Title:   CHICAGO POEMS

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Author:   CARL SANDBURG

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PDF Version:   1.2



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Bookmarks





Page No 1


CHICAGO POEMS

CARL SANDBURG



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Page No 2


Table of Contents

CHICAGO POEMS ............................................................................................................................................1

CARL SANDBURG ................................................................................................................................1

CHICAGO POEMS.............................................................................................................................................4

CHICAGO..............................................................................................................................................4

SKETCH .................................................................................................................................................5

MASSES .................................................................................................................................................6

LOST......................................................................................................................................................6

THE HARBOR.......................................................................................................................................7

THEY WILL SAY ..................................................................................................................................7

MILLDOORS .......................................................................................................................................7

HALSTED STREET CAR.....................................................................................................................8

CLARK STREET BRIDGE...................................................................................................................8

PASSERSBY ........................................................................................................................................9

THE WALKING MAN OF RODIN .....................................................................................................10

SUBWAY.............................................................................................................................................10

THE SHOVEL MAN ............................................................................................................................10

A TEAMSTER'S FAREWELL............................................................................................................11

FISH CRIER.........................................................................................................................................11

PICNIC BOAT.....................................................................................................................................11

HAPPINESS.........................................................................................................................................12

MUCKERS...........................................................................................................................................12

BLACKLISTED...................................................................................................................................13

GRACELAND ......................................................................................................................................13

CHILD OF THE ROMANS.................................................................................................................14

THE RIGHT TO GRIEF .......................................................................................................................14

MAG.....................................................................................................................................................15

ONION DAYS ......................................................................................................................................15

POPULATION DRIFTS .......................................................................................................................16

CRIPPLE..............................................................................................................................................17

A FENCE ..............................................................................................................................................17

ANNA IMROTH..................................................................................................................................18

WORKING GIRLS ...............................................................................................................................18

MAMIE .................................................................................................................................................19

PERSONALITY...................................................................................................................................19

CUMULATIVES ..................................................................................................................................20

TO CERTAIN JOURNEYMEN ...........................................................................................................20

CHAMFORT........................................................................................................................................21

LIMITED..............................................................................................................................................21

THE HASBEEN.................................................................................................................................22

IN A BACK ALLEY............................................................................................................................22

A COIN .................................................................................................................................................22

DYNAMITER .......................................................................................................................................23

ICE HANDLER ....................................................................................................................................23

JACK....................................................................................................................................................24

FELLOW CITIZENS ............................................................................................................................24

NIGGER...............................................................................................................................................25

TWO NEIGHBORS ..............................................................................................................................26

STYLE..................................................................................................................................................26


CHICAGO POEMS

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Page No 3


Table of Contents

TO BEACHEY, 1912...........................................................................................................................27

UNDER A HAT RIM...........................................................................................................................27

IN A BREATH.....................................................................................................................................28

BATH ....................................................................................................................................................28

BRONZES............................................................................................................................................29

DUNES.................................................................................................................................................29

ON THE WAY......................................................................................................................................30

READY TO KILL................................................................................................................................30

TO A CONTEMPORARY BUNKSHOOTER....................................................................................31

SKYSCRAPER .....................................................................................................................................33

HANDFULS......................................................................................................................................................35

FOG......................................................................................................................................................35

POOL....................................................................................................................................................36

JAN KUBELIK .....................................................................................................................................36

CHOOSE..............................................................................................................................................36

CRIMSON............................................................................................................................................36

WHITELIGHT ......................................................................................................................................37

FLUX....................................................................................................................................................37

KIN.......................................................................................................................................................37

WHITE SHOULDERS.........................................................................................................................38

LOSSES................................................................................................................................................38

TROTHS ...............................................................................................................................................38

WAR POEMS (19141915)..............................................................................................................................39

KILLERS..............................................................................................................................................39

AMONG THE RED GUNS ..................................................................................................................39

IRON .....................................................................................................................................................40

MURMURINGS IN A FIELD HOSPITAL.........................................................................................41

STATISTICS........................................................................................................................................41

FIGHT ...................................................................................................................................................42

BUTTONS............................................................................................................................................42

AND THEY OBEY..............................................................................................................................43

JAWS....................................................................................................................................................43

SALVAGE ............................................................................................................................................44

WARS ...................................................................................................................................................44

THE ROAD AND THE END ............................................................................................................................45

THE ROAD AND THE END ...............................................................................................................45

CHOICES.............................................................................................................................................46

GRAVES..............................................................................................................................................46

AZTEC MASK.....................................................................................................................................47

MOMUS...............................................................................................................................................47

THE ANSWER .....................................................................................................................................48

TO A DEAD MAN ...............................................................................................................................49

UNDER .................................................................................................................................................49

A SPHINX............................................................................................................................................50

WHO AM I?.........................................................................................................................................50

OUR PRAYER OF THANKS ..............................................................................................................51

FOGS AND FIRES ............................................................................................................................................51

AT A WINDOW ...................................................................................................................................51


CHICAGO POEMS

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Page No 4


Table of Contents

UNDER THE HARVEST MOON.......................................................................................................52

THE GREAT HUNT............................................................................................................................53

MONOTONE ........................................................................................................................................53

JOY.......................................................................................................................................................54

SHIRT ...................................................................................................................................................54

AZTEC ..................................................................................................................................................55

TWO.....................................................................................................................................................55

BACK YARD.......................................................................................................................................55

ON THE BREAKWATER...................................................................................................................56

MASK ...................................................................................................................................................56

PEARL FOG .........................................................................................................................................57

I SANG.................................................................................................................................................57

FOLLIES..............................................................................................................................................57

JUNE .....................................................................................................................................................58

NOCTURNE IN A DESERTED BRICKYARD ..................................................................................58

HYDRANGEAS ...................................................................................................................................58

THEME IN YELLOW ..........................................................................................................................59

BETWEEN TWO HILLS .....................................................................................................................59

LAST ANSWERS................................................................................................................................60

WINDOW .............................................................................................................................................60

YOUNG SEA ........................................................................................................................................60

BONES.................................................................................................................................................61

PALS .....................................................................................................................................................61

CHILD..................................................................................................................................................62

POPPIES ...............................................................................................................................................62

CHILD MOON.....................................................................................................................................63

MARGARET........................................................................................................................................63

SHADOWS ........................................................................................................................................................63

POEMS DONE ON A LATE NIGHT CAR .........................................................................................63

IT IS MUCH.........................................................................................................................................64

TRAFFICKER......................................................................................................................................65

HARRISON STREET COURT ............................................................................................................65

SOILED DOVE....................................................................................................................................65

JUNGHEIMER'S ..................................................................................................................................66

GONE...................................................................................................................................................66

OTHER DAYS (19001910)............................................................................................................................67

DREAMS IN THE DUSK ....................................................................................................................67

DOCKS .................................................................................................................................................67

ALL DAY LONG .................................................................................................................................68

WAITING .............................................................................................................................................68

FROM THE SHORE............................................................................................................................69

UPLANDS IN MAY .............................................................................................................................69

DREAM GIRL ......................................................................................................................................70

PLOWBOY ...........................................................................................................................................70

BROADWAY .......................................................................................................................................71

OLD WOMAN.....................................................................................................................................71

NOON HOUR .......................................................................................................................................72

'BOES ....................................................................................................................................................72


CHICAGO POEMS

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Page No 5


Table of Contents

UNDER A TELEPHONE POLE ..........................................................................................................73

I AM THE PEOPLE, THE MOB.........................................................................................................73

GOVERNMENT ...................................................................................................................................74

LANGUAGES......................................................................................................................................74

LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS.......................................................................................................75

SHEEP..................................................................................................................................................75

THE RED SON .....................................................................................................................................76

THE MIST............................................................................................................................................77

THE JUNK MAN.................................................................................................................................77

SILVER NAILS ....................................................................................................................................78

GYPSY.................................................................................................................................................78


CHICAGO POEMS

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Page No 6


CHICAGO POEMS

CARL SANDBURG

CHICAGO POEMS  

CHICAGO 

SKETCH 

MASSES 

LOST 

THE HARBOR 

THEY WILL SAY 

MILLDOORS 

HALSTED STREET CAR 

CLARK STREET BRIDGE 

PASSERSBY 

THE WALKING MAN OF RODIN 

SUBWAY 

THE SHOVEL MAN 

A TEAMSTER'S FAREWELL 

FISH CRIER 

PICNIC BOAT 

HAPPINESS 

MUCKERS 

BLACKLISTED 

GRACELAND 

CHILD OF THE ROMANS 

THE RIGHT TO GRIEF 

MAG 

ONION DAYS 

POPULATION DRIFTS 

CRIPPLE 

A FENCE 

ANNA IMROTH 

WORKING GIRLS 

MAMIE 

PERSONALITY 

CUMULATIVES 

TO CERTAIN JOURNEYMEN 

CHAMFORT 

LIMITED 

THE HASBEEN 

IN A BACK ALLEY 

A COIN 

DYNAMITER 

ICE HANDLER 

JACK  

CHICAGO POEMS 1



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Page No 7


FELLOW CITIZENS 

NIGGER 

TWO NEIGHBORS 

STYLE 

TO BEACHEY, 1912 

UNDER A HAT RIM 

IN A BREATH 

BATH 

BRONZES 

DUNES 

ON THE WAY 

READY TO KILL 

TO A CONTEMPORARY BUNKSHOOTER 

SKYSCRAPER  

HANDFULS  

FOG 

POOL 

JAN KUBELIK 

CHOOSE 

CRIMSON 

WHITELIGHT 

FLUX 

KIN 

WHITE SHOULDERS 

LOSSES 

TROTHS  

WAR POEMS (19141915)  

KILLERS 

AMONG THE RED GUNS 

IRON 

MURMURINGS IN A FIELD HOSPITAL 

STATISTICS 

FIGHT 

BUTTONS 

AND THEY OBEY 

JAWS 

SALVAGE 

WARS  

THE ROAD AND THE END  

THE ROAD AND THE END 

CHOICES 

GRAVES 

AZTEC MASK 

MOMUS 

THE ANSWER 

TO A DEAD MAN 

UNDER 

A SPHINX 

WHO AM I? 

OUR PRAYER OF THANKS  

FOGS AND FIRES  


CHICAGO POEMS

CHICAGO POEMS 2



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Page No 8


AT A WINDOW 

UNDER THE HARVEST MOON 

THE GREAT HUNT 

MONOTONE 

JOY 

SHIRT 

AZTEC 

TWO 

BACK YARD 

ON THE BREAKWATER 

MASK 

PEARL FOG 

I SANG 

FOLLIES 

JUNE 

NOCTURNE IN A DESERTED BRICKYARD 

HYDRANGEAS 

THEME IN YELLOW 

BETWEEN TWO HILLS 

LAST ANSWERS 

WINDOW 

YOUNG SEA 

BONES 

PALS 

CHILD 

POPPIES 

CHILD MOON 

MARGARET  

SHADOWS  

POEMS DONE ON A LATE NIGHT CAR 

IT IS MUCH 

TRAFFICKER 

HARRISON STREET COURT 

SOILED DOVE 

JUNGHEIMER'S 

GONE  

OTHER DAYS (19001910)  

DREAMS IN THE DUSK 

DOCKS 

ALL DAY LONG 

WAITING 

FROM THE SHORE 

UPLANDS IN MAY 

DREAM GIRL 

PLOWBOY 

BROADWAY 

OLD WOMAN 

NOON HOUR 

'BOES 

UNDER A TELEPHONE POLE 

I AM THE PEOPLE, THE MOB  


CHICAGO POEMS

CHICAGO POEMS 3



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Page No 9


GOVERNMENT 

LANGUAGES 

LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS 

SHEEP 

THE RED SON 

THE MIST 

THE JUNK MAN 

SILVER NAILS 

GYPSY  

                               To

                         MY WIFE AND PAL

                    LILLIAN STEICHEN SANDBURG

                         PREFATORY NOTE

     Some of these writings were first printed in Poetry: A

Magazine of Verse, Chicago. Permission to reprint is by courtesy of

that publication. The writer wishes to thank Harriet Monroe and

Alice Corbin Henderson, editors of Poetry, and William Marion

Reedy, editor of Reedy's Mirror, St. Louis, whose services have

heightened what values of human address herein hold good.

CHICAGO POEMS

CHICAGO

            HOG Butcher for the World, 

            Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, 

            Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler; 

            Stormy, husky, brawling, 

            City of the Big Shoulders: 


CHICAGO POEMS

CHICAGO POEMS 4



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Page No 10


They tell me you are wicked and I believe them, for I 

            have seen your painted women under the gas lamps 

            luring the farm boys. 

And they tell me you are crooked and I answer: Yes, it 

            is true I have seen the gunman kill and go free to 

            kill again. 

And they tell me you are brutal and my reply is: On the 

            faces of women and children I have seen the marks 

            of wanton hunger. 

And having answered so I turn once more to those who 

            sneer at this my city, and I give them back the sneer 

            and say to them: 

Come and show me another city with lifted head singing 

            so proud to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning. 

Flinging magnetic curses amid the toil of piling job on 

            job, here is a tall bold slugger set vivid against the 

            little soft cities; 

Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action, cunning 

            as a savage pitted against the wilderness, 

                                 Bareheaded, 

                                 Shoveling, 

                                 Wrecking, 

                                 Planning, 

                                 Building, breaking, rebuilding, 

Under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with 

            white teeth, 

Under the terrible burden of destiny laughing as a young 

            man laughs, 

Laughing even as an ignorant fighter laughs who has 

            never lost a battle, 

Bragging and laughing that under his wrist is the pulse. 

            and under his ribs the heart of the people, 

                                         Laughing! 

