A Christmas Chant By Abram Joseph Ryan

    They ask me to sing them a Christmas song
     That with musical mirth shall ring;
    How know I that the world’s great throng
     Will care for the words I sing?

    Let the young and the gay chant the Christmas lay,
     Their voices and hearts are glad;
    But I — I am old, and my locks are gray,
     And they tell me my voice is sad.

    Ah! once I could sing, when my heart beat warm
     With hopes, bright as life’s first spring;
    But the spring hath fled, and the golden charm
     Hath gone from the songs I sing.

    I have lost the spell that my verse could weave
     O’er the souls of the old and young,
    And never again — how it makes me grieve —
     Shall I sing as once I sung.

    Why ask a song? ah! perchance you believe,
     Since my days are so nearly past,
    That the song you’ll hear on this Christmas eve
     Is the old man’s best and last.

    Do you want the jingle of rhythm and rhyme?
     Art’s sweet but meaningless notes?
    Or the music of thought, that, like the chime
     Of a grand cathedral, floats

    Out of each word, and along each line,
     Into the spirit’s ear,
    Lifting it up and making it pine
     For a something far from here;

    Bearing the wings of the soul aloft
     From earth and its shadows dim;
    Soothing the breast with a sound as soft
     As a dream, or a seraph’s hymn;

    Evoking the solemnest hopes and fears
     From our being’s higher part;
    Dimming the eyes with radiant tears
     That flow from a spell bound heart?

    Do they want a song that is only a song,
     With no mystical meanings rife?
    Or a music that solemnly moves along —
     The undertone of a life!

    Well, then, I’ll sing, though I know no art,
     Nor the poet’s rhymes nor rules —
    A melody moves through my aged heart
     Not learned from the books or schools:

    A music I learned in the days long gone —
     I cannot tell where or how —
    But no matter where, it still sounds on
     Back of this wrinkled brow.

    And down in my heart I hear it still,
     Like the echoes of far-off bells;
    Like the dreamy sound of a summer rill
     Flowing through fairy dells.

    But what shall I sing for the world’s gay throng,
    And what the words of the old man’s song?

    The world they tell me, is so giddy grown
     That thought is rare;
    And thoughtless minds and shallow hearts alone
     Hold empire there;

    That fools have prestige, place and power and fame;
     Can it be true
    That wisdom is a scorn, a hissing shame,
     And wise are few?

    They tell me, too, that all is venal, vain,
     With high and low;
    That truth and honor are the slaves of gain;
     Can it be so?

    That lofty principle hath long been dead
     And in a shroud;
    That virtue walks ashamed, with downcast head,
     Amid the crowd.

    They tell me, too, that few they are who own
     God’s law and love;
    That thousands, living for this earth alone,
     Look not above;

    That daily, hourly, from the bad to worse,
     Men tread the path,
    Blaspheming God, and careless of the curse
     Of his dead wrath.

    And must I sing for slaves of sordid gain,
     Or to the few
    Shall I not dedicate this Christmas strain
     Who still are true?

    No; not for the false shall I strike the strings
     Of the lyre that was mute so long;
    If I sing at all, the gray bard sings
     For the few and the true his song.

    And ah! there is many a changeful mood
     That over my spirit steals;
    Beneath their spell, and in verses rude,
     Whatever he dreams or feels.

    Whatever the fancies this Christmas eve
     Are haunting the lonely man,
    Whether they gladden, or whether they grieve,
     He’ll sing them as best he can.

    Though some of the strings of his lyre are broke
     This holiest night of the year,
    Who knows how its melody may wake
     A Christmas smile or a tear?

    So on with the mystic song,
        With its meaning manifold —
        Two tones in every word,
        Two thoughts in every tone;
    In the measured words that move along
        One meaning shall be heard,
        One thought to all be told;
        But under it all, to be alone —
    And under it all, to all unknown —
        As safe as under a coffin-lid,
        Deep meanings shall be hid.
        Find them out who can!
    The thoughts concealed and unrevealed
        In the song of the lonely man.

