Sunday, August 27, 2017

A Christmas Thought

A Christmas Thought.
by Lucy Larcom
(To be recited with carefu regard to smoothness, without a sing-song effect. )

Oh Christmas is coming again, you say,
And you long fcr the thing; he is bringing;
But the costliest gift may not gladden the day,
Nor help on the merry bells ringing
Some getting is losing, you understand,
Some hoarding is far from saving;
What you hold in your hand may slip from your hand;
There is something better than having;
We are richer for what we give;
And only by giving we live.

Your last year's presents are scattered and gone;
You have almost forgot who gave them;
But the loving thoughts you bestow live on
As long as you choose to have them.
Love, love is your riches, though ever so poor;
No money can buy that treasure;
Yours always, from robber and rust secure,
Your own, without stint or measure:
It is only love that we can give;
It is only by loving we live.

For who is it smiles through the Christmas morn --
The Light of the wide creation?
A dear little Child in a stable born,
Whose love is the world's salvation.
He was poor on earth, but He gave us all
That can make our life worth the living;
And happy the Christmas day we call
That is spent, for His sake, in giving:
He shows us the way to live,
Like Him. let us love and give!

The Christmas We Like

The Christmas We Like.
By Ella M. Powers.
(A recitation for two primary children.)

First pupil: Just a little stocking,
Very small indeed,
Hang it by the chimney,
Santa Claus will heed.

Then on Christmas morning
I will run and see
All the lovely presents
He has left for me.

Second pupil: I never think that Christmas
Is quite so full of joy,
Unless I find a poor child
And give her a nice toy.

For don't you know at Christmas
We must be happy then,
And love to do for others
As Christ did to all men.

A Merry Christmas Eve

A Merry Christmas Eve. 
by Charles Kingsley

It chanced upon the merry, merry Christmas eve
I went sighing past the church across the moorland
dreary:
" Oh ! never sin and want and woe this earth will leave,
And the bells but mock the wailing round, they sing
so cheery.
How long, O Lord ! how long before Thou come again ?
Still in cellar, and in garret, and on moorland dreary
The orphans moan, and widows weep, and poor men
toil in vain,
Till earth is full of hope deferred, though Christmas
bells be cheery."

Then arose a joyous clamor from the wild fowl on the
mere,
Beneath the stars, across the snow, like clear bells
ringing,
And a voice within cried : " Listen ! — Christmas carols
even here !
Though thou be dumb, yet o'er their work the stars
and snows are singing.
Blind ! I live, I love, I reign ; and all the nations through
With the thunder of my judgments even now are
ringing ;
Do thou fulfill thy work, but as yon wild fowl do,
Thou wilt hear no less the wailing, yet hear through it
angels singing."

The Christmas Stocking

The Christmas Stocking.
Clarence H. Pearson

In the ghostly light I'm sitting, musing of long dead
Decembers,
While the fire-clad shapes are flitting in and out among
the embers
On my hearthstone in mad races, and I marvel, for in
seeming
I can dimly see the faces and the scenes of which I'm
dreaming.

O golden Christmas days of yore !
In sweet anticipation
I lived their joys for days before
Their glorious realization;
And on the dawn
Of Christmas morn
My childish heart was knocking
A wild tattoo,
As 'twould break through,
As I unhung my stocking. 

Each simple gift that came to hand,
How marvelous I thought it !
A treasure straight from wonderland,
For Santa Claus had brought it.
And at my cries
Of glad surprise
The others all came flocking
To share my glee
And view with me
The contents of the stocking

Years sped -- I left each well-loved scene
In Northern wilds to roam,
And there, 'mid tossing pine-trees green,
I made myself a home.
We numbered three
And blithe were we,
At adverse fortune mocking,
And Christmas-tide
By our fireside
Found hung the baby's stocking.

Alas! within our home to-night
No sweet young voice is ringing,
. And through its silent rooms no light,
Free, childish step is springing.
The wild winds rave
O'er baby's grave
Where plumy pines are rocking
And crossed at rest
On marble breast
The hands that filled my stocking

With misty eyes but steady hand
I raise my Christmas chalice;
Here's to the children of the land
In cabin or in palace;
May each one hold
The key of gold,
The gates of glee unlocking,
And hands be found
The whole world round
To fill the Christmas stocking

Christmas Hymn

Christmas Hymn.
by Eugene Field
(During this recitation let the piano be played very softly in running chords that resolve into the key of a Christmas carol which is taken up and sung by the entire school at the end of the poem.)

Sing, Christmas bells!
Say to the earth this is the morn
Whereon our Savior-King is born;
Sing to all men -- the bond, the free,
The rich, the poor, the high, the low,
The little child that sports in glee,
The aged folk that tottering go,--
Proclaim the morn
That Christ is born,
That saveth them and saveth me!
Sing angel host !
Sing of the stars that God has placed
Above the manger in the east.
Sing of the glories of the night,
The Virgin's sweet humility,
The Babe with kingly robes bedight, ‚--
Sing to all men where'er they be
This Christmas morn
For Christ is born,
That saveth them and saveth me !