| Carl Sandburg (18781967). Smoke and Steel. 1922. |
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| VI. Accomplished Facts |
| 6. Portrait |
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(For S. A.)
TO write one book in five years | |
| or five books in one year, | |
| to be the painter and the thing painted, | |
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where are we, bo? | |
| |
| Waitget his number. | 5 |
| The barber shop handling is here | |
| and the tweeds, the cheviot, the Scotch Mist, | |
| and the flame orange scarf. | |
| |
| Yet there is morehe sleeps under bridges | |
| with lonely crazy men; he sits in country | 10 |
| jails with bootleggers; he adopts the children | |
| of broken-down burlesque actresses; he has | |
| cried a heart of tears for Windy MacPhersons | |
| father; he pencils wrists of lonely women. | |
| |
| Can a man sit at a desk in a skyscraper in Chicago | 15 |
| and be a harnessmaker in a corn town in Iowa | |
| and feel the tall grass coming up in June | |
| and the ache of the cottonwood trees | |
| singing with the prairie wind? | |
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