- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Leaves of Grass, by Walt Whitman
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- Title: Leaves of Grass
- Author: Walt Whitman
- Release Date: August 24, 2008 [EBook #1322]
- [Last Updated: February 15, 2020]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEAVES OF GRASS ***
- Produced by G. Fuhrman, and David Widger
- LEAVES OF GRASS
- By Walt Whitman
- Come, said my soul,
- Such verses for my Body let us write, (for we are one,)
- That should I after return,
- Or, long, long hence, in other spheres,
- There to some group of mates the chants resuming,
- (Tallying Earth’s soil, trees, winds, tumultuous waves,)
- Ever with pleas’d smile I may keep on,
- Ever and ever yet the verses owning--as, first, I here and now
- Signing for Soul and Body, set to them my name,
- Walt Whitman
- BOOK I. INSCRIPTIONS
- One’s-Self I Sing
- One’s-self I sing, a simple separate person,
- Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.
- Of physiology from top to toe I sing,
- Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy for the Muse, I say
- the Form complete is worthier far,
- The Female equally with the Male I sing.
- Of Life immense in passion, pulse, and power,
- Cheerful, for freest action form’d under the laws divine,
- The Modern Man I sing.
- As I Ponder’d in Silence
- As I ponder’d in silence,
- Returning upon my poems, considering, lingering long,
- A Phantom arose before me with distrustful aspect,
- Terrible in beauty, age, and power,
- The genius of poets of old lands,
- As to me directing like flame its eyes,
- With finger pointing to many immortal songs,
- And menacing voice, What singest thou? it said,
- Know’st thou not there is but one theme for ever-enduring bards?
- And that is the theme of War, the fortune of battles,
- The making of perfect soldiers.
- Be it so, then I answer’d,
- I too haughty Shade also sing war, and a longer and greater one than any,
- Waged in my book with varying fortune, with flight, advance
- and retreat, victory deferr’d and wavering,
- (Yet methinks certain, or as good as certain, at the last,) the
- field the world,
- For life and death, for the Body and for the eternal Soul,
- Lo, I too am come, chanting the chant of battles,
- I above all promote brave soldiers.
- In Cabin’d Ships at Sea
- In cabin’d ships at sea,
- The boundless blue on every side expanding,
- With whistling winds and music of the waves, the large imperious waves,
- Or some lone bark buoy’d on the dense marine,
- Where joyous full of faith, spreading white sails,
- She cleaves the ether mid the sparkle and the foam of day, or under
- many a star at night,
- By sailors young and old haply will I, a reminiscence of the land, be read,
- In full rapport at last.
- Here are our thoughts, voyagers’ thoughts,
- Here not the land, firm land, alone appears, may then by them be said,
- The sky o’erarches here, we feel the undulating deck beneath our feet,
- We feel the long pulsation, ebb and flow of endless motion,
- The tones of unseen mystery, the vague and vast suggestions of the
- briny world, the liquid-flowing syllables,
- The perfume, the faint creaking of the cordage, the melancholy rhythm,
- The boundless vista and the horizon far and dim are all here,
- And this is ocean’s poem.
- Then falter not O book, fulfil your destiny,
- You not a reminiscence of the land alone,
- You too as a lone bark cleaving the ether, purpos’d I know not
- whither, yet ever full of faith,
- Consort to every ship that sails, sail you!
- Bear forth to them folded my love, (dear mariners, for you I fold it
- here in every leaf;)
- Speed on my book! spread your white sails my little bark athwart the
- imperious waves,
- Chant on, sail on, bear o’er the boundless blue from me to every sea,
- This song for mariners and all their ships.
- To Foreign Lands
- I heard that you ask’d for something to prove this puzzle the New World,
- And to define America, her athletic Democracy,
- Therefore I send you my poems that you behold in them what you wanted.
- To a Historian
- You who celebrate bygones,
- Who have explored the outward, the surfaces of the races, the life
- that has exhibited itself,
- Who have treated of man as the creature of politics, aggregates,
- rulers and priests,
- I, habitan of the Alleghanies, treating of him as he is in himself
- in his own rights,
- Pressing the pulse of the life that has seldom exhibited itself,
- (the great pride of man in himself,)
- Chanter of Personality, outlining what is yet to be,
- I project the history of the future.
- To Thee Old Cause
- To thee old cause!
- Thou peerless, passionate, good cause,
- Thou stern, remorseless, sweet idea,
- Deathless throughout the ages, races, lands,
- After a strange sad war, great war for thee,
- (I think all war through time was really fought, and ever will be
- really fought, for thee,)
- These chants for thee, the eternal march of thee.
- (A war O soldiers not for itself alone,
- Far, far more stood silently waiting behind, now to advance in this book.)
- Thou orb of many orbs!
- Thou seething principle! thou well-kept, latent germ! thou centre!
- Around the idea of thee the war revolving,
- With all its angry and vehement play of causes,
- (With vast results to come for thrice a thousand years,)
- These recitatives for thee,--my book and the war are one,
- Merged in its spirit I and mine, as the contest hinged on thee,
- As a wheel on its axis turns, this book unwitting to itself,
- Around the idea of thee.
- Eidolons
- I met a seer,
- Passing the hues and objects of the world,
- The fields of art and learning, pleasure, sense,
- To glean eidolons.
- Put in thy chants said he,
- No more the puzzling hour nor day, nor segments, parts, put in,
- Put first before the rest as light for all and entrance-song of all,
- That of eidolons.
- Ever the dim beginning,
- Ever the growth, the rounding of the circle,
- Ever the summit and the merge at last, (to surely start again,)
- Eidolons! eidolons!
- Ever the mutable,
- Ever materials, changing, crumbling, re-cohering,
- Ever the ateliers, the factories divine,
- Issuing eidolons.
- Lo, I or you,
- Or woman, man, or state, known or unknown,
- We seeming solid wealth, strength, beauty build,
- But really build eidolons.
- The ostent evanescent,
- The substance of an artist’s mood or savan’s studies long,
- Or warrior’s, martyr’s, hero’s toils,
- To fashion his eidolon.
- Of every human life,
- (The units gather’d, posted, not a thought, emotion, deed, left out,)
- The whole or large or small summ’d, added up,
- In its eidolon.
- The old, old urge,
- Based on the ancient pinnacles, lo, newer, higher pinnacles,
- From science and the modern still impell’d,
- The old, old urge, eidolons.
- The present now and here,
- America’s busy, teeming, intricate whirl,
- Of aggregate and segregate for only thence releasing,
- To-day’s eidolons.
- These with the past,
- Of vanish’d lands, of all the reigns of kings across the sea,
- Old conquerors, old campaigns, old sailors’ voyages,
- Joining eidolons.
- Densities, growth, facades,
- Strata of mountains, soils, rocks, giant trees,
- Far-born, far-dying, living long, to leave,
- Eidolons everlasting.
- Exalte, rapt, ecstatic,
- The visible but their womb of birth,
- Of orbic tendencies to shape and shape and shape,
- The mighty earth-eidolon.
- All space, all time,
- (The stars, the terrible perturbations of the suns,
- Swelling, collapsing, ending, serving their longer, shorter use,)
- Fill’d with eidolons only.
- The noiseless myriads,
- The infinite oceans where the rivers empty,
- The separate countless free identities, like eyesight,
- The true realities, eidolons.
- Not this the world,
- Nor these the universes, they the universes,
- Purport and end, ever the permanent life of life,
- Eidolons, eidolons.
- Beyond thy lectures learn’d professor,
- Beyond thy telescope or spectroscope observer keen, beyond all mathematics,
- Beyond the doctor’s surgery, anatomy, beyond the chemist with his chemistry,
- The entities of entities, eidolons.
- Unfix’d yet fix’d,
- Ever shall be, ever have been and are,
- Sweeping the present to the infinite future,
- Eidolons, eidolons, eidolons.
- The prophet and the bard,
- Shall yet maintain themselves, in higher stages yet,
- Shall mediate to the Modern, to Democracy, interpret yet to them,
- God and eidolons.
- And thee my soul,
- Joys, ceaseless exercises, exaltations,
- Thy yearning amply fed at last, prepared to meet,
- Thy mates, eidolons.
- Thy body permanent,
- The body lurking there within thy body,
- The only purport of the form thou art, the real I myself,
- An image, an eidolon.
- Thy very songs not in thy songs,
- No special strains to sing, none for itself,
- But from the whole resulting, rising at last and floating,
- A round full-orb’d eidolon.
- For Him I Sing
- For him I sing,
- I raise the present on the past,
- (As some perennial tree out of its roots, the present on the past,)
- With time and space I him dilate and fuse the immortal laws,
- To make himself by them the law unto himself.
- When I Read the Book
- When I read the book, the biography famous,
- And is this then (said I) what the author calls a man’s life?
- And so will some one when I am dead and gone write my life?
- (As if any man really knew aught of my life,
- Why even I myself I often think know little or nothing of my real life,
- Only a few hints, a few diffused faint clews and indirections
- I seek for my own use to trace out here.)
- Beginning My Studies
- Beginning my studies the first step pleas’d me so much,
- The mere fact consciousness, these forms, the power of motion,
- The least insect or animal, the senses, eyesight, love,
- The first step I say awed me and pleas’d me so much,
- I have hardly gone and hardly wish’d to go any farther,
- But stop and loiter all the time to sing it in ecstatic songs.
- Beginners
- How they are provided for upon the earth, (appearing at intervals,)
- How dear and dreadful they are to the earth,
- How they inure to themselves as much as to any--what a paradox
- appears their age,
- How people respond to them, yet know them not,
- How there is something relentless in their fate all times,
- How all times mischoose the objects of their adulation and reward,
- And how the same inexorable price must still be paid for the same
- great purchase.
- To the States
- To the States or any one of them, or any city of the States, Resist
- much, obey little,
- Once unquestioning obedience, once fully enslaved,
- Once fully enslaved, no nation, state, city of this earth, ever
- afterward resumes its liberty.
- On Journeys Through the States
- On journeys through the States we start,
- (Ay through the world, urged by these songs,
- Sailing henceforth to every land, to every sea,)
- We willing learners of all, teachers of all, and lovers of all.
- We have watch’d the seasons dispensing themselves and passing on,
- And have said, Why should not a man or woman do as much as the
- seasons, and effuse as much?
- We dwell a while in every city and town,
- We pass through Kanada, the North-east, the vast valley of the
- Mississippi, and the Southern States,
- We confer on equal terms with each of the States,
- We make trial of ourselves and invite men and women to hear,
- We say to ourselves, Remember, fear not, be candid, promulge the
- body and the soul,
- Dwell a while and pass on, be copious, temperate, chaste, magnetic,
- And what you effuse may then return as the seasons return,
- And may be just as much as the seasons.
- To a Certain Cantatrice
- Here, take this gift,
- I was reserving it for some hero, speaker, or general,
- One who should serve the good old cause, the great idea, the
- progress and freedom of the race,
- Some brave confronter of despots, some daring rebel;
- But I see that what I was reserving belongs to you just as much as to any.
- Me Imperturbe
- Me imperturbe, standing at ease in Nature,
- Master of all or mistress of all, aplomb in the midst of irrational things,
- Imbued as they, passive, receptive, silent as they,
- Finding my occupation, poverty, notoriety, foibles, crimes, less
- important than I thought,
- Me toward the Mexican sea, or in the Mannahatta or the Tennessee,
- or far north or inland,
- A river man, or a man of the woods or of any farm-life of these
- States or of the coast, or the lakes or Kanada,
- Me wherever my life is lived, O to be self-balanced for contingencies,
- To confront night, storms, hunger, ridicule, accidents, rebuffs, as
- the trees and animals do.
- Savantism
- Thither as I look I see each result and glory retracing itself and
- nestling close, always obligated,
- Thither hours, months, years--thither trades, compacts,
- establishments, even the most minute,
- Thither every-day life, speech, utensils, politics, persons, estates;
- Thither we also, I with my leaves and songs, trustful, admirant,
- As a father to his father going takes his children along with him.
- The Ship Starting
- Lo, the unbounded sea,
- On its breast a ship starting, spreading all sails, carrying even
- her moonsails.
- The pennant is flying aloft as she speeds she speeds so stately--
- below emulous waves press forward,
- They surround the ship with shining curving motions and foam.
- I Hear America Singing
- I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear,
- Those of mechanics, each one singing his as it should be blithe and strong,
- The carpenter singing his as he measures his plank or beam,
- The mason singing his as he makes ready for work, or leaves off work,
- The boatman singing what belongs to him in his boat, the deckhand
- singing on the steamboat deck,
- The shoemaker singing as he sits on his bench, the hatter singing as
- he stands,
- The wood-cutter’s song, the ploughboy’s on his way in the morning,
- or at noon intermission or at sundown,
- The delicious singing of the mother, or of the young wife at work,
- or of the girl sewing or washing,
- Each singing what belongs to him or her and to none else,
- The day what belongs to the day--at night the party of young
- fellows, robust, friendly,
- Singing with open mouths their strong melodious songs.
- What Place Is Besieged?
- What place is besieged, and vainly tries to raise the siege?
- Lo, I send to that place a commander, swift, brave, immortal,
- And with him horse and foot, and parks of artillery,
- And artillery-men, the deadliest that ever fired gun.
- Still Though the One I Sing
- Still though the one I sing,
- (One, yet of contradictions made,) I dedicate to Nationality,
- I leave in him revolt, (O latent right of insurrection! O
- quenchless, indispensable fire!)
- Shut Not Your Doors
- Shut not your doors to me proud libraries,
- For that which was lacking on all your well-fill’d shelves, yet
- needed most, I bring,
- Forth from the war emerging, a book I have made,
- The words of my book nothing, the drift of it every thing,
- A book separate, not link’d with the rest nor felt by the intellect,
- But you ye untold latencies will thrill to every page.
- Poets to Come
- Poets to come! orators, singers, musicians to come!
- Not to-day is to justify me and answer what I am for,
- But you, a new brood, native, athletic, continental, greater than
- before known,
- Arouse! for you must justify me.
- I myself but write one or two indicative words for the future,
- I but advance a moment only to wheel and hurry back in the darkness.
- I am a man who, sauntering along without fully stopping, turns a
- casual look upon you and then averts his face,
- Leaving it to you to prove and define it,
- Expecting the main things from you.
- To You
- Stranger, if you passing meet me and desire to speak to me, why
- should you not speak to me?
- And why should I not speak to you?
- Thou Reader
- Thou reader throbbest life and pride and love the same as I,
- Therefore for thee the following chants.
- BOOK II
- Starting from Paumanok
- 1
- Starting from fish-shape Paumanok where I was born,
- Well-begotten, and rais’d by a perfect mother,
- After roaming many lands, lover of populous pavements,
- Dweller in Mannahatta my city, or on southern savannas,
- Or a soldier camp’d or carrying my knapsack and gun, or a miner
- in California,
- Or rude in my home in Dakota’s woods, my diet meat, my drink from
- the spring,
- Or withdrawn to muse and meditate in some deep recess,
- Far from the clank of crowds intervals passing rapt and happy,
- Aware of the fresh free giver the flowing Missouri, aware of
- mighty Niagara,
- Aware of the buffalo herds grazing the plains, the hirsute and
- strong-breasted bull,
- Of earth, rocks, Fifth-month flowers experienced, stars, rain, snow,
- my amaze,
- Having studied the mocking-bird’s tones and the flight of the
- mountain-hawk,
- And heard at dawn the unrivall’d one, the hermit thrush from the
- swamp-cedars,
- Solitary, singing in the West, I strike up for a New World.
- 2
- Victory, union, faith, identity, time,
- The indissoluble compacts, riches, mystery,
- Eternal progress, the kosmos, and the modern reports.
- This then is life,
- Here is what has come to the surface after so many throes and convulsions.
- How curious! how real!
- Underfoot the divine soil, overhead the sun.
- See revolving the globe,
- The ancestor-continents away group’d together,
- The present and future continents north and south, with the isthmus
- between.
- See, vast trackless spaces,
- As in a dream they change, they swiftly fill,
- Countless masses debouch upon them,
- They are now cover’d with the foremost people, arts, institutions, known.
- See, projected through time,
- For me an audience interminable.
- With firm and regular step they wend, they never stop,
- Successions of men, Americanos, a hundred millions,
- One generation playing its part and passing on,
- Another generation playing its part and passing on in its turn,
- With faces turn’d sideways or backward towards me to listen,
- With eyes retrospective towards me.
- 3
- Americanos! conquerors! marches humanitarian!
- Foremost! century marches! Libertad! masses!
- For you a programme of chants.
- Chants of the prairies,
- Chants of the long-running Mississippi, and down to the Mexican sea,
- Chants of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota,
- Chants going forth from the centre from Kansas, and thence equidistant,
- Shooting in pulses of fire ceaseless to vivify all.
- 4
- Take my leaves America, take them South and take them North,
- Make welcome for them everywhere, for they are your own off-spring,
- Surround them East and West, for they would surround you,
- And you precedents, connect lovingly with them, for they connect
- lovingly with you.
- I conn’d old times,
- I sat studying at the feet of the great masters,
- Now if eligible O that the great masters might return and study me.
- In the name of these States shall I scorn the antique?
- Why these are the children of the antique to justify it.
- 5
- Dead poets, philosophs, priests,
- Martyrs, artists, inventors, governments long since,
- Language-shapers on other shores,
- Nations once powerful, now reduced, withdrawn, or desolate,
- I dare not proceed till I respectfully credit what you have left
- wafted hither,
- I have perused it, own it is admirable, (moving awhile among it,)
- Think nothing can ever be greater, nothing can ever deserve more
- than it deserves,
- Regarding it all intently a long while, then dismissing it,
- I stand in my place with my own day here.
- Here lands female and male,
- Here the heir-ship and heiress-ship of the world, here the flame of
- materials,
- Here spirituality the translatress, the openly-avow’d,
- The ever-tending, the finale of visible forms,
- The satisfier, after due long-waiting now advancing,
- Yes here comes my mistress the soul.
- 6
- The soul,
- Forever and forever--longer than soil is brown and solid--longer
- than water ebbs and flows.
- I will make the poems of materials, for I think they are to be the
- most spiritual poems,
- And I will make the poems of my body and of mortality,
- For I think I shall then supply myself with the poems of my soul and
- of immortality.
- I will make a song for these States that no one State may under any
- circumstances be subjected to another State,
- And I will make a song that there shall be comity by day and by
- night between all the States, and between any two of them,
- And I will make a song for the ears of the President, full of
- weapons with menacing points,
- And behind the weapons countless dissatisfied faces;
- And a song make I of the One form’d out of all,
- The fang’d and glittering One whose head is over all,
- Resolute warlike One including and over all,
- (However high the head of any else that head is over all.)
- I will acknowledge contemporary lands,
- I will trail the whole geography of the globe and salute courteously
- every city large and small,
- And employments! I will put in my poems that with you is heroism
- upon land and sea,
- And I will report all heroism from an American point of view.
- I will sing the song of companionship,
- I will show what alone must finally compact these,
- I believe these are to found their own ideal of manly love,
- indicating it in me,
- I will therefore let flame from me the burning fires that were
- threatening to consume me,
- I will lift what has too long kept down those smouldering fires,
- I will give them complete abandonment,
- I will write the evangel-poem of comrades and of love,
- For who but I should understand love with all its sorrow and joy?
- And who but I should be the poet of comrades?
- 7
- I am the credulous man of qualities, ages, races,
- I advance from the people in their own spirit,
- Here is what sings unrestricted faith.
- Omnes! omnes! let others ignore what they may,
- I make the poem of evil also, I commemorate that part also,
- I am myself just as much evil as good, and my nation is--and I say
- there is in fact no evil,
- (Or if there is I say it is just as important to you, to the land or
- to me, as any thing else.)
- I too, following many and follow’d by many, inaugurate a religion, I
- descend into the arena,
- (It may be I am destin’d to utter the loudest cries there, the
- winner’s pealing shouts,
- Who knows? they may rise from me yet, and soar above every thing.)
- Each is not for its own sake,
- I say the whole earth and all the stars in the sky are for religion’s sake.
- I say no man has ever yet been half devout enough,
- None has ever yet adored or worship’d half enough,
- None has begun to think how divine he himself is, and how certain
- the future is.
- I say that the real and permanent grandeur of these States must be
- their religion,
- Otherwise there is just no real and permanent grandeur;
- (Nor character nor life worthy the name without religion,
- Nor land nor man or woman without religion.)
- 8
- What are you doing young man?
- Are you so earnest, so given up to literature, science, art, amours?
- These ostensible realities, politics, points?
- Your ambition or business whatever it may be?
- It is well--against such I say not a word, I am their poet also,
- But behold! such swiftly subside, burnt up for religion’s sake,
- For not all matter is fuel to heat, impalpable flame, the essential
- life of the earth,
- Any more than such are to religion.
- 9
- What do you seek so pensive and silent?
- What do you need camerado?
- Dear son do you think it is love?
- Listen dear son--listen America, daughter or son,
- It is a painful thing to love a man or woman to excess, and yet it
- satisfies, it is great,
- But there is something else very great, it makes the whole coincide,
- It, magnificent, beyond materials, with continuous hands sweeps and
- provides for all.
- 10
- Know you, solely to drop in the earth the germs of a greater religion,
- The following chants each for its kind I sing.
- My comrade!
- For you to share with me two greatnesses, and a third one rising
- inclusive and more resplendent,
- The greatness of Love and Democracy, and the greatness of Religion.
- Melange mine own, the unseen and the seen,
- Mysterious ocean where the streams empty,
- Prophetic spirit of materials shifting and flickering around me,
- Living beings, identities now doubtless near us in the air that we
- know not of,
- Contact daily and hourly that will not release me,
- These selecting, these in hints demanded of me.
- Not he with a daily kiss onward from childhood kissing me,
- Has winded and twisted around me that which holds me to him,
- Any more than I am held to the heavens and all the spiritual world,
- After what they have done to me, suggesting themes.
- O such themes--equalities! O divine average!
- Warblings under the sun, usher’d as now, or at noon, or setting,
- Strains musical flowing through ages, now reaching hither,
- I take to your reckless and composite chords, add to them, and
- cheerfully pass them forward.
- 11
- As I have walk’d in Alabama my morning walk,
- I have seen where the she-bird the mocking-bird sat on her nest in
- the briers hatching her brood.
- I have seen the he-bird also,
- I have paus’d to hear him near at hand inflating his throat and
- joyfully singing.
- And while I paus’d it came to me that what he really sang for was
- not there only,
- Nor for his mate nor himself only, nor all sent back by the echoes,
- But subtle, clandestine, away beyond,
- A charge transmitted and gift occult for those being born.
- 12
- Democracy! near at hand to you a throat is now inflating itself and
- joyfully singing.
- Ma femme! for the brood beyond us and of us,
- For those who belong here and those to come,
- I exultant to be ready for them will now shake out carols stronger
- and haughtier than have ever yet been heard upon earth.
- I will make the songs of passion to give them their way,
- And your songs outlaw’d offenders, for I scan you with kindred eyes,
- and carry you with me the same as any.
- I will make the true poem of riches,
- To earn for the body and the mind whatever adheres and goes forward
- and is not dropt by death;
- I will effuse egotism and show it underlying all, and I will be the
- bard of personality,
- And I will show of male and female that either is but the equal of
- the other,
- And sexual organs and acts! do you concentrate in me, for I am determin’d
- to tell you with courageous clear voice to prove you illustrious,
- And I will show that there is no imperfection in the present, and
- can be none in the future,
- And I will show that whatever happens to anybody it may be turn’d to
- beautiful results,
- And I will show that nothing can happen more beautiful than death,
- And I will thread a thread through my poems that time and events are
- compact,
- And that all the things of the universe are perfect miracles, each
- as profound as any.
- I will not make poems with reference to parts,
- But I will make poems, songs, thoughts, with reference to ensemble,
- And I will not sing with reference to a day, but with reference to
- all days,
- And I will not make a poem nor the least part of a poem but has
- reference to the soul,
- Because having look’d at the objects of the universe, I find there
- is no one nor any particle of one but has reference to the soul.
- 13
- Was somebody asking to see the soul?
- See, your own shape and countenance, persons, substances, beasts,
- the trees, the running rivers, the rocks and sands.
- All hold spiritual joys and afterwards loosen them;
- How can the real body ever die and be buried?
- Of your real body and any man’s or woman’s real body,
- Item for item it will elude the hands of the corpse-cleaners and
- pass to fitting spheres,
- Carrying what has accrued to it from the moment of birth to the
- moment of death.
- Not the types set up by the printer return their impression, the
- meaning, the main concern,
- Any more than a man’s substance and life or a woman’s substance and
- life return in the body and the soul,
- Indifferently before death and after death.
- Behold, the body includes and is the meaning, the main concern and
- includes and is the soul;
- Whoever you are, how superb and how divine is your body, or any part
- of it!
- 14
- Whoever you are, to you endless announcements!
- Daughter of the lands did you wait for your poet?
- Did you wait for one with a flowing mouth and indicative hand?
- Toward the male of the States, and toward the female of the States,
- Exulting words, words to Democracy’s lands.
- Interlink’d, food-yielding lands!
- Land of coal and iron! land of gold! land of cotton, sugar, rice!
- Land of wheat, beef, pork! land of wool and hemp! land of the apple
- and the grape!
- Land of the pastoral plains, the grass-fields of the world! land of
- those sweet-air’d interminable plateaus!
- Land of the herd, the garden, the healthy house of adobie!
- Lands where the north-west Columbia winds, and where the south-west
- Colorado winds!
- Land of the eastern Chesapeake! land of the Delaware!
- Land of Ontario, Erie, Huron, Michigan!
- Land of the Old Thirteen! Massachusetts land! land of Vermont and
- Connecticut!
- Land of the ocean shores! land of sierras and peaks!
- Land of boatmen and sailors! fishermen’s land!
- Inextricable lands! the clutch’d together! the passionate ones!
- The side by side! the elder and younger brothers! the bony-limb’d!
- The great women’s land! the feminine! the experienced sisters and
- the inexperienced sisters!
- Far breath’d land! Arctic braced! Mexican breez’d! the diverse! the
- compact!
- The Pennsylvanian! the Virginian! the double Carolinian!
- O all and each well-loved by me! my intrepid nations! O I at any
- rate include you all with perfect love!
- I cannot be discharged from you! not from one any sooner than another!
- O death! O for all that, I am yet of you unseen this hour with
- irrepressible love,
- Walking New England, a friend, a traveler,
- Splashing my bare feet in the edge of the summer ripples on
- Paumanok’s sands,
- Crossing the prairies, dwelling again in Chicago, dwelling in every town,
- Observing shows, births, improvements, structures, arts,
- Listening to orators and oratresses in public halls,
- Of and through the States as during life, each man and woman my neighbor,
- The Louisianian, the Georgian, as near to me, and I as near to him and her,
- The Mississippian and Arkansian yet with me, and I yet with any of them,
- Yet upon the plains west of the spinal river, yet in my house of adobie,
- Yet returning eastward, yet in the Seaside State or in Maryland,
- Yet Kanadian cheerily braving the winter, the snow and ice welcome to me,
- Yet a true son either of Maine or of the Granite State, or the
- Narragansett Bay State, or the Empire State,
- Yet sailing to other shores to annex the same, yet welcoming every
- new brother,
- Hereby applying these leaves to the new ones from the hour they
- unite with the old ones,
- Coming among the new ones myself to be their companion and equal,
- coming personally to you now,
- Enjoining you to acts, characters, spectacles, with me.
- 15
- With me with firm holding, yet haste, haste on.
- For your life adhere to me,
- (I may have to be persuaded many times before I consent to give
- myself really to you, but what of that?
- Must not Nature be persuaded many times?)
- No dainty dolce affettuoso I,
- Bearded, sun-burnt, gray-neck’d, forbidding, I have arrived,
- To be wrestled with as I pass for the solid prizes of the universe,
- For such I afford whoever can persevere to win them.
- 16
- On my way a moment I pause,
- Here for you! and here for America!
- Still the present I raise aloft, still the future of the States I
- harbinge glad and sublime,
- And for the past I pronounce what the air holds of the red aborigines.
- The red aborigines,
- Leaving natural breaths, sounds of rain and winds, calls as of birds
- and animals in the woods, syllabled to us for names,
- Okonee, Koosa, Ottawa, Monongahela, Sauk, Natchez, Chattahoochee,
- Kaqueta, Oronoco,
- Wabash, Miami, Saginaw, Chippewa, Oshkosh, Walla-Walla,
- Leaving such to the States they melt, they depart, charging the
- water and the land with names.
- 17
- Expanding and swift, henceforth,
- Elements, breeds, adjustments, turbulent, quick and audacious,
- A world primal again, vistas of glory incessant and branching,
- A new race dominating previous ones and grander far, with new contests,
- New politics, new literatures and religions, new inventions and arts.
- These, my voice announcing--I will sleep no more but arise,
- You oceans that have been calm within me! how I feel you,
- fathomless, stirring, preparing unprecedented waves and storms.
