If I told you that in this house with boarded windows, where doors gape stupidly, where grey wallpaper twists away from the plaster like the whorls of a dead brain -- If I told you that in this house there lived Solomon Carney; that he built the fireplace with a trowel and a hammer and his two hands; that John and Rebecca died here of smallpox in the year when the doctor was held at Beulah, twenty miles away; or about the last son, Amos, who cleared the back fields and married in time and was crushed in the first steam thresher; and about his children that moved West (O the slow bleeding of the soil) If I told you this it would mean as much to you as an entry in a second-hand Bible -- no more. And yet the Rome of Edward Gibbon, seven volumes of print, cast in eight point solid with footnotes, contains nothing more than this. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE NEED FOR MEN by JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND ENVOY, TO 'MORE SONGS FROM VAGABONDIA' by RICHARD HOVEY SHE LOOKS BEYOND TO-MORROW by RUTH FITCH BARTLETT THE PHOENIX by ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON SONG IN THE NIGHT by OTTO JULIUS BIERBAUM A DIALOGUE BETWEEN HOM-VEG AND BALLURE'S RIVER by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN |