The Poems of Richard Watson Gilder | ||
THE WATCHMAN ON THE TOWER
Watchman ! What seest thou in the New Dawn?
Far off, across the seas, I behold men pursuing men and helpless women with dreadful massacre; borne on the eastern wind I hear the horrible cries of the murdered and bereft.
And what seest thou nearer, O Watchman of the Tower?
Nearer I see dark and cowering forms of crime and frightened innocence, alike given pitilessly to the green tree and the red flame.
And what else nearer dost thou see, O Seer of Evil Things?
I see smoldering fires and drift of black smoke where all manner of shames have been burned in the marketplaces, befouling the pure air of heaven.
And now, again, thou seest—?
I see scared creatures, in shape of men, fleeing from the light, and hiding in clefts of rocks, and in far places of the earth.
Look well, O Watchman, look near and wide, and tell us, who wait, what other things thou dost behold!
I see the shining faces of little children from whose backs heavy burdens have been lifted; I see rich men eagerly scattering their wealth among those who need— lifting up the stricken and restoring the power of self-help to the sturdy, and striving to make less hard the lot of them who work; I see those who labor winning an ampler share in the profits of their toil—in wage, and comfort, and safety, and time for rest; I behold Science conquering the secrets and guiding the forces of nature, and creating new and wondrous devices for human happiness
O Seer of Good and Evil, what else, what else?
Near by I behold the Angel of a People, and in his hand he bears a standard whereon is writ, in letters of light, the one word Truth; higher he bears the standard than ever before, and the people, in gathering numbers, follow the Word.
And what of the evil things that late thou sawest?
Still I see them, and many more, but fainter are they growing, as by some element of light consumed. Yet doth one strange and greatly evil thing loom with menace against the dawn—the shadow of false and self-seeking men who seize the banner of righteousness and with unclean hands uplift it, to the deceiving of many; and yet even here, I know, it is the love of Right and not of Wrong which doth mislead; and as the light increases, surely the pure in heart shall know their own and shun the deceiver of souls.
And what of the good that late thou sawest?
O still I see the good, and with clearer eyes; and, lo, it
O Watcher of the Dawn! thou seest what is, but canst thou see what yet shall be?
O ye who doubt! In the visible present lives the invisible future, and the hour that is brings the hour that shall be. If the Light grows, it shall not cease to grow; and the good that is brings the good that is to come. As with separate souls, so with peoples—the New Year, tho' it holds inheritance of shame and loss, holds, also, inheritance of striving, and accomplishment, and divine aspiration. Lo, the Light is climbing, not only of a New Year, but of a New Era for the awakening world.
The Poems of Richard Watson Gilder | ||