Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE BALLAD OF SETH BOYDEN'S GIFT, by ALICE READE ROUSE First Line: High in the square his statue stands Last Line: Might wear a poet's wreath. Subject(s): Heroism; Newark, New Jersey; Heroes; Heroines | ||||||||
High in the Square his statue stands, INVENTOR carved beneath: But he who crimsoned the lips of Spring Might wear a Poet's wreath. Old Newark sat in its bosky streets, Tidy and prim and serene; Prankt with posies and orchard sweets To the fringe of its marshes green. 'Twas after the fighting of 1812 Seth Boyden came to town; He'd licked the British, -- and they'd licked him, -- And he wanted to settle down. Old Newark called to him potently, Though none but himself could hear That clashing summons as it clanged On his prophetic ear: None but himself see that clean blue sky With its white little chubby clouds, Grimed with the reek of his chimneys tall, Grim with his black smoke-shrouds. "Thou hast lent me talents ten, Lord God," To his Maker deep he prayed: "An Thou prosper me, I will give them back Tenfold increased," he said. Long with his cunning hands he wrought, Long with his seething brain, That God might not require of him His usury in vain. He watched the hedgerow'd village lanes Where tinkling cows browsed home Herded by whistling barefoot lads, Great thoroughfares become: Stone-paven streets where clicked the heels In castanetted tune Of all new Newark's gentlefolk, Shod with his shining shoon. Malleable to his iron will, He bent earth's iron bars: The lightning Franklin had lured down, He flashed back to the stars. A thousand men he kept at work, A thousand ships at toil, A thousand ways of increase he Wrought out upon the soil. At length in life's cool afternoon, He paced his garden-place: -- A garden clipt from Newark's youth, Gay with its old-time grace. Outside his gates he heard the growl Of labor chained to the wheel, The roar of his captured genii bound, The shriek of his tortured steel. He thought of old Newark's bosky streets, Tidy and prim and serene, Prankt with posies and orchard sweets To the fringe of its marshes green. He said: "I have had my work to do Thy lendings to increase, Lord God: -- to pay Thee back Thy loan Before my days should cease. "Now, ere my death-hour strike, I would I might just pleasure Thee! Give Thee and Newark some quaint gift All free from merchantry." Up from the garden-sward there breathed An exquisite bouquet: Fresh, faint, and fragrant as a wine For faries on Mayday. And glancing down, Seth Boyden saw The wonder at his feet: Wild strawberries like elfin cups Brimmed with ecstatic sweet: Too frail for aught save dryades To taste with leafy lips, Yet aromatic as the juice That Puck in secret sips. Seth Boyden smiled: with careful skill He culled the perfect plants. Through patient moons he wove his spells Till knowledge conquered chance. He fed and watered, pruned and plucked, Till from his garden-sod, There blazed a berry fit to feed A hero or a god! This was the gift Seth Boyden gave To all his world for boon; That Heaven might smile and Newark feast From April on through June. For the great epic of his toil Heaped laurels are his meed: And garlands for the loveliness Of that last lyric deed. High in the Square his statue stands, INVENTOR carved beneath: But he who invented strawberries, Might wear a Poet's wreath. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CONFESSION OF ST. JIM-RALPH by DENIS JOHNSON NOTES FOR AN ELEGY by WILLIAM MEREDITH THE EROTICS OF HISTORY by EAVAN BOLAND A SONG FOR HEROES by EDWIN MARKHAM AFTER THE BROKEN ARM by RON PADGETT PRELUDE; FOR GEOFFREY GORER by EDITH SITWELL EXAMINATION OF THE HERO IN A TIME OF WAR by WALLACE STEVENS ISOLATION by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON |
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