- 18
- See, steamers steaming through my poems,
- See, in my poems immigrants continually coming and landing,
- See, in arriere, the wigwam, the trail, the hunter’s hut, the flat-boat,
- the maize-leaf, the claim, the rude fence, and the backwoods village,
- See, on the one side the Western Sea and on the other the Eastern Sea,
- how they advance and retreat upon my poems as upon their own shores,
- See, pastures and forests in my poems--see, animals wild and tame--see,
- beyond the Kaw, countless herds of buffalo feeding on short curly grass,
- See, in my poems, cities, solid, vast, inland, with paved streets,
- with iron and stone edifices, ceaseless vehicles, and commerce,
- See, the many-cylinder’d steam printing-press--see, the electric
- telegraph stretching across the continent,
- See, through Atlantica’s depths pulses American Europe reaching,
- pulses of Europe duly return’d,
- See, the strong and quick locomotive as it departs, panting, blowing
- the steam-whistle,
- See, ploughmen ploughing farms--see, miners digging mines--see,
- the numberless factories,
- See, mechanics busy at their benches with tools--see from among them
- superior judges, philosophs, Presidents, emerge, drest in
- working dresses,
- See, lounging through the shops and fields of the States, me
- well-belov’d, close-held by day and night,
- Hear the loud echoes of my songs there--read the hints come at last.
- 19
- O camerado close! O you and me at last, and us two only.
- O a word to clear one’s path ahead endlessly!
- O something ecstatic and undemonstrable! O music wild!
- O now I triumph--and you shall also;
- O hand in hand--O wholesome pleasure--O one more desirer and lover!
- O to haste firm holding--to haste, haste on with me.
- BOOK III
- Song of Myself
- 1
- I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
- And what I assume you shall assume,
- For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
- I loafe and invite my soul,
- I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.
- My tongue, every atom of my blood, form’d from this soil, this air,
- Born here of parents born here from parents the same, and their
- parents the same,
- I, now thirty-seven years old in perfect health begin,
- Hoping to cease not till death.
- Creeds and schools in abeyance,
- Retiring back a while sufficed at what they are, but never forgotten,
- I harbor for good or bad, I permit to speak at every hazard,
- Nature without check with original energy.
- 2
- Houses and rooms are full of perfumes, the shelves are crowded with
- perfumes,
- I breathe the fragrance myself and know it and like it,
- The distillation would intoxicate me also, but I shall not let it.
- The atmosphere is not a perfume, it has no taste of the
- distillation, it is odorless,
- It is for my mouth forever, I am in love with it,
- I will go to the bank by the wood and become undisguised and naked,
- I am mad for it to be in contact with me.
- The smoke of my own breath,
- Echoes, ripples, buzz’d whispers, love-root, silk-thread, crotch and vine,
- My respiration and inspiration, the beating of my heart, the passing
- of blood and air through my lungs,
- The sniff of green leaves and dry leaves, and of the shore and
- dark-color’d sea-rocks, and of hay in the barn,
- The sound of the belch’d words of my voice loos’d to the eddies of
- the wind,
- A few light kisses, a few embraces, a reaching around of arms,
- The play of shine and shade on the trees as the supple boughs wag,
- The delight alone or in the rush of the streets, or along the fields
- and hill-sides,
- The feeling of health, the full-noon trill, the song of me rising
- from bed and meeting the sun.
- Have you reckon’d a thousand acres much? have you reckon’d the earth much?
- Have you practis’d so long to learn to read?
- Have you felt so proud to get at the meaning of poems?
- Stop this day and night with me and you shall possess the origin of
- all poems,
- You shall possess the good of the earth and sun, (there are millions
- of suns left,)
- You shall no longer take things at second or third hand, nor look through
- the eyes of the dead, nor feed on the spectres in books,
- You shall not look through my eyes either, nor take things from me,
- You shall listen to all sides and filter them from your self.
- 3
- I have heard what the talkers were talking, the talk of the
- beginning and the end,
- But I do not talk of the beginning or the end.
- There was never any more inception than there is now,
- Nor any more youth or age than there is now,
- And will never be any more perfection than there is now,
- Nor any more heaven or hell than there is now.
- Urge and urge and urge,
- Always the procreant urge of the world.
- Out of the dimness opposite equals advance, always substance and
- increase, always sex,
- Always a knit of identity, always distinction, always a breed of life.
- To elaborate is no avail, learn’d and unlearn’d feel that it is so.
- Sure as the most certain sure, plumb in the uprights, well
- entretied, braced in the beams,
- Stout as a horse, affectionate, haughty, electrical,
- I and this mystery here we stand.
- Clear and sweet is my soul, and clear and sweet is all that is not my soul.
- Lack one lacks both, and the unseen is proved by the seen,
- Till that becomes unseen and receives proof in its turn.
- Showing the best and dividing it from the worst age vexes age,
- Knowing the perfect fitness and equanimity of things, while they
- discuss I am silent, and go bathe and admire myself.
- Welcome is every organ and attribute of me, and of any man hearty and clean,
- Not an inch nor a particle of an inch is vile, and none shall be
- less familiar than the rest.
- I am satisfied--I see, dance, laugh, sing;
- As the hugging and loving bed-fellow sleeps at my side through the night,
- and withdraws at the peep of the day with stealthy tread,
- Leaving me baskets cover’d with white towels swelling the house with
- their plenty,
- Shall I postpone my acceptation and realization and scream at my eyes,
- That they turn from gazing after and down the road,
- And forthwith cipher and show me to a cent,
- Exactly the value of one and exactly the value of two, and which is ahead?
- 4
- Trippers and askers surround me,
- People I meet, the effect upon me of my early life or the ward and
- city I live in, or the nation,
- The latest dates, discoveries, inventions, societies, authors old and new,
- My dinner, dress, associates, looks, compliments, dues,
- The real or fancied indifference of some man or woman I love,
- The sickness of one of my folks or of myself, or ill-doing or loss
- or lack of money, or depressions or exaltations,
- Battles, the horrors of fratricidal war, the fever of doubtful news,
- the fitful events;
- These come to me days and nights and go from me again,
- But they are not the Me myself.
- Apart from the pulling and hauling stands what I am,
- Stands amused, complacent, compassionating, idle, unitary,
- Looks down, is erect, or bends an arm on an impalpable certain rest,
- Looking with side-curved head curious what will come next,
- Both in and out of the game and watching and wondering at it.
- Backward I see in my own days where I sweated through fog with
- linguists and contenders,
- I have no mockings or arguments, I witness and wait.
- 5
- I believe in you my soul, the other I am must not abase itself to you,
- And you must not be abased to the other.
- Loafe with me on the grass, loose the stop from your throat,
- Not words, not music or rhyme I want, not custom or lecture, not
- even the best,
- Only the lull I like, the hum of your valved voice.
- I mind how once we lay such a transparent summer morning,
- How you settled your head athwart my hips and gently turn’d over upon me,
- And parted the shirt from my bosom-bone, and plunged your tongue
- to my bare-stript heart,
- And reach’d till you felt my beard, and reach’d till you held my feet.
- Swiftly arose and spread around me the peace and knowledge that pass
- all the argument of the earth,
- And I know that the hand of God is the promise of my own,
- And I know that the spirit of God is the brother of my own,
- And that all the men ever born are also my brothers, and the women
- my sisters and lovers,
- And that a kelson of the creation is love,
- And limitless are leaves stiff or drooping in the fields,
- And brown ants in the little wells beneath them,
- And mossy scabs of the worm fence, heap’d stones, elder, mullein and
- poke-weed.
- 6
- A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands;
- How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more than he.
- I guess it must be the flag of my disposition, out of hopeful green
- stuff woven.
- Or I guess it is the handkerchief of the Lord,
- A scented gift and remembrancer designedly dropt,
- Bearing the owner’s name someway in the corners, that we may see
- and remark, and say Whose?
- Or I guess the grass is itself a child, the produced babe of the vegetation.
- Or I guess it is a uniform hieroglyphic,
- And it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones,
- Growing among black folks as among white,
- Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff, I give them the same, I
- receive them the same.
- And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves.
- Tenderly will I use you curling grass,
- It may be you transpire from the breasts of young men,
- It may be if I had known them I would have loved them,
- It may be you are from old people, or from offspring taken soon out
- of their mothers’ laps,
- And here you are the mothers’ laps.
- This grass is very dark to be from the white heads of old mothers,
- Darker than the colorless beards of old men,
- Dark to come from under the faint red roofs of mouths.
- O I perceive after all so many uttering tongues,
- And I perceive they do not come from the roofs of mouths for nothing.
- I wish I could translate the hints about the dead young men and women,
- And the hints about old men and mothers, and the offspring taken
- soon out of their laps.
- What do you think has become of the young and old men?
- And what do you think has become of the women and children?
- They are alive and well somewhere,
- The smallest sprout shows there is really no death,
- And if ever there was it led forward life, and does not wait at the
- end to arrest it,
- And ceas’d the moment life appear’d.
- All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses,
- And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.
- 7
- Has any one supposed it lucky to be born?
- I hasten to inform him or her it is just as lucky to die, and I know it.
- I pass death with the dying and birth with the new-wash’d babe, and
- am not contain’d between my hat and boots,
- And peruse manifold objects, no two alike and every one good,
- The earth good and the stars good, and their adjuncts all good.
- I am not an earth nor an adjunct of an earth,
- I am the mate and companion of people, all just as immortal and
- fathomless as myself,
- (They do not know how immortal, but I know.)
- Every kind for itself and its own, for me mine male and female,
- For me those that have been boys and that love women,
- For me the man that is proud and feels how it stings to be slighted,
- For me the sweet-heart and the old maid, for me mothers and the
- mothers of mothers,
- For me lips that have smiled, eyes that have shed tears,
- For me children and the begetters of children.
- Undrape! you are not guilty to me, nor stale nor discarded,
- I see through the broadcloth and gingham whether or no,
- And am around, tenacious, acquisitive, tireless, and cannot be shaken away.
- 8
- The little one sleeps in its cradle,
- I lift the gauze and look a long time, and silently brush away flies
- with my hand.
- The youngster and the red-faced girl turn aside up the bushy hill,
- I peeringly view them from the top.
- The suicide sprawls on the bloody floor of the bedroom,
- I witness the corpse with its dabbled hair, I note where the pistol
- has fallen.
- The blab of the pave, tires of carts, sluff of boot-soles, talk of
- the promenaders,
- The heavy omnibus, the driver with his interrogating thumb, the
- clank of the shod horses on the granite floor,
- The snow-sleighs, clinking, shouted jokes, pelts of snow-balls,
- The hurrahs for popular favorites, the fury of rous’d mobs,
- The flap of the curtain’d litter, a sick man inside borne to the hospital,
- The meeting of enemies, the sudden oath, the blows and fall,
- The excited crowd, the policeman with his star quickly working his
- passage to the centre of the crowd,
- The impassive stones that receive and return so many echoes,
- What groans of over-fed or half-starv’d who fall sunstruck or in fits,
- What exclamations of women taken suddenly who hurry home and
- give birth to babes,
- What living and buried speech is always vibrating here, what howls
- restrain’d by decorum,
- Arrests of criminals, slights, adulterous offers made, acceptances,
- rejections with convex lips,
- I mind them or the show or resonance of them--I come and I depart.
- 9
- The big doors of the country barn stand open and ready,
- The dried grass of the harvest-time loads the slow-drawn wagon,
- The clear light plays on the brown gray and green intertinged,
- The armfuls are pack’d to the sagging mow.
- I am there, I help, I came stretch’d atop of the load,
- I felt its soft jolts, one leg reclined on the other,
- I jump from the cross-beams and seize the clover and timothy,
- And roll head over heels and tangle my hair full of wisps.
- 10
- Alone far in the wilds and mountains I hunt,
- Wandering amazed at my own lightness and glee,
- In the late afternoon choosing a safe spot to pass the night,
- Kindling a fire and broiling the fresh-kill’d game,
- Falling asleep on the gather’d leaves with my dog and gun by my side.
- The Yankee clipper is under her sky-sails, she cuts the sparkle and scud,
- My eyes settle the land, I bend at her prow or shout joyously from the deck.
- The boatmen and clam-diggers arose early and stopt for me,
- I tuck’d my trowser-ends in my boots and went and had a good time;
- You should have been with us that day round the chowder-kettle.
- I saw the marriage of the trapper in the open air in the far west,
- the bride was a red girl,
- Her father and his friends sat near cross-legged and dumbly smoking,
- they had moccasins to their feet and large thick blankets
- hanging from their shoulders,
- On a bank lounged the trapper, he was drest mostly in skins, his luxuriant
- beard and curls protected his neck, he held his bride by the hand,
- She had long eyelashes, her head was bare, her coarse straight locks
- descended upon her voluptuous limbs and reach’d to her feet.
- The runaway slave came to my house and stopt outside,
- I heard his motions crackling the twigs of the woodpile,
- Through the swung half-door of the kitchen I saw him limpsy and weak,
- And went where he sat on a log and led him in and assured him,
- And brought water and fill’d a tub for his sweated body and bruis’d feet,
- And gave him a room that enter’d from my own, and gave him some
- coarse clean clothes,
- And remember perfectly well his revolving eyes and his awkwardness,
- And remember putting plasters on the galls of his neck and ankles;
- He staid with me a week before he was recuperated and pass’d north,
- I had him sit next me at table, my fire-lock lean’d in the corner.
- 11
- Twenty-eight young men bathe by the shore,
- Twenty-eight young men and all so friendly;
- Twenty-eight years of womanly life and all so lonesome.
- She owns the fine house by the rise of the bank,
- She hides handsome and richly drest aft the blinds of the window.
- Which of the young men does she like the best?
- Ah the homeliest of them is beautiful to her.
- Where are you off to, lady? for I see you,
- You splash in the water there, yet stay stock still in your room.
- Dancing and laughing along the beach came the twenty-ninth bather,
- The rest did not see her, but she saw them and loved them.
- The beards of the young men glisten’d with wet, it ran from their long hair,
- Little streams pass’d all over their bodies.
- An unseen hand also pass’d over their bodies,
- It descended tremblingly from their temples and ribs.
- The young men float on their backs, their white bellies bulge to the
- sun, they do not ask who seizes fast to them,
- They do not know who puffs and declines with pendant and bending arch,
- They do not think whom they souse with spray.
- 12
- The butcher-boy puts off his killing-clothes, or sharpens his knife
- at the stall in the market,
- I loiter enjoying his repartee and his shuffle and break-down.
- Blacksmiths with grimed and hairy chests environ the anvil,
- Each has his main-sledge, they are all out, there is a great heat in
- the fire.
- From the cinder-strew’d threshold I follow their movements,
- The lithe sheer of their waists plays even with their massive arms,
- Overhand the hammers swing, overhand so slow, overhand so sure,
- They do not hasten, each man hits in his place.
- 13
- The negro holds firmly the reins of his four horses, the block swags
- underneath on its tied-over chain,
- The negro that drives the long dray of the stone-yard, steady and
- tall he stands pois’d on one leg on the string-piece,
- His blue shirt exposes his ample neck and breast and loosens over
- his hip-band,
- His glance is calm and commanding, he tosses the slouch of his hat
- away from his forehead,
- The sun falls on his crispy hair and mustache, falls on the black of
- his polish’d and perfect limbs.
- I behold the picturesque giant and love him, and I do not stop there,
- I go with the team also.
- In me the caresser of life wherever moving, backward as well as
- forward sluing,
- To niches aside and junior bending, not a person or object missing,
- Absorbing all to myself and for this song.
- Oxen that rattle the yoke and chain or halt in the leafy shade, what
- is that you express in your eyes?
- It seems to me more than all the print I have read in my life.
- My tread scares the wood-drake and wood-duck on my distant and
- day-long ramble,
- They rise together, they slowly circle around.
- I believe in those wing’d purposes,
- And acknowledge red, yellow, white, playing within me,
- And consider green and violet and the tufted crown intentional,
- And do not call the tortoise unworthy because she is not something else,
- And the jay in the woods never studied the gamut, yet trills pretty well to me,
- And the look of the bay mare shames silliness out of me.
- 14
- The wild gander leads his flock through the cool night,
- Ya-honk he says, and sounds it down to me like an invitation,
- The pert may suppose it meaningless, but I listening close,
- Find its purpose and place up there toward the wintry sky.
- The sharp-hoof’d moose of the north, the cat on the house-sill, the
- chickadee, the prairie-dog,
- The litter of the grunting sow as they tug at her teats,
- The brood of the turkey-hen and she with her half-spread wings,
- I see in them and myself the same old law.
- The press of my foot to the earth springs a hundred affections,
- They scorn the best I can do to relate them.
- I am enamour’d of growing out-doors,
- Of men that live among cattle or taste of the ocean or woods,
- Of the builders and steerers of ships and the wielders of axes and
- mauls, and the drivers of horses,
- I can eat and sleep with them week in and week out.
- What is commonest, cheapest, nearest, easiest, is Me,
- Me going in for my chances, spending for vast returns,
- Adorning myself to bestow myself on the first that will take me,
- Not asking the sky to come down to my good will,
- Scattering it freely forever.
- 15
- The pure contralto sings in the organ loft,
- The carpenter dresses his plank, the tongue of his foreplane
- whistles its wild ascending lisp,
- The married and unmarried children ride home to their Thanksgiving dinner,
- The pilot seizes the king-pin, he heaves down with a strong arm,
- The mate stands braced in the whale-boat, lance and harpoon are ready,
- The duck-shooter walks by silent and cautious stretches,
- The deacons are ordain’d with cross’d hands at the altar,
- The spinning-girl retreats and advances to the hum of the big wheel,
- The farmer stops by the bars as he walks on a First-day loafe and
- looks at the oats and rye,
- The lunatic is carried at last to the asylum a confirm’d case,
- (He will never sleep any more as he did in the cot in his mother’s
- bed-room;)
- The jour printer with gray head and gaunt jaws works at his case,
- He turns his quid of tobacco while his eyes blurr with the manuscript;
- The malform’d limbs are tied to the surgeon’s table,
- What is removed drops horribly in a pail;
- The quadroon girl is sold at the auction-stand, the drunkard nods by
- the bar-room stove,
- The machinist rolls up his sleeves, the policeman travels his beat,
- the gate-keeper marks who pass,
- The young fellow drives the express-wagon, (I love him, though I do
- not know him;)
- The half-breed straps on his light boots to compete in the race,
- The western turkey-shooting draws old and young, some lean on their
- rifles, some sit on logs,
- Out from the crowd steps the marksman, takes his position, levels his piece;
- The groups of newly-come immigrants cover the wharf or levee,
- As the woolly-pates hoe in the sugar-field, the overseer views them
- from his saddle,
- The bugle calls in the ball-room, the gentlemen run for their
- partners, the dancers bow to each other,
- The youth lies awake in the cedar-roof’d garret and harks to the
- musical rain,
- The Wolverine sets traps on the creek that helps fill the Huron,
- The squaw wrapt in her yellow-hemm’d cloth is offering moccasins and
- bead-bags for sale,
- The connoisseur peers along the exhibition-gallery with half-shut
- eyes bent sideways,
- As the deck-hands make fast the steamboat the plank is thrown for
- the shore-going passengers,
- The young sister holds out the skein while the elder sister winds it
- off in a ball, and stops now and then for the knots,
- The one-year wife is recovering and happy having a week ago borne
- her first child,
- The clean-hair’d Yankee girl works with her sewing-machine or in the
- factory or mill,
- The paving-man leans on his two-handed rammer, the reporter’s lead
- flies swiftly over the note-book, the sign-painter is lettering
- with blue and gold,
- The canal boy trots on the tow-path, the book-keeper counts at his
- desk, the shoemaker waxes his thread,
- The conductor beats time for the band and all the performers follow him,
- The child is baptized, the convert is making his first professions,
- The regatta is spread on the bay, the race is begun, (how the white
- sails sparkle!)
- The drover watching his drove sings out to them that would stray,
- The pedler sweats with his pack on his back, (the purchaser higgling
- about the odd cent;)
- The bride unrumples her white dress, the minute-hand of the clock
- moves slowly,
- The opium-eater reclines with rigid head and just-open’d lips,
- The prostitute draggles her shawl, her bonnet bobs on her tipsy and
- pimpled neck,
- The crowd laugh at her blackguard oaths, the men jeer and wink to
- each other,
- (Miserable! I do not laugh at your oaths nor jeer you;)
- The President holding a cabinet council is surrounded by the great
- Secretaries,
- On the piazza walk three matrons stately and friendly with twined arms,
- The crew of the fish-smack pack repeated layers of halibut in the hold,
- The Missourian crosses the plains toting his wares and his cattle,
- As the fare-collector goes through the train he gives notice by the
- jingling of loose change,
- The floor-men are laying the floor, the tinners are tinning the
- roof, the masons are calling for mortar,
- In single file each shouldering his hod pass onward the laborers;
- Seasons pursuing each other the indescribable crowd is gather’d, it
- is the fourth of Seventh-month, (what salutes of cannon and small arms!)
- Seasons pursuing each other the plougher ploughs, the mower mows,
- and the winter-grain falls in the ground;
- Off on the lakes the pike-fisher watches and waits by the hole in
- the frozen surface,
- The stumps stand thick round the clearing, the squatter strikes deep
- with his axe,
- Flatboatmen make fast towards dusk near the cotton-wood or pecan-trees,
- Coon-seekers go through the regions of the Red river or through
- those drain’d by the Tennessee, or through those of the Arkansas,
- Torches shine in the dark that hangs on the Chattahooche or Altamahaw,
- Patriarchs sit at supper with sons and grandsons and great-grandsons
- around them,
- In walls of adobie, in canvas tents, rest hunters and trappers after
- their day’s sport,
- The city sleeps and the country sleeps,
- The living sleep for their time, the dead sleep for their time,
- The old husband sleeps by his wife and the young husband sleeps by his wife;
- And these tend inward to me, and I tend outward to them,
- And such as it is to be of these more or less I am,
- And of these one and all I weave the song of myself.
- 16
- I am of old and young, of the foolish as much as the wise,
- Regardless of others, ever regardful of others,
- Maternal as well as paternal, a child as well as a man,
- Stuff’d with the stuff that is coarse and stuff’d with the stuff
- that is fine,
- One of the Nation of many nations, the smallest the same and the
- largest the same,
- A Southerner soon as a Northerner, a planter nonchalant and
- hospitable down by the Oconee I live,
- A Yankee bound my own way ready for trade, my joints the limberest
- joints on earth and the sternest joints on earth,
- A Kentuckian walking the vale of the Elkhorn in my deer-skin
- leggings, a Louisianian or Georgian,
- A boatman over lakes or bays or along coasts, a Hoosier, Badger, Buckeye;
- At home on Kanadian snow-shoes or up in the bush, or with fishermen
- off Newfoundland,
- At home in the fleet of ice-boats, sailing with the rest and tacking,
- At home on the hills of Vermont or in the woods of Maine, or the
- Texan ranch,
- Comrade of Californians, comrade of free North-Westerners, (loving
- their big proportions,)
- Comrade of raftsmen and coalmen, comrade of all who shake hands
- and welcome to drink and meat,
- A learner with the simplest, a teacher of the thoughtfullest,
- A novice beginning yet experient of myriads of seasons,
- Of every hue and caste am I, of every rank and religion,
- A farmer, mechanic, artist, gentleman, sailor, quaker,
- Prisoner, fancy-man, rowdy, lawyer, physician, priest.
- I resist any thing better than my own diversity,
- Breathe the air but leave plenty after me,
- And am not stuck up, and am in my place.
- (The moth and the fish-eggs are in their place,
- The bright suns I see and the dark suns I cannot see are in their place,
- The palpable is in its place and the impalpable is in its place.)
- 17
- These are really the thoughts of all men in all ages and lands, they
- are not original with me,
- If they are not yours as much as mine they are nothing, or next to nothing,
- If they are not the riddle and the untying of the riddle they are nothing,
- If they are not just as close as they are distant they are nothing.
- This is the grass that grows wherever the land is and the water is,
- This the common air that bathes the globe.
- 18
- With music strong I come, with my cornets and my drums,
- I play not marches for accepted victors only, I play marches for
- conquer’d and slain persons.
- Have you heard that it was good to gain the day?
- I also say it is good to fall, battles are lost in the same spirit
- in which they are won.
- I beat and pound for the dead,
- I blow through my embouchures my loudest and gayest for them.
- Vivas to those who have fail’d!
- And to those whose war-vessels sank in the sea!
- And to those themselves who sank in the sea!
- And to all generals that lost engagements, and all overcome heroes!
- And the numberless unknown heroes equal to the greatest heroes known!
- 19
- This is the meal equally set, this the meat for natural hunger,
- It is for the wicked just same as the righteous, I make appointments
- with all,
- I will not have a single person slighted or left away,
- The kept-woman, sponger, thief, are hereby invited,
- The heavy-lipp’d slave is invited, the venerealee is invited;
- There shall be no difference between them and the rest.
- This is the press of a bashful hand, this the float and odor of hair,
- This the touch of my lips to yours, this the murmur of yearning,
- This the far-off depth and height reflecting my own face,
- This the thoughtful merge of myself, and the outlet again.
- Do you guess I have some intricate purpose?
- Well I have, for the Fourth-month showers have, and the mica on the
- side of a rock has.
- Do you take it I would astonish?
- Does the daylight astonish? does the early redstart twittering
- through the woods?
- Do I astonish more than they?
- This hour I tell things in confidence,
- I might not tell everybody, but I will tell you.
- 20
- Who goes there? hankering, gross, mystical, nude;
- How is it I extract strength from the beef I eat?
- What is a man anyhow? what am I? what are you?
- All I mark as my own you shall offset it with your own,
- Else it were time lost listening to me.
- I do not snivel that snivel the world over,
- That months are vacuums and the ground but wallow and filth.
- Whimpering and truckling fold with powders for invalids, conformity
- goes to the fourth-remov’d,
- I wear my hat as I please indoors or out.
- Why should I pray? why should I venerate and be ceremonious?
- Having pried through the strata, analyzed to a hair, counsel’d with
- doctors and calculated close,
- I find no sweeter fat than sticks to my own bones.
- In all people I see myself, none more and not one a barley-corn less,
- And the good or bad I say of myself I say of them.
- I know I am solid and sound,
- To me the converging objects of the universe perpetually flow,
- All are written to me, and I must get what the writing means.
- I know I am deathless,
- I know this orbit of mine cannot be swept by a carpenter’s compass,
- I know I shall not pass like a child’s carlacue cut with a burnt
- stick at night.
- I know I am august,
- I do not trouble my spirit to vindicate itself or be understood,
- I see that the elementary laws never apologize,
- (I reckon I behave no prouder than the level I plant my house by,
- after all.)
- I exist as I am, that is enough,
- If no other in the world be aware I sit content,
- And if each and all be aware I sit content.
- One world is aware and by far the largest to me, and that is myself,
- And whether I come to my own to-day or in ten thousand or ten
- million years,
- I can cheerfully take it now, or with equal cheerfulness I can wait.
- My foothold is tenon’d and mortis’d in granite,
- I laugh at what you call dissolution,
- And I know the amplitude of time.
- 21
- I am the poet of the Body and I am the poet of the Soul,
- The pleasures of heaven are with me and the pains of hell are with me,
- The first I graft and increase upon myself, the latter I translate
- into new tongue.
- I am the poet of the woman the same as the man,
- And I say it is as great to be a woman as to be a man,
- And I say there is nothing greater than the mother of men.
- I chant the chant of dilation or pride,
- We have had ducking and deprecating about enough,
- I show that size is only development.
- Have you outstript the rest? are you the President?
- It is a trifle, they will more than arrive there every one, and
- still pass on.
- I am he that walks with the tender and growing night,
- I call to the earth and sea half-held by the night.
- Press close bare-bosom’d night--press close magnetic nourishing night!
- Night of south winds--night of the large few stars!
- Still nodding night--mad naked summer night.
- Smile O voluptuous cool-breath’d earth!
- Earth of the slumbering and liquid trees!
- Earth of departed sunset--earth of the mountains misty-topt!
- Earth of the vitreous pour of the full moon just tinged with blue!
- Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
- Earth of the limpid gray of clouds brighter and clearer for my sake!
- Far-swooping elbow’d earth--rich apple-blossom’d earth!
- Smile, for your lover comes.
- Prodigal, you have given me love--therefore I to you give love!
- O unspeakable passionate love.
- Thruster holding me tight and that I hold tight!
- We hurt each other as the bridegroom and the bride hurt each other.
- 22
- You sea! I resign myself to you also--I guess what you mean,
- I behold from the beach your crooked fingers,
- I believe you refuse to go back without feeling of me,
- We must have a turn together, I undress, hurry me out of sight of the land,
- Cushion me soft, rock me in billowy drowse,
- Dash me with amorous wet, I can repay you.
- Sea of stretch’d ground-swells,
- Sea breathing broad and convulsive breaths,
- Sea of the brine of life and of unshovell’d yet always-ready graves,
- Howler and scooper of storms, capricious and dainty sea,
- I am integral with you, I too am of one phase and of all phases.
- Partaker of influx and efflux I, extoller of hate and conciliation,
- Extoller of amies and those that sleep in each others’ arms.
- I am he attesting sympathy,
- (Shall I make my list of things in the house and skip the house that
- supports them?)
- I am not the poet of goodness only, I do not decline to be the poet
- of wickedness also.
- What blurt is this about virtue and about vice?
- Evil propels me and reform of evil propels me, I stand indifferent,
- My gait is no fault-finder’s or rejecter’s gait,
- I moisten the roots of all that has grown.
- Did you fear some scrofula out of the unflagging pregnancy?
- Did you guess the celestial laws are yet to be work’d over and rectified?
- I find one side a balance and the antipedal side a balance,
- Soft doctrine as steady help as stable doctrine,
- Thoughts and deeds of the present our rouse and early start.
- This minute that comes to me over the past decillions,
- There is no better than it and now.