Laughing the stormy, husky, brawling laughter of 

            Youth, halfnaked, sweating, proud to be Hog 

            Butcher, Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with 

            Railroads and Freight Handler to the Nation. 

SKETCH

THE shadows of the ships 

Rock on the crest 

In the low blue lustre 

Of the tardy and the soft inrolling tide. 


CHICAGO POEMS

SKETCH 5



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Page No 11


A long brown bar at the dip of the sky 

Puts an arm of sand in the span of salt. 

The lucid and endless wrinkles 

Draw in, lapse and withdraw. 

Wavelets crumble and white spent bubbles 

Wash on the floor of the beach. 

                                 Rocking on the crest 

                                 In the low blue lustre 

                                 Are the shadows of the ships. 

MASSES

AMONG the mountains I wandered and saw blue haze and 

            red crag and was amazed; 

On the beach where the long push under the endless tide 

            maneuvers, I stood silent; 

Under the stars on the prairie watching the Dipper slant 

            over the horizon's grass, I was full of thoughts. 

Great men, pageants of war and labor, soldiers and workers, 

            mothers lifting their childrenthese all I 

            touched, and felt the solemn thrill of them. 

And then one day I got a true look at the Poor, millions 

            of the Poor, patient and toiling; more patient than 

            crags, tides, and stars; innumerable, patient as the 

            darkness of nightand all broken, humble ruins of nations. 

LOST

DESOLATE and lone 

All night long on the lake 

Where fog trails and mist creeps, 

The whistle of a boat 

Calls and cries unendingly, 

Like some lost child 

In tears and trouble 

Hunting the harbor's breast 

And the harbor's eyes. 


CHICAGO POEMS

MASSES 6



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Page No 12


THE HARBOR

PASSING through huddled and ugly walls 

By doorways where women 

Looked from their hungerdeep eyes, 

Haunted with shadows of hungerhands, 

Out from the huddled and ugly walls, 

I came sudden, at the city's edge, 

On a blue burst of lake, 

Long lake waves breaking under the sun 

On a sprayflung curve of shore; 

And a fluttering storm of gulls, 

Masses of great gray wings 

And flying white bellies 

Veering and wheeling free in the open. 

THEY WILL SAY

            OF my city the worst that men will ever say is this: 

You took little children away from the sun and the dew, 

And the glimmers that played in the grass under the great sky, 

And the reckless rain; you put them between walls 

To work, broken and smothered, for bread and wages, 

To eat dust in their throats and die emptyhearted 

For a little handful of pay on a few Saturday nights. 

MILLDOORS

            YOU never come back. 

I say goodby when I see you going in the doors, 

The hopeless open doors that call and wait 

And take you then forhow many cents a day? 

How many cents for the sleepy eyes and fingers? 


CHICAGO POEMS

THE HARBOR 7



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Page No 13


I say goodby because I know they tap your wrists, 

In the dark, in the silence, day by day, 

And all the blood of you drop by drop, 

And you are old before you are young. 

                                 You never come back. 

HALSTED STREET CAR

                                 COME you, cartoonists, 

                                 Hang on a strap with me here 

                                 At seven o'clock in the morning 

                                 On a Halsted street car. 

                                         Take your pencils 

                                         And draw these faces. 

Try with your pencils for these crooked faces, 

That pigsticker in one cornerhis mouth 

That overall factory girlher loose cheeks. 

                                         Find for your pencils 

                                         A way to mark your memory 

                                         Of tired empty faces. 

                                         After their night's sleep, 

                                         In the moist dawn 

                                         And cool daybreak, 

                                         Faces 

                                         Tired of wishes, 

                                         Empty of dreams. 

CLARK STREET BRIDGE

DUST of the feet 

And dust of the wheels, 

Wagons and people going, 

All day feet and wheels. 

Now. . . 

. . Only stars and mist 


CHICAGO POEMS

HALSTED STREET CAR 8



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Page No 14


A lonely policeman, 

Two cabaret dancers, 

Stars and mist again, 

No more feet or wheels, 

No more dust and wagons. 

            Voices of dollars 

            And drops of blood 

            . . . . . 

            Voices of broken hearts, 

            . . Voices singing, singing, 

            . . Silver voices, singing, 

            Softer than the stars, 

            Softer than the mist. 

PASSERSBY

PASSERSBY, 

Out of your many faces 

Flash memories to me 

Now at the day end 

Away from the sidewalks 

Where your shoe soles traveled 

And your voices rose and blent 

To form the city's afternoon roar 

Hindering an old silence. 

Passersby, 

I remember lean ones among you, 

Throats in the clutch of a hope, 

Lips written over with strivings, 

Mouths that kiss only for love. 

Records of great wishes slept with, 

            Held long 

And prayed and toiled for. . 

            Yes, 

Written on 

Your mouths 

And your throats 

I read them 

When you passed by. 


CHICAGO POEMS

PASSERSBY 9



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Page No 15


THE WALKING MAN OF RODIN

LEGS hold a torso away from the earth. 

And a regular high poem of legs is here. 

Powers of bone and cord raise a belly and lungs 

Out of ooze and over the loam where eyes look and ears hear 

And arms have a chance to hammer and shoot and run motors. 

            You make us 

            Proud of our legs, old man. 

And you left off the head here, 

The skull found always crumbling neighbor of the ankles. 

SUBWAY

DOWN between the walls of shadow 

Where the iron laws insist, 

            The hunger voices mock. 

The worn wayfaring men 

With the hunched and humble shoulders, 

            Throw their laughter into toil. 

THE SHOVEL MAN

            ON the street 

Slung on his shoulder is a handle half way across, 

Tied in a big knot on the scoop of cast iron 

Are the overalls faded from sun and rain in the ditches; 

Spatter of dry clay sticking yellow on his left sleeve 

                                 And a flimsy shirt open at the throat, 

                                 I know him for a shovel man, 

                                 A dago working for a dollar six bits a day 

And a darkeyed woman in the old country dreams of 

            him for one of the world's ready men with a pair 

            of fresh lips and a kiss better than all the wild 

            grapes that ever grew in Tuscany. 


CHICAGO POEMS

THE WALKING MAN OF RODIN 10



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Page No 16


A TEAMSTER'S FAREWELL

                                           Sobs En Route to a Penitentiary 

GOODBY now to the streets and the clash of wheels and 

            locking hubs, 

The sun coming on the brass buckles and harness knobs. 

The muscles of the horses sliding under their heavy 

            haunches, 

Goodby now to the traffic policeman and his whistle, 

The smash of the iron hoof on the stones, 

All the crazy wonderful slamming roar of the street 

O God, there's noises I'm going to be hungry for. 

FISH CRIER

I KNOW a Jew fish crier down on Maxwell Street with a 

            voice like a north wind blowing over corn stubble 

            in January. 

He dangles herring before prospective customers evincing 

            a joy identical with that of Pavlowa dancing. 

His face is that of a man terribly glad to be selling fish, 

            terribly glad that God made fish, and customers to 

            whom he may call his wares, from a pushcart. 

PICNIC BOAT

SUNDAY night and the park policemen tell each other it 

            is dark as a stack of black cats on Lake Michigan. 

A big picnic boat comes home to Chicago from the peach 

            farms of Saugatuck. 

Hundreds of electric bulbs break the night's darkness, a 

            flock of red and yellow birds with wings at a standstill. 

Running along the deck railings are festoons and leaping 

            in curves are loops of light from prow and stern 


CHICAGO POEMS

A TEAMSTER'S FAREWELL 11



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Page No 17


to the tall smokestacks. 

Over the hoarse crunch of waves at my pier comes a 

            hoarse answer in the rhythmic oompa of the brasses 

            playing a Polish folksong for the homecomers. 

HAPPINESS

I ASKED the professors who teach the meaning of life to tell 

            me what is happiness. 

And I went to famous executives who boss the work of 

            thousands of men. 

They all shook their heads and gave me a smile as though 

            I was trying to fool with them 

And then one Sunday afternoon I wandered out along 

            the Desplaines river 

And I saw a crowd of Hungarians under the trees with 

            their women and children and a keg of beer and an 

            accordion. 

MUCKERS

            TWENTY men stand watching the muckers. 

                                 Stabbing the sides of the ditch 

                                 Where clay gleams yellow, 

                                 Driving the blades of their shovels 

                                 Deeper and deeper for the new gas mains 

                                 Wiping sweat off their faces 

                                         With red bandanas 

The muckers work on . . pausing . . to pull 

Their boots out of suckholes where they slosh. 

            Of the twenty looking on 

Ten murmer, "O, its a hell of a job," 

Ten others, "Jesus, I wish I had the job." 


CHICAGO POEMS

HAPPINESS 12



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Page No 18


BLACKLISTED

WHY shall I keep the old name? 

What is a name anywhere anyway? 

A name is a cheap thing all fathers and mothers leave 

            each child: 

A job is a job and I want to live, so 

Why does God Almighty or anybody else care whether 

            I take a new name to go by? 

GRACELAND

            TOMB of a millionaire, 

            A multimillionaire, ladies and gentlemen, 

            Place of the dead where they spend every year 

            The usury of twentyfive thousand dollars 

            For upkeep and flowers 

            To keep fresh the memory of the dead. 

            The merchant prince gone to dust 

            Commanded in his written will 

            Over the signed name of his last testament 

            Twentyfive thousand dollars be set aside 

            For roses, lilacs, hydrangeas, tulips, 

            For perfume and color, sweetness of remembrance 

            Around his last long home. 

(A hundred cash girls want nickels to go to the movies tonight. 

In the back stalls of a hundred saloons, women are at tables 

Drinking with men or waiting for men jingling loose 

            silver dollars in their pockets. 

In a hundred furnished rooms is a girl who sells silk or 

            dress goods or leather stuff for six dollars a week wages 

And when she pulls on her stockings in the morning she 

            is reckless about God and the newspapers and the 

            police, the talk of her home town or the name 

            people call her.) 


CHICAGO POEMS

BLACKLISTED 13



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Page No 19


CHILD OF THE ROMANS

THE dago shovelman sits by the railroad track 

Eating a noon meal of bread and bologna. 

            A train whirls by, and men and women at tables 

            Alive with red roses and yellow jonquils, 

            Eat steaks running with brown gravy, 

            Strawberries and cream, eclaires and coffee. 

The dago shovelman finishes the dry bread and bologna, 

Washes it down with a dipper from the waterboy, 

And goes back to the second half of a tenhour day's work 

Keeping the roadbed so the roses and jonquils 

Shake hardly at all in the cut glass vases 

Standing slender on the tables in the dining cars. 

THE RIGHT TO GRIEF

To Certain Poets About to Die 

TAKE your fill of intimate remorse, perfumed sorrow, 

Over the dead child of a millionaire, 

And the pity of Death refusing any check on the bank 

Which the millionaire might order his secretary to 

            scratch off 

And get cashed. 

            Very well, 

You for your grief and I for mine. 

Let me have a sorrow my own if I want to. 

I shall cry over the dead child of a stockyards hunky. 

His job is sweeping blood off the floor. 

He gets a dollar seventy cents a day when he works 

And it's many tubs of blood he shoves out with a broom 

            day by day. 

Now his three year old daughter 

Is in a white coffin that cost him a week's wages. 

Every Saturday night he will pay the undertaker fifty 

            cents till the debt is wiped out. 

The hunky and his wife and the kids 

Cry over the pinched face almost at peace in the white box. 


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CHILD OF THE ROMANS 14



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Page No 20


They remember it was scrawny and ran up high doctor bills. 

They are glad it is gone for the rest of the family now 

            will have more to eat and wear. 

Yet before the majesty of Death they cry around the coffin 

And wipe their eyes with red bandanas and sob when 

            the priest says, "God have mercy on us all." 

I have a right to feel my throat choke about this. 

You take your grief and I minesee? 

Tomorrow there is no funeral and the hunky goes back 

            to his job sweeping blood off the floor at a dollar 

            seventy cents a day. 

All he does all day long is keep on shoving hog blood 

            ahead of him with a broom 

MAG

I WISH to God I never saw you, Mag. 

I wish you never quit your job and came along with me. 

I wish we never bought a license and a white dress 

For you to get married in the day we ran off to a minister 

And told him we would love each other and take care of 

            each other 

Always and always long as the sun and the rain lasts anywhere. 

Yes, I'm wishing now you lived somewhere away from here 

And I was a bum on the bumpers a thousand miles away 

            dead broke. 

                                 I wish the kids had never come 

                                 And rent and coal and clothes to pay for 

                                 And a grocery man calling for cash, 

                                 Every day cash for beans and prunes. 

                                 I wish to God I never saw you, Mag. 

                                 I wish to God the kids had never come. 

ONION DAYS

MRS. GABRIELLE GIOVANNITTI comes along Peoria Street 

            every morning at nine o'clock 


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MAG 15



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Page No 21


With kindling wood piled on top of her head, her eyes 

            looking straight ahead to find the way for her old feet. 

Her daughterinlaw, Mrs. Pietro Giovannitti, whose 

            husband was killed in a tunnel explosion through 

            the negligence of a fellowservant, 

Works ten hours a day, sometimes twelve, picking onions 

            for Jasper on the Bowmanville road. 

She takes a street car at halfpast five in the morning, 

            Mrs. Pietro Giovannitti does, 

And gets back from Jasper's with cash for her day's 

            work, between nine and ten o'clock at night. 

Last week she got eight cents a box, Mrs. Pietro 

            Giovannitti, picking onions for Jasper, 

But this week Jasper dropped the pay to six cents a 

            box because so many women and girls were answering 

            the ads in the Daily News. 

Jasper belongs to an Episcopal church in Ravenswood 

            and on certain Sundays 

He enjoys chanting the Nicene creed with his daughters 

            on each side of him joining their voices with his. 

