Unlike Lent, Advent is celebrated when the year is becoming darker and colder, moving into the death and dormancy of winter. Before we can greet the coming of the light, we need to engage with some themes that are challenging and occasionally fearful. Like the magi who travelled a long distance to search out and adore the infant Jesus, and who took some wrong turnings on the way, we too have a journey to undertake, before we find that we have.
Introduction ix
1 December Advent Calendar Rowan Williams 1
'He will come like child'
2 December November Sonnet Elizabeth Jennings 5
'This is the season of right doubt'
3 December Autumn's Fall Kerry Hardie 8
'There must be space for death'
4 December Shadows D. H. Lawrence 12
'he is breaking me down to his own oblivion'
5 December Black Rook in Rainy Weather Sylvia Plath 16
'The long wait for the angel'
6 December The Other Ruth Fainlight 20
'Whatever I find if I search will be wrong'
7 December We grow accustomed to the Dark Emily Dickinson 24
'The Bravest - grope a little'
8 December The Absence R. S. Thomas 28
'a vacuum he may not abhor'
9 December Dover Beach Matthew Arnold 31
'we are here as on a darkling plain'
10 December Church Going Philip Larkin 36
'It pleases me to stand in silence here'
11 December Ozymandias P. B. Shelley 41
'Nothing beside remains'
12 December The Second Coming W. B. Yeats 45
'the centre cannot hold'
13 December The Tyger William Blake 48
'In the forests of the night'
14 December Darkness - after Rilke Alan Payne 52
'All selves/ belong to you'
15 December Blackbird in Fulham P. J. Kavanagh 55
'Its sole belief, that light will come at last'
16 December The Bat Jane Kenyon 59
'the one who astounded Mary'
17 December Annunciation Gwyneth Lewis 62
'he found his devotion drawn/ to nothing'
18 December The Annunciation Edwin Muir 65
'The angel and the girl are met'
19 December The Visitation Elizabeth Jennings 69
'secrets to be spoken'
20 December Northumbrian Sequence, 4 Kathleen Raine 73
'Let in your child tonight'
21 December At the Winter Solstice Jane Kenyon 77
'the girl dressed as Mary trembled'
22 December Ode to Winter Gillian Clarke 81
'On the darkest day bring in the tree'
23 December seasonal ghazal Harry Gilonis 84
'the yonder star our comfort'
24 December In the Days of Caesar Waldo Williams,
'the great music beyond tr. Rowan Williams 87 reason and reckoning'
25 December BC:AD U. A. Fanthorpe 90
'haphazard by starlight straight/ into the kingdom of heaven'
26 December A Christmas Carol Christina Rossetti 94
'Our God, Heaven cannot hold Him'
27 December Christmas George Herbert 98
'Wrapt in night's mantle'
28 December Innocent's Song Charles Causley 102
'What is he doing with the children?'
29 December Song for a Winter Birth Vernon Scannell 106
'The night was nailed to the sky'
30 December Musee des Beaux Arts W. H. Auden 110
'About suffering they were never wrong'
31 December 'Ring out, wild bells' Alfred, Lord Tennyson 114
'The year is going, let him go'
1 January The Year's Midnight Gillian Clarke 118
'expecting a future'
2 January Agnus Dei Denise Levertov 122
'Omnipotence / has been tossed away'
3 January Woman to Child Judith Wright 127
'Then all a world I made in me'
4 January Winter Paradise Kathleen Raine 131
'face unchanging everchanging'
5 January Journey of the Magi T. S. Eliot 134
'A cold coming we had of it'
6 January God's Grandeur Gerard Manley
'The world is charged with Hopkins 139
the grandeur of God'
Acknowledgements 143
Janet Morley is a freelance writer, speaker and workshop leader. She has worked for Christian Aid and for the Methodist Church, and is the author of several books of prayers and poems, including All Desires Known, Bread of Tomorrow, The Heart's Times, Haphazard by Starlight and Our Last Awakening.
Janet Morley has been a successful SPCK author for many years, with books of prayer - All Desires Known, and Bread of Tomorrow; and then the very successful Lent book, The Heart's Time. She worked for the Methodist Church on resources, but is now retired.