         *    *    *    *    *

    I’m sitting alone in my silent room
     This long December night,
    Watching the fire-flame fill the gloom
     With many a picture bright.
     Ah! how the fire can paint!
        Its magic skill, how strange!
        How every spark
        On the canvas dark
     Draws figures and forms so quaint!
        And how the pictures change!
        One moment how they smile!
        And in less than a little while,
        In the twinkling of an eye,
        Like the gleam of a summer sky,
        The beaming smiles all die.

    From gay to grave — from grave to gay —
    The faces change in the shadows gray;
    And just as I wonder who they are,
        Over them all,
        Like a funeral pall,
    The folds of the shadows droop and fall,
        And the charm is gone,
        And every one
        Of the pictures fade away.

    Ah! the fire within my grate
        Hath more than Raphael’s power,
        Is more than Raphael’s peer;
        It paints for me in a little hour
        More than he in a year;
    And the pictures hanging ’round me here
     This holy Christmas eve
    No artist’s pencil could create —
     No painter’s art conceive;

        Ah! those cheerful faces,
        Wearing youthful graces!
    I gaze on them until I seem
    Half awake and half in dream.
     There are brows without a mark,
        Features bright without a shade;
        There are eyes without a tear;
     There are lips unused to sigh.
     Ah! never mind — you soon shall die!
        All those faces soon shall fade,
        Fade into the dreary dark
        Like their pictures hanging here.
        — Lo! those tearful faces,
        Bearing age’s traces!

    I gaze on them, and they on me,
        Until I feel a sorrow steal
    Through my heart so drearily;
        There are faces furrowed deep;
        There are eyes that used to weep;
         There are brows beneath a cloud;
        There are hearts that want to sleep;
        Never mind! the shadows creep
         From the death-land; and a shroud,
        Tenderly as mother’s arm,
        Soon shall shield the old from harm,
         Soon shall wrap its robe of rest
         Round each sorrow-haunted breast
    Ah! that face of mother’s,
    Sister’s, too, and brother’s —
        And so many others,
        Dear is every name —
    And Ethel! Thou art there,
    With thy child-face sweet and fair,
         And thy heart so bright
         In its shroud so white;
         Just as I saw you last
         In the golden, happy past;
    And you seem to wear
    Upon your hair —
    Your waving, golden hair —
        The smile of the setting sun.
        Ah! me, how years will run!
        But all the years cannot efface
        Your purest name, your sweetest grace,
        From the heart that still is true
        Of all the world to you;
        The other faces shine,
        But none so fair as thine;
    And wherever they are to-night, I know
        They look the very same
        As in their pictures hanging here
        This night, to memory dear,
        And painted by the flames,
    With tombstones in the background,
        And shadows for their frames.

        And thus with my pictures only,
         And the fancies they unweave,
        Alone, and yet not lonely,
         I keep my Christmas eve.
    I’m sitting alone in my pictured room —
        But, no! they have vanished all —
    I’m watching the fire-glow fade into gloom,
        I’m watching the ashes fall.
    And far away back of the cheerful blaze
    The beautiful visions of by-gone days
    Are rising before my raptured gaze.
        Ah! Christmas fire, so bright and warm,
        Hast thou a wizard’s magic charm
    To bring those far-off scenes so near
    And make my past days meet me here?

        Tell me — tell me — how is it?
        The past is past, and here I sit,
    And there, lo! there before me rise,
     Beyond yon glowing flame,
    The summer suns of childhood’s skies,
     Yes — yes — the very same!
    I saw them rise long, long ago;
    I played beneath their golden glow;
     And I remember yet,
     I often cried with strange regret
     When in the west I saw them set
        And there they are again;
        The suns, the skies, the very days
        Of childhood, just beyond that blaze!
         But, ah! such visions almost craze
         The old man’s puzzled brain!
        I thought the past was past!
         But, no! it cannot be;
         ‘Tis here to-night with me!

     How is it, then? the past of men
     Is part of one eternity —
     The days of yore we so deplore,
     They are not dead — they are not fled,
     They live and live for evermore.
     And thus my past comes back to me
     With all its visions fair.

