Subtotal: $
Checkout-
Manly Virtues
-
God in a Cave
-
Editors’ Picks: Issue 26
-
Little Women, Rebel Angels
-
Sojourner Truth
-
Covering the Cover: What Are Families For?
-
Another View: Sunday Supper
-
Proteus Unbound
-
The First Society
-
The Corporate Parent
-
Family Matters
-
Letters from Readers
-
Family and Friends: Issue 26
-
The Case for One More Child
-
The Best of Times, the Worst of Times
-
Return to Vienna
-
You Can’t Go Home Again
-
Two Poems
-
Why Inheritance Matters
-
Not Just Nuclear
-
Dependence
-
The Praying Feminist
-
Letters from Death Row
-
The Beautiful Institution
-
Putting Marriage Second
-
Singles in the Pew
Next Article:
Explore Other Articles:
Behould a sely tender Babe,
In freesing winter nighte,
In homely manger trembling lies;
Alas, a pitious sighte!
The inns are full, no man will yelde
This little pilgrime bedd;
But forc’d He is with sely beastes
In cribb to shroude His headd.
This stable is a Prince’s courte,
The cribb His chaire of State;
The beastes are parcell of His pompe,
The wodden dish His plate.
The persons in that poore attire
His royall liveries weare;
The Prince Himself is come from heaven,
This pompe is prisèd there.
With joy approch, O Christian wighte!
Do homage to thy Kinge;
And highly prise His humble pompe
Which He from heaven doth bringe.
Source: Alexander Balloch Grossart, ed., The Complete Poems of Robert Southwell (England: private circulation, 1872), 107.
Already a subscriber? Sign in
Try 3 months of unlimited access. Start your FREE TRIAL today. Cancel anytime.
Sr Margaret Kerry, fsp
Thank you! Your site has such great posts. I share them on all my social media. Sr Margaret