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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
YOU TOO?, by JULIAN MOSES DRACHMAN First Line: You too, john harvard? ... Will you add your Last Line: But will you choose their destiny, you too? | |||
You, too, John Harvard? . . . Will you add your name To the long, crimson chronicle of shame, You who forsook dear Stratford's hallowed sod To seek new shrines where each might serve his God In equal freedom? Do you turn at last Re-entering black horrors of the past? Pontius' cross and Torquemada's fire, The scorpion-scourge of Babylon and Tyre, Bondage to Pharaoh, blows from Russian knout, The yellow hat of Arragon, sneer and shout, Exile, proscription, hatred, -- ghosts of sin You call to life with this that you begin. We have grown old in sorrow; suffering To us is no untried and dreaded thing. If you repeat what we have heard before, And, like the rest, bar the half-opened door, We'll take our staff in an accustomed hand And wear old shoes to many a stranger land. Sadly, with never a curse nor uttered pang, We'll chant the dirges Jeremiah sang. Our sole reply to this mad thing you do Will be a weary, futile sigh: "You, too?" We had a vision of a Western land, Full of your spirit, by the setting sun, New, free, where every man might boldly stand Upon devotion given, struggles won. That vision lured us over watery ways, Consoled black nights, sustained through evil days, And picked us up and set us down again Where we might live, toil, study, love like men. We've breathed the air of freedom, heads erect. With roots deep in our country's soil, we swear Wherever she may need us and expect Our dearest service, she shall find us there. We have lived by that vision; say not now That it was but a pale and fleeting dream, And truth a nightmare, that you merely seem Princes of justice, men of thoughtful brow, That you are small men even as others are. We'd not have hoped so dearly, come so far To seek old hatreds though the land be new. Are you, then, of their company, you too? Where are they now who spurned the folk of God? Rome sleeps beneath her seven ruined hills. The desert shrouds the tombs of Egypt, fills The palaces where Greek and Persian trod. We raise no sword; we threaten with no rod. We bow and pass from the oppressor's eye; Yet Justice, in some hidden way, from high Unto the victim levels him who kills. Wrath eats her own heart; envy turns man blind; Scorn plucks the pinions from the soaring mind And leaves it strengthless. . . . Pride has brought Spain low. Kaiser and Tzar, who hated us, are down. When we flee forth, the lustre leaves the crown, Eyes fail, life's pulse wanes, tremulous and slow. What all have tried, you may attempt anew, But will you choose their destiny, you too? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SCHOOL EXAMINATION by JULIAN MOSES DRACHMAN THE AGING COLOSSUS by JULIAN MOSES DRACHMAN RABBI BEN EZRA by ROBERT BROWNING SING-SONG; A NURSERY RHYME BOOK: 114 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI A SONNET. OF LOVE by PHILIP AYRES FRAGMENTS INTENDED FOR DEATH'S JEST-BOOK: SLEEPER'S COUNTENANCE by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES THE TIME IS GONE by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN THE NEW VICAR OF BRAY by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |
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