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The Burden of Jerusalem Rudyard Kipling I was working through files from the Roosevelt library (http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/), which has a large amount of letters online, when I noticed this by Churchill: I was immediately intrigued and wondered what it was that Churchill didn't want to be made public. I looked around the net and the only reference I could find was in usenet where some silly people had mentioned the Poems and they seem to have appeared in a Christopher Hitchens book about 1990. I emailed some Kipling people and one was kind enough to post me photocopies from one of the copies of them, talked about in the Churchill-Roosevelt correspondence, that he possessed. I think this is the first time the poems [with 'A Chapter of Proverbs'] have appeared in full online. The majority of Kipling fans seem to be in ignorance of their existence and I am not sure if they have appeared elsewhere in print since 1990. I think their historical importance is clear.14 October 1943, Webb-Johnson to FDR: www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box37/a334ee04.html (Page 1) www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box37/a334ee05.html (Page 2) 17 October 1943, Churchill to FDR: www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box37/a334ee03.html 25 October 1943, FDR to Webb-Johnson: www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box37/a334ee02.html 25 October 1943, FDR to Churchill: www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box37/a334ee01.html To follow "The Peace of Dives." THE BURDEN OF JERUSALEM But Abram said unto Sarai, "Behold thy maid is in thy hand. Do to her as it pleaseth thee." And when Sarai dealt hardly with her she fled from her face. Genesis XVI.6. In ancient days and deserts wild There rose a feud – still unsubdued – 'Twixt Sarah's son and Hagar's child That centred round Jerusalem. (While underneath the timeless bough Of Mamre's oak, mid stranger-folk The Patriarch slumbered and his spouse Nor dreamed about Jerusalem). For Ashmael lived where he was born, And pastured there in tents of hair Among the Camel and the Thorn – Beersheba, south Jerusalem. But Israel sought employ and food At Pharoah's knees, till Rameses Dismissed his plaguey multitude, with curses, Toward Jerusalem. Across the wilderness they came, And launched their horde o'er Jordan's ford, And blazed the road by sack and flame To Jebusite Jerusalem. Then Kings and Judges ruled the land, And did not well by Israel, Till Babylonia took a hand, And drove them from Jerusalem. And Cyrus sent them back anew, To carry on as they had done, Till angry Titus overthrew The fabric of Jerusalem. Then they were scattered north and west, While each Crusade more certain made That Hagar's vengeful son possessed Mohamedan Jerusalem. Where Ishmael held his desert state, And framed a creed to serve his need. – "Allah-hu-Akbar! God is Great!" He preached it in Jerusalem. And every realm they wandered through Rose, far or near, in hate or fear, And robbed and tortured, chased and slew, The outcasts of Jerusalem. So ran their doom – half seer, half slave – And ages passed, and at the last They stood beside each tyrant's grave, And whispered of Jerusalem. We do not know what God attends The Unloved Race in every place Where they amass their dividends From Riga to Jerusalem; But all the course of Time makes clear To everyone (except the Hun) It does not pay to interfere With Cohen from Jerusalem. For, 'neath the Rabbi's curls and fur (Or scents and rings of movie-Kings) The aloof, unleavened blood of Ur, Broods steadfast on Jerusalem. Where Ishmael bides in his own place – A robber bold, as was foretold, To stand before his brother's face – The wolf without Jerusalem: And burthened Gentiles o'er the main Must bear the weight of Israel's hate Because he is not brought again In triumph to Jerusalem. Yet he who bred the unending strife And was not brave enough to save The Bondsmaid from the furious wife, He wrought thy woe, Jerusalem! The privately published volumes containing 'Burden' are not described in any of the four existing bibliographies of Rudyard Kipling (Martindell, Livingston, Ballard or Stewart-Yeats). The following is by David Richards, an American Kipling collector and the author of a new bibliography of Rudyard Kipling, to be published by Oak Knoll Press in 2006. I have a little privately bound typescript book, supposedly (and I believe) printed by Alfred Webb-Johnson, who operated on Kipling in October 1931, and is said to have "edited" 'Something of Myself' (a claim doubted by Professor Pinney, as I remember). This book, a small 8vo titled in gilt only on the spine and bound in dark blue half-calf with marble endpapers, is comprised of 16 leaves. 'The Burden of Jerusalem' is leaves 4-8, and 'A Chapter of Proverbs' is leaves 9-13, with 32 numbered proverbs, ending with the note "An unpublished item by Rudyard Kipling, and given to me by Mrs. Kipling. Copy in the British Museum." This is followed by Webb-Johnson's signature. 'The Burden of Jerusalem' is present in the British Library (BL Add MS 45680 f. 155-56, typescript, two leaves, rectos only, seventeen 4-line stanzas, annotated "to follow 'The Peace of Dives'") in a typescript copy with a letter from Webb-Johnson dated 12 August 1940 saying that the poem was meant for publication but withheld by Mrs. Kipling. There is another copy at the Royal College of Surgeons, with 'A Chapter of Proverbs' and bound with correspondence regarding these items (Webb-Johnson to Winston Churchill, 28 July 1943; Churchill to Webb-Johnson, 1 August 1943 and 12 October 1943, and a copy of a letter from Webb-Johnson to Franklin Roosevelt, 14 October 1943).'The Burden of Jerusalem' appears in slightly edited form in Christopher Hitchens, Blood, Class, and Nostalgia: Anglo-American Ironies, Farrar, Straus & Giroux (New York), 1990, pp. 86-88. Here it is reproduced exactly as it appears in the original, privately published volume held by David Richards. (An instance of "Ashmael" instead of "Ishmael" and apparent punctuation errors appear in the original.)
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