     O past! could I go back to thee,
        And live forever there!
        But, no! there’s frost upon my hair;
        My feet have trod a path of care;
         And worn and wearied here I sit
         I am too tired to go to it.

        And thus with visions only,
         And the fancies they unweave,
        Alone, and yet not lonely,
         I keep my Christmas eve.

    I am sitting alone in my fire-lit room;
        But, no! the fire is dying,
    And the weary-voiced winds, in the outer gloom,
        Are sad, and I hear them sighing.
        The wind hath a voice to pine —
         Plaintive, and pensive and low;
        Hath it a heart like mine or thine?
         Knoweth it weal or woe?
        How it wails in a ghost-like strain,
        Just against that window pane!
    As if it were tired of its long, cold flight,
    And wanted to rest with me to-night.
        Cease! night-winds, cease!
         Why should you be sad?
        This is a night of joy and peace,
         And heaven and earth are glad!
        But still the wind’s voice grieves!
         Perchance o’er the fallen leaves,
        Which, in their summer bloom,
    Danced to the music of bird and breeze,
    But, torn from the arms of their parent trees,
        Lie now in their wintry tomb —
        Mute types of man’s own doom.

     And thus with the night winds only,
     And the fancies they unweave,
     Alone, and yet not lonely,
     I keep my Christmas eve.

    How long have I been dreaming here?
        Or have I dreamed at all?
    My fire is dead — my pictures fled —
    There’s nothing left but shadows drear —
        Shadows on the wall:

        Shifting, flitting,
        Round me sitting
        In my old arm chair —
        Rising, sinking
        Round me, thinking,
    Till, in the maze of many a dream,
    I’m not myself; and I almost seem
        Like one of the shadows there.
        Well, let the shadows stay!
        I wonder who are they?
    I cannot say; but I almost believe
    They know to-night is Christmas eve,
        And to-morrow Christmas day.

    Ah! there’s nothing like a Christmas eve
     To change life’s bitter gall to sweet,
    And change the sweet to gall again;
     To take the thorns from out our feet —
        The thorns and all their dreary pain,
        Only to put them back again.

    To take old stings from out our heart —
    Old stings that made them bleed and smart —
    Only to sharpen them the more,
    And press them back to the heart’s own core.

     Ah! no eve is like the Christmas eve!
    Fears and hopes, and hopes and fears,
    Tears and smiles, and smiles and tears,
    Cheers and sighs, and sighs and cheers,
    Sweet and bitter, bitter, sweet,
     Bright and dark, and dark and bright.
    All these mingle, all these meet,
     In this great and solemn night.

    Ah! there’s nothing like a Christmas eve
    To melt, with kindly glowing heat,
    From off our souls the snow and sleet,
    The dreary drift of wintry years,
     Only to make the cold winds blow,
     Only to make a colder snow;
    And make it drift, and drift, and drift,
    In flakes so icy-cold and swift,
     Until the heart that lies below
     Is cold and colder than the snow.

     And thus with the shadows only,
     And the dreamings they unweave,
     Alone, and yet not lonely,
     I keep my Christmas eve.

        ‘Tis passing fast!
        My fireless, lampless room
        Is a mass of moveless gloom;
        And without — a darkness vast,
        Solemn — starless — still!
        Heaven and earth doth fill.

        But list! there soundeth a bell,
        With a mystical ding, dong, dell!
        Is it, say, is it a funeral knell?
        Solemn and slow,
        Now loud — now low;
    Pealing the notes of human woe
    Over the graves lying under the snow!
        Ah! that pitiless ding, dong, dell!
        Trembling along the gale,
    Under the stars and over the snow.
    Why is it? whence is it sounding so?
        Is it a toll of a burial bell?

        Or is it a spirit’s wail?
        Solemnly, mournfully,
        Sad — and how lornfully!
         Ding, dong, dell!
        Whence is it? who can tell?
    And the marvelous notes they sink and swell,
    Sadder, and sadder, and sadder still!
    How the sounds tremble! how they thrill!
         Every tone
         So like a moan;
    As if the strange bell’s stranger clang
    Throbbed with a terrible human pang.

