Master And Boy

Summary


"Master And Boy" is a short poem by George MacDonald in which Father Time discovers a weeping child at his garden gate, shivering alone in the cold. The child reveals itself as the Shadow of Christmas Day, separated from its Master during the transition into the New Year. With Old Time urging it on, the Shadow races across a wintry meadow to catch the fading light of Christmas before it disappears entirely — and Time, seated on a gravestone, waits to see whether Heaven's New Year will finally arrive.

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“WHO is this little one lying,”
Said Time, “at my garden-gate,
Moaning and sobbing and crying,
Out in the cold so late?”

“They lurked until we came near,
Master and I,” the child said,
“Then caught me, with ‘Welcome, New-year!
Happy Year! Golden-head!’

“See Christmas-day, my Master,
On the meadow a mile away!
Father Time, make me run faster!
I’m the Shadow of Christmas-day!”

The Shadow child races across a winter meadow toward Christmas Day, as Father Time watches — Master And Boy poem

“Run, my child; still he’s in sight!
Only look well to his track;
Little Shadow, run like the light,
He misses you at his back!”

Old Time sat down in the sun
On a grave-stone—his legs were numb:
“When the boy to his master has run,”
He said, “Heaven’s New Year is come!”

Credits

George MacDonald was a Scottish author and poet of the 19th century, celebrated for his visionary fairy tales, fantasy novels, and spiritual verse. "Master And Boy" reflects his characteristic blending of Christian theology with imaginative allegory, personifying Time, Christmas, and the New Year as vivid, interacting figures in a single brief poem.