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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/6859-h.zip b/6859-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9686488 --- /dev/null +++ b/6859-h.zip diff --git a/6859-h/6859-h.htm b/6859-h/6859-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..368749d --- /dev/null +++ b/6859-h/6859-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,2314 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> + +<html> +<head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> + <title> Songs of Labor and Other Poems</title> + <style type="text/css"> + <!-- + BODY { font-family: serif; color: black; background: white; } + H1 { font-size: 18pt; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; text-transform: uppercase; } + H2 { font-size: 14pt; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; margin-top: 3em; } + H3 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; } + /* A { text-decoration: none; color: black; background: white; } */ + P.centered { text-align: center; } + A.footnote { font-size: 65%; vertical-align: top; } + + --> + </style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's Songs of Labor and Other Poems, by Morris Rosenfeld + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Songs of Labor and Other Poems + +Author: Morris Rosenfeld + +Translator: Rose Pastor Stokes + Helena Frank + +Posting Date: March 17, 2014 [EBook #6859] +Release Date: November, 2004 +First Posted: February 2, 2003 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + + + + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<h1>Songs of Labor<br> +and Other Poems<br> +by Morris Rosenfeld</h1> + +<P class="centered">Translated from the Yiddish by<br> +Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank</p> + +<p><img src="images/laborer.png" alt=""></p> + +<hr> + +<H2>Contents</H2> + +<p><a href="#inthefactory">In the Factory</a><br> +<a href="#myboy">My Boy</a><br> +<a href="#thenightingale">The Nightingale to the Workman</a><br> +<a href="#whatistheworld">What is the World?</a><br> +<a href="#despair">Despair</a><br> +<a href="#whither">Whither?</a><br> +<a href="#fromdawntodawn">From Dawn to Dawn</a><br> +<a href="#thecandleseller">The Candle Seller</a><br> +<a href="#thepaleoperator">The Pale Operator</a><br> +<a href="#thebeggarfamily">The Beggar Family</a><br> +<a href="#amillionaire">A Millionaire</a><br> +<a href="#septembermelodies">September Melodies</a><br> +<a href="#depression">Depression</a><br> +<a href="#thecanary">The Canary</a><br> +<a href="#wantandi">Want and I</a><br> +<a href="#thephantomvessel">The Phantom Vessel</a><br> +<a href="#tomymisery">To my Misery</a><br> +<a href="#olongtheway">O Long the Way</a><br> +<a href="#tothefortuneseeker">To the Fortune Seeker</a><br> +<a href="#myyouth">My Youth</a><br> +<a href="#inthewilderness">In the Wilderness</a><br> +<a href="#iveoftenlaughed">I’ve Often Laughed</a><br> +<a href="#againisingmysongs">Again I Sing my Songs</a><br> +<a href="#liberty">Liberty</a><br> +<a href="#atreeintheghetto">A Tree in the Ghetto</a><br> +<a href="#thecemeterynightingale">The Cemetery Nightingale</a><br> +<a href="#thecreationofman">The Creation of Man</a><br> +<a href="#journalism">Journalism</a><br> +<a href="#penandshears">Pen and Shears</a><br> +<a href="#forhire">For Hire</a><br> +<a href="#afellowslave">A Fellow Slave</a><br> +<a href="#thejewishmay">The Jewish May</a><br> +<a href="#thefeastoflights">The Feast of Lights</a><br> +<a href="#chanukahthoughts">Chanukah Thoughts</a><br> +<a href="#sfere">Sfēré</a><br> +<a href="#measuringthegraves">Measuring the Graves</a><br> +<a href="#thefirstbathofablution">The First Bath of Ablution</a><br> +<a href="#atonementeveningprayer">Atonement Evening Prayer</a><br> +<a href="#exitholiday">Exit Holiday</a><br> +</p> + +<hr> + +<p class="centered">SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS</p> + +<hr> + +<H2><a name="inthefactory">In the Factory</a></H2> + +<p>Oh, here in the shop the machines roar so wildly,<br> +That oft, unaware that I am, or have been,<br> +I sink and am lost in the terrible tumult;<br> +And void is my soul... I am but a machine.<br> +I work and I work and I work, never ceasing;<br> +Create and create things from morning till e’en;<br> +For what?—and for whom—Oh, I know not! Oh, ask not!<br> +Who ever has heard of a conscious machine?</p> + +<p>No, here is no feeling, no thought and no reason;<br> +This life-crushing labor has ever supprest<br> +The noblest and finest, the truest and richest,<br> +The deepest, the highest and humanly best.<br> +The seconds, the minutes, they pass out forever,<br> +They vanish, swift fleeting like straws in a gale.<br> +I drive the wheel madly as tho’ to o’ertake them,—<br> +Give chase without wisdom, or wit, or avail.</p> + +<p>The clock in the workshop,—it rests not a moment;<br> +It points on, and ticks on: Eternity—Time;<br> +And once someone told me the clock had a meaning,—<br> +Its pointing and ticking had reason and rhyme.<br> +And this too he told me,—or had I been dreaming,—<br> +The clock wakened life in one, forces unseen,<br> +And something besides;... I forget what; Oh, ask not!<br> +I know not, I know not, I am a machine.</p> + +<p>At times, when I listen, I hear the clock plainly;—<br> +The reason of old—the old meaning—is gone!<br> +The maddening pendulum urges me forward<br> +To labor and labor and still labor on.<br> +The tick of the clock is the Boss in his anger!<br> +The face of the clock has the eyes of a foe;<br> +The clock—Oh, I shudder—dost hear how it drives me?<br> +It calls me “Machine!” and it cries to me “Sew!”</p> + +<p>At noon, when about me the wild tumult ceases,<br> +And gone is the master, and I sit apart,<br> +And dawn in my brain is beginning to glimmer,<br> +The wound comes agape at the core of my heart;<br> +And tears, bitter tears flow; ay, tears that are scalding;<br> +They moisten my dinner—my dry crust of bread;<br> +They choke me,—I cannot eat;—no, no, I cannot!<br> +Oh, horrible toil I born of Need and of Dread.</p> + +<p>The sweatshop at mid-day—I’ll draw you the picture:<br> +A battlefield bloody; the conflict at rest;<br> +Around and about me the corpses are lying;<br> +The blood cries aloud from the earth’s gory breast.<br> +A moment... and hark! The loud signal is sounded,<br> +The dead rise again and renewed is the fight...<br> +They struggle, these corpses; for strangers, for strangers!<br> +They struggle, they fall, and they sink into night.</p> + +<p>I gaze on the battle in bitterest anger,<br> +And pain, hellish pain wakes the rebel in me!<br> +The clock—now I hear it aright!—It is crying:<br> +“An end to this bondage! An end there must be!”<br> +It quickens my reason, each feeling within me;<br> +It shows me how precious the moments that fly.<br> +Oh, worthless my life if I longer am silent,<br> +And lost to the world if in silence I die.</p> + +<p>The man in me sleeping begins to awaken;<br> +The thing that was slave into slumber has passed:<br> +Now; up with the man in me! Up and be doing!<br> +No misery more! Here is freedom at last!<br> +When sudden: a whistle!—the Boss—an alarum!—<br> +I sink in the slime of the stagnant routine;—<br> +There’s tumult, they struggle, oh, lost is my ego;—<br> +I know not, I care not, I am a machine!...</p> + +<H2><a name="myboy">My Boy</a></H2> + +<p>I have a little boy at home,<br> +A pretty little son;<br> +I think sometimes the world is mine<br> +In him, my only one.</p> + +<p>But seldom, seldom do I see<br> +My child in heaven’s light;<br> +I find him always fast asleep...<br> +I see him but at night.</p> + +<p>Ere dawn my labor drives me forth;<br> +’Tis night when I am free;<br> +A stranger am I to my child;<br> +And strange my child to me.</p> + +<p>I come in darkness to my home,<br> +With weariness and—pay;<br> +My pallid wife, she waits to tell<br> +The things he learned to say.</p> + +<p>How plain and prettily he asked:<br> +“Dear mamma, when’s ‘Tonight’?<br> +O when will come my dear papa<br> +And bring a penny bright?”</p> + +<p>I hear her words—I hasten out—<br> +This moment must it be!—<br> +The father-love flames in my breast:<br> +My child must look at me!</p> + +<p>I stand beside the tiny cot,<br> +And look, and list, and—ah!<br> +A dream-thought moves the baby-lips:<br> +“O, where is my papa!”</p> + +<p>I kiss and kiss the shut blue eyes;<br> +I kiss them not in vain.<br> +They open,—O they see me then!<br> +And straightway close again.</p> + +<p>“Here’s your papa, my precious one;—<br> +A penny for you!”—ah!<br> +A dream still moves the baby-lips:<br> +“O, where is my papa!”</p> + +<p>And I—I think in bitterness<br> +And disappointment sore;<br> +“Some day you will awake, my child,<br> +To find me nevermore.”</p> + +<H2><a name="thenightingale">The Nightingale to the Workman</a></H2> + +<p>Fair summer is here, glad summer is here!<br> +O hark! ’tis to you I am singing:<br> +The sun is all gold in a heaven of blue,<br> +The birds in the forest are trilling for you,<br> +The flies ’mid the grasses are winging;<br> +The little brook babbles—its secret is sweet.<br> +The loveliest flowers would circle your feet,—<br> +And you to your work ever clinging!...<br> +Come forth! Nature loves you. Come forth! Do not fear!<br> +Fair summer is here, glad summer is here,<br> +Full measure of happiness bringing.<br> +All creatures drink deep; and they pour wine anew<br> +In the old cup of life, and they wonder at you.<br> +Your portion is waiting since summer began;<br> +Then take it, oh, take it, you laboring man!</p> + +<p>’Tis summer today; ay, summer today!<br> +The butterflies light on the flowers.<br> +Delightfully glistens the silvery rain,<br> +The mountains are covered with greenness again,<br> +And perfumed and cool are the bowers.<br> +The sheep frisk about in the flowery vale,<br> +The shepherd and shepherdess pause in the dale,<br> +And these are the holiest hours!...<br> +Delay not, delay not, life passes away!<br> +’Tis summer today, sweet summer today!<br> +Come, throttle your wheel’s grinding power!...<br> +Your worktime is bitter and endless in length;<br> +And have you not foolishly lavished your strength?<br> +O think not the world is with bitterness rife,<br> +But drink of the wine from the goblet of life.</p> + +<p>O, summer is here, sweet summer is here!<br> +I cannot forever be trilling;<br> +I flee on the morrow. Then, you, have a care!<br> +The crow, from the perch I am leaving, the air<br> +With ominous cries will be filling.<br> +O, while I am singing to you from my tree<br> +Of love, and of life, and of joy yet to be,<br> +Arouse you!—O why so unwilling!...<br> +The heavens remain not so blue and so clear;—<br> +Now summer is here! Come, summer is here!<br> +Reach out for the joys that are thrilling!<br> +For like you who fade at your wheel, day by day,<br> +Soon all things will fade and be carried away.<br> +Our lives are but moments; and sometimes the cost<br> +Of a moment o’erlooked is eternity lost.</p> + +<H2><a name="whatistheworld">What is the World?</a></H2> + +<p>Well, say you the world is a chamber of sleep,<br> +And life but a sleeping and dreaming?<br> +Then I too would dream: and would joyously reap<br> +The blooms of harmonious seeming;<br> +The dream-flow’rs of hope and of freedom, perchance,<br> +The rich are so merrily reaping;—<br> +In Love’s eyes I’d fancy the joy of romance;<br> +No more would I dream Love is weeping.</p> + +<p>Or say you the world is a banquet, a ball,<br> +Where everyone goes who is able?<br> +I too wish to sit like a lord in the hall<br> +With savory share at the table.<br> +I too can enjoy what is wholesome and good,<br> +A morsel both dainty and healthy;<br> +I have in my body the same sort of blood<br> +That flows in the veins of the wealthy.</p> + +<p>A garden you say is the world, where abound<br> +The sweetest and loveliest roses?<br> +Then would I, no leave asking, saunter around<br> +And gather me handfuls of posies.<br> +Of thorns I am sure I would make me no wreath;<br> +(Of flowers I am very much fonder).<br> +And with my beloved the bowers beneath<br> +I’d wander, and wander, and wander.</p> + +<p>But ah! if the world is a battlefield wild,<br> +Where struggle the weak with the stronger,<br> +Then heed I no storm and no wife and no child!—<br> +I stand in abeyance no longer;—<br> +Rush into the fire of the battle nor yield,<br> +And fight for my perishing brother;<br> +Well, if I am struck—I can die on the field;<br> +Die gladly as well as another....</p> + +<H2><a name="despair">Despair</a></H2> + +<p>No rest—not one day in the seven for me?<br> +Not one, from the maddening yoke to be free?<br> +Not one to escape from the boss on the prowl,<br> +His sinister glance and his furious growl,<br> +The cry of the foreman, the smell of the shop,—<br> +To feel for one moment the manacles drop?<br> +—<i>’Tis rest then you want, and you fain would forget?<br> +To rest and oblivion they’ll carry you yet.</i></p> + +<p>The flow’rs and the trees will have withered ere long,<br> +The last bird already is ending his song;<br> +And soon will be leafless and shadeless the bow’rs...<br> +I long, oh I long for the perfume of flow’rs!<br> +To feel for a moment ere stripped are the trees,<br> +In meadow lands open, the breath of the breeze.<br> +—<i>You long for the meadow lands breezy and fair?<br> +O, soon enough others will carry you there.</i></p> + +<p>The rivulet sparkles with heavenly light,<br> +The wavelets they glisten, with diamonds bedight.<br> +Oh, but for a moment to leap in the stream,<br> +And play in the waters that ripple and gleam!<br> +My body is weakened with terrible toil.—<br> +The bath would refresh me, renew me the while.<br> +—<i>You dream of a bath in the shimmering stream?<br> +’Twill come—when forever is ended your dream.</i></p> + +<p>The sweatshop is smoky and gloomy and mean—<br> +I strive—oh, how vainly I strive to be clean!<br> +All day I am covered with grime and with dirt.<br> +You’d laugh,—but I long for a spotless white shirt!<br> +For life that is noble, ’tis needful, I ween,<br> +To work as a man should; and still be as clean.<br> +—<i>So now ’tis your wish all in white to be dressed?<br> +In white they will robe you, and lay you to rest.</i></p> + +<p>The woods they are cool, and the woods they are free;—<br> +To dream and to wander, how sweet it would be!<br> +The birds their eternal glad holiday keep;<br> +With song that enchants you and lulls you to sleep.<br> +’Tis hot here,—and close! and the din will not cease.<br> +I long for the forest, its coolth and its peace.<br> +—<i>Ay, cool you will soon be; and not only cool,<br> +But cold as no forest can make you, O Fool!</i></p> + +<p>I long for a friend who will comfort and cheer,<br> +And fill me with courage when sorrow is near;<br> +A comrade, of treasures the rarest and best,<br> +Who gives to existence its crown and its crest;<br> +And I am an orphan—and I am alone;<br> +No friend or companion to call me his own.<br> +—<i>Companions a-plenty—they’re numberless too;<br> +They’re swarming already and waiting for you.</i></p> + +<H2><a name="whither">Whither?</a></H2> + +<H3>(To a Young Girl)</H3> + +<p>Say whither, whither, pretty one?<br> +The hour is young at present!<br> +How hushed is all the world around!<br> +Ere dawn—the streets hold not a sound.<br> +O whither, whither do you run?<br> +Sleep at this hour is pleasant.<br> +The flowers are dreaming, dewy-wet;<br> +The bird-nests they are silent yet.<br> +Where to, before the rising sun<br> +The world her light is giving?</p> + +<p>“To earn a living.”</p> + +<p>O whither, whither, pretty child,<br> +So late at night a-strolling?<br> +Alone—with darkness round you curled?<br> +All rests!—and sleeping is the world.<br> +Where drives you now the wind so wild?<br> +The midnight bells are tolling!<br> +Day hath not warmed you with her light;<br> +What aid can’st hope then from the night?<br> +Night’s deaf and blind!—Oh whither, child,<br> +Light-minded fancies weaving?</p> + +<p>“To earn a living.”</p> + +<H2><a name="fromdawntodawn">From Dawn to Dawn</a></H2> + +<p>I bend o’er the wheel at my sewing;<br> +I’m spent; and I’m hungry for rest;<br> +No curse on the master bestowing,—<br> +No hell-fires within me are glowing,—<br> +Tho’ pain flares its fires in my breast.</p> + +<p>I mar the new cloth with my weeping,<br> +And struggle to hold back the tears;<br> +A fever comes over me, sweeping<br> +My veins; and all through me goes creeping<br> +A host of black terrors and fears.</p> + +<p>The wounds of the old years ache newly;<br> +The gloom of the shop hems me in;<br> +But six o’clock signals come duly:<br> +O, freedom seems mine again, truly...<br> +Unhindered I haste from the din.</p> + +<p class="centered">* * * * *</p> + +<p>Now home again, ailing and shaking,<br> +With tears that are blinding my eyes,<br> +With bones that are creaking and breaking,<br> +Unjoyful of rest... merely taking<br> +A seat; hoping never to rise.</p> + +<p>I gaze round me: none for a greeting!<br> +By Life for the moment unpressed,<br> +My poor wife lies sleeping—and beating<br> +A lip-tune in dream false and fleeting,<br> +My child mumbles close to her breast.</p> + +<p>I look on them, weeping in sorrow,<br> +And think: “When the Reaper has come—<br> +When finds me no longer the morrow—<br> +What aid then?—from whom will they borrow<br> +The crust of dry bread and the home?</p> + +<p>“What harbors that morrow,” I wonder,<br> +“For them when the breadwinner’s gone?<br> +When sudden and swift as the thunder<br> +The bread-bond is broken asunder,<br> +And friend in the world there is none.”</p> + +<p>A numbness my brain is o’ertaking...<br> +To sleep for a moment I drop:<br> +Then start!... In the east light is breaking!—<br> +I drag myself, ailing and aching,<br> +Again to the gloom of the shop.</p> + +<H2><a name="thecandleseller">The Candle Seller</a></H2> + +<p>In Hester Street, hard by a telegraph post,<br> +There sits a poor woman as wan as a ghost.<br> +Her pale face is shrunk, like the face of the dead,<br> +And yet you can tell that her cheeks once were red.<br> +But love, ease and friendship and glory, I ween,<br> +May hardly the cause of their fading have been.<br> +Poor soul, she has wept so, she scarcely can see.<br> +A skeleton infant she holds on her knee.<br> +It tugs at her breast, and it whimpers and sleeps,<br> +But soon at her cry it awakens and weeps—<br> +“Two cents, my good woman, three candles will buy,<br> +As bright as their flame be my star in the sky!”</p> + +<p>Tho’ few are her wares, and her basket is small,<br> +She earns her own living by these, when at all.<br> +She’s there with her baby in wind and in rain,<br> +In frost and in snow-fall, in weakness and pain.<br> +She trades and she trades, through the good times and slack—<br> +No home and no food, and no cloak to her back.<br> +She’s kithless and kinless—one friend at the most,<br> +And that one is silent: the telegraph post!<br> +She asks for no alms, the poor Jewess, but still,<br> +Altho’ she is wretched, forsaken and ill,<br> +She cries Sabbath candles to those that come nigh,<br> +And all that she pleads is, that people will buy.</p> + +<p>To honor the sweet, holy Sabbath, each one<br> +With joy in his heart to the market has gone.<br> +To shops and to pushcarts they hurriedly fare;<br> +But who for the poor, wretched woman will care?<br> +A few of her candles you think they will take?—<br> +They seek the meat patties, the fish and the cake.<br> +She holds forth a hand with the pitiful cry:<br> +“Two cents, my good women, three candles will buy!”<br> +But no one has listened, and no one has heard:<br> +Her voice is so weak, that it fails at each word.<br> +Perchance the poor mite in her lap understood,<br> +She hears mother’s crying—but where is the good</p> + +<p>I pray you, how long will she sit there and cry<br> +Her candles so feebly to all that pass by?<br> +How long will it be, do you think, ere her breath<br> +Gives out in the horrible struggle with Death?<br> +How long will this frail one in mother-love strong,<br> +Give suck to the babe at her breast? Oh, how long?<br> +The child mother’s tears used to swallow before,<br> +But mother’s eyes, nowadays, shed them no more.<br> +Oh, dry are the eyes now, and empty the brain,<br> +The heart well-nigh broken, the breath drawn with pain.<br> +Yet ever, tho’ faintly, she calls out anew:<br> +“Oh buy but two candles, good women, but two!”</p> + +<p>In Hester Street stands on the pavement of stone<br> +A small, orphaned basket, forsaken, alone.<br> +Beside it is sitting a corpse, cold and stark:<br> +The seller of candles—will nobody mark?<br> +No, none of the passers have noticed her yet.<br> +The rich ones, on feasting are busily set,<br> +And such as are pious, you well may believe,<br> +Have no time to spare on the gay Sabbath eve.<br> +So no one has noticed and no one has seen.<br> +And now comes the nightfall, and with it, serene,<br> +The Princess, the Sabbath, from Heaven descends,<br> +And all the gay throng to the synagogue wends.</p> + +<p>Within, where they pray, all is cleanly and bright,<br> +The cantor sings sweetly, they list with delight.<br> +But why in a dream stands the tall chandelier,<br> +As dim as the candles that gleam round a bier?<br> +The candles belonged to the woman, you know,<br> +Who died in the street but a short time ago.<br> +The rich and the pious have brought them tonight,<br> +For mother and child they have set them alight.<br> +The rich and the pious their duty have done:<br> +Her tapers are lighted who died all alone.<br> +The rich and the pious are nobly behaved:<br> +A body—what matters? But souls must be saved!</p> + +<p>O synagogue lights, be ye witnesses bold<br> +That mother and child died of hunger and cold<br> +Where millions are squandered in idle display;<br> +That men, all unheeded, must starve by the way.<br> +Then hold back your flame, blessed lights, hold it fast!<br> +The great day of judgment will come at the last.<br> +Before the white throne, where imposture is vain,<br> +Ye lights for the soul, ye’ll be lighted again!<br> +And upward your flame there shall mount as on wings,<br> +And damn the existing false order of things!</p> + +<H2><a name="thepaleoperator">The Pale Operator</a></H2> + +<p>If but with my pen I could draw him,<br> + With terror you’d look in his face;<br> +For he, since the first day I saw him,<br> + Has sat there and sewed in his place.</p> + +<p>Years pass in procession unending,<br> + And ever the pale one is seen,<br> +As over his work he sits bending,<br> + And fights with the soulless machine.</p> + +<p>I feel, as I gaze at each feature,<br> + Perspiring and grimy and wan,<br> +It is not the strength of the creature,—<br> + The will only, urges him on.</p> + +<p>And ever the sweat-drops are flowing,<br> + They fall o’er his thin cheek in streams,<br> +They water the stuff he is sewing,<br> + And soak themselves into the seams.</p> + +<p>How long shall the wheel yet, I pray you,<br> + Be chased by the pale artisan?<br> +And what shall the ending be, say you?<br> + Resolve the dark riddle who can!</p> + +<p>I know that it cannot be reckoned,—<br> + But one thing the future will show:<br> +When this man has vanished, a second<br> + Will sit in his place there and sew.</p> + +<H2><a name="thebeggarfamily">The Beggar Family</a></H2> + +<p>Within the court, before the judge,<br> +There stand six wretched creatures,<br> +They’re lame and weary, one and all,<br> +With pinched and pallid features.<br> +The father is a broken man,<br> +The mother weak and ailing,<br> +The little children, skin and bone,<br> +With fear and hunger wailing.</p> + +<p>Their sins are very great, and call<br> +Aloud for retribution,<br> +For their’s (maybe you guess!) the crime<br> +Of hopeless destitution.<br> +They look upon the judge’s face,<br> +They know what judges ponder,<br> +They know the punishment that waits<br> +On those that beg and wander.</p> + +<p>For months from justice they have fled<br> +Along the streets and highways,<br> +From farm to farm, from town to town,<br> +Along the lanes and byways.<br> +They’ve slept full oftentimes in jail,<br> +They’re known in many places;<br> +Yet still they live, for all the woe<br> +That’s stamped upon their faces.</p> + +<p>The woman’s chill with fear. The man<br> +Implores the judge: “Oh tell us,<br> +What will you? With our children small<br> +Relentlessly expel us?<br> +Oh let us be! We’ll sleep at night<br> +In corners dark; the city<br> +Has room for all! And some kind soul<br> +Will give a crust in pity.</p> + +<p>“For wife and children I will toil:<br> +It cannot be much longer<br> +(For God almighty is and good!)<br> +Ere I for work am stronger.<br> +Oh let us here with men remain,<br> +Nor drive us any further!<br> +Oh why our curses will you have,<br> +And not our blessings rather!”</p> + +<p>And now the sick man quails before<br> +The judge’s piercing glances:<br> +“No, only two of you shall go<br> +This time and take your chances.<br> +Your wife and you! The children four<br> +You’ll leave, my man, behind you,<br> +For them, within the Orphan’s Home,<br> +Free places I will find you.”</p> + +<p>The father’s dumb—the mother shrieks:<br> +“My babes and me you’d sever?<br> +If God there be, such cruel act<br> +Shall find forgiveness never!<br> +But first, oh judge, must you condemn<br> +To death their wretched mother—<br> +I cannot leave my children dear<br> +With you or any other!</p> + +<p>“I bore and nursed them, struggling still<br> +To shelter and to shield them,<br> +Oh judge, I’ll beg from door to door,<br> +My very life-blood yield them!<br> +I know you do not mean it, judge,<br> +With us poor folk you’re jesting.<br> +Give back my babes, and further yet<br> +We’ll wander unprotesting.”</p> + +<p>The judge, alas! has turned away,<br> +The paper dread unrolled,<br> +And useless all the mother’s grief,<br> +The wild and uncontrolled.<br> +More cruel can a sentence be<br> +Than that which now is given?<br> +Oh cursed the system ’neath whose sway<br> +The human heart is riven!</p> + +<H2><a name="amillionaire">A Millionaire</a></H2> + +<p>No, not from tuning-forks of gold<br> + Take I my key for singing;<br> +From Upper Seats no order bold<br> + Can set my music ringing;<br> +But groans the slave through sense of wrong,<br> + And naught my voice can smother;<br> +As flame leaps up, so leaps my song<br> + For my oppressed brother.</p> + +<p>And thus the end comes swift and sure...<br> + Thus life itself must leave me;<br> +For what can these my brothers poor<br> + In compensation give me,<br> +Save tears for ev’ry tear and sigh?—<br> + (For they are rich in anguish).<br> +A millionaire of tears am I,<br> + And mid my millions languish.</p> + +<H2><a name="septembermelodies">September Melodies</a></H2> + +<H3>I</H3> + +<p>The summer is over!<br> +’Tis windy and chilly.<br> +The flowers are dead in the dale.<br> +All beauty has faded,<br> +The rose and the lily<br> +In death-sleep lie withered and pale.</p> + +<p>Now hurries the stormwind<br> +A mournful procession<br> +Of leaves and dead flowers along,<br> +Now murmurs the forest<br> +Its dying confession,<br> +And hushed is the holiest song.</p> + +<p>Their “prayers of departure”<br> +The wild birds are singing,<br> +They fly to the wide stormy main.<br> +Oh tell me, ye loved ones,<br> +Whereto are ye winging?<br> +Oh answer: when come ye again?</p> + +<p>Oh hark to the wailing<br> +For joys that have vanished!<br> +The answer is heavy with pain:<br> +Alas! We know only<br> +That hence we are banished—<br> +But God knows of coming again!</p> + +<H3>II</H3> + +<p>The Tkiyes*-man has blown his horn,<br> +And swift the days’ declining;<br> +The leaves drop off, in fields forlorn<br> +Are tender grasses pining.</p> + +<p>The earth will soon be cold and bare,<br> +Her robe of glory falling;<br> +Already to the mourner’s prayer<br> +The last wild bird is calling.</p> + +<p>He sings so sweetly and so sad<br> +A song of friends who parted,<br> +That even if it find you glad,<br> +It leaves you broken hearted.</p> + +<p>The copses shudder in the breeze,<br> +Some dream-known terror fearing.<br> +Awake! O great and little trees!<br> +The Judgment-day is nearing!</p> + +<p>O men! O trees in copses cold!<br> +Beware the rising weather!<br> +Or late or soon, both young and old<br> +Shall strew the ground together... .</p> + +<p>[*Tkiye: first blast of the Ram’s horn.]</p> + +<H2><a name="depression">Depression</a></H2> + +<p>All the striving, all the failing,<br> +To the silent Nothing sailing.<br> +Swiftly, swiftly passing by!<br> +For the land of shadows leaving,<br> +Where a wistful hand is weaving<br> +Thy still woof, Eternity!</p> + +<p>Gloomy thoughts in me awaken,<br> +And with fear my breast is shaken,<br> +Thinking: O thou black abyss;<br> +All the toil and thrift of life,<br> +All the struggle and the strife,<br> +Shall it come at last to this?</p> + +<p>With the grave shall be requited<br> +Good and evil, and united<br> +Ne’er to separate again?<br> +What the light hath parted purely,<br> +Shall the darkness join more surely?—<br> +Was the vict’ry won in vain?</p> + +<p>O mute and infinite extension,<br> +O time beyond our comprehension,<br> +Shall thought and deed ungarnered fall?<br> +Ev’rything dost take and slay,<br> +Ev’rything dost bear away,<br> +Silent Nothing, silent All!...</p> + +<H2><a name="thecanary">The Canary</a></H2> + +<p>The free canary warbles<br> +In leafy forest dell:<br> +Who feels what rapture thrills her,<br> +And who her joy can tell?</p> + +<p>The sweet canary warbles<br> +Where wealth and splendor dwell:<br> +Who knows what sorrow moves her,<br> +And who her pain can tell?</p> + +<H2><a name="wantandi">Want And I</a></H2> + +<p>Who’s there? who’s there? who was it tried<br> +To force the entrance I’ve denied?<br> +An ’twere a friend, I’d gladly borne it,<br> +But no—’twas Want! I could have sworn it.<br> +I heard thy voice, old witch, I know thee!<br> +Avaunt, thou evil hag, beshrew thee!<br> +God’s curse! why seekest thou to find me?<br> +Away to all black years behind me!</p> + +<p>To torture me was thine endeavor,<br> +My body from my soul to sever,<br> +Of pride and courage to deprive me,<br> +And into beggary to drive me.<br> +Begone, where thousand devils burn—<br> +Begone, nor evermore return!<br> +Begone, most wretched thou of creatures,<br> +And hide for aye thine hateful features!<br> +—Beloved, ope the door in pity!</p> + +<p>No friend have I in all the city<br> +Save thee, then open to my call!<br> +The night is bleak, the snowflakes fall.<br> +Thine own, old Want am I, believe me!<br> +Ah, what delight, wilt thou receive me?<br> +I found, when I from thee had parted,<br> +No friend but he was fickle-hearted!</p> + +<p>Away, old hag! Thou liest, lo,<br> +Thou harbinger of pain and woe!<br> +Away—am I thine only friend?<br> +Thy lovers pale, they have no end!<br> +Thou vile one, may the devil take thee!<br> +Begone and no more visits make me!<br> +For—Yiddish writers not to mention—<br> +Men hold thee no such rare invention.