Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Alter AbelsonFeldmesten or Measuring the Graves
O
The bleaching grass is all a-cold;
The leaves all frayed, in dust are laid,
The shrewd and churlish winds grow bold.
That shiver, clinging to the tree,
The Eden leaves—the heart, it grieves,
The chilly air’s a prophecy.
A tear is trembling in the sky;
The bird, a lump is in her throat,
For song and summer that must die.
Days, purgatorial, sad and sere,
Like pilgrim plods her dolorous ways
To burial grounds to drop her tear.
The yarn in use for shrouds she buys,
And lays it in her prayer-book,
And wipes, and wipes again her eyes.
Her heart, a nest of gnawing fears;
And there unwinds, unwinds and laves
The thread with tears—they weep, her years.
With pain as if the grave did yawn
Within her heart; as if she heard
The whirr of worms in coffins spawn.
And metes and measures every mound;
Each peaceful dwelling of the dead,
Each holy home in silence bound.
As on the grave she lays the line;
And something sobs within her soul,
“You, too, one day will have this shrine.
Who knows if not your fingers now
Have measured here your life’s retreat,
The grave which time for you will plow?”
The hallowed, dusty tear-touched thread,
She takes it home, and weaves amain
A wick by which the Torah’s read.
That keeps the Torah’s law of life—
And then she sighs—“No more they tramp
The dead, the dead are free from strife.
We lit Thy Torah’s lamp so long,
With threads of graves, with threads of tears,
When will we weave it threads of song?”