Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Leto (In the Graphic)In the Hour of Need
D
A pawnshop? Yes, it is, my lad—just that, and nothing more,
Nothing remarkable in that? You see ’em every day?
No doubt you do. But wait a bit, and let me say my say.
I thought I should have lost her, but you see she is still with me:
I owe her life to him, my lad! To who d’ye ask?—to who?
To the old man at that popshop there!—and mark me, he’s a Jew!
It won’t take long to let you have the sense and soul of it;
Fanny was ill, and times were bad, and I’d no work to do;
Fanny got worse, and then I took to visiting the Jew.
And the times that were so tight before, my lad, got tighter still;
I pawned my things—such as they were—and I pawned my wife’s things too,
Till nothing was left to pawn—and still I had no work to do!
One night as I sat, with tight-clasped hands, beside my poor girl’s bed;
I closed my eyes in a dreamy way—didn’t sleep you understand;—
When I opened ’em I saw the Jew, with a basket in his hand!
For he brought new life to my dying wife, and made her strong again!
If Heaven is full when he dies, I know they’ll make room for the Jew!…
There! that’s the short of it, my lad,—and every word is true!