Here you will find the Poem Out Of Siberia of poet Katharine Lee Bates
SHAKERAGS, cripples, gaunt and dazed, Prison-broken hosts on hosts, Torture-scarred and dungeon-crazed, Down the convict road they pour, More and more and myriads more, Terrible as ghosts. Shuffling feet that miss the chain, Shoulders welted, faces hoar, Sightless eyes that stare in vain, Writhen limbs and idiot tongue? They are old who were so young When they passed before. Grimy from the mines, a stain And a horror on the white Sweep of the Siberian plain, These, grotesque and piteous, these Fill the earth with jubilees, Flood the skies with light. While each squalid tatter spins At the sport of wind and snow, Russia hails her paladins, And with cheer or sob proclaims Long unspoken hero names, Names they hardly know. They unto themselves are vague, Even as they tear the bread That their famished fingers beg; They themselves are specters, who Melt into their retinue Of unnumbered dead. From the shackles, from the whips, Over frozen steppes they stream, Quavering songs on ghastly lips, Haggard, holy caravan, Saviours of the soul of man, Martyrs of a dream; Martyrs of a dream fulfilled, Givers who have paid the price, Homing now to hearths long chilled, Guests exalted over all At glad Freedom's festival, Saints of sacrifice.