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Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

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Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg



Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

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I was born on the prairie and the milk of its wheat, the red of its clover, the eyes of its women, gave me a song and a slogan. Here the water went down, the icebergs slid with gravel, the gaps and the valleys hissed, and the black loam came, and the yellow sandy loam.

Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2718530 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-06-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .22" w x 6.00" l, .31 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 96 pages
Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

About the Author CARL SANDBURG (1878 1967) was twice awarded the Pulitzer Prize, first in 1940 for his biography of Abraham Lincoln and again in 1951 for Complete Poems. Before becoming known as a poet, he worked as a milkman, an ice harvester, a dishwasher, a salesman, a fireman, and a journalist. Among his classics are the Rootabaga Stories, which he wrote for his young daughters at the beginning of his long and distinguished literary career.


Cornhuskers, by Carl Sandburg

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. "The Old Things Go, Not One Lasts" By The Wingchair Critic The single edition of 'Cornhuskers' (1918) is further evidence that Carl Sandburg's work is best served by 'The Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg,' the most recent edition of which was published in 2003.While the propagandistic 'Chicago Poem' (1916) focused mainly on the plight of the urban poor, 'Cornhuskers,' as its title suggests, is largely a meditation on the life and experience of the prairie farmer during the first quarter of the 20th century.Sandburg was a poet who seemed to find personal meaning largely in the present moment, and thus, while 'Cornhuskers' records and occasionally celebrates the agricultural year and the people who live by it, death, mortality, and the transience of all things is a continuous motif.These themes intermingle freely with a honest, often blunt candor about the violence and sacrifice inherent in survival. The everyman farmer addressed in 'Prairie,' for example, is calmly advised by nature to "Kill your hogs with a knife slit under the ear. Hack them with cleavers. Hang them with hooks in the hind legs."Nor does the poet ignore the savagery of man and all creatures. 'Wilderness' acknowledges that "There is a wolf in me...fangs pointed for tearing gashes...a red tongue for raw meat...and the hot lapping of blood...I sing and kill and work: I am a pal of the world: I came from the wilderness."Sandburg was a poet of observation, and those reflected in 'Cornhuskers' are almost continually pensive: sorrow, loneliness, unfulfilled longing, and human isolation color the Midwestern landscape."The gloaming is bitter," he states in 'Sunset From Omaha Hotel Window,' not only in Omaha, but "in Chicago or Kenosha."Sleeping dogs dream "Not any hate, not any love, not anything but dreams" in 'Three Pieces on the Smoke of Autumn,' unlike man.The tradesman of 'Bricklayer Love' says, "I have thought of killing myself because I am only a bricklayer and you a woman who loves the man who runs a drug store."The speaker in 'Testament' serenely consigns his corpse to the earth, where the "nanny goats and billy goats of the shanty people eat the clover over my grave," for "I have had my chance to live with the people who have too much and the people who have too little and I chose one of the two and I have told no man why."The poet of 'In Tall Grass' offers his bleached skull to the bees so that they may use it to build a honeycomb.'Cool Tombs' addresses the marginality of human accomplishment and celebrity in the face of mortality, whether for Abraham Lincoln, Ulyyses Grant, Pocahontas, or "any streetful of people."In 'Prairie,' Sandburg observes "the past is a bucket of ashes."In one of 'Cornhuskers' most famous entries, 'Grass,' humanity is reminded that everyone and everything are impermanent and eventually forgotten: "I am the grass; I cover all."As in 'Chicago Poems,' politicians, the wealthy, the upper classes, and other leaders of society come in for repeated harsh criticism. "Huntington" in 'Southern Pacific,' though dead in "a house six feet long," still blithely dreams of men addressing him as "Yes, sir."'Palladiums' warns "Speak softly--the sacred cows may hear. Speak easy--the sacred cows must be fed."'Profiteer' describes an honorary statue erected to "one who participated in the war vicariously and bought ten farms" with his spoils. 'Cornhuskers' was written during World War I, and 'The Four Brothers' identifies the "four big brothers" of the title--France, Russia, Britain, and America--as "hunting death."In the vision of 'Cornhuskers,' man's meager hope arises from routine hard work, appreciation of the simple and the commonplace, and acceptance of the cycle of life. 