If the preacher repeats old sermons of a Sunday, Jasper's 

            mind wanders to his 700acre farm and how he 

            can make it produce more efficiently 

And sometimes he speculates on whether he could word 

            an ad in the Daily News so it would bring more 

            women and girls out to his farm and reduce operating 

            costs. 

Mrs. Pietro Giovannitti is far from desperate about life; 

            her joy is in a child she knows will arrive to her in 

            three months. 

And now while these are the pictures for today there are 

            other pictures of the Giovannitti people I could give 

            you for tomorrow, 

And how some of them go to the county agent on winter 

            mornings with their baskets for beans and cornmeal 

            and molasses. 

I listen to fellows saying here's good stuff for a novel or 

            it might be worked up into a good play. 

I say there's no dramatist living can put old Mrs. 

            Gabrielle Giovannitti into a play with that kindling 

            wood piled on top of her head coming along Peoria 

            Street nine o'clock in the morning. 

POPULATION DRIFTS

NEWMOWN hay smell and wind of the plain made her 


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POPULATION DRIFTS 16



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Page No 22


a woman whose ribs had the power of the hills in 

            them and her hands were tough for work and there 

            was passion for life in her womb. 

She and her man crossed the ocean and the years that 

            marked their faces saw them haggling with landlords 

            and grocers while six children played on the stones 

            and prowled in the garbage cans. 

One child coughed its lungs away, two more have adenoids 

            and can neither talk nor run like their mother, 

            one is in jail, two have jobs in a box factory 

And as they fold the pasteboard, they wonder what the 

            wishing is and the wistful glory in them that flutters 

            faintly when the glimmer of spring comes on 

            the air or the green of summer turns brown: 

They do not know it is the newmown hay smell calling 

            and the wind of the plain praying for them to come 

            back and take hold of life again with tough hands 

            and with passion. 

CRIPPLE

ONCE when I saw a cripple 

Gasping slowly his last days with the white plague, 

Looking from hollow eyes, calling for air, 

Desperately gesturing with wasted hands 

In the dark and dust of a house down in a slum, 

I said to myself 

I would rather have been a tall sunflower 

Living in a country garden 

Lifting a goldenbrown face to the summer, 

Rainwashed and dewmisted, 

Mixed with the poppies and ranking hollyhocks, 

And wonderingly watching night after night 

The clear silent processionals of stars. 

A FENCE

Now the stone house on the lake front is finished and the 

            workmen are beginning the fence. 

The palings are made of iron bars with steel points that 


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Page No 23


can stab the life out of any man who falls on them. 

As a fence, it is a masterpiece, and will shut off the rabble 

            and all vagabonds and hungry men and all wandering 

            children looking for a place to play. 

Passing through the bars and over the steel points will go 

            nothing except Death and the Rain and Tomorrow. 

ANNA IMROTH

CROSS the hands over the breast hereso. 

Straighten the legs a little moreso. 

And call for the wagon to come and take her home. 

Her mother will cry some and so will her sisters and 

            brothers. 

But all of the others got down and they are safe and 

            this is the only one of the factory girls who 

            wasn't lucky in making the jump when the fire broke. 

It is the hand of God and the lack of fire escapes. 

WORKING GIRLS

THE working girls in the morning are going to work 

            long lines of them afoot amid the downtown stores 

            and factories, thousands with little brickshaped 

            lunches wrapped in newspapers under their arms. 

Each morning as I move through this river of young 

            woman life I feel a wonder about where it is all 

            going, so many with a peach bloom of young years 

            on them and laughter of red lips and memories in 

            their eyes of dances the night before and plays and 

            walks. 

Green and gray streams run side by side in a river and 

            so here are always the others, those who have been 

            over the way, the women who know each one the 

            end of life's gamble for her, the meaning and the 

            clew, the how and the why of the dances and the 

            arms that passed around their waists and the fingers 

            that played in their hair. 

Faces go by written over: "I know it all, I know where 

the bloom and the laughter go and I have memories," 


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ANNA IMROTH 18



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Page No 24


and the feet of these move slower and they 

            have wisdom where the others have beauty. 

So the green and the gray move in the early morning 

            on the downtown streets. 

MAMIE

MAMIE beat her head against the bars of a little Indiana 

            town and dreamed of romance and big things off 

            somewhere the way the railroad trains all ran. 

She could see the smoke of the engines get lost down 

            where the streaks of steel flashed in the sun and 

            when the newspapers came in on the morning mail 

            she knew there was a big Chicago far off, where all 

            the trains ran. 

She got tired of the barber shop boys and the post office 

            chatter and the church gossip and the old pieces the 

            band played on the Fourth of July and Decoration Day 

And sobbed at her fate and beat her head against the 

            bars and was going to kill herself 

When the thought came to her that if she was going to 

            die she might as well die struggling for a clutch of 

            romance among the streets of Chicago. 

She has a job now at six dollars a week in the basement 

            of the Boston Store 

And even now she beats her head against the bars in the 

            same old way and wonders if there is a bigger place 

            the railroads run to from Chicago where maybe 

            there is 

                                         romance 

                                         and big things 

                                         and real dreams 

                                         that never go smash. 

PERSONALITY

         Musings of a Police Reporter in the Identification Bureau 

YOU have loved forty women, but you have only one thumb. 


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Page No 25


You have led a hundred secret lives, but you mark only 

            one thumb. 

You go round the world and fight in a thousand wars and 

            win all the world's honors, but when you come back 

            home the print of the one thumb your mother gave 

            you is the same print of thumb you had in the old 

            home when your mother kissed you and said goodby. 

Out of the whirling womb of time come millions of men 

and their feet crowd the earth and they cut one anothers' 

            throats for room to stand and among them all 

            are not two thumbs alike. 

Somewhere is a Great God of Thumbs who can tell the 

            inside story of this. 

CUMULATIVES

STORMS have beaten on this point of land 

And ships gone to wreck here 

                                 and the passersby remember it 

                                 with talk on the deck at night 

                                 as they near it. 

Fists have beaten on the face of this old prizefighter 

And his battles have held the sporting pages 

                                 and on the street they indicate him with their 

                                 right forefinger as one who once wore 

                                 a championship belt. 

A hundred stories have been published and a thousand rumored 

About why this tall dark man has divorced two beautiful 

            young women 

And married a third who resembles the first two 

                                         and they shake their heads and say, "There he 

                                 goes," 

            when he passes by in sunny weather or in rain 

            along the city streets. 

TO CERTAIN JOURNEYMEN

UNDERTAKERS, hearse drivers, grave diggers, 


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CUMULATIVES 20



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Page No 26


I speak to you as one not afraid of your business. 

You handle dust going to a long country, 

You know the secret behind your job is the same whether 

            you lower the coffin with modern, automatic machinery, 

            welloiled and noiseless, or whether the 

            body is laid in by naked hands and then covered 

            by the shovels. 

Your day's work is done with laughter many days of the year, 

And you earn a living by those who say goodby today 

            in thin whispers. 

CHAMFORT

THERE'S Chamfort. He's a sample. 

Locked himself in his library with a gun, 

Shot off his nose and shot out his right eye. 

And this Chamfort knew how to write 

And thousands read his books on how to live, 

But he himself didn't know 

How to die by force of his own handsee? 

They found him a red pool on the carpet 

Cool as an April forenoon, 

Talking and talking gay maxims and grim epigrams. 

Well, he wore bandages over his nose and right eye, 

Drank coffee and chatted many years 

With men and women who loved him 

Because he laughed and daily dared Death: 

"Come and take me." 

LIMITED

I AM riding on a limited express, one of the crack trains 

            of the nation. 

Hurtling across the prairie into blue haze and dark air 

            go fifteen allsteel coaches holding a thousand people. 

(All the coaches shall be scrap and rust and all the men 

            and women laughing in the diners and sleepers shall 

            pass to ashes.) 


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CHAMFORT 21



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Page No 27


I ask a man in the smoker where he is going and he 

            answers: "Omaha." 

THE HASBEEN

A STONE face higher than six horses stood five thousand 

            years gazing at the world seeming to clutch a secret. 

A boy passes and throws a niggerhead that chips off the 

            end of the nose from the stone face; he lets fly a 

            mud ball that spatters the right eye and cheek of the 

            old lookeron. 

The boy laughs and goes whistling "eeeeee eeeeee." 

            The stone face stands silent, seeming to clutch a 

            secret. 

IN A BACK ALLEY

REMEMBRANCE for a great man is this. 

The newsies are pitching pennies. 

And on the copper disk is the man's face. 

Dead lover of boys, what do you ask for now? 

A COIN

YOUR western heads here cast on money, 

You are the two that fade away together, 

                                         Partners in the mist. 

                                         Lunging buffalo shoulder, 

                                         Lean Indian face, 

We who come after where you are gone 

Salute your forms on the new nickel. 

                                         You are 

                                         To us: 


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THE HASBEEN 22



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Page No 28


The past. 

                                         Runners 

                                         On the prairie: 

                                         Goodby. 

DYNAMITER

I SAT with a dynamiter at supper in a German saloon 

            eating steak and onions. 

And he laughed and told stories of his wife and children 

            and the cause of labor and the working class. 

It was laughter of an unshakable man knowing life to be 

            a rich and redblooded thing. 

Yes, his laugh rang like the call of gray birds filled with 

            a glory of joy ramming their winged flight through 

            a rain storm. 

His name was in many newspapers as an enemy of the 

            nation and few keepers of churches or schools would 

            open their doors to him. 

Over the steak and onions not a word was said of his 

            deep days and nights as a dynamiter. 

Only I always remember him as a lover of life, a lover 

            of children, a lover of all free, reckless laughter 

            everywherelover of red hearts and red blood the 

            world over. 

ICE HANDLER

I KNOW an ice handler who wears a flannel shirt with 

            pearl buttons the size of a dollar, 

And he lugs a hundredpound hunk into a saloon ice 

            box, helps himself to cold ham and rye bread, 

Tells the bartender it's hotter than yesterday and will be 

            hotter yet tomorrow, by Jesus, 

And is on his way with his head in the air and a hard 

            pair of fists. 

He spends a dollar or so every Saturday night on a two 

            hundred pound woman who washes dishes in the 

            Hotel Morrison. 


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DYNAMITER 23



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Page No 29


He remembers when the union was organized he broke 

            the noses of two scabs and loosened the nuts so the 

            wheels came off six different wagons one morning, 

            and he came around and watched the ice melt in the 

            street. 

All he was sorry for was one of the scabs bit him on the 

            knuckles of the right hand so they bled when he 

            came around to the saloon to tell the boys about it. 

JACK

JACK was a swarthy, swaggering sonofagun. 

He worked thirty years on the railroad, ten hours a day, 

            and his hands were tougher than sole leather. 

He married a tough woman and they had eight children 

            and the woman died and the children grew up and 

            went away and wrote the old man every two years. 

He died in the poorhouse sitting on a bench in the sun 

            telling reminiscences to other old men whose women 

            were dead and children scattered. 

There was joy on his face when he died as there was joy 

            on his face when he livedhe was a swarthy, swaggering 

            sonofagun. 

FELLOW CITIZENS

I DRANK musty ale at the Illinois Athletic Club with 

            the millionaire manufacturer of Green River butter 

            one night 

And his face had the shining light of an oldtime Quaker, 

            he spoke of a beautiful daughter, and I knew he had 

            a peace and a happiness up his sleeve somewhere. 

Then I heard Jim Kirch make a speech to the Advertising 

            Association on the trade resources of South America. 

And the way he lighted a threeforanickel stogie and 

            cocked it at an angle regardless of the manners of 

            our best people, 

I knew he had a clutch on a real happiness even though 

            some of the reporters on his newspaper say he is 

            the living double of Jack London's Sea Wolf. 


CHICAGO POEMS

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Page No 30


In the mayor's office the mayor himself told me he was 

            happy though it is a hard job to satisfy all the office 

            seekers and eat all the dinners he is asked to eat. 

Down in Gilpin Place, near Hull House, was a man with 

            his jaw wrapped for a bad toothache, 

And he had it all over the butter millionaire, Jim Kirch 

            and the mayor when it came to happiness. 

He is a maker of accordions and guitars and not only 

            makes them from start to finish, but plays them 

            after he makes them. 

And he had a guitar of mahogany with a walnut bottom 

            he offered for seven dollars and a half if I wanted it, 

And another just like it, only smaller, for six dollars, 

            though he never mentioned the price till I asked him, 

And he stated the price in a sorry way, as though the 

            music and the make of an instrument count for a 

            million times more than the price in money. 

I thought he had a real soul and knew a lot about God. 

There was light in his eyes of one who has conquered 

            sorrow in so far as sorrow is conquerable or worth 

            conquering. 

Anyway he is the only Chicago citizen I was jealous of 

            that day. 

He played a dance they play in some parts of Italy 

            when the harvest of grapes is over and the wine 

            presses are ready for work. 

NIGGER

I AM the nigger. 

Singer of songs, 

Dancer. . . 

Softer than fluff of cotton. . . 

Harder than dark earth 

Roads beaten in the sun 

By the bare feet of slaves. . . 

Foam of teeth. . . breaking crash of laughter. . . 

Red love of the blood of woman, 

White love of the tumbling pickaninnies. . . 

Lazy love of the banjo thrum. . . 

Sweated and driven for the harvestwage, 

Loud laugher with hands like hams, 

Fists toughened on the handles, 

Smiling the slumber dreams of old jungles, 

Crazy as the sun and dew and dripping, heaving life 

            of the jungle, 


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NIGGER 25



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Page No 31


Brooding and muttering with memories of shackles: 

                                         I am the nigger. 

                                         Look at me. 

                                         I am the nigger. 

TWO NEIGHBORS

FACES of two eternities keep looking at me. 

