Christmas Comes Again

Summary


"Christmas Comes Again" is a Christmas poem that holds celebration and grief in tense balance. The speaker rallies for festive cheer — clinking glasses, singing sailors' and soldiers' songs — while haunted by the absence of brothers lost too soon. Two embedded songs pulse with the energy of men heading into battle or out to sea, yet the speaker's plea at the close reveals raw pain beneath the revelry: keep the graves out of sight, hold my hands, and let the Christmas chime ring on.

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Let me be merry now, ’t is time;
The season is at hand
For Christmas rhyme and Christmas chime,
Close up, and form the band.

The winter fires still burn as bright,
The lamp-light is as clear,
And since the dead are out of sight,
What hinders Christmas cheer?

Why think or speak of that abyss
In which lies all my Past?
High festival I need not miss,
While song and jest shall last.

We’ll clink and drink on Christmas Eve,
Our ghosts can feel no wrong;
They revelled ere they took their leave—
Hearken, my Soldier’s Song:

“The morning air doth coldly pass,
Comrades, to the saddle spring;
The night more bitter cold will bring
Ere dying—ere dying.
Sweetheart, come, the parting glass;
Glass and sabre, clash, clash, clash,
Ere dying—ere dying.
Stirrup-cup and stirrup-kiss—
Do you hope the foe we’ll miss,
Sweetheart, for this loving kiss,
Ere dying—ere dying?”

The feasts and revels of the year
Do ghosts remember long?
Even in memory come they here?
Listen, my Sailor’s song:

“O my hearties. yo heave ho!
Anchor’s up in Jolly Bay—
Hey!
Pipes and swipes, hob and nob—
Hey!
Mermaid Bess and Dolphin Meg,
Paddle over Jolly Bay—
Hey!
Tars, haul in for Christmas Day,
For round the ’varsal deep we go;
Never church, never bell,
For to tell
Of Christmas Day.
Yo heave ho, my hearties O!
Haul in, mates, here we lay—
Hey!”

His sword is rusting in its sheath,
His flag furled on the wall;
We’ll twine them with a holly-wreath,
With green leaves cover all.

A grieving man raises a glass by candlelight beside a holly-wrapped sword, in "Christmas Comes Again"

So clink and drink when falls the eve;
But, comrades, hide from me
Their graves—I would not see them heave
Beside me, like the sea.

Let not my brothers come again,
As men dead in their prime;
Then hold my hands, forget my pain,
And strike the Christmas chime.

Credits

Elizabeth Drew Stoddard was a 19th-century American poet and novelist, known for her unconventional, psychologically intense voice that set her apart from her contemporaries. This poem's embedded soldier and sailor songs give it an unusually dramatic, multi-voiced structure rare in Victorian-era Christmas verse.