Hope Is a Tattered Flag
Hope Is a Tattered Flag - meaning Summary
Hope as Resilient Ordinary
Sandburg presents hope as a ragged, persistent presence found in small, everyday things and global echoes alike. The poem stitches together industrial imagery, domestic comforts, music and distant broadcasts to show hope surviving amid hardship and war. Its tone is plain and cumulative: hope is ordinary, resourceful and collective, appearing in unexpected places from coal towns and used-car lots to broadcasts and communal song.
Read Complete AnalysesHope is a tattered flag and a dream of time. Hope is a heartspun word, the rainbow, the shadblow in white The evening star inviolable over the coal mines, The shimmer of northern lights across a bitter winter night, The blue hills beyond the smoke of the steel works, The birds who go on singing to their mates in peace, war, peace, The ten-cent crocus bulb blooming in a used-car salesroom, The horseshoe over the door, the luckpiece in the pocket, The kiss and the comforting laugh and resolve— Hope is an echo, hope ties itself yonder, yonder. The spring grass showing itself where least expected, The rolling fluff of white clouds on a changeable sky, The broadcast of strings from Japan, bells from Moscow, Of the voice of the prime minister of Sweden carried Across the sea in behalf of a world family of nations And children singing chorals of the Christ child And Bach being broadcast from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania And tall skyscrapers practically empty of tenants And the hands of strong men groping for handholds And the Salvation Army singing God loves us….
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