Skip to main content

LONGFELLOW'S CHRISTMAS

Hear "Longfellow's Christmas", a tale of hope narrated by Edward Herrmann.

ABOUT 'LONGFELLOW'S CHRISTMAS'

In the winter of 1860, Cambridge, Massachusetts, captures the essence of an American Christmas. Under starry skies and between snow-laden pines, proud New England houses push their way through a thick white blanket. Their yellow-orange windows, like Christmas candles, are reflected in the ice-bound Charles River.

In the silence of falling snow, sleigh bells and laughter crescendo as the Longfellow family, bundled in winter wool, is whisked along behind glossy horses. And above them, a thousand bare branches release a shower of sparkling snow. Five children giggle with delight. And ringing down cobbled lanes, across fields and through the wooded hills and valleys, are the bells—single steeple bells and bundles of carillon bells—playing those old familiar carols that make Christmas . . . Christmas. To men and women of goodwill everywhere, this is the music of hope and peace.

The following year, 1861, America will need that music to counter the drum and bugle of civil war. Rising from the strife are the plaintive songs of divided families— songs for lively boys who steal off to war, and broken young men carried back to their homes and, too often, on to early graves.

Still, for the Longfellow family of Cambridge, summer comes as it always has. For the five children, outings to the seashore, long walks under leafy canopies, and happy hours in the family home seem to promise that this summer will not, cannot, end.

Then on Tuesday, July ninth, a fire in the Longfellow home claims the life of the children’s mother, Fanny. Trying to rescue her, her husband, Henry, is severely burned on his hands and face. Three days later, Fanny, his beloved wife, is buried on the eighteenth anniversary of their wedding day, while he is confined to his bed, fighting to live—fighting to want to live. For Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, as one war rages without, another rages within.

For the next two years, Christmases come and go. Henry writes, “How inexpressibly sad are all the holidays. ‘A merry Christmas’ say the children, but that is no more for me. Perhaps someday God will give me peace.”

And then Henry learns that his eldest son, Charles, who ran away to join the army, has been critically wounded in battle. Henry rushes to Washington to bring his son home, and after days of searching, he finds him—barely alive.

With the outbreak of war, Fanny’s terrible death, and now, two years later, his son desperately clinging to life, we should not be surprised that on Christmas Day, 1863, Henry reaches for his pen and writes:

It was as if an earthquake rent
The hearthstones of a continent.
And in despair I bowed my head:
“There is no peace on earth,” I said,
“For hate is strong and mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good will to men.”

Reading his words today, we ask: When conflict rages and pain, grief, and loneliness overwhelm us, where is the music of hope and peace?

For Henry, the answer to that question has everything to do with Christmas. After Fanny’s death, he had written: “So strong is the sense of her presence upon me, that I should hardly be surprised to look up now and see her in the room. Death is a beginning, not an end.”

On that Christmas morning, it is clear to Henry that war, injury, and even death are not the end. The rising sun turns the icy river to silver and the windows of the Longfellow home to gold.

Henry’s children, bundled in winter wool, are whisked past snowy fields, through wooded hills and valleys, along the road to home. They look up, blinking and giggling in the falling snow. And they hear the sounds that make Christmas . . . Christmas.

They hear the bells!

From his desk, Henry hears them, too. Renewed, he plunges his pen into fresh ink, joyfully drawing it across a sheet of snow white paper . . .

I heard the bells on Christmas day
Their old familiar carols play,
And wild and sweet the words repeat
Of peace on earth, good will to men.

In those bells the message is clear: On Christmas day a Child was born in a stable. Of that Child, Henry writes: “Though in a manger Thou draw breath, Thou art greater than Life and Death.”

And so He is!

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth he sleep;
The wrong shall fail, the right prevail,
With peace on earth, good will to men.”

As the bells ring on, Henry dips his pen again and again. Because Christmas lives on, Fanny lives on, Charles lives on, a nation lives on, and we—each one of us—may live on as well, in hope and peace forever.

Till, ringing, singing, on its way,
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime, a chant sublime,
Of peace on earth, good will to men!
Good will to men!