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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Helen Hunt Jackson > Text of God's Light-Houses

A poem by Helen Hunt Jackson

God's Light-Houses

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Title:     God's Light-Houses
Author: Helen Hunt Jackson [More Titles by Jackson]

When night falls on the earth, the sea
From east to west lies twinkling bright
With shining beams from beacons high,
Which send afar their friendly light.

The sailors' eyes, like eyes in prayer,
Turn unto them for guiding ray:
If storms obscure their radiance,
The great ships helpless grope their way.

When night falls on the earth, the sky
Looks like a wide, a boundless main;
Who knows what voyagers sail there?
Who names the ports they seek and gain?

Are not the stars like beacons set,
To guide the argosies that go
From universe to universe,
Our little world above, below?

On their great errands solemn bent,
In their vast journeys unaware
Of our small planet's name or place
Revolving in the lower air.

Oh thought too vast! oh thought too glad:
An awe most rapturous it stirs.
From world to world God's beacons shine:
God means to save his mariners!


[The end]
Helen Hunt Jackson's poem: God's Light-Houses

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