        Ding, dong, dell!
        Dismally, drearily,
        Ever so wearily.
    Far off and faint as a requiem plaint
    Floats the deep-toned voice of the mystic bell
        Piercingly — thrillingly,
        Icily — chillingly,
        Near — and more near,
        Drearer — and more drear,
    Soundeth the wild, weird, ding, dong, dell!

        Now sinking lower,
        It tolleth slower!
    I list, and I hear its sound no more.
        And now, methinks, I know that bell,
        Know it well — know its knell —
    For I often heard it sound before.

    It is a bell — yet not a bell
     Whose sound may reach the ear!
    It tolls a knell — yet not a knell
     Which earthly sense may hear.
    In every soul a bell of dole
     Hangs ready to be tolled;
    And from that bell a funeral knell
     Is often outward rolled;
    And memory is the sexton gray
     Who tolls the dreary knell;
    And nights like this he loves to sway
     And swing his mystic bell.
    ‘Twas that I heard and nothing more,
     This lonely Christmas eve;
    Then, for the dead I’ll meet no more,
     At Christmas let me grieve.

    Night, be a priest! put your star-stole on
     And murmur a holy prayer
    Over each grave, and for every one
     Lying down lifeless there!

    And over the dead stands the high priest, Night,
     Robed in his shadowy stole;
    And beside him I kneel as his acolyte,
     To respond to his prayer of dole.

        And list! he begins
        That psalm for sins,
    The first of the mournful seven;
        Plaintive and soft
        It rises aloft,
    Begging the mercy of Heaven
        To pity and forgive,
        For the sake of those who live,
    The dead who have died unshriven.
        Miserere! Miserere!
    Still your heart and hush your breath!
    The voices of despair and death
        Are shuddering through the psalm!
        Miserere! Miserere!
    Lift your hearts! the terror dies!
    Up in yonder sinless skies
        The psalms sound sweet and calm!
        Miserere! Miserere!
    Very low, in tender tones,
    The music pleads, the music moans,
        “I forgive and have forgiven,
        The dead whose hearts were shriven.”
        De profundis! De profundis!
    Psalm of the dead and disconsolate!
     Thou hast sounded through a thousand years,
     And pealed above ten thousand biers;
    And still, sad psalm, you mourn the fate
        Of sinners and of just,
    When their souls are going up to God,
        Their bodies down to dust.
    Dread hymn! you wring the saddest tears
        From mortal eyes that fall,
    And your notes evoke the darkest fears
        That human hearts appall!
    You sound o’er the good, you sound o’er the bad,
    And ever your music is sad, so sad,
    We seem to hear murmured in every tone,
    For the saintly a blessing; for sinners a curse.
    Psalm, sad psalm! you must pray and grieve
    Over our dead on this Christmas eve.
        De profundis! De profundis!
    And the night chants the psalm o’er the mortal clay,
    And the spirits immortal from far away,
    To the music of hope sing this sweet-toned lay.

    You think of the dead on Christmas eve,
     Wherever the dead are sleeping,
    And we from a land where we may not grieve
     Look tenderly down on your weeping.
    You think us far, we are very near,
     From you and the earth, though parted;
    We sing to-night to console and cheer
     The hearts of the broken-hearted.
    The earth watches over the lifeless clay
     Of each of its countless sleepers,
    And the sleepless spirits that passed away
     Watch over all earth’s weepers.
    We shall meet again in a brighter land,
     Where farewell is never spoken;
    We shall clasp each other in hand,
     And the clasp shall not be broken;
    We shall meet again, in a bright, calm clime,
     Where we’ll never know a sadness,
    And our lives shall be filled, like a Christmas chime,
     With rapture and with gladness.
    The snows shall pass from our graves away,
     And you from the earth, remember;
    And the flowers of a bright, eternal May,
     Shall follow earth’s December.
    When you think of us think not of the tomb
     Where you laid us down in sorrow;
    But look aloft, and beyond earth’s gloom,
     And wait for the great to-morrow.
    And the pontiff, Night, with his star-stole on,
     Whispereth soft and low:
        Requiescat! Requiescat!

