Unknown |
Christmas
I
had almost forgotten the singing in the streets,
Snow
piled up by the houses, drifting
Underneath
the door into the warm room,
Firelight,
lamplight, the little lame cat
Dreaming
in soft sleep by the hearth, mother dozing,
Waiting
for Christmas to come, the boys and me
Trudging
over blanket fields waving lanterns to the sky.
I
had almost forgotten the smell, the feel of it all,
The
coming back home, with girls laughing like stars,
Their
cheeks, holly berries, me kissing one,
Silent-tongued,
soberly, by the long church wall;
Then
back to the kitchen table, supper on the white cloth,
Cheese,
bread, the home-made wine;
Symbols
of the nights' joy, a holy feast.
And
I wonder now, years gone, mother gone,
The
boys and girls scattered, drifted away with the snowflakes,
Lamplight
done, firelight over,
If
the sounds of our singing in the streets are still there,
Those
old tunes, still praising;
And
now, a life-time of Decembers away from it all,
A
branch of remembering holly spears my cheeks,
And
I think it may be so;
Yes,
I believe it may be so.
Leonard
Clark
in
Time and Tide, December 1959
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