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Life & Wisdom Quote by Sam Walter Foss

"Bring me men to match my mountains: Bring me men to match my plains: Men with empires in their purpose and new eras in their brains"

About this Quote

This is boosterism with a spiritual edge: a demand for people as vast, uncompromising, and unfinished as the American landscape itself. Foss isn’t merely praising “grit.” He’s staging a recruitment pitch for a nation that, at the turn of the 20th century, believed its geography carried a destiny. The line’s engine is scale. Mountains and plains aren’t scenery; they’re measuring sticks. If the land is epic, the citizen must be epic too.

The repetition of “Bring me men” works like a drumbeat from a pulpit or a town hall, turning poetry into civic summons. “Match” is the sly pressure point: nature has already set the standard, and ordinary ambition suddenly looks like underperformance. Foss’s “men” is historically literal, reflecting an era when public life and expansionist projects were coded male, but it also signals a type: the builder, the settler, the industrial organizer, the imperial administrator. That word choice reveals the poem’s blind spot as much as its energy.

“Empires in their purpose” lands with deliberate swagger. It’s aspirational and ominous, capturing the Gilded Age/Progressive Era blend of moral mission and imperial appetite. The phrase romanticizes bigness - big projects, big institutions, big influence - while laundering the costs behind the clean abstraction of “purpose.” Then Foss swivels to “new eras in their brains,” upgrading conquest into imagination. He wants not just muscle but a future-minded mindset, the kind that treats history as something you can draft.

It’s effective because it flatters the reader into responsibility: if you live under these mountains, you’re obligated to think and act on their scale.

Quote Details

TopicVision & Strategy
Source
Verified source: Whiffs from Wild Meadows (Sam Walter Foss, 1895)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Bring me men to match my mountains; Bring me men to match my plains,, Men with empires in their purpose, And new eras in their brains. (Page 260 (poem: “The Coming American”)). This quotation appears as a stanza within Sam Walter Foss’s poem “The Coming American” in his 1895 poetry collection Whiffs from Wild Meadows. In that book, the poem carries a headnote stating it was “Read at Mr. Henry C. Bowen’s Annual Fourth of July Celebration, at Roseland Park, Woodstock, Conn., July 4, 1894.” That indicates a public reading date (July 4, 1894), but the earliest *verifiable primary publication* I can confirm from a digitized primary source is the 1895 book printing on page 260.
Other candidates (1)
Women in the Military (Brian Mitchell, 1997) compilation96.7%
... Sam Walter Foss : Bring me men to match my mountains , Bring me men to match my plains , Men with empires in thei...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Foss, Sam Walter. (2026, February 18). Bring me men to match my mountains: Bring me men to match my plains: Men with empires in their purpose and new eras in their brains. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/bring-me-men-to-match-my-mountains-bring-me-men-121318/

Chicago Style
Foss, Sam Walter. "Bring me men to match my mountains: Bring me men to match my plains: Men with empires in their purpose and new eras in their brains." FixQuotes. February 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/bring-me-men-to-match-my-mountains-bring-me-men-121318/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Bring me men to match my mountains: Bring me men to match my plains: Men with empires in their purpose and new eras in their brains." FixQuotes, 18 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/bring-me-men-to-match-my-mountains-bring-me-men-121318/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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Bring Me Men to Match My Mountains - Sam Walter Foss
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About the Author

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Sam Walter Foss (June 19, 1858 - February 26, 1911) was a Poet from USA.

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