Margarete Münsterberg, ed., trans. A Harvest of German Verse. 1916.
By From Heaven HighMartin Luther (14831546)
F
And bring you tidings good and new.
So many tidings good I bring,
Thereof I want to say and sing:
E’en from a chosen virgin mild,
A child so fair and fine a sight,
To be your joy and your delight.
You out of danger, out of need;
Your Saviour He Himself will be,
From all your sins to make you free.
That He from God on high has brought;
With us in heaven you shall stay,
Now and forever and a day.
The swaddling-clothes so plain! Behold:
There lies the child in lowly state,
Who lights the world and bears its weight.
See what in yonder manger lies!
Whose is this lovely infant here?
It is the little Jesus dear.
Who to the sinner givest rest.
Thou camest here in misery.
Oh, let me thank Thee ardently!
How poor and lowly art thou grown,
That Thou on hay and straw must lie,
With mules and cattle feeding by!
And gleam with jewels gorgeously,
Yet it would be far, far too small
To be Thy cradle, Lord, at all.
Is swaddling-clothes and coarsest hay;
And there, O King so rich and great,
As if in Heaven, Thou dwellst in state.
To show Thy saving truth to me,
How worldly honour, goods and might
Are all as nothing in Thy sight.
Make Thee a smooth, white resting-place
Which deep within my heart shall be,
That I may e’er remember Thee,
And ever freely sing and leap,
Aye, sing a lovely lullaby,
With dulcet voice and spirits high.
Who gave to us His son, His own.
Rejoicing soars the angel throng,
And greets the New Year with its song.