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Subject: CHEROKEE INDIANS
Matches Found: 30

UPDATE command denied to user 'poetryex_users'@'localhost' for table `poetryex_poems`.`subcnt` 1 THE EAGLE WARRIOR: AN INVOCATION, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: This life-size ceramic man costumed as an eagle
Last Line: Tense-taloned, %be their emblem, be their witness, be their scribe
Variant Title(s): The Eagle Warrior: An Invocatio
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


2 THE CHEROKEE LOTTERY, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: When the cherokees refused to leave
Last Line: The thunder rolled away, %and no rain fell
Variant Title(s): The Cherokee Lotter
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


3 THE TRAIL, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Past corn
Last Line: Tear %trail
Variant Title(s): The Trai
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


4 THE PUMPKIN FIELD, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: What a grand lot they were
Last Line: And glowing still when I awoke-- %as they do now, and as they always will
Variant Title(s): The Pumpkin Fiel
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Politics; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


5 THE BONE-PICKER, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: In the old days, when a choctaw died
Last Line: And in my heart I feel his claw, %and on the wind I hear his wail
Variant Title(s): The Buzzard Ma
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


6 THE PLAYERS, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: A curtain of green divides--and there they are
Last Line: There will be no surrender, general. There will be no peace; %only the murderer who waits, only the
Variant Title(s): The Player
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


7 SITTING BULL IN SERBIA, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: A hundred years ago, they say, buffalo bill
Last Line: Plunge down the western sky %headlong into the night
Variant Title(s): Sitting Bull In Serbi
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


ARTIST AND HIS PENCIL: A SEARCH FOR THE PUREBLOODS, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Sixty-three indian tribes were represented in oklahoma - all
Last Line: Each one, each untouched tribe, recorded in a never-ending moment, %distinct and clear
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


AT THE THEATER: THE DEATH OF OSCEOLA, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH            Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: The theater was packed, and just before the curtain rose
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Native Americans - Removal


AT THE THEATER: THE DEATH OF OSCEOLA, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: The theater was packed, and just before the curtain rose
Last Line: Osceola's head, along with the others in the doctor's cabinet, %went up in flames
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


BUFFALO HUNTER, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Nothing moved in this great emptiness
Last Line: To join him for his european tour
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


BURNING OF MALMAISON, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: On a brisk cool evening when the wind
Last Line: All that was left: this small blue stain
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Politics; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


CHOCTAW STICK-BALL GAME, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: During a period of several sunsets, by the cleansing
Last Line: That ball game that the tribe had called %'little brother to war'
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


CROSSING, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: That winter the southern land had all the contours
Last Line: Into the throat of the beast
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


DEATH CRY FOR THE LANGUAGE, by DIANE GLANCY    Poem Source                    
First Line: Grandmother %tuya:taht'a branches at the top
Last Line: The narrow passages from this world
Subject(s): Ancestors And Ancestry; Cherokee Indians; Native Americans - History; Native Americans - Wars; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


FULL CIRCLE: THE CONNECTICUT CASINO, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH            Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: O / o / o the first full moon of the year 2000
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Native Americans - Removal


FULL CIRCLE: THE CONNECTICUT CASINO, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: O %o %o the first full moon of the year 2000
Last Line: And where all races live together %in lasting peace and perfect harmony
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


IV THE TALKING LEAVES: SEQUOYAH'S ALPHABET, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Alone for hours on end, he meditated on his mission
Last Line: Yet climbs the mountainside to touch the stars
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


IX CHRISTMAS IN WASHINGTON WITH THE CHOCTAW CHIEF, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Pushmataha, the great choctaw chief, arrived in washington
Last Line: Of the modern boundary between arkansas and oklahoma
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


JOURNEY TO THE INTERIOR, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: He has gone into the forest
Last Line: And every road leads on within %and none leads out
Subject(s): Aids (disease); Cherokee Indians; Sickness; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


LANGUAGE OF ENDANGERMENT, by VICTORIA LENA MANYARROWS    Poem Source                    
Last Line: Threatens us no more
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Language; Tongues; Writing And Writers


NATIVE AMERICAN BROADCASTING SYSTEM, by SHERMAN ALEXIE    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Five hundred years from now, archaeologists will discover
Last Line: The grasses grow %the rivers flow
Subject(s): Alcoholics And Alcoholism; Cherokee Indians; Greyhounds; Native Americans - History; Native Americans - Wars; Nuclear War; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Travel


OLD CHEROKEE WOMAN'S SONG, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Full Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: They have taken my land
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Native Americans - Removal


OLD CHEROKEE WOMAN'S SONG, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: They have taken my land
Last Line: Beyond the red water
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


PRAIRIE CHICKEN, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Full Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: Look at him there in that prairie dirt
Last Line: He looks for another prairie chicken
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Native Americans - Removal


SONG OF THE DISPOSSESSED, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Source         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: You came across the water, %like gods you walked ashore
Last Line: That robbed us of our country %and carried off our dreams
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39)


THE BURNING OF MALMAISON, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Full Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: On a brisk cool evening when the wind
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Politics & Government; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Native Americans - Removal


THE CHEROKEE, by MARY WESTON FORDHAM    Poem Text                    
First Line: Twas a cloudless morn and the sun shone bright
Last Line: He said, then calmly died.
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians


THE CROSSING, by WILLIAM JAY SMITH    Poem Full Text         Poet Analysis             Poet's Biography
First Line: That winter the southern land had all the contours
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Trail Of Tears (1838-39); Native Americans - Removal


TO A WILD ROSE ON A INDIAN GRAVE, by JOHN TROTWOOD MOORE    Poem Text                     Poet's Biography
First Line: In the pasture where the grasses are the first to / herald spring
Last Line: The good shall live forever, and the pure shall never die.
Subject(s): Cherokee Indians; Flowers; Legends; Roses