Poetry Performed Episode 016 - Song for the New Year by Eliza Cook



Episode 016 - Song for the New Year by Eliza Cook
Our celebration of the new year continues this week, turning to Eliza Cook and her poem “Song for the New Year”.

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Song for the New Year by Eliza Cook

Old Time has turned another page
     Of eternity and truth;
He reads with a warning voice to age,
     And whispers a lesson to youth.
A year has fled o’er heart and head
     Since last the yule log burnt;
And we have a task to closely ask,
     What the bosom and brain have learnt?
Oh! let us hope that our sands have run
     With wisdom’s precious grains;
Oh! may we find that our hands have done
     Some work of glorious pains.
Then a welcome and cheer to the merry new year,
     While the holly gleams above us;
With a pardon for the foes who hate,
     And a prayer for those who love us.

We may have seen some loved ones pass
     To the land of hallow’d rest;
We may miss the flow of an honest brow
     And the warmth of a friendly breast:
But if we nursed them while on earth,
     With hearts all true and kind,
Will their spirits blame the sinless mirth
     Of those true hearts left behind?
No, no! it were not well or wise
     To mourn with endless pain;
There’s a better world beyond the skies,
     Where the good shall meet again.
Then a welcome and cheer to the merry new year.
     While the holly gleams above us;
With a pardon for the foes who hate,
     And a prayer for those who love us.

Have our days rolled on serenely free
     From sorrow’s dim alloy?
Do we still possess the gifts that bless
     And fill our souls with joy?
Are the creatures dear still clinging near?
     Do we hear loved voices come?
Do we gaze on eyes whose glances shed
     A halo round our home?
Oh, if we do, let thanks be pour’d
     To Him who hath spared and given,
And forget not o’er the festive board
     The mercies held from heaven.
Then a welcome and cheer to the merry new year,
     While the holly gleams above us;
With a pardon for the foes who hate,
     And a prayer for those who love us.

That was Song for the New Year by Eliza Cook. Eliza Cook believed deeply in self-improvement through education, which brought her great popularity amongst the working class. She was an outspoken proponent of the political freedom of women. Born in 1818, she died in 1889.

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