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| CHRISTMAS EVE POEM | |
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December 24, 2002 |
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| The words of Phillips
Brooks's Christmas carol, "O Little Town of Bethlehem" have
had a mysterious power for me since I first heard them sung, as a small
child.
Brooks, I later learned, wrote the carol as a poem on a visit to Bethlehem in 1868. He was most famous in his time for a sermon he delivered, in that same period, on the subject of the Civil War dead. Now I associate the silent, dark streets he describes with the silence of the young men missing from little towns all over the North and the South: O little town of Bethlehem, Brooks's haunting evocation of seasonal hopes and fears were in my mind when I wrote my own poem, "December Blues." My poem too ncludes fears, as well as hopes-as in this holiday season of potential war. Here are its closing lines: In the shopping center lots, lights mounted on cold standards Of the stars; between the rows of cars people in coats walk Across the highway, where a town thickens by the tracks Even in the bars a businesslike set of the face keeps off How low and still the people lie, some awake, holding the carols |
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