Publication information |
Source: Hyde Park Historical Record Source type: magazine Document type: poem Document title: “William McKinley” Author(s): Sturtevant, Charles Date of publication: April 1903 Volume number: 3 Issue number: 1 Pagination: 34-35 |
Citation |
Sturtevant, Charles. “William McKinley.” Hyde Park Historical Record Apr. 1903 v3n1: pp. 34-35. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (poetry); anarchism (poetry). |
Named persons |
none. |
Notes |
“By Charles Sturtevant, M. D.” (p. 34). |
Document |
William McKinley
We
are walking in the shadow of an awful crime to-day;
This
whole nation lifts its heart to God, while fervently we pray
That
we may patiently endure this hateful sin and shame,
Which
has struck our foremost citizen at the summit of his fame!
If
an enemy had done this on a field of carnage red,
Or
a known and hunted rebel with a price upon his head,
It
would then have been a mystery to every loyal heart,
And
a national affliction in which each would bear a part.
But
when the best-beloved of this noble, western land
Left
every sign of power and state to take the outstretched hand
Of
the simplest and the greatest—of the rich and poor alike—
Oh
what dastardly disloyalty at such a heart to strike!
We
have brought this awful evil on ourselves, my fellow-men;
Let
us pause, and well consider, lest it come about again,
Lest
love of place, and thirst for power, and greed for sordid wealth
Shall
undermine our Nation’s life, and drain away her health.
For
when Liberty grows License, and “free speech” sedition’s yell
’Tis
time for all true-hearted men to stop and ponder well,
And
sweep with one great cleansing wave from all this broad domain,
With
the besom of destruction, this foul and deadly stain!
From
Alaska’s untrod solitudes in grandeur cold and still,
To
the sacred field of Concord, and the shaft of Bunker Hill,
From
our farthest northern limit to the sunny, southern lands
Where
new possessions wait us with open hearts and hands;
Where’er
that sacred symbol floats, the old “red, white and blue,”
Men
must and shall be in their hearts to that blest emblem true!
This
is no haunt for traitors—no rallying-place for crime,
But
our doors are open, and our hearts to true men all the time.
Oh,
Columbia! Oh, my Country! sitting bowed with humbled head!
Scenes
like these awaken memories of other loved and honored dead. [34][35]
Thrice
within a generation has the foul assassin’s hand
Cast
the shadow of a causeless crime o’er our beloved land!
It
shall be so no longer! Oh! arise in all thy might;
Not
in childish spite or temper, but with power that comes from right,
Break
and crush this noisome parasite on the land of Freedom’s birth,
Nor
in mistaken kindness shield the off-scourings of the earth!
Strike
with a might that shall appal [sic] each slinking anarchist
And
grind e’en into atoms the man who dares resist!
All
this people wait such action, and will fortify thy strength,
With
thy new leader—brighter hopes—to nobler deeds at length!
H
P , Sept. 14, 1901.