FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36  
37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  
DAZZLED by sun and drugged by space they wait, These homeless peoples, at our prairie gate; Dumb with the awe of those whom fate has hurled, Breathless, upon the threshold of a world! From near-horizoned, little lands they come, From barren country-side and deathly slum, From bleakest wastes, from lands of aching drouth, From grape-hung valleys of the smiling South, From chains and prisons, ay, from horrid fear, (Mark you the furtive eye, the listening ear!) And all amazed and silent, scared and shy-- An alien group beneath an alien sky! See--on that bench beside the busy door-- There sleeps a Roman born: upon the floor His wife, dark-haired and handsome, takes her rest, Their black-eyed baby tugging at her breast. Her hands lie still. Her brooding glances roam Above the pushing crowd to her far home, And slow she smiles to think how fine 'twill be When they (so rich!) return to Italy. Yonder, with stolid face and tragic eye, Sits a lone Russian; as we pass him by He neither stirs nor looks; his inner gaze Sees not the future fair, but, troubled, strays To the dark land he left but can't forget, Whose bonds, though broken, hold him prisoner yet. Here is a Pole--a worker; though so slim His muscle is of steel--no fear for him; He is the breed which conquers; he is nerved To fight and fight again. Too long he served, Man of a subject race! His fierce, blue eye Roams like a homing eagle o'er the sky, So limitless, so deep! for such as he Life has no higher bliss than to be free. This little Englishman with jaunty air And tweed cap perched awry on close-trimmed hair-- He, with his faded wife and noisy band, Has come from Home to seek a promised land-- He feels himself aggrieved, for no one said That things would be so big and so--outspread! He thinks of London with a pang of grief; His wife is sobbing in her handkerchief. But all his children stare with eager eyes. This is their land. Already they surmise Their heritage, their chance to live and grow, Won for them by their fathers, long ago! Another generation, and this Scot, Whose longing for the hills is ne'er forgot, Shall rear a son whose eye will never be Dim with a craving for that distant sea, Those barren rocks, that heather's purple glow-- The ache, the burn that only exiles know! This Irishman, who, when he sees the Green, Turns that his shaking lips may not be seen, He, too, shall bear a son who, blythe and gay, Sings the old son
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36  
37   38   39   40   41   42   >>  



Top keywords:
barren
 

promised

 

perched

 

trimmed

 

aggrieved

 

sobbing

 
handkerchief
 

London

 

thinks

 

things


outspread

 

fierce

 

homing

 

subject

 
homeless
 

served

 

Englishman

 

jaunty

 

higher

 

limitless


children
 

exiles

 

DAZZLED

 
Irishman
 
heather
 

purple

 

blythe

 

shaking

 

distant

 

fathers


Another

 

chance

 

drugged

 

Already

 

heritage

 

surmise

 

generation

 
craving
 

longing

 

forgot


nerved

 

conquers

 
horizoned
 
tugging
 

smiling

 

prisons

 
chains
 

handsome

 
haired
 

breast