Christmas

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  When a mighty mass of rock
  Is torn by some tremendous shock
  From a skyey cliff and madly pours
  Adown the steep with echoing roars
  Tearing along a deep-ploughed track
  With clouds of dust up-rolling back
  In the depth it strikes and stops with a shriek;

  There where it fell, its motion gone,
  It lies a helpless inert stone;
  Nor while the changing ages run
  Will it again behold the sun
  That gilded erst its lofty home,
  Unless some friendly power come
  To lift it from its tomb.

  So helpless lay the guilty son
  Of woe, when the first sin was done ­
  The day ineffable that heard
  The vengeful sentence and the word
  That sunk him then and sinks him still
  To lowest deeps of every ill ­
  Powerless his haughty will.

  Whoever of the sons of hate,
  Who, who among the reprobate
  To Him whom none can see and live
  Could come and say: 'Forgive, forgive'?
  Could make a new compact for aye,
  Which from the Foe in full array
  Should tear his captured prey?

  Behold, for us a Child has been won,
  To us has been vouchsafed a Son;
  The hostile powers with trembling bow
  And cower beneath his awful brow;
  To man His mighty hand He gives.
  The wretched, helpless, moribund lives
  And honor new achieves.

  From the House upon the mountain
  Gushes now a heavenly fountain,
  Through the vale of thorny woes
  Spreading living comfort goes;
  Apples exude from stumps of trees,
  Fragrance floats on every breeze,
  Flowers bloom, the thistle flees.

  O Thou begot eternally
  Of the Eternal, one with Thee,
  Which 'mong the endless ages can
  Declare: 'With me Thy race began'?
  Thou art. And of Thy vast command
  The whole contains not Thee. Thy hand
  Has made and makes it stand.

  And Thou didst not disdain to take
  On Thee this clay which Thou didst make?
  What merit its, what grace of Thine
  Allotted honor so divine?
  If in His hidden counsel He
  Will pardon so mysteriously,
  What pity His must be!

  To-day He was born. At Ephrata's gate,
  To an hostelry lowly and vaticinate
  Ascended the Virgin, the wonder of story,
  The Hope of the world and Israel's glory,
  Bearing the marvelous weight in her womb.
  Of Her He was born as He promised to come
  Very heir of Humanity's doom.

  The Virgin Mother, faint and wan,
  Wrapped some poor cloths about her Son
  And in a crib where oxen staid
  Her wonderful Infant softly laid.
  Then she adored Him, bowed before
  Her God, who had vouchsafed her
  Pure womb to unbar.

  Not at the sleepless guarded gates
  Of earth's imperial potentates
  A herald-angel of the sky
  Announced to men so great a joy;
  But to shepherds low and lone,
  By this hard world unsought, unknown,
  Bright flashing, he came down.

  Thousands round him in the air
  Showering, like an army fair
  Through the broad expanse of night
  Crowded on their blazing flight,
  Fire of zeal and sweetness bringing,
  As in Heaven their song is ringing
  To the Highest singing.

  Rolled up the hymn of hallowed mirth
  Withdrawing slowly from the earth
  Across the parting clouds on high,
  Ascending deeper in the sky,
  Faint and more faint at each remove,
  Till to the ears of faithful love
  The notes were lost above.

  Swift the favored shepherds went
  To the lowly inn with minds intent;
  There they saw in the manger laid
  Where the hornéd oxen staid ­
  Saw the swaddled Infant lie
  Welcomed thus; and heard faintly
  The King of Heaven cry.

  'Heavenly Infant, do not weep;
  O celestial Earth-born, sleep;
  Nor above Thy royal head
  Dare the roaring tempests spread,
  Wont, like stallions trained for war,
  Mad o'er impious lands afar
  To lead Thy vengeful car!

  'Peaceful sleep, fair stranger! now
  Thee Earth's nations do not know,
  But the day will come when they
  Shall be found beneath Thy sway;
  When they Thee ­ the lowly thing
  Hid in the dusty stable ring ­
  Shall recognize their King.'

© Alessandro Manzoni