</p> + +<p>—’Tis true! yet those must wait my leisure.<br> +To be with thee is now my pleasure.<br> +I love thy black and curling hair,<br> +I love thy wounded heart’s despair,<br> +I love thy sighs, I love to swallow<br> +Thy tears and all thy songs to follow.<br> +Oh great indeed, might I but show it,<br> +My love for thee, my pale-faced poet!</p> + +<p>Away, I’ve heard all that before,<br> +And am a writer, mark, no more.<br> +Instead of verses, wares I tell,<br> +And candy and tobacco sell.<br> +My life is sweet, my life is bitter.<br> +I’m ready and a prompt acquitter.<br> +Oh, smarter traders there are many,<br> +Yet live I well and turn a penny.</p> + +<p>—A dealer then wilt thou remain,<br> +Forever from the pen abstain?<br> +Good resolutions time disperses:<br> +Thou yet shalt hunger o’er thy verses,<br> +But vainly seeking to excuse thee<br> +Because thou dost, tonight, refuse me.<br> +Then open, fool, I tell thee plain,<br> +That we perforce shall meet again.</p> + +<p>Begone the way that I direct thee!<br> +I’ve millionaires now to protect me;<br> +No need to beg, no need to borrow,<br> +Nor fear a penniless tomorrow,<br> +Nor walk with face of blackest omen<br> +To thrill the hearts of stupid foemen,<br> +Who fain my pride to earth would bring,<br> +Because, forsooth, I sweetly sing!</p> + +<p>—Ho ho! ere thou art grown much older,<br> +Thy millionaires will all grow colder.<br> +Thou soon shalt be forgotten by them—<br> +They’ve other things to occupy them!<br> +Just now with thee they’re playing kindly,<br> +But fortune’s wheel is turning blindly<br> +To grind thy pleasures ere thou know it—<br> +And thou art left to me, my poet!</p> + +<H2><a name="thephantomvessel">The Phantom Vessel</a></H2> + +<p>Now the last, long rays of sunset<br> +To the tree-tops are ascending,<br> +And the ash-gray evening shadows<br> +Weave themselves around the earth.</p> + +<p>On the crest of yonder mountain,<br> +Now are seen from out the distance<br> +Slowly fading crimson traces;<br> +Footprints of the dying day.</p> + +<p>Blood-stained banners, torn and tattered,<br> +Hanging in the western corner,<br> +Dip their parched and burning edges<br> +In the cooling ocean wave.</p> + +<p>Smoothly roll the crystal wavelets<br> +Through the dusky veils of twilight,<br> +That are trembling down from heaven<br> +O’er the bosom of the sea.</p> + +<p>Soft a little wind is blowing<br> +O’er the gently rippling waters—<br> +What they whisper, what they murmur,<br> +Who is wise enough to say?</p> + +<p>Broad her snow-white sails outspreading<br> +’Gainst the quiet sky of evening,<br> +Flies a ship without a sailor,<br> +Flies—and whither, who can tell?</p> + +<p>As by magic moves the rudder;<br> +Borne upon her snowy pinions<br> +Flies the ship—as tho’ a spirit<br> +Drove her onward at its will!</p> + +<p>Empty is she, and deserted,<br> +Only close beside the mainmast<br> +Stands a lonely child, heartbroken,<br> +Sobbing loud and bitterly.</p> + +<p>Long and golden curls are falling<br> +Down his neck and o’er his shoulders;<br> +Now he glances backward sighing,<br> +And the silent ship flies on!</p> + +<p>With a little, shining kerchief,<br> +Fluttering upon the breezes,<br> +Unto me he sends a greeting,<br> +From afar he waves farewell.</p> + +<p>And my heart is throbbing wildly,<br> +I am weeping—tell me wherefore?<br> +God! that lovely child, I know him!<br> +’Tis my youth that flies from me!</p> + +<H2><a name="tomymisery">To My Misery</a></H2> + +<p>O Misery of mine, no other<br> + In faithfulness can match with thee,<br> +Thou more than friend, and more than brother,<br> + The only thing that cares for me!</p> + +<p>Where’er I turn, are unkind faces,<br> + And hate and treachery and guile,<br> +Thou, Mis’ry, in all times and places,<br> + Dost greet me with thy pallid smile.</p> + +<p>At birth I found thee waiting for me,<br> + I knew thee in my cradle first,<br> +The same small eyes and dim watched o’er me,<br> + The same dry, bony fingers nursed.</p> + +<p>And day by day when morning lightened,<br> + To school thou led’st me—home did’st bring,<br> +And thine were all the blooms that brightened<br> + The chilly landscape of my spring.</p> + +<p>And, thou my match and marriage monger,<br> + The marriage deed by thee was read;<br> +The hands foretelling need and hunger<br> + Were laid in blessing on my head.</p> + +<p>Thy love for me shall last unshaken,<br> + No further proof I ask, for when<br> +My hopes for aye were from me taken,<br> + My Mis’ry, thou wert with me then;</p> + +<p>And still, while sorrow’s storm is breaking<br> + Above me, and my head I bow—<br> +The kindly and the unforsaking,<br> + Oh Mis’ry, thou art with me now.</p> + +<p>Ay, still from out Fate’s gloomy towers<br> + I see thee come to me again,<br> +With wreaths of everlasting flowers,<br> + And songs funereal in thy train.</p> + +<p>And when life’s curses rock me nightly,<br> + And hushed I lie in slumber’s hold,<br> +Thy sable form comes treading lightly<br> + To wrap me in its garments fold.</p> + +<p>Thy brother let me be, and wholly<br> + Repay thee all I owe, tho’ late:<br> +My aching heart, my melancholy,<br> + My songs to thee I dedicate.</p> + +<H2><a name="olongtheway">O Long The Way</a></H2> + +<p>O long the way and short the day,<br> + No light in tower or town,<br> +The waters roar and far the shore—<br> + My ship, my ship goes down!</p> + +<p>’Tis all in vain to strive again,<br> + My cry the billows drown,<br> +The fight is done, the wind has won—<br> + My ship, my ship goes down!</p> + +<p>Bright sun, adieu! Thou’lt shine anew<br> + When skies no longer frown,<br> +But I—the deafening billows crash—<br> + My ship, my ship goes down!</p> + +<H2><a name="tothefortuneseeker">To The Fortune Seeker</a></H2> + +<p>A little more, a little less!—<br> +O shadow-hunters pitiless,<br> +Why then so eager, say!<br> +What’er you leave the grave will take,<br> +And all you gain and all you make,<br> +It will not last a day!</p> + +<p>Full soon will come the Reaper Black,<br> +Cut thorns and flowers mark his track<br> +Across Life’s meadow blithe.<br> +Oppose him, meet him as you will,<br> +Old Time’s behests he harkens still,<br> +Unsparing wields his scythe.</p> + +<p>A horrid mutiny by stealth<br> +Breaks out,—of power, fame and wealth<br> +Deserted you shall be!<br> +The foam upon your lip is rife;<br> +The last enigma now of Life<br> +Shall Death resolve for thee.</p> + +<p>You call for help—’tis all in vain!<br> +What have you for your toil and pain,<br> +What have you at the last?<br> +Poor luckless hunter, are you dumb?<br> +This way the cold pall-bearers come:<br> +A beggar’s soul has passed!</p> + +<p>A little less, a little more !—<br> +Look forth, look forth! without the door<br> +There stands a robber old.<br> +He’ll force your ev’ry lock and spring,<br> +And all your goods he’ll take and fling<br> +On Stygian waters cold.</p> + +<H2><a name="myyouth">My Youth</a></H2> + +<p>Come, beneath yon verdant branches,<br> +Come, my own, with me!<br> +Come, and there my soul will open<br> +Secret doors to thee.<br> +Yonder shalt thou learn the secrets<br> +Deep within my breast,<br> +Where my love upsprings eternal;<br> +Come! with pain opprest,<br> +Yonder all the truth I’ll tell thee,<br> +Tell it thee with tears...<br> +(Ah, so long have we been parted,<br> +Years of youth, sweet years!)</p> + +<p>See’st thou the dancers floating<br> +On a stream of sound?<br> +There alone, the soul entrancing,<br> +Happiness is found!<br> +Magic music, hark! it calls us,<br> +Ringing wild and sweet!<br> +One, two, three!—beloved, haste thee,<br> +Point thy dainty feet!<br> +Now at last I feel that living<br> +Is no foolish jest...<br> +(O sweet years of youth departed,<br> +Vanished with the rest!)</p> + +<p>Fiddler, play a little longer!<br> +Why this hurry, say?<br> +I’m but half-way through a measure—<br> +Yet a little play!<br> +Smiling in her wreath of flowers<br> +Is my love not fair?<br> +See us in the charmed circle,<br> +Flitting light as air!<br> +Haste thee, loved one, for the music<br> +Shall be hushed anon...<br> +(O sweet years of youth departed,<br> +Whither are ye gone?)</p> + +<p>Gracious youth of mine, so quickly<br> +Hath it come to this?<br> +Lo, where flowed the golden river,<br> +Yawns the black abyss!<br> +Where, oh where is my beloved,<br> +Where the wreath of flowers?<br> +Where, oh where the merry fiddler,<br> +Where those happy hours?<br> +Shall I never hear the echoes<br> +Of those songs again?<br> +Oh, on what hills are they ringing,<br> +O’er what sunny plain?<br> +May not I from out the distance<br> +Cast one backward glance<br> +On that fair and lost existence,<br> +Youth’s sweet dalliance?<br> +Foolish dreamer! Time hath snatched it,<br> +And, tho’ man implore,<br> +Joys that <i>he</i> hath reaped and garnered<br> +Bloom again no more!</p> + +<H2><a name="inthewilderness">In The Wilderness</a></H2> + +<p>Alone in desert dreary,<br> +A bird with folded wings<br> +Beholds the waste about her,<br> +And sweetly, sweetly sings.</p> + +<p>So heaven-sweet her singing,<br> +So clear the bird notes flow,<br> +’Twould seem the rocks must waken,<br> +The desert vibrant grow.</p> + +<p>Dead rocks and silent mountains<br> +Would’st waken with thy strain,—<br> +But dumb are still the mountains,<br> +And dead the rocks remain.</p> + +<p>For whom, O heavenly singer,<br> +Thy song so clear and free?<br> +Who hears or sees or heeds thee,<br> +Who feels or cares for thee?</p> + +<p>Thou may’st outpour in music<br> +Thy very soul... ’Twere vain!<br> +In stone thou canst not waken<br> +A throb of joy or pain.</p> + +<p>Thy song shall soon be silenced;<br> +I feel it... For I know<br> +Thy heart is near to bursting<br> +With loneliness and woe.</p> + +<p>Ah, vain is thine endeavor;<br> +It naught availeth—nay;<br> +For lonely as thou camest,<br> +So shalt thou pass away.</p> + +<H2><a name="iveoftenlaughed">I’ve Often Laughed</a></H2> + +<p>I’ve often laughed and oftener still have wept,<br> +A sighing always through my laughter crept,<br> +Tears were not far away...<br> +What is there to say?</p> + +<p>I’ve spoken much and oftener held by tongue,<br> +For still the most was neither said nor sung.<br> +Could I but tell it so...<br> +What is there to know?</p> + +<p>I’ve hated much and loved, oh so much more!<br> +Fierce contrasts at my very heartstrings tore...<br> +I tried to fight them—well...<br> +What is there to tell?</p> + +<H2><a name="againisingmysongs">Again I Sing my Songs</a></H2> + +<p>Once again my songs I sing thee,<br> + Now the spell is broken;<br> +Brothers, yet again I bring thee<br> + Songs of love the token.<br> +Of my joy and of my sorrow<br> + Gladly, sadly bringing;—<br> +Summer not a song would borrow—<br> + Winter sets me singing.</p> + +<p>O when life turns sad and lonely,<br> + When our joys are dead;<br> +When are heard the ravens only<br> + In the trees o’erhead;<br> +When the stormwind on the bowers<br> + Wreaks its wicked will,<br> +When the frost paints lying flowers,<br> + How should I be still?</p> + +<p>When the clouds are low descending,<br> + And the sun is drowned;<br> +When the winter knows no ending,<br> + And the cold is crowned;<br> +When with evil gloom oppressed<br> + Lie the ruins bare;<br> +When a sigh escapes the breast,<br> + Takes us unaware;</p> + +<p>When the snow-wrapped mountain dreams<br> + Of its summer gladness,<br> +When the wood is stripped and seems<br> + Full of care and sadness;<br> +When the songs are growing still<br> + As in Death’s repose,<br> +And the heart is growing chill,<br> + And the eyelids close;</p> + +<p>Then, O then I can but sing<br> + For I dream her coming—<br> +May, sweet May! I see her bring<br> + Buds and wild-bee humming!<br> +Through the silence heart-appalling,<br> + As I stand and listen,<br> +I can hear her song-birds calling,<br> + See her green leaves glisten!</p> + +<p>Thus again my songs I sing thee,<br> + Now the spell is broken;<br> +Brothers, yet again I bring thee<br> + Of my love the token.<br> +Of my joy and of my sorrow<br> + Gladly, sadly bringing,—<br> +Summer not a song would borrow!—<br> +Winter sets me singing.</p> + +<H2><a name="liberty">Liberty</a></H2> + +<p>When night and silence deep<br> +Hold all the world in sleep,<br> +As tho’ Death claimed the Hour,<br> +By some strange witchery<br> +Appears her form to me,<br> +As tho’ Magic were her dow’r.</p> + +<p>Her beauty heaven’s light!<br> +Her bosom snowy white!<br> +But pale her cheek appears.<br> +Her shoulders firm and fair;<br> +A mass of gold her hair.<br> +Her eyes—the home of tears.</p> + +<p>She looks at me nor speaks.<br> +Her arms are raised; she seeks<br> +Her fettered hands to show.<br> +On both white wrists a chain!—<br> +She cries and pleads in pain:<br> +“Unbind me!—Let me go!”</p> + +<p>I burn with bitter ire,<br> +I leap in wild desire<br> +The cruel bonds to break;<br> +But God! around the chain<br> +Is coiled and coiled again<br> +A long and loathsome snake.</p> + +<p>I shout, I cry, I chide;<br> +My voice goes far and wide,<br> +A ringing call to men:<br> +“Oh come, let in the light!<br> +Arise! Ye have the might!<br> +Set Freedom free again!”</p> + +<p>They sleep. But I strive on.<br> +They sleep!... Can’st wake a stone?...<br> +That one might stir! but one!<br> +Call I, or hold my peace,<br> +None comes to her release;<br> +And hope for her is none.</p> + +<p>But who may see her plight<br> +And not go mad outright!...<br> +“Now: up! For Freedom’s sake!”<br> +I spring to take her part:—<br> +“Fool!” cries a voice. I start...<br> +In anguish I awake.</p> + +<H2><a name="atreeintheghetto">A Tree in the Ghetto</a></H2> + +<p>There stands in th’ leafless Ghetto<br> +One spare-leaved, ancient tree;<br> +Above the Ghetto noises<br> +It moans eternally.</p> + +<p>In wonderment it muses,<br> +And murmurs with a sigh:<br> +“Alas! how God-forsaken<br> +And desolate am I!</p> + +<p>“Alas, the stony alleys,<br> +And noises loud and bold!<br> +Where are ye, birds of summer?<br> +Where are ye, woods of old?</p> + +<p>“And where, ye breezes balmy<br> +That wandered vagrant here?<br> +And where, oh sweep of heavens<br> +So deep and blue and clear?</p> + +<p>“Where are ye, mighty giants?<br> +Ye come not riding by<br> +Upon your fiery horses,<br> +A-whistling merrily.</p> + +<p>“Of other days my dreaming,<br> +Of other days, ah me!<br> +When sturdy hero-races<br> +Lived wild and glad and free!</p> + +<p>“The old sun shone, how brightly!<br> +The old lark sang, what song!<br> +O’er earth Desire and Gladness<br> +Reigned happily and long</p> + +<p>“But see! what are these ant-hills?—<br> +These ants that creep and crawl?...<br> +Bereft of man and nature,<br> +My life is stripped of all!</p> + +<p>“And I, an ancient orphan,<br> +What do I here alone?<br> +My friends have all departed,<br> +My youth and glory gone.</p> + +<p>“Oh, tear me, root and branches!<br> +No longer let me be<br> +A living head-stone, brooding<br> +O’er the grave of liberty.”</p> + +<H2><a name="thecemeterynightingale">The Cemetery Nightingale</a></H2> + +<p>In the hills’ embraces holden,<br> + In a valley filled with glooms,<br> +Lies a cemetery olden,<br> + Strewn with countless mould’ring tombs.</p> + +<p>Ancient graves o’erhung with mosses,<br> + Crumbling stones, effaced and green,—<br> +Venturesome is he who crosses,<br> + Night or day, the lonely scene.</p> + +<p>Blasted trees and willow streamers,<br> + ’Midst the terror round them spread,<br> +Seem like awe-bound, silent dreamers<br> + In this garden of the dead.</p> + +<p>One bird, anguish stricken, lingers<br> + In the shadow of the vale,<br> +First and best of feathered singers,—<br> + ’Tis the churchyard nightingale.</p> + +<p>As from bough to bough he flutters,<br> + Sweetest songs of woe and wail<br> +Through his gift divine he utters<br> + For the dreamers in the vale.</p> + +<p>Listen how his trills awaken<br> + Echoes from each mossy stone!<br> +Of all places he has taken<br> + God’s still Acre for his own.</p> + +<p class="centered">* * * * *</p> + +<p>Not on Spring or Summer glory,<br> +Not on god or angel story<br> +Loyal poet-fancy dwells!<br> +Not on streams for rich men flowing,<br> +Not on fields for rich men’s mowing,—<br> +Graves he sees, of graves he tells.<br> +Pain, oppression, woe eternal,<br> +Open heart-wounds deep, diurnal,<br> +Nothing comforts or allays;<br> +O’er God’s Acre in each nation<br> +Sings he songs of tribulation<br> +Tunes his golden harp and plays.</p> + +<H2><a name="thecreationofman">The Creation Of Man</a></H2> + +<p>When the world was first created<br> +By th’ all-wise Eternal One,<br> +Asked he none for help or counsel,—<br> +Simply spake, and it was done!</p> + +<p>Made it for his own good pleasure,<br> +Shaped it on his own design,<br> +Spent a long day’s work upon it,<br> +Formed it fair and very fine.</p> + +<p>Soon he thought on man’s creation,—<br> +Then perplexities arose,<br> +So the Lord His winged Senate<br> +Called, the question to propose:</p> + +<p>Hear, my great ones, why I called ye,<br> +Hear and help me ye who can,<br> +Hear and tell me how I further<br> +Shall proceed in making man.</p> + +<p>Ponder well before ye answer,<br> +And consider, children dear;—<br> +In our image I would make him,<br> +Free from stain, from blemish clear.</p> + +<p>Of my holy fire I’d give him,<br> +Crowned monarch shall he be,<br> +Ruling with a sway unquestioned<br> +Over earth and air and sea.</p> + +<p>Birds across the blue sky winging<br> +Swift shall fly before his face,—<br> +Silver fishes in the ocean,<br> +Savage lion in the chase.</p> + +<p>—How? This toy of froth and vapor,<br> +Thought the Senate, filled with fear,<br> +If so wide his kingdom stretches,<br> +Shortly he will break in here!</p> + +<p>So the Lord they answered, saying:—<br> +Mind and strength Thy creature give,<br> +Form him in our very image,<br> +Lord, but wingless let him live!</p> + +<p>Lest he shame the soaring eagle<br> +Let no wings to man be giv’n,<br> +Bid him o’er the earth be ruler,<br> +Lord, but keep him out of heav’n!</p> + +<p>Wisely said, the Lord made answer,<br> +Lo, your counsel fair I take!<br> +Yet, my Senate, one exception—<br> +One alone, I will to make.</p> + +<p>One exception! for the poet,<br> +For the singer, shall have wings;<br> +He the gates of Heav’n shall enter,<br> +Highest of created things.</p> + +<p>One I single from among ye,<br> +One to watch the ages long,<br> +Promptly to admit the poet<br> +When he hears his holy song.</p> + +<H2><a name="journalism">Journalism</a></H2> + +<p>Written today, and read today,<br> +And stale the news tomorrow!—<br> +Upon the sands I build... I <i>play!</i><br> +I play, and weep in sorrow:<br> +“Ah God, dear God! to find cessation<br> +From this soul-crushing occupation!<br> +If but one year ere Thou dost call me Thither,<br> +Lord, at this blighting task let me not wither.”</p> + +<H2><a name="penandshears">Pen and Shears</a></H2> + +<p>My tailor’s shears I scornèd then;<br> + I strove for something higher:<br> +To edit news—live by the pen—<br> + The pen that shall not tire!</p> + +<p>The pen, that was my humble slave,<br> + Has now enslaved its master;<br> +And fast as flows its Midas-wave,<br> + My rebel tears flow faster.</p> + +<p>The world I clad once, tailor-hired,<br> + Whilst I in tatters quakèd,<br> +Today, you see me well attired,<br> + Who lets the world go naked.</p> + +<p>What human soul, how’er oppressed,<br> + Can feel my chained soul’s yearning!<br> +A monster woe lies in my breast,<br> + In voiceless anguish burning.</p> + +<p>Oh, swing ajar the shop door, do!<br> + I’ll bear as ne’er I bore it.<br> +My blood!... you sweatshop leeches, you!...<br> + Now less I’ll blame you for it.</p> + +<p>I’ll stitch as ne’er in former years;<br> + I’ll drive the mad wheel faster;<br> +Slave will I be but to the shears;<br> + The pen shall know its master!</p> + +<H2><a name="forhire">For Hire</a></H2> + +<p>Work with might and main,<br> + Or with hand and heart,<br> +Work with soul and brain,<br> + Or with holy art,<br> +Thread, or genius’ fire—<br> + Make a vest, or verse—<br> +If ’tis done for hire,<br> + It is done the worse.</p> + +<H2><a name="afellowslave">A Fellow Slave</a></H2> + +<p>Pale-faced is he, as in the door<br> +He stands and trembles visibly,—<br> +With diffidence approaches me,<br> +And says: “Dear editor,</p> + +<p>“Since write you must, in prose or rhyme,<br> +Expose my master’s knavery,<br> +Condemn, I pray, the slavery<br> +That dominates our time.</p> + +<p>“I labor for a wicked man<br> +Who holds o’er all my being sway,—<br> +Who keeps me harnessed night and day.<br> +Since work I first began.</p> + +<p>“No leisure moments do I store,<br> +Yet harsh words only will he speak;<br> +My days are his, from week to week,<br> +But still he cries for more.</p> + +<p>“Oh print, I beg you, all I’ve said,<br> +And ask the world if this be right:<br> +To give the worker wage so slight<br> +That he must want for bread.</p> + +<p>“See, I have sinews powerful,<br> +And I’ve endurance, subtle skill,—<br> +Yet may not use them at my will,<br> +But live a master’s tool.</p> + +<p>“But oh, without avail do I<br> +Lay bare the woes of workingmen!<br> +Who earns his living by the pen,<br> +Feels not our misery.”</p> + +<p>The pallid slave yet paler grew,<br> +And ended here his bitter cry...<br> +And thus to him I made reply:<br> +“My friend, you judge untrue.</p> + +<p>“My strength and skill, like yours, are gain<br> +For others... Sold!... You understand?<br> +Your master—well—he owns your hand,<br> +And mine—he owns my brain.”</p> + +<H2><a name="thejewishmay">The Jewish May</a></H2> + +<p>May has come from out the showers,<br> +Sun and splendor in her train.<br> +All the grasses and the flowers<br> +Waken up to life again.<br> +Once again the leaves do show,<br> +And the meadow blossoms blow,<br> +Once again through hills and dales<br> +Rise the songs of nightingales.</p> + +<p>Wheresoe’er on field or hillside<br> +With her paint-brush Spring is seen,—<br> +In the valley, by the rillside,<br> +All the earth is decked with green.<br> +Once again the sun beguiles<br> +Moves the drowsy world to smiles.<br> +See! the sun, with mother-kiss<br> +Wakes her child to joy and bliss.</p> + +<p>Now each human feeling presses<br> +Flow’r like, upward to the sun,<br> +Softly, through the heart’s recesses,<br> +Steal sweet fancies, one by one.<br> +Golden dreams, their wings outshaking,<br> +Now are making<br> +Realms celestial,<br> +All of azure,<br> +New life waking,<br> +Bringing treasure<br> +Out of measure<br> +For the soul’s delight and pleasure.</p> + +<p>Who then, tell me, old and sad,<br> +Nears us with a heavy tread?<br> +On the sward in verdure clad,<br> +Lonely is the strange newcomer,<br> +Wearily he walks and slow,—<br> +His sweet springtime and his summer<br> +Faded long and long ago!</p> + +<p>Say, who is it yonder walks<br> +Past the hedgerows decked anew,<br> +While a fearful spectre stalks<br> +By his side the woodland through?<br> +’Tis our ancient friend the Jew!<br> +No sweet fancies hover round him,<br> +Naught but terror and distress.<br> +Wounds unhealed<br> +Where lie revealed<br> +Ghosts of former recollections,<br> +Corpses, corpses, old affections,<br> +Buried youth and happiness.</p> + +<p>Brier and blossom bow to meet him<br> +In derision round his path;<br> +Gloomily the hemlocks greet him<br> +And the crow screams out in wrath.<br> +Strange the birds and strange the flowers,<br> +Strange the sunshine seems and dim,<br> +Folk on earth and heav’nly powers!—<br> +Lo, the May is strange to him!</p> + +<p>Little flowers, it were meeter<br> +If ye made not quite so bold:<br> +Sweet ye are, but oh, far sweeter<br> +Knew he in the days of old!<br> +Oranges by thousands glowing<br> +Filled his groves on either hand,—<br> +All the plants were God’s own sowing<br> +In his happy, far-off land!</p> + +<p>Ask the cedars on the mountain!<br> +Ask them, for they know him well!<br> +Myrtles green by Sharon’s fountain,<br> +In whose shade he loved to dwell!<br> +Ask the Mount of Olives beauteous,—<br> +Ev’ry tree by ev’ry stream!—<br> +One and all will answer duteous<br> +For the fair and ancient dream....</p> + +<p>O’er the desert and the pleasance<br> +Gales of Eden softly blew,<br> +And the Lord His loving Presence<br> +Evermore declared anew.<br> +Angel children at their leisure<br> +Played in thousands round His tent,<br> +Countless thoughts of joy and pleasure<br> +God to His beloved sent.</p> + +<p>There in bygone days and olden,<br> +From a wond’rous harp and golden<br> +Charmed he music spirit-haunting,<br> +Holy, chaste and soul-enchanting.<br> +Never with the ancient sweetness,<br> +Never in its old completeness<br> +Shall it sound: his dream is ended,<br> +On a willow-bough suspended.</p> + +<p>Gone that dream so fair and fleeting!<br> +Yet behold: thou dreamst anew!<br> +Hark! a <i>new</i> May gives thee greeting<br> +From afar. Dost hear it, Jew?<br> +Weep no more, altho’ with sorrows<br> +Bow’d e’en to the grave: I see<br> +Happier years and brighter morrows,<br> +Dawning, Israel, for thee!<br> +Hear’st thou not the promise ring<br> +Where, like doves on silver wing,<br> +Thronging cherubs sweetly sing<br> +Newmade songs of what shall be?</p> + +<p>Hark! your olives shall be shaken,<br> +And your citrons and your limes<br> +Filled with fragrance. God shall waken.<br> +Lead you as in olden times.<br> +In the pastures by the river<br> +Ye once more your flocks shall tend.<br> +Ye shall live, and live forever<br> +Happy lives that know no end.<br> +No more wandering, no more sadness:<br> +Peace shall be your lot, and still<br> +Hero hearts shall throb with gladness<br> +’Neath Moriah’s silent hill.<br> +Nevermore of dread afflictions<br> +Or oppression need ye tell:<br> +Filled with joy and benedictions<br> +In the old home shall ye dwell.<br> +To the fatherland returning,<br> +Following the homeward path,<br> +Ye shall find the embers burning<br> +Still upon the ruined hearth!</p> + +<H2><a name="thefeastoflights">The Feast Of Lights</a></H2> + +<p>Little candles glistening,<br> +Telling those are listening<br> +Legends manifold,<br> +Many a little story,<br> +Tales of blood and glory<br> +Of the days of old.</p> + +<p>As I watch you flicker,<br> +As I list you bicker,<br> +Speak the ancient dreams:<br> +—You have battled, Jew, one time,<br> +You have conquer’d too, one time.<br> +(God, how strange it seems!)</p> + +<p>In your midst was order once,<br> +And within your border once<br> +Strangers took no part.<br> +Jew, you had a land one time,<br> +And an armèd hand, one time.<br> +(How it moves the heart!)</p> + +<p>Glisten, candles, glisten!<br> +As I stand and listen<br> +All the grief in me,<br> +All the woe is stirred again,<br> +And the question heard again:<br> +What the end shall be?</p> + +<H2><a name="chanukahthoughts">Chanukah Thoughts</a></H2> + +<p>Not always as you see us now,<br> + Have we been used to weep and sigh,<br> +We too have grasped the sword, I trow,<br> + And seen astonished foemen fly!</p> + +<p>We too have rushed into the fray,<br> + For our Belief the battle braved,<br> +And through the spears have fought our way,<br> + And high the flag of vict’ry waved.</p> + +<p>But generations go and come,<br> + And suns arise and set in tears,<br> +And we are weakened now and dumb,<br> + Foregone the might of ancient years.</p> + +<p>In exile where the wicked reign,<br> +Our courage and our pride expired,<br> +But e’en today each throbbing vein<br> + With Asmonean blood is fired.</p> + +<p>Tho’ cruel hands with mighty flail<br> + Have threshed us, yet we have not blenched:<br> +The sea of blood could naught prevail,<br> + That fire is burning, still unquenched.</p> + +<p>Our fall is great, our fall is real,<br> + (You need but look on us to tell!)<br> +Yet in us lives the old Ideal<br> + Which all the nations shall not quell.</p> + +<H2><a name="sfere">Sfēré</a></H2> + +<p>I asked of my Muse, had she any objection<br> + To laughing with me,—not a word for reply!<br> +You see, it is Sfēré, our time for dejection,—<br> + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry?</p> + +<p>You laughed then, you say? ’tis a sound to affright one!<br> + In Jewish delight, what is worthy the name?<br> +The laugh of a Jew! It is never a right one,<br> + For laughing and groaning with him are the same.</p> + +<p>You thought there was zest in a Jewish existence?<br> + You deemd that the star of a Jew could be kind?<br> +The Spring calls and beckons with gracious insistence,—<br> + Jew,—sit down in sackcloth and weep yourself blind!</p> + +<p>The garden is green and the woodland rejoices:<br> + How cool are the breezes, with fragrance how blent!<br> +But Spring calls not <i>you</i> with her thousand sweet voices!—<br> + With you it is Sfēré,—sit still and lament!</p> + +<p>The beautiful summer, this life’s consolation,<br> + In moaning and sighing glides quickly away.<br> +What hope can it offer to one of my nation?<br> + What joy can he find in the splendors of May?</p> + +<p>Bewildered and homeless, of whom whoso passes<br> + May fearlessly stop to make sport at his ease,—<br> +Say, is it for him to seek flowers and grasses,<br> + For him to be thinking on meadows and trees?</p> + +<p>And if for a moment, forgetting to ponder<br> + On grief and oppression, song breaks out anew,<br> +I hear in his lay only: “Wander and wander!”<br> + And ev’ry note tells me the singer’s a Jew.</p> + +<p>A skilful musician, and one who is verséd<br> + In metre and measure, whenever he hears<br> +The pitiful song of the Jewish disperséd,<br> + It touches his heart and it moves him to tears.</p> + +<p>The blast of the Ram’s-horn that quavers and trembles,—<br> + On this, now, alone Jewish fancy is bent.<br> +To grief and contrition its host it assembles,<br> + And causes the stoniest heart to relent.</p> + +<p>The wail that went up when the Temple was shattered,—<br> + The song of Atonement, the Suppliant’s psalm,—<br> +These only he loves, since they took him—and scattered,—<br> + Away from the land of the balsam and balm.</p> + +<p>Of all the sweet instruments, shiver’d and broken,<br> + That once in the Temple delighted his ear,<br> +The Ram’s-horn alone has he kept, as a token,<br> + And sobs out his soul on it once in the year.</p> + +<p>Instead of the harp and the viol and cymbal,<br> + Instead of the lyre, the guitar and the flute,<br> +He has but the dry, wither’d Ram’s-horn, the symbol<br> + Of gloom and despondence; the rest all are mute.</p> + +<p>He laughs, or he breaks into song, but soon after,<br> + Tho’ fain would he take in man’s gladness a part,<br> +One hears, low resounding athwart the gay laughter,<br> + The Suppliant’s psalm, and it pierces the heart.</p> + +<p>I asked of my Muse, had she any objection<br> + To laughing with me,—not a word for reply!<br> +You see, it is Sfēré, our time for dejection,—<br> + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry?