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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Harriet Monroe

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

Mother Earth

Harriet Monroe

OH a grand old time has the earth

In the long long life she lives!

From her huge mist-shrouded birth,

When reeling from under

She tore space asunder,

And feeling her way

Through the dim first day

Rose wheeling to run

In the path of the sun—

From then till forever,

Tiring not, pausing never,

She labors and laughs and gives.

Plains and mountains

She slowly makes,

With mighty hand

Sifting the sand,

Lifting the land

Out of the soft wet clutch of the shouting sea.

At lofty fountains

Her thirst she slakes,

And over the hills

Through the dancing rills

Wide rivers she fills,

That shine and sing and leap in their joy to be free.

Cool greenness she needs

And rich odor of bloom;

And longing, believing,

Slowly conceiving,

Her germ-woof weaving,

She spawns little seeds

By the wombful, the worldful,

And laughs as the pattern grows fair at her loom.

Proudly she trails

Her flower-broidered dresses

In the sight of the sun.

Loudly she hails

Through her far-streaming tresses

His coursers that run.

For her heart, ever living, grows eager for life,

Its delight and desire;

She feels the high praise of its passion and strife,

Of its rapture and fire.

There are wings and songs in her trees,

There are gleaming fish in her seas;

The brute beasts brave her

And gnaw her and crave her;

And out of the heart of these

She wrests a dream, a hope,

An arrogant plan

Of life that shall meet her,

Shall know and complete her,

That through ages shall climb and grope,

And at last be man.

Out of the bitter void she wins him—

Out of the night;

With terror and wild hope begins him,

And fierce delight.

She beats him into caves,

She starves and spurns him.

Her hills and plains are graves—

Into dust she turns him.

She teaches him war and wrath

And waste and lust and greed,

Then over his blood-red path

She scatters her fruitful seed.

With bloom of a thousand flowers,

With songs of the summer hours,

With the love of the wind for the tree,

With the dance of the sun on the sea,

She lulls and quells him—

Oh soft her caress!

And tenderly tells him

Of happiness.

Through her ages of years,

Through his toil and his tears,

At her wayward pleasure

She yields of her treasure

A gleam—yea, a hope,

Even a day of days,

When the wide heavens ope

And he loves and prays;

Then she laughs in wonder

To see him rise

Her leash from under

And brave the skies!

Oh a grand old time has the earth

In the long long life she lives!

A grand old time at her work sublime

As she labors and laughs and gives!