Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Max MeyerhardtIsrael
H
Since doomed in every land and clime to roam,
An exile and a wanderer on the earth,
Without a country and without a home!
That holy creed of origin divine;
They stamped as crime his sacred, pure belief,
And mocked his worship at Jehovah’s shrine.
From whom sprang sages, kings and prophets grand,
Earth’s mightiest race, the chosen of the Lord,
Was mocked and scorned and jeered in every land!
Cast him in dungeons terrible and dire,
And with a thousand tortures racked his form,
Then led him forth unto the death of fire.
Did persecution follow in his path,
And furious mobs deemed it a noble act
To vent on him their hatred and their wrath.
With fortitude sublime, ’mid smoke and flame;
And while their cruel foes stood mocking ’round,
They called on God and blessed His sacred name!
Through gloom and death, the Hebrew saw afar,
With faith’s unfailing and undying eye,
Beyond the clouds, hope’s bright and glorious star.
As, long ago, upon the Red Sea coast,
With miracles He saved His chosen race,
And in the sea ’whelmed Pharaoh’s mighty host.
For Israel triumphed over every foe,
And marching on with undiminished zeal,
Emerged in triumph from the night of woe.
Once more as beautiful, sublime, and grand
As when, in blessèd days of old, she stood
A mighty nation in the Holy Land.
For though no monuments rise o’er their tombs,
Yet fame upon the sacred spot shall shed
Her fairest garlands and her brightest blooms.
And on the scroll of glory written high:
And though earth’s proudest monuments decay,
Their deeds sublime will never, never die!
The future holds a destiny more grand;
For ’tis thy mission great to teach God’s laws
To the inhabitants of every land,
That unto Him alone shall prayers ascend,
And that before His great majestic throne
All men in reverent suppliance shall bend.
In thunder tones the glad acclaim will ring,
And nations, taking up the shout, shall cry,
“The God of Judah is our Lord and King!”