</p> + +<H2><a name="measuringthegraves">Measuring the Graves</a></H2> + +<p>First old Minna, bent and lowly,<br> + Eyes with weeping nearly blind;<br> +Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, slowly, slowly,<br> + With the yarn creeps on behind.</p> + +<p>On the holy book of Minna<br> + Fall the tear-drops—scarce a word<br> +(For the heart is moved within her)<br> + Of her praying can be heard.</p> + +<p>“Mighty Lord, whose sovereign pleasure<br> + Made all worlds and men of dust,<br> +I, Thy humble handmaid, measure,<br> + God, the dwellings of the just.</p> + +<p>“Speechless here the ground they cumber,<br> + Where the pious, gracious God,<br> +Where Thy heart’s beloved slumber<br> + Underneath the quiet sod.</p> + +<p>“They who sing in jubilation,<br> + Lord, before Thy holy seat,<br> +Each one from his habitation,<br> + Through the dream for ever sweet.</p> + +<p>“From the yarn with which I measure,<br> + Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, filled with awe,<br> +Wicks will make, to search the treasure,<br> + Nightly, of Thy holy Law.</p> + +<p>Praying still, by faith sustained:<br> + ’Thou with whom the holy dwell,<br> +Scorn not Jacob’s prayer unfeigned,<br> + Mark the tears of Israel!’”</p> + +<H2><a name="thefirstbathofablution">The First Bath of Ablution</a></H2> + +<p>The wind is keen, the frost is dread,<br> + Toward the icy water,<br> +By aunt and mother forth is led<br> + The fisher’s lovely daughter.</p> + +<p>“Dive in, dive in, my child, with haste!<br> + There’s naught whereon to ponder,<br> +The time, dear heart, we must not waste:<br> + The sun has set out yonder.</p> + +<p>“God’s mercy, child, is great and sure:<br> + Fear not but He will show it!<br> +Leap in,—leap out! and you are pure,—<br> + ’Tis over ere you know it!”</p> + +<p>The frost and cold with cruel knife<br> + The tender form assail.<br> +Ah, would you be a Jewish wife,<br> + You must not weep and quail!</p> + +<p>And in—and out,—she leaps. Once more!<br> + Poor girl, it has not served you.<br> +No purer are you than before:<br> + A Gentile has observed you!</p> + +<p>And into th’ icy flood again,<br> + In terror wild she leaps!<br> +The white limbs shudder... all in vain!<br> + The Christian still he peeps.</p> + +<p>The frost and cold, they burn and bite,<br> + The women rub their fingers,<br> +The lovely child grows white and white,<br> + As on the bank she lingers.</p> + +<p>“The Law, my child, we must fulfill,<br> + The scoundrel see depart!<br> +Yet once! ’tis but a moment’s chill,<br> + ’Tis but a trifling smart!”</p> + +<p>The white-faced child the Law has kept,<br> + The covenant unstained,<br> +For in the waters deep she leapt,<br> + And there below remained.</p> + +<H2><a name="atonementeveningprayer">Atonement Evening Prayer</a></H2> + +<p>Atonement Day—evening pray’r—sadness profound.<br> +The soul-lights, so clear once, are dying around.<br> +The reader is spent, and he barely can speak;<br> +The people are faint, e’en the basso is weak.<br> +The choristers pine for the hour of repose.<br> +Just one—two chants more, and the pray’r book we close!</p> + +<p>And now ev’ry Jew’s supplication is ended,<br> +And Nilah* approaching, and twilight descended.<br> +The blast of the New Year is blown on the horn,<br> +All go; by the Ark I am standing forlorn,<br> +And thinking: “How shall it be with us anon,<br> +When closed is the temple, and ev’ryone gone!”</p> + +<p>[* Ne’ilah, (Hebrew) Conclusion, concluding prayer.]</p> + +<H2><a name="exitholiday">Exit Holiday</a></H2> + +<p>Farewell to the feast-day! the pray’r book is stained<br> +With tears; of the booth scarce a trace has remained;<br> +The lime branch is withered, the osiers are dying,<br> +And pale as a corpse the fair palm-frond is lying;<br> +The boughs of grey willow are trodden and broken—<br> +Friend, these are your hopes and your longings unspoken!</p> + +<p>Lo, there lie your dreamings all dimm’d and rejected,<br> +And there lie the joys were so surely expected!<br> +And there is the happiness blighted and perished,<br> +And all that aforetime your soul knew and cherished,<br> +The loved and the longed for, the striven for vainly—<br> +Your whole life before you lies pictured how plainly!</p> + +<p>The branches are sapless, the leaves will decay,<br> +An end is upon us, and whence, who shall say?<br> +The broom of the beadle outside now has hustled<br> +The lime and the palm that so pleasantly rustled.<br> +There blew a cold gust, from our sight all is banished—<br> +The shaft from a cross-bow less swiftly had vanished!</p> + + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Songs of Labor and Other Poems, by Morris Rosenfeld + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + +***** This file should be named 6859-h.htm or 6859-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/6/8/5/6859/ + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Songs of Labor and Other Poems + +Author: Morris Rosenfeld + +Translator: Rose Pastor Stokes + Helena Frank + +Posting Date: March 17, 2014 [EBook #6859] +Release Date: November, 2004 +First Posted: February 2, 2003 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + + + + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + + + + + + + SONGS OF LABOR + AND OTHER POEMS BY + MORRIS ROSENFELD + + _Translated from the Yiddish by + Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank_ + + + + + Contents + + + In the Factory + My Boy + The Nightingale to the Workman + What is the World? + Despair + Whither? + From Dawn to Dawn + The Candle Seller + The Pale Operator + The Beggar Family + A Millionaire + September Melodies + Depression + The Canary + Want and I + The Phantom Vessel + To my Misery + O Long the Way + To the Fortune Seeker + My Youth + In the Wilderness + I've Often Laughed + Again I Sing my Songs + Liberty + A Tree in the Ghetto + The Cemetery Nightingale + The Creation of Man + Journalism + Pen and Shears + For Hire + A Fellow Slave + The Jewish May + The Feast of Lights + Chanukah Thoughts + Sfere + Measuring the Graves + The First Bath of Ablution + Atonement Evening Prayer + Exit Holiday + + + + + SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS + + + + + + In the Factory + + + Oh, here in the shop the machines roar so wildly, + That oft, unaware that I am, or have been, + I sink and am lost in the terrible tumult; + And void is my soul... I am but a machine. + I work and I work and I work, never ceasing; + Create and create things from morning till e'en; + For what?--and for whom--Oh, I know not! Oh, ask not! + Who ever has heard of a conscious machine? + + No, here is no feeling, no thought and no reason; + This life-crushing labor has ever supprest + The noblest and finest, the truest and richest, + The deepest, the highest and humanly best. + The seconds, the minutes, they pass out forever, + They vanish, swift fleeting like straws in a gale. + I drive the wheel madly as tho' to o'ertake them,-- + Give chase without wisdom, or wit, or avail. + + The clock in the workshop,--it rests not a moment; + It points on, and ticks on: Eternity--Time; + And once someone told me the clock had a meaning,-- + Its pointing and ticking had reason and rhyme. + And this too he told me,--or had I been dreaming,-- + The clock wakened life in one, forces unseen, + And something besides;... I forget what; Oh, ask not! + I know not, I know not, I am a machine. + + At times, when I listen, I hear the clock plainly;-- + The reason of old--the old meaning--is gone! + The maddening pendulum urges me forward + To labor and labor and still labor on. + The tick of the clock is the Boss in his anger! + The face of the clock has the eyes of a foe; + The clock--Oh, I shudder--dost hear how it drives me? + It calls me "Machine!" and it cries to me "Sew!" + + At noon, when about me the wild tumult ceases, + And gone is the master, and I sit apart, + And dawn in my brain is beginning to glimmer, + The wound comes agape at the core of my heart; + And tears, bitter tears flow; ay, tears that are scalding; + They moisten my dinner--my dry crust of bread; + They choke me,--I cannot eat;--no, no, I cannot! + Oh, horrible toil I born of Need and of Dread. + + The sweatshop at mid-day--I'll draw you the picture: + A battlefield bloody; the conflict at rest; + Around and about me the corpses are lying; + The blood cries aloud from the earth's gory breast. + A moment... and hark! The loud signal is sounded, + The dead rise again and renewed is the fight... + They struggle, these corpses; for strangers, for strangers! + They struggle, they fall, and they sink into night. + + I gaze on the battle in bitterest anger, + And pain, hellish pain wakes the rebel in me! + The clock--now I hear it aright!--It is crying: + "An end to this bondage! An end there must be!" + It quickens my reason, each feeling within me; + It shows me how precious the moments that fly. + Oh, worthless my life if I longer am silent, + And lost to the world if in silence I die. + + The man in me sleeping begins to awaken; + The thing that was slave into slumber has passed: + Now; up with the man in me! Up and be doing! + No misery more! Here is freedom at last! + When sudden: a whistle!--the Boss--an alarum!-- + I sink in the slime of the stagnant routine;-- + There's tumult, they struggle, oh, lost is my ego;-- + I know not, I care not, I am a machine!... + + + + + My Boy + + + I have a little boy at home, + A pretty little son; + I think sometimes the world is mine + In him, my only one. + + But seldom, seldom do I see + My child in heaven's light; + I find him always fast asleep... + I see him but at night. + + Ere dawn my labor drives me forth; + 'Tis night when I am free; + A stranger am I to my child; + And strange my child to me. + + I come in darkness to my home, + With weariness and--pay; + My pallid wife, she waits to tell + The things he learned to say. + + How plain and prettily he asked: + "Dear mamma, when's 'Tonight'? + O when will come my dear papa + And bring a penny bright?" + + I hear her words--I hasten out-- + This moment must it be!-- + The father-love flames in my breast: + My child must look at me! + + I stand beside the tiny cot, + And look, and list, and--ah! + A dream-thought moves the baby-lips: + "O, where is my papa!" + + I kiss and kiss the shut blue eyes; + I kiss them not in vain. + They open,--O they see me then! + And straightway close again. + + "Here's your papa, my precious one;-- + A penny for you!"--ah! + A dream still moves the baby-lips: + "O, where is my papa!" + + And I--I think in bitterness + And disappointment sore; + "Some day you will awake, my child, + To find me nevermore." + + + + + The Nightingale to the Workman + + + Fair summer is here, glad summer is here! + O hark! 'tis to you I am singing: + The sun is all gold in a heaven of blue, + The birds in the forest are trilling for you, + The flies 'mid the grasses are winging; + The little brook babbles--its secret is sweet. + The loveliest flowers would circle your feet,-- + And you to your work ever clinging!... + Come forth! Nature loves you. Come forth! Do not fear! + Fair summer is here, glad summer is here, + Full measure of happiness bringing. + All creatures drink deep; and they pour wine anew + In the old cup of life, and they wonder at you. + Your portion is waiting since summer began; + Then take it, oh, take it, you laboring man! + + 'Tis summer today; ay, summer today! + The butterflies light on the flowers. + Delightfully glistens the silvery rain, + The mountains are covered with greenness again, + And perfumed and cool are the bowers. + The sheep frisk about in the flowery vale, + The shepherd and shepherdess pause in the dale, + And these are the holiest hours!... + Delay not, delay not, life passes away! + 'Tis summer today, sweet summer today! + Come, throttle your wheel's grinding power!... + Your worktime is bitter and endless in length; + And have you not foolishly lavished your strength? + O think not the world is with bitterness rife, + But drink of the wine from the goblet of life. + + O, summer is here, sweet summer is here! + I cannot forever be trilling; + I flee on the morrow. Then, you, have a care! + The crow, from the perch I am leaving, the air + With ominous cries will be filling. + O, while I am singing to you from my tree + Of love, and of life, and of joy yet to be, + Arouse you!--O why so unwilling!... + The heavens remain not so blue and so clear;-- + Now summer is here! Come, summer is here! + Reach out for the joys that are thrilling! + For like you who fade at your wheel, day by day, + Soon all things will fade and be carried away. + Our lives are but moments; and sometimes the cost + Of a moment o'erlooked is eternity lost. + + + + + What is the World? + + + Well, say you the world is a chamber of sleep, + And life but a sleeping and dreaming? + Then I too would dream: and would joyously reap + The blooms of harmonious seeming; + The dream-flow'rs of hope and of freedom, perchance, + The rich are so merrily reaping;-- + In Love's eyes I'd fancy the joy of romance; + No more would I dream Love is weeping. + + Or say you the world is a banquet, a ball, + Where everyone goes who is able? + I too wish to sit like a lord in the hall + With savory share at the table. + I too can enjoy what is wholesome and good, + A morsel both dainty and healthy; + I have in my body the same sort of blood + That flows in the veins of the wealthy. + + A garden you say is the world, where abound + The sweetest and loveliest roses? + Then would I, no leave asking, saunter around + And gather me handfuls of posies. + Of thorns I am sure I would make me no wreath; + (Of flowers I am very much fonder). + And with my beloved the bowers beneath + I'd wander, and wander, and wander. + + But ah! if the world is a battlefield wild, + Where struggle the weak with the stronger, + Then heed I no storm and no wife and no child!-- + I stand in abeyance no longer;-- + Rush into the fire of the battle nor yield, + And fight for my perishing brother; + Well, if I am struck--I can die on the field; + Die gladly as well as another.... + + + + + Despair + + + No rest--not one day in the seven for me? + Not one, from the maddening yoke to be free? + Not one to escape from the boss on the prowl, + His sinister glance and his furious growl, + The cry of the foreman, the smell of the shop,-- + To feel for one moment the manacles drop? + --_'Tis rest then you want, and you fain would forget? + To rest and oblivion they'll carry you yet._ + + The flow'rs and the trees will have withered ere long, + The last bird already is ending his song; + And soon will be leafless and shadeless the bow'rs... + I long, oh I long for the perfume of flow'rs! + To feel for a moment ere stripped are the trees, + In meadow lands open, the breath of the breeze. + --_You long for the meadow lands breezy and fair? + O, soon enough others will carry you there._ + + The rivulet sparkles with heavenly light, + The wavelets they glisten, with diamonds bedight. + Oh, but for a moment to leap in the stream, + And play in the waters that ripple and gleam! + My body is weakened with terrible toil.-- + The bath would refresh me, renew me the while. + --_You dream of a bath in the shimmering stream? + 'Twill come--when forever is ended your dream._ + + The sweatshop is smoky and gloomy and mean-- + I strive--oh, how vainly I strive to be clean! + All day I am covered with grime and with dirt. + You'd laugh,--but I long for a spotless white shirt! + For life that is noble, 'tis needful, I ween, + To work as a man should; and still be as clean. + --_So now 'tis your wish all in white to be dressed? + In white they will robe you, and lay you to rest._ + + The woods they are cool, and the woods they are free;-- + To dream and to wander, how sweet it would be! + The birds their eternal glad holiday keep; + With song that enchants you and lulls you to sleep. + 'Tis hot here,--and close! and the din will not cease. + I long for the forest, its coolth and its peace. + --_Ay, cool you will soon be; and not only cool, + But cold as no forest can make you, O Fool!_ + + I long for a friend who will comfort and cheer, + And fill me with courage when sorrow is near; + A comrade, of treasures the rarest and best, + Who gives to existence its crown and its crest; + And I am an orphan--and I am alone; + No friend or companion to call me his own. + --_Companions a-plenty--they're numberless too; + They're swarming already and waiting for you._ + + + + + Whither? + + (To a Young Girl) + + + Say whither, whither, pretty one? + The hour is young at present! + How hushed is all the world around! + Ere dawn--the streets hold not a sound. + O whither, whither do you run? + Sleep at this hour is pleasant. + The flowers are dreaming, dewy-wet; + The bird-nests they are silent yet. + Where to, before the rising sun + The world her light is giving? + + "To earn a living." + + O whither, whither, pretty child, + So late at night a-strolling? + Alone--with darkness round you curled? + All rests!--and sleeping is the world. + Where drives you now the wind so wild? + The midnight bells are tolling! + Day hath not warmed you with her light; + What aid can'st hope then from the night? + Night's deaf and blind!--Oh whither, child, + Light-minded fancies weaving? + + "To earn a living." + + + + + From Dawn to Dawn + + + I bend o'er the wheel at my sewing; + I'm spent; and I'm hungry for rest; + No curse on the master bestowing,-- + No hell-fires within me are glowing,-- + Tho' pain flares its fires in my breast. + + I mar the new cloth with my weeping, + And struggle to hold back the tears; + A fever comes over me, sweeping + My veins; and all through me goes creeping + A host of black terrors and fears. + + The wounds of the old years ache newly; + The gloom of the shop hems me in; + But six o'clock signals come duly: + O, freedom seems mine again, truly... + Unhindered I haste from the din. + + * * * * * + + Now home again, ailing and shaking, + With tears that are blinding my eyes, + With bones that are creaking and breaking, + Unjoyful of rest... merely taking + A seat; hoping never to rise. + + I gaze round me: none for a greeting! + By Life for the moment unpressed, + My poor wife lies sleeping--and beating + A lip-tune in dream false and fleeting, + My child mumbles close to her breast. + + I look on them, weeping in sorrow, + And think: "When the Reaper has come-- + When finds me no longer the morrow-- + What aid then?--from whom will they borrow + The crust of dry bread and the home? + + "What harbors that morrow," I wonder, + "For them when the breadwinner's gone? + When sudden and swift as the thunder + The bread-bond is broken asunder, + And friend in the world there is none." + + A numbness my brain is o'ertaking... + To sleep for a moment I drop: + Then start!... In the east light is breaking!-- + I drag myself, ailing and aching, + Again to the gloom of the shop. + + + + + The Candle Seller + + + In Hester Street, hard by a telegraph post, + There sits a poor woman as wan as a ghost. + Her pale face is shrunk, like the face of the dead, + And yet you can tell that her cheeks once were red. + But love, ease and friendship and glory, I ween, + May hardly the cause of their fading have been. + Poor soul, she has wept so, she scarcely can see. + A skeleton infant she holds on her knee. + It tugs at her breast, and it whimpers and sleeps, + But soon at her cry it awakens and weeps-- + "Two cents, my good woman, three candles will buy, + As bright as their flame be my star in the sky!" + + Tho' few are her wares, and her basket is small, + She earns her own living by these, when at all. + She's there with her baby in wind and in rain, + In frost and in snow-fall, in weakness and pain. + She trades and she trades, through the good times and slack-- + No home and no food, and no cloak to her back. + She's kithless and kinless--one friend at the most, + And that one is silent: the telegraph post! + She asks for no alms, the poor Jewess, but still, + Altho' she is wretched, forsaken and ill, + She cries Sabbath candles to those that come nigh, + And all that she pleads is, that people will buy. + + To honor the sweet, holy Sabbath, each one + With joy in his heart to the market has gone. + To shops and to pushcarts they hurriedly fare; + But who for the poor, wretched woman will care? + A few of her candles you think they will take?-- + They seek the meat patties, the fish and the cake. + She holds forth a hand with the pitiful cry: + "Two cents, my good women, three candles will buy!" + But no one has listened, and no one has heard: + Her voice is so weak, that it fails at each word. + Perchance the poor mite in her lap understood, + She hears mother's crying--but where is the good + + I pray you, how long will she sit there and cry + Her candles so feebly to all that pass by? + How long will it be, do you think, ere her breath + Gives out in the horrible struggle with Death? + How long will this frail one in mother-love strong, + Give suck to the babe at her breast? Oh, how long? + The child mother's tears used to swallow before, + But mother's eyes, nowadays, shed them no more. + Oh, dry are the eyes now, and empty the brain, + The heart well-nigh broken, the breath drawn with pain. + Yet ever, tho' faintly, she calls out anew: + "Oh buy but two candles, good women, but two!" + + In Hester Street stands on the pavement of stone + A small, orphaned basket, forsaken, alone. + Beside it is sitting a corpse, cold and stark: + The seller of candles--will nobody mark? + No, none of the passers have noticed her yet. + The rich ones, on feasting are busily set, + And such as are pious, you well may believe, + Have no time to spare on the gay Sabbath eve. + So no one has noticed and no one has seen. + And now comes the nightfall, and with it, serene, + The Princess, the Sabbath, from Heaven descends, + And all the gay throng to the synagogue wends. + + Within, where they pray, all is cleanly and bright, + The cantor sings sweetly, they list with delight. + But why in a dream stands the tall chandelier, + As dim as the candles that gleam round a bier? + The candles belonged to the woman, you know, + Who died in the street but a short time ago. + The rich and the pious have brought them tonight, + For mother and child they have set them alight. + The rich and the pious their duty have done: + Her tapers are lighted who died all alone. + The rich and the pious are nobly behaved: + A body--what matters? But souls must be saved! + + O synagogue lights, be ye witnesses bold + That mother and child died of hunger and cold + Where millions are squandered in idle display; + That men, all unheeded, must starve by the way. + Then hold back your flame, blessed lights, hold it fast! + The great day of judgment will come at the last. + Before the white throne, where imposture is vain, + Ye lights for the soul, ye'll be lighted again! + And upward your flame there shall mount as on wings, + And damn the existing false order of things! + + + + + The Pale Operator + + + If but with my pen I could draw him, + With terror you'd look in his face; + For he, since the first day I saw him, + Has sat there and sewed in his place. + + Years pass in procession unending, + And ever the pale one is seen, + As over his work he sits bending, + And fights with the soulless machine. + + I feel, as I gaze at each feature, + Perspiring and grimy and wan, + It is not the strength of the creature,-- + The will only, urges him on. + + And ever the sweat-drops are flowing, + They fall o'er his thin cheek in streams, + They water the stuff he is sewing, + And soak themselves into the seams. + + How long shall the wheel yet, I pray you, + Be chased by the pale artisan? + And what shall the ending be, say you? + Resolve the dark riddle who can! + + I know that it cannot be reckoned,-- + But one thing the future will show: + When this man has vanished, a second + Will sit in his place there and sew. + + + + + The Beggar Family + + + Within the court, before the judge, + There stand six wretched creatures, + They're lame and weary, one and all, + With pinched and pallid features. + The father is a broken man, + The mother weak and ailing, + The little children, skin and bone, + With fear and hunger wailing. + + Their sins are very great, and call + Aloud for retribution, + For their's (maybe you guess!) the crime + Of hopeless destitution. + They look upon the judge's face, + They know what judges ponder, + They know the punishment that waits + On those that beg and wander. + + For months from justice they have fled + Along the streets and highways, + From farm to farm, from town to town, + Along the lanes and byways. + They've slept full oftentimes in jail, + They're known in many places; + Yet still they live, for all the woe + That's stamped upon their faces. + + The woman's chill with fear. The man + Implores the judge: "Oh tell us, + What will you? With our children small + Relentlessly expel us? + Oh let us be! We'll sleep at night + In corners dark; the city + Has room for all! And some kind soul + Will give a crust in pity. + + "For wife and children I will toil: + It cannot be much longer + (For God almighty is and good!) + Ere I for work am stronger. + Oh let us here with men remain, + Nor drive us any further! + Oh why our curses will you have, + And not our blessings rather!" + + And now the sick man quails before + The judge's piercing glances: + "No, only two of you shall go + This time and take your chances. + Your wife and you! The children four + You'll leave, my man, behind you, + For them, within the Orphan's Home, + Free places I will find you." + + The father's dumb--the mother shrieks: + "My babes and me you'd sever? + If God there be, such cruel act + Shall find forgiveness never! + But first, oh judge, must you condemn + To death their wretched mother-- + I cannot leave my children dear + With you or any other! + + "I bore and nursed them, struggling still + To shelter and to shield them, + Oh judge, I'll beg from door to door, + My very life-blood yield them! + I know you do not mean it, judge, + With us poor folk you're jesting. + Give back my babes, and further yet + We'll wander unprotesting." + + The judge, alas! has turned away, + The paper dread unrolled, + And useless all the mother's grief, + The wild and uncontrolled. + More cruel can a sentence be + Than that which now is given? + Oh cursed the system 'neath whose sway + The human heart is riven! + + + + + A Millionaire + + + No, not from tuning-forks of gold + Take I my key for singing; + From Upper Seats no order bold + Can set my music ringing; + But groans the slave through sense of wrong, + And naught my voice can smother; + As flame leaps up, so leaps my song + For my oppressed brother. + + And thus the end comes swift and sure... + Thus life itself must leave me; + For what can these my brothers poor + In compensation give me, + Save tears for ev'ry tear and sigh?-- + (For they are rich in anguish). + A millionaire of tears am I, + And mid my millions languish. + + + + + September Melodies + + + I + + + The summer is over! + 'Tis windy and chilly. + The flowers are dead in the dale. + All beauty has faded, + The rose and the lily + In death-sleep lie withered and pale. + + Now hurries the stormwind + A mournful procession + Of leaves and dead flowers along, + Now murmurs the forest + Its dying confession, + And hushed is the holiest song. + + Their "prayers of departure" + The wild birds are singing, + They fly to the wide stormy main. + Oh tell me, ye loved ones, + Whereto are ye winging? + Oh answer: when come ye again? + + Oh hark to the wailing + For joys that have vanished! + The answer is heavy with pain: + Alas! We know only + That hence we are banished-- + But God knows of coming again! + + + II + + + The Tkiyes*-man has blown his horn, + And swift the days' declining; + The leaves drop off, in fields forlorn + Are tender grasses pining. + + The earth will soon be cold and bare, + Her robe of glory falling; + Already to the mourner's prayer + The last wild bird is calling. + + He sings so sweetly and so sad + A song of friends who parted, + That even if it find you glad, + It leaves you broken hearted. + + The copses shudder in the breeze, + Some dream-known terror fearing. + Awake! O great and little trees! + The Judgment-day is nearing! + + O men! O trees in copses cold! + Beware the rising weather! + Or late or soon, both young and old + Shall strew the ground together.... + + [*Tkiye: first blast of the Ram's horn.] + + + + + Depression + + + All the striving, all the failing, + To the silent Nothing sailing. + Swiftly, swiftly passing by! + For the land of shadows leaving, + Where a wistful hand is weaving + Thy still woof, Eternity! + + Gloomy thoughts in me awaken, + And with fear my breast is shaken, + Thinking: O thou black abyss; + All the toil and thrift of life, + All the struggle and the strife, + Shall it come at last to this? + + With the grave shall be requited + Good and evil, and united + Ne'er to separate again? + What the light hath parted purely, + Shall the darkness join more surely?