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Home  »  Chicago Poems  »  125. Docks

Carl Sandburg (1878–1967). Chicago Poems. 1916.

125. Docks

STROLLING along

By the teeming docks,

I watch the ships put out.

Black ships that heave and lunge

And move like mastodons

Arising from lethargic sleep.

The fathomed harbor

Calls them not nor dares

Them to a strain of action,

But outward, on and outward,

Sounding low-reverberating calls,

Shaggy in the half-lit distance,

They pass the pointed headland,

View the wide, far-lifting wilderness

And leap with cumulative speed

To test the challenge of the sea.

Plunging,

Doggedly onward plunging,

Into salt and mist and foam and sun.