, before
That world's unsympathetic eyes
Lay other relics from our store
   Of tender memories?
What could it know of the joy and love
That throbbed and smiled and wept above
   An unresponsive thing?
And who could share the ecstatic thrill
With which we watched the upturned bill
Of our bird at its living spring?
Shall we tell how in the time gone by,
Beneath all changes of the sky,
And in an ordinary home
   Amid the city's din,
Life was to us a crystal dome,
   Our babe the flame therein?
Ah! this were jargon on the mart;
And though some gentle friend,
And many and many a suffering heart,
Would weep and comprehend,
Yet even these might fail to see
What we saw daily in the child --
Not the mere creature undefiled,
But the winged cherub soon to be.
That wandering hand which seemed to reach
   At angel finger-tips,
And that murmur like a mystic speech
   Upon the rosy lips,
That something in the serious face
Holier than even its infant grace,
And that rapt gaze on empty space,
Which made us, half believing, say,
"Ah, little wide-eyed seer! who knows
But that for you this chamber glows
With stately shapes and solemn shows?"
Which touched us, too, with vague alarms,
Lest in the circle of our arms
We held a being less akin
To his parents in a world of sin
Than to beings not of clay:
How could we speak in human phrase,
Of such scarce earthly traits and ways,
   What would not seem
   A doting dream,
In the creed of these sordid days?
   No! let us keep
   Deep, deep,
In sorrowing heart and aching brain,
This story hidden with the pain,
Which since that blue October night
When Willie vanished from our sight,
Must haunt us even in our sleep.
In the gloom of the chamber where he died,
And by that grave which, through our care,
From Yule to Yule of every year,
Is made like Spring to bloom;
And where, at times, we catch the sigh
As of an angel floating nigh,
Who longs but has not power to tell
That in that violet-shrouded cell
Lies nothing better than the shell
Which he had cast aside --
By that sweet grave, in that dark room,
We may weave at will for each other's ear,
Of that life, and that love, and that early doom,
The tale which is shadowed here:
To us alone it will always be
As fresh as our own misery;
But enough, alas! for the world is said,
In the brief "Here lieth" of the dead!

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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 09, 2023

3:34 min read
112

Quick analysis:

Scheme Text too long
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,687
Words 709
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 38, 75

Henry Timrod

Henry Timrod was an American poet, often called the poet laureate of the Confederacy. more…

All Henry Timrod poems | Henry Timrod Books

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