One is Omar Khayam and the red stuff 

            wherein men forget yesterday and tomorrow 

            and remember only the voices and songs, 

            the stories, newspapers and fights of today. 

One is Louis Cornaro and a slim trick 

            of slow, short meals across slow, short years, 

            letting Death open the door only in slow, short inches. 

I have a neighbor who swears by Omar. 

I have a neighbor who swears by Cornaro. 

                                                                        Both are happy. 

Faces of two eternities keep looking at me. 

                                                                        Let them look. 

STYLE

STYLEgo ahead talking about style. 

You can tell where a man gets his style just 

            as you can tell where Pavlowa got her legs 

            or Ty Cobb his batting eye. 

            Go on talking. 

Only don't take my style away. 

                                 It's my face. 

                                 Maybe no good 

                                         but anyway, my face. 

I talk with it, I sing with it, I see, taste and feel with it, 

            I know why I want to keep it. 

Kill my style 

                                         and you break Pavlowa's legs, 

                                         and you blind Ty Cobb's batting eye. 


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TWO NEIGHBORS 26



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Page No 32


TO BEACHEY, 1912

RIDING against the east, 

A veering, steady shadow 

Purrs the motorcall 

Of the manbird 

Ready with the deathlaughter 

In his throat 

And in his heart always 

The love of the big blue beyond. 

Only a man, 

A far fleck of shadow on the east 

Sitting at ease 

With his hands on a wheel 

And around him the large gray wings. 

Hold him, great soft wings, 

Keep and deal kindly, O wings, 

With the cool, calm shadow at the wheel. 

UNDER A HAT RIM

WHILE the hum and the hurry 

Of passing footfalls 

Beat in my ear like the restless surf 

Of a windblown sea, 

A soul came to me 

Out of the look on a face. 

Eyes like a lake 

Where a stormwind roams 

Caught me from under 

The rim of a hat. 

            I thought of a midsea wreck 

            and bruised fingers clinging 

            to a broken stateroom door. 


CHICAGO POEMS

TO BEACHEY, 1912 27



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Page No 33


IN A BREATH

To the Williamson Brothers 

HIGH noon. White sun flashes on the Michigan Avenue 

            asphalt. Drum of hoofs and whirr of motors. 

            Women trapsing along in flimsy clothes catching 

            play of sunfire to their skin and eyes. 

Inside the playhouse are movies from under the sea. 

            From the heat of pavements and the dust of sidewalks, 

            passersby go in a breath to be witnesses of 

            large cool sponges, large cool fishes, large cool valleys 

            and ridges of coral spread silent in the soak of 

            the ocean floor thousands of years. 

A naked swimmer dives. A knife in his right hand 

            shoots a streak at the throat of a shark. The tail 

            of the shark lashes. One swing would kill the swimmer. . . 

            Soon the knife goes into the soft under 

            neck of the veering fish. . . Its mouthful of teeth, 

            each tooth a dagger itself, set row on row, glistens 

            when the shuddering, yawning cadaver is hauled up 

            by the brothers of the swimmer. 

Outside in the street is the murmur and singing of life 

            in the sunhorses, motors, women trapsing along 

            in flimsy clothes, play of sunfire in their blood. 

BATH

            A MAN saw the whole world as a grinning skull and 

crossbones. The rose flesh of life shriveled from all 

faces. Nothing counts. Everything is a fake. Dust to 

dust and ashes to ashes and then an old darkness and a 

useless silence. So he saw it all. Then he went to a 

Mischa Elman concert. Two hours waves of sound beat 

on his eardrums. Music washed something or other 

inside him. Music broke down and rebuilt something or 

other in his head and heart. He joined in five encores 

for the young Russian Jew with the fiddle. When he 

got outside his heels hit the sidewalk a new way. He 

was the same man in the same world as before. Only 


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IN A BREATH 28



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Page No 34


there was a singing fire and a climb of roses everlastingly 

over the world he looked on. 

BRONZES

                                                                 I 

THE bronze General Grant riding a bronze horse in Lincoln 

            Park 

Shrivels in the sun by day when the motor cars whirr 

            by in long processions going somewhere to keep appointment 

            for dinner and matinees and buying and selling 

Though in the dusk and nightfall when high waves are piling 

On the slabs of the promenade along the lake shore near by 

I have seen the general dare the combers come closer 

And make to ride his bronze horse out into the hoofs 

            and guns of the storm. 

                                                               II 

I cross Lincoln Park on a winter night when the snow 

            is falling. 

Lincoln in bronze stands among the white lines of snow, 

            his bronze forehead meeting soft echoes of the newsies 

            crying forty thousand men are dead along the 

            Yser, his bronze ears listening to the mumbled roar 

            of the city at his bronze feet. 

A lithe Indian on a bronze pony, Shakespeare seated with 

            long legs in bronze, Garibaldi in a bronze cape, they 

            hold places in the cold, lonely snow tonight on their 

            pedestals and so they will hold them past midnight 

            and into the dawn. 

DUNES

WHAT do we see here in the sand dunes of the white 

            moon alone with our thoughts, Bill, 

Alone with our dreams, Bill, soft as the women tying 


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BRONZES 29



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Page No 35


scarves around their heads dancing, 

Alone with a picture and a picture coming one after the 

            other of all the dead, 

The dead more than all these grains of sand one by one 

            piled here in the moon, 

Piled against the skyline taking shapes like the hand of 

            the wind wanted, 

What do we see here, Bill, outside of what the wise men 

            beat their heads on, 

Outside of what the poets cry for and the soldiers drive 

            on headlong and leave their skulls in the sun for 

            what, Bill? 

ON THE WAY

LITTLE one, you have been buzzing in the books, 

Flittering in the newspapers and drinking beer with 

            lawyers 

And amid the educated men of the clubs you have been 

            getting an earful of speech from trained tongues. 

Take an earful from me once, go with me on a hike 

Along sand stretches on the great inland sea here 

And while the eastern breeze blows on us and the 

            restless surge 

Of the lake waves on the breakwater breaks with an ever 

            fresh monotone, 

Let us ask ourselves: What is truth? what do you or I 

            know? 

How much do the wisest of the world's men know about 

            where the massed human procession is going? 

You have heard the mob laughed at? 

I ask you: Is not the mob rough as the mountains are 

            rough? 

And all things human rise from the mob and relapse and 

            rise again as rain to the sea? 

READY TO KILL


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ON THE WAY 30



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Page No 36


TEN minutes now I have been looking at this. 

I have gone by here before and wondered about it. 

This is a bronze memorial of a famous general 

Riding horseback with a flag and a sword and a revolver 

            on him. 

I want to smash the whole thing into a pile of junk to be 

            hauled away to the scrap yard. 

I put it straight to you, 

After the farmer, the miner, the shop man, the factory 

            hand, the fireman and the teamster, 

Have all been remembered with bronze memorials, 

Shaping them on the job of getting all of us 

Something to eat and something to wear, 

When they stack a few silhouettes 

                                 Against the sky 

                                 Here in the park, 

And show the real huskies that are doing the work of 

            the world, and feeding people instead of butchering them, 

Then maybe I will stand here 

And look easy at this general of the army holding a flag 

            in the air, 

And riding like hell on horseback 

Ready to kill anybody that gets in his way, 

Ready to run the red blood and slush the bowels of men 

            all over the sweet new grass of the prairie. 

TO A CONTEMPORARY BUNKSHOOTER

You come along. . . tearing your shirt. . . yelling about 

            Jesus. 

            Where do you get that stuff? 

            What do you know about Jesus? 

Jesus had a way of talking soft and outside of a few 

            bankers and higherups among the con men of Jerusalem 

            everybody liked to have this Jesus around because 

            he never made any fake passes and everything 

            he said went and he helped the sick and gave the 

            people hope. 

You come along squirting words at us, shaking your fist 

            and calling us all dam fools so fierce the froth slobbers 

            over your lips. . . always blabbing we're all 

            going to hell straight off and you know all about it. 


CHICAGO POEMS

TO A CONTEMPORARY BUNKSHOOTER 31



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Page No 37


I've read Jesus' words. I know what he said. You don't 

            throw any scare into me. I've got your number. I 

            know how much you know about Jesus. 

He never came near clean people or dirty people but 

            they felt cleaner because he came along. It was your 

            crowd of bankers and business men and lawyers 

            hired the sluggers and murderers who put Jesus out 

            of the running. 

I say the same bunch backing you nailed the nails into 

            the hands of this Jesus of Nazareth. He had lined 

            up against him the same crooks and strongarm men 

            now lined up with you paying your way. 

This Jesus was good to look at, smelled good, listened 

            good. He threw out something fresh and beautiful 

            from the skin of his body and the touch of his hands 

            wherever he passed along. 

You slimy bunkshooter, you put a smut on every human 

            blossom in reach of your rotten breath belching 

            about hellfire and hiccupping about this Man who 

            lived a clean life in Galilee. 

When are you going to quit making the carpenters build 

            emergency hospitals for women and girls driven 

            crazy with wrecked nerves from your gibberish about 

            JesusI put it to you again: Where do you get that 

            stuff; what do you know about Jesus? 

Go ahead and bust all the chairs you want to. Smash 

            a whole wagon load of furniture at every performance. 

            Turn sixty somersaults and stand on your 

            nutty head. If it wasn't for the way you scare the 

            women and kids I'd feel sorry for you and pass the hat. 

I like to watch a good fourflusher work, but not when 

            he starts people puking and calling for the doctors. 

I like a man that's got nerve and can pull off a great 

            original performance, but youyou're only a bug 

            house peddler of secondhand gospelyou're only 

            shoving out a phoney imitation of the goods this 

            Jesus wanted free as air and sunlight. 

You tell people living in shanties Jesus is going to fix it 

            up all right with them by giving them mansions in 

            the skies after they're dead and the worms have 

            eaten 'em. 

You tell $6 a week department store girls all they need 

            is Jesus; you take a steel trust wop, dead without 

            having lived, gray and shrunken at forty years of 


CHICAGO POEMS

TO A CONTEMPORARY BUNKSHOOTER 32



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Page No 38


age, and you tell him to look at Jesus on the cross 

            and he'll be all right. 

You tell poor people they don't need any more money 

            on pay day and even if it's fierce to be out of a job, 

            Jesus'll fix that up all right, all rightall they gotta 

            do is take Jesus the way you say. 

I'm telling you Jesus wouldn't stand for the stuff you're 

            handing out. Jesus played it different. The bankers 

            and lawyers of Jerusalem got their sluggers and 

            murderers to go after Jesus just because Jesus 

            wouldn't play their game. He didn't sit in with 

            the big thieves. 

I don't want a lot of gab from a bunkshooter in my religion. 

I won't take my religion from any man who never works 

            except with his mouth and never cherishes any memory 

            except the face of the woman on the American 

            silver dollar. 

I ask you to come through and show me where you're 

            pouring out the blood of your life. 

I've been to this suburb of Jerusalem they call Golgotha, 

            where they nailed Him, and I know if the story is 

            straight it was real blood ran from His hands and 

            the nailholes, and it was real blood spurted in red 

            drops where the spear of the Roman soldier rammed 

            in between the ribs of this Jesus of Nazareth. 

SKYSCRAPER

BY day the skyscraper looms in the smoke and sun and 

            has a soul. 

Prairie and valley, streets of the city, pour people into 

            it and they mingle among its twenty floors and are 

            poured out again back to the streets, prairies and 

            valleys. 

It is the men and women, boys and girls so poured in and 

            out all day that give the building a soul of dreams 

            and thoughts and memories. 

(Dumped in the sea or fixed in a desert, who would care 

            for the building or speak its name or ask a policeman 

            the way to it?) 

Elevators slide on their cables and tubes catch letters and 

            parcels and iron pipes carry gas and water in and 


CHICAGO POEMS

SKYSCRAPER 33



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Page No 39


sewage out. 

Wires climb with secrets, carry light and carry words, 

            and tell terrors and profits and lovescurses of men 

            grappling plans of business and questions of women 

            in plots of love. 

Hour by hour the caissons reach down to the rock of the 

            earth and hold the building to a turning planet. 

Hour by hour the girders play as ribs and reach out and 

            hold together the stone walls and floors. 

Hour by hour the hand of the mason and the stuff of the 

            mortar clinch the pieces and parts to the shape an 

            architect voted. 

Hour by hour the sun and the rain, the air and the rust, 

            and the press of time running into centuries, play 

            on the building inside and out and use it. 

Men who sunk the pilings and mixed the mortar are laid 

            in graves where the wind whistles a wild song 

            without words 

And so are men who strung the wires and fixed the pipes 

            and tubes and those who saw it rise floor by floor. 

Souls of them all are here, even the hod carrier begging 

            at back doors hundreds of miles away and the brick 

            layer who went to state's prison for shooting another 

            man while drunk. 

(One man fell from a girder and broke his neck at the 

            end of a straight plungehe is herehis soul has 

            gone into the stones of the building.) 

On the office doors from tier to tierhundreds of names 

            and each name standing for a face written across 

            with a dead child, a passionate lover, a driving 

            ambition for a million dollar business or a lobster's 

            ease of life. 

Behind the signs on the doors they work and the walls 

            tell nothing from room to room. 

Tendollaraweek stenographers take letters from 

            corporation officers, lawyers, efficiency engineers, 

            and tons of letters go bundled from the building to all 

            ends of the earth. 

Smiles and tears of each office girl go into the soul of 

            the building just the same as the mastermen who 

            rule the building. 

Hands of clocks turn to noon hours and each floor 

            empties its men and women who go away and eat 

            and come back to work. 

Toward the end of the afternoon all work slackens and 


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SKYSCRAPER 34



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Page No 40


all jobs go slower as the people feel day closing on 

            them. 