         Peace! Peace! to every one
    For whom we grieve this Christmas eve,
     In their graves beneath the snow.

    The stars in the far-off heaven
    Have long since struck eleven!
    And hark! from temple and from tower,
    Soundeth time’s grandest midnight hour,
    Blessed by the Saviour’s birth,
    And night putteth off the sable stole,
    Symbol of sorrow and sign of dole,
    For one with many a starry gem,
    To honor the Babe of Bethlehem,
    Who comes to men the King of them,
    Yet comes without robe or diadem,
    And all turn towards the holy east,
    To hear the song of the Christmas feast.

    Four thousand years earth waited,
     Four thousand years men prayed,
    Four thousand years the nations sighed,
     That their King so long delayed.

    The prophets told His coming,
     The saintly for Him sighed,
    And the star of the Babe of Bethlehem
     Shone o’er them when they died.

    Their faces towards the future,
     They longed to hail the light
    That in the after centuries
     Would rise on Christmas night.

    But still the Saviour tarried,
     Within His father’s home
    And the nations wept and wondered why
     The promised had not come.

    At last earth’s hope was granted,
     And God was a child of earth;
    And a thousand angels chanted
     The lowly midnight birth.

    Ah! Bethlehem was grander
     That hour than Paradise;
    And the light of earth that night eclipsed
     The splendors of the skies.

    Then let us sing the anthem
     The angels once did sing;
    Until the music of love and praise,
     O’er whole wide world will ring.

        Gloria in excelsis!
        Sound the thrilling song;
        In excelsis Deo!
        Roll the hymn along.
        Gloria in excelsis!
        Let the heavens ring;
        In excelsis Deo!
        Welcome, new-born King
        Gloria in excelsis!
        Over the sea and land,
        In excelsis Deo!
        Chant the anthem grand.
        Gloria in excelsis!
        Let us all rejoice;
        In excelsis Deo!
        Lift each heart and voice.
        Gloria in excelsis!
        Swell the hymn on high;
        In excelsis Deo!
        Sound it to the sky.
        Gloria in excelsis!
        Sing it, sinful earth,
        In excelsis Deo!
        For the Saviour’s birth.

    Thus joyfully and victoriously,
    Glad and ever so gloriously,
    High as the heavens, wide as the earth,
    Swelleth the hymn of the Saviour’s birth.

        Lo! the day is waking
        In the east afar;
        Dawn is faintly breaking,
        Sunk in every star.

        Christmas eve has vanished
        With its shadows gray;
        All its griefs are banished
        By bright Christmas day.

        Joyful chimes are ringing
        O’er the land and seas,
        And there comes glad singing,
        Borne on every breeze.

        Little ones so merry
        Bed-clothes coyly lift,
        And, in such a hurry,
        Prattle “Christmas gift!”

        Little heads so curly,
        Knowing Christmas laws,
        Peep out very early
        For old “Santa Claus”.

        Little eyes are laughing
        O’er their Christmas toys,
        Older ones are quaffing
        Cups of Christmas joys.

        Hearts are joyous, cheerful,
        Faces all are gay;
        None are sad and tearful
        On bright Christmas day.

        Hearts are light and bounding,
        All from care are free;
        Homes are all resounding
        With the sounds of glee.

        Feet with feet are meeting,
        Bent on pleasure’s way;
        Souls to souls give greeting
        Warm on Christmas day.

        Gifts are kept a-going
        Fast from hand to hand;
        Blessings are a-flowing
        Over every land.

        One vast wave of gladness
        Sweeps its world-wide way,
        Drowning every sadness
        On this Christmas day.

        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Haste around the earth;
        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Scatter smiles and mirth.

        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Be to one and all!
        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Enter hut and hall.

        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Be to rich and poor!
        Merry, merry Christmas
        Stop at every door.

        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Fill each heart with joy!
        Merry, merry Christmas
        To each girl and boy.

        Merry, merry Christmas,
        Better gifts than gold;
        Merry, merry Christmas
        To the young and old.

        Merry, merry Christmas,
        May the coming year
        Bring as merry a Christmas
        And as bright a cheer.