Thursday, February 3, 2022

Now Is Our Hour

 By Samantha Bonk

Poets sing their songs

That have written history

For our American Country

As it developed,

Unfold,

Became the superpower

After trails took toll on our nation.

 

Yet forgotten they are

Because names and dates defeat them

In the classroom

But not today.

Today let me explain history

In the eyes of our poets.

 

It was April 18th of seventy-five,

When ‘pon midnight did ride

Our famous Paul Revere.

He rode through the streets

Trying to beat the Redcoats

Around the bend, calling to arms

Our American men![1]

 

See, Henry Wadsworth

Wrote of Paul Revere

And his poem persevered

Because without,

Revere would never appear

In our history books at all.

 

While there is a song

That is not too long,

You sing at each game,

Each inauguration

In our States.

This is the song

Of “the land of the free

And the home of the brave”[2]

Where the Star-Spangled Banner does wave.

This is our Anthem

Which came from the poem by

Mr. Scott Keys called

“Defense of Fort M’Henry”.

For without,

What would we sing?

 

And when independence was won,

Patriotism sprung

As Walt Whitman claims

“He hears America singing…

Each singing what belongs

To him or her and none else”[3]

For America is free.

 This a cause for celebration,

One we take for granted now

Because hotdogs and fireworks

Only last so long

And our country’s a powerhouse now

So freedom is something we need not gain

For the pain of oppression is forgotten today.

 

But then, that was not the case,

As slavery reigned

And brought just pain

And heartbreak for the white man’s gain,

Yet slaves are poets too,

Their life sheds truth on their abuse.

They scream

“the influence of slaveholding power,

Like a dark cloud of vengeance

does over them lore,

And from it a poison most deadly distills,

And freedom’s best lifeblood,

it stagnates and chills.”[4]

 

But as pain is brought forth

On paper, in words

Liberation does push

Towards the light

As South and North divide

While each poem revives

A feeling of hope

For our soldiers to fight

For freedom and rights.

As Whitman writes

“Drum Taps”

Explaining what the Civil War

Meant to those who

Tapped out lights

And as his poem grow

To the public eyes

More rise to fight.

 

And as our “poet fueled war”[5]

Came to a close

And Lincoln’s quill rose

Reconstruction imposed,

As equality is gained

Yet unsustained

As Jim Crow Laws and segregation arose

And will not close.

Still Ms. Walker spreads

A message of hope

For equality and peace

“For [her] People”[6] and our country.

 

While as Industrialization climbed,

Smog rised.

Dickinson writes

Banish Air From Air,

Which shared the importance of nature

Which then was impaired,

As cities grew

And the sun who

Once had shown

Is unknown to dweller’s eyes,

So this poem inspired reform

To once again feel

The warmth of the Sun.

 

Sun, which shone on

A new life for many

As immigrants climbed into ships

Inspired by our lady

Who on her base cries,

“Give me your tired, your poor,

your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

The wretched refuse of your teeming shores.

Send these, the homeless, tempest tost to me,

I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”[7]

 

This poem, The New Colossus

Brought to us by Ms. Lazarus

Is the reason cities teemed

With laborers working hard,

Sweat streaming

As their feats are unnoticed by companies

But still, they have hope

Inspired by “the light beside the golden door.”

 

And in celebration Sandburg writes

Of our city,

The good and the bad of our

“Hog Butcher of the World,

Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,

Player with Railroads and the Nation’s Freight Handler;

Stormy, husky, brawling,

City of Big Shoulders”[8]

 

This poem brought overwhelming

Pride for our Chicago city

Just before World War I

As it grew to new heights

While our country turns all its might

To the growing war overseas,

Where the “Anthem for Doomed Youth”

Springs to our country

As it sings,

“Only the monstrous anger of the guns,

Only the stuttering rifles rapid rattle”[9]

Patters overseas.

 

And this Anthem pulls on our heartstrings

So, our money flings

To the military

And our neutrality swings to

Selling submarines,

 food,

weapons,

anything

to the Allied Powers overseas.

 

So when the draft hits,

And men are shipped across sea

They sing,

“Send the word,

Send the word over there,

That the Yanks are coming,

The Yanks are coming

The drums rum-tumming ev’rywhere.”[10]

And patriotism springs

As they sing their song,

And women rush to fill in jobs

In factories

For their country.

 

Yet when the war is won,

Europe is left in disarray

Completely dismayed

From the shower of firepower,

But America flowers

For now is our hour

Because America’s a Superpower.


[1]From Longfellow, H. W. (1860). Paul Revere's Ride.

[2] From Keys, F. S. (1814). Defense of Fort M'Henry.

 [3] From Whitman, W. (1860). I Hear America Singing.

 [4] From L.L. (1844). A family escaping from slavery.

[5] Wilson, E. (2012, November 13). A "Poetry-Fueled War" (Interview by R. Graham). Poetry Foundation. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/69877/a-poetry-fueled-war

 [6] This poem was originally named “For My People” by Maraget Walker explaining the hardships African Americans faced during this time period.

[7] Lazarus, E. (1883). The New Colossus.

[8] Sandburg, C. (1914). Chicago.

[9] Owen, W. (1920). Anthem for Doomed Youth.

[10] Send the Word Over There [Video]. (n.d.). YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6hRDS3LvQQ

 

About the Author
Samantha Bonk is a senior at Metamora Township High School enrolled in ICC dual credit courses. Apart from writing poetry, she enjoys playing her double bass and classical guitar. Sammy is fond of traversing across the country and hopes to visit all fifty states. 

 

 

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