'A Hymn for Epiphany' (poem) written by Sidney Godolphin

This poem is from the anthology 'Minor Poets of The Caroline Period' volume ii, (edited by George Saintsbury, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1906), pp 246 - 247


Lord when the wise men came from far,

Led to Thy cradle by a star,

Then did the shepherds too rejoice,

Instructed by thy Angel's voice:

Blest were the wisemen in their skill,

And the shepherds in their harmless will.


Wise men in tracing Nature's laws

Ascend unto the highest Cause,

Shepherds with humble fearfulness

Walk safely, though their Light be less:

Thouh wise men better know the way 

It seems no honest heart can stray.


There is no merit in the wise

But Love, (the shepherds' sacrifice)

Wise men, all ways of knowledge past,

To the shepherds' wonder come at last:

To know can only wonder breed,

And not to know is wonder's seed.


A wise man at the altar bows

And offers up his studied vows,

And is received; may not the tears,

Which spring too from a shepherd's fears,

And sighs upon his frailty spent,

Though not distinct, be eloquent?


'Tis true, the object santifies 

All passions which within us rise,

But since no creature comprehends 

The Cause of causes, End of ends,

He who himself vouchsafes to know

Best pleases his Creator so.


When, then, our sorrows we apply

To our own wants and poverty,

When we look up in all distress

And our own misery confess,

Sending both thanks and prayers above -

Then, though we do not know, we love. 

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