Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Elias LiebermanJosef Israels
W
On perilous cruises sped,
When the howling wind and the swirling foam
A message of danger read—
There was one to measure the dread of the sea
For the helpless women then,
Whose bread was found on the crest of the wave
By the sturdy fishermen.
As it sobbed to the lonely stone,
On the mound of the man who came no more,
Who left her all alone—
Alone to the wind and the sea and the storm
That had claimed their murderous fill;
Alone to the break of the taunting deep
And a cottage void and still.
In the wandering martyr race
That flies with the wind in the fearful round
Of an everlasting chase;
To note the patient shoulder shrug,
The pathos of mind and eye,
In the form of the man with the mortal wounds,
Who yet disdained to die.
Who limned with a deathless hand,
The woes of the men whose mettle you try—
The waifs of the sea and the land.
Be good to his artist soul, O Lord,
For he ate of the bread of tears
And drank from the bitter cup of those
Who count the leaden years.