One by one the floors are emptied. . . The uniformed 

            elevator men are gone. Pails clang. . . Scrubbers 

            work, talking in foreign tongues. Broom and water 

            and mop clean from the floors human dust and spit, 

            and machine grime of the day. 

Spelled in electric fire on the roof are words telling 

            miles of houses and people where to buy a thing for 

            money. The sign speaks till midnight. 

Darkness on the hallways. Voices echo. Silence 

            holds. . . Watchmen walk slow from floor to floor 

            and try the doors. Revolvers bulge from their hip 

            pockets. . . Steel safes stand in corners. Money 

            is stacked in them. 

A young watchman leans at a window and sees the lights 

            of barges butting their way across a harbor, nets of 

            red and white lanterns in a railroad yard, and a span 

            of glooms splashed with lines of white and blurs of 

            crosses and clusters over the sleeping city. 

By night the skyscraper looms in the smoke and the stars 

            and has a soul. 

HANDFULS

FOG

THE fog comes 

on little cat feet. 

It sits looking 

over harbor and city 

on silent haunches 

and then moves on. 


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HANDFULS 35



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Page No 41


POOL

OUT of the fire 

Came a man sunken 

To less than cinders, 

A teacup of ashes or so. 

And I, 

The gold in the house, 

Writhed into a stiff pool. 

JAN KUBELIK

YOUR bow swept over a string, and a long low note 

            quivered to the air. 

(A mother of Bohemia sobs over a new child perfect 

            learning to suck milk.) 

Your bow ran fast over all the high strings fluttering 

            and wild. 

(All the girls in Bohemia are laughing on a Sunday afternoon 

            in the hills with their lovers.) 

CHOOSE

            THE single clenched fist lifted and ready, 

Or the open asking hand held out and waiting. 

                                         Choose: 

For we meet by one or the other. 

CRIMSON

CRIMSON is the slow smolder of the cigar end I hold, 

Gray is the ash that stiffens and covers all silent the fire. 


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POOL 36



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Page No 42


(A great man I know is dead and while he lies in his 

            coffin a gone flame I sit here in cumbering shadows 

            and smoke and watch my thoughts come and go.) 

WHITELIGHT

YOUR whitelight flashes the frost tonight 

Moon of the purple and silent west. 

Remember me one of your lovers of dreams. 

FLUX

SAND of the sea runs red 

Where the sunset reaches and quivers. 

Sand of the sea runs yellow 

Where the moon slants and wavers. 

KIN

            BROTHER, I am fire 

Surging under the ocean floor. 

I shall never meet you, brother 

Not for years, anyhow; 

Maybe thousands of years, brother. 

Then I will warm you, 

Hold you close, wrap you in circles, 

Use you and change you 

Maybe thousands of years, brother. 


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Page No 43


WHITE SHOULDERS

YOUR white shoulders 

            I remember 

And your shrug of laughter. 

            Low laughter 

            Shaken slow 

From your white shoulders. 

LOSSES

I HAVE love 

And a child, 

A banjo 

And shadows. 

(Losses of God, 

All will go 

And one day 

We will hold 

Only the shadows.) 

TROTHS

YELLOW dust on a bumble 

            bee's wing, 

Grey lights in a woman's 

            asking eyes, 

Red ruins in the changing 

            sunset embers: 

I take you and pile high 

            the memories. 

Death will break her claws 

            on some I keep. 


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WHITE SHOULDERS 38



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Page No 44


WAR POEMS (19141915)

KILLERS

            I AM singing to you 

Soft as a man with a dead child speaks; 

Hard as a man in handcuffs, 

Held where he cannot move: 

            Under the sun 

Are sixteen million men, 

Chosen for shining teeth, 

Sharp eyes, hard legs, 

And a running of young warm blood in their wrists. 

            And a red juice runs on the green grass; 

And a red juice soaks the dark soil. 

And the sixteen million are killing. . . and killing 

                                 and killing. 

            I never forget them day or night: 

They beat on my head for memory of them; 

They pound on my heart and I cry back to them, 

To their homes and women, dreams and games. 

            I wake in the night and smell the trenches, 

And hear the low stir of sleepers in lines 

Sixteen million sleepers and pickets in the dark: 

Some of them long sleepers for always, 

Some of them tumbling to sleep tomorrow for always, 

Fixed in the drag of the world's heartbreak, 

Eating and drinking, toiling. . . on a long job of 

                                 killing. 

Sixteen million men. 

AMONG THE RED GUNS


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WAR POEMS (19141915)     39



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Page No 45


After waking at dawn one morning when the wind sang 

                                           low among dry leaves in an elm 

AMONG the red guns, 

In the hearts of soldiers 

Running free blood 

In the long, long campaign: 

            Dreams go on. 

Among the leather saddles, 

In the heads of soldiers 

Heavy in the wracks and kills 

Of all straight fighting: 

            Dreams go on. 

Among the hot muzzles, 

In the hands of soldiers 

Brought from fleshfolds of women 

Soft amid the blood and crying 

In all your hearts and heads 

Among the guns and saddles and muzzles: 

            Dreams, 

Dreams go on, 

Out of the dead on their backs, 

Broken and no use any more: 

Dreams of the way and the end go on. 

IRON

GUNS, 

Long, steel guns, 

Pointed from the war ships 

In the name of the war god. 

Straight, shining, polished guns, 

Clambered over with jackies in white blouses, 

Glory of tan faces, tousled hair, white teeth, 

Laughing lithe jackies in white blouses, 

Sitting on the guns singing war songs, war chanties. 

Shovels, 

Broad, iron shovels, 

Scooping out oblong vaults, 

Loosening turf and leveling sod. 

            I ask you 


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IRON 40



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Page No 46


To witness 

            The shovel is brother to the gun. 

MURMURINGS IN A FIELD HOSPITAL

                       [They picked him up in the grass where he had lain two 

            days in the rain with a piece of shrapnel in his lungs.] 

COME to me only with playthings now. . . 

A picture of a singing woman with blue eyes 

Standing at a fence of hollyhocks, poppies and sunflowers. . . 

Or an old man I remember sitting with children telling stories 

Of days that never happened anywhere in the world. . . 

No more iron cold and real to handle, 

Shaped for a drive straight ahead. 

Bring me only beautiful useless things. 

Only old home things touched at sunset in the quiet. . . 

And at the window one day in summer 

Yellow of the new crock of butter 

Stood against the red of new climbing roses. . . 

And the world was all playthings. 

STATISTICS

NAPOLEON shifted, 

Restless in the old sarcophagus 

And murmured to a watchguard: 

"Who goes there?" 

"Twentyone million men, 

Soldiers, armies, guns, 

Twentyone million 

Afoot, horseback, 

In the air, 

Under the sea." 

And Napoleon turned to his sleep: 

"It is not my world answering; 

It is some dreamer who knows not 

The world I marched in 

From Calais to Moscow." 


CHICAGO POEMS

MURMURINGS IN A FIELD HOSPITAL 41



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Page No 47


And he slept on 

In the old sarcophagus 

While the aeroplanes 

Droned their motors 

Between Napoleon's mausoleum 

And the cool night stars. 

FIGHT

RED drips from my chin where I have been eating. 

Not all the blood, nowhere near all, is wiped off my mouth. 

Clots of red mess my hair 

And the tiger, the buffalo, know how. 

I was a killer. 

                                 Yes, I am a killer. 

I come from killing. 

                                 I go to more. 

I drive red joy ahead of me from killing. 

Red gluts and red hungers run in the smears and juices 

            of my inside bones: 

The child cries for a suck mother and I cry for war. 

BUTTONS

I HAVE been watching the war map slammed up for 

            advertising in front of the newspaper office. 

Buttonsred and yellow buttonsblue and black buttons 

            are shoved back and forth across the map. 

A laughing young man, sunny with freckles, 

Climbs a ladder, yells a joke to somebody in the crowd, 

And then fixes a yellow button one inch west 

And follows the yellow button with a black button one 

            inch west. 

(Ten thousand men and boys twist on their bodies in 

            a red soak along a river edge, 


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FIGHT 42



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Page No 48


Gasping of wounds, calling for water, some rattling 

            death in their throats.) 

Who would guess what it cost to move two buttons one 

            inch on the war map here in front of the newspaper 

            office where the frecklefaced young man is laughing 

            to us? 

AND THEY OBEY

SMASH down the cities. 

Knock the walls to pieces. 

Break the factories and cathedrals, warehouses 

            and homes 

Into loose piles of stone and lumber and black 

            burnt wood: 

            You are the soldiers and we command you. 

Build up the cities. 

Set up the walls again. 

Put together once more the factories and cathedrals, 

            warehouses and homes 

Into buildings for life and labor: 

            You are workmen and citizens all: We 

            command you. 

JAWS

SEVEN nations stood with their hands on the jaws of death. 

It was the first week in August, Nineteen Hundred Fourteen. 

I was listening, you were listening, the whole world was 

            listening, 

And all of us heard a Voice murmuring: 

                                         "I am the way and the light, 

                                         He that believeth on me 

                                         Shall not perish 

                                         But shall have everlasting life." 

Seven nations listening heard the Voice and answered: 

                                         "O Hell!" 

The jaws of death began clicking and they go on clicking. 

                                         "O Hell!" 


CHICAGO POEMS

AND THEY OBEY 43



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Page No 49


SALVAGE

GUNS on the battle lines have pounded now a year 

            between Brussels and Paris. 

And, William Morris, when I read your old chapter on 

            the great arches and naves and little whimsical 

            corners of the Churches of Northern FranceBrrrr! 

I'm glad you're a dead man, William Morris, I'm glad 

            you're down in the damp and mouldy, only a memory 

            instead of a living manI'm glad you're gone. 

You never lied to us, William Morris, you loved the 

            shape of those stones piled and carved for you to 

            dream over and wonder because workmen got joy 

            of life into them, 

Workmen in aprons singing while they hammered, and 

            praying, and putting their songs and prayers into 

            the walls and roofs, the bastions and cornerstones 

            and gargoylesall their children and kisses of 

            women and wheat and roses growing. 

I say, William Morris, I'm glad you're gone, I'm glad 

            you're a dead man. 

Guns on the battle lines have pounded a year now between 

            Brussels and Paris. 

WARS

IN the old wars drum of hoofs and the beat of shod feet. 

In the new wars hum of motors and the tread of rubber tires. 

In the wars to come silent wheels and whirr of rods not 

            yet dreamed out in the heads of men. 

In the old wars clutches of short swords and jabs into 

            faces with spears. 

In the new wars long range guns and smashed walls, guns 

            running a spit of metal and men falling in tens and 

            twenties. 

In the wars to come new silent deaths, new silent hurlers 

            not yet dreamed out in the heads of men. 


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SALVAGE 44



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Page No 50


In the old wars kings quarreling and thousands of men 

            following. 

In the new wars kings quarreling and millions of men 

            following. 

In the wars to come kings kicked under the dust and 

            millions of men following great causes not yet 

            dreamed out in the heads of men. 

THE ROAD AND THE END

THE ROAD AND THE END

I SHALL foot it 

Down the roadway in the dusk, 

Where shapes of hunger wander 

And the fugitives of pain go by. 

I shall foot it 

In the silence of the morning, 

See the night slur into dawn, 

Hear the slow great winds arise 

Where tall trees flank the way 

And shoulder toward the sky. 

The broken boulders by the road 

Shall not commemorate my ruin. 

Regret shall be the gravel under foot. 

I shall watch for 

Slim birds swift of wing 

That go where wind and ranks of thunder 

Drive the wild processionals of rain. 

The dust of the traveled road 

Shall touch my hands and face. 


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THE ROAD AND THE END 45



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Page No 51


CHOICES

THEY offer you many things, 

            I a few. 

Moonlight on the play of fountains at night 

With water sparkling a drowsy monotone, 

Bareshouldered, smiling women and talk 

And a crossplay of loves and adulteries 

And a fear of death and a remembering of regrets: 

All this they offer you. 

I come with: 

            salt and bread 

            a terrible job of work 

            and tireless war; 

Come and have now: 

            hunger. 

            danger 

            and hate. 

GRAVES

I DREAMED one man stood against a thousand, 

One man damned as a wrongheaded fool. 

One year and another he walked the streets, 

And a thousand shrugs and hoots 

Met him in the shoulders and mouths he passed. 

            He died alone. 

And only the undertaker came to his funeral. 

Flowers grow over his grave anod in the wind, 

And over the graves of the thousand, too, 

The flowers grow anod in the wind. 

            Flowers and the wind, 

Flowers anod over the graves of the dead, 

Petals of red, leaves of yellow, streaks of white, 

Masses of purple sagging. . . 

I love you and your great way of forgetting.


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CHOICES 46



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Page No 52


AZTEC MASK

I WANTED a man's face looking into the jaws and throat 

            of life 

With something proud on his face, so proud no smash 

            of the jaws, 

No gulp of the throat leaves the face in the end 

With anything else than the old proud look: 

                                 Even to the finish, dumped in the dust, 

                                 Lost among the usedup cinders, 

                                 This face, men would say, is a flash, 

                                 Is laid on bones taken from the ribs of the earth, 

                                 Ready for the hammers of changing, changing years, 

                                 Ready for the sleeping, sleeping years of silence. 

                                 Ready for the dust and fire and wind. 

I wanted this face and I saw it today in an Aztec mask. 

A cry out of storm and dark, a red yell and a purple prayer, 

A beaten shape of ashes 

                                         waiting the sunrise or night, 

                                         something or nothing, 

                                         proudmouthed, 

                                         proudeyed gambler. 

MOMUS

MOMUS is the name men give your face, 

The brag of its tone, like a long low steamboat whistle 

Finding a way mid mist on a shoreland, 

Where gray rocks let the salt water shatter spray 

            Against horizons purple, silent. 

