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Home  »  The Little Book of Modern Verse  »  The Only Way

Jessie B. Rittenhouse, ed. (1869–1948). The Little Book of Modern Verse. 1917.

Louis V. Ledoux

The Only Way

I
MEMPHIS and Karnak, Luxor, Thebes, the Nile:

Of these your letters told; and I who read

Saw room on dim horizons Egypt’s dead

In march across the desert, mile on mile,

A ghostly caravan in slow defile

Between the sand and stars; and at their head

From unmapped darkness into darkness fled

The gods that Egypt feared a little while.

There black against the night I saw them loom

With captive kings and armies in array

Remembered only by their sculptured doom,

And thought: What Egypt was are we to-day.

Then rose obscure against the rearward gloom

The march of Empires yet to pass away.

II
I looked in vision down the centuries

And saw how Athens stood a sunlit while

A sovereign city free from greed and guile,

The half-embodied dream of Pericles.

Then saw I one of smooth words, swift to please,

At laggard virtue mock with shrug and smile;

With Cleon’s creed rang court and peristyle,

Then sank the sun in far Sicilian seas.

From brows ignoble fell the violet crown.

Again the warning sounds; the hosts engage:

In Cleon’s face we fling our battle gage,

We win as foes of Cleon loud renown;

But while we think to build the coming age

The laurel on our brows is turning brown.

III
We top the poisonous blooms that choke the state,

At flower and fruit our flashing strokes are made,

The whetted scythe on stalk and stein is laid,

But deeper must we strike to extirpate

The rooted evil that within our gate

Will sprout again and flourish, branch and blade,

For only from within can ill be stayed

While Adam’s seed is unregenerate.

With zeal redoubled let our strength be strained

To cut the rooted causes where they hold,

Nor spend our sinews on the fungus mold

When all the breeding marshes must be drained.

Be this our aim; and let our youth be trained

To honor virtue more than place and gold.

IV
A hundred cities sapped by slow decay,

A hundred codes and systems proven vain

Lie hearsed in sand upon the heaving plain.

Memorial ruins mounded, still and gray;

And we who plod the barren waste to-day

Another code evolving, think to gain

Surcease of man’s inheritance of pain

And mold a state immune from evil’s sway.

Not laws; but virtue in the soul we need,

The old Socratic justice in the heart,

The golden rule become the people’s creed

When years of training have performed their part

For thus alone in home and church and mart

Can evil perish and the race be freed.