A Candlemas Dialogue.

By Christina Georgina Rossetti

    "Love brought Me down; and cannot love make thee     Carol for joy to Me?     Hear cheerful robin carol from his tree,     Who owes not half to Me     I won for thee."     "Yea, Lord, I hear his carol's wordless voice;     And well may he rejoice     Who hath not heard of death's discordant noise.     So might I too rejoice     With such a voice."     "True, thou hast compassed death; but hast not thou     The tree of life's own bough?     Am I not Life and Resurrection now?     My Cross balm-bearing bough     For such as thou?"     "Ah me, Thy Cross! - but that seems far away;     Thy Cradle-song to-day     I too would raise, and worship Thee and pray:     Not empty, Lord, to-day     Send me away."     "If thou wilt not go empty, spend thy store;     And I will give thee more,     Yea, make thee ten times richer than before.     Give more and give yet more     Out of thy store."     "Because Thou givest me Thyself, I will     Thy blessed word fulfil,     Give with both hands, and hoard by giving still;     Thy pleasure to fulfil,     And work Thy Will."

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Poem Details

Language: English
Keywords: Public Domain
Source: Public Domain Collection
Rights/Permissions: Public Domain

Analysis & Notes:
The poem unfolds as a dialogue between a suffering soul and a divine presence, structured as a series of questions and responses that mirror the rhythmic cadence of a carol. The form mirrors this exchange through its stanzas, each a compact unit of argument and counterargument, while the rhyme scheme (ababac) lends a musicality that underscores the theme of joy amid suffering. The speaker begins with lament, questioning why love has brought them down, only to be met with divine reassurance that points to the tree of life and the promise of resurrection. The volta occurs when the speaker shifts from despair to resolve, embracing the divine command to give more and give yet more, a transformation marked by the shift from questions to declarations. The final lines crystallize this shift, as the speaker pledges to give with both hands, a resolution that echoes the poem's opening tension but now framed in surrender and trust. The poem's power lies in its economy: in 30 lines, it condenses a spiritual journey from doubt to devotion, using sound and structure to amplify its emotional arc.