Christmas Morn

Summary


"Christmas Morn" is a jubilant Christmas poem that sweeps across mountains, seas, and snow-covered plains to celebrate the dawn of Christ's birth. Each stanza carries a different scene — sailors singing at their masts, bells ringing over icy landscapes, an exile dreaming of home and feasting — before closing with Charity walking the world to aid widows and the fatherless. The poem builds a rich, joyful vision of Christmas as a moment of universal peace, love, and generous giving.

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There’s a holy light like a beacon bright,
Afar over land and sea.
Soft its lambent ray o’er the broad earth plays
With a rosy dancing glee,
And the topmost peak of the mountains bleak
Blush fair in the glowing morn.
Over wood and tarn sweeps the glorious dawn
To herald the Child-Christ born.

White the sea-waves fling like an angel’s wing
The foam as their blue crests rise,
While each gallant ship, with a skim and a dip,
In the wind’s lap speeding flies;
And the sailor’s song is borne along
The breeze of the golden morn,
For joyous he sings as the mast he swings
To herald the Child-Christ born.

In the land of snow where the keen winds blow
And the ice-king holds his sway,
A glittering sheen on the plains is seen,
As tribute to him they pay.
While merrily sing with a peal and a ring
The bells on the crystal morn,
As gayly they chime with silvery rhyme
To herald the Child-Christ born.

A woman walks across a snowy dawn landscape as church bells ring in the distance, illustrating Christmas Morn.

To his sea-girt home, where’er he may roam,
Speed the thoughts of Briton’s son.
In city or plain, on the crested main,
The heart of the absent one
Again in his dreams with ecstasy seems
To swell in the happy morn,
As he hears the voice of his loved rejoice,
To herald the Child-Christ born.

In dreams borne along, he joins the glad throng,
The riot and wassail gay;
And the boar’s head bold as in Nowel old
Brave crowns the feast of the day;
The holly’s red blush ’mid the ivy’s crush;
The mistletoe greets the morn
With kisses to claim in love’s holy name,
To herald the Child-Christ born.

Then Charity sweet with most gracious feet
Walks forth o’er the smiling land,
To widow’s relief, to fatherless grief,
She bringeth a helping hand.
For peace and good-will the whole world doth fill
With the dawn of the Nowel morn.
Let every heart sing a glad welcoming,
To herald the Child-Christ born.

Credits

Anna de Brémont was an American-born author and socialite who lived and worked extensively in Victorian Britain, becoming known for her poetry, fiction, and society journalism. "Christmas Morn" reflects her gift for sweeping lyrical imagery, drawing on both the natural world and British Christmas traditions such as the boar's head feast and the wassail to evoke the spirit of the season.