In a book that’s 120 years old published by a company that is no longer in business, written by a man about whom I never otherwise would have heard, is an incredible poem about the Fourth of July.
Because this guy said it much better than I can (and because the copyright has expired), I decided to let you hear from him today.
First a word of explanation about the poem: It was written, of course, in the 19th century, when ideas were expressed with more complexity (and when fireworks were a lot more fun and a lot more dangerous). Thus, the line about the noisy fireworks making tempting one to “philogical sin” means the noise makes some people want to cuss. And, of course, the word “natal” refers to birth.
First, the thought for the day: In our attempt to limit fireworks in Iowa to those considered “safe,” why did the Iowa Legislature determine that the only “safe” fireworks (sparklers) are the ones made for children to hold in their hands?
Our Natal Day
by Will Carleton
Oh, the Fourth of July!
When fire-crackers fly,
And urchins in petticoats tyrants defy
When all the still air
Creeps away in despair
And clamor is king,
Be the day dark or fair!
When freedom’s red flowers
Fall in star-spangled showers
And liberty capers for
Twenty-four hours
When the morn’s ushered in
By a sleep-crushing din
That tempts us to use
Philological sin
When the forenoon advances
With large circumstances
Subjecting our lives
To debatable chances
When the soldiers of peace
Their attractions increase
By marching, protected
With clubs of police
When the little toy gun
Has its share of the fun
By teaching short-hand
To the favorite son.
Oh, the Fourth of July!
When grand souls hover nigh!
When Washington bends
From the honest blue sky!
When Jefferson stands — Famous scribe of all lands —
The charter of heaven in his glorified hands!
When his comrade, strong, high,
John Adams-comes nigh,
(For both went to their rest the same Fourth of July!)
When Franklin-grand, droll That could lightnings control,
Comes here with his sturdy, progressive old soul;
When freedom's strong staff Hancock-with a laugh,
Writes in memory's album his huge autograph!
But let thought have its way
And give memory sway;
Do we think of the cost of this glorified day?
While the harvest-field waves,
Do we think of those braves
In the farms thickly planted with thousands of graves?
How the great flag up there,
Clean and pure as the air,
Has been drabbled with blood-drops, and trailed in despair?
Do we know what a land
God hath placed in our hand,
To be made into star-gems, or crushed into sand?
Let us feel that our race,
Doomed to no second place,
Must glitter with triumph, or die in disgrace
That millions unborn,
At night, noon, and morn,
Will thank us with blessings, or curse us with scorn,
For raising more high
Freedom's flag to the sky,
Or losing forever the Fourth of July!
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