Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Arizona
By Joaquin Miller (18371913)(From The Ship in the Desert)
T
So strewn with wealth, so sown with gold!
Yes, thou art old and hoary white
With time, and ruin of all things;
And on thy lonesome borders night
Sits brooding o’er with drooping wings.
Across thy breast the flowing sail,
And cheered the hearts of cheering crew
From further seas, no more prevail.
With but a pyramid, a stone,
Set head and foot in sands to tell
The tired stranger where they fell.
His neck, and drew slow up and down
Thy thousand freights through rock-built town,
Is now the free-born buffalo.
The mountain sheep leaps free and bold
His high-built summit, and looks down
From battlements of buried town.
They lord the land, they come, they go
At will; they laugh at man, they blow
A cloud of black steeds on the plain.
The ashes whiten on thy brow,
The winds, the waves have drawn away,
The very wild man dreads to stay.
Made dumb with awe and wonderment,
Beneath a palm within my tent,
With idle and discouraged hands,
Not many days agone, on sands
Of awful, silent Africa.
I did recall a semblance there
Of thee. I mused where story fades
From her dark brow and found her fair.
Was populous with blowing sail.
And set with city, white-walled town,
All manned with armies bright with mail,
Ere yet that awful Sphinx sat down
To gaze into eternity,
Or Egypt knew her natal hour,
Or Africa had name or power.