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By Aileen Cassinetto

we are not that kind of country.


We are sanctuary for the hungry,


the homeless, the huddled,


held together by an idea


our immigrant fathers believed in.


Rendered, it meant independence.


Pursued, it kindled war, ordinance,


a fighting chance. Forty thousand


musket balls, by themselves, did not


shape the boundaries on which we


map our days. To draw our borders,


we needed more than firecakes.


More than a pound of meat


with bone and gristle,


or salt fish and a gill of peas.


We needed the faith and grit of people


who were not yet Americans.


To be an American is to


recognize the sacrifice


of the widow and the orphan;


it is to understand the weft of tent


cities expecting caravans,


and the heft of a child in a camp


not meant for children, or sitting


before a judge awaiting judgement.


What do we say to the native


whose lands we now inhabit?


What do we say to our immigrant


fathers who held certain truths


to be self-evident?


Do we now still pledge to each


other our lives, our fortunes,


our sacred honor.


There are no kings in America.


Only gilded men we can topple


again and again.


Aileen Cassinetto, "There are no kings in America" from Vox Populi. Copyright © 2020 by Aileen Cassinetto. Reprinted by permission of Aileen Cassinetto.

Poet Bio

Aileen Cassinetto
Aileen Cassinetto is the Poet Laureate of San Mateo County and an Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellow. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Banyan Review, Cultural Weekly, Fellowship, Guest, Marsh Hawk Review, Nonconformist Magazine, and Vox Populi, among others. See More By This Poet
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