            Yes, Momus, 

Men have flung your face in bronze 

To gaze in gargoyle downward on a streetwhirl of folk. 

They were artists did this, shaped your sad mouth, 

Gave you a tall forehead slanted with calm, broad wisdom; 

All your lips to the corners and your cheeks to the high bones 

Thrown over and through with a smile that forever 

            wishes and wishes, purple, silent, fled from all the 

            iron things of life, evaded like a sought bandit, gone 

            into dreams, by God. 


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AZTEC MASK 47



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Page No 53


I wonder, Momus, 

Whether shadows of the dead sit somewhere and look 

            with deep laughter 

On men who play in terrible earnest the old, known, 

            solemn repetitions of history. 

A droning monotone soft as sea laughter hovers from 

            your kindliness of bronze, 

You give me the human ease of a mountain peak, purple, 

            silent; 

Granite shoulders heaving above the earth curves, 

Careless eyewitness of the spawning tides of men and 

            women 

Swarming always in a drift of millions to the dust of toil, 

            the salt of tears, 

And blood drops of undiminishing war. 

THE ANSWER

You have spoken the answer. 

A child searches far sometimes 

Into the red dust 

                                                 On a dark rose leaf 

And so you have gone far 

                                                 For the answer is: 

                                                         Silence. 

            In the republic 

Of the winking stars and spent cataclysms 

Sure we are it is off there the answer 

                                 is hidden and folded over, 

Sleeping in the sun, careless whether 

                                 it is Sunday or any other day of 

                                 the week, 

Knowing silence will bring all one way 

                                 or another. 

Have we not seen 

Purple of the pansy 

                                         out of the mulch 

                                         and mold 

                                         crawl 

                                         into a dusk 


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THE ANSWER 48



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Page No 54


of velvet? 

                                         blur of yellow? 

Almost we thought from nowwhere but it was 

                                 the silence, 

                                         the future, 

                                         working. 

TO A DEAD MAN

OVER the dead line we have called to you 

To come across with a word to us, 

Some beaten whisper of what happens 

Where you are over the dead line 

Deaf to our calls and voiceless. 

The flickering shadows have not answered 

Nor your lips sent a signal 

Whether love talks and roses grow 

And the sun breaks at morning 

Splattering the sea with crimson. 

UNDER

                                                                 I 

I AM the undertow 

Washing tides of power 

Battering the pillars 

Under your things of high law. 

                                                               II 

I am a sleepless 

Slowfaring eater, 

Maker of rust and rot 

In your bastioned fastenings, 

Caissons deep. 

                                                               III 

I am the Law 

Older than you 

And your builders proud. 


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TO A DEAD MAN 49



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Page No 55


I am deaf 

In all days 

Whether you 

Say "Yes" or "No". 

I am the crumbler: 

            Tomorrow. 

A SPHINX

CLOSEMOUTHED you sat five thousand years and never 

            let out a whisper. 

Processions came by, marchers, asking questions you 

            answered with grey eyes never blinking, shut lips 

            never talking. 

Not one croak of anything you know has come from your 

            cat crouch of ages. 

I am one of those who know all you know and I keep my 

            questions: I know the answers you hold. 

WHO AM I?

MY head knocks against the stars. 

My feet are on the hilltops. 

My fingertips are in the valleys and shores of 

            universal life. 

Down in the sounding foam of primal things I 

            reach my hands and play with pebbles of 

            destiny. 

I have been to hell and back many times. 

I know all about heaven, for I have talked with God. 

I dabble in the blood and guts of the terrible. 

I know the passionate seizure of beauty 

And the marvelous rebellion of man at all signs 

            reading "Keep Off." 

My name is Truth and I am the most elusive captive 

            in the universe. 


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Page No 56


OUR PRAYER OF THANKS

FOR the gladness here where the sun is shining at 

                                 evening on the weeds at the river, 

            Our prayer of thanks. 

For the laughter of children who tumble barefooted and 

                                 bareheaded in the summer grass, 

            Our prayer of thanks. 

For the sunset and the stars, the women and the white 

                                 arms that hold us, 

            Our prayer of thanks. 

            God, 

If you are deaf and blind, if this is all lost to you, 

God, if the dead in their coffins amid the silver handles 

                                 on the edge of town, or the reckless dead of war 

                                 days thrown unknown in pits, if these dead are 

                                 forever deaf and blind and lost, 

            Our prayer of thanks. 

            God, 

The game is all your way, the secrets and the signals and 

                                 the system; and so for the break of the game and 

                                 the first play and the last. 

            Our prayer of thanks. 

FOGS AND FIRES

AT A WINDOW

GIVE me hunger, 

O you gods that sit and give 

The world its orders. 


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Page No 57


Give me hunger, pain and want, 

Shut me out with shame and failure 

From your doors of gold and fame, 

Give me your shabbiest, weariest hunger! 

But leave me a little love, 

A voice to speak to me in the day end, 

A hand to touch me in the dark room 

Breaking the long loneliness. 

In the dusk of dayshapes 

Blurring the sunset, 

One little wandering, western star 

Thrust out from the changing shores of shadow. 

Let me go to the window, 

Watch there the dayshapes of dusk 

And wait and know the coming 

Of a little love. 

UNDER THE HARVEST MOON

            UNDER the harvest moon, 

When the soft silver 

Drips shimmering 

Over the garden nights, 

Death, the gray mocker, 

Comes and whispers to you 

As a beautiful friend 

Who remembers. 

            Under the summer roses 

When the flagrant crimson 

Lurks in the dusk 

Of the wild red leaves, 

Love, with little hands, 

Comes and touches you 

With a thousand memories, 

And asks you 

Beautiful, unanswerable questions. 


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Page No 58


THE GREAT HUNT

I CANNOT tell you now; 

            When the wind's drive and whirl 

            Blow me along no longer, 

            And the wind's a whisper at last 

Maybe I'll tell you then 

                                                     some other time. 

            When the rose's flash to the sunset 

            Reels to the rack and the twist, 

            And the rose is a red bygone, 

            When the face I love is going 

            And the gate to the end shall clang, 

            And it's no use to beckon or say, "So long" 

Maybe I'll tell you then 

                                                     some other time. 

I never knew any more beautiful than you: 

            I have hunted you under my thoughts, 

            I have broken down under the wind 

            And into the roses looking for you. 

                                 I shall never find any 

                                                     greater than you. 

MONOTONE

            THE monotone of the rain is beautiful, 

And the sudden rise and slow relapse 

Of the long multitudinous rain. 

            The sun on the hills is beautiful, 

Or a captured sunset seaflung, 

Bannered with fire and gold. 

            A face I know is beautiful 

With fire and gold of sky and sea, 

And the peace of long warm rain. 


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Page No 59


JOY

            LET a joy keep you. 

Reach out your hands 

And take it when it runs by, 

As the Apache dancer 

Clutches his woman. 

I have seen them 

Live long and laugh loud, 

Sent on singing, singing, 

Smashed to the heart 

Under the ribs 

With a terrible love. 

Joy always, 

Joy everywhere 

Let joy kill you! 

Keep away from the little deaths. 

SHIRT

I REMEMBER once I ran after you and tagged the fluttering 

            shirt of you in the wind. 

Once many days ago I drank a glassful of something and 

            the picture of you shivered and slid on top of the 

            stuff. 

And again it was nobody else but you I heard in the 

            singing voice of a careless humming woman. 

One night when I sat with chums telling stories at a 

            bonfire flickering red embers, in a language its own 

            talking to a spread of white stars: 

                                         It was you that slunk laughing 

                                         in the clumsy staggering shadows. 

Broken answers of remembrance let me know you are 

            alive with a peering phantom face behind a doorway 

            somewhere in the city's push and fury 

Or under a pack of moss and leaves waiting in silence 

            under a twist of oaken arms ready as ever to run 

            away again when I tag the fluttering shirt of you. 


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Page No 60


AZTEC

YOU came from the Aztecs 

With a copper on your forearms 

Tawnier than a sunset 

Saying goodby to an even river. 

And I said, you remember, 

Those forearms of yours 

Were finer than bronzes 

And you were glad. 

                                                 It was tears 

And a path west 

                                 and a homegoing 

                                 when I asked 

Why there were scars of worn gold 

Where a man's ring was fixed once 

On your third finger. 

                                                 And I call you 

To come back 

                                 before the days are longer. 

TWO

MEMORY of you is . . . a blue spear of flower. 

I cannot remember the name of it. 

Alongside a bold dripping poppy is fire and silk. 

                                                     And they cover you. 

BACK YARD

SHINE on, O moon of summer. 

Shine to the leaves of grass, catalpa and oak, 

All silver under your rain tonight. 

An Italian boy is sending songs to you tonight from an 

            accordion. 


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Page No 61


A Polish boy is out with his best girl; they marry next 

            month; tonight they are throwing you kisses. 

An old man next door is dreaming over a sheen that sits 

            in a cherry tree in his back yard. 

The clocks say I must goI stay here sitting on the 

            back porch drinking white thoughts you rain down. 

                                 Shine on, O moon, 

Shake out more and more silver changes. 

ON THE BREAKWATER

ON the breakwater in the summer dark, a man and a 

            girl are sitting, 

She across his knee and they are looking face into face 

Talking to each other without words, singing rythms in 

            silence to each other. 

A funnel of white ranges the blue dusk from an out 

            going boat, 

Playing its searchlight, puzzled, abrupt, over a streak of 

            green, 

And two on the breakwater keep their silence, she on his 

            knee. 

MASK

FLING your red scarf faster and faster, dancer. 

It is summer and the sun loves a million green leaves, 

            masses of green. 

Your red scarf flashes across them calling and acalling. 

The silk and flare of it is a great soprano leading a 

            chorus 

Carried along in a rouse of voices reaching for the heart 

            of the world. 

Your toes are singing to meet the song of your arms: 

Let the red scarf go swifter. 


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Page No 62


Summer and the sun command you. 

PEARL FOG

            OPEN the door now. 

Go roll up the collar of your coat 

To walk in the changing scarf of mist. 

Tell your sins here to the pearl fog 

And know for once a deepening night 

Strange as the halfmeanings 

Alurk in a wise woman's mousey eyes. 

            Yes, tell your sins 

And know how careless a pearl fog is 

Of the laws you have broken. 

I SANG

I SANG to you and the moon 

But only the moon remembers. 

            I sang 

O reckless freehearted 

                                 freethroated rythms, 

Even the moon remembers them 

            And is kind to me. 

FOLLIES

                                 SHAKEN, 

The blossoms of lilac, 

            And shattered, 

The atoms of purple. 

Green dip the leaves, 

            Darker the bark, 


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Page No 63


Longer the shadows. 

Sheer lines of poplar 

Shimmer with masses of silver 

And down in a garden old with years 

And broken walls of ruin and story, 

Roses rise with red rainmemories. 

                                 May! 

            In the open world 

The sun comes and finds your face, 

            Remembering all. 

JUNE

PAULA is digging and shaping the loam of a salvia, 

            Scarlet Chinese talker of summer. 

Two petals of crabapple blossom blow fallen in Paula's 

                                 hair, 

            And fluff of white from a cottonwood. 

NOCTURNE IN A DESERTED BRICKYARD

            STUFF of the moon 

Runs on the lapping sand 

Out to the longest shadows. 

Under the curving willows, 

And round the creep of the wave line, 

Fluxions of yellow and dusk on the waters 

Make a wide dreaming pansy of an old pond in the night. 

HYDRANGEAS

DRAGOONS, I tell you the white hydrangeas 

            turn rust and go soon. 

Already mid September a line of brown runs 


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Page No 64


over them. 

One sunset after another tracks the faces, the 

            petals. 

Waiting, they look over the fence for what 

            way they go. 

THEME IN YELLOW

I SPOT the hills 

With yellow balls in autumn. 

I light the prairie cornfields 

Orange and tawny gold clusters 

And I am called pumpkins. 

On the last of October 

When dusk is fallen 

Children join hands 

And circle round me 

Singing ghost songs 

And love to the harvest moon; 

I am a jacko'lantern 

With terrible teeth 

And the children know 

I am fooling. 

BETWEEN TWO HILLS

BETWEEN two hills 

The old town stands. 

The houses loom 

And the roofs and trees 

And the dusk and the dark, 

The damp and the dew 

            Are there. 

The prayers are said 

And the people rest 

For sleep is there 

And the touch of dreams 

            Is over all. 


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Page No 65


LAST ANSWERS

I WROTE a poem on the mist 

And a woman asked me what I meant by it. 

I had thought till then only of the beauty of the mist, 

                                 how pearl and gray of it mix and reel, 

And change the drab shanties with lighted lamps at evening 

                                 into points of mystery quivering with color. 

            I answered: 

The whole world was mist once long ago and some day 

                                 it will all go back to mist, 

Our skulls and lungs are more water than bone and 

                                 tissue 

And all poets love dust and mist because all the last 

                                 answers 

Go running back to dust and mist. 

WINDOW

NIGHT from a railroad car window 

Is a great, dark, soft thing 

Broken across with slashes of light. 

YOUNG SEA

THE sea is never still. 

It pounds on the shore 

Restless as a young heart, 

Hunting. 

The sea speaks 

And only the stormy hearts 

Know what it says: 

It is the face 


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Page No 66


of a rough mother speaking. 

The sea is young. 

One storm cleans all the hoar 

And loosens the age of it. 

I hear it laughing, reckless. 

They love the sea, 

Men who ride on it 

And know they will die 

Under the salt of it 

Let only the young come, 

            Says the sea. 

Let them kiss my face 

            And hear me. 

I am the last word 

            And I tell 

Where storms and stars come from. 

BONES

SLING me under the sea. 

Pack me down in the salt and wet. 

No farmer's plow shall touch my bones. 