- What behaved well in the past or behaves well to-day is not such wonder,
- The wonder is always and always how there can be a mean man or an infidel.
- 23
- Endless unfolding of words of ages!
- And mine a word of the modern, the word En-Masse.
- A word of the faith that never balks,
- Here or henceforward it is all the same to me, I accept Time absolutely.
- It alone is without flaw, it alone rounds and completes all,
- That mystic baffling wonder alone completes all.
- I accept Reality and dare not question it,
- Materialism first and last imbuing.
- Hurrah for positive science! long live exact demonstration!
- Fetch stonecrop mixt with cedar and branches of lilac,
- This is the lexicographer, this the chemist, this made a grammar of
- the old cartouches,
- These mariners put the ship through dangerous unknown seas.
- This is the geologist, this works with the scalper, and this is a
- mathematician.
- Gentlemen, to you the first honors always!
- Your facts are useful, and yet they are not my dwelling,
- I but enter by them to an area of my dwelling.
- Less the reminders of properties told my words,
- And more the reminders they of life untold, and of freedom and extrication,
- And make short account of neuters and geldings, and favor men and
- women fully equipt,
- And beat the gong of revolt, and stop with fugitives and them that
- plot and conspire.
- 24
- Walt Whitman, a kosmos, of Manhattan the son,
- Turbulent, fleshy, sensual, eating, drinking and breeding,
- No sentimentalist, no stander above men and women or apart from them,
- No more modest than immodest.
- Unscrew the locks from the doors!
- Unscrew the doors themselves from their jambs!
- Whoever degrades another degrades me,
- And whatever is done or said returns at last to me.
- Through me the afflatus surging and surging, through me the current
- and index.
- I speak the pass-word primeval, I give the sign of democracy,
- By God! I will accept nothing which all cannot have their
- counterpart of on the same terms.
- Through me many long dumb voices,
- Voices of the interminable generations of prisoners and slaves,
- Voices of the diseas’d and despairing and of thieves and dwarfs,
- Voices of cycles of preparation and accretion,
- And of the threads that connect the stars, and of wombs and of the
- father-stuff,
- And of the rights of them the others are down upon,
- Of the deform’d, trivial, flat, foolish, despised,
- Fog in the air, beetles rolling balls of dung.
- Through me forbidden voices,
- Voices of sexes and lusts, voices veil’d and I remove the veil,
- Voices indecent by me clarified and transfigur’d.
- I do not press my fingers across my mouth,
- I keep as delicate around the bowels as around the head and heart,
- Copulation is no more rank to me than death is.
- I believe in the flesh and the appetites,
- Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part and tag of me
- is a miracle.
- Divine am I inside and out, and I make holy whatever I touch or am
- touch’d from,
- The scent of these arm-pits aroma finer than prayer,
- This head more than churches, bibles, and all the creeds.
- If I worship one thing more than another it shall be the spread of
- my own body, or any part of it,
- Translucent mould of me it shall be you!
- Shaded ledges and rests it shall be you!
- Firm masculine colter it shall be you!
- Whatever goes to the tilth of me it shall be you!
- You my rich blood! your milky stream pale strippings of my life!
- Breast that presses against other breasts it shall be you!
- My brain it shall be your occult convolutions!
- Root of wash’d sweet-flag! timorous pond-snipe! nest of guarded
- duplicate eggs! it shall be you!
- Mix’d tussled hay of head, beard, brawn, it shall be you!
- Trickling sap of maple, fibre of manly wheat, it shall be you!
- Sun so generous it shall be you!
- Vapors lighting and shading my face it shall be you!
- You sweaty brooks and dews it shall be you!
- Winds whose soft-tickling genitals rub against me it shall be you!
- Broad muscular fields, branches of live oak, loving lounger in my
- winding paths, it shall be you!
- Hands I have taken, face I have kiss’d, mortal I have ever touch’d,
- it shall be you.
- I dote on myself, there is that lot of me and all so luscious,
- Each moment and whatever happens thrills me with joy,
- I cannot tell how my ankles bend, nor whence the cause of my faintest wish,
- Nor the cause of the friendship I emit, nor the cause of the
- friendship I take again.
- That I walk up my stoop, I pause to consider if it really be,
- A morning-glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics
- of books.
- To behold the day-break!
- The little light fades the immense and diaphanous shadows,
- The air tastes good to my palate.
- Hefts of the moving world at innocent gambols silently rising
- freshly exuding,
- Scooting obliquely high and low.
- Something I cannot see puts upward libidinous prongs,
- Seas of bright juice suffuse heaven.
- The earth by the sky staid with, the daily close of their junction,
- The heav’d challenge from the east that moment over my head,
- The mocking taunt, See then whether you shall be master!
- 25
- Dazzling and tremendous how quick the sun-rise would kill me,
- If I could not now and always send sun-rise out of me.
- We also ascend dazzling and tremendous as the sun,
- We found our own O my soul in the calm and cool of the daybreak.
- My voice goes after what my eyes cannot reach,
- With the twirl of my tongue I encompass worlds and volumes of worlds.
- Speech is the twin of my vision, it is unequal to measure itself,
- It provokes me forever, it says sarcastically,
- Walt you contain enough, why don’t you let it out then?
- Come now I will not be tantalized, you conceive too much of
- articulation,
- Do you not know O speech how the buds beneath you are folded?
- Waiting in gloom, protected by frost,
- The dirt receding before my prophetical screams,
- I underlying causes to balance them at last,
- My knowledge my live parts, it keeping tally with the meaning of all things,
- Happiness, (which whoever hears me let him or her set out in search
- of this day.)
- My final merit I refuse you, I refuse putting from me what I really am,
- Encompass worlds, but never try to encompass me,
- I crowd your sleekest and best by simply looking toward you.
- Writing and talk do not prove me,
- I carry the plenum of proof and every thing else in my face,
- With the hush of my lips I wholly confound the skeptic.
- 26
- Now I will do nothing but listen,
- To accrue what I hear into this song, to let sounds contribute toward it.
- I hear bravuras of birds, bustle of growing wheat, gossip of flames,
- clack of sticks cooking my meals,
- I hear the sound I love, the sound of the human voice,
- I hear all sounds running together, combined, fused or following,
- Sounds of the city and sounds out of the city, sounds of the day and night,
- Talkative young ones to those that like them, the loud laugh of
- work-people at their meals,
- The angry base of disjointed friendship, the faint tones of the sick,
- The judge with hands tight to the desk, his pallid lips pronouncing
- a death-sentence,
- The heave’e’yo of stevedores unlading ships by the wharves, the
- refrain of the anchor-lifters,
- The ring of alarm-bells, the cry of fire, the whirr of swift-streaking
- engines and hose-carts with premonitory tinkles and color’d lights,
- The steam-whistle, the solid roll of the train of approaching cars,
- The slow march play’d at the head of the association marching two and two,
- (They go to guard some corpse, the flag-tops are draped with black muslin.)
- I hear the violoncello, (’tis the young man’s heart’s complaint,)
- I hear the key’d cornet, it glides quickly in through my ears,
- It shakes mad-sweet pangs through my belly and breast.
- I hear the chorus, it is a grand opera,
- Ah this indeed is music--this suits me.
- A tenor large and fresh as the creation fills me,
- The orbic flex of his mouth is pouring and filling me full.
- I hear the train’d soprano (what work with hers is this?)
- The orchestra whirls me wider than Uranus flies,
- It wrenches such ardors from me I did not know I possess’d them,
- It sails me, I dab with bare feet, they are lick’d by the indolent waves,
- I am cut by bitter and angry hail, I lose my breath,
- Steep’d amid honey’d morphine, my windpipe throttled in fakes of death,
- At length let up again to feel the puzzle of puzzles,
- And that we call Being.
- 27
- To be in any form, what is that?
- (Round and round we go, all of us, and ever come back thither,)
- If nothing lay more develop’d the quahaug in its callous shell were enough.
- Mine is no callous shell,
- I have instant conductors all over me whether I pass or stop,
- They seize every object and lead it harmlessly through me.
- I merely stir, press, feel with my fingers, and am happy,
- To touch my person to some one else’s is about as much as I can stand.
- 28
- Is this then a touch? quivering me to a new identity,
- Flames and ether making a rush for my veins,
- Treacherous tip of me reaching and crowding to help them,
- My flesh and blood playing out lightning to strike what is hardly
- different from myself,
- On all sides prurient provokers stiffening my limbs,
- Straining the udder of my heart for its withheld drip,
- Behaving licentious toward me, taking no denial,
- Depriving me of my best as for a purpose,
- Unbuttoning my clothes, holding me by the bare waist,
- Deluding my confusion with the calm of the sunlight and pasture-fields,
- Immodestly sliding the fellow-senses away,
- They bribed to swap off with touch and go and graze at the edges of me,
- No consideration, no regard for my draining strength or my anger,
- Fetching the rest of the herd around to enjoy them a while,
- Then all uniting to stand on a headland and worry me.
- The sentries desert every other part of me,
- They have left me helpless to a red marauder,
- They all come to the headland to witness and assist against me.
- I am given up by traitors,
- I talk wildly, I have lost my wits, I and nobody else am the
- greatest traitor,
- I went myself first to the headland, my own hands carried me there.
- You villain touch! what are you doing? my breath is tight in its throat,
- Unclench your floodgates, you are too much for me.
- 29
- Blind loving wrestling touch, sheath’d hooded sharp-tooth’d touch!
- Did it make you ache so, leaving me?
- Parting track’d by arriving, perpetual payment of perpetual loan,
- Rich showering rain, and recompense richer afterward.
- Sprouts take and accumulate, stand by the curb prolific and vital,
- Landscapes projected masculine, full-sized and golden.
- 30
- All truths wait in all things,
- They neither hasten their own delivery nor resist it,
- They do not need the obstetric forceps of the surgeon,
- The insignificant is as big to me as any,
- (What is less or more than a touch?)
- Logic and sermons never convince,
- The damp of the night drives deeper into my soul.
- (Only what proves itself to every man and woman is so,
- Only what nobody denies is so.)
- A minute and a drop of me settle my brain,
- I believe the soggy clods shall become lovers and lamps,
- And a compend of compends is the meat of a man or woman,
- And a summit and flower there is the feeling they have for each other,
- And they are to branch boundlessly out of that lesson until it
- becomes omnific,
- And until one and all shall delight us, and we them.
- 31
- I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey work of the stars,
- And the pismire is equally perfect, and a grain of sand, and the egg
- of the wren,
- And the tree-toad is a chef-d’œuvre for the highest,
- And the running blackberry would adorn the parlors of heaven,
- And the narrowest hinge in my hand puts to scorn all machinery,
- And the cow crunching with depress’d head surpasses any statue,
- And a mouse is miracle enough to stagger sextillions of infidels.
- I find I incorporate gneiss, coal, long-threaded moss, fruits,
- grains, esculent roots,
- And am stucco’d with quadrupeds and birds all over,
- And have distanced what is behind me for good reasons,
- But call any thing back again when I desire it.
- In vain the speeding or shyness,
- In vain the plutonic rocks send their old heat against my approach,
- In vain the mastodon retreats beneath its own powder’d bones,
- In vain objects stand leagues off and assume manifold shapes,
- In vain the ocean settling in hollows and the great monsters lying low,
- In vain the buzzard houses herself with the sky,
- In vain the snake slides through the creepers and logs,
- In vain the elk takes to the inner passes of the woods,
- In vain the razor-bill’d auk sails far north to Labrador,
- I follow quickly, I ascend to the nest in the fissure of the cliff.
- 32
- I think I could turn and live with animals, they are so placid and
- self-contain’d,
- I stand and look at them long and long.
- They do not sweat and whine about their condition,
- They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,
- They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,
- Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of
- owning things,
- Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of
- years ago,
- Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.
- So they show their relations to me and I accept them,
- They bring me tokens of myself, they evince them plainly in their
- possession.
- I wonder where they get those tokens,
- Did I pass that way huge times ago and negligently drop them?
- Myself moving forward then and now and forever,
- Gathering and showing more always and with velocity,
- Infinite and omnigenous, and the like of these among them,
- Not too exclusive toward the reachers of my remembrancers,
- Picking out here one that I love, and now go with him on brotherly terms.
- A gigantic beauty of a stallion, fresh and responsive to my caresses,
- Head high in the forehead, wide between the ears,
- Limbs glossy and supple, tail dusting the ground,
- Eyes full of sparkling wickedness, ears finely cut, flexibly moving.
- His nostrils dilate as my heels embrace him,
- His well-built limbs tremble with pleasure as we race around and return.
- I but use you a minute, then I resign you, stallion,
- Why do I need your paces when I myself out-gallop them?
- Even as I stand or sit passing faster than you.
- 33
- Space and Time! now I see it is true, what I guess’d at,
- What I guess’d when I loaf’d on the grass,
- What I guess’d while I lay alone in my bed,
- And again as I walk’d the beach under the paling stars of the morning.
- My ties and ballasts leave me, my elbows rest in sea-gaps,
- I skirt sierras, my palms cover continents,
- I am afoot with my vision.
- By the city’s quadrangular houses--in log huts, camping with lumber-men,
- Along the ruts of the turnpike, along the dry gulch and rivulet bed,
- Weeding my onion-patch or hosing rows of carrots and parsnips,
- crossing savannas, trailing in forests,
- Prospecting, gold-digging, girdling the trees of a new purchase,
- Scorch’d ankle-deep by the hot sand, hauling my boat down the
- shallow river,
- Where the panther walks to and fro on a limb overhead, where the
- buck turns furiously at the hunter,
- Where the rattlesnake suns his flabby length on a rock, where the
- otter is feeding on fish,
- Where the alligator in his tough pimples sleeps by the bayou,
- Where the black bear is searching for roots or honey, where the
- beaver pats the mud with his paddle-shaped tall;
- Over the growing sugar, over the yellow-flower’d cotton plant, over
- the rice in its low moist field,
- Over the sharp-peak’d farm house, with its scallop’d scum and
- slender shoots from the gutters,
- Over the western persimmon, over the long-leav’d corn, over the
- delicate blue-flower flax,
- Over the white and brown buckwheat, a hummer and buzzer there with
- the rest,
- Over the dusky green of the rye as it ripples and shades in the breeze;
- Scaling mountains, pulling myself cautiously up, holding on by low
- scragged limbs,
- Walking the path worn in the grass and beat through the leaves of the brush,
- Where the quail is whistling betwixt the woods and the wheat-lot,
- Where the bat flies in the Seventh-month eve, where the great
- goldbug drops through the dark,
- Where the brook puts out of the roots of the old tree and flows to
- the meadow,
- Where cattle stand and shake away flies with the tremulous
- shuddering of their hides,
- Where the cheese-cloth hangs in the kitchen, where andirons straddle
- the hearth-slab, where cobwebs fall in festoons from the rafters;
- Where trip-hammers crash, where the press is whirling its cylinders,
- Wherever the human heart beats with terrible throes under its ribs,
- Where the pear-shaped balloon is floating aloft, (floating in it
- myself and looking composedly down,)
- Where the life-car is drawn on the slip-noose, where the heat
- hatches pale-green eggs in the dented sand,
- Where the she-whale swims with her calf and never forsakes it,
- Where the steam-ship trails hind-ways its long pennant of smoke,
- Where the fin of the shark cuts like a black chip out of the water,
- Where the half-burn’d brig is riding on unknown currents,
- Where shells grow to her slimy deck, where the dead are corrupting below;
- Where the dense-starr’d flag is borne at the head of the regiments,
- Approaching Manhattan up by the long-stretching island,
- Under Niagara, the cataract falling like a veil over my countenance,
- Upon a door-step, upon the horse-block of hard wood outside,
- Upon the race-course, or enjoying picnics or jigs or a good game of
- base-ball,
- At he-festivals, with blackguard gibes, ironical license,
- bull-dances, drinking, laughter,
- At the cider-mill tasting the sweets of the brown mash, sucking the
- juice through a straw,
- At apple-peelings wanting kisses for all the red fruit I find,
- At musters, beach-parties, friendly bees, huskings, house-raisings;
- Where the mocking-bird sounds his delicious gurgles, cackles,
- screams, weeps,
- Where the hay-rick stands in the barn-yard, where the dry-stalks are
- scatter’d, where the brood-cow waits in the hovel,
- Where the bull advances to do his masculine work, where the stud to
- the mare, where the cock is treading the hen,
- Where the heifers browse, where geese nip their food with short jerks,
- Where sun-down shadows lengthen over the limitless and lonesome prairie,
- Where herds of buffalo make a crawling spread of the square miles
- far and near,
- Where the humming-bird shimmers, where the neck of the long-lived
- swan is curving and winding,
- Where the laughing-gull scoots by the shore, where she laughs her
- near-human laugh,
- Where bee-hives range on a gray bench in the garden half hid by the
- high weeds,
- Where band-neck’d partridges roost in a ring on the ground with
- their heads out,
- Where burial coaches enter the arch’d gates of a cemetery,
- Where winter wolves bark amid wastes of snow and icicled trees,
- Where the yellow-crown’d heron comes to the edge of the marsh at
- night and feeds upon small crabs,
- Where the splash of swimmers and divers cools the warm noon,
- Where the katy-did works her chromatic reed on the walnut-tree over
- the well,
- Through patches of citrons and cucumbers with silver-wired leaves,
- Through the salt-lick or orange glade, or under conical firs,
- Through the gymnasium, through the curtain’d saloon, through the
- office or public hall;
- Pleas’d with the native and pleas’d with the foreign, pleas’d with
- the new and old,
- Pleas’d with the homely woman as well as the handsome,
- Pleas’d with the quakeress as she puts off her bonnet and talks melodiously,
- Pleas’d with the tune of the choir of the whitewash’d church,
- Pleas’d with the earnest words of the sweating Methodist preacher,
- impress’d seriously at the camp-meeting;
- Looking in at the shop-windows of Broadway the whole forenoon,
- flatting the flesh of my nose on the thick plate glass,
- Wandering the same afternoon with my face turn’d up to the clouds,
- or down a lane or along the beach,
- My right and left arms round the sides of two friends, and I in the middle;
- Coming home with the silent and dark-cheek’d bush-boy, (behind me
- he rides at the drape of the day,)
- Far from the settlements studying the print of animals’ feet, or the
- moccasin print,
- By the cot in the hospital reaching lemonade to a feverish patient,
- Nigh the coffin’d corpse when all is still, examining with a candle;
- Voyaging to every port to dicker and adventure,
- Hurrying with the modern crowd as eager and fickle as any,
- Hot toward one I hate, ready in my madness to knife him,
- Solitary at midnight in my back yard, my thoughts gone from me a long while,
- Walking the old hills of Judaea with the beautiful gentle God by my side,
- Speeding through space, speeding through heaven and the stars,
- Speeding amid the seven satellites and the broad ring, and the
- diameter of eighty thousand miles,
- Speeding with tail’d meteors, throwing fire-balls like the rest,
- Carrying the crescent child that carries its own full mother in its belly,
- Storming, enjoying, planning, loving, cautioning,
- Backing and filling, appearing and disappearing,
- I tread day and night such roads.
- I visit the orchards of spheres and look at the product,
- And look at quintillions ripen’d and look at quintillions green.
- I fly those flights of a fluid and swallowing soul,
- My course runs below the soundings of plummets.
- I help myself to material and immaterial,
- No guard can shut me off, no law prevent me.
- I anchor my ship for a little while only,
- My messengers continually cruise away or bring their returns to me.
- I go hunting polar furs and the seal, leaping chasms with a
- pike-pointed staff, clinging to topples of brittle and blue.
- I ascend to the foretruck,
- I take my place late at night in the crow’s-nest,
- We sail the arctic sea, it is plenty light enough,
- Through the clear atmosphere I stretch around on the wonderful beauty,
- The enormous masses of ice pass me and I pass them, the scenery is
- plain in all directions,
- The white-topt mountains show in the distance, I fling out my
- fancies toward them,
- We are approaching some great battle-field in which we are soon to
- be engaged,
- We pass the colossal outposts of the encampment, we pass with still
- feet and caution,
- Or we are entering by the suburbs some vast and ruin’d city,
- The blocks and fallen architecture more than all the living cities
- of the globe.
- I am a free companion, I bivouac by invading watchfires,
- I turn the bridegroom out of bed and stay with the bride myself,
- I tighten her all night to my thighs and lips.
- My voice is the wife’s voice, the screech by the rail of the stairs,
- They fetch my man’s body up dripping and drown’d.
- I understand the large hearts of heroes,
- The courage of present times and all times,
- How the skipper saw the crowded and rudderless wreck of the
- steamship, and Death chasing it up and down the storm,
- How he knuckled tight and gave not back an inch, and was faithful of
- days and faithful of nights,
- And chalk’d in large letters on a board, Be of good cheer, we will
- not desert you;
- How he follow’d with them and tack’d with them three days and
- would not give it up,
- How he saved the drifting company at last,
- How the lank loose-gown’d women look’d when boated from the
- side of their prepared graves,
- How the silent old-faced infants and the lifted sick, and the
- sharp-lipp’d unshaved men;
- All this I swallow, it tastes good, I like it well, it becomes mine,
- I am the man, I suffer’d, I was there.
- The disdain and calmness of martyrs,
- The mother of old, condemn’d for a witch, burnt with dry wood, her
- children gazing on,
- The hounded slave that flags in the race, leans by the fence,
- blowing, cover’d with sweat,
- The twinges that sting like needles his legs and neck, the murderous
- buckshot and the bullets,
- All these I feel or am.
- I am the hounded slave, I wince at the bite of the dogs,
- Hell and despair are upon me, crack and again crack the marksmen,
- I clutch the rails of the fence, my gore dribs, thinn’d with the
- ooze of my skin,
- I fall on the weeds and stones,
- The riders spur their unwilling horses, haul close,
- Taunt my dizzy ears and beat me violently over the head with whip-stocks.
- Agonies are one of my changes of garments,
- I do not ask the wounded person how he feels, I myself become the
- wounded person,
- My hurts turn livid upon me as I lean on a cane and observe.
- I am the mash’d fireman with breast-bone broken,
- Tumbling walls buried me in their debris,
- Heat and smoke I inspired, I heard the yelling shouts of my comrades,
- I heard the distant click of their picks and shovels,
- They have clear’d the beams away, they tenderly lift me forth.
- I lie in the night air in my red shirt, the pervading hush is for my sake,
- Painless after all I lie exhausted but not so unhappy,
- White and beautiful are the faces around me, the heads are bared
- of their fire-caps,
- The kneeling crowd fades with the light of the torches.
- Distant and dead resuscitate,
- They show as the dial or move as the hands of me, I am the clock myself.
- I am an old artillerist, I tell of my fort’s bombardment,
- I am there again.
- Again the long roll of the drummers,
- Again the attacking cannon, mortars,
- Again to my listening ears the cannon responsive.
- I take part, I see and hear the whole,
- The cries, curses, roar, the plaudits for well-aim’d shots,
- The ambulanza slowly passing trailing its red drip,
- Workmen searching after damages, making indispensable repairs,
- The fall of grenades through the rent roof, the fan-shaped explosion,
- The whizz of limbs, heads, stone, wood, iron, high in the air.
- Again gurgles the mouth of my dying general, he furiously waves
- with his hand,
- He gasps through the clot Mind not me--mind--the entrenchments.
- 34
- Now I tell what I knew in Texas in my early youth,
- (I tell not the fall of Alamo,
- Not one escaped to tell the fall of Alamo,
- The hundred and fifty are dumb yet at Alamo,)
- ’Tis the tale of the murder in cold blood of four hundred and twelve
- young men.
- Retreating they had form’d in a hollow square with their baggage for
- breastworks,
- Nine hundred lives out of the surrounding enemies, nine times their
- number, was the price they took in advance,
- Their colonel was wounded and their ammunition gone,
- They treated for an honorable capitulation, receiv’d writing and
- seal, gave up their arms and march’d back prisoners of war.
- They were the glory of the race of rangers,
- Matchless with horse, rifle, song, supper, courtship,
- Large, turbulent, generous, handsome, proud, and affectionate,
- Bearded, sunburnt, drest in the free costume of hunters,
- Not a single one over thirty years of age.
- The second First-day morning they were brought out in squads and
- massacred, it was beautiful early summer,
- The work commenced about five o’clock and was over by eight.
- None obey’d the command to kneel,
- Some made a mad and helpless rush, some stood stark and straight,
- A few fell at once, shot in the temple or heart, the living and dead
- lay together,
- The maim’d and mangled dug in the dirt, the new-comers saw them there,
- Some half-kill’d attempted to crawl away,
- These were despatch’d with bayonets or batter’d with the blunts of muskets,
- A youth not seventeen years old seiz’d his assassin till two more
- came to release him,
- The three were all torn and cover’d with the boy’s blood.
- At eleven o’clock began the burning of the bodies;
- That is the tale of the murder of the four hundred and twelve young men.
- 35
- Would you hear of an old-time sea-fight?
- Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars?
- List to the yarn, as my grandmother’s father the sailor told it to me.
- Our foe was no skulk in his ship I tell you, (said he,)
- His was the surly English pluck, and there is no tougher or truer,
- and never was, and never will be;
- Along the lower’d eve he came horribly raking us.
- We closed with him, the yards entangled, the cannon touch’d,
- My captain lash’d fast with his own hands.
- We had receiv’d some eighteen pound shots under the water,
- On our lower-gun-deck two large pieces had burst at the first fire,
- killing all around and blowing up overhead.
- Fighting at sun-down, fighting at dark,
- Ten o’clock at night, the full moon well up, our leaks on the gain,
- and five feet of water reported,
- The master-at-arms loosing the prisoners confined in the after-hold
- to give them a chance for themselves.
- The transit to and from the magazine is now stopt by the sentinels,
- They see so many strange faces they do not know whom to trust.
- Our frigate takes fire,
- The other asks if we demand quarter?
- If our colors are struck and the fighting done?
- Now I laugh content, for I hear the voice of my little captain,
- We have not struck, he composedly cries, we have just begun our part
- of the fighting.
- Only three guns are in use,
- One is directed by the captain himself against the enemy’s main-mast,
- Two well serv’d with grape and canister silence his musketry and
- clear his decks.
- The tops alone second the fire of this little battery, especially
- the main-top,
- They hold out bravely during the whole of the action.
- Not a moment’s cease,
- The leaks gain fast on the pumps, the fire eats toward the powder-magazine.
- One of the pumps has been shot away, it is generally thought we are sinking.
- Serene stands the little captain,
- He is not hurried, his voice is neither high nor low,
- His eyes give more light to us than our battle-lanterns.
- Toward twelve there in the beams of the moon they surrender to us.
- 36
- Stretch’d and still lies the midnight,
- Two great hulls motionless on the breast of the darkness,
- Our vessel riddled and slowly sinking, preparations to pass to the
- one we have conquer’d,
- The captain on the quarter-deck coldly giving his orders through a
- countenance white as a sheet,
- Near by the corpse of the child that serv’d in the cabin,
- The dead face of an old salt with long white hair and carefully
- curl’d whiskers,
- The flames spite of all that can be done flickering aloft and below,
- The husky voices of the two or three officers yet fit for duty,
- Formless stacks of bodies and bodies by themselves, dabs of flesh
- upon the masts and spars,
- Cut of cordage, dangle of rigging, slight shock of the soothe of waves,
- Black and impassive guns, litter of powder-parcels, strong scent,
- A few large stars overhead, silent and mournful shining,
- Delicate sniffs of sea-breeze, smells of sedgy grass and fields by
- the shore, death-messages given in charge to survivors,
- The hiss of the surgeon’s knife, the gnawing teeth of his saw,
- Wheeze, cluck, swash of falling blood, short wild scream, and long,
- dull, tapering groan,
- These so, these irretrievable.
- 37
- You laggards there on guard! look to your arms!
- In at the conquer’d doors they crowd! I am possess’d!
- Embody all presences outlaw’d or suffering,
- See myself in prison shaped like another man,
- And feel the dull unintermitted pain.
- For me the keepers of convicts shoulder their carbines and keep watch,
- It is I let out in the morning and barr’d at night.
- Not a mutineer walks handcuff’d to jail but I am handcuff’d to him
- and walk by his side,
- (I am less the jolly one there, and more the silent one with sweat
- on my twitching lips.)
- Not a youngster is taken for larceny but I go up too, and am tried
- and sentenced.
- Not a cholera patient lies at the last gasp but I also lie at the last gasp,
- My face is ash-color’d, my sinews gnarl, away from me people retreat.
- Askers embody themselves in me and I am embodied in them,
- I project my hat, sit shame-faced, and beg.
- 38
- Enough! enough! enough!
- Somehow I have been stunn’d. Stand back!
- Give me a little time beyond my cuff’d head, slumbers, dreams, gaping,
- I discover myself on the verge of a usual mistake.
- That I could forget the mockers and insults!
- That I could forget the trickling tears and the blows of the
- bludgeons and hammers!
- That I could look with a separate look on my own crucifixion and
- bloody crowning.
- I remember now,
- I resume the overstaid fraction,
- The grave of rock multiplies what has been confided to it, or to any graves,
- Corpses rise, gashes heal, fastenings roll from me.
- I troop forth replenish’d with supreme power, one of an average
- unending procession,
- Inland and sea-coast we go, and pass all boundary lines,
- Our swift ordinances on their way over the whole earth,
- The blossoms we wear in our hats the growth of thousands of years.
- Eleves, I salute you! come forward!
- Continue your annotations, continue your questionings.
