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William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. (1878–1962). Anthology of Magazine Verse for 1920.

Deported

THE TRANSPORTS move stealthily to sea—

The sea so prone to take strange freightage eagerly—

But this sad freightage even the sea disowns

And lifts its storms and frowns in darker mood

And never was a cargo more adrift …

There are no ports, no country’s flag, no waiting hands

In any land on earth for it.

Nor any home to take it in.

And all the prisons are too proud.

O Mayflower! Ships of Columbus!

And frigates and vessels of wood and of steel,

With your cargoes of gifts and your graces!

O swift laughing sails like fluttering garments of girls

Running down soft green slopes

To a dance with their lovers at Fair time!

O all the brave prows that advance to these shores

Like believers to the rail at communion!

Be blind! Turn away from-those ships, from those spectres,

Do not think these the cargoes we send out from our shores,

These of the darkness, in the night, in secrecy,

Under sealed orders!

O Liberty! Mother! with your head proudly erect

And your regal brow confident

And your uplifted arm

Hailing far children of earth to your sheltering;

O Liberty! Mother who nurses back to full strength

The offspring of breasts that are empty,

Who gives and who trusts and who welcomes in limitless trusting!

Do not look down at these ships as they pass—

Purring like cats that are clawing their kill—

Oh, do not notice!

The New York Sun