Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE BUILDERS, by BERTON BRALEY Poet's Biography First Line: Never a jungle is penetrated Last Line: Newark -- city that builds his dreams. Subject(s): Buildings & Builders; Newark, New Jersey | ||||||||
Never a jungle is penetrated, Never an unknown sea is dared, Never adventure is consummated, Never a faint new trail is fared, But that some dreamer has had the vision Which leads men on the ends of earth, That laughs at doubting, and scorns derision, And falters not at the cynic's mirth. So the dreamer dreams, but there follows after The mighty epic of steel and stone, When caisson, scaffold and well and rafter Have made a fact where the dream was shown; And so with furnace and lathe and hammer, With blast that rumbles and shaft that gleams, Her factories crowned with a grimy glamour, Newark buildeth the dreamers' dreams. Where the torrent leaps with a roar of thunder, Where the bridge is built or the dam is laid, Where the wet walled tunnel burrows under Mountain, river and palisade, There is Newark's magic of nail or girder, Of spikes and castings and posts and beams, The need and wants of the world have spurred her, Newark -- city that builds our dreams. She has fashioned tools for the world's rough duty, For the men who dig and the men that hew, She has fashioned jewels for wealth and beauty, She has shod the prince and the pauper, too; So the dreamer dreams, he's the wonder waker, With soul that hungers and brain that teems, But back of him toils the magic-maker, Newark -- city that builds his dreams. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NEWARK: 1666 by ELIZABETH SEWELL HILL NEWARK: 1766 by ELIZABETH SEWELL HILL THE CITY OF HERITAGE by ANNA BLAKE MEZQUIDA PORT NEWARK TERMINAL by EDWARD STEVENS RANKIN NEWARK'S MORNING SONG by LEONARD HARMON ROBBINS THE BALLAD OF SETH BOYDEN'S GIFT by ALICE READE ROUSE NEWARK AND PHILIP KEARNY by CLINTON SCOLLARD THE SMITHY OF GOD by CLEMENT WOOD |
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