- 39
- The friendly and flowing savage, who is he?
- Is he waiting for civilization, or past it and mastering it?
- Is he some Southwesterner rais’d out-doors? is he Kanadian?
- Is he from the Mississippi country? Iowa, Oregon, California?
- The mountains? prairie-life, bush-life? or sailor from the sea?
- Wherever he goes men and women accept and desire him,
- They desire he should like them, touch them, speak to them, stay with them.
- Behavior lawless as snow-flakes, words simple as grass, uncomb’d
- head, laughter, and naivete,
- Slow-stepping feet, common features, common modes and emanations,
- They descend in new forms from the tips of his fingers,
- They are wafted with the odor of his body or breath, they fly out of
- the glance of his eyes.
- 40
- Flaunt of the sunshine I need not your bask--lie over!
- You light surfaces only, I force surfaces and depths also.
- Earth! you seem to look for something at my hands,
- Say, old top-knot, what do you want?
- Man or woman, I might tell how I like you, but cannot,
- And might tell what it is in me and what it is in you, but cannot,
- And might tell that pining I have, that pulse of my nights and days.
- Behold, I do not give lectures or a little charity,
- When I give I give myself.
- You there, impotent, loose in the knees,
- Open your scarf’d chops till I blow grit within you,
- Spread your palms and lift the flaps of your pockets,
- I am not to be denied, I compel, I have stores plenty and to spare,
- And any thing I have I bestow.
- I do not ask who you are, that is not important to me,
- You can do nothing and be nothing but what I will infold you.
- To cotton-field drudge or cleaner of privies I lean,
- On his right cheek I put the family kiss,
- And in my soul I swear I never will deny him.
- On women fit for conception I start bigger and nimbler babes.
- (This day I am jetting the stuff of far more arrogant republics.)
- To any one dying, thither I speed and twist the knob of the door.
- Turn the bed-clothes toward the foot of the bed,
- Let the physician and the priest go home.
- I seize the descending man and raise him with resistless will,
- O despairer, here is my neck,
- By God, you shall not go down! hang your whole weight upon me.
- I dilate you with tremendous breath, I buoy you up,
- Every room of the house do I fill with an arm’d force,
- Lovers of me, bafflers of graves.
- Sleep--I and they keep guard all night,
- Not doubt, not decease shall dare to lay finger upon you,
- I have embraced you, and henceforth possess you to myself,
- And when you rise in the morning you will find what I tell you is so.
- 41
- I am he bringing help for the sick as they pant on their backs,
- And for strong upright men I bring yet more needed help.
- I heard what was said of the universe,
- Heard it and heard it of several thousand years;
- It is middling well as far as it goes--but is that all?
- Magnifying and applying come I,
- Outbidding at the start the old cautious hucksters,
- Taking myself the exact dimensions of Jehovah,
- Lithographing Kronos, Zeus his son, and Hercules his grandson,
- Buying drafts of Osiris, Isis, Belus, Brahma, Buddha,
- In my portfolio placing Manito loose, Allah on a leaf, the crucifix
- engraved,
- With Odin and the hideous-faced Mexitli and every idol and image,
- Taking them all for what they are worth and not a cent more,
- Admitting they were alive and did the work of their days,
- (They bore mites as for unfledg’d birds who have now to rise and fly
- and sing for themselves,)
- Accepting the rough deific sketches to fill out better in myself,
- bestowing them freely on each man and woman I see,
- Discovering as much or more in a framer framing a house,
- Putting higher claims for him there with his roll’d-up sleeves
- driving the mallet and chisel,
- Not objecting to special revelations, considering a curl of smoke or
- a hair on the back of my hand just as curious as any revelation,
- Lads ahold of fire-engines and hook-and-ladder ropes no less to me
- than the gods of the antique wars,
- Minding their voices peal through the crash of destruction,
- Their brawny limbs passing safe over charr’d laths, their white
- foreheads whole and unhurt out of the flames;
- By the mechanic’s wife with her babe at her nipple interceding for
- every person born,
- Three scythes at harvest whizzing in a row from three lusty angels
- with shirts bagg’d out at their waists,
- The snag-tooth’d hostler with red hair redeeming sins past and to come,
- Selling all he possesses, traveling on foot to fee lawyers for his
- brother and sit by him while he is tried for forgery;
- What was strewn in the amplest strewing the square rod about me, and
- not filling the square rod then,
- The bull and the bug never worshipp’d half enough,
- Dung and dirt more admirable than was dream’d,
- The supernatural of no account, myself waiting my time to be one of
- the supremes,
- The day getting ready for me when I shall do as much good as the
- best, and be as prodigious;
- By my life-lumps! becoming already a creator,
- Putting myself here and now to the ambush’d womb of the shadows.
- 42
- A call in the midst of the crowd,
- My own voice, orotund sweeping and final.
- Come my children,
- Come my boys and girls, my women, household and intimates,
- Now the performer launches his nerve, he has pass’d his prelude on
- the reeds within.
- Easily written loose-finger’d chords--I feel the thrum of your
- climax and close.
- My head slues round on my neck,
- Music rolls, but not from the organ,
- Folks are around me, but they are no household of mine.
- Ever the hard unsunk ground,
- Ever the eaters and drinkers, ever the upward and downward sun, ever
- the air and the ceaseless tides,
- Ever myself and my neighbors, refreshing, wicked, real,
- Ever the old inexplicable query, ever that thorn’d thumb, that
- breath of itches and thirsts,
- Ever the vexer’s hoot! hoot! till we find where the sly one hides
- and bring him forth,
- Ever love, ever the sobbing liquid of life,
- Ever the bandage under the chin, ever the trestles of death.
- Here and there with dimes on the eyes walking,
- To feed the greed of the belly the brains liberally spooning,
- Tickets buying, taking, selling, but in to the feast never once going,
- Many sweating, ploughing, thrashing, and then the chaff for payment
- receiving,
- A few idly owning, and they the wheat continually claiming.
- This is the city and I am one of the citizens,
- Whatever interests the rest interests me, politics, wars, markets,
- newspapers, schools,
- The mayor and councils, banks, tariffs, steamships, factories,
- stocks, stores, real estate and personal estate.
- The little plentiful manikins skipping around in collars and tail’d coats
- I am aware who they are, (they are positively not worms or fleas,)
- I acknowledge the duplicates of myself, the weakest and shallowest
- is deathless with me,
- What I do and say the same waits for them,
- Every thought that flounders in me the same flounders in them.
- I know perfectly well my own egotism,
- Know my omnivorous lines and must not write any less,
- And would fetch you whoever you are flush with myself.
- Not words of routine this song of mine,
- But abruptly to question, to leap beyond yet nearer bring;
- This printed and bound book--but the printer and the
- printing-office boy?
- The well-taken photographs--but your wife or friend close and solid
- in your arms?
- The black ship mail’d with iron, her mighty guns in her turrets--but
- the pluck of the captain and engineers?
- In the houses the dishes and fare and furniture--but the host and
- hostess, and the look out of their eyes?
- The sky up there--yet here or next door, or across the way?
- The saints and sages in history--but you yourself?
- Sermons, creeds, theology--but the fathomless human brain,
- And what is reason? and what is love? and what is life?
- 43
- I do not despise you priests, all time, the world over,
- My faith is the greatest of faiths and the least of faiths,
- Enclosing worship ancient and modern and all between ancient and modern,
- Believing I shall come again upon the earth after five thousand years,
- Waiting responses from oracles, honoring the gods, saluting the sun,
- Making a fetich of the first rock or stump, powowing with sticks in
- the circle of obis,
- Helping the llama or brahmin as he trims the lamps of the idols,
- Dancing yet through the streets in a phallic procession, rapt and
- austere in the woods a gymnosophist,
- Drinking mead from the skull-cap, to Shastas and Vedas admirant,
- minding the Koran,
- Walking the teokallis, spotted with gore from the stone and knife,
- beating the serpent-skin drum,
- Accepting the Gospels, accepting him that was crucified, knowing
- assuredly that he is divine,
- To the mass kneeling or the puritan’s prayer rising, or sitting
- patiently in a pew,
- Ranting and frothing in my insane crisis, or waiting dead-like till
- my spirit arouses me,
- Looking forth on pavement and land, or outside of pavement and land,
- Belonging to the winders of the circuit of circuits.
- One of that centripetal and centrifugal gang I turn and talk like
- man leaving charges before a journey.
- Down-hearted doubters dull and excluded,
- Frivolous, sullen, moping, angry, affected, dishearten’d, atheistical,
- I know every one of you, I know the sea of torment, doubt, despair
- and unbelief.
- How the flukes splash!
- How they contort rapid as lightning, with spasms and spouts of blood!
- Be at peace bloody flukes of doubters and sullen mopers,
- I take my place among you as much as among any,
- The past is the push of you, me, all, precisely the same,
- And what is yet untried and afterward is for you, me, all, precisely
- the same.
- I do not know what is untried and afterward,
- But I know it will in its turn prove sufficient, and cannot fail.
- Each who passes is consider’d, each who stops is consider’d, not
- single one can it fall.
- It cannot fall the young man who died and was buried,
- Nor the young woman who died and was put by his side,
- Nor the little child that peep’d in at the door, and then drew back
- and was never seen again,
- Nor the old man who has lived without purpose, and feels it with
- bitterness worse than gall,
- Nor him in the poor house tubercled by rum and the bad disorder,
- Nor the numberless slaughter’d and wreck’d, nor the brutish koboo
- call’d the ordure of humanity,
- Nor the sacs merely floating with open mouths for food to slip in,
- Nor any thing in the earth, or down in the oldest graves of the earth,
- Nor any thing in the myriads of spheres, nor the myriads of myriads
- that inhabit them,
- Nor the present, nor the least wisp that is known.
- 44
- It is time to explain myself--let us stand up.
- What is known I strip away,
- I launch all men and women forward with me into the Unknown.
- The clock indicates the moment--but what does eternity indicate?
- We have thus far exhausted trillions of winters and summers,
- There are trillions ahead, and trillions ahead of them.
- Births have brought us richness and variety,
- And other births will bring us richness and variety.
- I do not call one greater and one smaller,
- That which fills its period and place is equal to any.
- Were mankind murderous or jealous upon you, my brother, my sister?
- I am sorry for you, they are not murderous or jealous upon me,
- All has been gentle with me, I keep no account with lamentation,
- (What have I to do with lamentation?)
- I am an acme of things accomplish’d, and I an encloser of things to be.
- My feet strike an apex of the apices of the stairs,
- On every step bunches of ages, and larger bunches between the steps,
- All below duly travel’d, and still I mount and mount.
- Rise after rise bow the phantoms behind me,
- Afar down I see the huge first Nothing, I know I was even there,
- I waited unseen and always, and slept through the lethargic mist,
- And took my time, and took no hurt from the fetid carbon.
- Long I was hugg’d close--long and long.
- Immense have been the preparations for me,
- Faithful and friendly the arms that have help’d me.
- Cycles ferried my cradle, rowing and rowing like cheerful boatmen,
- For room to me stars kept aside in their own rings,
- They sent influences to look after what was to hold me.
- Before I was born out of my mother generations guided me,
- My embryo has never been torpid, nothing could overlay it.
- For it the nebula cohered to an orb,
- The long slow strata piled to rest it on,
- Vast vegetables gave it sustenance,
- Monstrous sauroids transported it in their mouths and deposited it
- with care.
- All forces have been steadily employ’d to complete and delight me,
- Now on this spot I stand with my robust soul.
- 45
- O span of youth! ever-push’d elasticity!
- O manhood, balanced, florid and full.
- My lovers suffocate me,
- Crowding my lips, thick in the pores of my skin,
- Jostling me through streets and public halls, coming naked to me at night,
- Crying by day, Ahoy! from the rocks of the river, swinging and
- chirping over my head,
- Calling my name from flower-beds, vines, tangled underbrush,
- Lighting on every moment of my life,
- Bussing my body with soft balsamic busses,
- Noiselessly passing handfuls out of their hearts and giving them to be mine.
- Old age superbly rising! O welcome, ineffable grace of dying days!
- Every condition promulges not only itself, it promulges what grows
- after and out of itself,
- And the dark hush promulges as much as any.
- I open my scuttle at night and see the far-sprinkled systems,
- And all I see multiplied as high as I can cipher edge but the rim of
- the farther systems.
- Wider and wider they spread, expanding, always expanding,
- Outward and outward and forever outward.
- My sun has his sun and round him obediently wheels,
- He joins with his partners a group of superior circuit,
- And greater sets follow, making specks of the greatest inside them.
- There is no stoppage and never can be stoppage,
- If I, you, and the worlds, and all beneath or upon their surfaces,
- were this moment reduced back to a pallid float, it would
- not avail the long run,
- We should surely bring up again where we now stand,
- And surely go as much farther, and then farther and farther.
- A few quadrillions of eras, a few octillions of cubic leagues, do
- not hazard the span or make it impatient,
- They are but parts, any thing is but a part.
- See ever so far, there is limitless space outside of that,
- Count ever so much, there is limitless time around that.
- My rendezvous is appointed, it is certain,
- The Lord will be there and wait till I come on perfect terms,
- The great Camerado, the lover true for whom I pine will be there.
- 46
- I know I have the best of time and space, and was never measured and
- never will be measured.
- I tramp a perpetual journey, (come listen all!)
- My signs are a rain-proof coat, good shoes, and a staff cut from the woods,
- No friend of mine takes his ease in my chair,
- I have no chair, no church, no philosophy,
- I lead no man to a dinner-table, library, exchange,
- But each man and each woman of you I lead upon a knoll,
- My left hand hooking you round the waist,
- My right hand pointing to landscapes of continents and the public road.
- Not I, not any one else can travel that road for you,
- You must travel it for yourself.
- It is not far, it is within reach,
- Perhaps you have been on it since you were born and did not know,
- Perhaps it is everywhere on water and on land.
- Shoulder your duds dear son, and I will mine, and let us hasten forth,
- Wonderful cities and free nations we shall fetch as we go.
- If you tire, give me both burdens, and rest the chuff of your hand
- on my hip,
- And in due time you shall repay the same service to me,
- For after we start we never lie by again.
- This day before dawn I ascended a hill and look’d at the crowded heaven,
- And I said to my spirit When we become the enfolders of those orbs,
- and the pleasure and knowledge of every thing in them, shall we
- be fill’d and satisfied then?
- And my spirit said No, we but level that lift to pass and continue beyond.
- You are also asking me questions and I hear you,
- I answer that I cannot answer, you must find out for yourself.
- Sit a while dear son,
- Here are biscuits to eat and here is milk to drink,
- But as soon as you sleep and renew yourself in sweet clothes, I kiss you
- with a good-by kiss and open the gate for your egress hence.
- Long enough have you dream’d contemptible dreams,
- Now I wash the gum from your eyes,
- You must habit yourself to the dazzle of the light and of every
- moment of your life.
- Long have you timidly waded holding a plank by the shore,
- Now I will you to be a bold swimmer,
- To jump off in the midst of the sea, rise again, nod to me, shout,
- and laughingly dash with your hair.
- 47
- I am the teacher of athletes,
- He that by me spreads a wider breast than my own proves the width of my own,
- He most honors my style who learns under it to destroy the teacher.
- The boy I love, the same becomes a man not through derived power,
- but in his own right,
- Wicked rather than virtuous out of conformity or fear,
- Fond of his sweetheart, relishing well his steak,
- Unrequited love or a slight cutting him worse than sharp steel cuts,
- First-rate to ride, to fight, to hit the bull’s eye, to sail a
- skiff, to sing a song or play on the banjo,
- Preferring scars and the beard and faces pitted with small-pox over
- all latherers,
- And those well-tann’d to those that keep out of the sun.
- I teach straying from me, yet who can stray from me?
- I follow you whoever you are from the present hour,
- My words itch at your ears till you understand them.
- I do not say these things for a dollar or to fill up the time while
- I wait for a boat,
- (It is you talking just as much as myself, I act as the tongue of you,
- Tied in your mouth, in mine it begins to be loosen’d.)
- I swear I will never again mention love or death inside a house,
- And I swear I will never translate myself at all, only to him or her
- who privately stays with me in the open air.
- If you would understand me go to the heights or water-shore,
- The nearest gnat is an explanation, and a drop or motion of waves key,
- The maul, the oar, the hand-saw, second my words.
- No shutter’d room or school can commune with me,
- But roughs and little children better than they.
- The young mechanic is closest to me, he knows me well,
- The woodman that takes his axe and jug with him shall take me with
- him all day,
- The farm-boy ploughing in the field feels good at the sound of my voice,
- In vessels that sail my words sail, I go with fishermen and seamen
- and love them.
- The soldier camp’d or upon the march is mine,
- On the night ere the pending battle many seek me, and I do not fail them,
- On that solemn night (it may be their last) those that know me seek me.
- My face rubs to the hunter’s face when he lies down alone in his blanket,
- The driver thinking of me does not mind the jolt of his wagon,
- The young mother and old mother comprehend me,
- The girl and the wife rest the needle a moment and forget where they are,
- They and all would resume what I have told them.
- 48
- I have said that the soul is not more than the body,
- And I have said that the body is not more than the soul,
- And nothing, not God, is greater to one than one’s self is,
- And whoever walks a furlong without sympathy walks to his own
- funeral drest in his shroud,
- And I or you pocketless of a dime may purchase the pick of the earth,
- And to glance with an eye or show a bean in its pod confounds the
- learning of all times,
- And there is no trade or employment but the young man following it
- may become a hero,
- And there is no object so soft but it makes a hub for the wheel’d universe,
- And I say to any man or woman, Let your soul stand cool and composed
- before a million universes.
- And I say to mankind, Be not curious about God,
- For I who am curious about each am not curious about God,
- (No array of terms can say how much I am at peace about God and
- about death.)
- I hear and behold God in every object, yet understand God not in the least,
- Nor do I understand who there can be more wonderful than myself.
- Why should I wish to see God better than this day?
- I see something of God each hour of the twenty-four, and each moment then,
- In the faces of men and women I see God, and in my own face in the glass,
- I find letters from God dropt in the street, and every one is sign’d
- by God’s name,
- And I leave them where they are, for I know that wheresoe’er I go,
- Others will punctually come for ever and ever.
- 49
- And as to you Death, and you bitter hug of mortality, it is idle to
- try to alarm me.
- To his work without flinching the accoucheur comes,
- I see the elder-hand pressing receiving supporting,
- I recline by the sills of the exquisite flexible doors,
- And mark the outlet, and mark the relief and escape.
- And as to you Corpse I think you are good manure, but that does not
- offend me,
- I smell the white roses sweet-scented and growing,
- I reach to the leafy lips, I reach to the polish’d breasts of melons.
- And as to you Life I reckon you are the leavings of many deaths,
- (No doubt I have died myself ten thousand times before.)
- I hear you whispering there O stars of heaven,
- O suns--O grass of graves--O perpetual transfers and promotions,
- If you do not say any thing how can I say any thing?
- Of the turbid pool that lies in the autumn forest,
- Of the moon that descends the steeps of the soughing twilight,
- Toss, sparkles of day and dusk--toss on the black stems that decay
- in the muck,
- Toss to the moaning gibberish of the dry limbs.
- I ascend from the moon, I ascend from the night,
- I perceive that the ghastly glimmer is noonday sunbeams reflected,
- And debouch to the steady and central from the offspring great or small.
- 50
- There is that in me--I do not know what it is--but I know it is in me.
- Wrench’d and sweaty--calm and cool then my body becomes,
- I sleep--I sleep long.
- I do not know it--it is without name--it is a word unsaid,
- It is not in any dictionary, utterance, symbol.
- Something it swings on more than the earth I swing on,
- To it the creation is the friend whose embracing awakes me.
- Perhaps I might tell more. Outlines! I plead for my brothers and sisters.
- Do you see O my brothers and sisters?
- It is not chaos or death--it is form, union, plan--it is eternal
- life--it is Happiness.
- 51
- The past and present wilt--I have fill’d them, emptied them.
- And proceed to fill my next fold of the future.
- Listener up there! what have you to confide to me?
- Look in my face while I snuff the sidle of evening,
- (Talk honestly, no one else hears you, and I stay only a minute longer.)
- Do I contradict myself?
- Very well then I contradict myself,
- (I am large, I contain multitudes.)
- I concentrate toward them that are nigh, I wait on the door-slab.
- Who has done his day’s work? who will soonest be through with his supper?
- Who wishes to walk with me?
- Will you speak before I am gone? will you prove already too late?
- 52
- The spotted hawk swoops by and accuses me, he complains of my gab
- and my loitering.
- I too am not a bit tamed, I too am untranslatable,
- I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world.
- The last scud of day holds back for me,
- It flings my likeness after the rest and true as any on the shadow’d wilds,
- It coaxes me to the vapor and the dusk.
- I depart as air, I shake my white locks at the runaway sun,
- I effuse my flesh in eddies, and drift it in lacy jags.
- I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love,
- If you want me again look for me under your boot-soles.
- You will hardly know who I am or what I mean,
- But I shall be good health to you nevertheless,
- And filter and fibre your blood.
- Failing to fetch me at first keep encouraged,
- Missing me one place search another,
- I stop somewhere waiting for you.
- BOOK IV. CHILDREN OF ADAM
- To the Garden the World
- To the garden the world anew ascending,
- Potent mates, daughters, sons, preluding,
- The love, the life of their bodies, meaning and being,
- Curious here behold my resurrection after slumber,
- The revolving cycles in their wide sweep having brought me again,
- Amorous, mature, all beautiful to me, all wondrous,
- My limbs and the quivering fire that ever plays through them, for
- reasons, most wondrous,
- Existing I peer and penetrate still,
- Content with the present, content with the past,
- By my side or back of me Eve following,
- Or in front, and I following her just the same.
- From Pent-Up Aching Rivers
- From pent-up aching rivers,
- From that of myself without which I were nothing,
- From what I am determin’d to make illustrious, even if I stand sole
- among men,
- From my own voice resonant, singing the phallus,
- Singing the song of procreation,
- Singing the need of superb children and therein superb grown people,
- Singing the muscular urge and the blending,
- Singing the bedfellow’s song, (O resistless yearning!
- O for any and each the body correlative attracting!
- O for you whoever you are your correlative body! O it, more than all
- else, you delighting!)
- From the hungry gnaw that eats me night and day,
- From native moments, from bashful pains, singing them,
- Seeking something yet unfound though I have diligently sought it
- many a long year,
- Singing the true song of the soul fitful at random,
- Renascent with grossest Nature or among animals,
- Of that, of them and what goes with them my poems informing,
- Of the smell of apples and lemons, of the pairing of birds,
- Of the wet of woods, of the lapping of waves,
- Of the mad pushes of waves upon the land, I them chanting,
- The overture lightly sounding, the strain anticipating,
- The welcome nearness, the sight of the perfect body,
- The swimmer swimming naked in the bath, or motionless on his back
- lying and floating,
- The female form approaching, I pensive, love-flesh tremulous aching,
- The divine list for myself or you or for any one making,
- The face, the limbs, the index from head to foot, and what it arouses,
- The mystic deliria, the madness amorous, the utter abandonment,
- (Hark close and still what I now whisper to you,
- I love you, O you entirely possess me,
- O that you and I escape from the rest and go utterly off, free and lawless,
- Two hawks in the air, two fishes swimming in the sea not more
- lawless than we;)
- The furious storm through me careering, I passionately trembling.
- The oath of the inseparableness of two together, of the woman that
- loves me and whom I love more than my life, that oath swearing,
- (O I willingly stake all for you,
- O let me be lost if it must be so!
- O you and I! what is it to us what the rest do or think?
- What is all else to us? only that we enjoy each other and exhaust
- each other if it must be so;)
- From the master, the pilot I yield the vessel to,
- The general commanding me, commanding all, from him permission taking,
- From time the programme hastening, (I have loiter’d too long as it is,)
- From sex, from the warp and from the woof,
- From privacy, from frequent repinings alone,
- From plenty of persons near and yet the right person not near,
- From the soft sliding of hands over me and thrusting of fingers
- through my hair and beard,
- From the long sustain’d kiss upon the mouth or bosom,
- From the close pressure that makes me or any man drunk, fainting
- with excess,
- From what the divine husband knows, from the work of fatherhood,
- From exultation, victory and relief, from the bedfellow’s embrace in
- the night,
- From the act-poems of eyes, hands, hips and bosoms,
- From the cling of the trembling arm,
- From the bending curve and the clinch,
- From side by side the pliant coverlet off-throwing,
- From the one so unwilling to have me leave, and me just as unwilling
- to leave,
- (Yet a moment O tender waiter, and I return,)
- From the hour of shining stars and dropping dews,
- From the night a moment I emerging flitting out,
- Celebrate you act divine and you children prepared for,
- And you stalwart loins.
- I Sing the Body Electric
- 1
- I sing the body electric,
- The armies of those I love engirth me and I engirth them,
- They will not let me off till I go with them, respond to them,
- And discorrupt them, and charge them full with the charge of the soul.
- Was it doubted that those who corrupt their own bodies conceal themselves?
- And if those who defile the living are as bad as they who defile the dead?
- And if the body does not do fully as much as the soul?
- And if the body were not the soul, what is the soul?
- 2
- The love of the body of man or woman balks account, the body itself
- balks account,
- That of the male is perfect, and that of the female is perfect.
- The expression of the face balks account,
- But the expression of a well-made man appears not only in his face,
- It is in his limbs and joints also, it is curiously in the joints of
- his hips and wrists,
- It is in his walk, the carriage of his neck, the flex of his waist
- and knees, dress does not hide him,
- The strong sweet quality he has strikes through the cotton and broadcloth,
- To see him pass conveys as much as the best poem, perhaps more,
- You linger to see his back, and the back of his neck and shoulder-side.
- The sprawl and fulness of babes, the bosoms and heads of women, the
- folds of their dress, their style as we pass in the street, the
- contour of their shape downwards,
- The swimmer naked in the swimming-bath, seen as he swims through
- the transparent green-shine, or lies with his face up and rolls
- silently to and from the heave of the water,
- The bending forward and backward of rowers in row-boats, the
- horse-man in his saddle,
- Girls, mothers, house-keepers, in all their performances,
- The group of laborers seated at noon-time with their open
- dinner-kettles, and their wives waiting,
- The female soothing a child, the farmer’s daughter in the garden or
- cow-yard,
- The young fellow hosing corn, the sleigh-driver driving his six
- horses through the crowd,
- The wrestle of wrestlers, two apprentice-boys, quite grown, lusty,
- good-natured, native-born, out on the vacant lot at sundown after work,
- The coats and caps thrown down, the embrace of love and resistance,
- The upper-hold and under-hold, the hair rumpled over and blinding the eyes;
- The march of firemen in their own costumes, the play of masculine
- muscle through clean-setting trowsers and waist-straps,
- The slow return from the fire, the pause when the bell strikes
- suddenly again, and the listening on the alert,
- The natural, perfect, varied attitudes, the bent head, the curv’d
- neck and the counting;
- Such-like I love--I loosen myself, pass freely, am at the mother’s
- breast with the little child,
- Swim with the swimmers, wrestle with wrestlers, march in line with
- the firemen, and pause, listen, count.
- 3
- I knew a man, a common farmer, the father of five sons,
- And in them the fathers of sons, and in them the fathers of sons.
- This man was a wonderful vigor, calmness, beauty of person,
- The shape of his head, the pale yellow and white of his hair and
- beard, the immeasurable meaning of his black eyes, the richness
- and breadth of his manners,
- These I used to go and visit him to see, he was wise also,
- He was six feet tall, he was over eighty years old, his sons were
- massive, clean, bearded, tan-faced, handsome,
- They and his daughters loved him, all who saw him loved him,
- They did not love him by allowance, they loved him with personal love,
- He drank water only, the blood show’d like scarlet through the
- clear-brown skin of his face,
- He was a frequent gunner and fisher, he sail’d his boat himself, he
- had a fine one presented to him by a ship-joiner, he had
- fowling-pieces presented to him by men that loved him,
- When he went with his five sons and many grand-sons to hunt or fish,
- you would pick him out as the most beautiful and vigorous of the gang,
- You would wish long and long to be with him, you would wish to sit
- by him in the boat that you and he might touch each other.
- 4
- I have perceiv’d that to be with those I like is enough,
- To stop in company with the rest at evening is enough,
- To be surrounded by beautiful, curious, breathing, laughing flesh is enough,
- To pass among them or touch any one, or rest my arm ever so lightly
- round his or her neck for a moment, what is this then?
- I do not ask any more delight, I swim in it as in a sea.
- There is something in staying close to men and women and looking
- on them, and in the contact and odor of them, that pleases the soul well,
- All things please the soul, but these please the soul well.
- 5
- This is the female form,
- A divine nimbus exhales from it from head to foot,
- It attracts with fierce undeniable attraction,
- I am drawn by its breath as if I were no more than a helpless vapor,
- all falls aside but myself and it,
- Books, art, religion, time, the visible and solid earth, and what
- was expected of heaven or fear’d of hell, are now consumed,
- Mad filaments, ungovernable shoots play out of it, the response
- likewise ungovernable,
- Hair, bosom, hips, bend of legs, negligent falling hands all
- diffused, mine too diffused,
- Ebb stung by the flow and flow stung by the ebb, love-flesh swelling
- and deliciously aching,
- Limitless limpid jets of love hot and enormous, quivering jelly of
- love, white-blow and delirious nice,
- Bridegroom night of love working surely and softly into the prostrate dawn,
- Undulating into the willing and yielding day,
- Lost in the cleave of the clasping and sweet-flesh’d day.