-- + Was the vict'ry won in vain? + + O mute and infinite extension, + O time beyond our comprehension, + Shall thought and deed ungarnered fall? + Ev'rything dost take and slay, + Ev'rything dost bear away, + Silent Nothing, silent All!... + + + + + The Canary + + + The free canary warbles + In leafy forest dell: + Who feels what rapture thrills her, + And who her joy can tell? + + The sweet canary warbles + Where wealth and splendor dwell: + Who knows what sorrow moves her, + And who her pain can tell? + + + + + Want And I + + + Who's there? who's there? who was it tried + To force the entrance I've denied? + An 'twere a friend, I'd gladly borne it, + But no--'twas Want! I could have sworn it. + I heard thy voice, old witch, I know thee! + Avaunt, thou evil hag, beshrew thee! + God's curse! why seekest thou to find me? + Away to all black years behind me! + + To torture me was thine endeavor, + My body from my soul to sever, + Of pride and courage to deprive me, + And into beggary to drive me. + Begone, where thousand devils burn-- + Begone, nor evermore return! + Begone, most wretched thou of creatures, + And hide for aye thine hateful features! + --Beloved, ope the door in pity! + + No friend have I in all the city + Save thee, then open to my call! + The night is bleak, the snowflakes fall. + Thine own, old Want am I, believe me! + Ah, what delight, wilt thou receive me? + I found, when I from thee had parted, + No friend but he was fickle-hearted! + + Away, old hag! Thou liest, lo, + Thou harbinger of pain and woe! + Away--am I thine only friend? + Thy lovers pale, they have no end! + Thou vile one, may the devil take thee! + Begone and no more visits make me! + For--Yiddish writers not to mention-- + Men hold thee no such rare invention. + + --'Tis true! yet those must wait my leisure. + To be with thee is now my pleasure. + I love thy black and curling hair, + I love thy wounded heart's despair, + I love thy sighs, I love to swallow + Thy tears and all thy songs to follow. + Oh great indeed, might I but show it, + My love for thee, my pale-faced poet! + + Away, I've heard all that before, + And am a writer, mark, no more. + Instead of verses, wares I tell, + And candy and tobacco sell. + My life is sweet, my life is bitter. + I'm ready and a prompt acquitter. + Oh, smarter traders there are many, + Yet live I well and turn a penny. + + --A dealer then wilt thou remain, + Forever from the pen abstain? + Good resolutions time disperses: + Thou yet shalt hunger o'er thy verses, + But vainly seeking to excuse thee + Because thou dost, tonight, refuse me. + Then open, fool, I tell thee plain, + That we perforce shall meet again. + + Begone the way that I direct thee! + I've millionaires now to protect me; + No need to beg, no need to borrow, + Nor fear a penniless tomorrow, + Nor walk with face of blackest omen + To thrill the hearts of stupid foemen, + Who fain my pride to earth would bring, + Because, forsooth, I sweetly sing! + + --Ho ho! ere thou art grown much older, + Thy millionaires will all grow colder. + Thou soon shalt be forgotten by them-- + They've other things to occupy them! + Just now with thee they're playing kindly, + But fortune's wheel is turning blindly + To grind thy pleasures ere thou know it-- + And thou art left to me, my poet! + + + + + The Phantom Vessel + + + Now the last, long rays of sunset + To the tree-tops are ascending, + And the ash-gray evening shadows + Weave themselves around the earth. + + On the crest of yonder mountain, + Now are seen from out the distance + Slowly fading crimson traces; + Footprints of the dying day. + + Blood-stained banners, torn and tattered, + Hanging in the western corner, + Dip their parched and burning edges + In the cooling ocean wave. + + Smoothly roll the crystal wavelets + Through the dusky veils of twilight, + That are trembling down from heaven + O'er the bosom of the sea. + + Soft a little wind is blowing + O'er the gently rippling waters-- + What they whisper, what they murmur, + Who is wise enough to say? + + Broad her snow-white sails outspreading + 'Gainst the quiet sky of evening, + Flies a ship without a sailor, + Flies--and whither, who can tell? + + As by magic moves the rudder; + Borne upon her snowy pinions + Flies the ship--as tho' a spirit + Drove her onward at its will! + + Empty is she, and deserted, + Only close beside the mainmast + Stands a lonely child, heartbroken, + Sobbing loud and bitterly. + + Long and golden curls are falling + Down his neck and o'er his shoulders; + Now he glances backward sighing, + And the silent ship flies on! + + With a little, shining kerchief, + Fluttering upon the breezes, + Unto me he sends a greeting, + From afar he waves farewell. + + And my heart is throbbing wildly, + I am weeping--tell me wherefore? + God! that lovely child, I know him! + 'Tis my youth that flies from me! + + + + + To My Misery + + + O Misery of mine, no other + In faithfulness can match with thee, + Thou more than friend, and more than brother, + The only thing that cares for me! + + Where'er I turn, are unkind faces, + And hate and treachery and guile, + Thou, Mis'ry, in all times and places, + Dost greet me with thy pallid smile. + + At birth I found thee waiting for me, + I knew thee in my cradle first, + The same small eyes and dim watched o'er me, + The same dry, bony fingers nursed. + + And day by day when morning lightened, + To school thou led'st me--home did'st bring, + And thine were all the blooms that brightened + The chilly landscape of my spring. + + And, thou my match and marriage monger, + The marriage deed by thee was read; + The hands foretelling need and hunger + Were laid in blessing on my head. + + Thy love for me shall last unshaken, + No further proof I ask, for when + My hopes for aye were from me taken, + My Mis'ry, thou wert with me then; + + And still, while sorrow's storm is breaking + Above me, and my head I bow-- + The kindly and the unforsaking, + Oh Mis'ry, thou art with me now. + + Ay, still from out Fate's gloomy towers + I see thee come to me again, + With wreaths of everlasting flowers, + And songs funereal in thy train. + + And when life's curses rock me nightly, + And hushed I lie in slumber's hold, + Thy sable form comes treading lightly + To wrap me in its garments fold. + + Thy brother let me be, and wholly + Repay thee all I owe, tho' late: + My aching heart, my melancholy, + My songs to thee I dedicate. + + + + + O Long The Way + + + O long the way and short the day, + No light in tower or town, + The waters roar and far the shore-- + My ship, my ship goes down! + + 'Tis all in vain to strive again, + My cry the billows drown, + The fight is done, the wind has won-- + My ship, my ship goes down! + + Bright sun, adieu! Thou'lt shine anew + When skies no longer frown, + But I--the deafening billows crash-- + My ship, my ship goes down! + + + + + To The Fortune Seeker + + + A little more, a little less!-- + O shadow-hunters pitiless, + Why then so eager, say! + What'er you leave the grave will take, + And all you gain and all you make, + It will not last a day! + + Full soon will come the Reaper Black, + Cut thorns and flowers mark his track + Across Life's meadow blithe. + Oppose him, meet him as you will, + Old Time's behests he harkens still, + Unsparing wields his scythe. + + A horrid mutiny by stealth + Breaks out,--of power, fame and wealth + Deserted you shall be! + The foam upon your lip is rife; + The last enigma now of Life + Shall Death resolve for thee. + + You call for help--'tis all in vain! + What have you for your toil and pain, + What have you at the last? + Poor luckless hunter, are you dumb? + This way the cold pall-bearers come: + A beggar's soul has passed! + + A little less, a little more !-- + Look forth, look forth! without the door + There stands a robber old. + He'll force your ev'ry lock and spring, + And all your goods he'll take and fling + On Stygian waters cold. + + + + + My Youth + + + Come, beneath yon verdant branches, + Come, my own, with me! + Come, and there my soul will open + Secret doors to thee. + Yonder shalt thou learn the secrets + Deep within my breast, + Where my love upsprings eternal; + Come! with pain opprest, + Yonder all the truth I'll tell thee, + Tell it thee with tears... + (Ah, so long have we been parted, + Years of youth, sweet years!) + + See'st thou the dancers floating + On a stream of sound? + There alone, the soul entrancing, + Happiness is found! + Magic music, hark! it calls us, + Ringing wild and sweet! + One, two, three!--beloved, haste thee, + Point thy dainty feet! + Now at last I feel that living + Is no foolish jest... + (O sweet years of youth departed, + Vanished with the rest!) + + Fiddler, play a little longer! + Why this hurry, say? + I'm but half-way through a measure-- + Yet a little play! + Smiling in her wreath of flowers + Is my love not fair? + See us in the charmed circle, + Flitting light as air! + Haste thee, loved one, for the music + Shall be hushed anon... + (O sweet years of youth departed, + Whither are ye gone?) + + Gracious youth of mine, so quickly + Hath it come to this? + Lo, where flowed the golden river, + Yawns the black abyss! + Where, oh where is my beloved, + Where the wreath of flowers? + Where, oh where the merry fiddler, + Where those happy hours? + Shall I never hear the echoes + Of those songs again? + Oh, on what hills are they ringing, + O'er what sunny plain? + May not I from out the distance + Cast one backward glance + On that fair and lost existence, + Youth's sweet dalliance? + Foolish dreamer! Time hath snatched it, + And, tho' man implore, + Joys that _he_ hath reaped and garnered + Bloom again no more! + + + + + In The Wilderness + + + Alone in desert dreary, + A bird with folded wings + Beholds the waste about her, + And sweetly, sweetly sings. + + So heaven-sweet her singing, + So clear the bird notes flow, + 'Twould seem the rocks must waken, + The desert vibrant grow. + + Dead rocks and silent mountains + Would'st waken with thy strain,-- + But dumb are still the mountains, + And dead the rocks remain. + + For whom, O heavenly singer, + Thy song so clear and free? + Who hears or sees or heeds thee, + Who feels or cares for thee? + + Thou may'st outpour in music + Thy very soul... 'Twere vain! + In stone thou canst not waken + A throb of joy or pain. + + Thy song shall soon be silenced; + I feel it... For I know + Thy heart is near to bursting + With loneliness and woe. + + Ah, vain is thine endeavor; + It naught availeth--nay; + For lonely as thou camest, + So shalt thou pass away. + + + + + I've Often Laughed + + + I've often laughed and oftener still have wept, + A sighing always through my laughter crept, + Tears were not far away... + What is there to say? + + I've spoken much and oftener held by tongue, + For still the most was neither said nor sung. + Could I but tell it so... + What is there to know? + + I've hated much and loved, oh so much more! + Fierce contrasts at my very heartstrings tore... + I tried to fight them--well... + What is there to tell? + + + + + Again I Sing my Songs + + + Once again my songs I sing thee, + Now the spell is broken; + Brothers, yet again I bring thee + Songs of love the token. + Of my joy and of my sorrow + Gladly, sadly bringing;-- + Summer not a song would borrow-- + Winter sets me singing. + + O when life turns sad and lonely, + When our joys are dead; + When are heard the ravens only + In the trees o'erhead; + When the stormwind on the bowers + Wreaks its wicked will, + When the frost paints lying flowers, + How should I be still? + + When the clouds are low descending, + And the sun is drowned; + When the winter knows no ending, + And the cold is crowned; + When with evil gloom oppressed + Lie the ruins bare; + When a sigh escapes the breast, + Takes us unaware; + + When the snow-wrapped mountain dreams + Of its summer gladness, + When the wood is stripped and seems + Full of care and sadness; + When the songs are growing still + As in Death's repose, + And the heart is growing chill, + And the eyelids close; + + Then, O then I can but sing + For I dream her coming-- + May, sweet May! I see her bring + Buds and wild-bee humming! + Through the silence heart-appalling, + As I stand and listen, + I can hear her song-birds calling, + See her green leaves glisten! + + Thus again my songs I sing thee, + Now the spell is broken; + Brothers, yet again I bring thee + Of my love the token. + Of my joy and of my sorrow + Gladly, sadly bringing,-- + Summer not a song would borrow!-- + Winter sets me singing. + + + + + Liberty + + + When night and silence deep + Hold all the world in sleep, + As tho' Death claimed the Hour, + By some strange witchery + Appears her form to me, + As tho' Magic were her dow'r. + + Her beauty heaven's light! + Her bosom snowy white! + But pale her cheek appears. + Her shoulders firm and fair; + A mass of gold her hair. + Her eyes--the home of tears. + + She looks at me nor speaks. + Her arms are raised; she seeks + Her fettered hands to show. + On both white wrists a chain!-- + She cries and pleads in pain: + "Unbind me!--Let me go!" + + I burn with bitter ire, + I leap in wild desire + The cruel bonds to break; + But God! around the chain + Is coiled and coiled again + A long and loathsome snake. + + I shout, I cry, I chide; + My voice goes far and wide, + A ringing call to men: + "Oh come, let in the light! + Arise! Ye have the might! + Set Freedom free again!" + + They sleep. But I strive on. + They sleep!... Can'st wake a stone?... + That one might stir! but one! + Call I, or hold my peace, + None comes to her release; + And hope for her is none. + + But who may see her plight + And not go mad outright!... + "Now: up! For Freedom's sake!" + I spring to take her part:-- + "Fool!" cries a voice. I start... + In anguish I awake. + + + + + A Tree in the Ghetto + + + There stands in th' leafless Ghetto + One spare-leaved, ancient tree; + Above the Ghetto noises + It moans eternally. + + In wonderment it muses, + And murmurs with a sigh: + "Alas! how God-forsaken + And desolate am I! + + "Alas, the stony alleys, + And noises loud and bold! + Where are ye, birds of summer? + Where are ye, woods of old? + + "And where, ye breezes balmy + That wandered vagrant here? + And where, oh sweep of heavens + So deep and blue and clear? + + "Where are ye, mighty giants? + Ye come not riding by + Upon your fiery horses, + A-whistling merrily. + + "Of other days my dreaming, + Of other days, ah me! + When sturdy hero-races + Lived wild and glad and free! + + "The old sun shone, how brightly! + The old lark sang, what song! + O'er earth Desire and Gladness + Reigned happily and long + + "But see! what are these ant-hills?-- + These ants that creep and crawl?... + Bereft of man and nature, + My life is stripped of all! + + "And I, an ancient orphan, + What do I here alone? + My friends have all departed, + My youth and glory gone. + + "Oh, tear me, root and branches! + No longer let me be + A living head-stone, brooding + O'er the grave of liberty." + + + + + The Cemetery Nightingale + + + In the hills' embraces holden, + In a valley filled with glooms, + Lies a cemetery olden, + Strewn with countless mould'ring tombs. + + Ancient graves o'erhung with mosses, + Crumbling stones, effaced and green,-- + Venturesome is he who crosses, + Night or day, the lonely scene. + + Blasted trees and willow streamers, + 'Midst the terror round them spread, + Seem like awe-bound, silent dreamers + In this garden of the dead. + + One bird, anguish stricken, lingers + In the shadow of the vale, + First and best of feathered singers,-- + 'Tis the churchyard nightingale. + + As from bough to bough he flutters, + Sweetest songs of woe and wail + Through his gift divine he utters + For the dreamers in the vale. + + Listen how his trills awaken + Echoes from each mossy stone! + Of all places he has taken + God's still Acre for his own. + + * * * * * + + Not on Spring or Summer glory, + Not on god or angel story + Loyal poet-fancy dwells! + Not on streams for rich men flowing, + Not on fields for rich men's mowing,-- + Graves he sees, of graves he tells. + Pain, oppression, woe eternal, + Open heart-wounds deep, diurnal, + Nothing comforts or allays; + O'er God's Acre in each nation + Sings he songs of tribulation + Tunes his golden harp and plays. + + + + + The Creation of Man + + + When the world was first created + By th' all-wise Eternal One, + Asked he none for help or counsel,-- + Simply spake, and it was done! + + Made it for his own good pleasure, + Shaped it on his own design, + Spent a long day's work upon it, + Formed it fair and very fine. + + Soon he thought on man's creation,-- + Then perplexities arose, + So the Lord His winged Senate + Called, the question to propose: + + Hear, my great ones, why I called ye, + Hear and help me ye who can, + Hear and tell me how I further + Shall proceed in making man. + + Ponder well before ye answer, + And consider, children dear;-- + In our image I would make him, + Free from stain, from blemish clear. + + Of my holy fire I'd give him, + Crowned monarch shall he be, + Ruling with a sway unquestioned + Over earth and air and sea. + + Birds across the blue sky winging + Swift shall fly before his face,-- + Silver fishes in the ocean, + Savage lion in the chase. + + --How? This toy of froth and vapor, + Thought the Senate, filled with fear, + If so wide his kingdom stretches, + Shortly he will break in here! + + So the Lord they answered, saying:-- + Mind and strength Thy creature give, + Form him in our very image, + Lord, but wingless let him live! + + Lest he shame the soaring eagle + Let no wings to man be giv'n, + Bid him o'er the earth be ruler, + Lord, but keep him out of heav'n! + + Wisely said, the Lord made answer, + Lo, your counsel fair I take! + Yet, my Senate, one exception-- + One alone, I will to make. + + One exception! for the poet, + For the singer, shall have wings; + He the gates of Heav'n shall enter, + Highest of created things. + + One I single from among ye, + One to watch the ages long, + Promptly to admit the poet + When he hears his holy song. + + + + + Journalism + + Written today, and read today, + And stale the news tomorrow!-- + Upon the sands I build... I _play!_ + I play, and weep in sorrow: + "Ah God, dear God! to find cessation + From this soul-crushing occupation! + If but one year ere Thou dost call me Thither, + Lord, at this blighting task let me not wither." + + + + + Pen and Shears + + + My tailor's shears I scorned then; + I strove for something higher: + To edit news--live by the pen-- + The pen that shall not tire! + + The pen, that was my humble slave, + Has now enslaved its master; + And fast as flows its Midas-wave, + My rebel tears flow faster. + + The world I clad once, tailor-hired, + Whilst I in tatters quaked, + Today, you see me well attired, + Who lets the world go naked. + + What human soul, how'er oppressed, + Can feel my chained soul's yearning! + A monster woe lies in my breast, + In voiceless anguish burning. + + Oh, swing ajar the shop door, do! + I'll bear as ne'er I bore it. + My blood!... you sweatshop leeches, you!... + Now less I'll blame you for it. + + I'll stitch as ne'er in former years; + I'll drive the mad wheel faster; + Slave will I be but to the shears; + The pen shall know its master! + + + + + For Hire + + + Work with might and main, + Or with hand and heart, + Work with soul and brain, + Or with holy art, + Thread, or genius' fire-- + Make a vest, or verse-- + If 'tis done for hire, + It is done the worse. + + + + + A Fellow Slave + + + Pale-faced is he, as in the door + He stands and trembles visibly,-- + With diffidence approaches me, + And says: "Dear editor, + + "Since write you must, in prose or rhyme, + Expose my master's knavery, + Condemn, I pray, the slavery + That dominates our time. + + "I labor for a wicked man + Who holds o'er all my being sway,-- + Who keeps me harnessed night and day. + Since work I first began. + + "No leisure moments do I store, + Yet harsh words only will he speak; + My days are his, from week to week, + But still he cries for more. + + "Oh print, I beg you, all I've said, + And ask the world if this be right: + To give the worker wage so slight + That he must want for bread. + + "See, I have sinews powerful, + And I've endurance, subtle skill,-- + Yet may not use them at my will, + But live a master's tool. + + "But oh, without avail do I + Lay bare the woes of workingmen! + Who earns his living by the pen, + Feels not our misery." + + The pallid slave yet paler grew, + And ended here his bitter cry... + And thus to him I made reply: + "My friend, you judge untrue. + + "My strength and skill, like yours, are gain + For others... Sold!... You understand? + Your master--well--he owns your hand, + And mine--he owns my brain." + + + + + The Jewish May + + + May has come from out the showers, + Sun and splendor in her train. + All the grasses and the flowers + Waken up to life again. + Once again the leaves do show, + And the meadow blossoms blow, + Once again through hills and dales + Rise the songs of nightingales. + + Wheresoe'er on field or hillside + With her paint-brush Spring is seen,-- + In the valley, by the rillside, + All the earth is decked with green. + Once again the sun beguiles + Moves the drowsy world to smiles. + See! the sun, with mother-kiss + Wakes her child to joy and bliss. + + Now each human feeling presses + Flow'r like, upward to the sun, + Softly, through the heart's recesses, + Steal sweet fancies, one by one. + Golden dreams, their wings outshaking, + Now are making + Realms celestial, + All of azure, + New life waking, + Bringing treasure + Out of measure + For the soul's delight and pleasure. + + Who then, tell me, old and sad, + Nears us with a heavy tread? + On the sward in verdure clad, + Lonely is the strange newcomer, + Wearily he walks and slow,-- + His sweet springtime and his summer + Faded long and long ago! + + Say, who is it yonder walks + Past the hedgerows decked anew, + While a fearful spectre stalks + By his side the woodland through? + 'Tis our ancient friend the Jew! + No sweet fancies hover round him, + Naught but terror and distress. + Wounds unhealed + Where lie revealed + Ghosts of former recollections, + Corpses, corpses, old affections, + Buried youth and happiness. + + Brier and blossom bow to meet him + In derision round his path; + Gloomily the hemlocks greet him + And the crow screams out in wrath. + Strange the birds and strange the flowers, + Strange the sunshine seems and dim, + Folk on earth and heav'nly powers!-- + Lo, the May is strange to him! + + Little flowers, it were meeter + If ye made not quite so bold: + Sweet ye are, but oh, far sweeter + Knew he in the days of old! + Oranges by thousands glowing + Filled his groves on either hand,-- + All the plants were God's own sowing + In his happy, far-off land! + + Ask the cedars on the mountain! + Ask them, for they know him well! + Myrtles green by Sharon's fountain, + In whose shade he loved to dwell! + Ask the Mount of Olives beauteous,-- + Ev'ry tree by ev'ry stream!-- + One and all will answer duteous + For the fair and ancient dream.... + + O'er the desert and the pleasance + Gales of Eden softly blew, + And the Lord His loving Presence + Evermore declared anew. + Angel children at their leisure + Played in thousands round His tent, + Countless thoughts of joy and pleasure + God to His beloved sent. + + There in bygone days and olden, + From a wond'rous harp and golden + Charmed he music spirit-haunting, + Holy, chaste and soul-enchanting. + Never with the ancient sweetness, + Never in its old completeness + Shall it sound: his dream is ended, + On a willow-bough suspended. + + Gone that dream so fair and fleeting! + Yet behold: thou dreamst anew! + Hark! a _new_ May gives thee greeting + From afar. Dost hear it, Jew? + Weep no more, altho' with sorrows + Bow'd e'en to the grave: I see + Happier years and brighter morrows, + Dawning, Israel, for thee! + Hear'st thou not the promise ring + Where, like doves on silver wing, + Thronging cherubs sweetly sing + Newmade songs of what shall be? + + Hark! your olives shall be shaken, + And your citrons and your limes + Filled with fragrance. God shall waken. + Lead you as in olden times. + In the pastures by the river + Ye once more your flocks shall tend. + Ye shall live, and live forever + Happy lives that know no end. + No more wandering, no more sadness: + Peace shall be your lot, and still + Hero hearts shall throb with gladness + 'Neath Moriah's silent hill. + Nevermore of dread afflictions + Or oppression need ye tell: + Filled with joy and benedictions + In the old home shall ye dwell. + To the fatherland returning, + Following the homeward path, + Ye shall find the embers burning + Still upon the ruined hearth! + + + + + The Feast Of Lights + + + Little candles glistening, + Telling those are listening + Legends manifold, + Many a little story, + Tales of blood and glory + Of the days of old. + + As I watch you flicker, + As I list you bicker, + Speak the ancient dreams: + --You have battled, Jew, one time, + You have conquer'd too, one time. + (God, how strange it seems!) + + In your midst was order once, + And within your border once + Strangers took no part. + Jew, you had a land one time, + And an armed hand, one time. + (How it moves the heart!) + + Glisten, candles, glisten! + As I stand and listen + All the grief in me, + All the woe is stirred again, + And the question heard again: + What the end shall be? + + + + + Chanukah Thoughts + + + Not always as you see us now, + Have we been used to weep and sigh, + We too have grasped the sword, I trow, + And seen astonished foemen fly! + + We too have rushed into the fray, + For our Belief the battle braved, + And through the spears have fought our way, + And high the flag of vict'ry waved. + + But generations go and come, + And suns arise and set in tears, + And we are weakened now and dumb, + Foregone the might of ancient years. + + In exile where the wicked reign, + Our courage and our pride expired, + But e'en today each throbbing vein + With Asmonean blood is fired. + + Tho' cruel hands with mighty flail + Have threshed us, yet we have not blenched: + The sea of blood could naught prevail, + That fire is burning, still unquenched. + + Our fall is great, our fall is real, + (You need but look on us to tell!) + Yet in us lives the old Ideal + Which all the nations shall not quell. + + + + + Sfere + + + I asked of my Muse, had she any objection + To laughing with me,--not a word for reply! + You see, it is Sfere, our time for dejection,-- + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry? + + You laughed then, you say? 'tis a sound to affright one! + In Jewish delight, what is worthy the name? + The laugh of a Jew! It is never a right one, + For laughing and groaning with him are the same. + + You thought there was zest in a Jewish existence? + You deemd that the star of a Jew could be kind? + The Spring calls and beckons with gracious insistence,-- + Jew,--sit down in sackcloth and weep yourself blind! + + The garden is green and the woodland rejoices: + How cool are the breezes, with fragrance how blent! + But Spring calls not _you_ with her thousand sweet voices!-- + With you it is Sfere,--sit still and lament! + + The beautiful summer, this life's consolation, + In moaning and sighing glides quickly away. + What hope can it offer to one of my nation? + What joy can he find in the splendors of May? + + Bewildered and homeless, of whom whoso passes + May fearlessly stop to make sport at his ease,-- + Say, is it for him to seek flowers and grasses, + For him to be thinking on meadows and trees? + + And if for a moment, forgetting to ponder + On grief and oppression, song breaks out anew, + I hear in his lay only: "Wander and wander!" + And ev'ry note tells me the singer's a Jew. + + A skilful musician, and one who is versed + In metre and measure, whenever he hears + The pitiful song of the Jewish dispersed, + It touches his heart and it moves him to tears. + + The blast of the Ram's-horn that quavers and trembles,-- + On this, now, alone Jewish fancy is bent. + To grief and contrition its host it assembles, + And causes the stoniest heart to relent. + + The wail that went up when the Temple was shattered,-- + The song of Atonement, the Suppliant's psalm,-- + These only he loves, since they took him--and scattered,-- + Away from the land of the balsam and balm. + + Of all the sweet instruments, shiver'd and broken, + That once in the Temple delighted his ear, + The Ram's-horn alone has he kept, as a token, + And sobs out his soul on it once in the year. + + Instead of the harp and the viol and cymbal, + Instead of the lyre, the guitar and the flute, + He has but the dry, wither'd Ram's-horn, the symbol + Of gloom and despondence; the rest all are mute. + + He laughs, or he breaks into song, but soon after, + Tho' fain would he take in man's gladness a part, + One hears, low resounding athwart the gay laughter, + The Suppliant's psalm, and it pierces the heart. + + I asked of my Muse, had she any objection + To laughing with me,--not a word for reply! + You see, it is Sfere, our time for dejection,-- + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry? + + + + + Measuring the Graves + + + First old Minna, bent and lowly, + Eyes with weeping nearly blind; + Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, slowly, slowly, + With the yarn creeps on behind. + + On the holy book of Minna + Fall the tear-drops--scarce a word + (For the heart is moved within her) + Of her praying can be heard. + + "Mighty Lord, whose sovereign pleasure + Made all worlds and men of dust, + I, Thy humble handmaid, measure, + God, the dwellings of the just. + + "Speechless here the ground they cumber, + Where the pious, gracious God, + Where Thy heart's beloved slumber + Underneath the quiet sod. + + "They who sing in jubilation, + Lord, before Thy holy seat, + Each one from his habitation, + Through the dream for ever sweet. + + "From the yarn with which I measure, + Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, filled with awe, + Wicks will make, to search the treasure, + Nightly, of Thy holy Law. + + Praying still, by faith sustained: + 'Thou with whom the holy dwell, + Scorn not Jacob's prayer unfeigned, + Mark the tears of Israel!'" + + + + + The First Bath of Ablution + + + The wind is keen, the frost is dread, + Toward the icy water, + By aunt and mother forth is led + The fisher's lovely daughter. + + "Dive in, dive in, my child, with haste! + There's naught whereon to ponder, + The time, dear heart, we must not waste: + The sun has set out yonder. + + "God's mercy, child, is great and sure: + Fear not but He will show it! + Leap in,--leap out! and you are pure,-- + 'Tis over ere you know it!" + + The frost and cold with cruel knife + The tender form assail. + Ah, would you be a Jewish wife, + You must not weep and quail! + + And in--and out,--she leaps. Once more! + Poor girl, it has not served you. + No purer are you than before: + A Gentile has observed you! + + And into th' icy flood again, + In terror wild she leaps! + The white limbs shudder... all in vain! + The Christian still he peeps. + + The frost and cold, they burn and bite, + The women rub their fingers, + The lovely child grows white and white, + As on the bank she lingers. + + "The Law, my child, we must fulfill, + The scoundrel see depart! + Yet once! 'tis but a moment's chill, + 'Tis but a trifling smart!" + + The white-faced child the Law has kept, + The covenant unstained, + For in the waters deep she leapt, + And there below remained. + + + + + Atonement Evening Prayer + + + Atonement Day--evening pray'r--sadness profound. + The soul-lights, so clear once, are dying around. + The reader is spent, and he barely can speak; + The people are faint, e'en the basso is weak. + The choristers pine for the hour of repose. + Just one--two chants more, and the pray'r book we close! + + And now ev'ry Jew's supplication is ended, + And Nilah* approaching, and twilight descended. + The blast of the New Year is blown on the horn, + All go; by the Ark I am standing forlorn, + And thinking: "How shall it be with us anon, + When closed is the temple, and ev'ryone gone!" + + [* Ne'ilah, (Hebrew) Conclusion, concluding prayer.] + + + + + Exit Holiday + + + Farewell to the feast-day! the pray'r book is stained + With tears; of the booth scarce a trace has remained; + The lime branch is withered, the osiers are dying, + And pale as a corpse the fair palm-frond is lying; + The boughs of grey willow are trodden and broken-- + Friend, these are your hopes and your longings unspoken! + + Lo, there lie your dreamings all dimm'd and rejected, + And there lie the joys were so surely expected! + And there is the happiness blighted and perished, + And all that aforetime your soul knew and cherished, + The loved and the longed for, the striven for vainly-- + Your whole life before you lies pictured how plainly! + + The branches are sapless, the leaves will decay, + An end is upon us, and whence, who shall say? + The broom of the beadle outside now has hustled + The lime and the palm that so pleasantly rustled. + There blew a cold gust, from our sight all is banished-- + The shaft from a cross-bow less swiftly had vanished! + + + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Songs of Labor and Other Poems, by Morris Rosenfeld + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + +***** This file should be named 6859.txt or 6859.