A mother’s secret.
How sweet the sacred
legend—if unblamed
In my slight verse such
holy things are named
—Of Mary’s
secret hours of hidden joy,
Silent, but pondering
on her wondrous boy!
Ave, Maria! Pardon,
if I wrong
Those heavenly words
that shame my earthly song!
The choral host had
closed the angel’s strain
Sung to the midnight
watch on Bethlehem’s plain;
And now the shepherds,
hastening on their way,
Sought the still hamlet
where the Infant lay.
They passed the fields
that gleaning Ruth toiled O’er,
They saw afar the ruined
threshing-floor
Where Moab’s daughter,
homeless and forlorn,
Found Boaz slumbering
by his heaps of corn;
And some remembered
how the holy scribe,
Skilled in the lore
of every jealous tribe,
Traced the warm blood
of Jesse’s royal son
To that fair alien,
bravely wooed and won.
So fared they on to
seek the promised sign
That marked the anointed
heir of David’s line.
At last, by forms of
earthly semblance led,
They found the crowded
inn, the oxen’s shed.
No pomp was there, no
glory shone around
On the coarse straw
that strewed the reeking ground;
One dim retreat a flickering
torch betrayed,
In that poor cell the
Lord of Life was laid!
The wondering shepherds
told their breathless tale
Of the bright choir
that woke the sleeping vale;
Told how the skies with
sudden glory flamed;
Told how the shining
multitude proclaimed
“Joy, joy to earth!
Behold the hallowed morn!
In David’s city
Christ the Lord is born!
‘Glory to God!’
let angels shout on high,
‘Good-will to
men!’ the listening Earth reply!”
They spoke with hurried
words and accents wild;
Calm in his cradle slept
the heavenly child.
No trembling word the
mother’s joy revealed,
One sigh of rapture,
and her lips were sealed;
Unmoved she saw the
rustic train depart,
But kept their words
to ponder in her heart.
Twelve years had passed;
the boy was fair and tall,
Growing in wisdom, finding
grace with all.
The maids of Nazareth,
as they trooped to fill
Their balanced urns
beside the mountain-rill,
The gathered matrons,
as they sat and spun,
Spoke in soft words
of Joseph’s quiet son.
No voice had reached
the Galilean vale
Of star-led kings or
awe-struck shepherds’ tale;
In the meek, studious
child they only saw
The future Rabbi, learned
in Israel’s law.
So grew the boy; and
now the feast was near,
When at the holy place
the tribes appear.
Scarce had the home-bred
child of Nazareth seen
Beyond the hills that
girt the village-green,
Save when at midnight,
o’er the star-lit sands,
Snatched from the steel
of Herod’s murdering bands,
A babe, close-folded
to his mother’s breast,
Through Edom’s
wilds he sought the sheltering West.