- This the nucleus--after the child is born of woman, man is born of woman,
- This the bath of birth, this the merge of small and large, and the
- outlet again.
- Be not ashamed women, your privilege encloses the rest, and is the
- exit of the rest,
- You are the gates of the body, and you are the gates of the soul.
- The female contains all qualities and tempers them,
- She is in her place and moves with perfect balance,
- She is all things duly veil’d, she is both passive and active,
- She is to conceive daughters as well as sons, and sons as well as daughters.
- As I see my soul reflected in Nature,
- As I see through a mist, One with inexpressible completeness,
- sanity, beauty,
- See the bent head and arms folded over the breast, the Female I see.
- 6
- The male is not less the soul nor more, he too is in his place,
- He too is all qualities, he is action and power,
- The flush of the known universe is in him,
- Scorn becomes him well, and appetite and defiance become him well,
- The wildest largest passions, bliss that is utmost, sorrow that is
- utmost become him well, pride is for him,
- The full-spread pride of man is calming and excellent to the soul,
- Knowledge becomes him, he likes it always, he brings every thing to
- the test of himself,
- Whatever the survey, whatever the sea and the sail he strikes
- soundings at last only here,
- (Where else does he strike soundings except here?)
- The man’s body is sacred and the woman’s body is sacred,
- No matter who it is, it is sacred--is it the meanest one in the
- laborers’ gang?
- Is it one of the dull-faced immigrants just landed on the wharf?
- Each belongs here or anywhere just as much as the well-off, just as
- much as you,
- Each has his or her place in the procession.
- (All is a procession,
- The universe is a procession with measured and perfect motion.)
- Do you know so much yourself that you call the meanest ignorant?
- Do you suppose you have a right to a good sight, and he or she has
- no right to a sight?
- Do you think matter has cohered together from its diffuse float, and
- the soil is on the surface, and water runs and vegetation sprouts,
- For you only, and not for him and her?
- 7
- A man’s body at auction,
- (For before the war I often go to the slave-mart and watch the sale,)
- I help the auctioneer, the sloven does not half know his business.
- Gentlemen look on this wonder,
- Whatever the bids of the bidders they cannot be high enough for it,
- For it the globe lay preparing quintillions of years without one
- animal or plant,
- For it the revolving cycles truly and steadily roll’d.
- In this head the all-baffling brain,
- In it and below it the makings of heroes.
- Examine these limbs, red, black, or white, they are cunning in
- tendon and nerve,
- They shall be stript that you may see them.
- Exquisite senses, life-lit eyes, pluck, volition,
- Flakes of breast-muscle, pliant backbone and neck, flesh not flabby,
- good-sized arms and legs,
- And wonders within there yet.
- Within there runs blood,
- The same old blood! the same red-running blood!
- There swells and jets a heart, there all passions, desires,
- reachings, aspirations,
- (Do you think they are not there because they are not express’d in
- parlors and lecture-rooms?)
- This is not only one man, this the father of those who shall be
- fathers in their turns,
- In him the start of populous states and rich republics,
- Of him countless immortal lives with countless embodiments and enjoyments.
- How do you know who shall come from the offspring of his offspring
- through the centuries?
- (Who might you find you have come from yourself, if you could trace
- back through the centuries?)
- 8
- A woman’s body at auction,
- She too is not only herself, she is the teeming mother of mothers,
- She is the bearer of them that shall grow and be mates to the mothers.
- Have you ever loved the body of a woman?
- Have you ever loved the body of a man?
- Do you not see that these are exactly the same to all in all nations
- and times all over the earth?
- If any thing is sacred the human body is sacred,
- And the glory and sweet of a man is the token of manhood untainted,
- And in man or woman a clean, strong, firm-fibred body, is more
- beautiful than the most beautiful face.
- Have you seen the fool that corrupted his own live body? or the fool
- that corrupted her own live body?
- For they do not conceal themselves, and cannot conceal themselves.
- 9
- O my body! I dare not desert the likes of you in other men and
- women, nor the likes of the parts of you,
- I believe the likes of you are to stand or fall with the likes of
- the soul, (and that they are the soul,)
- I believe the likes of you shall stand or fall with my poems, and
- that they are my poems,
- Man’s, woman’s, child, youth’s, wife’s, husband’s, mother’s,
- father’s, young man’s, young woman’s poems,
- Head, neck, hair, ears, drop and tympan of the ears,
- Eyes, eye-fringes, iris of the eye, eyebrows, and the waking or
- sleeping of the lids,
- Mouth, tongue, lips, teeth, roof of the mouth, jaws, and the jaw-hinges,
- Nose, nostrils of the nose, and the partition,
- Cheeks, temples, forehead, chin, throat, back of the neck, neck-slue,
- Strong shoulders, manly beard, scapula, hind-shoulders, and the
- ample side-round of the chest,
- Upper-arm, armpit, elbow-socket, lower-arm, arm-sinews, arm-bones,
- Wrist and wrist-joints, hand, palm, knuckles, thumb, forefinger,
- finger-joints, finger-nails,
- Broad breast-front, curling hair of the breast, breast-bone, breast-side,
- Ribs, belly, backbone, joints of the backbone,
- Hips, hip-sockets, hip-strength, inward and outward round,
- man-balls, man-root,
- Strong set of thighs, well carrying the trunk above,
- Leg-fibres, knee, knee-pan, upper-leg, under-leg,
- Ankles, instep, foot-ball, toes, toe-joints, the heel;
- All attitudes, all the shapeliness, all the belongings of my or your
- body or of any one’s body, male or female,
- The lung-sponges, the stomach-sac, the bowels sweet and clean,
- The brain in its folds inside the skull-frame,
- Sympathies, heart-valves, palate-valves, sexuality, maternity,
- Womanhood, and all that is a woman, and the man that comes from woman,
- The womb, the teats, nipples, breast-milk, tears, laughter, weeping,
- love-looks, love-perturbations and risings,
- The voice, articulation, language, whispering, shouting aloud,
- Food, drink, pulse, digestion, sweat, sleep, walking, swimming,
- Poise on the hips, leaping, reclining, embracing, arm-curving and tightening,
- The continual changes of the flex of the mouth, and around the eyes,
- The skin, the sunburnt shade, freckles, hair,
- The curious sympathy one feels when feeling with the hand the naked
- meat of the body,
- The circling rivers the breath, and breathing it in and out,
- The beauty of the waist, and thence of the hips, and thence downward
- toward the knees,
- The thin red jellies within you or within me, the bones and the
- marrow in the bones,
- The exquisite realization of health;
- O I say these are not the parts and poems of the body only, but of the soul,
- O I say now these are the soul!
- A Woman Waits for Me
- A woman waits for me, she contains all, nothing is lacking,
- Yet all were lacking if sex were lacking, or if the moisture of the
- right man were lacking.
- Sex contains all, bodies, souls,
- Meanings, proofs, purities, delicacies, results, promulgations,
- Songs, commands, health, pride, the maternal mystery, the seminal milk,
- All hopes, benefactions, bestowals, all the passions, loves,
- beauties, delights of the earth,
- All the governments, judges, gods, follow’d persons of the earth,
- These are contain’d in sex as parts of itself and justifications of itself.
- Without shame the man I like knows and avows the deliciousness of his sex,
- Without shame the woman I like knows and avows hers.
- Now I will dismiss myself from impassive women,
- I will go stay with her who waits for me, and with those women that
- are warm-blooded and sufficient for me,
- I see that they understand me and do not deny me,
- I see that they are worthy of me, I will be the robust husband of
- those women.
- They are not one jot less than I am,
- They are tann’d in the face by shining suns and blowing winds,
- Their flesh has the old divine suppleness and strength,
- They know how to swim, row, ride, wrestle, shoot, run, strike,
- retreat, advance, resist, defend themselves,
- They are ultimate in their own right--they are calm, clear,
- well-possess’d of themselves.
- I draw you close to me, you women,
- I cannot let you go, I would do you good,
- I am for you, and you are for me, not only for our own sake, but for
- others’ sakes,
- Envelop’d in you sleep greater heroes and bards,
- They refuse to awake at the touch of any man but me.
- It is I, you women, I make my way,
- I am stern, acrid, large, undissuadable, but I love you,
- I do not hurt you any more than is necessary for you,
- I pour the stuff to start sons and daughters fit for these States, I
- press with slow rude muscle,
- I brace myself effectually, I listen to no entreaties,
- I dare not withdraw till I deposit what has so long accumulated within me.
- Through you I drain the pent-up rivers of myself,
- In you I wrap a thousand onward years,
- On you I graft the grafts of the best-beloved of me and America,
- The drops I distil upon you shall grow fierce and athletic girls,
- new artists, musicians, and singers,
- The babes I beget upon you are to beget babes in their turn,
- I shall demand perfect men and women out of my love-spendings,
- I shall expect them to interpenetrate with others, as I and you
- inter-penetrate now,
- I shall count on the fruits of the gushing showers of them, as I
- count on the fruits of the gushing showers I give now,
- I shall look for loving crops from the birth, life, death,
- immortality, I plant so lovingly now.
- Spontaneous Me
- Spontaneous me, Nature,
- The loving day, the mounting sun, the friend I am happy with,
- The arm of my friend hanging idly over my shoulder,
- The hillside whiten’d with blossoms of the mountain ash,
- The same late in autumn, the hues of red, yellow, drab, purple, and
- light and dark green,
- The rich coverlet of the grass, animals and birds, the private
- untrimm’d bank, the primitive apples, the pebble-stones,
- Beautiful dripping fragments, the negligent list of one after
- another as I happen to call them to me or think of them,
- The real poems, (what we call poems being merely pictures,)
- The poems of the privacy of the night, and of men like me,
- This poem drooping shy and unseen that I always carry, and that all
- men carry,
- (Know once for all, avow’d on purpose, wherever are men like me, are
- our lusty lurking masculine poems,)
- Love-thoughts, love-juice, love-odor, love-yielding, love-climbers,
- and the climbing sap,
- Arms and hands of love, lips of love, phallic thumb of love, breasts
- of love, bellies press’d and glued together with love,
- Earth of chaste love, life that is only life after love,
- The body of my love, the body of the woman I love, the body of the
- man, the body of the earth,
- Soft forenoon airs that blow from the south-west,
- The hairy wild-bee that murmurs and hankers up and down, that gripes the
- full-grown lady-flower, curves upon her with amorous firm legs, takes
- his will of her, and holds himself tremulous and tight till he is
- satisfied;
- The wet of woods through the early hours,
- Two sleepers at night lying close together as they sleep, one with
- an arm slanting down across and below the waist of the other,
- The smell of apples, aromas from crush’d sage-plant, mint, birch-bark,
- The boy’s longings, the glow and pressure as he confides to me what
- he was dreaming,
- The dead leaf whirling its spiral whirl and falling still and
- content to the ground,
- The no-form’d stings that sights, people, objects, sting me with,
- The hubb’d sting of myself, stinging me as much as it ever can any
- one,
- The sensitive, orbic, underlapp’d brothers, that only privileged
- feelers may be intimate where they are,
- The curious roamer the hand roaming all over the body, the bashful
- withdrawing of flesh where the fingers soothingly pause and
- edge themselves,
- The limpid liquid within the young man,
- The vex’d corrosion so pensive and so painful,
- The torment, the irritable tide that will not be at rest,
- The like of the same I feel, the like of the same in others,
- The young man that flushes and flushes, and the young woman that
- flushes and flushes,
- The young man that wakes deep at night, the hot hand seeking to
- repress what would master him,
- The mystic amorous night, the strange half-welcome pangs, visions, sweats,
- The pulse pounding through palms and trembling encircling fingers,
- the young man all color’d, red, ashamed, angry;
- The souse upon me of my lover the sea, as I lie willing and naked,
- The merriment of the twin babes that crawl over the grass in the
- sun, the mother never turning her vigilant eyes from them,
- The walnut-trunk, the walnut-husks, and the ripening or ripen’d
- long-round walnuts,
- The continence of vegetables, birds, animals,
- The consequent meanness of me should I skulk or find myself indecent,
- while birds and animals never once skulk or find themselves indecent,
- The great chastity of paternity, to match the great chastity of maternity,
- The oath of procreation I have sworn, my Adamic and fresh daughters,
- The greed that eats me day and night with hungry gnaw, till I saturate
- what shall produce boys to fill my place when I am through,
- The wholesome relief, repose, content,
- And this bunch pluck’d at random from myself,
- It has done its work--I toss it carelessly to fall where it may.
- One Hour to Madness and Joy
- One hour to madness and joy! O furious! O confine me not!
- (What is this that frees me so in storms?
- What do my shouts amid lightnings and raging winds mean?)
- O to drink the mystic deliria deeper than any other man!
- O savage and tender achings! (I bequeath them to you my children,
- I tell them to you, for reasons, O bridegroom and bride.)
- O to be yielded to you whoever you are, and you to be yielded to me
- in defiance of the world!
- O to return to Paradise! O bashful and feminine!
- O to draw you to me, to plant on you for the first time the lips of
- a determin’d man.
- O the puzzle, the thrice-tied knot, the deep and dark pool, all
- untied and illumin’d!
- O to speed where there is space enough and air enough at last!
- To be absolv’d from previous ties and conventions, I from mine and
- you from yours!
- To find a new unthought-of nonchalance with the best of Nature!
- To have the gag remov’d from one’s mouth!
- To have the feeling to-day or any day I am sufficient as I am.
- O something unprov’d! something in a trance!
- To escape utterly from others’ anchors and holds!
- To drive free! to love free! to dash reckless and dangerous!
- To court destruction with taunts, with invitations!
- To ascend, to leap to the heavens of the love indicated to me!
- To rise thither with my inebriate soul!
- To be lost if it must be so!
- To feed the remainder of life with one hour of fulness and freedom!
- With one brief hour of madness and joy.
- Out of the Rolling Ocean the Crowd
- Out of the rolling ocean the crowd came a drop gently to me,
- Whispering I love you, before long I die,
- I have travel’d a long way merely to look on you to touch you,
- For I could not die till I once look’d on you,
- For I fear’d I might afterward lose you.
- Now we have met, we have look’d, we are safe,
- Return in peace to the ocean my love,
- I too am part of that ocean my love, we are not so much separated,
- Behold the great rondure, the cohesion of all, how perfect!
- But as for me, for you, the irresistible sea is to separate us,
- As for an hour carrying us diverse, yet cannot carry us diverse forever;
- Be not impatient--a little space--know you I salute the air, the
- ocean and the land,
- Every day at sundown for your dear sake my love.
- Ages and Ages Returning at Intervals
- Ages and ages returning at intervals,
- Undestroy’d, wandering immortal,
- Lusty, phallic, with the potent original loins, perfectly sweet,
- I, chanter of Adamic songs,
- Through the new garden the West, the great cities calling,
- Deliriate, thus prelude what is generated, offering these, offering myself,
- Bathing myself, bathing my songs in Sex,
- Offspring of my loins.
- We Two, How Long We Were Fool’d
- We two, how long we were fool’d,
- Now transmuted, we swiftly escape as Nature escapes,
- We are Nature, long have we been absent, but now we return,
- We become plants, trunks, foliage, roots, bark,
- We are bedded in the ground, we are rocks,
- We are oaks, we grow in the openings side by side,
- We browse, we are two among the wild herds spontaneous as any,
- We are two fishes swimming in the sea together,
- We are what locust blossoms are, we drop scent around lanes mornings
- and evenings,
- We are also the coarse smut of beasts, vegetables, minerals,
- We are two predatory hawks, we soar above and look down,
- We are two resplendent suns, we it is who balance ourselves orbic
- and stellar, we are as two comets,
- We prowl fang’d and four-footed in the woods, we spring on prey,
- We are two clouds forenoons and afternoons driving overhead,
- We are seas mingling, we are two of those cheerful waves rolling
- over each other and interwetting each other,
- We are what the atmosphere is, transparent, receptive, pervious, impervious,
- We are snow, rain, cold, darkness, we are each product and influence
- of the globe,
- We have circled and circled till we have arrived home again, we two,
- We have voided all but freedom and all but our own joy.
- O Hymen! O Hymenee!
- O hymen! O hymenee! why do you tantalize me thus?
- O why sting me for a swift moment only?
- Why can you not continue? O why do you now cease?
- Is it because if you continued beyond the swift moment you would
- soon certainly kill me?
- I Am He That Aches with Love
- I am he that aches with amorous love;
- Does the earth gravitate? does not all matter, aching, attract all matter?
- So the body of me to all I meet or know.
- Native Moments
- Native moments--when you come upon me--ah you are here now,
- Give me now libidinous joys only,
- Give me the drench of my passions, give me life coarse and rank,
- To-day I go consort with Nature’s darlings, to-night too,
- I am for those who believe in loose delights, I share the midnight
- orgies of young men,
- I dance with the dancers and drink with the drinkers,
- The echoes ring with our indecent calls, I pick out some low person
- for my dearest friend,
- He shall be lawless, rude, illiterate, he shall be one condemn’d by
- others for deeds done,
- I will play a part no longer, why should I exile myself from my companions?
- O you shunn’d persons, I at least do not shun you,
- I come forthwith in your midst, I will be your poet,
- I will be more to you than to any of the rest.
- Once I Pass’d Through a Populous City
- Once I pass’d through a populous city imprinting my brain for future
- use with its shows, architecture, customs, traditions,
- Yet now of all that city I remember only a woman I casually met
- there who detain’d me for love of me,
- Day by day and night by night we were together--all else has long
- been forgotten by me,
- I remember I say only that woman who passionately clung to me,
- Again we wander, we love, we separate again,
- Again she holds me by the hand, I must not go,
- I see her close beside me with silent lips sad and tremulous.
- I Heard You Solemn-Sweet Pipes of the Organ
- I heard you solemn-sweet pipes of the organ as last Sunday morn I
- pass’d the church,
- Winds of autumn, as I walk’d the woods at dusk I heard your long-
- stretch’d sighs up above so mournful,
- I heard the perfect Italian tenor singing at the opera, I heard the
- soprano in the midst of the quartet singing;
- Heart of my love! you too I heard murmuring low through one of the
- wrists around my head,
- Heard the pulse of you when all was still ringing little bells last
- night under my ear.
- Facing West from California’s Shores
- Facing west from California’s shores,
- Inquiring, tireless, seeking what is yet unfound,
- I, a child, very old, over waves, towards the house of maternity,
- the land of migrations, look afar,
- Look off the shores of my Western sea, the circle almost circled;
- For starting westward from Hindustan, from the vales of Kashmere,
- From Asia, from the north, from the God, the sage, and the hero,
- From the south, from the flowery peninsulas and the spice islands,
- Long having wander’d since, round the earth having wander’d,
- Now I face home again, very pleas’d and joyous,
- (But where is what I started for so long ago?
- And why is it yet unfound?)
- As Adam Early in the Morning
- As Adam early in the morning,
- Walking forth from the bower refresh’d with sleep,
- Behold me where I pass, hear my voice, approach,
- Touch me, touch the palm of your hand to my body as I pass,
- Be not afraid of my body.
- BOOK V. CALAMUS
- In Paths Untrodden
- In paths untrodden,
- In the growth by margins of pond-waters,
- Escaped from the life that exhibits itself,
- From all the standards hitherto publish’d, from the pleasures,
- profits, conformities,
- Which too long I was offering to feed my soul,
- Clear to me now standards not yet publish’d, clear to me that my soul,
- That the soul of the man I speak for rejoices in comrades,
- Here by myself away from the clank of the world,
- Tallying and talk’d to here by tongues aromatic,
- No longer abash’d, (for in this secluded spot I can respond as I
- would not dare elsewhere,)
- Strong upon me the life that does not exhibit itself, yet contains
- all the rest,
- Resolv’d to sing no songs to-day but those of manly attachment,
- Projecting them along that substantial life,
- Bequeathing hence types of athletic love,
- Afternoon this delicious Ninth-month in my forty-first year,
- I proceed for all who are or have been young men,
- To tell the secret my nights and days,
- To celebrate the need of comrades.
- Scented Herbage of My Breast
- Scented herbage of my breast,
- Leaves from you I glean, I write, to be perused best afterwards,
- Tomb-leaves, body-leaves growing up above me above death,
- Perennial roots, tall leaves, O the winter shall not freeze you
- delicate leaves,
- Every year shall you bloom again, out from where you retired you
- shall emerge again;
- O I do not know whether many passing by will discover you or inhale
- your faint odor, but I believe a few will;
- O slender leaves! O blossoms of my blood! I permit you to tell in
- your own way of the heart that is under you,
- O I do not know what you mean there underneath yourselves, you are
- not happiness,
- You are often more bitter than I can bear, you burn and sting me,
- Yet you are beautiful to me you faint tinged roots, you make me
- think of death,
- Death is beautiful from you, (what indeed is finally beautiful
- except death and love?)
- O I think it is not for life I am chanting here my chant of lovers,
- I think it must be for death,
- For how calm, how solemn it grows to ascend to the atmosphere of lovers,
- Death or life I am then indifferent, my soul declines to prefer,
- (I am not sure but the high soul of lovers welcomes death most,)
- Indeed O death, I think now these leaves mean precisely the same as
- you mean,
- Grow up taller sweet leaves that I may see! grow up out of my breast!
- Spring away from the conceal’d heart there!
- Do not fold yourself so in your pink-tinged roots timid leaves!
- Do not remain down there so ashamed, herbage of my breast!
- Come I am determin’d to unbare this broad breast of mine, I have
- long enough stifled and choked;
- Emblematic and capricious blades I leave you, now you serve me not,
- I will say what I have to say by itself,
- I will sound myself and comrades only, I will never again utter a
- call only their call,
- I will raise with it immortal reverberations through the States,
- I will give an example to lovers to take permanent shape and will
- through the States,
- Through me shall the words be said to make death exhilarating,
- Give me your tone therefore O death, that I may accord with it,
- Give me yourself, for I see that you belong to me now above all, and
- are folded inseparably together, you love and death are,
- Nor will I allow you to balk me any more with what I was calling life,
- For now it is convey’d to me that you are the purports essential,
- That you hide in these shifting forms of life, for reasons, and that
- they are mainly for you,
- That you beyond them come forth to remain, the real reality,
- That behind the mask of materials you patiently wait, no matter how long,
- That you will one day perhaps take control of all,
- That you will perhaps dissipate this entire show of appearance,
- That may-be you are what it is all for, but it does not last so very long,
- But you will last very long.
- Whoever You Are Holding Me Now in Hand
- Whoever you are holding me now in hand,
- Without one thing all will be useless,
- I give you fair warning before you attempt me further,
- I am not what you supposed, but far different.
- Who is he that would become my follower?
- Who would sign himself a candidate for my affections?
- The way is suspicious, the result uncertain, perhaps destructive,
- You would have to give up all else, I alone would expect to be your
- sole and exclusive standard,
- Your novitiate would even then be long and exhausting,
- The whole past theory of your life and all conformity to the lives
- around you would have to be abandon’d,
- Therefore release me now before troubling yourself any further, let
- go your hand from my shoulders,
- Put me down and depart on your way.
- Or else by stealth in some wood for trial,
- Or back of a rock in the open air,
- (For in any roof’d room of a house I emerge not, nor in company,
- And in libraries I lie as one dumb, a gawk, or unborn, or dead,)
- But just possibly with you on a high hill, first watching lest any
- person for miles around approach unawares,
- Or possibly with you sailing at sea, or on the beach of the sea or
- some quiet island,
- Here to put your lips upon mine I permit you,
- With the comrade’s long-dwelling kiss or the new husband’s kiss,
- For I am the new husband and I am the comrade.
- Or if you will, thrusting me beneath your clothing,
- Where I may feel the throbs of your heart or rest upon your hip,
- Carry me when you go forth over land or sea;
- For thus merely touching you is enough, is best,
- And thus touching you would I silently sleep and be carried eternally.
- But these leaves conning you con at peril,
- For these leaves and me you will not understand,
- They will elude you at first and still more afterward, I will
- certainly elude you.
- Even while you should think you had unquestionably caught me, behold!
- Already you see I have escaped from you.
- For it is not for what I have put into it that I have written this book,
- Nor is it by reading it you will acquire it,
- Nor do those know me best who admire me and vauntingly praise me,
- Nor will the candidates for my love (unless at most a very few)
- prove victorious,
- Nor will my poems do good only, they will do just as much evil,
- perhaps more,
- For all is useless without that which you may guess at many times
- and not hit, that which I hinted at;
- Therefore release me and depart on your way.
- For You, O Democracy
- Come, I will make the continent indissoluble,
- I will make the most splendid race the sun ever shone upon,
- I will make divine magnetic lands,
- With the love of comrades,
- With the life-long love of comrades.
- I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers of America,
- and along the shores of the great lakes, and all over the prairies,
- I will make inseparable cities with their arms about each other’s necks,
- By the love of comrades,
- By the manly love of comrades.
- For you these from me, O Democracy, to serve you ma femme!
- For you, for you I am trilling these songs.
- These I Singing in Spring
- These I singing in spring collect for lovers,
- (For who but I should understand lovers and all their sorrow and joy?
- And who but I should be the poet of comrades?)
- Collecting I traverse the garden the world, but soon I pass the gates,
- Now along the pond-side, now wading in a little, fearing not the wet,
- Now by the post-and-rail fences where the old stones thrown there,
- pick’d from the fields, have accumulated,
- (Wild-flowers and vines and weeds come up through the stones and
- partly cover them, beyond these I pass,)
- Far, far in the forest, or sauntering later in summer, before I
- think where I go,
- Solitary, smelling the earthy smell, stopping now and then in the silence,
- Alone I had thought, yet soon a troop gathers around me,
- Some walk by my side and some behind, and some embrace my arms or neck,
- They the spirits of dear friends dead or alive, thicker they come, a
- great crowd, and I in the middle,
- Collecting, dispensing, singing, there I wander with them,
- Plucking something for tokens, tossing toward whoever is near me,
- Here, lilac, with a branch of pine,
- Here, out of my pocket, some moss which I pull’d off a live-oak in
- Florida as it hung trailing down,
- Here, some pinks and laurel leaves, and a handful of sage,
- And here what I now draw from the water, wading in the pondside,
- (O here I last saw him that tenderly loves me, and returns again
- never to separate from me,
- And this, O this shall henceforth be the token of comrades, this
- calamus-root shall,
- Interchange it youths with each other! let none render it back!)
- And twigs of maple and a bunch of wild orange and chestnut,
- And stems of currants and plum-blows, and the aromatic cedar,
- These I compass’d around by a thick cloud of spirits,
- Wandering, point to or touch as I pass, or throw them loosely from me,
- Indicating to each one what he shall have, giving something to each;
- But what I drew from the water by the pond-side, that I reserve,
- I will give of it, but only to them that love as I myself am capable
- of loving.
- Not Heaving from My Ribb’d Breast Only
- Not heaving from my ribb’d breast only,
- Not in sighs at night in rage dissatisfied with myself,
- Not in those long-drawn, ill-supprest sighs,
- Not in many an oath and promise broken,
- Not in my wilful and savage soul’s volition,
- Not in the subtle nourishment of the air,
- Not in this beating and pounding at my temples and wrists,
- Not in the curious systole and diastole within which will one day cease,
- Not in many a hungry wish told to the skies only,
- Not in cries, laughter, defiancies, thrown from me when alone far in
- the wilds,
- Not in husky pantings through clinch’d teeth,
- Not in sounded and resounded words, chattering words, echoes, dead words,
- Not in the murmurs of my dreams while I sleep,
- Nor the other murmurs of these incredible dreams of every day,
- Nor in the limbs and senses of my body that take you and dismiss you
- continually--not there,
- Not in any or all of them O adhesiveness! O pulse of my life!
- Need I that you exist and show yourself any more than in these songs.
- Of the Terrible Doubt of Appearances
- Of the terrible doubt of appearances,
- Of the uncertainty after all, that we may be deluded,
- That may-be reliance and hope are but speculations after all,
- That may-be identity beyond the grave is a beautiful fable only,
- May-be the things I perceive, the animals, plants, men, hills,
- shining and flowing waters,
- The skies of day and night, colors, densities, forms, may-be these
- are (as doubtless they are) only apparitions, and the real
- something has yet to be known,
- (How often they dart out of themselves as if to confound me and mock me!
- How often I think neither I know, nor any man knows, aught of them,)
- May-be seeming to me what they are (as doubtless they indeed but seem)
- as from my present point of view, and might prove (as of course they
- would) nought of what they appear, or nought anyhow, from entirely
- changed points of view;
- To me these and the like of these are curiously answer’d by my
- lovers, my dear friends,
- When he whom I love travels with me or sits a long while holding me
- by the hand,
- When the subtle air, the impalpable, the sense that words and reason
- hold not, surround us and pervade us,
- Then I am charged with untold and untellable wisdom, I am silent, I
- require nothing further,
- I cannot answer the question of appearances or that of identity
- beyond the grave,
- But I walk or sit indifferent, I am satisfied,
- He ahold of my hand has completely satisfied me.
- The Base of All Metaphysics
- And now gentlemen,
- A word I give to remain in your memories and minds,
- As base and finale too for all metaphysics.
- (So to the students the old professor,
- At the close of his crowded course.)