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/6/8/5/6859/ + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Songs of Labor and Other Poems + +Author: Morris Rosenfeld +translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank + +Release Date: November, 2004 [EBook #6859] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on February 2, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + + + + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + + +SONGS OF LABOR +AND OTHER POEMS BY +MORRIS ROSENFELD + +_Translated from the Yiddish by +Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank_ + + + + +Contents + + +In the Factory +My Boy +The Nightingale to the Workman +What is the World? +Despair +Whither? +From Dawn to Dawn +The Candle Seller +The Pale Operator +The Beggar Family +A Millionaire +September Melodies +Depression +The Canary +Want and I +The Phantom Vessel +To my Misery +O Long the Way +To the Fortune Seeker +My Youth +In the Wilderness +I've Often Laughed +Again I Sing my Songs +Liberty +A Tree in the Ghetto +The Cemetery Nightingale +The Creation of Man +Journalism +Pen and Shears +For Hire +A Fellow Slave +The Jewish May +The Feast of Lights +Chanukah Thoughts +Sfere +Measuring the Graves +The First Bath of Ablution +Atonement Evening Prayer +Exit Holiday + + + + +SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS + + + + + +In the Factory + + +Oh, here in the shop the machines roar so wildly, +That oft, unaware that I am, or have been, +I sink and am lost in the terrible tumult; +And void is my soul... I am but a machine. +I work and I work and I work, never ceasing; +Create and create things from morning till e'en; +For what?--and for whom--Oh, I know not! Oh, ask not! +Who ever has heard of a conscious machine? + +No, here is no feeling, no thought and no reason; +This life-crushing labor has ever supprest +The noblest and finest, the truest and richest, +The deepest, the highest and humanly best. +The seconds, the minutes, they pass out forever, +They vanish, swift fleeting like straws in a gale. +I drive the wheel madly as tho' to o'ertake them,-- +Give chase without wisdom, or wit, or avail. + +The clock in the workshop,--it rests not a moment; +It points on, and ticks on: Eternity--Time; +And once someone told me the clock had a meaning,-- +Its pointing and ticking had reason and rhyme. +And this too he told me,--or had I been dreaming,-- +The clock wakened life in one, forces unseen, +And something besides;... I forget what; Oh, ask not! +I know not, I know not, I am a machine. + +At times, when I listen, I hear the clock plainly;-- +The reason of old--the old meaning--is gone! +The maddening pendulum urges me forward +To labor and labor and still labor on. +The tick of the clock is the Boss in his anger! +The face of the clock has the eyes of a foe; +The clock--Oh, I shudder--dost hear how it drives me? +It calls me "Machine!" and it cries to me "Sew!" + +At noon, when about me the wild tumult ceases, +And gone is the master, and I sit apart, +And dawn in my brain is beginning to glimmer, +The wound comes agape at the core of my heart; +And tears, bitter tears flow; ay, tears that are scalding; +They moisten my dinner--my dry crust of bread; +They choke me,--I cannot eat;--no, no, I cannot! +Oh, horrible toil I born of Need and of Dread. + +The sweatshop at mid-day--I'll draw you the picture: +A battlefield bloody; the conflict at rest; +Around and about me the corpses are lying; +The blood cries aloud from the earth's gory breast. +A moment... and hark! The loud signal is sounded, +The dead rise again and renewed is the fight... +They struggle, these corpses; for strangers, for strangers! +They struggle, they fall, and they sink into night. + +I gaze on the battle in bitterest anger, +And pain, hellish pain wakes the rebel in me! +The clock--now I hear it aright!--It is crying: +"An end to this bondage! An end there must be!" +It quickens my reason, each feeling within me; +It shows me how precious the moments that fly. +Oh, worthless my life if I longer am silent, +And lost to the world if in silence I die. + +The man in me sleeping begins to awaken; +The thing that was slave into slumber has passed: +Now; up with the man in me! Up and be doing! +No misery more! Here is freedom at last! +When sudden: a whistle!--the Boss--an alarum!-- +I sink in the slime of the stagnant routine;-- +There's tumult, they struggle, oh, lost is my ego;-- +I know not, I care not, I am a machine!... + + + + +My Boy + + +I have a little boy at home, +A pretty little son; +I think sometimes the world is mine +In him, my only one. + +But seldom, seldom do I see +My child in heaven's light; +I find him always fast asleep... +I see him but at night. + +Ere dawn my labor drives me forth; +'Tis night when I am free; +A stranger am I to my child; +And strange my child to me. + +I come in darkness to my home, +With weariness and--pay; +My pallid wife, she waits to tell +The things he learned to say. + +How plain and prettily he asked: +"Dear mamma, when's 'Tonight'? +O when will come my dear papa +And bring a penny bright?" + +I hear her words--I hasten out-- +This moment must it be!-- +The father-love flames in my breast: +My child must look at me! + +I stand beside the tiny cot, +And look, and list, and--ah! +A dream-thought moves the baby-lips: +"O, where is my papa!" + +I kiss and kiss the shut blue eyes; +I kiss them not in vain. +They open,--O they see me then! +And straightway close again. + +"Here's your papa, my precious one;-- +A penny for you!"--ah! +A dream still moves the baby-lips: +"O, where is my papa!" + +And I--I think in bitterness +And disappointment sore; +"Some day you will awake, my child, +To find me nevermore." + + + + +The Nightingale to the Workman + + +Fair summer is here, glad summer is here! +O hark! 'tis to you I am singing: +The sun is all gold in a heaven of blue, +The birds in the forest are trilling for you, +The flies 'mid the grasses are winging; +The little brook babbles--its secret is sweet. +The loveliest flowers would circle your feet,-- +And you to your work ever clinging!... +Come forth! Nature loves you. Come forth! Do not fear! +Fair summer is here, glad summer is here, +Full measure of happiness bringing. +All creatures drink deep; and they pour wine anew +In the old cup of life, and they wonder at you. +Your portion is waiting since summer began; +Then take it, oh, take it, you laboring man! + +'Tis summer today; ay, summer today! +The butterflies light on the flowers. +Delightfully glistens the silvery rain, +The mountains are covered with greenness again, +And perfumed and cool are the bowers. +The sheep frisk about in the flowery vale, +The shepherd and shepherdess pause in the dale, +And these are the holiest hours!... +Delay not, delay not, life passes away! +'Tis summer today, sweet summer today! +Come, throttle your wheel's grinding power!... +Your worktime is bitter and endless in length; +And have you not foolishly lavished your strength? +O think not the world is with bitterness rife, +But drink of the wine from the goblet of life. + +O, summer is here, sweet summer is here! +I cannot forever be trilling; +I flee on the morrow. Then, you, have a care! +The crow, from the perch I am leaving, the air +With ominous cries will be filling. +O, while I am singing to you from my tree +Of love, and of life, and of joy yet to be, +Arouse you!--O why so unwilling!... +The heavens remain not so blue and so clear;-- +Now summer is here! Come, summer is here! +Reach out for the joys that are thrilling! +For like you who fade at your wheel, day by day, +Soon all things will fade and be carried away. +Our lives are but moments; and sometimes the cost +Of a moment o'erlooked is eternity lost. + + + + +What is the World? + + +Well, say you the world is a chamber of sleep, +And life but a sleeping and dreaming? +Then I too would dream: and would joyously reap +The blooms of harmonious seeming; +The dream-flow'rs of hope and of freedom, perchance, +The rich are so merrily reaping;-- +In Love's eyes I'd fancy the joy of romance; +No more would I dream Love is weeping. + +Or say you the world is a banquet, a ball, +Where everyone goes who is able? +I too wish to sit like a lord in the hall +With savory share at the table. +I too can enjoy what is wholesome and good, +A morsel both dainty and healthy; +I have in my body the same sort of blood +That flows in the veins of the wealthy. + +A garden you say is the world, where abound +The sweetest and loveliest roses? +Then would I, no leave asking, saunter around +And gather me handfuls of posies. +Of thorns I am sure I would make me no wreath; +(Of flowers I am very much fonder). +And with my beloved the bowers beneath +I'd wander, and wander, and wander. + +But ah! if the world is a battlefield wild, +Where struggle the weak with the stronger, +Then heed I no storm and no wife and no child!-- +I stand in abeyance no longer;-- +Rush into the fire of the battle nor yield, +And fight for my perishing brother; +Well, if I am struck--I can die on the field; +Die gladly as well as another.... + + + + +Despair + + +No rest--not one day in the seven for me? +Not one, from the maddening yoke to be free? +Not one to escape from the boss on the prowl, +His sinister glance and his furious growl, +The cry of the foreman, the smell of the shop,-- +To feel for one moment the manacles drop? +--_'Tis rest then you want, and you fain would forget? +To rest and oblivion they'll carry you yet._ + +The flow'rs and the trees will have withered ere long, +The last bird already is ending his song; +And soon will be leafless and shadeless the bow'rs... +I long, oh I long for the perfume of flow'rs! +To feel for a moment ere stripped are the trees, +In meadow lands open, the breath of the breeze. +--_You long for the meadow lands breezy and fair? +O, soon enough others will carry you there._ + +The rivulet sparkles with heavenly light, +The wavelets they glisten, with diamonds bedight. +Oh, but for a moment to leap in the stream, +And play in the waters that ripple and gleam! +My body is weakened with terrible toil.-- +The bath would refresh me, renew me the while. +--_You dream of a bath in the shimmering stream? +'Twill come--when forever is ended your dream._ + +The sweatshop is smoky and gloomy and mean-- +I strive--oh, how vainly I strive to be clean! +All day I am covered with grime and with dirt. +You'd laugh,--but I long for a spotless white shirt! +For life that is noble, 'tis needful, I ween, +To work as a man should; and still be as clean. +--_So now 'tis your wish all in white to be dressed? +In white they will robe you, and lay you to rest._ + +The woods they are cool, and the woods they are free;-- +To dream and to wander, how sweet it would be! +The birds their eternal glad holiday keep; +With song that enchants you and lulls you to sleep. +'Tis hot here,--and close! and the din will not cease. +I long for the forest, its coolth and its peace. +--_Ay, cool you will soon be; and not only cool, +But cold as no forest can make you, O Fool!_ + +I long for a friend who will comfort and cheer, +And fill me with courage when sorrow is near; +A comrade, of treasures the rarest and best, +Who gives to existence its crown and its crest; +And I am an orphan--and I am alone; +No friend or companion to call me his own. +--_Companions a-plenty--they're numberless too; +They're swarming already and waiting for you._ + + + + +Whither? + +(To a Young Girl) + + +Say whither, whither, pretty one? +The hour is young at present! +How hushed is all the world around! +Ere dawn--the streets hold not a sound. +O whither, whither do you run? +Sleep at this hour is pleasant. +The flowers are dreaming, dewy-wet; +The bird-nests they are silent yet. +Where to, before the rising sun +The world her light is giving? + +"To earn a living." + +O whither, whither, pretty child, +So late at night a-strolling? +Alone--with darkness round you curled? +All rests!--and sleeping is the world. +Where drives you now the wind so wild? +The midnight bells are tolling! +Day hath not warmed you with her light; +What aid can'st hope then from the night? +Night's deaf and blind!--Oh whither, child, +Light-minded fancies weaving? + +"To earn a living." + + + + +From Dawn to Dawn + + +I bend o'er the wheel at my sewing; +I'm spent; and I'm hungry for rest; +No curse on the master bestowing,-- +No hell-fires within me are glowing,-- +Tho' pain flares its fires in my breast. + +I mar the new cloth with my weeping, +And struggle to hold back the tears; +A fever comes over me, sweeping +My veins; and all through me goes creeping +A host of black terrors and fears. + +The wounds of the old years ache newly; +The gloom of the shop hems me in; +But six o'clock signals come duly: +O, freedom seems mine again, truly... +Unhindered I haste from the din. + + * * * * * + +Now home again, ailing and shaking, +With tears that are blinding my eyes, +With bones that are creaking and breaking, +Unjoyful of rest... merely taking +A seat; hoping never to rise. + +I gaze round me: none for a greeting! +By Life for the moment unpressed, +My poor wife lies sleeping--and beating +A lip-tune in dream false and fleeting, +My child mumbles close to her breast. + +I look on them, weeping in sorrow, +And think: "When the Reaper has come-- +When finds me no longer the morrow-- +What aid then?--from whom will they borrow +The crust of dry bread and the home? + +"What harbors that morrow," I wonder, +"For them when the breadwinner's gone? +When sudden and swift as the thunder +The bread-bond is broken asunder, +And friend in the world there is none." + +A numbness my brain is o'ertaking... +To sleep for a moment I drop: +Then start!... In the east light is breaking!-- +I drag myself, ailing and aching, +Again to the gloom of the shop. + + + + +The Candle Seller + + +In Hester Street, hard by a telegraph post, +There sits a poor woman as wan as a ghost. +Her pale face is shrunk, like the face of the dead, +And yet you can tell that her cheeks once were red. +But love, ease and friendship and glory, I ween, +May hardly the cause of their fading have been. +Poor soul, she has wept so, she scarcely can see. +A skeleton infant she holds on her knee. +It tugs at her breast, and it whimpers and sleeps, +But soon at her cry it awakens and weeps-- +"Two cents, my good woman, three candles will buy, +As bright as their flame be my star in the sky!" + +Tho' few are her wares, and her basket is small, +She earns her own living by these, when at all. +She's there with her baby in wind and in rain, +In frost and in snow-fall, in weakness and pain. +She trades and she trades, through the good times and slack-- +No home and no food, and no cloak to her back. +She's kithless and kinless--one friend at the most, +And that one is silent: the telegraph post! +She asks for no alms, the poor Jewess, but still, +Altho' she is wretched, forsaken and ill, +She cries Sabbath candles to those that come nigh, +And all that she pleads is, that people will buy. + +To honor the sweet, holy Sabbath, each one +With joy in his heart to the market has gone. +To shops and to pushcarts they hurriedly fare; +But who for the poor, wretched woman will care? +A few of her candles you think they will take?-- +They seek the meat patties, the fish and the cake. +She holds forth a hand with the pitiful cry: +"Two cents, my good women, three candles will buy!" +But no one has listened, and no one has heard: +Her voice is so weak, that it fails at each word. +Perchance the poor mite in her lap understood, +She hears mother's crying--but where is the good + +I pray you, how long will she sit there and cry +Her candles so feebly to all that pass by? +How long will it be, do you think, ere her breath +Gives out in the horrible struggle with Death? +How long will this frail one in mother-love strong, +Give suck to the babe at her breast? Oh, how long? +The child mother's tears used to swallow before, +But mother's eyes, nowadays, shed them no more. +Oh, dry are the eyes now, and empty the brain, +The heart well-nigh broken, the breath drawn with pain. +Yet ever, tho' faintly, she calls out anew: +"Oh buy but two candles, good women, but two!" + +In Hester Street stands on the pavement of stone +A small, orphaned basket, forsaken, alone. +Beside it is sitting a corpse, cold and stark: +The seller of candles--will nobody mark? +No, none of the passers have noticed her yet. +The rich ones, on feasting are busily set, +And such as are pious, you well may believe, +Have no time to spare on the gay Sabbath eve. +So no one has noticed and no one has seen. +And now comes the nightfall, and with it, serene, +The Princess, the Sabbath, from Heaven descends, +And all the gay throng to the synagogue wends. + +Within, where they pray, all is cleanly and bright, +The cantor sings sweetly, they list with delight. +But why in a dream stands the tall chandelier, +As dim as the candles that gleam round a bier? +The candles belonged to the woman, you know, +Who died in the street but a short time ago. +The rich and the pious have brought them tonight, +For mother and child they have set them alight. +The rich and the pious their duty have done: +Her tapers are lighted who died all alone. +The rich and the pious are nobly behaved: +A body--what matters? But souls must be saved! + +O synagogue lights, be ye witnesses bold +That mother and child died of hunger and cold +Where millions are squandered in idle display; +That men, all unheeded, must starve by the way. +Then hold back your flame, blessed lights, hold it fast! +The great day of judgment will come at the last. +Before the white throne, where imposture is vain, +Ye lights for the soul, ye'll be lighted again! +And upward your flame there shall mount as on wings, +And damn the existing false order of things! + + + + +The Pale Operator + + +If but with my pen I could draw him, + With terror you'd look in his face; +For he, since the first day I saw him, + Has sat there and sewed in his place. + +Years pass in procession unending, + And ever the pale one is seen, +As over his work he sits bending, + And fights with the soulless machine. + +I feel, as I gaze at each feature, + Perspiring and grimy and wan, +It is not the strength of the creature,-- + The will only, urges him on. + +And ever the sweat-drops are flowing, + They fall o'er his thin cheek in streams, +They water the stuff he is sewing, + And soak themselves into the seams. + +How long shall the wheel yet, I pray you, + Be chased by the pale artisan? +And what shall the ending be, say you? + Resolve the dark riddle who can! + +I know that it cannot be reckoned,-- + But one thing the future will show: +When this man has vanished, a second + Will sit in his place there and sew. + + + + +The Beggar Family + + +Within the court, before the judge, +There stand six wretched creatures, +They're lame and weary, one and all, +With pinched and pallid features. +The father is a broken man, +The mother weak and ailing, +The little children, skin and bone, +With fear and hunger wailing. + +Their sins are very great, and call +Aloud for retribution, +For their's (maybe you guess!) the crime +Of hopeless destitution. +They look upon the judge's face, +They know what judges ponder, +They know the punishment that waits +On those that beg and wander. + +For months from justice they have fled +Along the streets and highways, +From farm to farm, from town to town, +Along the lanes and byways. +They've slept full oftentimes in jail, +They're known in many places; +Yet still they live, for all the woe +That's stamped upon their faces. + +The woman's chill with fear. The man +Implores the judge: "Oh tell us, +What will you? With our children small +Relentlessly expel us? +Oh let us be! We'll sleep at night +In corners dark; the city +Has room for all! And some kind soul +Will give a crust in pity. + +"For wife and children I will toil: +It cannot be much longer +(For God almighty is and good!) +Ere I for work am stronger. +Oh let us here with men remain, +Nor drive us any further! +Oh why our curses will you have, +And not our blessings rather!" + +And now the sick man quails before +The judge's piercing glances: +"No, only two of you shall go +This time and take your chances. +Your wife and you! The children four +You'll leave, my man, behind you, +For them, within the Orphan's Home, +Free places I will find you." + +The father's dumb--the mother shrieks: +"My babes and me you'd sever? +If God there be, such cruel act +Shall find forgiveness never! +But first, oh judge, must you condemn +To death their wretched mother-- +I cannot leave my children dear +With you or any other! + +"I bore and nursed them, struggling still +To shelter and to shield them, +Oh judge, I'll beg from door to door, +My very life-blood yield them! +I know you do not mean it, judge, +With us poor folk you're jesting. +Give back my babes, and further yet +We'll wander unprotesting." + +The judge, alas! has turned away, +The paper dread unrolled, +And useless all the mother's grief, +The wild and uncontrolled. +More cruel can a sentence be +Than that which now is given? +Oh cursed the system 'neath whose sway +The human heart is riven! + + + + +A Millionaire + + +No, not from tuning-forks of gold + Take I my key for singing; +From Upper Seats no order bold + Can set my music ringing; +But groans the slave through sense of wrong, + And naught my voice can smother; +As flame leaps up, so leaps my song + For my oppressed brother. + +And thus the end comes swift and sure... + Thus life itself must leave me; +For what can these my brothers poor + In compensation give me, +Save tears for ev'ry tear and sigh?-- + (For they are rich in anguish). +A millionaire of tears am I, + And mid my millions languish. + + + + +September Melodies + + +I + + +The summer is over! +'Tis windy and chilly. +The flowers are dead in the dale. +All beauty has faded, +The rose and the lily +In death-sleep lie withered and pale. + +Now hurries the stormwind +A mournful procession +Of leaves and dead flowers along, +Now murmurs the forest +Its dying confession, +And hushed is the holiest song. + +Their "prayers of departure" +The wild birds are singing, +They fly to the wide stormy main. +Oh tell me, ye loved ones, +Whereto are ye winging? +Oh answer: when come ye again? + +Oh hark to the wailing +For joys that have vanished! +The answer is heavy with pain: +Alas! We know only +That hence we are banished-- +But God knows of coming again! + + +II + + +The Tkiyes*-man has blown his horn, +And swift the days' declining; +The leaves drop off, in fields forlorn +Are tender grasses pining. + +The earth will soon be cold and bare, +Her robe of glory falling; +Already to the mourner's prayer +The last wild bird is calling. + +He sings so sweetly and so sad +A song of friends who parted, +That even if it find you glad, +It leaves you broken hearted. + +The copses shudder in the breeze, +Some dream-known terror fearing. +Awake! O great and little trees! +The Judgment-day is nearing! + +O men! O trees in copses cold! +Beware the rising weather! +Or late or soon, both young and old +Shall strew the ground together.... + +[*Tkiye: first blast of the Ram's horn.] + + + + +Depression + + +All the striving, all the failing, +To the silent Nothing sailing. +Swiftly, swiftly passing by! +For the land of shadows leaving, +Where a wistful hand is weaving +Thy still woof, Eternity! + +Gloomy thoughts in me awaken, +And with fear my breast is shaken, +Thinking: O thou black abyss; +All the toil and thrift of life, +All the struggle and the strife, +Shall it come at last to this? + +With the grave shall be requited +Good and evil, and united +Ne'er to separate again? +What the light hath parted purely, +Shall the darkness join more surely?-- +Was the vict'ry won in vain? + +O mute and infinite extension, +O time beyond our comprehension, +Shall thought and deed ungarnered fall? +Ev'rything dost take and slay, +Ev'rything dost bear away, +Silent Nothing, silent All!... + + + + +The Canary + + +The free canary warbles +In leafy forest dell: +Who feels what rapture thrills her, +And who her joy can tell? + +The sweet canary warbles +Where wealth and splendor dwell: +Who knows what sorrow moves her, +And who her pain can tell? + + + + +Want And I + + +Who's there? who's there? who was it tried +To force the entrance I've denied? +An 'twere a friend, I'd gladly borne it, +But no--'twas Want! I could have sworn it. +I heard thy voice, old witch, I know thee! +Avaunt, thou evil hag, beshrew thee! +God's curse! why seekest thou to find me? +Away to all black years behind me! + +To torture me was thine endeavor, +My body from my soul to sever, +Of pride and courage to deprive me, +And into beggary to drive me. +Begone, where thousand devils burn-- +Begone, nor evermore return! +Begone, most wretched thou of creatures, +And hide for aye thine hateful features! +--Beloved, ope the door in pity! + +No friend have I in all the city +Save thee, then open to my call! +The night is bleak, the snowflakes fall. +Thine own, old Want am I, believe me! +Ah, what delight, wilt thou receive me? +I found, when I from thee had parted, +No friend but he was fickle-hearted! + +Away, old hag! Thou liest, lo, +Thou harbinger of pain and woe! +Away--am I thine only friend? +Thy lovers pale, they have no end! +Thou vile one, may the devil take thee! +Begone and no more visits make me! +For--Yiddish writers not to mention-- +Men hold thee no such rare invention. + +--'Tis true! yet those must wait my leisure. +To be with thee is now my pleasure. +I love thy black and curling hair, +I love thy wounded heart's despair, +I love thy sighs, I love to swallow +Thy tears and all thy songs to follow. +Oh great indeed, might I but show it, +My love for thee, my pale-faced poet! + +Away, I've heard all that before, +And am a writer, mark, no more. +Instead of verses, wares I tell, +And candy and tobacco sell. +My life is sweet, my life is bitter. +I'm ready and a prompt acquitter. +Oh, smarter traders there are many, +Yet live I well and turn a penny. + +--A dealer then wilt thou remain, +Forever from the pen abstain? +Good resolutions time disperses: +Thou yet shalt hunger o'er thy verses, +But vainly seeking to excuse thee +Because thou dost, tonight, refuse me. +Then open, fool, I tell thee plain, +That we perforce shall meet again. + +Begone the way that I direct thee! +I've millionaires now to protect me; +No need to beg, no need to borrow, +Nor fear a penniless tomorrow, +Nor walk with face of blackest omen +To thrill the hearts of stupid foemen, +Who fain my pride to earth would bring, +Because, forsooth, I sweetly sing! + +--Ho ho! ere thou art grown much older, +Thy millionaires will all grow colder. +Thou soon shalt be forgotten by them-- +They've other things to occupy them! +Just now with thee they're playing kindly, +But fortune's wheel is turning blindly +To grind thy pleasures ere thou know it-- +And thou art left to me, my poet! + + + + +The Phantom Vessel + + +Now the last, long rays of sunset +To the tree-tops are ascending, +And the ash-gray evening shadows +Weave themselves around the earth. + +On the crest of yonder mountain, +Now are seen from out the distance +Slowly fading crimson traces; +Footprints of the dying day. + +Blood-stained banners, torn and tattered, +Hanging in the western corner, +Dip their parched and burning edges +In the cooling ocean wave. + +Smoothly roll the crystal wavelets +Through the dusky veils of twilight, +That are trembling down from heaven +O'er the bosom of the sea. + +Soft a little wind is blowing +O'er the gently rippling waters-- +What they whisper, what they murmur, +Who is wise enough to say? + +Broad her snow-white sails outspreading +'Gainst the quiet sky of evening, +Flies a ship without a sailor, +Flies--and whither, who can tell? + +As by magic moves the rudder; +Borne upon her snowy pinions +Flies the ship--as tho' a spirit +Drove her onward at its will! + +Empty is she, and deserted, +Only close beside the mainmast +Stands a lonely child, heartbroken, +Sobbing loud and bitterly. + +Long and golden curls are falling +Down his neck and o'er his shoulders; +Now he glances backward sighing, +And the silent ship flies on! + +With a little, shining kerchief, +Fluttering upon the breezes, +Unto me he sends a greeting, +From afar he waves farewell. + +And my heart is throbbing wildly, +I am weeping--tell me wherefore? +God! that lovely child, I know him! +'Tis my youth that flies from me! + + + + +To My Misery + + +O Misery of mine, no other + In faithfulness can match with thee, +Thou more than friend, and more than brother, + The only thing that cares for me! + +Where'er I turn, are unkind faces, + And hate and treachery and guile, +Thou, Mis'ry, in all times and places, + Dost greet me with thy pallid smile. + +At birth I found thee waiting for me, + I knew thee in my cradle first, +The same small eyes and dim watched o'er me, + The same dry, bony fingers nursed. + +And day by day when morning lightened, + To school thou led'st me--home did'st bring, +And thine were all the blooms that brightened + The chilly landscape of my spring. + +And, thou my match and marriage monger, + The marriage deed by thee was read; +The hands foretelling need and hunger + Were laid in blessing on my head. + +Thy love for me shall last unshaken, + No further proof I ask, for when +My hopes for aye were from me taken, + My Mis'ry, thou wert with me then; + +And still, while sorrow's storm is breaking + Above me, and my head I bow-- +The kindly and the unforsaking, + Oh Mis'ry, thou art with me now. + +Ay, still from out Fate's gloomy towers + I see thee come to me again, +With wreaths of everlasting flowers, + And songs funereal in thy train. + +And when life's curses rock me nightly, + And hushed I lie in slumber's hold, +Thy sable form comes treading lightly + To wrap me in its garments fold. + +Thy brother let me be, and wholly + Repay thee all I owe, tho' late: +My aching heart, my melancholy, + My songs to thee I dedicate. + + + + +O Long The Way + + +O long the way and short the day, + No light in tower or town, +The waters roar and far the shore-- + My ship, my ship goes down! + +'Tis all in vain to strive again, + My cry the billows drown, +The fight is done, the wind has won-- + My ship, my ship goes down! + +Bright sun, adieu! Thou'lt shine anew + When skies no longer frown, +But I--the deafening billows crash-- + My ship, my ship goes down! + + + + +To The Fortune Seeker + + +A little more, a little less!