No Hamlet hold my jaws and speak 

How jokes are gone and empty is my mouth. 

Long, greeneyed scavengers shall pick my eyes, 

Purple fish play hideandseek, 

And I shall be song of thunder, crash of sea, 

Down on the floors of salt and wet. 

                                 Sling me . . . under the sea. 

PALS

TAKE a hold now 

On the silver handles here, 

Six silver handles, 

One for each of his old pals. 


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Page No 67


Take hold 

And lift him down the stairs, 

Put him on the rollers 

Over the floor of the hearse. 

Take him on the last haul, 

To the cold straight house, 

The level even house, 

To the last house of all. 

            The dead say nothing 

            And the dead know much 

            And the dead hold under their tongues 

            A lockedup story. 

CHILD

THE young child, Christ, is straight and wise 

And asks questions of the old men, questions 

Found under running water for all children 

And found under shadows thrown on still waters 

By tall trees looking downward, old and gnarled. 

Found to the eyes of children alone, untold, 

Singing a low song in the loneliness. 

And the young child, Christ, goes on asking 

And the old men answer nothing and only know love 

For the young child. Christ, straight and wise. 

POPPIES

SHE loves bloodred poppies for a garden to walk in. 

In a loose white gown she walks 

                                 and a new child tugs at cords in her body. 

Her head to the west at evening when the dew is creeping, 

A shudder of gladness runs in her bones and torsal fiber: 

She loves bloodred poppies for a garden to walk in. 


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CHILD MOON

THE child's wonder 

At the old moon 

Comes back nightly. 

She points her finger 

To the far silent yellow thing 

Shining through the branches 

Filtering on the leaves a golden sand, 

Crying with her little tongue, "See the moon!" 

And in her bed fading to sleep 

With babblings of the moon on her little mouth. 

MARGARET

MANY birds and the beating of wings 

Make a flinging reckless hum 

In the early morning at the rocks 

Above the blue pool 

Where the gray shadows swim lazy. 

In your blue eyes, O reckless child, 

I saw today many little wild wishes, 

Eager as the great morning. 

SHADOWS

POEMS DONE ON A LATE NIGHT CAR

                                                       I. CHICKENS 

I AM The Great White Way of the city: 

When you ask what is my desire, I answer: 


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Page No 69


"Girls fresh as country wild flowers, 

With young faces tired of the cows and barns, 

Eager in their eyes as the dawn to find my mysteries, 

Slender supple girls with shapely legs, 

Lure in the arch of their little shoulders 

And wisdom from the prairies to cry only softly at 

                                 the ashes of my mysteries." 

                                                       II. USED UP 

         Lines based on certain regrets that come with rumination 

                                         upon the painted faces of women on 

                                               North Clark Street, Chicago 

                                         Roses, 

                                     Red roses, 

                                         Crushed 

In the rain and wind 

Like mouths of women 

Beaten by the fists of 

Men using them. 

            O little roses 

            And broken leaves 

            And petal wisps: 

You that so flung your crimson 

            To the sun 

Only yesterday. 

                                                         III. HOME 

Here is a thing my heart wishes the world had more of: 

I heard it in the air of one night when I listened 

To a mother singing softly to a child restless and angry 

            in the darkness. 

IT IS MUCH

WOMEN of night life amid the lights 

Where the line of your full, round throats 

Matches in gleam the glint of your eyes 

And the ring of your heartdeep laughter: 

            It is much to be warm and sure of tomorrow. 

Women of night life along the shadows, 

Lean at your throats and skulking the walls, 

Gaunt as a bitch worn to the bone, 


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Page No 70


Under the paint of your smiling faces: 

            It is much to be warm and sure of tomorrow. 

TRAFFICKER

AMONG the shadows where two streets cross, 

A woman lurks in the dark and waits 

To move on when a policeman heaves in view. 

Smiling a broken smile from a face 

Painted over haggard bones and desperate eyes, 

All night she offers passersby what they will 

Of her beauty wasted, body faded, claims gone, 

And no takers. 

HARRISON STREET COURT

I HEARD a woman's lips 

Speaking to a companion 

Say these words: 

"A woman what hustles 

Never keeps nothin' 

For all her hustlin'. 

Somebody always gets 

What she goes on the street for. 

If it ain't a pimp 

It's a bull what gets it. 

I been hustlin' now 

Till I ain't much good any more. 

I got nothin' to show for it. 

Some man got it all, 

Every night's hustlin' I ever did." 

SOILED DOVE


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Page No 71


LET us be honest; the lady was not a harlot until she 

            married a corporation lawyer who picked her from 

            a Ziegfeld chorus. 

Before then she never took anybody's money and paid 

            for her silk stockings out of what she earned singing 

            and dancing. 

She loved one man and he loved six women and the 

            game was changing her looks, calling for more and 

            more massage money and high coin for the beauty 

            doctors. 

Now she drives a long, underslung motor car all by herself, 

            reads in the day's papers what her husband is 

            doing to the interstate commerce commission, requires 

            a larger corsage from year to year, and wonders 

            sometimes how one man is coming along with 

            six women. 

JUNGHEIMER'S

IN western fields of corn and northern timber lands, 

            They talk about me, a saloon with a soul, 

            The soft red lights, the long curving bar, 

            The leather seats and dim corners, 

            Tall brass spittoons, a nigger cutting ham, 

And the painting of a woman halfdressed thrown reckless 

            across a bed after a night of booze and riots. 

GONE

EVERYBODY loved Chick Lorimer in our town. 

                                                 Far off 

                                         Everybody loved her. 

So we all love a wild girl keeping a hold 

On a dream she wants. 

Nobody knows now where Chick Lorimer went. 

Nobody knows why she packed her trunk. . a few 

            old things 

And is gone, 

                                                 Gone with her little chin 

                                                 Thrust ahead of her 


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Page No 72


And her soft hair blowing careless 

                                                 From under a wide hat, 

Dancer, singer, a laughing passionate lover. 

Were there ten men or a hundred hunting Chick? 

Were there five men or fifty with aching hearts? 

                                         Everybody loved Chick Lorimer. 

                                                 Nobody knows where she's gone. 

OTHER DAYS (19001910)

DREAMS IN THE DUSK

DREAMS in the dusk, 

Only dreams closing the day 

And with the day's close going back 

To the gray things, the dark things, 

The far, deep things of dreamland. 

Dreams, only dreams in the dusk, 

Only the old remembered pictures 

Of lost days when the day's loss 

Wrote in tears the heart's loss. 

Tears and loss and broken dreams 

May find your heart at dusk. 

DOCKS

STROLLING along 

By the teeming docks, 

I watch the ships put out. 

Black ships that heave and lunge 

And move like mastodons 

Arising from lethargic sleep. 


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Page No 73


The fathomed harbor 

Calls them not nor dares 

Them to a strain of action, 

But outward, on and outward, 

Sounding lowreverberating calls, 

Shaggy in the halflit distance, 

They pass the pointed headland, 

View the wide, farlifting wilderness 

And leap with cumulative speed 

To test the challenge of the sea. 

Plunging, 

Doggedly onward plunging, 

Into salt and mist and foam and sun. 

ALL DAY LONG

ALL day long in fog and wind, 

The waves have flung their beating crests 

Against the palisades of adamant. 

            My boy, he went to sea, long and long ago, 

            Curls of brown were slipping underneath his cap, 

            He looked at me from blue and steely eyes; 

            Natty, straight and true, he stepped away, 

            My boy, he went to sea. 

All day long in fog and wind, 

The waves have flung their beating crests 

Against the palisades of adamant. 

WAITING

TODAY I will let the old boat stand 

Where the sweep of the harbor tide comes in 

To the pulse of a far, deepsteady sway. 

And I will rest and dream and sit on the deck 

            Watching the world go by 

And take my pay for many hard days gone I remember. 

I will choose what clouds I like 


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Page No 74


In the great white fleets that wander the blue 

As I lie on my back or loaf at the rail. 

And I will listen as the veering winds kiss me and fold me 

And put on my brow the touch of the world's great will. 

Daybreak will hear the heart of the boat beat, 

            Engine throb and piston play 

In the quiver and leap at call of life. 

Tomorrow we move in the gaps and heights 

On changing floors of unlevel seas 

And no man shall stop us and no man follow 

For ours is the quest of an unknown shore 

And we are husky and lusty and shoutinggay. 

FROM THE SHORE

A LONE gray bird, 

Dimdipping, farflying, 

Alone in the shadows and grandeurs and tumults 

Of night and the sea 

And the stars and storms. 

Out over the darkness it wavers and hovers, 

Out into the gloom it swings and batters, 

Out into the wind and the rain and the vast, 

Out into the pit of a great black world, 

Where fogs are at battle, skydriven, seablown, 

Love of mist and rapture of flight, 

Glories of chance and hazards of death 

On its eager and palpitant wings. 

Out into the deep of the great dark world, 

Beyond the long borders where foam and drift 

Of the sundering waves are lost and gone 

On the tides that plunge and rear and crumble. 

UPLANDS IN MAY

WONDER as of old things 

Fresh and fair come back 


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Page No 75


Hangs over pasture and road. 

Lush in the lowland grasses rise 

And upland beckons to upland. 

The great strong hills are humble. 

DREAM GIRL

YOU will come one day in a waver of love, 

Tender as dew, impetuous as rain, 

The tan of the sun will be on your skin, 

The purr of the breeze in your murmuring speech, 

You will pose with a hillflower grace. 

You will come, with your slim, expressive arms, 

A poise of the head no sculptor has caught 

And nuances spoken with shoulder and neck, 

Your face in a passandrepass of moods 

As many as skies in delicate change 

Of cloud and blue and flimmering sun. 

                                                 Yet, 

You may not come, O girl of a dream, 

We may but pass as the world goes by 

And take from a look of eyes into eyes, 

A film of hope and a memoried day. 

PLOWBOY

AFTER the last red sunset glimmer, 

Black on the line of a low hill rise, 

Formed into moving shadows, I saw 

A plowboy and two horses lined against the gray, 

Plowing in the dusk the last furrow. 

The turf had a gleam of brown, 

And smell of soil was in the air, 

And, cool and moist, a haze of April. 

I shall remember you long, 

Plowboy and horses against the sky in shadow. 

I shall remember you and the picture 


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Page No 76


You made for me, 

Turning the turf in the dusk 

And haze of an April gloaming. 

BROADWAY

I SHALL never forget you, Broadway 

Your golden and calling lights. 

I'll remember you long, 

Tallwalled river of rush and play. 

Hearts that know you hate you 

And lips that have given you laughter 

Have gone to their ashes of life and its roses, 

Cursing the dreams that were lost 

In the dust of your harsh and trampled stones. 

OLD WOMAN

THE owlcar clatters along, dogged by the echo 

From building and battered pavingstone. 

The headlight scoffs at the mist, 

And fixes its yellow rays in the cold slow rain; 

Against a pane I press my forehead 

And drowsily look on the walls and sidewalks. 

The headlight finds the way 

And life is gone from the wet and the welter 

Only an old woman, bloated, disheveled and bleared. 

Farwandered waif of other days, 

Huddles for sleep in a doorway, 

Homeless. 


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Page No 77


NOON HOUR

SHE sits in the dust at the walls 

            And makes cigars, 

Bending at the bench 

With fingers wageanxious, 

Changing her sweat for the day's pay. 

Now the noon hour has come, 

And she leans with her bare arms 

On the windowsill over the river, 

Leans and feels at her throat 

Coolmoving things out of the free open ways: 

At her throat and eyes and nostrils 

The touch and the blowing cool 

Of great free ways beyond the walls. 

'BOES

I WAITED today for a freight train to pass. 

Cattle cars with steers butting their horns against the 

            bars, went by. 

And a half a dozen hoboes stood on bumpers between 

            cars. 

Well, the cattle are respectable, I thought. 

Every steer has its transportation paid for by the farmer 

            sending it to market, 

While the hoboes are lawbreakers in riding a railroad 

            train without a ticket. 

It reminded me of ten days I spent in the Allegheny 

            County jail in Pittsburgh. 

I got ten days even though I was a veteran of the 

            SpanishAmerican war. 

Cooped in the same cell with me was an old man, a 

            bricklayer and a boozefighter. 

But it just happened he, too, was a veteran soldier, and 

            he had fought to preserve the Union and free the 

            niggers. 

We were three in all, the other being a Lithuanian who 

            got drunk on pay day at the steel works and got to 

            fighting a policeman; 

All the clothes he had was a shirt, pants and shoes 


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Page No 78


somebody got his hat and coat and what money he 

            had left over when he got drunk. 

UNDER A TELEPHONE POLE

I AM a copper wire slung in the air, 

Slim against the sun I make not even a clear line of shadow. 

Night and day I keep singinghumming and thrumming: 

It is love and war and money; it is the fighting and the 

            tears, the work and want, 

Death and laughter of men and women passing through 

            me, carrier of your speech, 

In the rain and the wet dripping, in the dawn and the 

            shine drying, 

                                         A copper wire. 

I AM THE PEOPLE, THE MOB

I AM the peoplethe mobthe crowdthe mass. 

Do you know that all the great work of the world is 

            done through me? 

I am the workingman, the inventor, the maker of the 

            world's food and clothes. 

I am the audience that witnesses history. The Napoleons 

            come from me and the Lincolns. They die. And 

            then I send forth more Napoleons and Lincolns. 

I am the seed ground. I am a prairie that will stand 

            for much plowing. Terrible storms pass over me. 

            I forget. The best of me is sucked out and wasted. 

            I forget. Everything but Death comes to me and 

            makes me work and give up what I have. And I 

            forget. 

Sometimes I growl, shake myself and spatter a few red 

            drops for history to remember. ThenI forget. 

