Romaios
Romaios
By W. G. Ballantine
Hamilton Fish Armstrong, ed. The Book of New York Verse. 1917.
- ’TWAS in the crowded avenue; o’erhead
- Thundered the trains; below the pavement shook
- With quivering cables; everywhere the crush
- Of horses, wheels, and men eddied and swirled.
- A river of humanity swept by
- With faces hard as ice. I stopped beside
- A little push-cart filled with southern fruits
- And dickered with the huckster, “Three for five?”
- “No, two,” in broken English. There we stood—
- He shabby, stooping, wolfish, all intent
- Upon a penny, I to him no more
- Than just another stranger from the throng
- Trampling each other in this fierce new world.
- Then looking in his sordid eyes I said,
- Using the tongue of Plato and of Paul,
- “Art thou a Roman?” Never magic word
- Of wizard or enchanter wrought more sure.
- The man erect, transfigured, eyes on fire,
- Lips parted, breath drawn fast, thrust in my hands
- His double handful. Huckster? No, a king!
- “Could I speak Roman? Did I share it all—
- The memories, the pride, the grief, the hope?”
- Then welcome to the best of all he had.
- Wouldst know, self-glorified American,
- The name that sums the grandest heritage
- Race ever owned? ’Tis “Roman” spoke in Greek;
- ROMAIOS they call it. Constantine the Great,
- Fixed with new capital where East meets West,
- Brought Rome’s imperial law, the Cross of Christ,
- The art and tongue of Greece—the whole world’s best;
- And in that fairest spot new Christian Rome
- Reigned queen a thousand years, until the Turk
- Fell like a blight, and darkness shrouded all.
- But still that name lives in the exiles’ dreams,
- All glories, Christian, Hebrew, Roman, Greek,
- Blend in that one unequalled Romaios.
- Abraham, Moses, Homer, Phidias,
- Cæsar, Paul, Chrysostom, Justinian,
- Bozzaris, Ypsilanti, Byron, all
- Are his. O blessed America, these men
- That come in rags, bring jewels in their hearts
- To shine resplendent in thy future’s crown!