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Henry Vaughan (Генри Воэн)


* * *


Joy of my life while left me here!
And still my love!
How in thy absence thou dost steer
Me from above!
A life well led
This truth commends,
With quick or dead
It never ends.

Stars are of mighty use; the night
Is dark, and long;
The road foul; and where one goes right,
Six may go wrong.
One twinkling ray,
Shot o'er some cloud,
May clear much away,
And guide a crowd.

God's saints are shining lights: who stays
Here long must pass
O'er dark hills, swift streams, and steep ways
As smooth as glass;
But these all night,
Like candles, shed
Their beams, and light
Us into bed.

They are, indeed, our pillar-fires,
Seen as we go;
They are that city's shining spires
We travel to:
A swordlike gleam
Kept man for sin
First out; this beam
Will guide them in. 



Henry Vaughan's other poems:
  1. Thou That Know'st For Whom I Mourn
  2. Etesia Absent
  3. Silence and Stealth of Days!
  4. Son-Days
  5. The Relapse


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