'Caboose Thoughts' states "The sun, the birds, the grass - they know. They get along. We'll get along. It's going to come out all right - do you know?"Sandburg encourages the reader to "Look at six eggs in a mockingbird's nest...look at songs hidden in eggs," and to appreciate, as he has, boys running "barefoot in the leaves" and "farmhands with their faces in fried catfish on a Monday morning."Throughout, Sandburg speaks in the loose, conversational folk tone that was the hallmark of his work. Most of the poems have only a very light structure and appear spontaneously written, so that 'Potato Blossom Songs and Jigs' features lines such as "The story lags. The story has no connections. The story is nothing but a lot of banjo plinka planka plunks."'Cornhuskers' can stand on its own, but works best when considered in immediate conjunction with later volumes 'Smoke And Steel' (1920), 'Slabs of the Sunburnt West' (1922), 'Good Morning, America' (1928), and 'The People, Yes' (1936), making 'The Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg' the ideal vehicle for expressing his increasingly unappreciated vision.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. A triumph by one of Whitman's great heirs By Michael J. Mazza "Cornhuskers," a volume of poetry by Carl Sandburg, was first published in 1918. This book demonstrates a poetic style and subject matter that are very much like that of 19th century giant Walt Whitman; is fact, Whitman is even mentioned in one of the poems in this book (specifically, "Interior").Sandburg writes in a direct, vernacular language. He demonstrates an appreciation of the lands, people, and animals of the United States. He pays particular attention to working class life, industrialization, and ethnic diversity. A series of poems deal with American wars from the Revolutionary War to World War I. Throughout, Sandburg's voice is at times ironic, mystical, ecstatic, and/or tender.There are a number of particularly memorable selections in "Cornhuskers." I loved "Wilderness," which begins "There is a wolf in me." "Prayers of Steel" uses remarkable erotic language to explore the use of steel in America's development. Another impressive poem is "Alix," about a champion racing mare.Sandburg writes, "I speak of new cities and new people." In "Cornhuskers," he created one of the first great poetic testaments of the 20th century.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A Collection Of Contrasts By Dave_42 Carl Sandburg (January 6, 1878 - July 22, 1967) in 1919 was one of the second recipients of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry for his collection "Cornhuskers". The collection is divided into several sections including: "Cornhuskers"; "Persons Half Known"; "Leather Leggings"; "Haunts"; and "Shenandoah". Each of the sections has its own feel to it and the poems range from the long "Prairie" and "The Four Brothers" which bookend the entire collection, to the very short, such as "Cartoon". The subject or the poems also contrasts, though one would expect that in most collections. Lastly, time itself has added an additional contrast to the collection which I will discuss later."Cornhuskers" includes poems about life on the great plains of the United States. It opens with the masterful 11-page "Prairie", which is unlike any other poem in the section and only is approached in terms of scope by "The Four Brothers" which closes the collection. The poems in this section often deal with nature and history and the feel of life in the rural plains areas."Person's Half Known" includes poems about people of some renown, though who they are is not always readily apparent. "Chicago Poet" is about himself, "Fire-Logs" is about Nancy Hanks, the mother of Abraham Lincoln, and other people he writes about include the likes of Inez Milholland, Adelaide Crapsey, and others, and one can enjoy a trip through history in learning about the subjects of these poems."Leather Leggings" is an unusual section as it seems to have more to do with the activities of people, though some of the poems don't necessarily fit that loose definition. The poems deal with a very wide variety of professions, activities, and the products of those labors. As an example, "Clocks" deals with a variety of time-pieces and how they are used in different ways and "Flat Lands" deals with those in the real estate profession."Haunts" deals with those feelings and memories which one remembers throughout their life. Here there are poems remembering a love, a special time, one's lost childhood, music, faith, and much more.The last section is "Shenandoah", which contains poems about war, and for whatever reason this section feels even more timeless than the rest of the book. Perhaps that is because this world so seldom knows real peace that one can easily identify with the feelings and images which these poems bring to mind.This a tremendous collection of poems, which are filled with history, feelings, images, and so much more. It has but one weakness, and that is a word which has become so hateful that it pains the reader to run across it at any time, and certainly when reading such wonderful poetry. It appears fewer than 10 times in the book, and yet each time it does it gives one pause. It makes one wish for a new edition to remove it or change it, but at the same time one would never want to lose or change such art. Thus all one can do is to reflect on the mistakes of our past and appreciate how such words and hatred can damage even that which was created for the most benign purpose.

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