Title: In The Yule-Log Glow—Book 3
Editor: Harrison S. Morris
Release date: February 15, 2007 [eBook #20586]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Sam W., Jason Isbell and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
"Sic as folk tell ower at a winter ingle"
Scott
PHILADELPHIA
J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
1900.
Copyright, 1891, by J. B. Lippincott Company.
Printed by J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia.
Fancy, if you will, Gentle Reader, that, between the intervals of tale-telling,—the Yule-log still ruddy upon the visages of your fellow-guests from many lands,—fancy that a quiet traveller draws out of his side-pocket a little, well-worn pair of books from which he reads some scrap of verse or some melodious Christmas poem. Fancy, too, that, beneath the inn windows, in the snow outside, an occasional band of the Waits strikes up an ancient carol with voice and horn, begging, when the music is done, admittance to the glowing warmth within doors and a share in the plenteous cakes and ale.
Imagine this, if you will, and choose, from the pages to come, whatever of old or new will fit well into the conceit; for not a few carols or legends lie there which have done service under the snow-covered gables or by the crackling wood, and which will help, with their quaint heartiness or simple beauty, to realize the charm of Christmas the world around,—that charm which flows from hearty and generous good-will towards men; which has for its inner light the kindly desire for peace on earth.
Ready for the Feast | Page 59 |
The Baron's Hall | " 66 |
A Shepherd | " 142 |
A Vision | " 200 |
Legends in Song. | PAGE |
The Hallowed Time | 11 |
On the Morning of Christ's Nativity | 12 |
The First Roman Christmas | 23 |
The Three Damsels | 25 |
King Olaf's Christmas[A] | 29 |
Halbert and Hob | 33 |
Good King Wenceslas | 39 |
The Wise Men of the East | 41 |
Christmas at Sea | 46 |
"Last Christmas was a Year ago"[B] | 50 |
As It Fell Upon A Day. | |
A Christmas "Now" | 59 |
Christmas Eve Customs | 63 |
Merry Souls | 64 |
Christmas in the Olden Time | 66 |
Ceremonies for Christmas | 68 |
[Pg 6]Bringing in the Boar's Head | 69 |
The Boar's Head Carol | 70 |
To be Eaten with Mustard | 71 |
Christmas-Day in the Morning | 72 |
Praise of Christmas | 73 |
Winter's Delights | 78 |
A Christmas Catch | 79 |
The Epic | 80 |
The Country Life | 89 |
Christmas Omnipresent | 90 |
An Old English Christmas-Tide | 94 |
Signs of Christmas | 97 |
The Mistletoe | 99 |
Christmas of Old | 101 |
A Plea for a Present | 112 |
A New-Year's Gift Sent to Sir Simeon Steward | 114 |
The New-Year's Gift | 116 |
An Invitation to the Revel | 117 |
A Christmas Ditty | 120 |
At the End of the Feast | 121 |
Twelfth Night; or, King and Queen | 123 |
Ceremonies for Candlemas Eve | 125 |
Another Ceremony | 126 |
The Ceremonies for Candlemas Day | 127 |
Another Ceremony | 127 |
Saint Distaff's Day, the Morrow after Twelfth Day | 128 |
[Pg 7] | |
The Shepherds. | |
On Oaten Pipes | 131 |
Pipe-Playing | 132 |
The First Carol | 134 |
In Bethlehem | 137 |
A Carol in the Pastures | 139 |
The Shepherds | 141 |
On Shepherds' Pipes | 144 |
Angel Tidings | 145 |
The News-Bearers | 146 |
Hymn for Christmas-Day | 149 |
A Hymn of the Nativity | 150 |
Sung by the Shepherd | 155 |
From "The Light of the World"[C] | 158 |
It Brings Good Cheer. | |
Old Christmas Returned | 179 |
The Trencherman | 184 |
Ban and Blessing | 186 |
Thrice Welcome! | 187 |
Christmas Provender | 188 |
Glee and Solace | 189 |
On Saint John's Day | 191 |
Christmas Alms | 193 |
Christmas at the Round-Table | 195 |
Lullaby. | |
A Carol at the Manger | 199 |
[Pg 8]A Dream Carol | 200 |
The King in the Cradle | 202 |
Madonna and Child | 205 |
A Rocking Hymn | 209 |
A Cradle-Song of the Virgin | 212 |
Whispering Palms | 214 |
A Christmas Lullaby | 215 |
The Virgin's Cradle-Hymn | 216 |
The Sovereign | 217 |
By the Cradle-Side | 219 |
The Virgin Mary to the Child Jesus | 221 |
A Bedside Ditty | 230 |
Given Back on Christmas Morn | 231 |
A Lulling Song | 237 |
Good-Night | 239 |
[A] By the courtesy of Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin & Co.
