Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Ruth Schechter AlexanderThe Yellow Badge
H
And yet not so long ago,
They bound on our arms a yellow shame
The seal of their scorn for us of the Name,
And laughed at our deep-sunk woe.
And the world sweeps on to its goal;
We walk the streets with a master’s tread
And the fear we lived in is long since dead,
But the badge we wear in our soul.
Lest worse than the fear might fall,
Have broken the back of our freeman’s pride
And the terror of those who were cursed, and died
Lives on in us one and all.
They killed us like sheep and then?
We waited for death in an ecstasy,
As the unfelt pang that should set us free,
And give us our life again.
A snug, complacent crew
With wealth and culture at our command
And the friendly glance and the outstretched hand
Of those who mocked us and slew.
With an eye cast round to view
Lest the Past that is in us may lift its head,
Betray to the world we love and dread,
“Behold! This is a Jew.”
And the times are broad and free,
We too belong to the Brotherhood
We shout, lest it be not understood:
“Liberal Jews” are we.
Hating with petty hate
Each other, our past, and the names we bear,
Quarreling meanly to snatch our share
Of the gold that we think makes great.
Is graven on Israel’s heart;
And we render our language, our symbols, our songs,
Our honor, our martyrs, aye, even our wrongs
For a smile on our neighbour’s part.
Let us tear the shame from our souls,
We shall rend ourselves and the wounds will bleed
But the hurt and blood are our right and meed;
They will heal us and make us whole.
Where under the sunshine lies
The land that is ours in every sod,
The gift of the King, our fathers’ God,
To His children and allies.
And cleanse away our stain,
The ignoble and base forgot
With the daily frettings of scheme and plot,
We shall stand upright again.
And our just doom strikes us down,
And naught remain but a pinch of dust,
A flash of gold and a sword a-rust,
Of the people God called His Crown.