- Having studied the new and antique, the Greek and Germanic systems,
- Kant having studied and stated, Fichte and Schelling and Hegel,
- Stated the lore of Plato, and Socrates greater than Plato,
- And greater than Socrates sought and stated, Christ divine having
- studied long,
- I see reminiscent to-day those Greek and Germanic systems,
- See the philosophies all, Christian churches and tenets see,
- Yet underneath Socrates clearly see, and underneath Christ the divine I see,
- The dear love of man for his comrade, the attraction of friend to friend,
- Of the well-married husband and wife, of children and parents,
- Of city for city and land for land.
- Recorders Ages Hence
- Recorders ages hence,
- Come, I will take you down underneath this impassive exterior, I
- will tell you what to say of me,
- Publish my name and hang up my picture as that of the tenderest lover,
- The friend the lover’s portrait, of whom his friend his lover was fondest,
- Who was not proud of his songs, but of the measureless ocean of love
- within him, and freely pour’d it forth,
- Who often walk’d lonesome walks thinking of his dear friends, his lovers,
- Who pensive away from one he lov’d often lay sleepless and
- dissatisfied at night,
- Who knew too well the sick, sick dread lest the one he lov’d might
- secretly be indifferent to him,
- Whose happiest days were far away through fields, in woods, on hills,
- he and another wandering hand in hand, they twain apart from other men,
- Who oft as he saunter’d the streets curv’d with his arm the shoulder
- of his friend, while the arm of his friend rested upon him also.
- When I Heard at the Close of the Day
- When I heard at the close of the day how my name had been receiv’d
- with plaudits in the capitol, still it was not a happy night for
- me that follow’d,
- And else when I carous’d, or when my plans were accomplish’d, still
- I was not happy,
- But the day when I rose at dawn from the bed of perfect health,
- refresh’d, singing, inhaling the ripe breath of autumn,
- When I saw the full moon in the west grow pale and disappear in the
- morning light,
- When I wander’d alone over the beach, and undressing bathed,
- laughing with the cool waters, and saw the sun rise,
- And when I thought how my dear friend my lover was on his way
- coming, O then I was happy,
- O then each breath tasted sweeter, and all that day my food
- nourish’d me more, and the beautiful day pass’d well,
- And the next came with equal joy, and with the next at evening came
- my friend,
- And that night while all was still I heard the waters roll slowly
- continually up the shores,
- I heard the hissing rustle of the liquid and sands as directed to me
- whispering to congratulate me,
- For the one I love most lay sleeping by me under the same cover in
- the cool night,
- In the stillness in the autumn moonbeams his face was inclined toward me,
- And his arm lay lightly around my breast--and that night I was happy.
- Are You the New Person Drawn Toward Me?
- Are you the new person drawn toward me?
- To begin with take warning, I am surely far different from what you suppose;
- Do you suppose you will find in me your ideal?
- Do you think it so easy to have me become your lover?
- Do you think the friendship of me would be unalloy’d satisfaction?
- Do you think I am trusty and faithful?
- Do you see no further than this facade, this smooth and tolerant
- manner of me?
- Do you suppose yourself advancing on real ground toward a real heroic man?
- Have you no thought O dreamer that it may be all maya, illusion?
- Roots and Leaves Themselves Alone
- Roots and leaves themselves alone are these,
- Scents brought to men and women from the wild woods and pond-side,
- Breast-sorrel and pinks of love, fingers that wind around tighter
- than vines,
- Gushes from the throats of birds hid in the foliage of trees as the
- sun is risen,
- Breezes of land and love set from living shores to you on the living
- sea, to you O sailors!
- Frost-mellow’d berries and Third-month twigs offer’d fresh to young
- persons wandering out in the fields when the winter breaks up,
- Love-buds put before you and within you whoever you are,
- Buds to be unfolded on the old terms,
- If you bring the warmth of the sun to them they will open and bring
- form, color, perfume, to you,
- If you become the aliment and the wet they will become flowers,
- fruits, tall branches and trees.
- Not Heat Flames Up and Consumes
- Not heat flames up and consumes,
- Not sea-waves hurry in and out,
- Not the air delicious and dry, the air of ripe summer, bears lightly
- along white down-balls of myriads of seeds,
- Waited, sailing gracefully, to drop where they may;
- Not these, O none of these more than the flames of me, consuming,
- burning for his love whom I love,
- O none more than I hurrying in and out;
- Does the tide hurry, seeking something, and never give up? O I the same,
- O nor down-balls nor perfumes, nor the high rain-emitting clouds,
- are borne through the open air,
- Any more than my soul is borne through the open air,
- Wafted in all directions O love, for friendship, for you.
- Trickle Drops
- Trickle drops! my blue veins leaving!
- O drops of me! trickle, slow drops,
- Candid from me falling, drip, bleeding drops,
- From wounds made to free you whence you were prison’d,
- From my face, from my forehead and lips,
- From my breast, from within where I was conceal’d, press forth red
- drops, confession drops,
- Stain every page, stain every song I sing, every word I say, bloody drops,
- Let them know your scarlet heat, let them glisten,
- Saturate them with yourself all ashamed and wet,
- Glow upon all I have written or shall write, bleeding drops,
- Let it all be seen in your light, blushing drops.
- City of Orgies
- City of orgies, walks and joys,
- City whom that I have lived and sung in your midst will one day make
- Not the pageants of you, not your shifting tableaus, your
- spectacles, repay me,
- Not the interminable rows of your houses, nor the ships at the wharves,
- Nor the processions in the streets, nor the bright windows with
- goods in them,
- Nor to converse with learn’d persons, or bear my share in the soiree
- or feast;
- Not those, but as I pass O Manhattan, your frequent and swift flash
- of eyes offering me love,
- Offering response to my own--these repay me,
- Lovers, continual lovers, only repay me.
- Behold This Swarthy Face
- Behold this swarthy face, these gray eyes,
- This beard, the white wool unclipt upon my neck,
- My brown hands and the silent manner of me without charm;
- Yet comes one a Manhattanese and ever at parting kisses me lightly
- on the lips with robust love,
- And I on the crossing of the street or on the ship’s deck give a
- kiss in return,
- We observe that salute of American comrades land and sea,
- We are those two natural and nonchalant persons.
- I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing
- I saw in Louisiana a live-oak growing,
- All alone stood it and the moss hung down from the branches,
- Without any companion it grew there uttering joyous of dark green,
- And its look, rude, unbending, lusty, made me think of myself,
- But I wonder’d how it could utter joyous leaves standing alone there
- without its friend near, for I knew I could not,
- And I broke off a twig with a certain number of leaves upon it and
- twined around it a little moss,
- And brought it away, and I have placed it in sight in my room,
- It is not needed to remind me as of my own dear friends,
- (For I believe lately I think of little else than of them,)
- Yet it remains to me a curious token, it makes me think of manly love;
- For all that, and though the live-oak glistens there in Louisiana
- solitary in a wide in a wide flat space,
- Uttering joyous leaves all its life without a friend a lover near,
- I know very well I could not.
- To a Stranger
- Passing stranger! you do not know how longingly I look upon you,
- You must be he I was seeking, or she I was seeking, (it comes to me
- as of a dream,)
- I have somewhere surely lived a life of joy with you,
- All is recall’d as we flit by each other, fluid, affectionate,
- chaste, matured,
- You grew up with me, were a boy with me or a girl with me,
- I ate with you and slept with you, your body has become not yours
- only nor left my body mine only,
- You give me the pleasure of your eyes, face, flesh, as we pass, you
- take of my beard, breast, hands, in return,
- I am not to speak to you, I am to think of you when I sit alone or
- wake at night alone,
- I am to wait, I do not doubt I am to meet you again,
- I am to see to it that I do not lose you.
- This Moment Yearning and Thoughtful
- This moment yearning and thoughtful sitting alone,
- It seems to me there are other men in other lands yearning and thoughtful,
- It seems to me I can look over and behold them in Germany, Italy,
- France, Spain,
- Or far, far away, in China, or in Russia or talking other dialects,
- And it seems to me if I could know those men I should become
- attached to them as I do to men in my own lands,
- O I know we should be brethren and lovers,
- I know I should be happy with them.
- I Hear It Was Charged Against Me
- I hear it was charged against me that I sought to destroy institutions,
- But really I am neither for nor against institutions,
- (What indeed have I in common with them? or what with the
- destruction of them?)
- Only I will establish in the Mannahatta and in every city of these
- States inland and seaboard,
- And in the fields and woods, and above every keel little or large
- that dents the water,
- Without edifices or rules or trustees or any argument,
- The institution of the dear love of comrades.
- The Prairie-Grass Dividing
- The prairie-grass dividing, its special odor breathing,
- I demand of it the spiritual corresponding,
- Demand the most copious and close companionship of men,
- Demand the blades to rise of words, acts, beings,
- Those of the open atmosphere, coarse, sunlit, fresh, nutritious,
- Those that go their own gait, erect, stepping with freedom and
- command, leading not following,
- Those with a never-quell’d audacity, those with sweet and lusty
- flesh clear of taint,
- Those that look carelessly in the faces of Presidents and governors,
- as to say Who are you?
- Those of earth-born passion, simple, never constrain’d, never obedient,
- Those of inland America.
- When I Peruse the Conquer’d Fame
- When I peruse the conquer’d fame of heroes and the victories of
- mighty generals, I do not envy the generals,
- Nor the President in his Presidency, nor the rich in his great house,
- But when I hear of the brotherhood of lovers, how it was with them,
- How together through life, through dangers, odium, unchanging, long
- and long,
- Through youth and through middle and old age, how unfaltering, how
- affectionate and faithful they were,
- Then I am pensive--I hastily walk away fill’d with the bitterest envy.
- We Two Boys Together Clinging
- We two boys together clinging,
- One the other never leaving,
- Up and down the roads going, North and South excursions making,
- Power enjoying, elbows stretching, fingers clutching,
- Arm’d and fearless, eating, drinking, sleeping, loving.
- No law less than ourselves owning, sailing, soldiering, thieving,
- threatening,
- Misers, menials, priests alarming, air breathing, water drinking, on
- the turf or the sea-beach dancing,
- Cities wrenching, ease scorning, statutes mocking, feebleness chasing,
- Fulfilling our foray.
- A Promise to California
- A promise to California,
- Or inland to the great pastoral Plains, and on to Puget sound and Oregon;
- Sojourning east a while longer, soon I travel toward you, to remain,
- to teach robust American love,
- For I know very well that I and robust love belong among you,
- inland, and along the Western sea;
- For these States tend inland and toward the Western sea, and I will also.
- Here the Frailest Leaves of Me
- Here the frailest leaves of me and yet my strongest lasting,
- Here I shade and hide my thoughts, I myself do not expose them,
- And yet they expose me more than all my other poems.
- No Labor-Saving Machine
- No labor-saving machine,
- Nor discovery have I made,
- Nor will I be able to leave behind me any wealthy bequest to found
- hospital or library,
- Nor reminiscence of any deed of courage for America,
- Nor literary success nor intellect; nor book for the book-shelf,
- But a few carols vibrating through the air I leave,
- For comrades and lovers.
- A Glimpse
- A glimpse through an interstice caught,
- Of a crowd of workmen and drivers in a bar-room around the stove
- late of a winter night, and I unremark’d seated in a corner,
- Of a youth who loves me and whom I love, silently approaching and
- seating himself near, that he may hold me by the hand,
- A long while amid the noises of coming and going, of drinking and
- oath and smutty jest,
- There we two, content, happy in being together, speaking little,
- perhaps not a word.
- A Leaf for Hand in Hand
- A leaf for hand in hand;
- You natural persons old and young!
- You on the Mississippi and on all the branches and bayous of
- the Mississippi!
- You friendly boatmen and mechanics! you roughs!
- You twain! and all processions moving along the streets!
- I wish to infuse myself among you till I see it common for you to
- walk hand in hand.
- Earth, My Likeness
- Earth, my likeness,
- Though you look so impassive, ample and spheric there,
- I now suspect that is not all;
- I now suspect there is something fierce in you eligible to burst forth,
- For an athlete is enamour’d of me, and I of him,
- But toward him there is something fierce and terrible in me eligible
- to burst forth,
- I dare not tell it in words, not even in these songs.
- I Dream’d in a Dream
- I dream’d in a dream I saw a city invincible to the attacks of the
- whole of the rest of the earth,
- I dream’d that was the new city of Friends,
- Nothing was greater there than the quality of robust love, it led the rest,
- It was seen every hour in the actions of the men of that city,
- And in all their looks and words.
- What Think You I Take My Pen in Hand?
- What think you I take my pen in hand to record?
- The battle-ship, perfect-model’d, majestic, that I saw pass the
- offing to-day under full sail?
- The splendors of the past day? or the splendor of the night that
- envelops me?
- Or the vaunted glory and growth of the great city spread around me? --no;
- But merely of two simple men I saw to-day on the pier in the midst
- of the crowd, parting the parting of dear friends,
- The one to remain hung on the other’s neck and passionately kiss’d him,
- While the one to depart tightly prest the one to remain in his arms.
- To the East and to the West
- To the East and to the West,
- To the man of the Seaside State and of Pennsylvania,
- To the Kanadian of the north, to the Southerner I love,
- These with perfect trust to depict you as myself, the germs are in all men,
- I believe the main purport of these States is to found a superb
- friendship, exalte, previously unknown,
- Because I perceive it waits, and has been always waiting, latent in all men.
- Sometimes with One I Love
- Sometimes with one I love I fill myself with rage for fear I effuse
- unreturn’d love,
- But now I think there is no unreturn’d love, the pay is certain one
- way or another,
- (I loved a certain person ardently and my love was not return’d,
- Yet out of that I have written these songs.)
- To a Western Boy
- Many things to absorb I teach to help you become eleve of mine;
- Yet if blood like mine circle not in your veins,
- If you be not silently selected by lovers and do not silently select lovers,
- Of what use is it that you seek to become eleve of mine?
- Fast Anchor’d Eternal O Love!
- Fast-anchor’d eternal O love! O woman I love!
- O bride! O wife! more resistless than I can tell, the thought of you!
- Then separate, as disembodied or another born,
- Ethereal, the last athletic reality, my consolation,
- I ascend, I float in the regions of your love O man,
- O sharer of my roving life.
- Among the Multitude
- Among the men and women the multitude,
- I perceive one picking me out by secret and divine signs,
- Acknowledging none else, not parent, wife, husband, brother, child,
- any nearer than I am,
- Some are baffled, but that one is not--that one knows me.
- Ah lover and perfect equal,
- I meant that you should discover me so by faint indirections,
- And I when I meet you mean to discover you by the like in you.
- O You Whom I Often and Silently Come
- O you whom I often and silently come where you are that I may be with you,
- As I walk by your side or sit near, or remain in the same room with you,
- Little you know the subtle electric fire that for your sake is
- playing within me.
- That Shadow My Likeness
- That shadow my likeness that goes to and fro seeking a livelihood,
- chattering, chaffering,
- How often I find myself standing and looking at it where it flits,
- How often I question and doubt whether that is really me;
- But among my lovers and caroling these songs,
- O I never doubt whether that is really me.
- Full of Life Now
- Full of life now, compact, visible,
- I, forty years old the eighty-third year of the States,
- To one a century hence or any number of centuries hence,
- To you yet unborn these, seeking you.
- When you read these I that was visible am become invisible,
- Now it is you, compact, visible, realizing my poems, seeking me,
- Fancying how happy you were if I could be with you and become your comrade;
- Be it as if I were with you. (Be not too certain but I am now with you.)
- BOOK VI
- Salut au Monde!
- 1
- O take my hand Walt Whitman!
- Such gliding wonders! such sights and sounds!
- Such join’d unended links, each hook’d to the next,
- Each answering all, each sharing the earth with all.
- What widens within you Walt Whitman?
- What waves and soils exuding?
- What climes? what persons and cities are here?
- Who are the infants, some playing, some slumbering?
- Who are the girls? who are the married women?
- Who are the groups of old men going slowly with their arms about
- each other’s necks?
- What rivers are these? what forests and fruits are these?
- What are the mountains call’d that rise so high in the mists?
- What myriads of dwellings are they fill’d with dwellers?
- 2
- Within me latitude widens, longitude lengthens,
- Asia, Africa, Europe, are to the east--America is provided for in the west,
- Banding the bulge of the earth winds the hot equator,
- Curiously north and south turn the axis-ends,
- Within me is the longest day, the sun wheels in slanting rings, it
- does not set for months,
- Stretch’d in due time within me the midnight sun just rises above
- the horizon and sinks again,
- Within me zones, seas, cataracts, forests, volcanoes, groups,
- Malaysia, Polynesia, and the great West Indian islands.
- 3
- What do you hear Walt Whitman?
- I hear the workman singing and the farmer’s wife singing,
- I hear in the distance the sounds of children and of animals early
- in the day,
- I hear emulous shouts of Australians pursuing the wild horse,
- I hear the Spanish dance with castanets in the chestnut shade, to
- the rebeck and guitar,
- I hear continual echoes from the Thames,
- I hear fierce French liberty songs,
- I hear of the Italian boat-sculler the musical recitative of old poems,
- I hear the locusts in Syria as they strike the grain and grass with
- the showers of their terrible clouds,
- I hear the Coptic refrain toward sundown, pensively falling on the
- breast of the black venerable vast mother the Nile,
- I hear the chirp of the Mexican muleteer, and the bells of the mule,
- I hear the Arab muezzin calling from the top of the mosque,
- I hear the Christian priests at the altars of their churches, I hear
- the responsive base and soprano,
- I hear the cry of the Cossack, and the sailor’s voice putting to sea
- at Okotsk,
- I hear the wheeze of the slave-coffle as the slaves march on, as the
- husky gangs pass on by twos and threes, fasten’d together
- with wrist-chains and ankle-chains,
- I hear the Hebrew reading his records and psalms,
- I hear the rhythmic myths of the Greeks, and the strong legends of
- the Romans,
- I hear the tale of the divine life and bloody death of the beautiful
- God the Christ,
- I hear the Hindoo teaching his favorite pupil the loves, wars,
- adages, transmitted safely to this day from poets who wrote three
- thousand years ago.
- 4
- What do you see Walt Whitman?
- Who are they you salute, and that one after another salute you?
- I see a great round wonder rolling through space,
- I see diminute farms, hamlets, ruins, graveyards, jails, factories,
- palaces, hovels, huts of barbarians, tents of nomads upon the surface,
- I see the shaded part on one side where the sleepers are sleeping,
- and the sunlit part on the other side,
- I see the curious rapid change of the light and shade,
- I see distant lands, as real and near to the inhabitants of them as
- my land is to me.
- I see plenteous waters,
- I see mountain peaks, I see the sierras of Andes where they range,
- I see plainly the Himalayas, Chian Shahs, Altays, Ghauts,
- I see the giant pinnacles of Elbruz, Kazbek, Bazardjusi,
- I see the Styrian Alps, and the Karnac Alps,
- I see the Pyrenees, Balks, Carpathians, and to the north the
- Dofrafields, and off at sea mount Hecla,
- I see Vesuvius and Etna, the mountains of the Moon, and the Red
- mountains of Madagascar,
- I see the Lybian, Arabian, and Asiatic deserts,
- I see huge dreadful Arctic and Antarctic icebergs,
- I see the superior oceans and the inferior ones, the Atlantic and
- Pacific, the sea of Mexico, the Brazilian sea, and the sea of Peru,
- The waters of Hindustan, the China sea, and the gulf of Guinea,
- The Japan waters, the beautiful bay of Nagasaki land-lock’d in its
- mountains,
- The spread of the Baltic, Caspian, Bothnia, the British shores, and
- the bay of Biscay,
- The clear-sunn’d Mediterranean, and from one to another of its islands,
- The White sea, and the sea around Greenland.
- I behold the mariners of the world,
- Some are in storms, some in the night with the watch on the lookout,
- Some drifting helplessly, some with contagious diseases.
- I behold the sail and steamships of the world, some in clusters in
- port, some on their voyages,
- Some double the cape of Storms, some cape Verde, others capes
- Guardafui, Bon, or Bajadore,
- Others Dondra head, others pass the straits of Sunda, others cape
- Lopatka, others Behring’s straits,
- Others cape Horn, others sail the gulf of Mexico or along Cuba or
- Hayti, others Hudson’s bay or Baffin’s bay,
- Others pass the straits of Dover, others enter the Wash, others the
- firth of Solway, others round cape Clear, others the Land’s End,
- Others traverse the Zuyder Zee or the Scheld,
- Others as comers and goers at Gibraltar or the Dardanelles,
- Others sternly push their way through the northern winter-packs,
- Others descend or ascend the Obi or the Lena,
- Others the Niger or the Congo, others the Indus, the Burampooter
- and Cambodia,
- Others wait steam’d up ready to start in the ports of Australia,
- Wait at Liverpool, Glasgow, Dublin, Marseilles, Lisbon, Naples,
- Hamburg, Bremen, Bordeaux, the Hague, Copenhagen,
- Wait at Valparaiso, Rio Janeiro, Panama.
- 5
- I see the tracks of the railroads of the earth,
- I see them in Great Britain, I see them in Europe,
- I see them in Asia and in Africa.
- I see the electric telegraphs of the earth,
- I see the filaments of the news of the wars, deaths, losses, gains,
- passions, of my race.
- I see the long river-stripes of the earth,
- I see the Amazon and the Paraguay,
- I see the four great rivers of China, the Amour, the Yellow River,
- the Yiang-tse, and the Pearl,
- I see where the Seine flows, and where the Danube, the Loire, the
- Rhone, and the Guadalquiver flow,
- I see the windings of the Volga, the Dnieper, the Oder,
- I see the Tuscan going down the Arno, and the Venetian along the Po,
- I see the Greek seaman sailing out of Egina bay.
- 6
- I see the site of the old empire of Assyria, and that of Persia, and
- that of India,
- I see the falling of the Ganges over the high rim of Saukara.
- I see the place of the idea of the Deity incarnated by avatars in
- human forms,
- I see the spots of the successions of priests on the earth, oracles,
- sacrificers, brahmins, sabians, llamas, monks, muftis, exhorters,
- I see where druids walk’d the groves of Mona, I see the mistletoe
- and vervain,
- I see the temples of the deaths of the bodies of Gods, I see the old
- signifiers.
- I see Christ eating the bread of his last supper in the midst of
- youths and old persons,
- I see where the strong divine young man the Hercules toil’d
- faithfully and long and then died,
- I see the place of the innocent rich life and hapless fate of the
- beautiful nocturnal son, the full-limb’d Bacchus,
- I see Kneph, blooming, drest in blue, with the crown of feathers on
- his head,
- I see Hermes, unsuspected, dying, well-belov’d, saying to the people
- Do not weep for me,
- This is not my true country, I have lived banish’d from my true
- country, I now go back there,
- I return to the celestial sphere where every one goes in his turn.
- 7
- I see the battle-fields of the earth, grass grows upon them and
- blossoms and corn,
- I see the tracks of ancient and modern expeditions.
- I see the nameless masonries, venerable messages of the unknown
- events, heroes, records of the earth.
- I see the places of the sagas,
- I see pine-trees and fir-trees torn by northern blasts,
- I see granite bowlders and cliffs, I see green meadows and lakes,
- I see the burial-cairns of Scandinavian warriors,
- I see them raised high with stones by the marge of restless oceans,
- that the dead men’s spirits when they wearied of their quiet
- graves might rise up through the mounds and gaze on the tossing
- billows, and be refresh’d by storms, immensity, liberty, action.
- I see the steppes of Asia,
- I see the tumuli of Mongolia, I see the tents of Kalmucks and Baskirs,
- I see the nomadic tribes with herds of oxen and cows,
- I see the table-lands notch’d with ravines, I see the jungles and deserts,
- I see the camel, the wild steed, the bustard, the fat-tail’d sheep,
- the antelope, and the burrowing wolf
- I see the highlands of Abyssinia,
- I see flocks of goats feeding, and see the fig-tree, tamarind, date,
- And see fields of teff-wheat and places of verdure and gold.
- I see the Brazilian vaquero,
- I see the Bolivian ascending mount Sorata,
- I see the Wacho crossing the plains, I see the incomparable rider of
- horses with his lasso on his arm,
- I see over the pampas the pursuit of wild cattle for their hides.
- 8
- I see the regions of snow and ice,
- I see the sharp-eyed Samoiede and the Finn,
- I see the seal-seeker in his boat poising his lance,
- I see the Siberian on his slight-built sledge drawn by dogs,
- I see the porpoise-hunters, I see the whale-crews of the south
- Pacific and the north Atlantic,
- I see the cliffs, glaciers, torrents, valleys, of Switzerland--I
- mark the long winters and the isolation.
- I see the cities of the earth and make myself at random a part of them,
- I am a real Parisian,
- I am a habitan of Vienna, St. Petersburg, Berlin, Constantinople,
- I am of Adelaide, Sidney, Melbourne,
- I am of London, Manchester, Bristol, Edinburgh, Limerick,
- I am of Madrid, Cadiz, Barcelona, Oporto, Lyons, Brussels, Berne,
- Frankfort, Stuttgart, Turin, Florence,
- I belong in Moscow, Cracow, Warsaw, or northward in Christiania or
- Stockholm, or in Siberian Irkutsk, or in some street in Iceland,
- I descend upon all those cities, and rise from them again.
- 10
- I see vapors exhaling from unexplored countries,
- I see the savage types, the bow and arrow, the poison’d splint, the
- fetich, and the obi.
- I see African and Asiatic towns,
- I see Algiers, Tripoli, Derne, Mogadore, Timbuctoo, Monrovia,
- I see the swarms of Pekin, Canton, Benares, Delhi, Calcutta, Tokio,
- I see the Kruman in his hut, and the Dahoman and Ashantee-man in their huts,
- I see the Turk smoking opium in Aleppo,
- I see the picturesque crowds at the fairs of Khiva and those of Herat,
- I see Teheran, I see Muscat and Medina and the intervening sands,
- see the caravans toiling onward,
- I see Egypt and the Egyptians, I see the pyramids and obelisks.
- I look on chisell’d histories, records of conquering kings,
- dynasties, cut in slabs of sand-stone, or on granite-blocks,
- I see at Memphis mummy-pits containing mummies embalm’d,
- swathed in linen cloth, lying there many centuries,
- I look on the fall’n Theban, the large-ball’d eyes, the
- side-drooping neck, the hands folded across the breast.
- I see all the menials of the earth, laboring,
- I see all the prisoners in the prisons,
- I see the defective human bodies of the earth,
- The blind, the deaf and dumb, idiots, hunchbacks, lunatics,
- The pirates, thieves, betrayers, murderers, slave-makers of the earth,
- The helpless infants, and the helpless old men and women.
- I see male and female everywhere,
- I see the serene brotherhood of philosophs,
- I see the constructiveness of my race,
- I see the results of the perseverance and industry of my race,
- I see ranks, colors, barbarisms, civilizations, I go among them, I
- mix indiscriminately,
- And I salute all the inhabitants of the earth.
- 11
- You whoever you are!
- You daughter or son of England!
- You of the mighty Slavic tribes and empires! you Russ in Russia!
- You dim-descended, black, divine-soul’d African, large, fine-headed,
- nobly-form’d, superbly destin’d, on equal terms with me!
- You Norwegian! Swede! Dane! Icelander! you Prussian!
- You Spaniard of Spain! you Portuguese!
- You Frenchwoman and Frenchman of France!
- You Belge! you liberty-lover of the Netherlands! (you stock whence I
- myself have descended;)
- You sturdy Austrian! you Lombard! Hun! Bohemian! farmer of Styria!
- You neighbor of the Danube!
- You working-man of the Rhine, the Elbe, or the Weser! you working-woman too!
- You Sardinian! you Bavarian! Swabian! Saxon! Wallachian! Bulgarian!
- You Roman! Neapolitan! you Greek!
- You lithe matador in the arena at Seville!
- You mountaineer living lawlessly on the Taurus or Caucasus!
- You Bokh horse-herd watching your mares and stallions feeding!
- You beautiful-bodied Persian at full speed in the saddle shooting
- arrows to the mark!
- You Chinaman and Chinawoman of China! you Tartar of Tartary!
- You women of the earth subordinated at your tasks!
- You Jew journeying in your old age through every risk to stand once
- on Syrian ground!
- You other Jews waiting in all lands for your Messiah!
- You thoughtful Armenian pondering by some stream of the Euphrates!
- you peering amid the ruins of Nineveh! you ascending mount Ararat!
- You foot-worn pilgrim welcoming the far-away sparkle of the minarets
- of Mecca!
- You sheiks along the stretch from Suez to Bab-el-mandeb ruling your
- families and tribes!
- You olive-grower tending your fruit on fields of Nazareth, Damascus,
- or lake Tiberias!
- You Thibet trader on the wide inland or bargaining in the shops of Lassa!
- You Japanese man or woman! you liver in Madagascar, Ceylon, Sumatra, Borneo!
- All you continentals of Asia, Africa, Europe, Australia, indifferent
- of place!
- All you on the numberless islands of the archipelagoes of the sea!
- And you of centuries hence when you listen to me!
- And you each and everywhere whom I specify not, but include just the same!
- Health to you! good will to you all, from me and America sent!
- Each of us inevitable,
- Each of us limitless--each of us with his or her right upon the earth,
- Each of us allow’d the eternal purports of the earth,
- Each of us here as divinely as any is here.
- 12
- You Hottentot with clicking palate! you woolly-hair’d hordes!
- You own’d persons dropping sweat-drops or blood-drops!
- You human forms with the fathomless ever-impressive countenances of brutes!
- You poor koboo whom the meanest of the rest look down upon for all
- your glimmering language and spirituality!
