"The Sun Went Down in Beauty" by George Marion McClellan

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July 4, 2020  

The Sun Went Down in Beauty


George Marion McClellan

The sun went down in beauty
    Beyond the Mississippi side,
As I stood on the banks of the river
    And watched its waters glide;
Its swelling currents resembling
    The longing restless soul,
Surging, swelling, and pursuing
    Its ever receding goal.

The sun went down in beauty,
    But the restless tide flowed on,
And the phantom of absent loved ones
    Danced on the waves and were gone;
Fleeting phantoms of loved ones,
    Their faces jubilant with glee,
In the spray seemed to rise and beckon,
    And then rush on to the sea.

The sun went down in beauty,
    While I stood musing alone,
Stood watching the rushing river
    And heard its restless moan;
Longings, vague, intenable,
    So far from speech apart,
Like the endless rush of the river,
    Went surging through my heart.

The sun went down in beauty,
    Peacefully sank to rest,
Leaving its golden reflection
    On the great Mississippi’s breast;
Gleaming on the turbulent river,
    In the coming gray twilight,
Soothing its restless surging,
    And kissing its waters goodnight.

This poem is in the public domain. Published in Poem-a-Day on July 4, 2020 by the Academy of American Poets.

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“The Sun Went Down in Beauty” originally appeared in The Path of Dreams (J. P. Morton & Company, 1916).

George Marion McClellan was born on September 29, 1860, in Belfast, Tennessee. A poet and prose writer, he taught Latin and English in Central High School in Louisville, Kentucky, from 1899 to 1911, before becoming the principal of Dunbar Public School. He died in 1934. 

The Path of Dreams
(J. P. Morton & Company, 1916)

Black Lives Matter Anthology

“You carrying your brother home
You noticing the butterflies”

—“You Are Who I Love” by Aracelis Girmay


“The Negro Speaks of Rivers” by Langston Hughes
read more
“Riverbank Blues” by Sterling A. Brown
read more

Thanks to Major Jackson, author of The Absurd Man (W. W. Norton, 2020), who curated Poem-a-Day for June 22-July 3. Read a Q&A about Jackson’s curatorial approach and find out more about our guest editors for the year
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