A Nation’s Strength
By William Ralph Emerson
What makes a nation’s pillars high
And its foundations strong?
What makes it mighty to defy
The foes that round it throng?
It is not gold. Its kingdoms grand
Go down in battle shock;
Its shafts are laid on sinking sand,
Not on abiding rock.
Is it the sword? Ask the red dust
Of empires passed away;
The blood has turned their stones to rust,
Their glory to decay.
And is it pride? Ah, that bright crown
Has seemed to nations sweet;
But God has struck its luster down
In ashes at his feet.
Not gold but only men can make
A people great and strong;
Men who for truth and honor’s sake
Stand fast and suffer long.
Brave men who work while others sleep,
Who dare while others fly…
They build a nation’s pillars deep
And lift them to the sky.
About the Poem
As we prepare to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, I’ve been looking back at American poetry that asks not simply what America is, but what America ought to be.
William Ralph Emerson’s A Nation’s Strength stood out to me because it asks a question that remains just as important today as it was when the poem was written: What makes a nation great?
The United States has never been perfect. The Declaration proclaimed equality as a self-evident truth, but equality was never fully realized at the nation’s founding. Enslaved people remained enslaved. Women were denied the vote. Property requirements limited political participation in many places. Native peoples were displaced. LGBTQ+ people were forced to live in silence, criminalized, pathologized, and denied basic recognition under the law. Throughout our history, every expansion of liberty has been met by resistance, and nearly every step forward has been followed by attempts to roll it back.
Yet the American story is also the story of people insisting that the nation live up to its own ideals.
American poetry tells that story remarkably well. Walt Whitman’s I Hear America Singing celebrated the dignity of workers and the promise of representative government, while We Two Boys Together Clinging quietly insisted that same-sex love also belonged in America. Langston Hughes answered Whitman with I, Too, claiming a place at America’s table for Black Americans. Maya Angelou’s Still I Rise proclaimed resilience against oppression. Emma Lazarus’s The New Colossus reimagined America as a refuge for immigrants. Joy Harjo’s Perhaps the World Ends Here reminds us that Indigenous voices have always been part of the American story. Audre Lorde’s A Litany for Survival reminds us that speaking—even when we are afraid—is itself an act of courage.
Together, these poets expand the meaning of America. Each asks us to widen the circle of who belongs. Each insists that the ideals expressed in 1776 belong to everyone.
That is why I chose William Ralph Emerson’s poem for this Independence Day. At a time when patriotism is too often confused with slogans, flags, or political loyalty, A Nation’s Strength reminds us that the true measure of a nation is something far less visible. It is found in people who value truth over convenience, justice over privilege, courage over fear, and hope over cynicism.
The United States has often fallen short of its own ideals. We still do. But those ideals are worth celebrating precisely because they continue to challenge us. America’s strength has never rested in its wealth or its military. Its greatest strength has always been its people—especially those who have dared to make the nation more faithful to its promise.
Perhaps that is the enduring lesson of Emerson’s poem. A nation is not made great by what it possesses, but by what its people choose to become.
A Nation’s Strength asks a deceptively simple question: What makes a nation great? Rather than pointing to wealth, military might, or national pride, William Ralph Emerson argues that a nation’s true foundation is the character of its people. Gold can be lost, armies can be defeated, and empires can crumble, but a people committed to truth, honor, courage, and perseverance provide a foundation that endures.
Although William Ralph Emerson was not himself a transcendentalist philosopher, the poem reflects several ideals associated with transcendentalism. Like his second cousin Ralph Waldo Emerson, he emphasizes that lasting greatness comes from moral character rather than material success or political power. In that sense, A Nation’s Strength is both a patriotic poem and a timeless meditation on civic virtue.
More than a century after it was written, its central question remains relevant. Every generation must decide whether a nation’s greatness is measured by what it owns, what it conquers, or how faithfully its people pursue justice, truth, and the common good.
About the Poet
William Ralph Emerson (1833–1917) was an American architect, writer, and poet. Although he is less well known than his famous second cousin, Ralph Waldo Emerson, he wrote a number of poems reflecting on civic life, character, and patriotism. His best-known poem, A Nation’s Strength, has been widely anthologized because of its enduring message that the true strength of a nation lies not in its wealth or military power but in the integrity and perseverance of its people.
While his poetry is rooted in the ideals of the nineteenth century, its message continues to resonate whenever Americans reflect on the meaning of citizenship, liberty, and the ongoing work of building a more perfect union.