- You dwarf’d Kamtschatkan, Greenlander, Lapp!
- You Austral negro, naked, red, sooty, with protrusive lip,
- groveling, seeking your food!
- You Caffre, Berber, Soudanese!
- You haggard, uncouth, untutor’d Bedowee!
- You plague-swarms in Madras, Nankin, Kaubul, Cairo!
- You benighted roamer of Amazonia! you Patagonian! you Feejeeman!
- I do not prefer others so very much before you either,
- I do not say one word against you, away back there where you stand,
- (You will come forward in due time to my side.)
- 13
- My spirit has pass’d in compassion and determination around the whole earth,
- I have look’d for equals and lovers and found them ready for me in
- all lands,
- I think some divine rapport has equalized me with them.
- You vapors, I think I have risen with you, moved away to distant
- continents, and fallen down there, for reasons,
- I think I have blown with you you winds;
- You waters I have finger’d every shore with you,
- I have run through what any river or strait of the globe has run through,
- I have taken my stand on the bases of peninsulas and on the high
- embedded rocks, to cry thence:
- What cities the light or warmth penetrates I penetrate those cities myself,
- All islands to which birds wing their way I wing my way myself.
- Toward you all, in America’s name,
- I raise high the perpendicular hand, I make the signal,
- To remain after me in sight forever,
- For all the haunts and homes of men.
- BOOK VII
- Song of the Open Road
- 1
- Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road,
- Healthy, free, the world before me,
- The long brown path before me leading wherever I choose.
- Henceforth I ask not good-fortune, I myself am good-fortune,
- Henceforth I whimper no more, postpone no more, need nothing,
- Done with indoor complaints, libraries, querulous criticisms,
- Strong and content I travel the open road.
- The earth, that is sufficient,
- I do not want the constellations any nearer,
- I know they are very well where they are,
- I know they suffice for those who belong to them.
- (Still here I carry my old delicious burdens,
- I carry them, men and women, I carry them with me wherever I go,
- I swear it is impossible for me to get rid of them,
- I am fill’d with them, and I will fill them in return.)
- 2
- You road I enter upon and look around, I believe you are not all
- that is here,
- I believe that much unseen is also here.
- Here the profound lesson of reception, nor preference nor denial,
- The black with his woolly head, the felon, the diseas’d, the
- illiterate person, are not denied;
- The birth, the hasting after the physician, the beggar’s tramp, the
- drunkard’s stagger, the laughing party of mechanics,
- The escaped youth, the rich person’s carriage, the fop, the eloping couple,
- The early market-man, the hearse, the moving of furniture into the
- town, the return back from the town,
- They pass, I also pass, any thing passes, none can be interdicted,
- None but are accepted, none but shall be dear to me.
- 3
- You air that serves me with breath to speak!
- You objects that call from diffusion my meanings and give them shape!
- You light that wraps me and all things in delicate equable showers!
- You paths worn in the irregular hollows by the roadsides!
- I believe you are latent with unseen existences, you are so dear to me.
- You flagg’d walks of the cities! you strong curbs at the edges!
- You ferries! you planks and posts of wharves! you timber-lined
- side! you distant ships!
- You rows of houses! you window-pierc’d facades! you roofs!
- You porches and entrances! you copings and iron guards!
- You windows whose transparent shells might expose so much!
- You doors and ascending steps! you arches!
- You gray stones of interminable pavements! you trodden crossings!
- From all that has touch’d you I believe you have imparted to
- yourselves, and now would impart the same secretly to me,
- From the living and the dead you have peopled your impassive surfaces,
- and the spirits thereof would be evident and amicable with me.
- 4
- The earth expanding right hand and left hand,
- The picture alive, every part in its best light,
- The music falling in where it is wanted, and stopping where it is
- not wanted,
- The cheerful voice of the public road, the gay fresh sentiment of the road.
- O highway I travel, do you say to me Do not leave me?
- Do you say Venture not--if you leave me you are lost?
- Do you say I am already prepared, I am well-beaten and undenied,
- adhere to me?
- O public road, I say back I am not afraid to leave you, yet I love you,
- You express me better than I can express myself,
- You shall be more to me than my poem.
- I think heroic deeds were all conceiv’d in the open air, and all
- free poems also,
- I think I could stop here myself and do miracles,
- I think whatever I shall meet on the road I shall like, and whoever
- beholds me shall like me,
- I think whoever I see must be happy.
- 5
- From this hour I ordain myself loos’d of limits and imaginary lines,
- Going where I list, my own master total and absolute,
- Listening to others, considering well what they say,
- Pausing, searching, receiving, contemplating,
- Gently, but with undeniable will, divesting myself of the holds that
- would hold me.
- I inhale great draughts of space,
- The east and the west are mine, and the north and the south are mine.
- I am larger, better than I thought,
- I did not know I held so much goodness.
- All seems beautiful to me,
- can repeat over to men and women You have done such good to me
- I would do the same to you,
- I will recruit for myself and you as I go,
- I will scatter myself among men and women as I go,
- I will toss a new gladness and roughness among them,
- Whoever denies me it shall not trouble me,
- Whoever accepts me he or she shall be blessed and shall bless me.
- 6
- Now if a thousand perfect men were to appear it would not amaze me,
- Now if a thousand beautiful forms of women appear’d it would not
- astonish me.
- Now I see the secret of the making of the best persons,
- It is to grow in the open air and to eat and sleep with the earth.
- Here a great personal deed has room,
- (Such a deed seizes upon the hearts of the whole race of men,
- Its effusion of strength and will overwhelms law and mocks all
- authority and all argument against it.)
- Here is the test of wisdom,
- Wisdom is not finally tested in schools,
- Wisdom cannot be pass’d from one having it to another not having it,
- Wisdom is of the soul, is not susceptible of proof, is its own proof,
- Applies to all stages and objects and qualities and is content,
- Is the certainty of the reality and immortality of things, and the
- excellence of things;
- Something there is in the float of the sight of things that provokes
- it out of the soul.
- Now I re-examine philosophies and religions,
- They may prove well in lecture-rooms, yet not prove at all under the
- spacious clouds and along the landscape and flowing currents.
- Here is realization,
- Here is a man tallied--he realizes here what he has in him,
- The past, the future, majesty, love--if they are vacant of you, you
- are vacant of them.
- Only the kernel of every object nourishes;
- Where is he who tears off the husks for you and me?
- Where is he that undoes stratagems and envelopes for you and me?
- Here is adhesiveness, it is not previously fashion’d, it is apropos;
- Do you know what it is as you pass to be loved by strangers?
- Do you know the talk of those turning eye-balls?
- 7
- Here is the efflux of the soul,
- The efflux of the soul comes from within through embower’d gates,
- ever provoking questions,
- These yearnings why are they? these thoughts in the darkness why are they?
- Why are there men and women that while they are nigh me the sunlight
- expands my blood?
- Why when they leave me do my pennants of joy sink flat and lank?
- Why are there trees I never walk under but large and melodious
- thoughts descend upon me?
- (I think they hang there winter and summer on those trees and always
- drop fruit as I pass;)
- What is it I interchange so suddenly with strangers?
- What with some driver as I ride on the seat by his side?
- What with some fisherman drawing his seine by the shore as I walk by
- and pause?
- What gives me to be free to a woman’s and man’s good-will? what
- gives them to be free to mine?
- 8
- The efflux of the soul is happiness, here is happiness,
- I think it pervades the open air, waiting at all times,
- Now it flows unto us, we are rightly charged.
- Here rises the fluid and attaching character,
- The fluid and attaching character is the freshness and sweetness of
- man and woman,
- (The herbs of the morning sprout no fresher and sweeter every day
- out of the roots of themselves, than it sprouts fresh and sweet
- continually out of itself.)
- Toward the fluid and attaching character exudes the sweat of the
- love of young and old,
- From it falls distill’d the charm that mocks beauty and attainments,
- Toward it heaves the shuddering longing ache of contact.
- 9
- Allons! whoever you are come travel with me!
- Traveling with me you find what never tires.
- The earth never tires,
- The earth is rude, silent, incomprehensible at first, Nature is rude
- and incomprehensible at first,
- Be not discouraged, keep on, there are divine things well envelop’d,
- I swear to you there are divine things more beautiful than words can tell.
- Allons! we must not stop here,
- However sweet these laid-up stores, however convenient this dwelling
- we cannot remain here,
- However shelter’d this port and however calm these waters we must
- not anchor here,
- However welcome the hospitality that surrounds us we are permitted
- to receive it but a little while.
- 10
- Allons! the inducements shall be greater,
- We will sail pathless and wild seas,
- We will go where winds blow, waves dash, and the Yankee clipper
- speeds by under full sail.
- Allons! with power, liberty, the earth, the elements,
- Health, defiance, gayety, self-esteem, curiosity;
- Allons! from all formules!
- From your formules, O bat-eyed and materialistic priests.
- The stale cadaver blocks up the passage--the burial waits no longer.
- Allons! yet take warning!
- He traveling with me needs the best blood, thews, endurance,
- None may come to the trial till he or she bring courage and health,
- Come not here if you have already spent the best of yourself,
- Only those may come who come in sweet and determin’d bodies,
- No diseas’d person, no rum-drinker or venereal taint is permitted here.
- (I and mine do not convince by arguments, similes, rhymes,
- We convince by our presence.)
- 11
- Listen! I will be honest with you,
- I do not offer the old smooth prizes, but offer rough new prizes,
- These are the days that must happen to you:
- You shall not heap up what is call’d riches,
- You shall scatter with lavish hand all that you earn or achieve,
- You but arrive at the city to which you were destin’d, you hardly
- settle yourself to satisfaction before you are call’d by an
- irresistible call to depart,
- You shall be treated to the ironical smiles and mockings of those
- who remain behind you,
- What beckonings of love you receive you shall only answer with
- passionate kisses of parting,
- You shall not allow the hold of those who spread their reach’d hands
- toward you.
- 12
- Allons! after the great Companions, and to belong to them!
- They too are on the road--they are the swift and majestic men--they
- are the greatest women,
- Enjoyers of calms of seas and storms of seas,
- Sailors of many a ship, walkers of many a mile of land,
- Habitues of many distant countries, habitues of far-distant dwellings,
- Trusters of men and women, observers of cities, solitary toilers,
- Pausers and contemplators of tufts, blossoms, shells of the shore,
- Dancers at wedding-dances, kissers of brides, tender helpers of
- children, bearers of children,
- Soldiers of revolts, standers by gaping graves, lowerers-down of coffins,
- Journeyers over consecutive seasons, over the years, the curious
- years each emerging from that which preceded it,
- Journeyers as with companions, namely their own diverse phases,
- Forth-steppers from the latent unrealized baby-days,
- Journeyers gayly with their own youth, journeyers with their bearded
- and well-grain’d manhood,
- Journeyers with their womanhood, ample, unsurpass’d, content,
- Journeyers with their own sublime old age of manhood or womanhood,
- Old age, calm, expanded, broad with the haughty breadth of the universe,
- Old age, flowing free with the delicious near-by freedom of death.
- 13
- Allons! to that which is endless as it was beginningless,
- To undergo much, tramps of days, rests of nights,
- To merge all in the travel they tend to, and the days and nights
- they tend to,
- Again to merge them in the start of superior journeys,
- To see nothing anywhere but what you may reach it and pass it,
- To conceive no time, however distant, but what you may reach it and pass it,
- To look up or down no road but it stretches and waits for you,
- however long but it stretches and waits for you,
- To see no being, not God’s or any, but you also go thither,
- To see no possession but you may possess it, enjoying all without
- labor or purchase, abstracting the feast yet not abstracting one
- particle of it,
- To take the best of the farmer’s farm and the rich man’s elegant
- villa, and the chaste blessings of the well-married couple, and
- the fruits of orchards and flowers of gardens,
- To take to your use out of the compact cities as you pass through,
- To carry buildings and streets with you afterward wherever you go,
- To gather the minds of men out of their brains as you encounter
- them, to gather the love out of their hearts,
- To take your lovers on the road with you, for all that you leave
- them behind you,
- To know the universe itself as a road, as many roads, as roads for
- traveling souls.
- All parts away for the progress of souls,
- All religion, all solid things, arts, governments--all that was or is
- apparent upon this globe or any globe, falls into niches and corners
- before the procession of souls along the grand roads of the universe.
- Of the progress of the souls of men and women along the grand roads of
- the universe, all other progress is the needed emblem and sustenance.
- Forever alive, forever forward,
- Stately, solemn, sad, withdrawn, baffled, mad, turbulent, feeble,
- dissatisfied,
- Desperate, proud, fond, sick, accepted by men, rejected by men,
- They go! they go! I know that they go, but I know not where they go,
- But I know that they go toward the best--toward something great.
- Whoever you are, come forth! or man or woman come forth!
- You must not stay sleeping and dallying there in the house, though
- you built it, or though it has been built for you.
- Out of the dark confinement! out from behind the screen!
- It is useless to protest, I know all and expose it.
- Behold through you as bad as the rest,
- Through the laughter, dancing, dining, supping, of people,
- Inside of dresses and ornaments, inside of those wash’d and trimm’d faces,
- Behold a secret silent loathing and despair.
- No husband, no wife, no friend, trusted to hear the confession,
- Another self, a duplicate of every one, skulking and hiding it goes,
- Formless and wordless through the streets of the cities, polite and
- bland in the parlors,
- In the cars of railroads, in steamboats, in the public assembly,
- Home to the houses of men and women, at the table, in the bedroom,
- everywhere,
- Smartly attired, countenance smiling, form upright, death under the
- breast-bones, hell under the skull-bones,
- Under the broadcloth and gloves, under the ribbons and artificial flowers,
- Keeping fair with the customs, speaking not a syllable of itself,
- Speaking of any thing else but never of itself.
- 14
- Allons! through struggles and wars!
- The goal that was named cannot be countermanded.
- Have the past struggles succeeded?
- What has succeeded? yourself? your nation? Nature?
- Now understand me well--it is provided in the essence of things that
- from any fruition of success, no matter what, shall come forth
- something to make a greater struggle necessary.
- My call is the call of battle, I nourish active rebellion,
- He going with me must go well arm’d,
- He going with me goes often with spare diet, poverty, angry enemies,
- desertions.
- 15
- Allons! the road is before us!
- It is safe--I have tried it--my own feet have tried it well--be not
- detain’d!
- Let the paper remain on the desk unwritten, and the book on the
- shelf unopen’d!
- Let the tools remain in the workshop! let the money remain unearn’d!
- Let the school stand! mind not the cry of the teacher!
- Let the preacher preach in his pulpit! let the lawyer plead in the
- court, and the judge expound the law.
- Camerado, I give you my hand!
- I give you my love more precious than money,
- I give you myself before preaching or law;
- Will you give me yourself? will you come travel with me?
- Shall we stick by each other as long as we live?
- BOOK VIII
- Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
- 1
- Flood-tide below me! I see you face to face!
- Clouds of the west--sun there half an hour high--I see you also face
- to face.
- Crowds of men and women attired in the usual costumes, how curious
- you are to me!
- On the ferry-boats the hundreds and hundreds that cross, returning
- home, are more curious to me than you suppose,
- And you that shall cross from shore to shore years hence are more
- to me, and more in my meditations, than you might suppose.
- 2
- The impalpable sustenance of me from all things at all hours of the day,
- The simple, compact, well-join’d scheme, myself disintegrated, every
- one disintegrated yet part of the scheme,
- The similitudes of the past and those of the future,
- The glories strung like beads on my smallest sights and hearings, on
- the walk in the street and the passage over the river,
- The current rushing so swiftly and swimming with me far away,
- The others that are to follow me, the ties between me and them,
- The certainty of others, the life, love, sight, hearing of others.
- Others will enter the gates of the ferry and cross from shore to shore,
- Others will watch the run of the flood-tide,
- Others will see the shipping of Manhattan north and west, and the
- heights of Brooklyn to the south and east,
- Others will see the islands large and small;
- Fifty years hence, others will see them as they cross, the sun half
- an hour high,
- A hundred years hence, or ever so many hundred years hence, others
- will see them,
- Will enjoy the sunset, the pouring-in of the flood-tide, the
- falling-back to the sea of the ebb-tide.
- 3
- It avails not, time nor place--distance avails not,
- I am with you, you men and women of a generation, or ever so many
- generations hence,
- Just as you feel when you look on the river and sky, so I felt,
- Just as any of you is one of a living crowd, I was one of a crowd,
- Just as you are refresh’d by the gladness of the river and the
- bright flow, I was refresh’d,
- Just as you stand and lean on the rail, yet hurry with the swift
- current, I stood yet was hurried,
- Just as you look on the numberless masts of ships and the
- thick-stemm’d pipes of steamboats, I look’d.
- I too many and many a time cross’d the river of old,
- Watched the Twelfth-month sea-gulls, saw them high in the air
- floating with motionless wings, oscillating their bodies,
- Saw how the glistening yellow lit up parts of their bodies and left
- the rest in strong shadow,
- Saw the slow-wheeling circles and the gradual edging toward the south,
- Saw the reflection of the summer sky in the water,
- Had my eyes dazzled by the shimmering track of beams,
- Look’d at the fine centrifugal spokes of light round the shape of my
- head in the sunlit water,
- Look’d on the haze on the hills southward and south-westward,
- Look’d on the vapor as it flew in fleeces tinged with violet,
- Look’d toward the lower bay to notice the vessels arriving,
- Saw their approach, saw aboard those that were near me,
- Saw the white sails of schooners and sloops, saw the ships at anchor,
- The sailors at work in the rigging or out astride the spars,
- The round masts, the swinging motion of the hulls, the slender
- serpentine pennants,
- The large and small steamers in motion, the pilots in their pilothouses,
- The white wake left by the passage, the quick tremulous whirl of the wheels,
- The flags of all nations, the falling of them at sunset,
- The scallop-edged waves in the twilight, the ladled cups, the
- frolic-some crests and glistening,
- The stretch afar growing dimmer and dimmer, the gray walls of the
- granite storehouses by the docks,
- On the river the shadowy group, the big steam-tug closely flank’d on
- each side by the barges, the hay-boat, the belated lighter,
- On the neighboring shore the fires from the foundry chimneys burning
- high and glaringly into the night,
- Casting their flicker of black contrasted with wild red and yellow
- light over the tops of houses, and down into the clefts of streets.
- 4
- These and all else were to me the same as they are to you,
- I loved well those cities, loved well the stately and rapid river,
- The men and women I saw were all near to me,
- Others the same--others who look back on me because I look’d forward
- to them,
- (The time will come, though I stop here to-day and to-night.)
- 5
- What is it then between us?
- What is the count of the scores or hundreds of years between us?
- Whatever it is, it avails not--distance avails not, and place avails not,
- I too lived, Brooklyn of ample hills was mine,
- I too walk’d the streets of Manhattan island, and bathed in the
- waters around it,
- I too felt the curious abrupt questionings stir within me,
- In the day among crowds of people sometimes they came upon me,
- In my walks home late at night or as I lay in my bed they came upon me,
- I too had been struck from the float forever held in solution,
- I too had receiv’d identity by my body,
- That I was I knew was of my body, and what I should be I knew I
- should be of my body.
- 6
- It is not upon you alone the dark patches fall,
- The dark threw its patches down upon me also,
- The best I had done seem’d to me blank and suspicious,
- My great thoughts as I supposed them, were they not in reality meagre?
- Nor is it you alone who know what it is to be evil,
- I am he who knew what it was to be evil,
- I too knitted the old knot of contrariety,
- Blabb’d, blush’d, resented, lied, stole, grudg’d,
- Had guile, anger, lust, hot wishes I dared not speak,
- Was wayward, vain, greedy, shallow, sly, cowardly, malignant,
- The wolf, the snake, the hog, not wanting in me.
- The cheating look, the frivolous word, the adulterous wish, not wanting,
- Refusals, hates, postponements, meanness, laziness, none of these wanting,
- Was one with the rest, the days and haps of the rest,
- Was call’d by my nighest name by clear loud voices of young men as
- they saw me approaching or passing,
- Felt their arms on my neck as I stood, or the negligent leaning of
- their flesh against me as I sat,
- Saw many I loved in the street or ferry-boat or public assembly, yet
- never told them a word,
- Lived the same life with the rest, the same old laughing, gnawing, sleeping,
- Play’d the part that still looks back on the actor or actress,
- The same old role, the role that is what we make it, as great as we like,
- Or as small as we like, or both great and small.
- 7
- Closer yet I approach you,
- What thought you have of me now, I had as much of you--I laid in my
- stores in advance,
- I consider’d long and seriously of you before you were born.
- Who was to know what should come home to me?
- Who knows but I am enjoying this?
- Who knows, for all the distance, but I am as good as looking at you
- now, for all you cannot see me?
- 8
- Ah, what can ever be more stately and admirable to me than
- mast-hemm’d Manhattan?
- River and sunset and scallop-edg’d waves of flood-tide?
- The sea-gulls oscillating their bodies, the hay-boat in the
- twilight, and the belated lighter?
- What gods can exceed these that clasp me by the hand, and with voices I
- love call me promptly and loudly by my nighest name as approach?
- What is more subtle than this which ties me to the woman or man that
- looks in my face?
- Which fuses me into you now, and pours my meaning into you?
- We understand then do we not?
- What I promis’d without mentioning it, have you not accepted?
- What the study could not teach--what the preaching could not
- accomplish is accomplish’d, is it not?
- 9
- Flow on, river! flow with the flood-tide, and ebb with the ebb-tide!
- Frolic on, crested and scallop-edg’d waves!
- Gorgeous clouds of the sunset! drench with your splendor me, or the
- men and women generations after me!
- Cross from shore to shore, countless crowds of passengers!
- Stand up, tall masts of Mannahatta! stand up, beautiful hills of Brooklyn!
- Throb, baffled and curious brain! throw out questions and answers!
- Suspend here and everywhere, eternal float of solution!
- Gaze, loving and thirsting eyes, in the house or street or public assembly!
- Sound out, voices of young men! loudly and musically call me by my
- nighest name!
- Live, old life! play the part that looks back on the actor or actress!
- Play the old role, the role that is great or small according as one
- makes it!
- Consider, you who peruse me, whether I may not in unknown ways be
- looking upon you;
- Be firm, rail over the river, to support those who lean idly, yet
- haste with the hasting current;
- Fly on, sea-birds! fly sideways, or wheel in large circles high in the air;
- Receive the summer sky, you water, and faithfully hold it till all
- downcast eyes have time to take it from you!
- Diverge, fine spokes of light, from the shape of my head, or any
- one’s head, in the sunlit water!
- Come on, ships from the lower bay! pass up or down, white-sail’d
- schooners, sloops, lighters!
- Flaunt away, flags of all nations! be duly lower’d at sunset!
- Burn high your fires, foundry chimneys! cast black shadows at
- nightfall! cast red and yellow light over the tops of the houses!
- Appearances, now or henceforth, indicate what you are,
- You necessary film, continue to envelop the soul,
- About my body for me, and your body for you, be hung our divinest aromas,
- Thrive, cities--bring your freight, bring your shows, ample and
- sufficient rivers,
- Expand, being than which none else is perhaps more spiritual,
- Keep your places, objects than which none else is more lasting.
- You have waited, you always wait, you dumb, beautiful ministers,
- We receive you with free sense at last, and are insatiate henceforward,
- Not you any more shall be able to foil us, or withhold yourselves from us,
- We use you, and do not cast you aside--we plant you permanently within us,
- We fathom you not--we love you--there is perfection in you also,
- You furnish your parts toward eternity,
- Great or small, you furnish your parts toward the soul.
- BOOK IX
- Song of the Answerer
- 1
- Now list to my morning’s romanza, I tell the signs of the Answerer,
- To the cities and farms I sing as they spread in the sunshine before me.
- A young man comes to me bearing a message from his brother,
- How shall the young man know the whether and when of his brother?
- Tell him to send me the signs. And I stand before the young man
- face to face, and take his right hand in my left hand and his
- left hand in my right hand,
- And I answer for his brother and for men, and I answer for him that
- answers for all, and send these signs.
- Him all wait for, him all yield up to, his word is decisive and final,
- Him they accept, in him lave, in him perceive themselves as amid light,
- Him they immerse and he immerses them.
- Beautiful women, the haughtiest nations, laws, the landscape,
- people, animals,
- The profound earth and its attributes and the unquiet ocean, (so
- tell I my morning’s romanza,)
- All enjoyments and properties and money, and whatever money will buy,
- The best farms, others toiling and planting and he unavoidably reaps,
- The noblest and costliest cities, others grading and building and he
- domiciles there,
- Nothing for any one but what is for him, near and far are for him,
- the ships in the offing,
- The perpetual shows and marches on land are for him if they are for anybody.
- He puts things in their attitudes,
- He puts to-day out of himself with plasticity and love,
- He places his own times, reminiscences, parents, brothers and
- sisters, associations, employment, politics, so that the rest
- never shame them afterward, nor assume to command them.
- He is the Answerer,
- What can be answer’d he answers, and what cannot be answer’d he
- shows how it cannot be answer’d.
- A man is a summons and challenge,
- (It is vain to skulk--do you hear that mocking and laughter? do you
- hear the ironical echoes?)
- Books, friendships, philosophers, priests, action, pleasure, pride,
- beat up and down seeking to give satisfaction,
- He indicates the satisfaction, and indicates them that beat up and
- down also.
- Whichever the sex, whatever the season or place, he may go freshly
- and gently and safely by day or by night,
- He has the pass-key of hearts, to him the response of the prying of
- hands on the knobs.
- His welcome is universal, the flow of beauty is not more welcome or
- universal than he is,
- The person he favors by day or sleeps with at night is blessed.
- Every existence has its idiom, every thing has an idiom and tongue,
- He resolves all tongues into his own and bestows it upon men, and
- any man translates, and any man translates himself also,
- One part does not counteract another part, he is the joiner, he sees
- how they join.
- He says indifferently and alike How are you friend? to the President
- at his levee,
- And he says Good-day my brother, to Cudge that hoes in the sugar-field,
- And both understand him and know that his speech is right.
- He walks with perfect ease in the capitol,
- He walks among the Congress, and one Representative says to another,
- Here is our equal appearing and new.
- Then the mechanics take him for a mechanic,
- And the soldiers suppose him to be a soldier, and the sailors that
- he has follow’d the sea,
- And the authors take him for an author, and the artists for an artist,
- And the laborers perceive he could labor with them and love them,
- No matter what the work is, that he is the one to follow it or has
- follow’d it,
- No matter what the nation, that he might find his brothers and
- sisters there.
- The English believe he comes of their English stock,
- A Jew to the Jew he seems, a Russ to the Russ, usual and near,
- removed from none.
- Whoever he looks at in the traveler’s coffee-house claims him,
- The Italian or Frenchman is sure, the German is sure, the Spaniard
- is sure, and the island Cuban is sure,
- The engineer, the deck-hand on the great lakes, or on the Mississippi
- or St. Lawrence or Sacramento, or Hudson or Paumanok sound, claims him.
- The gentleman of perfect blood acknowledges his perfect blood,
- The insulter, the prostitute, the angry person, the beggar, see
- themselves in the ways of him, he strangely transmutes them,
- They are not vile any more, they hardly know themselves they are so grown.
- 2
- The indications and tally of time,
- Perfect sanity shows the master among philosophs,
- Time, always without break, indicates itself in parts,
- What always indicates the poet is the crowd of the pleasant company
- of singers, and their words,
- The words of the singers are the hours or minutes of the light or dark,
- but the words of the maker of poems are the general light and dark,
- The maker of poems settles justice, reality, immortality,
- His insight and power encircle things and the human race,
- He is the glory and extract thus far of things and of the human race.
- The singers do not beget, only the Poet begets,
- The singers are welcom’d, understood, appear often enough, but rare
- has the day been, likewise the spot, of the birth of the maker
- of poems, the Answerer,
- (Not every century nor every five centuries has contain’d such a
- day, for all its names.)
- The singers of successive hours of centuries may have ostensible
- names, but the name of each of them is one of the singers,
- The name of each is, eye-singer, ear-singer, head-singer,
- sweet-singer, night-singer, parlor-singer, love-singer,
- weird-singer, or something else.
- All this time and at all times wait the words of true poems,
- The words of true poems do not merely please,
- The true poets are not followers of beauty but the august masters of beauty;
- The greatness of sons is the exuding of the greatness of mothers
- and fathers,
- The words of true poems are the tuft and final applause of science.
- Divine instinct, breadth of vision, the law of reason, health,
- rudeness of body, withdrawnness,
- Gayety, sun-tan, air-sweetness, such are some of the words of poems.
- The sailor and traveler underlie the maker of poems, the Answerer,
- The builder, geometer, chemist, anatomist, phrenologist, artist, all
- these underlie the maker of poems, the Answerer.
- The words of the true poems give you more than poems,
- They give you to form for yourself poems, religions, politics, war,
- peace, behavior, histories, essays, daily life, and every thing else,
- They balance ranks, colors, races, creeds, and the sexes,
- They do not seek beauty, they are sought,
- Forever touching them or close upon them follows beauty, longing,
- fain, love-sick.
- They prepare for death, yet are they not the finish, but rather the outset,
- They bring none to his or her terminus or to be content and full,
- Whom they take they take into space to behold the birth of stars, to
- learn one of the meanings,
- To launch off with absolute faith, to sweep through the ceaseless
- rings and never be quiet again.
- BOOK X
- Our Old Feuillage
- Always our old feuillage!
