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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Harriet Monroe

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

Our Canal

Harriet Monroe

In lazy laughing Panama

O flutter of ribbon ’twixt the seas!

The low-roofed houses lie afloat,

White foam-drift of the Caribbees.

Under lithe palms that fan the sky

Down in each drowsy plaza there

Brown-footed girls go glancing by

With red hibiscus in their hair.

Low mountains, trailing veils of cloud,

In the two oceans dip their feet,

And hear the proud tides roaring loud

Where Andes with Sierras meet.

O Panama! O ribbon-twist

That ties the continents together,

Now East and West shall slip your tether

And keep their ancient tryst.

What are you doing here,

Young men, with your engines vast?

Sons of the pioneer

Who conquered wastes austere

And from ocean to ocean passed;

Sons of the men who made

Reaper and telegraph,

Steamer and aeroplane—

All the iron-handed things,

Swift feet and ears and wings,

That would make the old gods laugh

For the bitter games they played

With the secrets they kept in vain:

What are you doing here,

Young men, with your dredges and drills

That level the ancient hills

Into a path for ships?

Open your eyes and lips—

What do you see and hear?

“Oh, we build you the world’s last wonder,

The thing not made with hands.

Our steel beasts gnaw asunder

The locked and laboring lands.

We choke the torrent’s rage

And bid him his wrath assuage

By drowning the jungle deep.

In steel-locked chambers gray

We hold his floods at bay,

On wide blue lakes asleep.

Now shall the brave ships ride

Over the crouching hill

From eager tide to tide,

That so we may fulfil

The iron century’s will;

That so our country, maker of tools sublime,

The nations may surprise

With this last gift of the grand old workman, Time;

His prodigy powerful, delicate, sentient, wise,

Perfect in strange completeness, strong to obey,

Strong to compel the world along its way

And praise man’s triumph in its mighty rhyme.”

But what are you doing here,

Young men, with your flags?—

With your glamor of joy severe

In the labor that never lags?

With your villages up the hill,

The screened little houses gay,

Where the good of all is the will

Of each in a grand new way?

Sons of the men who founded

New states in the wilds, to be

Garden and range unbounded

For young Democracy;

Sons of the heroes dear

Who fought for liberty,

What are you doing here?

“Look, it’s the same old fight

Out of the dark to the light;

Never the end shall be

Till the last slave is free!

Here while we dig the Ditch

We would build you a perfect state,

Where service makes men great

And the great scorn to be rich;

Where each one has his place

And a measure more than his mead—

A banner of joy to grace

The strength of the daily deed;

Where wan Disease, the slayer,

Is trapped in his poison lair

With Squalor and Want and Care;

Where the Work is a marching song

Sung by us all together,

Bearing the race along

Through good and evil weather.

Oh tell them, shout it through the halls of time!—

When the Big Chief unrolls his glorious plan,

Draws hearts and hands together in perfect rhyme,

Nothing shall be impossible to Man!”

But what are you doing here,

Young men, with your gates?—

With your bells and beacons clear

Where the hope of the whole world waits?

With your call across the seas

To the ships that circle afar,

To the nations that burn and freeze

Each under her separate star?

Sons of the dreamers brave

Who followed the Truth austere,

Of poets and prophets grave—

What are you doing here?

“Hush! we wait at the gate

Till the dream shall be the law,

He gave us our beacons and bells

Who first the vision saw,

And the fleets of the world in state

Shall follow his caravels.

Ghost-led, our ships shall sail

West to the ancient East.

Once more the quest of the Grail,

And the greatest shall be the least.

We shall circle the earth around

With peace like a garland fine;

The warring world shall be bound

With a girdle of love divine.

What build we from coast to coast?

’Tis a path for the Holy Ghost.

Oh Tomorrow and Yesterday

At its gate clasp hands, touch lips;

They shall send men forth in ships

To find the perfect way.

“All that was writ shall be fulfilled at last.

Come—till we round the circle, end the story.

The west-bound sun leads forward to the past

The thundering cruisers and the caravels.

Tomorrow you shall hear our song of glory

Rung in the chime of India’s temple bells.”

O lazy laughing Panama!

O flutter of ribbon ’twixt the seas!

Pirate and king your colors wore

And stained with blood your golden keys.

Now what strange guest, on what mad quest,

Lifts up your trophy to the breeze!

O Panama, O ribbon-twist

That ties the continents together,

Now East and West shall slip your tether

And keep their ancient tryst.

To COLONEL GOETHALS
and the other laborers
in the Canal Zone