The Occident and the Orient, posterior and posterior, sitting tight, holding fast the culture dumped by them onto primitive America, Atlantic to Pacific, were monumental colophons a disorderly country fellow, vulgar Long Islander, not overfond of the stench choking native respiration, poked down off the shelf with the aid of some mere blades of grass; and deliberately climbing up, brazenly usurping one end of the new America, now waves his spears aloft and shouts down valleys, across plains, over mountains, into heights: Come, what man of you dares climb the other? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ABOU BEN ADHEM by JAMES HENRY LEIGH HUNT THE WIND AND THE MOON by GEORGE MACDONALD WORDLY WISE (10) by MOTHER GOOSE THE WHITE BIRDS by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS ALEC YEATON'S SON; GLOUCESTER, AUGUST, 1720 by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH TWO THINGS by AMIR MAHMUD IBN AMIR YAMINU'D-DIN TUGHRA'I PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 52. YA HAKK by EDWIN ARNOLD |