Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By AnonymousBabylon
T
Proud daughter of the East!
That dwellest as on sea-birds’ wings,
Upon Euphrates’ breast;
As lofty as thy pride of old,
So deep shall be thy doom;
Thy wealth is fled, thy days are told,
Awake! thine end is come!
A sword is on thy host!
Thy princes and their mighty bands—
The Lord shall mock their boast!
His Hand has rein’d the rushing steed,
And quell’d the rage of war;
Shall stay the flying lance’s speed
And burn the whirling car.
The Lord of Hosts hath said,
Bid trumpets rouse the distant bands
Of Persia and the Mede;
The bucklers bring, make bright the dart,
I lead thee forth to war,
To burst the gates of brass apart
And break the iron bar!
Thy valiant men of might,
Their lion hearts, proud Babylon,
Have failed thee in the fight;
Thy cities are all desolate,
Thy lofty gates shall fall,
The hand that wrought Gomorrah’s fate
Shall crush thy mighty wall.
Upon the desert plain,
But, lurking in thy cavern’d rocks,
The forest beast shall reign.
Fair Babylon, Lost Babylon!
Sit in the dust and mourn,
Hurled headlong from thy lofty throne—
Forgotten and forlorn!