They were the fair-haired Achaeans, Who won the Trojan war; They were the Vikings who sailed to Iceland And America. They became the bone of England, And the fire of Normandy, And the will of Holland and Germany, And the builders of America. Their blood flowed into the veins of David, And the veins of Jesus, Homer and AEschylos, Dante and Michael Angelo, Alexander and Caesar, William of Orange and Washington. They sang the songs, They won the wars. They were chosen for might in battle; For blue eyes and white flesh, For clean blood, for strength, for class. They went to the wars And left the little breeds To stay with the women, Trading and plowing. They perished in battle All the way along the stretch of centuries, And left the little breeds to possess the earth -- The Great Race is passing. They went forth to free peoples, White and black. They fought for their own freedom, And perished. They founded America, And perished -- The Great Race is passing. On State street throngs crowd and push, Wriggle and writhe like maggots. Their noses are flat, Their faces are broad, Their heads are like gourds, Their eyes are dull, Their mouths are open -- The Great Race is passing. The meek shall inherit the earth: Crackers and negroes in the South, Methodists and prohibitionists, Mongrels and pigmies Possess the land. A president sits in a wheel chair Sick from the fumes of his own idle dreams -- The Great Race is passing. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE INDIAN SERENADE by PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY WHEN by SARAH CHAUNCEY WOOLSEY A CHRISTMAS HYMN by CECIL FRANCES ALEXANDER A SUMMER NIGHT by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS THE RAJPOOT WIFE by EDWIN ARNOLD MANDRAKE'S SONG; FRAGMENT by THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES RED COTTON NIGHT-CAP COUNTRY; OR, TURF AND TOWERS: PART 4 by ROBERT BROWNING |