LITTLE, I ween, did Mary guess, As on her arm her baby lay, What tides of joy would swell and beat, Through ages long, on Christmas day. And what if she had known it all, -- The awful splendor of his fame? The inmost heart of all her joy Would still, methinks, have been the same: The joy that every mother knows Who feels her babe against her breast: The voyage long is overpast, And now is calm and peace and rest. "Art thou the Christ?" The wonder came As easy as her infant's breath: But answer none. Enough for her, That love had triumphed over death. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE COMING AMERICAN by SAM WALTER FOSS TO ELECTRA (1) by ROBERT HERRICK WELCOME, LITTLE STRANGER (BY A DISPLACED THREE-YEAR-OLD) by CHARLES FOLLEN ADAMS A TOUCH OF NATURE by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH THE OUTCAST by HELEN MCCRORY ARENDELL POLYHYMNIA: SONNET TO LADY FALKLAND UPON HER GOING TO INTO IRELAND by WILLIAM BASSE |