Song Meaning
The poem opens with a striking image: the infinite God, confined within the Virgin Mary's womb, now leaves that "imprisonment" to enter the world. This "immensity cloistered" is now "weak enough" for human eyes, a deliberate vulnerability for divine purpose. The immediate question, "for thee, for Him, hath the inn no room?" sets up a profound contrast between the divine arrival and the earthly rejection.
The central tension lies in the juxtaposition of divine power and earthly humility, coupled with human indifference. While the "stars and wise men" will journey to witness this birth, the immediate setting is a humble "stall," highlighting the paradox of Christ's arrival. The narrator's soul is urged to see with "faith's eyes" how the being who "fills all place, yet none holds Him" lies in such a lowly state.
The most compelling craft element is the inversion of pity. The narrator marvels at God's "wondrous high" pity for humanity, so profound that He "would have need to be pitied by thee." This rhetorical question forces a deep reflection on the listener's own capacity for empathy and their relationship with the divine, suggesting that our own suffering is mirrored in Christ's humble birth.
This passage achieves its emotional power through paradox and direct address. The overwhelming scale of God contrasted with the manger scene, and the idea of the divine needing human pity, creates a complex emotional resonance. The call to "Kiss Him, and with Him into Egypt go" with the "kind mother, who partakes thy woe" offers a path of shared suffering and solace, grounding the theological in a deeply human connection.