- The American Eagle has flown to the west,
- Leaving the land that she loveth the best,
- Has gone to Dacotah, to dwell in the wild,
- A land on which God in his mercy ne'er smiled,
- Which Missouri flows through with its river of mud,
- Where no flowers ever blossom or trees ever bud,
- Save the cottonwood mean, or the willow so tough,
- If you've split them or burnt them you know well enough,
- And there she has perched on a wild desert cliff,
- To take of the air that's around her a sniff
- She hears an old wolf that comes out of his den,
- He switches his tail, and then burrows again,
- She sees a small prairie-dog come forth to bark,
- Then retire once more to his hermitage dark,
- Then she spies in a thicket of cottonwood brush,
- An elk through the wilderness go with a rush,
- Then a buffalo herd canter by with a roar,
- Shake their tails and their horns till she sees them no more,
- Than an Indian at last in his skins and his paint,
- Gives the air that's around her a repulsive taint,
- A flock of lean buzzards wheel off in the blue,
- To add to the desolate cast of the view.
- The Earth is bare wherever she looks,
- She sees neither fountains no clear water brooks,
- Arid plains like Sahara where simoons have swept,
- And hills on whose summits no dew ever wept,
- "If this is the land of Dacotah," she cries,
- "I pity the 1st U.S. V. at Fort Rice."
- Then plumes her gay wings, and soars far from the scene,
- To lands more delightful and skies more serene.
History and Legacy of Wild Birds Including Historic Ornithology and Other Topics of Interest
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