Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By N. N.Moses
T
Races that have ruled the world,—
They have fallen, they have perished,
And new standards are unfurled.
Gods are banished at whose altars
Nations have been wont to pray,
And where Wisdom erst held sway
Ignorance supinely falters.
Filled the earth, have ceased to be;
Even their renown no longer
Lives in lays of minstrelsy.
Lo! the hero’s might is broken
And his sword is gone to rust;
Lips are steeped in death and dust
That have sweetly sung and spoken.
From whose all-devouring deep
Songs of bards and words of sages
Mist like in tradition sweep,—
Radiant and serene reposes,
Unattained by mist and gloom,
Undiminished by the tomb,
A colossal image—Moses.
Of such ken there is no need,
For his aspect is the creature
Of his word and of his deed,—
Of the word that is engraven
Even on the soul that’s lost
Of the deed that led his host
Toward freedom, truth and Heaven.
In his purpose and in might,
Tender is his love as woman,
Fierce in the defense of right;
Meek and faltering, yet compliant,
In the presence of the Lord,—
In obedience of his word
Bold, unyielding and defiant.
Of our days from fumous height—
Lifeless, barren, solitary—
Beams with life diffusing light;
So he rises on our vision
From the past which phantoms shroud,
Life-impregnate, halo-browed,
In the garb of his tradition.
Where he trod and where he stood;
Where the flaming briar fluttered
In the desert’s solitude;
At the throne of him who trifled
With the wrath revealed of God,
And where with uplifted rod
The pursuing hosts he stifled;
When he smote the barren rock,
Or by marvel or decree quelled
Ingrate murmurs of his flock;
When from Sinai, rent with thunder,
He descended with the Law:—
Thrills with reverential awe
And compels transcendent wonder.
Self-obscuring, tranquil, grand,
As with eyes that death was glassing
He beheld the promised land—
Did he ween as on that mountain
He expired meek and brave,
That while man still man would be,
Far into eternity,
He would look on Moses’ grave
As his birthright’s sacred fountain?