A LITTLE lamp can send but a brief and feeble ray, The great lights bravely beam, and their radiance far away Is the comfort of the nations and the furtherance of the day. All men remember when the great lights were lit, The day is kept in honor, and they name it as they sit And watch the guiding flame, thanking and blessing it. But the small and struggling lights which a breath of storm might kill, Each fain to light a continent, but doomed to smallness still, Is there no one to praise them for their service of goodwill? Yes, one, the Lord of all, who is the source of Light; He sees them where they burn in the blackness of Earth’s night, And the larger and the less alike are precious in his sight. He is the secret source by which their flames are fed, From the beacon’s wide, white ray which flashes overhead, To the intermittent ray which the half-spent tapers shed; And to each he says, “Well done,” which has bravely sought to burn. And when the dawn ariseth, and each is quenched in turn, Absorbed into the perfect day for which pure spirits yearn;— Each little flame that struggled to make the night more fair Shall find its place in Paradise and burn in heavenly air, And the Father of all Lights shall be its welcome there. |