I Heard The Bells On Christmas Day
7/8" x 5/8"
32 pages, 9 illustrations
"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'."
This
Christmas carol was written by William Wadsworth Longfellow on
Christmas Eve, 1861, as the Civil War approached its most horrific
stages. His son had been injured in the war a year earlier, and
something in the chilling weather must have reminded him of the grim
irony of celebrating Christmas against the backdrop of war. This little
version of the poem has been illustrated with pictures of other winter
battles throughout history: the battle of Stalingrad, the battle of the
Bulge, Valley Forge, the battle of Goldsboro Bridge, the French retreat
from Moscow, the German retreat from Moscow, and others, a catalog of
misery and waste redeemed by the poem's final ringing, angry verse:
"Then
tolled the bells more loud and deep, 'God is not dead, nor does he
sleep.
The
wrong shall fail, the Right prevail, with Peace on Earth,Good Will to
Men'."
The book is bound in silver-gray paper, with a paper title pasted on
the front, and decorative endpapers.
Also available in miniature here:
I Heard The Bells On
Christmas Day
This product was added to our
catalog
October 24, 2009