"Sweet are the blooming cheeks of the living,Note the succession of vowel sounds varying with every line, yet each group so perfect in itself and so completely in unison with its burden of sentiment. And that delightful break in the third line; and the weird utter close! A bit like that may be carried in one's head for a life-time and lose nothing of its pleasure-giving power.
Sweet are the musical voices sounding,
But sweet— ah, sweet!—
Are the eyes of the silent dead."
"With the Continental blood interveined."The stately march of the big Latin words at their best is not often made so obvious. They are apt in other handling to become pompous; and then they are not poetry.
"Saw from the deep what arose and mounted,—And sometimes he strikes upon a refrain that is as grand and spirit-stirring as the noblest martial music:—
Oh, wild as my heart and resistless!"
"Have the elder races halted,The dragging dullness of the first three lines is admirably contrived to give full effect to the startling vigor of the closing invocation. Though by nature and association something of a conservative, I am half tempted to become a radical (at some more convenient season) on the strength of that same.
Wearied,
Over there beyond the seas?
We take up the task eternal,
And the labor and the lesson,
Pioneers, O Pioneers!"
"Silent, upon her dead gazing,But I think I have given citations enough to make good my assertion that the barbaric yawp keeps very good time to music. Whether the lines will bear the test of school-boy scanning is not the question at issue. But the most careless observer must see that the poet does not always ignore even mere conventionalities.
I viewed the mother of all."
"I believe there is nothing in the universeAnd who has ever more succinctly presented the gap between mere information and soul-satisfying knowledge than he who left the learned man to weigh and name the hosts of heaven, while his late auditor
That has not an immortal soul."
"A doubt crawled before me,
Undulating like a snake."
"Walked forth in the mystical moist night airBut perhaps he is at his very best in dealing with merely human topics, and modern ones at that. Of all the literature brought into being by the battle of the Little Big Horn, I know nothing comparable to those simple lines, straightforward as a sword thrust, which tell the story of
And looked up in perfect silence at the stars"?
"The cavalry companies fighting with sternestAnd when he rises to the peroration beginning with
coolest heroism,
The fall of Custer and of all his officers and men."
"The grand tradition of our race,he is very nearly on a par with the best parts of the Commemoration Ode. But a few lines cited from so condensed a poem can give no adequate idea of it.
The loftiest of life upheld by death,"
"The tremulous twinkle of thy wheels"?What is prettier than
"Thy long-trailing vapor pennants,Where can you find such a union of mechanical accuracy with poetic power as
Ending in delicate purple"?
"Thee in thy panoply,It is treading on delicate ground; but how well he treads! And his final address to his subject as the
Thy measured dual throbbing
And thy beat convulsive"?
"Type of the moderncertainly does not lack strength.
Pulse of the continent"