-- +O shadow-hunters pitiless, +Why then so eager, say! +What'er you leave the grave will take, +And all you gain and all you make, +It will not last a day! + +Full soon will come the Reaper Black, +Cut thorns and flowers mark his track +Across Life's meadow blithe. +Oppose him, meet him as you will, +Old Time's behests he harkens still, +Unsparing wields his scythe. + +A horrid mutiny by stealth +Breaks out,--of power, fame and wealth +Deserted you shall be! +The foam upon your lip is rife; +The last enigma now of Life +Shall Death resolve for thee. + +You call for help--'tis all in vain! +What have you for your toil and pain, +What have you at the last? +Poor luckless hunter, are you dumb? +This way the cold pall-bearers come: +A beggar's soul has passed! + +A little less, a little more !-- +Look forth, look forth! without the door +There stands a robber old. +He'll force your ev'ry lock and spring, +And all your goods he'll take and fling +On Stygian waters cold. + + + + +My Youth + + +Come, beneath yon verdant branches, +Come, my own, with me! +Come, and there my soul will open +Secret doors to thee. +Yonder shalt thou learn the secrets +Deep within my breast, +Where my love upsprings eternal; +Come! with pain opprest, +Yonder all the truth I'll tell thee, +Tell it thee with tears... +(Ah, so long have we been parted, +Years of youth, sweet years!) + +See'st thou the dancers floating +On a stream of sound? +There alone, the soul entrancing, +Happiness is found! +Magic music, hark! it calls us, +Ringing wild and sweet! +One, two, three!--beloved, haste thee, +Point thy dainty feet! +Now at last I feel that living +Is no foolish jest... +(O sweet years of youth departed, +Vanished with the rest!) + +Fiddler, play a little longer! +Why this hurry, say? +I'm but half-way through a measure-- +Yet a little play! +Smiling in her wreath of flowers +Is my love not fair? +See us in the charmed circle, +Flitting light as air! +Haste thee, loved one, for the music +Shall be hushed anon... +(O sweet years of youth departed, +Whither are ye gone?) + +Gracious youth of mine, so quickly +Hath it come to this? +Lo, where flowed the golden river, +Yawns the black abyss! +Where, oh where is my beloved, +Where the wreath of flowers? +Where, oh where the merry fiddler, +Where those happy hours? +Shall I never hear the echoes +Of those songs again? +Oh, on what hills are they ringing, +O'er what sunny plain? +May not I from out the distance +Cast one backward glance +On that fair and lost existence, +Youth's sweet dalliance? +Foolish dreamer! Time hath snatched it, +And, tho' man implore, +Joys that _he_ hath reaped and garnered +Bloom again no more! + + + + +In The Wilderness + + +Alone in desert dreary, +A bird with folded wings +Beholds the waste about her, +And sweetly, sweetly sings. + +So heaven-sweet her singing, +So clear the bird notes flow, +'Twould seem the rocks must waken, +The desert vibrant grow. + +Dead rocks and silent mountains +Would'st waken with thy strain,-- +But dumb are still the mountains, +And dead the rocks remain. + +For whom, O heavenly singer, +Thy song so clear and free? +Who hears or sees or heeds thee, +Who feels or cares for thee? + +Thou may'st outpour in music +Thy very soul... 'Twere vain! +In stone thou canst not waken +A throb of joy or pain. + +Thy song shall soon be silenced; +I feel it... For I know +Thy heart is near to bursting +With loneliness and woe. + +Ah, vain is thine endeavor; +It naught availeth--nay; +For lonely as thou camest, +So shalt thou pass away. + + + + +I've Often Laughed + + +I've often laughed and oftener still have wept, +A sighing always through my laughter crept, +Tears were not far away... +What is there to say? + +I've spoken much and oftener held by tongue, +For still the most was neither said nor sung. +Could I but tell it so... +What is there to know? + +I've hated much and loved, oh so much more! +Fierce contrasts at my very heartstrings tore... +I tried to fight them--well... +What is there to tell? + + + + +Again I Sing my Songs + + +Once again my songs I sing thee, + Now the spell is broken; +Brothers, yet again I bring thee + Songs of love the token. +Of my joy and of my sorrow + Gladly, sadly bringing;-- +Summer not a song would borrow-- + Winter sets me singing. + +O when life turns sad and lonely, + When our joys are dead; +When are heard the ravens only + In the trees o'erhead; +When the stormwind on the bowers + Wreaks its wicked will, +When the frost paints lying flowers, + How should I be still? + +When the clouds are low descending, + And the sun is drowned; +When the winter knows no ending, + And the cold is crowned; +When with evil gloom oppressed + Lie the ruins bare; +When a sigh escapes the breast, + Takes us unaware; + +When the snow-wrapped mountain dreams + Of its summer gladness, +When the wood is stripped and seems + Full of care and sadness; +When the songs are growing still + As in Death's repose, +And the heart is growing chill, + And the eyelids close; + +Then, O then I can but sing + For I dream her coming-- +May, sweet May! I see her bring + Buds and wild-bee humming! +Through the silence heart-appalling, + As I stand and listen, +I can hear her song-birds calling, + See her green leaves glisten! + +Thus again my songs I sing thee, + Now the spell is broken; +Brothers, yet again I bring thee + Of my love the token. +Of my joy and of my sorrow + Gladly, sadly bringing,-- +Summer not a song would borrow!-- +Winter sets me singing. + + + + +Liberty + + +When night and silence deep +Hold all the world in sleep, +As tho' Death claimed the Hour, +By some strange witchery +Appears her form to me, +As tho' Magic were her dow'r. + +Her beauty heaven's light! +Her bosom snowy white! +But pale her cheek appears. +Her shoulders firm and fair; +A mass of gold her hair. +Her eyes--the home of tears. + +She looks at me nor speaks. +Her arms are raised; she seeks +Her fettered hands to show. +On both white wrists a chain!-- +She cries and pleads in pain: +"Unbind me!--Let me go!" + +I burn with bitter ire, +I leap in wild desire +The cruel bonds to break; +But God! around the chain +Is coiled and coiled again +A long and loathsome snake. + +I shout, I cry, I chide; +My voice goes far and wide, +A ringing call to men: +"Oh come, let in the light! +Arise! Ye have the might! +Set Freedom free again!" + +They sleep. But I strive on. +They sleep!... Can'st wake a stone?... +That one might stir! but one! +Call I, or hold my peace, +None comes to her release; +And hope for her is none. + +But who may see her plight +And not go mad outright!... +"Now: up! For Freedom's sake!" +I spring to take her part:-- +"Fool!" cries a voice. I start... +In anguish I awake. + + + + +A Tree in the Ghetto + + +There stands in th' leafless Ghetto +One spare-leaved, ancient tree; +Above the Ghetto noises +It moans eternally. + +In wonderment it muses, +And murmurs with a sigh: +"Alas! how God-forsaken +And desolate am I! + +"Alas, the stony alleys, +And noises loud and bold! +Where are ye, birds of summer? +Where are ye, woods of old? + +"And where, ye breezes balmy +That wandered vagrant here? +And where, oh sweep of heavens +So deep and blue and clear? + +"Where are ye, mighty giants? +Ye come not riding by +Upon your fiery horses, +A-whistling merrily. + +"Of other days my dreaming, +Of other days, ah me! +When sturdy hero-races +Lived wild and glad and free! + +"The old sun shone, how brightly! +The old lark sang, what song! +O'er earth Desire and Gladness +Reigned happily and long + +"But see! what are these ant-hills?-- +These ants that creep and crawl?... +Bereft of man and nature, +My life is stripped of all! + +"And I, an ancient orphan, +What do I here alone? +My friends have all departed, +My youth and glory gone. + +"Oh, tear me, root and branches! +No longer let me be +A living head-stone, brooding +O'er the grave of liberty." + + + + +The Cemetery Nightingale + + +In the hills' embraces holden, + In a valley filled with glooms, +Lies a cemetery olden, + Strewn with countless mould'ring tombs. + +Ancient graves o'erhung with mosses, + Crumbling stones, effaced and green,-- +Venturesome is he who crosses, + Night or day, the lonely scene. + +Blasted trees and willow streamers, + 'Midst the terror round them spread, +Seem like awe-bound, silent dreamers + In this garden of the dead. + +One bird, anguish stricken, lingers + In the shadow of the vale, +First and best of feathered singers,-- + 'Tis the churchyard nightingale. + +As from bough to bough he flutters, + Sweetest songs of woe and wail +Through his gift divine he utters + For the dreamers in the vale. + +Listen how his trills awaken + Echoes from each mossy stone! +Of all places he has taken + God's still Acre for his own. + + * * * * * + +Not on Spring or Summer glory, +Not on god or angel story +Loyal poet-fancy dwells! +Not on streams for rich men flowing, +Not on fields for rich men's mowing,-- +Graves he sees, of graves he tells. +Pain, oppression, woe eternal, +Open heart-wounds deep, diurnal, +Nothing comforts or allays; +O'er God's Acre in each nation +Sings he songs of tribulation +Tunes his golden harp and plays. + + + + +The Creation of Man + + +When the world was first created +By th' all-wise Eternal One, +Asked he none for help or counsel,-- +Simply spake, and it was done! + +Made it for his own good pleasure, +Shaped it on his own design, +Spent a long day's work upon it, +Formed it fair and very fine. + +Soon he thought on man's creation,-- +Then perplexities arose, +So the Lord His winged Senate +Called, the question to propose: + +Hear, my great ones, why I called ye, +Hear and help me ye who can, +Hear and tell me how I further +Shall proceed in making man. + +Ponder well before ye answer, +And consider, children dear;-- +In our image I would make him, +Free from stain, from blemish clear. + +Of my holy fire I'd give him, +Crowned monarch shall he be, +Ruling with a sway unquestioned +Over earth and air and sea. + +Birds across the blue sky winging +Swift shall fly before his face,-- +Silver fishes in the ocean, +Savage lion in the chase. + +--How? This toy of froth and vapor, +Thought the Senate, filled with fear, +If so wide his kingdom stretches, +Shortly he will break in here! + +So the Lord they answered, saying:-- +Mind and strength Thy creature give, +Form him in our very image, +Lord, but wingless let him live! + +Lest he shame the soaring eagle +Let no wings to man be giv'n, +Bid him o'er the earth be ruler, +Lord, but keep him out of heav'n! + +Wisely said, the Lord made answer, +Lo, your counsel fair I take! +Yet, my Senate, one exception-- +One alone, I will to make. + +One exception! for the poet, +For the singer, shall have wings; +He the gates of Heav'n shall enter, +Highest of created things. + +One I single from among ye, +One to watch the ages long, +Promptly to admit the poet +When he hears his holy song. + + + + +Journalism + +Written today, and read today, +And stale the news tomorrow!-- +Upon the sands I build... I _play!_ +I play, and weep in sorrow: +"Ah God, dear God! to find cessation +From this soul-crushing occupation! +If but one year ere Thou dost call me Thither, +Lord, at this blighting task let me not wither." + + + + +Pen and Shears + + +My tailor's shears I scorned then; + I strove for something higher: +To edit news--live by the pen-- + The pen that shall not tire! + +The pen, that was my humble slave, + Has now enslaved its master; +And fast as flows its Midas-wave, + My rebel tears flow faster. + +The world I clad once, tailor-hired, + Whilst I in tatters quaked, +Today, you see me well attired, + Who lets the world go naked. + +What human soul, how'er oppressed, + Can feel my chained soul's yearning! +A monster woe lies in my breast, + In voiceless anguish burning. + +Oh, swing ajar the shop door, do! + I'll bear as ne'er I bore it. +My blood!... you sweatshop leeches, you!... + Now less I'll blame you for it. + +I'll stitch as ne'er in former years; + I'll drive the mad wheel faster; +Slave will I be but to the shears; + The pen shall know its master! + + + + +For Hire + + +Work with might and main, + Or with hand and heart, +Work with soul and brain, + Or with holy art, +Thread, or genius' fire-- + Make a vest, or verse-- +If 'tis done for hire, + It is done the worse. + + + + +A Fellow Slave + + +Pale-faced is he, as in the door +He stands and trembles visibly,-- +With diffidence approaches me, +And says: "Dear editor, + +"Since write you must, in prose or rhyme, +Expose my master's knavery, +Condemn, I pray, the slavery +That dominates our time. + +"I labor for a wicked man +Who holds o'er all my being sway,-- +Who keeps me harnessed night and day. +Since work I first began. + +"No leisure moments do I store, +Yet harsh words only will he speak; +My days are his, from week to week, +But still he cries for more. + +"Oh print, I beg you, all I've said, +And ask the world if this be right: +To give the worker wage so slight +That he must want for bread. + +"See, I have sinews powerful, +And I've endurance, subtle skill,-- +Yet may not use them at my will, +But live a master's tool. + +"But oh, without avail do I +Lay bare the woes of workingmen! +Who earns his living by the pen, +Feels not our misery." + +The pallid slave yet paler grew, +And ended here his bitter cry... +And thus to him I made reply: +"My friend, you judge untrue. + +"My strength and skill, like yours, are gain +For others... Sold!... You understand? +Your master--well--he owns your hand, +And mine--he owns my brain." + + + + +The Jewish May + + +May has come from out the showers, +Sun and splendor in her train. +All the grasses and the flowers +Waken up to life again. +Once again the leaves do show, +And the meadow blossoms blow, +Once again through hills and dales +Rise the songs of nightingales. + +Wheresoe'er on field or hillside +With her paint-brush Spring is seen,-- +In the valley, by the rillside, +All the earth is decked with green. +Once again the sun beguiles +Moves the drowsy world to smiles. +See! the sun, with mother-kiss +Wakes her child to joy and bliss. + +Now each human feeling presses +Flow'r like, upward to the sun, +Softly, through the heart's recesses, +Steal sweet fancies, one by one. +Golden dreams, their wings outshaking, +Now are making +Realms celestial, +All of azure, +New life waking, +Bringing treasure +Out of measure +For the soul's delight and pleasure. + +Who then, tell me, old and sad, +Nears us with a heavy tread? +On the sward in verdure clad, +Lonely is the strange newcomer, +Wearily he walks and slow,-- +His sweet springtime and his summer +Faded long and long ago! + +Say, who is it yonder walks +Past the hedgerows decked anew, +While a fearful spectre stalks +By his side the woodland through? +'Tis our ancient friend the Jew! +No sweet fancies hover round him, +Naught but terror and distress. +Wounds unhealed +Where lie revealed +Ghosts of former recollections, +Corpses, corpses, old affections, +Buried youth and happiness. + +Brier and blossom bow to meet him +In derision round his path; +Gloomily the hemlocks greet him +And the crow screams out in wrath. +Strange the birds and strange the flowers, +Strange the sunshine seems and dim, +Folk on earth and heav'nly powers!-- +Lo, the May is strange to him! + +Little flowers, it were meeter +If ye made not quite so bold: +Sweet ye are, but oh, far sweeter +Knew he in the days of old! +Oranges by thousands glowing +Filled his groves on either hand,-- +All the plants were God's own sowing +In his happy, far-off land! + +Ask the cedars on the mountain! +Ask them, for they know him well! +Myrtles green by Sharon's fountain, +In whose shade he loved to dwell! +Ask the Mount of Olives beauteous,-- +Ev'ry tree by ev'ry stream!-- +One and all will answer duteous +For the fair and ancient dream.... + +O'er the desert and the pleasance +Gales of Eden softly blew, +And the Lord His loving Presence +Evermore declared anew. +Angel children at their leisure +Played in thousands round His tent, +Countless thoughts of joy and pleasure +God to His beloved sent. + +There in bygone days and olden, +From a wond'rous harp and golden +Charmed he music spirit-haunting, +Holy, chaste and soul-enchanting. +Never with the ancient sweetness, +Never in its old completeness +Shall it sound: his dream is ended, +On a willow-bough suspended. + +Gone that dream so fair and fleeting! +Yet behold: thou dreamst anew! +Hark! a _new_ May gives thee greeting +From afar. Dost hear it, Jew? +Weep no more, altho' with sorrows +Bow'd e'en to the grave: I see +Happier years and brighter morrows, +Dawning, Israel, for thee! +Hear'st thou not the promise ring +Where, like doves on silver wing, +Thronging cherubs sweetly sing +Newmade songs of what shall be? + +Hark! your olives shall be shaken, +And your citrons and your limes +Filled with fragrance. God shall waken. +Lead you as in olden times. +In the pastures by the river +Ye once more your flocks shall tend. +Ye shall live, and live forever +Happy lives that know no end. +No more wandering, no more sadness: +Peace shall be your lot, and still +Hero hearts shall throb with gladness +'Neath Moriah's silent hill. +Nevermore of dread afflictions +Or oppression need ye tell: +Filled with joy and benedictions +In the old home shall ye dwell. +To the fatherland returning, +Following the homeward path, +Ye shall find the embers burning +Still upon the ruined hearth! + + + + +The Feast Of Lights + + +Little candles glistening, +Telling those are listening +Legends manifold, +Many a little story, +Tales of blood and glory +Of the days of old. + +As I watch you flicker, +As I list you bicker, +Speak the ancient dreams: +--You have battled, Jew, one time, +You have conquer'd too, one time. +(God, how strange it seems!) + +In your midst was order once, +And within your border once +Strangers took no part. +Jew, you had a land one time, +And an armed hand, one time. +(How it moves the heart!) + +Glisten, candles, glisten! +As I stand and listen +All the grief in me, +All the woe is stirred again, +And the question heard again: +What the end shall be? + + + + +Chanukah Thoughts + + +Not always as you see us now, + Have we been used to weep and sigh, +We too have grasped the sword, I trow, + And seen astonished foemen fly! + +We too have rushed into the fray, + For our Belief the battle braved, +And through the spears have fought our way, + And high the flag of vict'ry waved. + +But generations go and come, + And suns arise and set in tears, +And we are weakened now and dumb, + Foregone the might of ancient years. + +In exile where the wicked reign, +Our courage and our pride expired, +But e'en today each throbbing vein + With Asmonean blood is fired. + +Tho' cruel hands with mighty flail + Have threshed us, yet we have not blenched: +The sea of blood could naught prevail, + That fire is burning, still unquenched. + +Our fall is great, our fall is real, + (You need but look on us to tell!) +Yet in us lives the old Ideal + Which all the nations shall not quell. + + + + +Sfere + + +I asked of my Muse, had she any objection + To laughing with me,--not a word for reply! +You see, it is Sfere, our time for dejection,-- + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry? + +You laughed then, you say? 'tis a sound to affright one! + In Jewish delight, what is worthy the name? +The laugh of a Jew! It is never a right one, + For laughing and groaning with him are the same. + +You thought there was zest in a Jewish existence? + You deemd that the star of a Jew could be kind? +The Spring calls and beckons with gracious insistence,-- + Jew,--sit down in sackcloth and weep yourself blind! + +The garden is green and the woodland rejoices: + How cool are the breezes, with fragrance how blent! +But Spring calls not _you_ with her thousand sweet voices!-- + With you it is Sfere,--sit still and lament! + +The beautiful summer, this life's consolation, + In moaning and sighing glides quickly away. +What hope can it offer to one of my nation? + What joy can he find in the splendors of May? + +Bewildered and homeless, of whom whoso passes + May fearlessly stop to make sport at his ease,-- +Say, is it for him to seek flowers and grasses, + For him to be thinking on meadows and trees? + +And if for a moment, forgetting to ponder + On grief and oppression, song breaks out anew, +I hear in his lay only: "Wander and wander!" + And ev'ry note tells me the singer's a Jew. + +A skilful musician, and one who is versed + In metre and measure, whenever he hears +The pitiful song of the Jewish dispersed, + It touches his heart and it moves him to tears. + +The blast of the Ram's-horn that quavers and trembles,-- + On this, now, alone Jewish fancy is bent. +To grief and contrition its host it assembles, + And causes the stoniest heart to relent. + +The wail that went up when the Temple was shattered,-- + The song of Atonement, the Suppliant's psalm,-- +These only he loves, since they took him--and scattered,-- + Away from the land of the balsam and balm. + +Of all the sweet instruments, shiver'd and broken, + That once in the Temple delighted his ear, +The Ram's-horn alone has he kept, as a token, + And sobs out his soul on it once in the year. + +Instead of the harp and the viol and cymbal, + Instead of the lyre, the guitar and the flute, +He has but the dry, wither'd Ram's-horn, the symbol + Of gloom and despondence; the rest all are mute. + +He laughs, or he breaks into song, but soon after, + Tho' fain would he take in man's gladness a part, +One hears, low resounding athwart the gay laughter, + The Suppliant's psalm, and it pierces the heart. + +I asked of my Muse, had she any objection + To laughing with me,--not a word for reply! +You see, it is Sfere, our time for dejection,-- + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry? + + + + +Measuring the Graves + + +First old Minna, bent and lowly, + Eyes with weeping nearly blind; +Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, slowly, slowly, + With the yarn creeps on behind. + +On the holy book of Minna + Fall the tear-drops--scarce a word +(For the heart is moved within her) + Of her praying can be heard. + +"Mighty Lord, whose sovereign pleasure + Made all worlds and men of dust, +I, Thy humble handmaid, measure, + God, the dwellings of the just. + +"Speechless here the ground they cumber, + Where the pious, gracious God, +Where Thy heart's beloved slumber + Underneath the quiet sod. + +"They who sing in jubilation, + Lord, before Thy holy seat, +Each one from his habitation, + Through the dream for ever sweet. + +"From the yarn with which I measure, + Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, filled with awe, +Wicks will make, to search the treasure, + Nightly, of Thy holy Law. + +Praying still, by faith sustained: + 'Thou with whom the holy dwell, +Scorn not Jacob's prayer unfeigned, + Mark the tears of Israel!'" + + + + +The First Bath of Ablution + + +The wind is keen, the frost is dread, + Toward the icy water, +By aunt and mother forth is led + The fisher's lovely daughter. + +"Dive in, dive in, my child, with haste! + There's naught whereon to ponder, +The time, dear heart, we must not waste: + The sun has set out yonder. + +"God's mercy, child, is great and sure: + Fear not but He will show it! +Leap in,--leap out! and you are pure,-- + 'Tis over ere you know it!" + +The frost and cold with cruel knife + The tender form assail. +Ah, would you be a Jewish wife, + You must not weep and quail! + +And in--and out,--she leaps. Once more! + Poor girl, it has not served you. +No purer are you than before: + A Gentile has observed you! + +And into th' icy flood again, + In terror wild she leaps! +The white limbs shudder... all in vain! + The Christian still he peeps. + +The frost and cold, they burn and bite, + The women rub their fingers, +The lovely child grows white and white, + As on the bank she lingers. + +"The Law, my child, we must fulfill, + The scoundrel see depart! +Yet once! 'tis but a moment's chill, + 'Tis but a trifling smart!" + +The white-faced child the Law has kept, + The covenant unstained, +For in the waters deep she leapt, + And there below remained. + + + + +Atonement Evening Prayer + + +Atonement Day--evening pray'r--sadness profound. +The soul-lights, so clear once, are dying around. +The reader is spent, and he barely can speak; +The people are faint, e'en the basso is weak. +The choristers pine for the hour of repose. +Just one--two chants more, and the pray'r book we close! + +And now ev'ry Jew's supplication is ended, +And Nilah* approaching, and twilight descended. +The blast of the New Year is blown on the horn, +All go; by the Ark I am standing forlorn, +And thinking: "How shall it be with us anon, +When closed is the temple, and ev'ryone gone!" + +[* Ne'ilah, (Hebrew) Conclusion, concluding prayer.] + + + + +Exit Holiday + + +Farewell to the feast-day! the pray'r book is stained +With tears; of the booth scarce a trace has remained; +The lime branch is withered, the osiers are dying, +And pale as a corpse the fair palm-frond is lying; +The boughs of grey willow are trodden and broken-- +Friend, these are your hopes and your longings unspoken! + +Lo, there lie your dreamings all dimm'd and rejected, +And there lie the joys were so surely expected! +And there is the happiness blighted and perished, +And all that aforetime your soul knew and cherished, +The loved and the longed for, the striven for vainly-- +Your whole life before you lies pictured how plainly! + +The branches are sapless, the leaves will decay, +An end is upon us, and whence, who shall say? +The broom of the beadle outside now has hustled +The lime and the palm that so pleasantly rustled. +There blew a cold gust, from our sight all is banished-- +The shaft from a cross-bow less swiftly had vanished! + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs of Labor and Other Poems +by Morris Rosenfeld +translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + +This file should be named slbpm10.txt or slbpm10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, slbpm11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, slbpm10a.txt + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END* + diff --git a/old/slbpm10.zip b/old/slbpm10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0bd49be --- /dev/null +++ b/old/slbpm10.zip diff --git a/old/slbpm10h.htm b/old/slbpm10h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fda1087 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/slbpm10h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,2288 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/strict.dtd"> +<html> +<head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> + <title> Songs of Labor and Other Poems</title> + <style type="text/css"> + <!-- + BODY { font-family: serif; color: black; background: white; } + H1 { font-size: 18pt; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; text-transform: uppercase; } + H2 { font-size: 14pt; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; margin-top: 3em; } + H3 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; } + A { text-decoration: none; color: black; background: white; } + P.centered { text-align: center; } + A.footnote { font-size: 65%; vertical-align: top; } + + --> + </style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs of Labor and Other Poems +by Morris Rosenfeld +translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Songs of Labor and Other Poems + +Author: Morris Rosenfeld +translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank + +Release Date: November, 2004 [EBook #6859] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on February 2, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + + + + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<h1>Songs of Labor<br> +and Other Poems<br> +by Morris Rosenfeld</h1> + +<P class="centered">Translated from the Yiddish by<br> +Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank</p> + +<p><img src="laborer.png" alt=""></p> + +<hr> + +<H2>Contents</H2> + +<p><a href="#inthefactory">In the Factory</a><br> +<a href="#myboy">My Boy</a><br> +<a href="#thenightingale">The Nightingale to the Workman</a><br> +<a href="#whatistheworld">What is the World?</a><br> +<a href="#despair">Despair</a><br> +<a href="#whither">Whither?</a><br> +<a href="#fromdawntodawn">From Dawn to Dawn</a><br> +<a href="#thecandleseller">The Candle Seller</a><br> +<a href="#thepaleoperator">The Pale Operator</a><br> +<a href="#thebeggarfamily">The Beggar Family</a><br> +<a href="#amillionaire">A Millionaire</a><br> +<a href="#septembermelodies">September Melodies</a><br> +<a href="#depression">Depression</a><br> +<a href="#thecanary">The Canary</a><br> +<a href="#wantandi">Want and I</a><br> +<a href="#thephantomvessel">The Phantom Vessel</a><br> +<a href="#tomymisery">To my Misery</a><br> +<a href="#olongtheway">O Long the Way</a><br> +<a href="#tothefortuneseeker">To the Fortune Seeker</a><br> +<a href="#myyouth">My Youth</a><br> +<a href="#inthewilderness">In the Wilderness</a><br> +<a href="#iveoftenlaughed">I’ve Often Laughed</a><br> +<a href="#againisingmysongs">Again I Sing my Songs</a><br> +<a href="#liberty">Liberty</a><br> +<a href="#atreeintheghetto">A Tree in the Ghetto</a><br> +<a href="#thecemeterynightingale">The Cemetery Nightingale</a><br> +<a href="#thecreationofman">The Creation of Man</a><br> +<a href="#journalism">Journalism</a><br> +<a href="#penandshears">Pen and Shears</a><br> +<a href="#forhire">For Hire</a><br> +<a href="#afellowslave">A Fellow Slave</a><br> +<a href="#thejewishmay">The Jewish May</a><br> +<a href="#thefeastoflights">The Feast of Lights</a><br> +<a href="#chanukahthoughts">Chanukah Thoughts</a><br> +<a href="#sfere">Sfēré</a><br> +<a href="#measuringthegraves">Measuring the Graves</a><br> +<a href="#thefirstbathofablution">The First Bath of Ablution</a><br> +<a href="#atonementeveningprayer">Atonement Evening Prayer</a><br> +<a href="#exitholiday">Exit Holiday</a><br> +</p> + +<hr> + +<p class="centered">SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS</p> + +<hr> + +<H2><a name="inthefactory">In the Factory</a></H2> + +<p>Oh, here in the shop the machines roar so wildly,<br> +That oft, unaware that I am, or have been,<br> +I sink and am lost in the terrible tumult;<br> +And void is my soul... I am but a machine.<br> +I work and I work and I work, never ceasing;<br> +Create and create things from morning till e’en;<br> +For what?—and for whom—Oh, I know not! Oh, ask not!<br> +Who ever has heard of a conscious machine?</p> + +<p>No, here is no feeling, no thought and no reason;<br> +This life-crushing labor has ever supprest<br> +The noblest and finest, the truest and richest,<br> +The deepest, the highest and humanly best.<br> +The seconds, the minutes, they pass out forever,<br> +They vanish, swift fleeting like straws in a gale.<br> +I drive the wheel madly as tho’ to o’ertake them,—<br> +Give chase without wisdom, or wit, or avail.</p> + +<p>The clock in the workshop,—it rests not a moment;<br> +It points on, and ticks on: Eternity—Time;<br> +And once someone told me the clock had a meaning,—<br> +Its pointing and ticking had reason and rhyme.