THE star, so pure in saintly white, Deep in the solemn soul of night, With dreams of deathless beauty wed, And golden ways that seraphs tread: The child -- so mere a thing of earth, So meek a flower of mortal birth: A far-off lucent world, so bright, Stooping to touch with tender light That little gown at evening prayer: It seems a condescension rare, -- Heaven round a common child to glow! Ah! wiser eyes of angels know The star, a toy but roughly wrought; The child, God's own most loving thought. Yon evening planet, wan with moons, Colossal, 'mid its dim, swift noons, -- What is it but a bulk of stone, Like this gray globe we dwell upon? Down hollow spaces, sightless, chill, Its vibrant beams in darkness thrill, Till through some window drift the rays Where a pure heart looks up and prays; And in that silent worshiper, The waves of feeling stir and stir, And spread in wider rings above, To tremble at God's heart of love. Though it be kingliest one of all His worlds, 't is but a stony ball: What are they all, from sun to sun, But dust and stubble, when all's done? Some heavenly grace it only caught, When, like a hint from home, it brought To a child's heart one tender thought: Itself in that great mystery lost, As some bright pebble, idly tost Into the darkling sea at night, Whose widening ripples, running light, Go out into the infinite. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ANGEL IN THE HOUSE: BOOK 2. CANTO 8. PRELUDE: THE KISS by COVENTRY KERSEY DIGHTON PATMORE SONNETS TO LAURA IN LIFE: 156 by PETRARCH A CHILD'S SONG OF CHRISTMAS by MARJORIE LOWRY CHRISTIE PICKTHALL BEVERLY SHORE IN WINTER by THOMAS GOLD APPLETON CHARACTERS: SARAH TAYLOR RIGBY by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THENIEL MENZIES' BONNIE MARY by ROBERT BURNS TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. MONTE CARLO by EDWARD CARPENTER BLANK MISGIVINGS OF A CREATURE MOVING ABOUT IN WORLDS NOT REALIZED: 1 by ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH |