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Fire Dreams

(Written to be read aloud, if so be, Thanksgiving Day)

I REMEMBER here by the fire,  
In the flickering reds and saffrons,  
They came in a ramshackle tub,  
Pilgrims in tall hats,  
Pilgrims of iron jaws,           5
Drifting by weeks on beaten seas,  
And the random chapters say  
They were glad and sang to God.  
 
And so  
Since the iron-jawed men sat down        
And said, “Thanks, O God,”  
For life and soup and a little less  
Than a hobo handout to-day,  
Since gray winds blew gray patterns of sleet on Plymouth Rock,  
Since the iron-jawed men sang “Thanks, O God,”        
You and I, O Child of the West,  
Remember more than ever  
November and the hunter’s moon,  
November and the yellow-spotted hills.  
 
And so        
In the name of the iron-jawed men  
I will stand up and say yes till the finish is come and gone.  
God of all broken hearts, empty hands, sleeping soldiers,  
God of all star-flung beaches of night sky,  
I and my love-child stand up together to-day and sing: “Thanks, O God.”

Cornhuskers. 1918.

#AmericanWriters

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