<br> +And this too he told me,—or had I been dreaming,—<br> +The clock wakened life in one, forces unseen,<br> +And something besides;... I forget what; Oh, ask not!<br> +I know not, I know not, I am a machine.</p> + +<p>At times, when I listen, I hear the clock plainly;—<br> +The reason of old—the old meaning—is gone!<br> +The maddening pendulum urges me forward<br> +To labor and labor and still labor on.<br> +The tick of the clock is the Boss in his anger!<br> +The face of the clock has the eyes of a foe;<br> +The clock—Oh, I shudder—dost hear how it drives me?<br> +It calls me “Machine!” and it cries to me “Sew!”</p> + +<p>At noon, when about me the wild tumult ceases,<br> +And gone is the master, and I sit apart,<br> +And dawn in my brain is beginning to glimmer,<br> +The wound comes agape at the core of my heart;<br> +And tears, bitter tears flow; ay, tears that are scalding;<br> +They moisten my dinner—my dry crust of bread;<br> +They choke me,—I cannot eat;—no, no, I cannot!<br> +Oh, horrible toil I born of Need and of Dread.</p> + +<p>The sweatshop at mid-day—I’ll draw you the picture:<br> +A battlefield bloody; the conflict at rest;<br> +Around and about me the corpses are lying;<br> +The blood cries aloud from the earth’s gory breast.<br> +A moment... and hark! The loud signal is sounded,<br> +The dead rise again and renewed is the fight...<br> +They struggle, these corpses; for strangers, for strangers!<br> +They struggle, they fall, and they sink into night.</p> + +<p>I gaze on the battle in bitterest anger,<br> +And pain, hellish pain wakes the rebel in me!<br> +The clock—now I hear it aright!—It is crying:<br> +“An end to this bondage! An end there must be!”<br> +It quickens my reason, each feeling within me;<br> +It shows me how precious the moments that fly.<br> +Oh, worthless my life if I longer am silent,<br> +And lost to the world if in silence I die.</p> + +<p>The man in me sleeping begins to awaken;<br> +The thing that was slave into slumber has passed:<br> +Now; up with the man in me! Up and be doing!<br> +No misery more! Here is freedom at last!<br> +When sudden: a whistle!—the Boss—an alarum!—<br> +I sink in the slime of the stagnant routine;—<br> +There’s tumult, they struggle, oh, lost is my ego;—<br> +I know not, I care not, I am a machine!...</p> + +<H2><a name="myboy">My Boy</a></H2> + +<p>I have a little boy at home,<br> +A pretty little son;<br> +I think sometimes the world is mine<br> +In him, my only one.</p> + +<p>But seldom, seldom do I see<br> +My child in heaven’s light;<br> +I find him always fast asleep...<br> +I see him but at night.</p> + +<p>Ere dawn my labor drives me forth;<br> +’Tis night when I am free;<br> +A stranger am I to my child;<br> +And strange my child to me.</p> + +<p>I come in darkness to my home,<br> +With weariness and—pay;<br> +My pallid wife, she waits to tell<br> +The things he learned to say.</p> + +<p>How plain and prettily he asked:<br> +“Dear mamma, when’s ‘Tonight’?<br> +O when will come my dear papa<br> +And bring a penny bright?”</p> + +<p>I hear her words—I hasten out—<br> +This moment must it be!—<br> +The father-love flames in my breast:<br> +My child must look at me!</p> + +<p>I stand beside the tiny cot,<br> +And look, and list, and—ah!<br> +A dream-thought moves the baby-lips:<br> +“O, where is my papa!”</p> + +<p>I kiss and kiss the shut blue eyes;<br> +I kiss them not in vain.<br> +They open,—O they see me then!<br> +And straightway close again.</p> + +<p>“Here’s your papa, my precious one;—<br> +A penny for you!”—ah!<br> +A dream still moves the baby-lips:<br> +“O, where is my papa!”</p> + +<p>And I—I think in bitterness<br> +And disappointment sore;<br> +“Some day you will awake, my child,<br> +To find me nevermore.”</p> + +<H2><a name="thenightingale">The Nightingale to the Workman</a></H2> + +<p>Fair summer is here, glad summer is here!<br> +O hark! ’tis to you I am singing:<br> +The sun is all gold in a heaven of blue,<br> +The birds in the forest are trilling for you,<br> +The flies ’mid the grasses are winging;<br> +The little brook babbles—its secret is sweet.<br> +The loveliest flowers would circle your feet,—<br> +And you to your work ever clinging!...<br> +Come forth! Nature loves you. Come forth! Do not fear!<br> +Fair summer is here, glad summer is here,<br> +Full measure of happiness bringing.<br> +All creatures drink deep; and they pour wine anew<br> +In the old cup of life, and they wonder at you.<br> +Your portion is waiting since summer began;<br> +Then take it, oh, take it, you laboring man!</p> + +<p>’Tis summer today; ay, summer today!<br> +The butterflies light on the flowers.<br> +Delightfully glistens the silvery rain,<br> +The mountains are covered with greenness again,<br> +And perfumed and cool are the bowers.<br> +The sheep frisk about in the flowery vale,<br> +The shepherd and shepherdess pause in the dale,<br> +And these are the holiest hours!...<br> +Delay not, delay not, life passes away!<br> +’Tis summer today, sweet summer today!<br> +Come, throttle your wheel’s grinding power!...<br> +Your worktime is bitter and endless in length;<br> +And have you not foolishly lavished your strength?<br> +O think not the world is with bitterness rife,<br> +But drink of the wine from the goblet of life.</p> + +<p>O, summer is here, sweet summer is here!<br> +I cannot forever be trilling;<br> +I flee on the morrow. Then, you, have a care!<br> +The crow, from the perch I am leaving, the air<br> +With ominous cries will be filling.<br> +O, while I am singing to you from my tree<br> +Of love, and of life, and of joy yet to be,<br> +Arouse you!—O why so unwilling!...<br> +The heavens remain not so blue and so clear;—<br> +Now summer is here! Come, summer is here!<br> +Reach out for the joys that are thrilling!<br> +For like you who fade at your wheel, day by day,<br> +Soon all things will fade and be carried away.<br> +Our lives are but moments; and sometimes the cost<br> +Of a moment o’erlooked is eternity lost.</p> + +<H2><a name="whatistheworld">What is the World?</a></H2> + +<p>Well, say you the world is a chamber of sleep,<br> +And life but a sleeping and dreaming?<br> +Then I too would dream: and would joyously reap<br> +The blooms of harmonious seeming;<br> +The dream-flow’rs of hope and of freedom, perchance,<br> +The rich are so merrily reaping;—<br> +In Love’s eyes I’d fancy the joy of romance;<br> +No more would I dream Love is weeping.</p> + +<p>Or say you the world is a banquet, a ball,<br> +Where everyone goes who is able?<br> +I too wish to sit like a lord in the hall<br> +With savory share at the table.<br> +I too can enjoy what is wholesome and good,<br> +A morsel both dainty and healthy;<br> +I have in my body the same sort of blood<br> +That flows in the veins of the wealthy.</p> + +<p>A garden you say is the world, where abound<br> +The sweetest and loveliest roses?<br> +Then would I, no leave asking, saunter around<br> +And gather me handfuls of posies.<br> +Of thorns I am sure I would make me no wreath;<br> +(Of flowers I am very much fonder).<br> +And with my beloved the bowers beneath<br> +I’d wander, and wander, and wander.</p> + +<p>But ah! if the world is a battlefield wild,<br> +Where struggle the weak with the stronger,<br> +Then heed I no storm and no wife and no child!—<br> +I stand in abeyance no longer;—<br> +Rush into the fire of the battle nor yield,<br> +And fight for my perishing brother;<br> +Well, if I am struck—I can die on the field;<br> +Die gladly as well as another....</p> + +<H2><a name="despair">Despair</a></H2> + +<p>No rest—not one day in the seven for me?<br> +Not one, from the maddening yoke to be free?<br> +Not one to escape from the boss on the prowl,<br> +His sinister glance and his furious growl,<br> +The cry of the foreman, the smell of the shop,—<br> +To feel for one moment the manacles drop?<br> +—<i>’Tis rest then you want, and you fain would forget?<br> +To rest and oblivion they’ll carry you yet.</i></p> + +<p>The flow’rs and the trees will have withered ere long,<br> +The last bird already is ending his song;<br> +And soon will be leafless and shadeless the bow’rs...<br> +I long, oh I long for the perfume of flow’rs!<br> +To feel for a moment ere stripped are the trees,<br> +In meadow lands open, the breath of the breeze.<br> +—<i>You long for the meadow lands breezy and fair?<br> +O, soon enough others will carry you there.</i></p> + +<p>The rivulet sparkles with heavenly light,<br> +The wavelets they glisten, with diamonds bedight.<br> +Oh, but for a moment to leap in the stream,<br> +And play in the waters that ripple and gleam!<br> +My body is weakened with terrible toil.—<br> +The bath would refresh me, renew me the while.<br> +—<i>You dream of a bath in the shimmering stream?<br> +’Twill come—when forever is ended your dream.</i></p> + +<p>The sweatshop is smoky and gloomy and mean—<br> +I strive—oh, how vainly I strive to be clean!<br> +All day I am covered with grime and with dirt.<br> +You’d laugh,—but I long for a spotless white shirt!<br> +For life that is noble, ’tis needful, I ween,<br> +To work as a man should; and still be as clean.<br> +—<i>So now ’tis your wish all in white to be dressed?<br> +In white they will robe you, and lay you to rest.</i></p> + +<p>The woods they are cool, and the woods they are free;—<br> +To dream and to wander, how sweet it would be!<br> +The birds their eternal glad holiday keep;<br> +With song that enchants you and lulls you to sleep.<br> +’Tis hot here,—and close! and the din will not cease.<br> +I long for the forest, its coolth and its peace.<br> +—<i>Ay, cool you will soon be; and not only cool,<br> +But cold as no forest can make you, O Fool!</i></p> + +<p>I long for a friend who will comfort and cheer,<br> +And fill me with courage when sorrow is near;<br> +A comrade, of treasures the rarest and best,<br> +Who gives to existence its crown and its crest;<br> +And I am an orphan—and I am alone;<br> +No friend or companion to call me his own.<br> +—<i>Companions a-plenty—they’re numberless too;<br> +They’re swarming already and waiting for you.</i></p> + +<H2><a name="whither">Whither?</a></H2> + +<H3>(To a Young Girl)</H3> + +<p>Say whither, whither, pretty one?<br> +The hour is young at present!<br> +How hushed is all the world around!<br> +Ere dawn—the streets hold not a sound.<br> +O whither, whither do you run?<br> +Sleep at this hour is pleasant.<br> +The flowers are dreaming, dewy-wet;<br> +The bird-nests they are silent yet.<br> +Where to, before the rising sun<br> +The world her light is giving?</p> + +<p>“To earn a living.”</p> + +<p>O whither, whither, pretty child,<br> +So late at night a-strolling?<br> +Alone—with darkness round you curled?<br> +All rests!—and sleeping is the world.<br> +Where drives you now the wind so wild?<br> +The midnight bells are tolling!<br> +Day hath not warmed you with her light;<br> +What aid can’st hope then from the night?<br> +Night’s deaf and blind!—Oh whither, child,<br> +Light-minded fancies weaving?</p> + +<p>“To earn a living.”</p> + +<H2><a name="fromdawntodawn">From Dawn to Dawn</a></H2> + +<p>I bend o’er the wheel at my sewing;<br> +I’m spent; and I’m hungry for rest;<br> +No curse on the master bestowing,—<br> +No hell-fires within me are glowing,—<br> +Tho’ pain flares its fires in my breast.</p> + +<p>I mar the new cloth with my weeping,<br> +And struggle to hold back the tears;<br> +A fever comes over me, sweeping<br> +My veins; and all through me goes creeping<br> +A host of black terrors and fears.</p> + +<p>The wounds of the old years ache newly;<br> +The gloom of the shop hems me in;<br> +But six o’clock signals come duly:<br> +O, freedom seems mine again, truly...<br> +Unhindered I haste from the din.</p> + +<p class="centered">* * * * *</p> + +<p>Now home again, ailing and shaking,<br> +With tears that are blinding my eyes,<br> +With bones that are creaking and breaking,<br> +Unjoyful of rest... merely taking<br> +A seat; hoping never to rise.</p> + +<p>I gaze round me: none for a greeting!<br> +By Life for the moment unpressed,<br> +My poor wife lies sleeping—and beating<br> +A lip-tune in dream false and fleeting,<br> +My child mumbles close to her breast.</p> + +<p>I look on them, weeping in sorrow,<br> +And think: “When the Reaper has come—<br> +When finds me no longer the morrow—<br> +What aid then?—from whom will they borrow<br> +The crust of dry bread and the home?</p> + +<p>“What harbors that morrow,” I wonder,<br> +“For them when the breadwinner’s gone?<br> +When sudden and swift as the thunder<br> +The bread-bond is broken asunder,<br> +And friend in the world there is none.”</p> + +<p>A numbness my brain is o’ertaking...<br> +To sleep for a moment I drop:<br> +Then start!... In the east light is breaking!—<br> +I drag myself, ailing and aching,<br> +Again to the gloom of the shop.</p> + +<H2><a name="thecandleseller">The Candle Seller</a></H2> + +<p>In Hester Street, hard by a telegraph post,<br> +There sits a poor woman as wan as a ghost.<br> +Her pale face is shrunk, like the face of the dead,<br> +And yet you can tell that her cheeks once were red.<br> +But love, ease and friendship and glory, I ween,<br> +May hardly the cause of their fading have been.<br> +Poor soul, she has wept so, she scarcely can see.<br> +A skeleton infant she holds on her knee.<br> +It tugs at her breast, and it whimpers and sleeps,<br> +But soon at her cry it awakens and weeps—<br> +“Two cents, my good woman, three candles will buy,<br> +As bright as their flame be my star in the sky!”</p> + +<p>Tho’ few are her wares, and her basket is small,<br> +She earns her own living by these, when at all.<br> +She’s there with her baby in wind and in rain,<br> +In frost and in snow-fall, in weakness and pain.<br> +She trades and she trades, through the good times and slack—<br> +No home and no food, and no cloak to her back.<br> +She’s kithless and kinless—one friend at the most,<br> +And that one is silent: the telegraph post!<br> +She asks for no alms, the poor Jewess, but still,<br> +Altho’ she is wretched, forsaken and ill,<br> +She cries Sabbath candles to those that come nigh,<br> +And all that she pleads is, that people will buy.</p> + +<p>To honor the sweet, holy Sabbath, each one<br> +With joy in his heart to the market has gone.<br> +To shops and to pushcarts they hurriedly fare;<br> +But who for the poor, wretched woman will care?<br> +A few of her candles you think they will take?—<br> +They seek the meat patties, the fish and the cake.<br> +She holds forth a hand with the pitiful cry:<br> +“Two cents, my good women, three candles will buy!”<br> +But no one has listened, and no one has heard:<br> +Her voice is so weak, that it fails at each word.<br> +Perchance the poor mite in her lap understood,<br> +She hears mother’s crying—but where is the good</p> + +<p>I pray you, how long will she sit there and cry<br> +Her candles so feebly to all that pass by?<br> +How long will it be, do you think, ere her breath<br> +Gives out in the horrible struggle with Death?<br> +How long will this frail one in mother-love strong,<br> +Give suck to the babe at her breast? Oh, how long?<br> +The child mother’s tears used to swallow before,<br> +But mother’s eyes, nowadays, shed them no more.<br> +Oh, dry are the eyes now, and empty the brain,<br> +The heart well-nigh broken, the breath drawn with pain.<br> +Yet ever, tho’ faintly, she calls out anew:<br> +“Oh buy but two candles, good women, but two!”</p> + +<p>In Hester Street stands on the pavement of stone<br> +A small, orphaned basket, forsaken, alone.<br> +Beside it is sitting a corpse, cold and stark:<br> +The seller of candles—will nobody mark?<br> +No, none of the passers have noticed her yet.<br> +The rich ones, on feasting are busily set,<br> +And such as are pious, you well may believe,<br> +Have no time to spare on the gay Sabbath eve.<br> +So no one has noticed and no one has seen.<br> +And now comes the nightfall, and with it, serene,<br> +The Princess, the Sabbath, from Heaven descends,<br> +And all the gay throng to the synagogue wends.</p> + +<p>Within, where they pray, all is cleanly and bright,<br> +The cantor sings sweetly, they list with delight.<br> +But why in a dream stands the tall chandelier,<br> +As dim as the candles that gleam round a bier?<br> +The candles belonged to the woman, you know,<br> +Who died in the street but a short time ago.<br> +The rich and the pious have brought them tonight,<br> +For mother and child they have set them alight.<br> +The rich and the pious their duty have done:<br> +Her tapers are lighted who died all alone.<br> +The rich and the pious are nobly behaved:<br> +A body—what matters? But souls must be saved!</p> + +<p>O synagogue lights, be ye witnesses bold<br> +That mother and child died of hunger and cold<br> +Where millions are squandered in idle display;<br> +That men, all unheeded, must starve by the way.<br> +Then hold back your flame, blessed lights, hold it fast!<br> +The great day of judgment will come at the last.<br> +Before the white throne, where imposture is vain,<br> +Ye lights for the soul, ye’ll be lighted again!<br> +And upward your flame there shall mount as on wings,<br> +And damn the existing false order of things!</p> + +<H2><a name="thepaleoperator">The Pale Operator</a></H2> + +<p>If but with my pen I could draw him,<br> + With terror you’d look in his face;<br> +For he, since the first day I saw him,<br> + Has sat there and sewed in his place.</p> + +<p>Years pass in procession unending,<br> + And ever the pale one is seen,<br> +As over his work he sits bending,<br> + And fights with the soulless machine.</p> + +<p>I feel, as I gaze at each feature,<br> + Perspiring and grimy and wan,<br> +It is not the strength of the creature,—<br> + The will only, urges him on.</p> + +<p>And ever the sweat-drops are flowing,<br> + They fall o’er his thin cheek in streams,<br> +They water the stuff he is sewing,<br> + And soak themselves into the seams.</p> + +<p>How long shall the wheel yet, I pray you,<br> + Be chased by the pale artisan?<br> +And what shall the ending be, say you?<br> + Resolve the dark riddle who can!</p> + +<p>I know that it cannot be reckoned,—<br> + But one thing the future will show:<br> +When this man has vanished, a second<br> + Will sit in his place there and sew.</p> + +<H2><a name="thebeggarfamily">The Beggar Family</a></H2> + +<p>Within the court, before the judge,<br> +There stand six wretched creatures,<br> +They’re lame and weary, one and all,<br> +With pinched and pallid features.<br> +The father is a broken man,<br> +The mother weak and ailing,<br> +The little children, skin and bone,<br> +With fear and hunger wailing.</p> + +<p>Their sins are very great, and call<br> +Aloud for retribution,<br> +For their’s (maybe you guess!) the crime<br> +Of hopeless destitution.<br> +They look upon the judge’s face,<br> +They know what judges ponder,<br> +They know the punishment that waits<br> +On those that beg and wander.</p> + +<p>For months from justice they have fled<br> +Along the streets and highways,<br> +From farm to farm, from town to town,<br> +Along the lanes and byways.<br> +They’ve slept full oftentimes in jail,<br> +They’re known in many places;<br> +Yet still they live, for all the woe<br> +That’s stamped upon their faces.</p> + +<p>The woman’s chill with fear. The man<br> +Implores the judge: “Oh tell us,<br> +What will you? With our children small<br> +Relentlessly expel us?<br> +Oh let us be! We’ll sleep at night<br> +In corners dark; the city<br> +Has room for all! And some kind soul<br> +Will give a crust in pity.</p> + +<p>“For wife and children I will toil:<br> +It cannot be much longer<br> +(For God almighty is and good!)<br> +Ere I for work am stronger.<br> +Oh let us here with men remain,<br> +Nor drive us any further!<br> +Oh why our curses will you have,<br> +And not our blessings rather!”</p> + +<p>And now the sick man quails before<br> +The judge’s piercing glances:<br> +“No, only two of you shall go<br> +This time and take your chances.<br> +Your wife and you! The children four<br> +You’ll leave, my man, behind you,<br> +For them, within the Orphan’s Home,<br> +Free places I will find you.”</p> + +<p>The father’s dumb—the mother shrieks:<br> +“My babes and me you’d sever?<br> +If God there be, such cruel act<br> +Shall find forgiveness never!<br> +But first, oh judge, must you condemn<br> +To death their wretched mother—<br> +I cannot leave my children dear<br> +With you or any other!</p> + +<p>“I bore and nursed them, struggling still<br> +To shelter and to shield them,<br> +Oh judge, I’ll beg from door to door,<br> +My very life-blood yield them!<br> +I know you do not mean it, judge,<br> +With us poor folk you’re jesting.<br> +Give back my babes, and further yet<br> +We’ll wander unprotesting.”</p> + +<p>The judge, alas! has turned away,<br> +The paper dread unrolled,<br> +And useless all the mother’s grief,<br> +The wild and uncontrolled.<br> +More cruel can a sentence be<br> +Than that which now is given?<br> +Oh cursed the system ’neath whose sway<br> +The human heart is riven!</p> + +<H2><a name="amillionaire">A Millionaire</a></H2> + +<p>No, not from tuning-forks of gold<br> + Take I my key for singing;<br> +From Upper Seats no order bold<br> + Can set my music ringing;<br> +But groans the slave through sense of wrong,<br> + And naught my voice can smother;<br> +As flame leaps up, so leaps my song<br> + For my oppressed brother.</p> + +<p>And thus the end comes swift and sure...<br> + Thus life itself must leave me;<br> +For what can these my brothers poor<br> + In compensation give me,<br> +Save tears for ev’ry tear and sigh?—<br> + (For they are rich in anguish).<br> +A millionaire of tears am I,<br> + And mid my millions languish.</p> + +<H2><a name="septembermelodies">September Melodies</a></H2> + +<H3>I</H3> + +<p>The summer is over!<br> +’Tis windy and chilly.<br> +The flowers are dead in the dale.<br> +All beauty has faded,<br> +The rose and the lily<br> +In death-sleep lie withered and pale.</p> + +<p>Now hurries the stormwind<br> +A mournful procession<br> +Of leaves and dead flowers along,<br> +Now murmurs the forest<br> +Its dying confession,<br> +And hushed is the holiest song.</p> + +<p>Their “prayers of departure”<br> +The wild birds are singing,<br> +They fly to the wide stormy main.<br> +Oh tell me, ye loved ones,<br> +Whereto are ye winging?<br> +Oh answer: when come ye again?</p> + +<p>Oh hark to the wailing<br> +For joys that have vanished!<br> +The answer is heavy with pain:<br> +Alas! We know only<br> +That hence we are banished—<br> +But God knows of coming again!</p> + +<H3>II</H3> + +<p>The Tkiyes*-man has blown his horn,<br> +And swift the days’ declining;<br> +The leaves drop off, in fields forlorn<br> +Are tender grasses pining.</p> + +<p>The earth will soon be cold and bare,<br> +Her robe of glory falling;<br> +Already to the mourner’s prayer<br> +The last wild bird is calling.</p> + +<p>He sings so sweetly and so sad<br> +A song of friends who parted,<br> +That even if it find you glad,<br> +It leaves you broken hearted.</p> + +<p>The copses shudder in the breeze,<br> +Some dream-known terror fearing.<br> +Awake! O great and little trees!<br> +The Judgment-day is nearing!</p> + +<p>O men! O trees in copses cold!<br> +Beware the rising weather!<br> +Or late or soon, both young and old<br> +Shall strew the ground together... .</p> + +<p>[*Tkiye: first blast of the Ram’s horn.]</p> + +<H2><a name="depression">Depression</a></H2> + +<p>All the striving, all the failing,<br> +To the silent Nothing sailing.<br> +Swiftly, swiftly passing by!<br> +For the land of shadows leaving,<br> +Where a wistful hand is weaving<br> +Thy still woof, Eternity!</p> + +<p>Gloomy thoughts in me awaken,<br> +And with fear my breast is shaken,<br> +Thinking: O thou black abyss;<br> +All the toil and thrift of life,<br> +All the struggle and the strife,<br> +Shall it come at last to this?</p> + +<p>With the grave shall be requited<br> +Good and evil, and united<br> +Ne’er to separate again?<br> +What the light hath parted purely,<br> +Shall the darkness join more surely?—<br> +Was the vict’ry won in vain?</p> + +<p>O mute and infinite extension,<br> +O time beyond our comprehension,<br> +Shall thought and deed ungarnered fall?<br> +Ev’rything dost take and slay,<br> +Ev’rything dost bear away,<br> +Silent Nothing, silent All!...</p> + +<H2><a name="thecanary">The Canary</a></H2> + +<p>The free canary warbles<br> +In leafy forest dell:<br> +Who feels what rapture thrills her,<br> +And who her joy can tell?</p> + +<p>The sweet canary warbles<br> +Where wealth and splendor dwell:<br> +Who knows what sorrow moves her,<br> +And who her pain can tell?</p> + +<H2><a name="wantandi">Want And I</a></H2> + +<p>Who’s there? who’s there? who was it tried<br> +To force the entrance I’ve denied?<br> +An ’twere a friend, I’d gladly borne it,<br> +But no—’twas Want! I could have sworn it.<br> +I heard thy voice, old witch, I know thee!<br> +Avaunt, thou evil hag, beshrew thee!<br> +God’s curse! why seekest thou to find me?<br> +Away to all black years behind me!</p> + +<p>To torture me was thine endeavor,<br> +My body from my soul to sever,<br> +Of pride and courage to deprive me,<br> +And into beggary to drive me.<br> +Begone, where thousand devils burn—<br> +Begone, nor evermore return!<br> +Begone, most wretched thou of creatures,<br> +And hide for aye thine hateful features!<br> +—Beloved, ope the door in pity!</p> + +<p>No friend have I in all the city<br> +Save thee, then open to my call!<br> +The night is bleak, the snowflakes fall.<br> +Thine own, old Want am I, believe me!<br> +Ah, what delight, wilt thou receive me?<br> +I found, when I from thee had parted,<br> +No friend but he was fickle-hearted!</p> + +<p>Away, old hag! Thou liest, lo,<br> +Thou harbinger of pain and woe!<br> +Away—am I thine only friend?<br> +Thy lovers pale, they have no end!<br> +Thou vile one, may the devil take thee!<br> +Begone and no more visits make me!<br> +For—Yiddish writers not to mention—<br> +Men hold thee no such rare invention.</p> + +<p>—’Tis true! yet those must wait my leisure.<br> +To be with thee is now my pleasure.<br> +I love thy black and curling hair,<br> +I love thy wounded heart’s despair,<br> +I love thy sighs, I love to swallow<br> +Thy tears and all thy songs to follow.<br> +Oh great indeed, might I but show it,<br> +My love for thee, my pale-faced poet!</p> + +<p>Away, I’ve heard all that before,<br> +And am a writer, mark, no more.<br> +Instead of verses, wares I tell,<br> +And candy and tobacco sell.<br> +My life is sweet, my life is bitter.<br> +I’m ready and a prompt acquitter.<br> +Oh, smarter traders there are many,<br> +Yet live I well and turn a penny.</p> + +<p>—A dealer then wilt thou remain,<br> +Forever from the pen abstain?<br> +Good resolutions time disperses:<br> +Thou yet shalt hunger o’er thy verses,<br> +But vainly seeking to excuse thee<br> +Because thou dost, tonight, refuse me.<br> +Then open, fool, I tell thee plain,<br> +That we perforce shall meet again.</p> + +<p>Begone the way that I direct thee!<br> +I’ve millionaires now to protect me;<br> +No need to beg, no need to borrow,<br> +Nor fear a penniless tomorrow,<br> +Nor walk with face of blackest omen<br> +To thrill the hearts of stupid foemen,<br> +Who fain my pride to earth would bring,<br> +Because, forsooth, I sweetly sing!</p> + +<p>—Ho ho! ere thou art grown much older,<br> +Thy millionaires will all grow colder.<br> +Thou soon shalt be forgotten by them—<br> +They’ve other things to occupy them!<br> +Just now with thee they’re playing kindly,<br> +But fortune’s wheel is turning blindly<br> +To grind thy pleasures ere thou know it—<br> +And thou art left to me, my poet!</p> + +<H2><a name="thephantomvessel">The Phantom Vessel</a></H2> + +<p>Now the last, long rays of sunset<br> +To the tree-tops are ascending,<br> +And the ash-gray evening shadows<br> +Weave themselves around the earth.</p> + +<p>On the crest of yonder mountain,<br> +Now are seen from out the distance<br> +Slowly fading crimson traces;<br> +Footprints of the dying day.</p> + +<p>Blood-stained banners, torn and tattered,<br> +Hanging in the western corner,<br> +Dip their parched and burning edges<br> +In the cooling ocean wave.</p> + +<p>Smoothly roll the crystal wavelets<br> +Through the dusky veils of twilight,<br> +That are trembling down from heaven<br> +O’er the bosom of the sea.</p> + +<p>Soft a little wind is blowing<br> +O’er the gently rippling waters—<br> +What they whisper, what they murmur,<br> +Who is wise enough to say?</p> + +<p>Broad her snow-white sails outspreading<br> +’Gainst the quiet sky of evening,<br> +Flies a ship without a sailor,<br> +Flies—and whither, who can tell?</p> + +<p>As by magic moves the rudder;<br> +Borne upon her snowy pinions<br> +Flies the ship—as tho’ a spirit<br> +Drove her onward at its will!</p> + +<p>Empty is she, and deserted,<br> +Only close beside the mainmast<br> +Stands a lonely child, heartbroken,<br> +Sobbing loud and bitterly.</p> + +<p>Long and golden curls are falling<br> +Down his neck and o’er his shoulders;<br> +Now he glances backward sighing,<br> +And the silent ship flies on!</p> + +<p>With a little, shining kerchief,<br> +Fluttering upon the breezes,<br> +Unto me he sends a greeting,<br> +From afar he waves farewell.</p> + +<p>And my heart is throbbing wildly,<br> +I am weeping—tell me wherefore?<br> +God! that lovely child, I know him!<br> +’Tis my youth that flies from me!</p> + +<H2><a name="tomymisery">To My Misery</a></H2> + +<p>O Misery of mine, no other<br> + In faithfulness can match with thee,<br> +Thou more than friend, and more than brother,<br> + The only thing that cares for me!</p> + +<p>Where’er I turn, are unkind faces,<br> + And hate and treachery and guile,<br> +Thou, Mis’ry, in all times and places,<br> + Dost greet me with thy pallid smile.</p> + +<p>At birth I found thee waiting for me,<br> + I knew thee in my cradle first,<br> +The same small eyes and dim watched o’er me,<br> + The same dry, bony fingers nursed.</p> + +<p>And day by day when morning lightened,<br> + To school thou led’st me—home did’st bring,<br> +And thine were all the blooms that brightened<br> + The chilly landscape of my spring.</p> + +<p>And, thou my match and marriage monger,<br> + The marriage deed by thee was read;<br> +The hands foretelling need and hunger<br> + Were laid in blessing on my head.</p> + +<p>Thy love for me shall last unshaken,<br> + No further proof I ask, for when<br> +My hopes for aye were from me taken,<br> + My Mis’ry, thou wert with me then;</p> + +<p>And still, while sorrow’s storm is breaking<br> + Above me, and my head I bow—<br> +The kindly and the unforsaking,<br> + Oh Mis’ry, thou art with me now.</p> + +<p>Ay, still from out Fate’s gloomy towers<br> + I see thee come to me again,<br> +With wreaths of everlasting flowers,<br> + And songs funereal in thy train.