Carl Sandburg

Memoir

PAPA JOFFRE, the shoulders of him wide as the land of France.  

We look on the shoulders filling the stage of the Chicago Auditorium.  

A fat mayor has spoken much English and the mud of his speech is crossed with quicksilver hisses elusive and rapid from floor and gallery.  

A neat governor speaks English and the listeners ring chimes to his clear thoughts.  

Joffre speaks a few words in French; this is a voice of the long firing line that runs from the salt sea dunes of Flanders to the white spear crags of the Swiss mountains.           5

This is the man on whose yes and no has hung the death of battalions and brigades; this man speaks of the tricolor of his country now melted in a great resolve with the starred bunting of Lincoln and Washington.  

This is the hero of the Marne, massive, irreckonable; he lets tears roll down his cheek; they trickle a wet salt off his chin onto the blue coat.  

There is a play of American hands and voices equal to sea-breakers and a lift of white sun on a stony beach.

Cornhuskers. 1918.

#AmericanWriters

Other works by Carl Sandburg...



Top