12 Aug: "American Names" by Stephen Vincent Benet

American Names
I have fallen in love with American names,
The sharp names that never get fat,
The snakeskin-titles of mining-claims,
The plumed war-bonnet of Medicine Hat,
Tucson and Deadwood and Lost Mule Flat.

Seine and Piave are silver spoons,
But the spoonbowl-metal is thin and worn,
There are English counties like hunting-tunes
Played on the keys of a postboy's horn,
But I will remember where I was born.

I will remember Carquinez Straits,
Little French Lick and Lundy's Lane,
The Yankee ships and the Yankee dates
And the bullet-towns of Calamity Jane.
I will remember Skunktown Plain.

I will fall in love with a Salem tree
And a rawhide quirt from Santa Cruz,
I will get me a bottle of Boston sea
And a blue-gum nigger to sing me blues.
I am tired of loving a foreign muse.

Rue des Martyrs and Bleeding-Heart-Yard,
Senlis, Pisa, and Blindman's Oast,
It is a magic ghost you guard
But I am sick for a newer ghost,
Harrisburg, Spartanburg, Painted Post.

Henry and John were never so
And Henry and John were always right?
Granted, but when it was time to go
And the tea and the laurels had stood all night,
Did they never watch for Nantucket Light?

I shall not rest quiet in Montparnasse.
I shall not lie easy at Winchelsea.
You may bury my body in Sussex grass,
You may bury my tongue at Champmedy.
I shall not be there. I shall rise and pass.
Bury my heart at Wounded Knee. 

1 comment:

  1. Hiding something of remembrance to a more present indulgence...the roots of American names always come from somewhere else (besides Native American tongue), but yet the credit and majesty of these words is given to the present experience of these words in these places. As I researched more about the reference to Wounded Knee- it was the author Dee Brown who took this title for his book on from the author of this poem, not the other way around. Wounded Knee Battlefield is located on the Lakota Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota and was the location of the massacre of 150-3000 Lakota Indians and 39 US Army men in 1890. Benet was the son of a colonel in the US Army in the early 1900's which may explain his traveling to all of these places and interest in learning about them. A lot of the references seem brought to America by foreign parties, but his interest seems in exploring what they are now in America...what they have become.

    I wish that unanimous post would have asked about figures of speech on this one- we would have had to have you tackle that one....

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