</p> + +<p>And when life’s curses rock me nightly,<br> + And hushed I lie in slumber’s hold,<br> +Thy sable form comes treading lightly<br> + To wrap me in its garments fold.</p> + +<p>Thy brother let me be, and wholly<br> + Repay thee all I owe, tho’ late:<br> +My aching heart, my melancholy,<br> + My songs to thee I dedicate.</p> + +<H2><a name="olongtheway">O Long The Way</a></H2> + +<p>O long the way and short the day,<br> + No light in tower or town,<br> +The waters roar and far the shore—<br> + My ship, my ship goes down!</p> + +<p>’Tis all in vain to strive again,<br> + My cry the billows drown,<br> +The fight is done, the wind has won—<br> + My ship, my ship goes down!</p> + +<p>Bright sun, adieu! Thou’lt shine anew<br> + When skies no longer frown,<br> +But I—the deafening billows crash—<br> + My ship, my ship goes down!</p> + +<H2><a name="tothefortuneseeker">To The Fortune Seeker</a></H2> + +<p>A little more, a little less!—<br> +O shadow-hunters pitiless,<br> +Why then so eager, say!<br> +What’er you leave the grave will take,<br> +And all you gain and all you make,<br> +It will not last a day!</p> + +<p>Full soon will come the Reaper Black,<br> +Cut thorns and flowers mark his track<br> +Across Life’s meadow blithe.<br> +Oppose him, meet him as you will,<br> +Old Time’s behests he harkens still,<br> +Unsparing wields his scythe.</p> + +<p>A horrid mutiny by stealth<br> +Breaks out,—of power, fame and wealth<br> +Deserted you shall be!<br> +The foam upon your lip is rife;<br> +The last enigma now of Life<br> +Shall Death resolve for thee.</p> + +<p>You call for help—’tis all in vain!<br> +What have you for your toil and pain,<br> +What have you at the last?<br> +Poor luckless hunter, are you dumb?<br> +This way the cold pall-bearers come:<br> +A beggar’s soul has passed!</p> + +<p>A little less, a little more !—<br> +Look forth, look forth! without the door<br> +There stands a robber old.<br> +He’ll force your ev’ry lock and spring,<br> +And all your goods he’ll take and fling<br> +On Stygian waters cold.</p> + +<H2><a name="myyouth">My Youth</a></H2> + +<p>Come, beneath yon verdant branches,<br> +Come, my own, with me!<br> +Come, and there my soul will open<br> +Secret doors to thee.<br> +Yonder shalt thou learn the secrets<br> +Deep within my breast,<br> +Where my love upsprings eternal;<br> +Come! with pain opprest,<br> +Yonder all the truth I’ll tell thee,<br> +Tell it thee with tears...<br> +(Ah, so long have we been parted,<br> +Years of youth, sweet years!)</p> + +<p>See’st thou the dancers floating<br> +On a stream of sound?<br> +There alone, the soul entrancing,<br> +Happiness is found!<br> +Magic music, hark! it calls us,<br> +Ringing wild and sweet!<br> +One, two, three!—beloved, haste thee,<br> +Point thy dainty feet!<br> +Now at last I feel that living<br> +Is no foolish jest...<br> +(O sweet years of youth departed,<br> +Vanished with the rest!)</p> + +<p>Fiddler, play a little longer!<br> +Why this hurry, say?<br> +I’m but half-way through a measure—<br> +Yet a little play!<br> +Smiling in her wreath of flowers<br> +Is my love not fair?<br> +See us in the charmed circle,<br> +Flitting light as air!<br> +Haste thee, loved one, for the music<br> +Shall be hushed anon...<br> +(O sweet years of youth departed,<br> +Whither are ye gone?)</p> + +<p>Gracious youth of mine, so quickly<br> +Hath it come to this?<br> +Lo, where flowed the golden river,<br> +Yawns the black abyss!<br> +Where, oh where is my beloved,<br> +Where the wreath of flowers?<br> +Where, oh where the merry fiddler,<br> +Where those happy hours?<br> +Shall I never hear the echoes<br> +Of those songs again?<br> +Oh, on what hills are they ringing,<br> +O’er what sunny plain?<br> +May not I from out the distance<br> +Cast one backward glance<br> +On that fair and lost existence,<br> +Youth’s sweet dalliance?<br> +Foolish dreamer! Time hath snatched it,<br> +And, tho’ man implore,<br> +Joys that <i>he</i> hath reaped and garnered<br> +Bloom again no more!</p> + +<H2><a name="inthewilderness">In The Wilderness</a></H2> + +<p>Alone in desert dreary,<br> +A bird with folded wings<br> +Beholds the waste about her,<br> +And sweetly, sweetly sings.</p> + +<p>So heaven-sweet her singing,<br> +So clear the bird notes flow,<br> +’Twould seem the rocks must waken,<br> +The desert vibrant grow.</p> + +<p>Dead rocks and silent mountains<br> +Would’st waken with thy strain,—<br> +But dumb are still the mountains,<br> +And dead the rocks remain.</p> + +<p>For whom, O heavenly singer,<br> +Thy song so clear and free?<br> +Who hears or sees or heeds thee,<br> +Who feels or cares for thee?</p> + +<p>Thou may’st outpour in music<br> +Thy very soul... ’Twere vain!<br> +In stone thou canst not waken<br> +A throb of joy or pain.</p> + +<p>Thy song shall soon be silenced;<br> +I feel it... For I know<br> +Thy heart is near to bursting<br> +With loneliness and woe.</p> + +<p>Ah, vain is thine endeavor;<br> +It naught availeth—nay;<br> +For lonely as thou camest,<br> +So shalt thou pass away.</p> + +<H2><a name="iveoftenlaughed">I’ve Often Laughed</a></H2> + +<p>I’ve often laughed and oftener still have wept,<br> +A sighing always through my laughter crept,<br> +Tears were not far away...<br> +What is there to say?</p> + +<p>I’ve spoken much and oftener held by tongue,<br> +For still the most was neither said nor sung.<br> +Could I but tell it so...<br> +What is there to know?</p> + +<p>I’ve hated much and loved, oh so much more!<br> +Fierce contrasts at my very heartstrings tore...<br> +I tried to fight them—well...<br> +What is there to tell?</p> + +<H2><a name="againisingmysongs">Again I Sing my Songs</a></H2> + +<p>Once again my songs I sing thee,<br> + Now the spell is broken;<br> +Brothers, yet again I bring thee<br> + Songs of love the token.<br> +Of my joy and of my sorrow<br> + Gladly, sadly bringing;—<br> +Summer not a song would borrow—<br> + Winter sets me singing.</p> + +<p>O when life turns sad and lonely,<br> + When our joys are dead;<br> +When are heard the ravens only<br> + In the trees o’erhead;<br> +When the stormwind on the bowers<br> + Wreaks its wicked will,<br> +When the frost paints lying flowers,<br> + How should I be still?</p> + +<p>When the clouds are low descending,<br> + And the sun is drowned;<br> +When the winter knows no ending,<br> + And the cold is crowned;<br> +When with evil gloom oppressed<br> + Lie the ruins bare;<br> +When a sigh escapes the breast,<br> + Takes us unaware;</p> + +<p>When the snow-wrapped mountain dreams<br> + Of its summer gladness,<br> +When the wood is stripped and seems<br> + Full of care and sadness;<br> +When the songs are growing still<br> + As in Death’s repose,<br> +And the heart is growing chill,<br> + And the eyelids close;</p> + +<p>Then, O then I can but sing<br> + For I dream her coming—<br> +May, sweet May! I see her bring<br> + Buds and wild-bee humming!<br> +Through the silence heart-appalling,<br> + As I stand and listen,<br> +I can hear her song-birds calling,<br> + See her green leaves glisten!</p> + +<p>Thus again my songs I sing thee,<br> + Now the spell is broken;<br> +Brothers, yet again I bring thee<br> + Of my love the token.<br> +Of my joy and of my sorrow<br> + Gladly, sadly bringing,—<br> +Summer not a song would borrow!—<br> +Winter sets me singing.</p> + +<H2><a name="liberty">Liberty</a></H2> + +<p>When night and silence deep<br> +Hold all the world in sleep,<br> +As tho’ Death claimed the Hour,<br> +By some strange witchery<br> +Appears her form to me,<br> +As tho’ Magic were her dow’r.</p> + +<p>Her beauty heaven’s light!<br> +Her bosom snowy white!<br> +But pale her cheek appears.<br> +Her shoulders firm and fair;<br> +A mass of gold her hair.<br> +Her eyes—the home of tears.</p> + +<p>She looks at me nor speaks.<br> +Her arms are raised; she seeks<br> +Her fettered hands to show.<br> +On both white wrists a chain!—<br> +She cries and pleads in pain:<br> +“Unbind me!—Let me go!”</p> + +<p>I burn with bitter ire,<br> +I leap in wild desire<br> +The cruel bonds to break;<br> +But God! around the chain<br> +Is coiled and coiled again<br> +A long and loathsome snake.</p> + +<p>I shout, I cry, I chide;<br> +My voice goes far and wide,<br> +A ringing call to men:<br> +“Oh come, let in the light!<br> +Arise! Ye have the might!<br> +Set Freedom free again!”</p> + +<p>They sleep. But I strive on.<br> +They sleep!... Can’st wake a stone?...<br> +That one might stir! but one!<br> +Call I, or hold my peace,<br> +None comes to her release;<br> +And hope for her is none.</p> + +<p>But who may see her plight<br> +And not go mad outright!...<br> +“Now: up! For Freedom’s sake!”<br> +I spring to take her part:—<br> +“Fool!” cries a voice. I start...<br> +In anguish I awake.</p> + +<H2><a name="atreeintheghetto">A Tree in the Ghetto</a></H2> + +<p>There stands in th’ leafless Ghetto<br> +One spare-leaved, ancient tree;<br> +Above the Ghetto noises<br> +It moans eternally.</p> + +<p>In wonderment it muses,<br> +And murmurs with a sigh:<br> +“Alas! how God-forsaken<br> +And desolate am I!</p> + +<p>“Alas, the stony alleys,<br> +And noises loud and bold!<br> +Where are ye, birds of summer?<br> +Where are ye, woods of old?</p> + +<p>“And where, ye breezes balmy<br> +That wandered vagrant here?<br> +And where, oh sweep of heavens<br> +So deep and blue and clear?</p> + +<p>“Where are ye, mighty giants?<br> +Ye come not riding by<br> +Upon your fiery horses,<br> +A-whistling merrily.</p> + +<p>“Of other days my dreaming,<br> +Of other days, ah me!<br> +When sturdy hero-races<br> +Lived wild and glad and free!</p> + +<p>“The old sun shone, how brightly!<br> +The old lark sang, what song!<br> +O’er earth Desire and Gladness<br> +Reigned happily and long</p> + +<p>“But see! what are these ant-hills?—<br> +These ants that creep and crawl?...<br> +Bereft of man and nature,<br> +My life is stripped of all!</p> + +<p>“And I, an ancient orphan,<br> +What do I here alone?<br> +My friends have all departed,<br> +My youth and glory gone.</p> + +<p>“Oh, tear me, root and branches!<br> +No longer let me be<br> +A living head-stone, brooding<br> +O’er the grave of liberty.”</p> + +<H2><a name="thecemeterynightingale">The Cemetery Nightingale</a></H2> + +<p>In the hills’ embraces holden,<br> + In a valley filled with glooms,<br> +Lies a cemetery olden,<br> + Strewn with countless mould’ring tombs.</p> + +<p>Ancient graves o’erhung with mosses,<br> + Crumbling stones, effaced and green,—<br> +Venturesome is he who crosses,<br> + Night or day, the lonely scene.</p> + +<p>Blasted trees and willow streamers,<br> + ’Midst the terror round them spread,<br> +Seem like awe-bound, silent dreamers<br> + In this garden of the dead.</p> + +<p>One bird, anguish stricken, lingers<br> + In the shadow of the vale,<br> +First and best of feathered singers,—<br> + ’Tis the churchyard nightingale.</p> + +<p>As from bough to bough he flutters,<br> + Sweetest songs of woe and wail<br> +Through his gift divine he utters<br> + For the dreamers in the vale.</p> + +<p>Listen how his trills awaken<br> + Echoes from each mossy stone!<br> +Of all places he has taken<br> + God’s still Acre for his own.</p> + +<p class="centered">* * * * *</p> + +<p>Not on Spring or Summer glory,<br> +Not on god or angel story<br> +Loyal poet-fancy dwells!<br> +Not on streams for rich men flowing,<br> +Not on fields for rich men’s mowing,—<br> +Graves he sees, of graves he tells.<br> +Pain, oppression, woe eternal,<br> +Open heart-wounds deep, diurnal,<br> +Nothing comforts or allays;<br> +O’er God’s Acre in each nation<br> +Sings he songs of tribulation<br> +Tunes his golden harp and plays.</p> + +<H2><a name="thecreationofman">The Creation Of Man</a></H2> + +<p>When the world was first created<br> +By th’ all-wise Eternal One,<br> +Asked he none for help or counsel,—<br> +Simply spake, and it was done!</p> + +<p>Made it for his own good pleasure,<br> +Shaped it on his own design,<br> +Spent a long day’s work upon it,<br> +Formed it fair and very fine.</p> + +<p>Soon he thought on man’s creation,—<br> +Then perplexities arose,<br> +So the Lord His winged Senate<br> +Called, the question to propose:</p> + +<p>Hear, my great ones, why I called ye,<br> +Hear and help me ye who can,<br> +Hear and tell me how I further<br> +Shall proceed in making man.</p> + +<p>Ponder well before ye answer,<br> +And consider, children dear;—<br> +In our image I would make him,<br> +Free from stain, from blemish clear.</p> + +<p>Of my holy fire I’d give him,<br> +Crowned monarch shall he be,<br> +Ruling with a sway unquestioned<br> +Over earth and air and sea.</p> + +<p>Birds across the blue sky winging<br> +Swift shall fly before his face,—<br> +Silver fishes in the ocean,<br> +Savage lion in the chase.</p> + +<p>—How? This toy of froth and vapor,<br> +Thought the Senate, filled with fear,<br> +If so wide his kingdom stretches,<br> +Shortly he will break in here!</p> + +<p>So the Lord they answered, saying:—<br> +Mind and strength Thy creature give,<br> +Form him in our very image,<br> +Lord, but wingless let him live!</p> + +<p>Lest he shame the soaring eagle<br> +Let no wings to man be giv’n,<br> +Bid him o’er the earth be ruler,<br> +Lord, but keep him out of heav’n!</p> + +<p>Wisely said, the Lord made answer,<br> +Lo, your counsel fair I take!<br> +Yet, my Senate, one exception—<br> +One alone, I will to make.</p> + +<p>One exception! for the poet,<br> +For the singer, shall have wings;<br> +He the gates of Heav’n shall enter,<br> +Highest of created things.</p> + +<p>One I single from among ye,<br> +One to watch the ages long,<br> +Promptly to admit the poet<br> +When he hears his holy song.</p> + +<H2><a name="journalism">Journalism</a></H2> + +<p>Written today, and read today,<br> +And stale the news tomorrow!—<br> +Upon the sands I build... I <i>play!</i><br> +I play, and weep in sorrow:<br> +“Ah God, dear God! to find cessation<br> +From this soul-crushing occupation!<br> +If but one year ere Thou dost call me Thither,<br> +Lord, at this blighting task let me not wither.”</p> + +<H2><a name="penandshears">Pen and Shears</a></H2> + +<p>My tailor’s shears I scornèd then;<br> + I strove for something higher:<br> +To edit news—live by the pen—<br> + The pen that shall not tire!</p> + +<p>The pen, that was my humble slave,<br> + Has now enslaved its master;<br> +And fast as flows its Midas-wave,<br> + My rebel tears flow faster.</p> + +<p>The world I clad once, tailor-hired,<br> + Whilst I in tatters quakèd,<br> +Today, you see me well attired,<br> + Who lets the world go naked.</p> + +<p>What human soul, how’er oppressed,<br> + Can feel my chained soul’s yearning!<br> +A monster woe lies in my breast,<br> + In voiceless anguish burning.</p> + +<p>Oh, swing ajar the shop door, do!<br> + I’ll bear as ne’er I bore it.<br> +My blood!... you sweatshop leeches, you!...<br> + Now less I’ll blame you for it.</p> + +<p>I’ll stitch as ne’er in former years;<br> + I’ll drive the mad wheel faster;<br> +Slave will I be but to the shears;<br> + The pen shall know its master!</p> + +<H2><a name="forhire">For Hire</a></H2> + +<p>Work with might and main,<br> + Or with hand and heart,<br> +Work with soul and brain,<br> + Or with holy art,<br> +Thread, or genius’ fire—<br> + Make a vest, or verse—<br> +If ’tis done for hire,<br> + It is done the worse.</p> + +<H2><a name="afellowslave">A Fellow Slave</a></H2> + +<p>Pale-faced is he, as in the door<br> +He stands and trembles visibly,—<br> +With diffidence approaches me,<br> +And says: “Dear editor,</p> + +<p>“Since write you must, in prose or rhyme,<br> +Expose my master’s knavery,<br> +Condemn, I pray, the slavery<br> +That dominates our time.</p> + +<p>“I labor for a wicked man<br> +Who holds o’er all my being sway,—<br> +Who keeps me harnessed night and day.<br> +Since work I first began.</p> + +<p>“No leisure moments do I store,<br> +Yet harsh words only will he speak;<br> +My days are his, from week to week,<br> +But still he cries for more.</p> + +<p>“Oh print, I beg you, all I’ve said,<br> +And ask the world if this be right:<br> +To give the worker wage so slight<br> +That he must want for bread.</p> + +<p>“See, I have sinews powerful,<br> +And I’ve endurance, subtle skill,—<br> +Yet may not use them at my will,<br> +But live a master’s tool.</p> + +<p>“But oh, without avail do I<br> +Lay bare the woes of workingmen!<br> +Who earns his living by the pen,<br> +Feels not our misery.”</p> + +<p>The pallid slave yet paler grew,<br> +And ended here his bitter cry...<br> +And thus to him I made reply:<br> +“My friend, you judge untrue.</p> + +<p>“My strength and skill, like yours, are gain<br> +For others... Sold!... You understand?<br> +Your master—well—he owns your hand,<br> +And mine—he owns my brain.”</p> + +<H2><a name="thejewishmay">The Jewish May</a></H2> + +<p>May has come from out the showers,<br> +Sun and splendor in her train.<br> +All the grasses and the flowers<br> +Waken up to life again.<br> +Once again the leaves do show,<br> +And the meadow blossoms blow,<br> +Once again through hills and dales<br> +Rise the songs of nightingales.</p> + +<p>Wheresoe’er on field or hillside<br> +With her paint-brush Spring is seen,—<br> +In the valley, by the rillside,<br> +All the earth is decked with green.<br> +Once again the sun beguiles<br> +Moves the drowsy world to smiles.<br> +See! the sun, with mother-kiss<br> +Wakes her child to joy and bliss.</p> + +<p>Now each human feeling presses<br> +Flow’r like, upward to the sun,<br> +Softly, through the heart’s recesses,<br> +Steal sweet fancies, one by one.<br> +Golden dreams, their wings outshaking,<br> +Now are making<br> +Realms celestial,<br> +All of azure,<br> +New life waking,<br> +Bringing treasure<br> +Out of measure<br> +For the soul’s delight and pleasure.</p> + +<p>Who then, tell me, old and sad,<br> +Nears us with a heavy tread?<br> +On the sward in verdure clad,<br> +Lonely is the strange newcomer,<br> +Wearily he walks and slow,—<br> +His sweet springtime and his summer<br> +Faded long and long ago!</p> + +<p>Say, who is it yonder walks<br> +Past the hedgerows decked anew,<br> +While a fearful spectre stalks<br> +By his side the woodland through?<br> +’Tis our ancient friend the Jew!<br> +No sweet fancies hover round him,<br> +Naught but terror and distress.<br> +Wounds unhealed<br> +Where lie revealed<br> +Ghosts of former recollections,<br> +Corpses, corpses, old affections,<br> +Buried youth and happiness.</p> + +<p>Brier and blossom bow to meet him<br> +In derision round his path;<br> +Gloomily the hemlocks greet him<br> +And the crow screams out in wrath.<br> +Strange the birds and strange the flowers,<br> +Strange the sunshine seems and dim,<br> +Folk on earth and heav’nly powers!—<br> +Lo, the May is strange to him!</p> + +<p>Little flowers, it were meeter<br> +If ye made not quite so bold:<br> +Sweet ye are, but oh, far sweeter<br> +Knew he in the days of old!<br> +Oranges by thousands glowing<br> +Filled his groves on either hand,—<br> +All the plants were God’s own sowing<br> +In his happy, far-off land!</p> + +<p>Ask the cedars on the mountain!<br> +Ask them, for they know him well!<br> +Myrtles green by Sharon’s fountain,<br> +In whose shade he loved to dwell!<br> +Ask the Mount of Olives beauteous,—<br> +Ev’ry tree by ev’ry stream!—<br> +One and all will answer duteous<br> +For the fair and ancient dream....</p> + +<p>O’er the desert and the pleasance<br> +Gales of Eden softly blew,<br> +And the Lord His loving Presence<br> +Evermore declared anew.<br> +Angel children at their leisure<br> +Played in thousands round His tent,<br> +Countless thoughts of joy and pleasure<br> +God to His beloved sent.</p> + +<p>There in bygone days and olden,<br> +From a wond’rous harp and golden<br> +Charmed he music spirit-haunting,<br> +Holy, chaste and soul-enchanting.<br> +Never with the ancient sweetness,<br> +Never in its old completeness<br> +Shall it sound: his dream is ended,<br> +On a willow-bough suspended.</p> + +<p>Gone that dream so fair and fleeting!<br> +Yet behold: thou dreamst anew!<br> +Hark! a <i>new</i> May gives thee greeting<br> +From afar. Dost hear it, Jew?<br> +Weep no more, altho’ with sorrows<br> +Bow’d e’en to the grave: I see<br> +Happier years and brighter morrows,<br> +Dawning, Israel, for thee!<br> +Hear’st thou not the promise ring<br> +Where, like doves on silver wing,<br> +Thronging cherubs sweetly sing<br> +Newmade songs of what shall be?</p> + +<p>Hark! your olives shall be shaken,<br> +And your citrons and your limes<br> +Filled with fragrance. God shall waken.<br> +Lead you as in olden times.<br> +In the pastures by the river<br> +Ye once more your flocks shall tend.<br> +Ye shall live, and live forever<br> +Happy lives that know no end.<br> +No more wandering, no more sadness:<br> +Peace shall be your lot, and still<br> +Hero hearts shall throb with gladness<br> +’Neath Moriah’s silent hill.<br> +Nevermore of dread afflictions<br> +Or oppression need ye tell:<br> +Filled with joy and benedictions<br> +In the old home shall ye dwell.<br> +To the fatherland returning,<br> +Following the homeward path,<br> +Ye shall find the embers burning<br> +Still upon the ruined hearth!</p> + +<H2><a name="thefeastoflights">The Feast Of Lights</a></H2> + +<p>Little candles glistening,<br> +Telling those are listening<br> +Legends manifold,<br> +Many a little story,<br> +Tales of blood and glory<br> +Of the days of old.</p> + +<p>As I watch you flicker,<br> +As I list you bicker,<br> +Speak the ancient dreams:<br> +—You have battled, Jew, one time,<br> +You have conquer’d too, one time.<br> +(God, how strange it seems!)</p> + +<p>In your midst was order once,<br> +And within your border once<br> +Strangers took no part.<br> +Jew, you had a land one time,<br> +And an armèd hand, one time.<br> +(How it moves the heart!)</p> + +<p>Glisten, candles, glisten!<br> +As I stand and listen<br> +All the grief in me,<br> +All the woe is stirred again,<br> +And the question heard again:<br> +What the end shall be?</p> + +<H2><a name="chanukahthoughts">Chanukah Thoughts</a></H2> + +<p>Not always as you see us now,<br> + Have we been used to weep and sigh,<br> +We too have grasped the sword, I trow,<br> + And seen astonished foemen fly!</p> + +<p>We too have rushed into the fray,<br> + For our Belief the battle braved,<br> +And through the spears have fought our way,<br> + And high the flag of vict’ry waved.</p> + +<p>But generations go and come,<br> + And suns arise and set in tears,<br> +And we are weakened now and dumb,<br> + Foregone the might of ancient years.</p> + +<p>In exile where the wicked reign,<br> +Our courage and our pride expired,<br> +But e’en today each throbbing vein<br> + With Asmonean blood is fired.</p> + +<p>Tho’ cruel hands with mighty flail<br> + Have threshed us, yet we have not blenched:<br> +The sea of blood could naught prevail,<br> + That fire is burning, still unquenched.</p> + +<p>Our fall is great, our fall is real,<br> + (You need but look on us to tell!)<br> +Yet in us lives the old Ideal<br> + Which all the nations shall not quell.</p> + +<H2><a name="sfere">Sfēré</a></H2> + +<p>I asked of my Muse, had she any objection<br> + To laughing with me,—not a word for reply!<br> +You see, it is Sfēré, our time for dejection,—<br> + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry?</p> + +<p>You laughed then, you say? ’tis a sound to affright one!<br> + In Jewish delight, what is worthy the name?<br> +The laugh of a Jew! It is never a right one,<br> + For laughing and groaning with him are the same.</p> + +<p>You thought there was zest in a Jewish existence?<br> + You deemd that the star of a Jew could be kind?<br> +The Spring calls and beckons with gracious insistence,—<br> + Jew,—sit down in sackcloth and weep yourself blind!</p> + +<p>The garden is green and the woodland rejoices:<br> + How cool are the breezes, with fragrance how blent!<br> +But Spring calls not <i>you</i> with her thousand sweet voices!—<br> + With you it is Sfēré,—sit still and lament!</p> + +<p>The beautiful summer, this life’s consolation,<br> + In moaning and sighing glides quickly away.<br> +What hope can it offer to one of my nation?<br> + What joy can he find in the splendors of May?</p> + +<p>Bewildered and homeless, of whom whoso passes<br> + May fearlessly stop to make sport at his ease,—<br> +Say, is it for him to seek flowers and grasses,<br> + For him to be thinking on meadows and trees?</p> + +<p>And if for a moment, forgetting to ponder<br> + On grief and oppression, song breaks out anew,<br> +I hear in his lay only: “Wander and wander!”<br> + And ev’ry note tells me the singer’s a Jew.</p> + +<p>A skilful musician, and one who is verséd<br> + In metre and measure, whenever he hears<br> +The pitiful song of the Jewish disperséd,<br> + It touches his heart and it moves him to tears.</p> + +<p>The blast of the Ram’s-horn that quavers and trembles,—<br> + On this, now, alone Jewish fancy is bent.<br> +To grief and contrition its host it assembles,<br> + And causes the stoniest heart to relent.</p> + +<p>The wail that went up when the Temple was shattered,—<br> + The song of Atonement, the Suppliant’s psalm,—<br> +These only he loves, since they took him—and scattered,—<br> + Away from the land of the balsam and balm.</p> + +<p>Of all the sweet instruments, shiver’d and broken,<br> + That once in the Temple delighted his ear,<br> +The Ram’s-horn alone has he kept, as a token,<br> + And sobs out his soul on it once in the year.</p> + +<p>Instead of the harp and the viol and cymbal,<br> + Instead of the lyre, the guitar and the flute,<br> +He has but the dry, wither’d Ram’s-horn, the symbol<br> + Of gloom and despondence; the rest all are mute.</p> + +<p>He laughs, or he breaks into song, but soon after,<br> + Tho’ fain would he take in man’s gladness a part,<br> +One hears, low resounding athwart the gay laughter,<br> + The Suppliant’s psalm, and it pierces the heart.</p> + +<p>I asked of my Muse, had she any objection<br> + To laughing with me,—not a word for reply!<br> +You see, it is Sfēré, our time for dejection,—<br> + And can a Jew laugh when the rule is to cry?</p> + +<H2><a name="measuringthegraves">Measuring the Graves</a></H2> + +<p>First old Minna, bent and lowly,<br> + Eyes with weeping nearly blind;<br> +Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, slowly, slowly,<br> + With the yarn creeps on behind.</p> + +<p>On the holy book of Minna<br> + Fall the tear-drops—scarce a word<br> +(For the heart is moved within her)<br> + Of her praying can be heard.</p> + +<p>“Mighty Lord, whose sovereign pleasure<br> + Made all worlds and men of dust,<br> +I, Thy humble handmaid, measure,<br> + God, the dwellings of the just.</p> + +<p>“Speechless here the ground they cumber,<br> + Where the pious, gracious God,<br> +Where Thy heart’s beloved slumber<br> + Underneath the quiet sod.</p> + +<p>“They who sing in jubilation,<br> + Lord, before Thy holy seat,<br> +Each one from his habitation,<br> + Through the dream for ever sweet.</p> + +<p>“From the yarn with which I measure,<br> + Pessyeh-Tsvaitel, filled with awe,<br> +Wicks will make, to search the treasure,<br> + Nightly, of Thy holy Law.</p> + +<p>Praying still, by faith sustained:<br> + ’Thou with whom the holy dwell,<br> +Scorn not Jacob’s prayer unfeigned,<br> + Mark the tears of Israel!’”</p> + +<H2><a name="thefirstbathofablution">The First Bath of Ablution</a></H2> + +<p>The wind is keen, the frost is dread,<br> + Toward the icy water,<br> +By aunt and mother forth is led<br> + The fisher’s lovely daughter.</p> + +<p>“Dive in, dive in, my child, with haste!<br> + There’s naught whereon to ponder,<br> +The time, dear heart, we must not waste:<br> + The sun has set out yonder.</p> + +<p>“God’s mercy, child, is great and sure:<br> + Fear not but He will show it!<br> +Leap in,—leap out! and you are pure,—<br> + ’Tis over ere you know it!”</p> + +<p>The frost and cold with cruel knife<br> + The tender form assail.<br> +Ah, would you be a Jewish wife,<br> + You must not weep and quail!</p> + +<p>And in—and out,—she leaps. Once more!<br> + Poor girl, it has not served you.<br> +No purer are you than before:<br> + A Gentile has observed you!</p> + +<p>And into th’ icy flood again,<br> + In terror wild she leaps!<br> +The white limbs shudder... all in vain!<br> + The Christian still he peeps.</p> + +<p>The frost and cold, they burn and bite,<br> + The women rub their fingers,<br> +The lovely child grows white and white,<br> + As on the bank she lingers.</p> + +<p>“The Law, my child, we must fulfill,<br> + The scoundrel see depart!<br> +Yet once! ’tis but a moment’s chill,<br> + ’Tis but a trifling smart!”</p> + +<p>The white-faced child the Law has kept,<br> + The covenant unstained,<br> +For in the waters deep she leapt,<br> + And there below remained.</p> + +<H2><a name="atonementeveningprayer">Atonement Evening Prayer</a></H2> + +<p>Atonement Day—evening pray’r—sadness profound.<br> +The soul-lights, so clear once, are dying around.<br> +The reader is spent, and he barely can speak;<br> +The people are faint, e’en the basso is weak.<br> +The choristers pine for the hour of repose.<br> +Just one—two chants more, and the pray’r book we close!</p> + +<p>And now ev’ry Jew’s supplication is ended,<br> +And Nilah* approaching, and twilight descended.<br> +The blast of the New Year is blown on the horn,<br> +All go; by the Ark I am standing forlorn,<br> +And thinking: “How shall it be with us anon,<br> +When closed is the temple, and ev’ryone gone!”</p> + +<p>[* Ne’ilah, (Hebrew) Conclusion, concluding prayer.]</p> + +<H2><a name="exitholiday">Exit Holiday</a></H2> + +<p>Farewell to the feast-day! the pray’r book is stained<br> +With tears; of the booth scarce a trace has remained;<br> +The lime branch is withered, the osiers are dying,<br> +And pale as a corpse the fair palm-frond is lying;<br> +The boughs of grey willow are trodden and broken—<br> +Friend, these are your hopes and your longings unspoken!</p> + +<p>Lo, there lie your dreamings all dimm’d and rejected,<br> +And there lie the joys were so surely expected!<br> +And there is the happiness blighted and perished,<br> +And all that aforetime your soul knew and cherished,<br> +The loved and the longed for, the striven for vainly—<br> +Your whole life before you lies pictured how plainly!</p> + +<p>The branches are sapless, the leaves will decay,<br> +An end is upon us, and whence, who shall say?<br> +The broom of the beadle outside now has hustled<br> +The lime and the palm that so pleasantly rustled.<br> +There blew a cold gust, from our sight all is banished—<br> +The shaft from a cross-bow less swiftly had vanished!</p> + + + + + + + +<pre> + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs of Labor and Other Poems +by Morris Rosenfeld +translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF LABOR AND OTHER POEMS *** + +This file should be named slbpm10h.htm or slbpm10h.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, slbpm11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, slbpm10a.txt + +Produced by S Goodman, David Starner +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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