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The Dead Christ

Take the dead Christ to my chamber,

The Christ I brought from Rome;

Over all the tossing ocean,

He has reached his western home;

Bear him as in procession,

And lay him solemnly

Where, through weary night and morning,

He shall bear me company.

 

The name I bear is other

Than that I bore by birth,

And I've given life to children

Who'll grow and dwell on earth;

But the time comes swiftly towards me

(Nor do I bid it stay),

When the dead Christ will be more to me

Than all I hold to-day.

 

Lay the dead Christ beside me,

Oh, press him on my heart,

I would hold him long and painfully

Till the weary tears should start;

Till the divine contagion

Heal me of self and sin,

And the cold weight press wholly down

The pulse that chokes within.

 

Reproof and frost, they fret me,

Towards the free, the sunny lands,

From the chaos of existence

I stretch these feeble hands;

And, penitential, kneeling,

Pray God would not be wroth,

Who gave not the strength of feeling,

And strength of labor both.

 

Thou'rt but a wooden carving,

Defaced of worms, and old;

Yet more to me thou couldst not be

Wert thou all wrapt in gold,

Like the gem-bedizened baby

Which, at the Twelth-day noon,

They show from the Ara Coeli's steps,

To a merry dancing tune.

 

I ask of thee no wonders,

No changing white or red;

I dream not thou art living,

I love and prize thee dead.

That salutary deadness

I seek, through want and pain,

From which God's own high power can bid

Our virtue rise again.

j
Written by
Julia Ward Howe
1819-1910 / American
Lines·Words
48·274
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