Under the Mistletoe (Poem)

Summary

This poem explores the symbolic significance of mistletoe, traditionally associated with Christmas, as a means to inspire goodwill, unity, and love among people regardless of age or social status. It emphasizes the power of the mistletoe to bring warmth to cold hearts and foster reconciliation between those who have been apart or in conflict. The poem encourages expanding this ethos of love and togetherness beyond the holiday season, suggesting that the mistletoe's spirit should be pervasive throughout the year. It calls for the mistletoe's unifying presence to transcend barriers of race and class, advocating for a more equitable and compassionate society. By urging love's mistletoe to be hung universally, the poem aspires to inspire enduring peace and kindness in the face of oppression and inequality.

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Under the Mistletoe, pearly and green,
Meet the kind lips of the young and the old;
Under the Mistletoe, hearts may be seen
Glowing as though they had never been cold.

Under the Mistletoe, peace and good-will
Mingle the spirits that long have been twain;
Leaves of the olive-branch twine with it still,
While breathings of Hope fill the loud carol strain.

Yet why should this holy and festival mirth
In the reign of Old Christmas-tide only be found?
Hang up Love’s Mistletoe over the earth,
And let us kiss under it all the year round!

Hang up the Mistletoe over the land
Where the poor dark man is spurned by the white;
Hang it wherever Oppression’s strong hand
Wrings from the helpless Humanity’s right.

Hang it on high where the starving lip sobs,
And the patrician one turneth in scorn;
Let it be met where the purple steel robs
Child of its father and field of its corn.

Hail it with joy in our yule-lighted mirth,
But let it not fade with the festival sound;
Hang up Love’s Mistletoe over the earth,
And let us kiss under it all the year round!