"We are the valiant pioneers,
Who came the winding road,
Into the wide untrammeled West
With shovel, pick and load;
Out to a land of hopes and dreams
Through smoky rims of blue;
With patient, plodding oxen teams,
We blazed the trail for you."
Nina's collection of "Poems of Meditation and Sentiment" includes "They Scintillate" revealing a contentment for the unfettered truths. Her poem "The Truth" provides final rebuttal on this theme of ephemeral versus spiritual liberty. "Inception" reveals Nina's amusement with the joy and humor of being a poetess, a trustee of word sounds.
Nina's sense of whimsy is reflected in her collection, "A bit of nonsense now and then is relished by the wise men." This summary of whimsy and wisdom shows great competence in Nina's "Life has Its Way."
In her poem, "To Dakota", stanza four, Nina gives her toast:
"The prairies sleep, while ages keep
The Land so true,
Supremely blest of all the West,
For me, and you.
O, broad and grand Dakota land
So leal and true,
Of all the West I love you best
So, here's to you."
Her poem, "The Prairie" (Before the Drouth), stanza eight:
"A vast and living checker-board
The game - I love it so:
In green and black or blue and gold
As seasons come and go."
The Germans from Russia Heritage Collection is pleased that the Wiskek family of Ashley, North Dakota, shares Rose Berries in Autumn by Nina Farley Wishek. Also available is Along the Trails of Yesterday: A Story of McIntosh County by Nina Farley Wishek.