In his poem "The Prairies", William Cullen Bryant's exhibits a sympathetic interest in the past throughout this work. Bryant begins his poem by saying, "These are the Gardens of the Desert, these/ The Unshorn fields, boundless and beautiful, / And fresh as the young earth, err man had sinned-/ The Prairies" (L 1-4). Here Bryant shows that many settlers move West in an attempt to start a new society on the fertile land of the prairies like the many who precede them. Later in the poem Bryant states," And pass the prairie-hawk that, poised on high,/ Flaps his broad wings, yet moves notye have played/ Among the palms of Mexico and vines/ Of Texas, and have cripes the limpid brooks/ That from the fountains of Sonora glide/ Into the calm Pacifichave ye fanned"(L 17-22). These lines show the ever westward expansion of America all the way to the Pacific Ocean.(you need more in this sentence. What does it show?) During this on-going expansion, Americans came across many areas that were inhabited by people including the Indians and the "mound-builders." Bryant describes these primitive, yet advanced people as the mound builders as, "A race, that long has passed away,/ Built them;-a disciplined and populous race/ Heaped, with long toil, the earth." Later he compares the mound builders way of
Cited: Bryant, William Cullen. "The Prairies". The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Shorter 6th edition. Ed. Baym et al. New York: Norton, 2003. 473-475. Morner, Kathleen and Rausch, Ralph. Introduction to Romanticism. 07 Mar. 2006 .