When I, the People, learn to remember, when I, the 

            People, use the lessons of yesterday and no longer 

            forget who robbed me last year, who played me for 

            a foolthen there will be no speaker in all the world 

            say the name: "The People," with any fleck of a 

            sneer in his voice or any faroff smile of derision. 


CHICAGO POEMS

UNDER A TELEPHONE POLE 73



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Page No 79


The mobthe crowdthe masswill arrive then. 

GOVERNMENT

THE GovernmentI heard about the Government and 

            I went out to find it. I said I would look closely at 

            it when I saw it. 

Then I saw a policeman dragging a drunken man to 

            the callaboose. It was the Government in action. 

I saw a ward alderman slip into an office one morning 

            and talk with a judge. Later in the day the judge 

            dismissed a case against a pickpocket who was a 

            live ward worker for the alderman. Again I saw 

            this was the Government, doing things. 

I saw militiamen level their rifles at a crowd of 

            workingmen who were trying to get other workingmen 

            to stay away from a shop where there was a strike 

            on. Government in action. 

Everywhere I saw that Government is a thing made of 

            men, that Government has blood and bones, it is 

            many mouths whispering into many ears, sending 

            telegrams, aiming rifles, writing orders, saying 

            "yes" and "no." 

Government dies as the men who form it die and are laid 

            away in their graves and the new Government that 

            comes after is human, made of heartbeats of blood, 

            ambitions, lusts, and money running through it all, 

            money paid and money taken, and money covered 

            up and spoken of with hushed voices. 

A Government is just as secret and mysterious and sensitive 

            as any human sinner carrying a load of germs, 

            traditions and corpuscles handed down from 

            fathers and mothers away back. 

LANGUAGES

THERE are no handles upon a language 

Whereby men take hold of it 


CHICAGO POEMS

GOVERNMENT 74



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Page No 80


And mark it with signs for its remembrance. 

It is a river, this language, 

Once in a thousand years 

Breaking a new course 

Changing its way to the ocean. 

It is mountain effluvia 

Moving to valleys 

And from nation to nation 

Crossing borders and mixing. 

Languages die like rivers. 

Words wrapped round your tongue today 

And broken to shape of thought 

Between your teeth and lips speaking 

Now and today 

Shall be faded hieroglyphics 

Ten thousand years from now. 

Singand singingremember 

Your song dies and changes 

And is not here tomorrow 

Any more than the wind 

Blowing ten thousand years ago. 

LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS

            EMILY DICKINSON: 

You gave us the bumble bee who has a soul, 

The everlasting traveler among the hollyhocks, 

And how God plays around a back yard garden. 

            STEVIE CRANE: 

War is kind and we never knew the kindness of war till 

                                 you came; 

Nor the black riders and clashes of spear and shield out 

                                 of the sea, 

Nor the mumblings and shots that rise from dreams on 

                                 call. 

SHEEP

            Thousands of sheep, softfooted, blacknosed sheep 


CHICAGO POEMS

LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS 75



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Page No 81


one by one going up the hill and over the fenceone by 

one fourfooted pattering up and overone by one wiggling 

their stub tails as they take the short jump and go 

overone by one silently unless for the multitudinous 

drumming of their hoofs as they move on and go over 

thousands and thousands of them in the grey haze of 

evening just after sundownone by one slanting in a 

long line to pass over the hill 

            I am the slow, longlegged Sleepyman and I love you 

sheep in Persia, California, Argentine, Australia, or 

Spainyou are the thoughts that help me when I, the 

Sleepyman, lay my hands on the eyelids of the children 

of the world at eight o'clock every nightyou thousands 

and thousands of sheep in a procession of dusk making 

an endless multitudinous drumming on the hills with 

your hoofs. 

THE RED SON

I LOVE your faces I saw the many years 

I drank your milk and filled my mouth 

With your home talk, slept in your house 

And was one of you. 

                                 But a fire burns in my heart. 

Under the ribs where pulses thud 

And flitting between bones of skull 

Is the push, the endless mysterious command, 

                                 Saying: 

"I leave you behind 

You for the little hills and the years all alike, 

You with your patient cows and old houses 

Protected from the rain, 

I am going away and I never come back to you; 

Crags and high rough places call me, 

Great places of death 

Where men go empty handed 

And pass over smiling 

To the stardrift on the horizon rim. 

My last whisper shall be alone, unknown; 

I shall go to the city and fight against it, 

And make it give me passwords 

Of luck and love, women worth dying for, 

And money. 

                                 I go where you wist not of 

                                 Nor I nor any man nor woman. 


CHICAGO POEMS

THE RED SON 76



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Page No 82


I only know I go to storms 

                                 Grappling against things wet and naked." 

There is no pity of it and no blame. 

None of us is in the wrong. 

After all it is only this: 

                                 You for the little hills and I go away. 

THE MIST

I AM the mist, the impalpable mist, 

Back of the thing you seek. 

My arms are long, 

Long as the reach of time and space. 

Some toil and toil, believing, 

Looking now and again on my face, 

Catching a vital, olden glory. 

But no one passes me, 

I tangle and snare them all. 

I am the cause of the Sphinx, 

The voiceless, baffled, patient Sphinx. 

I was at the first of things, 

I will be at the last. 

            I am the primal mist 

            And no man passes me; 

            My long impalpable arms 

            Bar them all. 

THE JUNK MAN

I AM glad God saw Death 

And gave Death a job taking care of all who are tired 

            of living: 

When all the wheels in a clock are worn and slow and 

            the connections loose 

And the clock goes on ticking and telling the wrong time 

            from hour to hour 


CHICAGO POEMS

THE MIST 77



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Page No 83


And people around the house joke about what a bum 

            clock it is, 

How glad the clock is when the big Junk Man drives 

            his wagon 

Up to the house and puts his arms around the clock and 

            says: 

                                 "You don't belong here, 

                                 You gotta come 

                                 Along with me," 

How glad the clock is then, when it feels the arms of the 

            Junk Man close around it and carry it away. 

SILVER NAILS

            A MAN was crucified. He came to the city a stranger, 

was accused, and nailed to a cross. He lingered hanging. 

Laughed at the crowd. "The nails are iron," he 

said, "You are cheap. In my country when we crucify 

we use silver nails. . ." So he went jeering. They 

did not understand him at first. Later they talked about 

him in changed voices in the saloons, bowling alleys, and 

churches. It came over them every man is crucified 

only once in his life and the law of humanity dictates 

silver nails be used for the job. A statue was erected 

to him in a public square. Not having gathered his 

name when he was among them, they wrote him as John 

Silvernail on the statue. 

GYPSY

I ASKED a gypsy pal 

To imitate an old image 

And speak old wisdom. 

She drew in her chin, 

Made her neck and head 

The top piece of a Nile obelisk 

            and said: 

Snatch off the gag from thy mouth, child, 

And be free to keep silence. 

Tell no man anything for no man listens, 


CHICAGO POEMS

SILVER NAILS 78



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Page No 84


Yet hold thy lips ready to speak. 

[End.] 


CHICAGO POEMS

SILVER NAILS 79



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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. CHICAGO POEMS, page = 7

   3. CARL SANDBURG, page = 7

4.  CHICAGO POEMS, page = 10

   5.  CHICAGO, page = 10

   6.  SKETCH, page = 11

   7.  MASSES, page = 12

   8.  LOST, page = 12

   9.  THE HARBOR, page = 13

   10.  THEY WILL SAY, page = 13

   11.  MILL-DOORS, page = 13

   12.  HALSTED STREET CAR, page = 14

   13.  CLARK STREET BRIDGE, page = 14

   14.  PASSERS-BY, page = 15

   15.  THE WALKING MAN OF RODIN, page = 16

   16.  SUBWAY, page = 16

   17.  THE SHOVEL MAN, page = 16

   18.  A TEAMSTER'S FAREWELL, page = 17

   19.  FISH CRIER, page = 17

   20.  PICNIC BOAT, page = 17

   21.  HAPPINESS, page = 18

   22.  MUCKERS, page = 18

   23.  BLACKLISTED, page = 19

   24.  GRACELAND, page = 19

   25.  CHILD OF THE ROMANS, page = 20

   26.  THE RIGHT TO GRIEF, page = 20

   27.  MAG, page = 21

   28.  ONION DAYS, page = 21

   29.  POPULATION DRIFTS, page = 22

   30.  CRIPPLE, page = 23

   31.  A FENCE, page = 23

   32.  ANNA IMROTH, page = 24

   33.  WORKING GIRLS, page = 24

   34.  MAMIE, page = 25

   35.  PERSONALITY, page = 25

   36.  CUMULATIVES, page = 26

   37.  TO CERTAIN JOURNEYMEN, page = 26

   38.  CHAMFORT, page = 27

   39.  LIMITED, page = 27

   40.  THE HAS-BEEN, page = 28

   41.  IN A BACK ALLEY, page = 28

   42.  A COIN, page = 28

   43.  DYNAMITER, page = 29

   44.  ICE HANDLER, page = 29

   45.  JACK, page = 30

   46.  FELLOW CITIZENS, page = 30

   47.  NIGGER, page = 31

   48.  TWO NEIGHBORS, page = 32

   49.  STYLE, page = 32

   50.  TO BEACHEY, 1912, page = 33

   51.  UNDER A HAT RIM, page = 33

   52.  IN A BREATH, page = 34

   53.  BATH, page = 34

   54.  BRONZES, page = 35

   55.  DUNES, page = 35

   56. ON THE WAY, page = 36

   57.  READY TO KILL, page = 36

   58.  TO A CONTEMPORARY BUNKSHOOTER, page = 37

   59.  SKYSCRAPER, page = 39

60.  HANDFULS, page = 41

   61.  FOG, page = 41

   62.  POOL, page = 42

   63.  JAN KUBELIK, page = 42

   64.  CHOOSE, page = 42

   65.  CRIMSON, page = 42

   66.  WHITELIGHT, page = 43

   67.  FLUX, page = 43

   68.  KIN, page = 43

   69.  WHITE SHOULDERS, page = 44

   70.  LOSSES, page = 44

   71.  TROTHS, page = 44

72.  WAR POEMS (1914-1915), page = 45

   73.  KILLERS, page = 45

   74.  AMONG THE RED GUNS, page = 45

   75.  IRON, page = 46

   76.  MURMURINGS IN A FIELD HOSPITAL, page = 47

   77.  STATISTICS, page = 47

   78.  FIGHT, page = 48

   79.  BUTTONS, page = 48

   80.  AND THEY OBEY, page = 49

   81.  JAWS, page = 49

   82.  SALVAGE, page = 50

   83.  WARS, page = 50

84.  THE ROAD AND THE END, page = 51

   85.  THE ROAD AND THE END, page = 51

   86.  CHOICES, page = 52

   87.  GRAVES, page = 52

   88.  AZTEC MASK, page = 53

   89.  MOMUS, page = 53

   90.  THE ANSWER, page = 54

   91.  TO A DEAD MAN, page = 55

   92.  UNDER, page = 55

   93.  A SPHINX, page = 56

   94.  WHO AM I?, page = 56

   95.  OUR PRAYER OF THANKS, page = 57

96.  FOGS AND FIRES, page = 57

   97.  AT A WINDOW, page = 57

   98.  UNDER THE HARVEST MOON, page = 58

   99.  THE GREAT HUNT, page = 59

   100.  MONOTONE, page = 59

   101.  JOY, page = 60

   102.  SHIRT, page = 60

   103.  AZTEC, page = 61

   104.  TWO, page = 61

   105.  BACK YARD, page = 61

   106.  ON THE BREAKWATER, page = 62

   107.  MASK, page = 62

   108.  PEARL FOG, page = 63

   109.  I SANG, page = 63

   110.  FOLLIES, page = 63

   111.  JUNE, page = 64

   112.  NOCTURNE IN A DESERTED BRICKYARD, page = 64

   113.  HYDRANGEAS, page = 64

   114.  THEME IN YELLOW, page = 65

   115.  BETWEEN TWO HILLS, page = 65

   116.  LAST ANSWERS, page = 66

   117.  WINDOW, page = 66

   118.  YOUNG SEA, page = 66

   119.  BONES, page = 67

   120.  PALS, page = 67

   121.  CHILD, page = 68

   122.  POPPIES, page = 68

   123.  CHILD MOON, page = 69

   124.  MARGARET, page = 69

125.  SHADOWS, page = 69

   126.  POEMS DONE ON A LATE NIGHT CAR, page = 69

   127.  IT IS MUCH, page = 70

   128.  TRAFFICKER, page = 71

   129.  HARRISON STREET COURT, page = 71

   130.  SOILED DOVE, page = 71

   131.  JUNGHEIMER'S, page = 72

   132.  GONE, page = 72

133.  OTHER DAYS (1900-1910), page = 73

   134.  DREAMS IN THE DUSK, page = 73

   135.  DOCKS, page = 73

   136.  ALL DAY LONG, page = 74

   137.  WAITING, page = 74

   138.  FROM THE SHORE, page = 75

   139.  UPLANDS IN MAY, page = 75

   140.  DREAM GIRL, page = 76

   141.  PLOWBOY, page = 76

   142.  BROADWAY, page = 77

   143.  OLD WOMAN, page = 77

   144.  NOON HOUR, page = 78

   145.  'BOES, page = 78

   146.  UNDER A TELEPHONE POLE, page = 79

   147.  I AM THE PEOPLE, THE MOB, page = 79

   148.  GOVERNMENT, page = 80

   149.  LANGUAGES, page = 80

   150.  LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS, page = 81

   151.  SHEEP, page = 81

   152.  THE RED SON, page = 82

   153.  THE MIST, page = 83

   154.  THE JUNK MAN, page = 83

   155.  SILVER NAILS, page = 84

   156.  GYPSY, page = 84