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Additional Poems By Joseph Freeman Essay Research

Additional Poems By Joseph Freeman Essay, Research Paper


TO THE OLD WORLD


If your forefathers have been wise and brave,


And lit a thousand lights, it little matters:


You are an aged king before his grave


Whom his own folly has reduced to tatters.


While the world tumbles down about your head,


Your royal cloak, inherited of old,


Slips from your shoulders by a broken thread,


And gathers dust into its woven gold.


There let it lie, entangled in itself.


Write the last footnote to your history,


And, laying the volume on Time’s iron shelf,


Sit back to muse on days that are to be,


When laughing boys, turning to sober men,


Shall build your ruins into a world again.


(1921)


PRINCE JERNIKIDZE


Prince Jernikidze wears his boots


Above his knees; his black mustache


Curls like the Kaiser’s; when he shoots


Friend and foe turn white as ash.


The movements of his hands are svelt,


Ivory bullets grace his chest,


The studded poignard at his belt


Dangles down his thigh. The best


Dancers in Tiflis envy his


Light Lesginka’s steady whirl,


He bends his close-cropped head to kiss


The finger-tips of every girl.


Over the shashleek and the wine


His deep and passionate baritone


Directs the singing down the line,


And none may drain his glass alone.


When morning breaks into his room


He dons his long Circassian coat,


Marches to the Sovnarkom


Knocks at the door and clears his throat,


Opens the ledger with his hand,


Bows to the commissars who pass,


Calls the janitor comrade, and


Keeps accounts for the working class.


(1926)


BALLAD OF TAMPA


When after dinner you smoke, gentlemen, remember


Tampa leads the world making clear Havanas: Mexicans,


Cubans, Urugayans, Porto Ricans are your vassals;


Ybor City, Palmetto Beach, West Tampa sweat, ache, starve,


For the azure smoke-ring exciting tonight’s new lay.


Dull-eyed sallow elderly women stand confuted


In the factory-tomb banding, wrapping, boxing.


Machines monotonously clock the minutes;


Gossamer of cellophane automatically embraces cigars.


No, says the woman-worker, I don’t count cigars packing;


There’s no time, no time; we get used to it;


One look tells us how many there are;


No time . . . no time . . . no time.


Bastard houses, colonial and Spanish, lean


Over Ybor City’s narrow Seventh Avenue, memorial


Of antithetic races flowing to the New World’s shores.


Here the home of Tampa’s proletariat winds its lank


Streets under balconies. Labor yokes all races; voices


And awnings shout Martinez, Cohen, Carducci! But O


Beloved flaming faces of Latin America, passionate


And stern, whose eyes burn with remembrance


Of a hundred battles with the world wide foe.


Going home, gentlemen, we find no architecture;


Home is an old broken wooden box patched


With tin or paper, naked within, maybe a hard cot;


Maybe, O petit-bourgeois luxury, even two; maybe


A decrepit icebox, a table limping on three legs;


Shacks whose faces grow black with worry.


Where will the rent–two bucks a week—come from?


The workers, having forgotten under the chronic


Fake smile of the Blue Eagle the feel of labor,


Do not recall the names of conquistadors


Who first touched Tampa’s shores; let the Chamber


Trumpet to a posterity of tourists the memory


Of Pamfilo de Narvaez, Hernando de Soto


The immense teeth and spectacles of Teddy.


We know only the third republic, the Roosevelt


Who flashes trecherous promises through a cataleptic gain.


We remember, gentlemen, the

great strike of Thirty-One


When we marched to the factory of Sanchez y Haya


And on the water tank high above Ybor City


Nailed the red flag with hammer and sickle.


We remember, too, the terror, the cops who wrecked


The face of our leader Hy Gordon, cracked their pistols


Through his wrist-bone broke our Union.


Let us go, then Comrades, to the Communist meeting;


Go in silence; the forgotten man is forgotten,


he Reds remembered; they are here illegal,


Foregathering secretly in private homes.


Tiptoe up the stairway one by one.


Order, compa?eros; Comrade Lopez has the floor.


The terror grows, we have no work, we starve;


Our wives and children hunger; those who still


Labor aridly in the factories (robbed


Of the traditional readers) face new wage-cuts;


The cops ravage meetings; jail, beat, deport


The bravest, wisest workers, those


Who know the road to freedom from this hell.


The factory gates are closed to Negroes:–


Let the black bastards die, let them all die,


Let the blessed Blue Eagle dedevour these rebellious worms,


But let it preserve our profits!


Compa?eros, we shall not die; our ranks are but


A platoon in that vast army, throughout


The world which carries high the proletarian banner


Fighting through blood and terror toward the goal.


We who once raised the red banner over Ybor City


Shall do our part indeed, striking the needed blows


For an America of work and thought for all.


Where soil, factory and machine; art,


Philosophy and science; love itself


Shall be with bread the portion of the people.


Mankind looks forward, but the hurt look back:


Broken of will, distracted and afraid,


They who have had no childhood but the rack


Shall yet be judged for what they’ve done or said.


And if their feet, once crucified, now drag,


We’ll nail them once again upon our scorn:


When mankind marches, let the weak not lag,


Cursing the time and place where they were born.


The past dies, save for those whom it has broken;


They will remember whom the world has maimed.


Let them be silent! Things must not be spoken


Which hide deep in the thought of man, ashamed:


Or, if their lips are bitter and inflamed,


Let them speak all by symbol and by token.


New York


1925


In this black room, midnight and morn are each


Aeons away; the open window brings


The sea’s insistent roar against the beach;


Loud in the night the hollow bellbuoy flings


Skyward its melancholy monotones;


Above the clamor of the breaking waves


Far off its lonely clapper moans


Like some despairing idiot who raves


Crawling on hands and knees through empty streets


To doors that seem familiar, there to weep.


While one unconscious twisted knuckle beats


For succor, for compassion and for sleep,


He rends the silence with a final cry


To which the stubborn night makes no reply.


New York


November 1931


The hordes that battle for the world’s domain


Sweat impatiently within each camp;


Once more the bloodsoaked earth roars with the tramp


Of armies thundering across the plain.


And now again the long eternal rain


Shall drum in darkness taps upon the damp


Cracked bodies, or the yellow lonely lamp


Of night glow on the entrails of the slain.


And we who once awoke from the slow dream


Of peace and childhood to behold the sky


Broken asunder by the flaming steel


Of shells whose death came with a monstrous scream,


Shall this time, having lived, know how to die,


Rifle in hand, to make a just dream real.


New York


December 1931

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