CHICKAMAUGA LAKE

Where farmers’ cattle grazed on pasture lands,

The fishes feed; the clumsy turtles swim

Where once the corn crops grew; the frog expands

His throat, proud of the pleasure given him;

This lake now slips its fingertips between

A hundred little pebbled hills, and all

Are dressed in tender grass and leaves of green,

With here and there an islet like a ball

Half sunken in a pool, yet floating on

To reach some distant shore. The swallows swing

Their airplanes down and wet their beaks at dawn,

And men awake to hear the thrushes sing.

When day grows old and sun is westward bound,

They stretch the shadowed trees across the lake,

And duck and loon and gull and teal have found

A place which fishermen will not forsake;

And when the moon receives its silvered crown,

The waters, like magicians, reach into

The sky and pull the stars and planets down

Without their heat, void of the distant blue;

Then leave them floating in their watered graves,

And as the boat speeds on, the pilot sees

Amidst the rippled and discordant waves,

Reflections broken by realities.

This latent power decrees that through the years

The form of woman shall remain unbowed

By household toil which warped the pioneers

Who slaved as sweaty beasts while farmers plowed

And tilled the soil; that men shall play as well

As work, and know what rest from labor means;

That love of beauty in the heart shall tell

That eyes are never blind to Nature’s scenes.

If Chickamauga means in Cherokee

A sluggish stream, this dam revives the dead,

Electrifies the soul of Tennessee,

And gives to industry a potent head.