THE FAMILY TREE

Your genealogy may be

The finest thing on earth

Or merely a decadent tree

Of past descent and worth.

The children of the Puritans

Should have the Pilgrims’ souls

Or else an alien wire spans

Your insulated poles.

An aristocracy of breed

Is that which keeps the stamp

Of spirit from heroic deed

In patriot hall or camp.

The veins whose life-blood flows for home

Or right or liberty

Should be the same from which they come,

To keep the nation free.

To find in our ancestral line

A sire of noble blood

Puts on us truth to make the sign

Of our escutcheon good.

Colonial forbears condemn

Like ghosts from hollow boles

Unless we reincarnate them

Without their shrouds and stoles.

To be well-born a century back,

A century of fruit,

A century the soil to pack

About the ancient root,

Is such a heritage we well

May trace it to its source

For all from which its scions swell,

Its vital ichors course.