[B] By the courtesy of The Century Company.
[C] By the courtesy of Messrs. Funk & Wagnalls.
Frederick Tennyson.
Shakespeare.
John Milton.
Alfred H. Domett.
Algernon Charles Swinburne.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
Robert Browning.
Translated from the Latin, by J. M. Neale.
A. Mary F. Robinson.
Robert Louis Stevenson.
James Whitcomb Riley.
Poor Robin.
George Wither.
Robert Herrick.
[D] Burn.
Round About Our Coal Fire.
Sir Walter Scott.
Robert Herrick.
[E] Burning.
Ritson's Ancient Songs.
Bishoprick Garland, A.D. 1834.
Thomas Campion.
Thomas Weelkes, A.D. 1597.
Lord Tennyson.
Robert Herrick.
Leigh Hunt.
H. S. M.
Edwin Lees.
Bryan Waller Proctor.
From the German of Thos. Kirchmaier, A.D. 1553.
[F] White bread.
Ben Jonson.
Robert Herrick.
Robert Herrick.
New Christmas Carols, A.D. 1642.
Robert Herrick.
Robert Herrick.
Robert Herrick.
Robert Herrick.
Robert Herrick.
Robert Herrick.
Milton.
Coventry Mysteries.
Tyrle, Tyrle, so Merrily the Shepherds began to Blow.
Wright's Songs and Carols.
Christmas Carolles, A.D. 1550.
Edward Bolton.
Henry Vaughan.
William Drummond.
William Drummond.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
Jeremy Taylor.
Richard Crashaw.
New Christmas Carols.
Sir Edwin Arnold.
"You may talk of Country Christmasses,
Their thirty pound butter'd eggs, their pies of carps' tongues;
Their pheasants drench'd with ambergris; the carcasses of three
fat wethers bruised for gravy to make sauce for a single peacock!"
Massinger.
Evans' Old Ballads.
New Christmas Carols.
Poor Robin's Almanac.
Poor Robin's Almanac.
Poor Robin's Almanac.
New Christmas Carols, A.D. 1661.
New Christmas Carols, A.D. 1661.
Poor Robin's Almanac.
John Hookham Frere.
Tennyson.
Coventry Mysteries.
Sandy's Christmas Carols.
Byrd's Psalmes, Sonets, etc., A.D. 1588.
George Wither.
Translated from the Latin by Rev. H. R. Bramley.
Lope de Vega.
John Addington Symonds.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
Martin Peerson, A.D. 1620.
William Blake.
Milton.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
[M] It is a Jewish tradition that Moses died of the kisses of God's lips.
Algernon Charles Swinburne.
Thomas Hood.
Isaac Watts.
H. S. M.
Transcriber's Notes:
A number of the poems contain archaic and varied spelling. This has been left as printed, with the exception of the following few printer errors:
Page 51—nothin.' amended to nothin'.—"Jes sayin' nothin'. That was why ..."
Page 59—joyfulst amended to joyful'st—"So, now is come our joyful'st feast,"
Page 70—convivo amended to convivio—"Quot estis in convivio."
Illustrations have been shifted slightly, so that they are not in the middle of poems. Captions have been added from the List of Illustrations. The first illustration was located as a frontispiece in the book, but has been moved closer to the page number given in the List of Illustrations here.
Page 97 contains the line "Bears home the huge unwieldly logs,"—unwieldly may or may not be a printer error, so it has been left as printed.