The Jazz-bird sings a barnyard song-
A cock-a-doodle bray,
A jingle-bells, a boiler works,
A he-man's roundelay.
The eagle said, 'My noisy son,
I send you out to fight!'
So the youngster spread his sunflower wings
And roared with all his might.
His headlight eyes went flashing
From Oregon to Maine;
And the land was dark with airships
In the darting Jazz-bird's train.
Crossing the howling ocean,
His bell-mouth shook the sky;
And the Yankees in the trenches
Gave back the hue and cry.
And Europe had not heard the like-
And Germany went down!
The fowl of steel with clashing claws
Tore off the Kaiser's crown.
The Modest Jazz-bird
Vachel Lindsay
(1)
Poem topics: dark, ocean, sky, son, song, steel, crown, fight, mouth, train, spread, europe, noisy, I love you, I miss you, bird, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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