BENEATH the burning brazen sky,	
The yellowed tepees stand.	
Not far away a singing river	
Sets through the sand.	
Within the shadow of a lonely elm tree	  
The tired ponies keep.	
The wild land, throbbing with the suns hot magic,	
Is rapt as sleep.	
From out a clump of scanty willows	
A low wail floats,	  
The endless repetition of a lovers	
Melancholy notes,	
So sad, so sweet, so elemental,	
All lovers pain	
Seems borne upon its sobbing cadence,	  
The love-song of the plain.	
From frenzied cry forever falling,	
To the winds wild moan,	
It seems the voice of anguish calling	
Alone! alone!	  
Caught from the winds forever moaning	
On the plain,	
Wrought from the agonies of woman	
In maternal pain,	
It holds within its simple measure	  
All death of joy,	
Breathed though it be by smiling maiden	
Or lithe brown boy.	
It hath this magic, sad though its cadence	
And short refrain	  
It helps the exiled people of the mountain	
Endure the plain;	
For when at night the stars a-glitter	
Defy the moon,	
The maiden listens, leans to seek her lover	  
Where waters croon.	
Flute on, O lithe and tuneful Utah,	
Reply, brown jade;	
There are no other joys secure to either	
Man or maid.	  
Soon you are old and heavy-hearted,	
Lost to mirth;	
While on you lies the white mans gory	
Greed of earth.	
Strange that to me that burning desert	  
Seems so dear.	
The endless sky and lonely mesa,	
Flat and drear,	
Calls me, calls me as the flute of Utah	
Calls his mate,	  
This wild, sad, sunny, brazen country,	
Hot as hate.	
Again the glittering sky uplifts star-blazing;	
Again the stream	
From out the far-off snowy mountains	  
Sings through my dream;	
And on the air I hear the flute-voice calling	
The lovers croon,	
And see the listening, longing maiden	
Lit by the moon


 



