Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Rufus LearsiThe Ghetto-Jew
I
A figure all bent and retreating;
His raiment was shabby, and bearded his face,
His gaze was bewildering and fleeting;
And those whose drossiness glared through the gilt
Guffawed a contemptuous greeting.
And read there his marvellous story;
His brows were large with the wisdom of pain,
His locks by affliction made hoary;
A memory lurked in the depth of his eyes,
A prayer and a vision of glory.
A prayer of patience and yearning,
And a vision of Home that gleamed in the dark,
Through ages of weary sojourning;
Yet they of the gilded and glittering throng
Had naught but derision and spurning.
And nursed it through vigils of ages;
He gave it the blood of his life to absorb
Yet mockery now is his wages.
Shall this be the word his story to close,
A jeer be the last of its pages?