I—MY FATHERS CAME FROM KENTUCKY

I was born in Illinois,—

Have lived there many days.

And I have Northern words,

And thoughts,

And ways.

But my great grandfathers came

To the west with Daniel Boone,

And taught his babes to read,

And heard the red-bird’s tune;

And heard the turkey’s call,

And stilled the panther’s cry,

And rolled on the blue-grass hills,

And looked God in the eye.

And feud and Hell were theirs;

Love, like the moon’s desire,

Love like a burning mine,

Love like rifle-fire.

I tell tales out of school

Till these Yankees hate my style.

Why should the young cad cry,

Shout with joy for a mile?

Why do I faint with love

Till the prairies dip and reel?

My heart is a kicking horse

Shod with Kentucky steel.

No drop of my blood from north

Of Mason and Dixon’s line.

And this racer in my breast

Tears my ribs for a sign.

But I ran in Kentucky hills

Last week. They were hearth and home....

And the church at Grassy Springs,

Under the red-bird’s wings

Was peace and honeycomb.