Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Poem For The Meeting Of The American Medical Association At New York, May 5, 1853 by Oliver Wendell Holmes
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A Poem For The Meeting Of The American Medical Association At New York, May 5, 1853

    By Oliver Wendell Holmes



    I hold a letter in my hand, -
    A flattering letter, more's the pity, -
    By some contriving junto planned,
    And signed per order of Committee.
    It touches every tenderest spot, -
    My patriotic predilections,
    My well-known-something - don't ask what, -
    My poor old songs, my kind affections.

    They make a feast on Thursday next,
    And hope to make the feasters merry;
    They own they're something more perplexed
    For poets than for port and sherry.
    They want the men of - (word torn out);
    Our friends will come with anxious faces,
    (To see our blankets off, no doubt,
    And trot us out and show our paces.)

    They hint that papers by the score
    Are rather musty kind of rations, -
    They don't exactly mean a bore,
    But only trying to the patience;
    That such as - you know who I mean -
    Distinguished for their - what d' ye call 'em -
    Should bring the dews of Hippocrene
    To sprinkle on the faces solemn.

    - The same old story: that's the chaff
    To catch the birds that sing the ditties;
    Upon my soul, it makes me laugh
    To read these letters from Committees!
    They're all so loving and so fair, -
    All for your sake such kind compunction;
    'T would save your carriage half its wear
    To touch its wheels with such an unction!

    Why, who am I, to lift me here
    And beg such learned folk to listen,
    To ask a smile, or coax a tear
    Beneath these stoic lids to glisten?
    As well might some arterial thread
    Ask the whole frame to feel it gushing,
    While throbbing fierce from heel to head
    The vast aortic tide was rushing.

    As well some hair-like nerve might strain
    To set its special streamlet going,
    While through the myriad-channelled brain
    The burning flood of thought was flowing;
    Or trembling fibre strive to keep
    The springing haunches gathered shorter,
    While the scourged racer, leap on leap,
    Was stretching through the last hot quarter!

    Ah me! you take the bud that came
    Self-sown in your poor garden's borders,
    And hand it to the stately dame
    That florists breed for, all she orders.
    She thanks you, - it was kindly meant, -
    (A pale afair, not worth the keeping,) -
    Good morning; and your bud is sent
    To join the tea-leaves used for sweeping.

    Not always so, kind hearts and true, -
    For such I know are round me beating;
    Is not the bud I offer you,
    Fresh gathered for the hour of meeting,
    Pale though its outer leaves may be,
    Rose-red in all its inner petals? -
    Where the warm life we cannot see -
    The life of love that gave it - settles.


    We meet from regions far away,
    Like rills from distant mountains streaming;
    The sun is on Francisco's bay,
    O'er Chesapeake the lighthouse gleaming;
    While summer girds the still bayou
    In chains of bloom, her bridal token,
    Monadnock sees the sky grow blue,
    His crystal bracelet yet unbroken.

    Yet Nature bears the selfsame heart
    Beneath her russet-mantled bosom
    As where, with burning lips apart,
    She breathes and white magnolias blossom;
    The selfsame founts her chalice fill
    With showery sunlight running over,
    On fiery plain and frozen hill,
    On myrtle-beds and fields of clover.

    I give you Home! its crossing lines
    United in one golden suture,
    And showing every day that shines
    The present growing to the future, -
    A flag that bears a hundred stars
    In one bright ring, with love for centre,
    Fenced round with white and crimson bars
    No prowling treason dares to enter!

    O brothers, home may be a word
    To make affection's living treasure,
    The wave an angel might have stirred,
    A stagnant pool of selfish pleasure;
    HOME! It is where the day-star springs
    And where the evening sun reposes,
    Where'er the eagle spreads his wings,
    From northern pines to southern roses!



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