Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). An American Anthology, 1787–1900. 1900.
By WalterLearned980 The Last Reservation
S
On the bank of the river,
They waited the boat that should bear them away
From their poor homes forever.
To these wards of the nation:
“Give us land and more room,” was the cry, “and move on
To the next reservation.”
From which they were driven,
Where the last camp-fire’s smoke, borne out on the breeze,
Rose slowly toward heaven.
The home of her nation;
Around her, the gleam of the bayonet and blade
Of civilization.
With tender caressing,
She bent down, on the cheek of her babe soft and warm
A mother’s kiss pressing.
Close-guarded and narrow,
Noting as little the two that are gone
As the fall of a sparrow.
To refinement a stranger,
And a babe, that was born in a wigwam as poor
And rude as a manger.
Of a brave Christian nation,
Moved on—thank God, forever at rest
In the last reservation.