- Always Florida’s green peninsula--always the priceless delta of
- Louisiana--always the cotton-fields of Alabama and Texas,
- Always California’s golden hills and hollows, and the silver
- mountains of New Mexico--always soft-breath’d Cuba,
- Always the vast slope drain’d by the Southern sea, inseparable with
- the slopes drain’d by the Eastern and Western seas,
- The area the eighty-third year of these States, the three and a half
- millions of square miles,
- The eighteen thousand miles of sea-coast and bay-coast on the main,
- the thirty thousand miles of river navigation,
- The seven millions of distinct families and the same number of dwellings--
- always these, and more, branching forth into numberless branches,
- Always the free range and diversity--always the continent of Democracy;
- Always the prairies, pastures, forests, vast cities, travelers,
- Kanada, the snows;
- Always these compact lands tied at the hips with the belt stringing
- the huge oval lakes;
- Always the West with strong native persons, the increasing density there,
- the habitans, friendly, threatening, ironical, scorning invaders;
- All sights, South, North, East--all deeds, promiscuously done at all times,
- All characters, movements, growths, a few noticed, myriads unnoticed,
- Through Mannahatta’s streets I walking, these things gathering,
- On interior rivers by night in the glare of pine knots, steamboats
- wooding up,
- Sunlight by day on the valley of the Susquehanna, and on the valleys
- of the Potomac and Rappahannock, and the valleys of the Roanoke
- and Delaware,
- In their northerly wilds beasts of prey haunting the Adirondacks the
- hills, or lapping the Saginaw waters to drink,
- In a lonesome inlet a sheldrake lost from the flock, sitting on the
- water rocking silently,
- In farmers’ barns oxen in the stable, their harvest labor done, they
- rest standing, they are too tired,
- Afar on arctic ice the she-walrus lying drowsily while her cubs play around,
- The hawk sailing where men have not yet sail’d, the farthest polar
- sea, ripply, crystalline, open, beyond the floes,
- White drift spooning ahead where the ship in the tempest dashes,
- On solid land what is done in cities as the bells strike midnight together,
- In primitive woods the sounds there also sounding, the howl of the
- wolf, the scream of the panther, and the hoarse bellow of the elk,
- In winter beneath the hard blue ice of Moosehead lake, in summer
- visible through the clear waters, the great trout swimming,
- In lower latitudes in warmer air in the Carolinas the large black
- buzzard floating slowly high beyond the tree tops,
- Below, the red cedar festoon’d with tylandria, the pines and
- cypresses growing out of the white sand that spreads far and flat,
- Rude boats descending the big Pedee, climbing plants, parasites with
- color’d flowers and berries enveloping huge trees,
- The waving drapery on the live-oak trailing long and low,
- noiselessly waved by the wind,
- The camp of Georgia wagoners just after dark, the supper-fires and
- the cooking and eating by whites and negroes,
- Thirty or forty great wagons, the mules, cattle, horses, feeding
- from troughs,
- The shadows, gleams, up under the leaves of the old sycamore-trees,
- the flames with the black smoke from the pitch-pine curling and rising;
- Southern fishermen fishing, the sounds and inlets of North
- Carolina’s coast, the shad-fishery and the herring-fishery, the
- large sweep-seines, the windlasses on shore work’d by horses, the
- clearing, curing, and packing-houses;
- Deep in the forest in piney woods turpentine dropping from the
- incisions in the trees, there are the turpentine works,
- There are the negroes at work in good health, the ground in all
- directions is cover’d with pine straw;
- In Tennessee and Kentucky slaves busy in the coalings, at the forge,
- by the furnace-blaze, or at the corn-shucking,
- In Virginia, the planter’s son returning after a long absence,
- joyfully welcom’d and kiss’d by the aged mulatto nurse,
- On rivers boatmen safely moor’d at nightfall in their boats under
- shelter of high banks,
- Some of the younger men dance to the sound of the banjo or fiddle,
- others sit on the gunwale smoking and talking;
- Late in the afternoon the mocking-bird, the American mimic, singing
- in the Great Dismal Swamp,
- There are the greenish waters, the resinous odor, the plenteous
- moss, the cypress-tree, and the juniper-tree;
- Northward, young men of Mannahatta, the target company from an
- excursion returning home at evening, the musket-muzzles all
- bear bunches of flowers presented by women;
- Children at play, or on his father’s lap a young boy fallen asleep,
- (how his lips move! how he smiles in his sleep!)
- The scout riding on horseback over the plains west of the
- Mississippi, he ascends a knoll and sweeps his eyes around;
- California life, the miner, bearded, dress’d in his rude costume,
- the stanch California friendship, the sweet air, the graves one
- in passing meets solitary just aside the horse-path;
- Down in Texas the cotton-field, the negro-cabins, drivers driving
- mules or oxen before rude carts, cotton bales piled on banks
- and wharves;
- Encircling all, vast-darting up and wide, the American Soul, with
- equal hemispheres, one Love, one Dilation or Pride;
- In arriere the peace-talk with the Iroquois the aborigines, the
- calumet, the pipe of good-will, arbitration, and indorsement,
- The sachem blowing the smoke first toward the sun and then toward
- the earth,
- The drama of the scalp-dance enacted with painted faces and guttural
- exclamations,
- The setting out of the war-party, the long and stealthy march,
- The single file, the swinging hatchets, the surprise and slaughter
- of enemies;
- All the acts, scenes, ways, persons, attitudes of these States,
- reminiscences, institutions,
- All these States compact, every square mile of these States without
- excepting a particle;
- Me pleas’d, rambling in lanes and country fields, Paumanok’s fields,
- Observing the spiral flight of two little yellow butterflies
- shuffling between each other, ascending high in the air,
- The darting swallow, the destroyer of insects, the fall traveler
- southward but returning northward early in the spring,
- The country boy at the close of the day driving the herd of cows and
- shouting to them as they loiter to browse by the roadside,
- The city wharf, Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Charleston, New
- Orleans, San Francisco,
- The departing ships when the sailors heave at the capstan;
- Evening--me in my room--the setting sun,
- The setting summer sun shining in my open window, showing the
- swarm of flies, suspended, balancing in the air in the centre
- of the room, darting athwart, up and down, casting swift
- shadows in specks on the opposite wall where the shine is;
- The athletic American matron speaking in public to crowds of listeners,
- Males, females, immigrants, combinations, the copiousness, the
- individuality of the States, each for itself--the moneymakers,
- Factories, machinery, the mechanical forces, the windlass, lever,
- pulley, all certainties,
- The certainty of space, increase, freedom, futurity,
- In space the sporades, the scatter’d islands, the stars--on the firm
- earth, the lands, my lands,
- O lands! all so dear to me--what you are, (whatever it is,) I putting it
- at random in these songs, become a part of that, whatever it is,
- Southward there, I screaming, with wings slow flapping, with the
- myriads of gulls wintering along the coasts of Florida,
- Otherways there atwixt the banks of the Arkansaw, the Rio Grande,
- the Nueces, the Brazos, the Tombigbee, the Red River, the
- Saskatchawan or the Osage, I with the spring waters laughing
- and skipping and running,
- Northward, on the sands, on some shallow bay of Paumanok, I with
- parties of snowy herons wading in the wet to seek worms and
- aquatic plants,
- Retreating, triumphantly twittering, the king-bird, from piercing
- the crow with its bill, for amusement--and I triumphantly twittering,
- The migrating flock of wild geese alighting in autumn to refresh
- themselves, the body of the flock feed, the sentinels outside
- move around with erect heads watching, and are from time to time
- reliev’d by other sentinels--and I feeding and taking turns
- with the rest,
- In Kanadian forests the moose, large as an ox, corner’d by hunters,
- rising desperately on his hind-feet, and plunging with his
- fore-feet, the hoofs as sharp as knives--and I, plunging at the
- hunters, corner’d and desperate,
- In the Mannahatta, streets, piers, shipping, store-houses, and the
- countless workmen working in the shops,
- And I too of the Mannahatta, singing thereof--and no less in myself
- than the whole of the Mannahatta in itself,
- Singing the song of These, my ever-united lands--my body no more
- inevitably united, part to part, and made out of a thousand
- diverse contributions one identity, any more than my lands
- are inevitably united and made ONE IDENTITY;
- Nativities, climates, the grass of the great pastoral Plains,
- Cities, labors, death, animals, products, war, good and evil--these me,
- These affording, in all their particulars, the old feuillage to me
- and to America, how can I do less than pass the clew of the union
- of them, to afford the like to you?
- Whoever you are! how can I but offer you divine leaves, that you
- also be eligible as I am?
- How can I but as here chanting, invite you for yourself to collect
- bouquets of the incomparable feuillage of these States?
- BOOK XI
- A Song of Joys
- O to make the most jubilant song!
- Full of music--full of manhood, womanhood, infancy!
- Full of common employments--full of grain and trees.
- O for the voices of animals--O for the swiftness and balance of fishes!
- O for the dropping of raindrops in a song!
- O for the sunshine and motion of waves in a song!
- O the joy of my spirit--it is uncaged--it darts like lightning!
- It is not enough to have this globe or a certain time,
- I will have thousands of globes and all time.
- O the engineer’s joys! to go with a locomotive!
- To hear the hiss of steam, the merry shriek, the steam-whistle, the
- laughing locomotive!
- To push with resistless way and speed off in the distance.
- O the gleesome saunter over fields and hillsides!
- The leaves and flowers of the commonest weeds, the moist fresh
- stillness of the woods,
- The exquisite smell of the earth at daybreak, and all through the forenoon.
- O the horseman’s and horsewoman’s joys!
- The saddle, the gallop, the pressure upon the seat, the cool
- gurgling by the ears and hair.
- O the fireman’s joys!
- I hear the alarm at dead of night,
- I hear bells, shouts! I pass the crowd, I run!
- The sight of the flames maddens me with pleasure.
- O the joy of the strong-brawn’d fighter, towering in the arena in
- perfect condition, conscious of power, thirsting to meet his opponent.
- O the joy of that vast elemental sympathy which only the human soul is
- capable of generating and emitting in steady and limitless floods.
- O the mother’s joys!
- The watching, the endurance, the precious love, the anguish, the
- patiently yielded life.
- O the of increase, growth, recuperation,
- The joy of soothing and pacifying, the joy of concord and harmony.
- O to go back to the place where I was born,
- To hear the birds sing once more,
- To ramble about the house and barn and over the fields once more,
- And through the orchard and along the old lanes once more.
- O to have been brought up on bays, lagoons, creeks, or along the coast,
- To continue and be employ’d there all my life,
- The briny and damp smell, the shore, the salt weeds exposed at low water,
- The work of fishermen, the work of the eel-fisher and clam-fisher;
- I come with my clam-rake and spade, I come with my eel-spear,
- Is the tide out? I Join the group of clam-diggers on the flats,
- I laugh and work with them, I joke at my work like a mettlesome young man;
- In winter I take my eel-basket and eel-spear and travel out on foot
- on the ice--I have a small axe to cut holes in the ice,
- Behold me well-clothed going gayly or returning in the afternoon,
- my brood of tough boys accompanying me,
- My brood of grown and part-grown boys, who love to be with no
- one else so well as they love to be with me,
- By day to work with me, and by night to sleep with me.
- Another time in warm weather out in a boat, to lift the lobster-pots
- where they are sunk with heavy stones, (I know the buoys,)
- O the sweetness of the Fifth-month morning upon the water as I row
- just before sunrise toward the buoys,
- I pull the wicker pots up slantingly, the dark green lobsters are
- desperate with their claws as I take them out, I insert
- wooden pegs in the ’oints of their pincers,
- I go to all the places one after another, and then row back to the shore,
- There in a huge kettle of boiling water the lobsters shall be boil’d
- till their color becomes scarlet.
- Another time mackerel-taking,
- Voracious, mad for the hook, near the surface, they seem to fill the
- water for miles;
- Another time fishing for rock-fish in Chesapeake bay, I one of the
- brown-faced crew;
- Another time trailing for blue-fish off Paumanok, I stand with braced body,
- My left foot is on the gunwale, my right arm throws far out the
- coils of slender rope,
- In sight around me the quick veering and darting of fifty skiffs, my
- companions.
- O boating on the rivers,
- The voyage down the St. Lawrence, the superb scenery, the steamers,
- The ships sailing, the Thousand Islands, the occasional timber-raft
- and the raftsmen with long-reaching sweep-oars,
- The little huts on the rafts, and the stream of smoke when they cook
- supper at evening.
- (O something pernicious and dread!
- Something far away from a puny and pious life!
- Something unproved! something in a trance!
- Something escaped from the anchorage and driving free.)
- O to work in mines, or forging iron,
- Foundry casting, the foundry itself, the rude high roof, the ample
- and shadow’d space,
- The furnace, the hot liquid pour’d out and running.
- O to resume the joys of the soldier!
- To feel the presence of a brave commanding officer--to feel his sympathy!
- To behold his calmness--to be warm’d in the rays of his smile!
- To go to battle--to hear the bugles play and the drums beat!
- To hear the crash of artillery--to see the glittering of the bayonets
- and musket-barrels in the sun!
- To see men fall and die and not complain!
- To taste the savage taste of blood--to be so devilish!
- To gloat so over the wounds and deaths of the enemy.
- O the whaleman’s joys! O I cruise my old cruise again!
- I feel the ship’s motion under me, I feel the Atlantic breezes fanning me,
- I hear the cry again sent down from the mast-head, There--she blows!
- Again I spring up the rigging to look with the rest--we descend,
- wild with excitement,
- I leap in the lower’d boat, we row toward our prey where he lies,
- We approach stealthy and silent, I see the mountainous mass,
- lethargic, basking,
- I see the harpooneer standing up, I see the weapon dart from his
- vigorous arm;
- O swift again far out in the ocean the wounded whale, settling,
- running to windward, tows me,
- Again I see him rise to breathe, we row close again,
- I see a lance driven through his side, press’d deep, turn’d in the wound,
- Again we back off, I see him settle again, the life is leaving him fast,
- As he rises he spouts blood, I see him swim in circles narrower and
- narrower, swiftly cutting the water--I see him die,
- He gives one convulsive leap in the centre of the circle, and then
- falls flat and still in the bloody foam.
- O the old manhood of me, my noblest joy of all!
- My children and grand-children, my white hair and beard,
- My largeness, calmness, majesty, out of the long stretch of my life.
- O ripen’d joy of womanhood! O happiness at last!
- I am more than eighty years of age, I am the most venerable mother,
- How clear is my mind--how all people draw nigh to me!
- What attractions are these beyond any before? what bloom more
- than the bloom of youth?
- What beauty is this that descends upon me and rises out of me?
- O the orator’s joys!
- To inflate the chest, to roll the thunder of the voice out from the
- ribs and throat,
- To make the people rage, weep, hate, desire, with yourself,
- To lead America--to quell America with a great tongue.
- O the joy of my soul leaning pois’d on itself, receiving identity through
- materials and loving them, observing characters and absorbing them,
- My soul vibrated back to me from them, from sight, hearing, touch,
- reason, articulation, comparison, memory, and the like,
- The real life of my senses and flesh transcending my senses and flesh,
- My body done with materials, my sight done with my material eyes,
- Proved to me this day beyond cavil that it is not my material eyes
- which finally see,
- Nor my material body which finally loves, walks, laughs, shouts,
- embraces, procreates.
- O the farmer’s joys!
- Ohioan’s, Illinoisian’s, Wisconsinese’, Kanadian’s, Iowan’s,
- Kansian’s, Missourian’s, Oregonese’ joys!
- To rise at peep of day and pass forth nimbly to work,
- To plough land in the fall for winter-sown crops,
- To plough land in the spring for maize,
- To train orchards, to graft the trees, to gather apples in the fall.
- O to bathe in the swimming-bath, or in a good place along shore,
- To splash the water! to walk ankle-deep, or race naked along the shore.
- O to realize space!
- The plenteousness of all, that there are no bounds,
- To emerge and be of the sky, of the sun and moon and flying
- clouds, as one with them.
- O the joy a manly self-hood!
- To be servile to none, to defer to none, not to any tyrant known or unknown,
- To walk with erect carriage, a step springy and elastic,
- To look with calm gaze or with a flashing eye,
- To speak with a full and sonorous voice out of a broad chest,
- To confront with your personality all the other personalities of the earth.
- Knowist thou the excellent joys of youth?
- Joys of the dear companions and of the merry word and laughing face?
- Joy of the glad light-beaming day, joy of the wide-breath’d games?
- Joy of sweet music, joy of the lighted ball-room and the dancers?
- Joy of the plenteous dinner, strong carouse and drinking?
- Yet O my soul supreme!
- Knowist thou the joys of pensive thought?
- Joys of the free and lonesome heart, the tender, gloomy heart?
- Joys of the solitary walk, the spirit bow’d yet proud, the suffering
- and the struggle?
- The agonistic throes, the ecstasies, joys of the solemn musings day
- or night?
- Joys of the thought of Death, the great spheres Time and Space?
- Prophetic joys of better, loftier love’s ideals, the divine wife,
- the sweet, eternal, perfect comrade?
- Joys all thine own undying one, joys worthy thee O soul.
- O while I live to be the ruler of life, not a slave,
- To meet life as a powerful conqueror,
- No fumes, no ennui, no more complaints or scornful criticisms,
- To these proud laws of the air, the water and the ground, proving
- my interior soul impregnable,
- And nothing exterior shall ever take command of me.
- For not life’s joys alone I sing, repeating--the joy of death!
- The beautiful touch of Death, soothing and benumbing a few moments,
- for reasons,
- Myself discharging my excrementitious body to be burn’d, or render’d
- to powder, or buried,
- My real body doubtless left to me for other spheres,
- My voided body nothing more to me, returning to the purifications,
- further offices, eternal uses of the earth.
- O to attract by more than attraction!
- How it is I know not--yet behold! the something which obeys none
- of the rest,
- It is offensive, never defensive--yet how magnetic it draws.
- O to struggle against great odds, to meet enemies undaunted!
- To be entirely alone with them, to find how much one can stand!
- To look strife, torture, prison, popular odium, face to face!
- To mount the scaffold, to advance to the muzzles of guns with
- perfect nonchalance!
- To be indeed a God!
- O to sail to sea in a ship!
- To leave this steady unendurable land,
- To leave the tiresome sameness of the streets, the sidewalks and the
- houses,
- To leave you O you solid motionless land, and entering a ship,
- To sail and sail and sail!
- O to have life henceforth a poem of new joys!
- To dance, clap hands, exult, shout, skip, leap, roll on, float on!
- To be a sailor of the world bound for all ports,
- A ship itself, (see indeed these sails I spread to the sun and air,)
- A swift and swelling ship full of rich words, full of joys.
- BOOK XII
- Song of the Broad-Axe
- 1
- Weapon shapely, naked, wan,
- Head from the mother’s bowels drawn,
- Wooded flesh and metal bone, limb only one and lip only one,
- Gray-blue leaf by red-heat grown, helve produced from a little seed sown,
- Resting the grass amid and upon,
- To be lean’d and to lean on.
- Strong shapes and attributes of strong shapes, masculine trades,
- sights and sounds.
- Long varied train of an emblem, dabs of music,
- Fingers of the organist skipping staccato over the keys of the great organ.
- 2
- Welcome are all earth’s lands, each for its kind,
- Welcome are lands of pine and oak,
- Welcome are lands of the lemon and fig,
- Welcome are lands of gold,
- Welcome are lands of wheat and maize, welcome those of the grape,
- Welcome are lands of sugar and rice,
- Welcome the cotton-lands, welcome those of the white potato and
- sweet potato,
- Welcome are mountains, flats, sands, forests, prairies,
- Welcome the rich borders of rivers, table-lands, openings,
- Welcome the measureless grazing-lands, welcome the teeming soil of
- orchards, flax, honey, hemp;
- Welcome just as much the other more hard-faced lands,
- Lands rich as lands of gold or wheat and fruit lands,
- Lands of mines, lands of the manly and rugged ores,
- Lands of coal, copper, lead, tin, zinc,
- Lands of iron--lands of the make of the axe.
- 3
- The log at the wood-pile, the axe supported by it,
- The sylvan hut, the vine over the doorway, the space clear’d for garden,
- The irregular tapping of rain down on the leaves after the storm is lull’d,
- The walling and moaning at intervals, the thought of the sea,
- The thought of ships struck in the storm and put on their beam ends,
- and the cutting away of masts,
- The sentiment of the huge timbers of old-fashion’d houses and barns,
- The remember’d print or narrative, the voyage at a venture of men,
- families, goods,
- The disembarkation, the founding of a new city,
- The voyage of those who sought a New England and found it, the outset
- anywhere,
- The settlements of the Arkansas, Colorado, Ottawa, Willamette,
- The slow progress, the scant fare, the axe, rifle, saddle-bags;
- The beauty of all adventurous and daring persons,
- The beauty of wood-boys and wood-men with their clear untrimm’d faces,
- The beauty of independence, departure, actions that rely on themselves,
- The American contempt for statutes and ceremonies, the boundless
- impatience of restraint,
- The loose drift of character, the inkling through random types, the
- solidification;
- The butcher in the slaughter-house, the hands aboard schooners and
- sloops, the raftsman, the pioneer,
- Lumbermen in their winter camp, daybreak in the woods, stripes of
- snow on the limbs of trees, the occasional snapping,
- The glad clear sound of one’s own voice, the merry song, the natural
- life of the woods, the strong day’s work,
- The blazing fire at night, the sweet taste of supper, the talk, the
- bed of hemlock-boughs and the bear-skin;
- The house-builder at work in cities or anywhere,
- The preparatory jointing, squaring, sawing, mortising,
- The hoist-up of beams, the push of them in their places, laying them
- regular,
- Setting the studs by their tenons in the mortises according as they
- were prepared,
- The blows of mallets and hammers, the attitudes of the men, their
- curv’d limbs,
- Bending, standing, astride the beams, driving in pins, holding on by
- posts and braces,
- The hook’d arm over the plate, the other arm wielding the axe,
- The floor-men forcing the planks close to be nail’d,
- Their postures bringing their weapons downward on the bearers,
- The echoes resounding through the vacant building:
- The huge storehouse carried up in the city well under way,
- The six framing-men, two in the middle and two at each end, carefully
- bearing on their shoulders a heavy stick for a cross-beam,
- The crowded line of masons with trowels in their right hands rapidly
- laying the long side-wall, two hundred feet from front to rear,
- The flexible rise and fall of backs, the continual click of the
- trowels striking the bricks,
- The bricks one after another each laid so workmanlike in its place,
- and set with a knock of the trowel-handle,
- The piles of materials, the mortar on the mortar-boards, and the
- steady replenishing by the hod-men;
- Spar-makers in the spar-yard, the swarming row of well-grown apprentices,
- The swing of their axes on the square-hew’d log shaping it toward
- the shape of a mast,
- The brisk short crackle of the steel driven slantingly into the pine,
- The butter-color’d chips flying off in great flakes and slivers,
- The limber motion of brawny young arms and hips in easy costumes,
- The constructor of wharves, bridges, piers, bulk-heads, floats,
- stays against the sea;
- The city fireman, the fire that suddenly bursts forth in the
- close-pack’d square,
- The arriving engines, the hoarse shouts, the nimble stepping and daring,
- The strong command through the fire-trumpets, the falling in line,
- the rise and fall of the arms forcing the water,
- The slender, spasmic, blue-white jets, the bringing to bear of the
- hooks and ladders and their execution,
- The crash and cut away of connecting wood-work, or through floors
- if the fire smoulders under them,
- The crowd with their lit faces watching, the glare and dense shadows;
- The forger at his forge-furnace and the user of iron after him,
- The maker of the axe large and small, and the welder and temperer,
- The chooser breathing his breath on the cold steel and trying the
- edge with his thumb,
- The one who clean-shapes the handle and sets it firmly in the socket;
- The shadowy processions of the portraits of the past users also,
- The primal patient mechanics, the architects and engineers,
- The far-off Assyrian edifice and Mizra edifice,
- The Roman lictors preceding the consuls,
- The antique European warrior with his axe in combat,
- The uplifted arm, the clatter of blows on the helmeted head,
- The death-howl, the limpsy tumbling body, the rush of friend and foe
- thither,
- The siege of revolted lieges determin’d for liberty,
- The summons to surrender, the battering at castle gates, the truce
- and parley,
- The sack of an old city in its time,
- The bursting in of mercenaries and bigots tumultuously and disorderly,
- Roar, flames, blood, drunkenness, madness,
- Goods freely rifled from houses and temples, screams of women in the
- gripe of brigands,
- Craft and thievery of camp-followers, men running, old persons despairing,
- The hell of war, the cruelties of creeds,
- The list of all executive deeds and words just or unjust,
- The power of personality just or unjust.
- 4
- Muscle and pluck forever!
- What invigorates life invigorates death,
- And the dead advance as much as the living advance,
- And the future is no more uncertain than the present,
- For the roughness of the earth and of man encloses as much as the
- delicatesse of the earth and of man,
- And nothing endures but personal qualities.
- What do you think endures?
- Do you think a great city endures?
- Or a teeming manufacturing state? or a prepared constitution? or the
- best built steamships?
- Or hotels of granite and iron? or any chef-d’œuvres of engineering,
- forts, armaments?
- Away! these are not to be cherish’d for themselves,
- They fill their hour, the dancers dance, the musicians play for them,
- The show passes, all does well enough of course,
- All does very well till one flash of defiance.
- A great city is that which has the greatest men and women,
- If it be a few ragged huts it is still the greatest city in the
- whole world.
- 5
- The place where a great city stands is not the place of stretch’d
- wharves, docks, manufactures, deposits of produce merely,
- Nor the place of ceaseless salutes of new-comers or the
- anchor-lifters of the departing,
- Nor the place of the tallest and costliest buildings or shops
- selling goods from the rest of the earth,
- Nor the place of the best libraries and schools, nor the place where
- money is plentiest,
- Nor the place of the most numerous population.
- Where the city stands with the brawniest breed of orators and bards,
- Where the city stands that is belov’d by these, and loves them in
- return and understands them,
- Where no monuments exist to heroes but in the common words and deeds,
- Where thrift is in its place, and prudence is in its place,
- Where the men and women think lightly of the laws,
- Where the slave ceases, and the master of slaves ceases,
- Where the populace rise at once against the never-ending audacity of
- elected persons,
- Where fierce men and women pour forth as the sea to the whistle of
- death pours its sweeping and unript waves,
- Where outside authority enters always after the precedence of inside
- authority,
- Where the citizen is always the head and ideal, and President,
- Mayor, Governor and what not, are agents for pay,
- Where children are taught to be laws to themselves, and to depend on
- themselves,
- Where equanimity is illustrated in affairs,
- Where speculations on the soul are encouraged,
- Where women walk in public processions in the streets the same as the men,
- Where they enter the public assembly and take places the same as the men;
- Where the city of the faithfulest friends stands,
- Where the city of the cleanliness of the sexes stands,
- Where the city of the healthiest fathers stands,
- Where the city of the best-bodied mothers stands,
- There the great city stands.
- 6
- How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!
- How the floridness of the materials of cities shrivels before a
- man’s or woman’s look!
- All waits or goes by default till a strong being appears;
- A strong being is the proof of the race and of the ability of the universe,
- When he or she appears materials are overaw’d,
- The dispute on the soul stops,
- The old customs and phrases are confronted, turn’d back, or laid away.
- What is your money-making now? what can it do now?
- What is your respectability now?
- What are your theology, tuition, society, traditions, statute-books, now?
- Where are your jibes of being now?
- Where are your cavils about the soul now?
- 7
- A sterile landscape covers the ore, there is as good as the best for
- all the forbidding appearance,
- There is the mine, there are the miners,
- The forge-furnace is there, the melt is accomplish’d, the hammersmen
- are at hand with their tongs and hammers,
- What always served and always serves is at hand.
- Than this nothing has better served, it has served all,
- Served the fluent-tongued and subtle-sensed Greek, and long ere the Greek,
- Served in building the buildings that last longer than any,
- Served the Hebrew, the Persian, the most ancient Hindustanee,
- Served the mound-raiser on the Mississippi, served those whose
- relics remain in Central America,
- Served Albic temples in woods or on plains, with unhewn pillars and
- the druids,
- Served the artificial clefts, vast, high, silent, on the
- snow-cover’d hills of Scandinavia,
- Served those who time out of mind made on the granite walls rough
- sketches of the sun, moon, stars, ships, ocean waves,
- Served the paths of the irruptions of the Goths, served the pastoral
- tribes and nomads,
- Served the long distant Kelt, served the hardy pirates of the Baltic,
- Served before any of those the venerable and harmless men of Ethiopia,
- Served the making of helms for the galleys of pleasure and the
- making of those for war,
- Served all great works on land and all great works on the sea,
- For the mediaeval ages and before the mediaeval ages,
- Served not the living only then as now, but served the dead.
- 8
- I see the European headsman,
- He stands mask’d, clothed in red, with huge legs and strong naked arms,
- And leans on a ponderous axe.
- (Whom have you slaughter’d lately European headsman?
- Whose is that blood upon you so wet and sticky?)
- I see the clear sunsets of the martyrs,
- I see from the scaffolds the descending ghosts,
- Ghosts of dead lords, uncrown’d ladies, impeach’d ministers, rejected kings,
- Rivals, traitors, poisoners, disgraced chieftains and the rest.
- I see those who in any land have died for the good cause,
- The seed is spare, nevertheless the crop shall never run out,
- (Mind you O foreign kings, O priests, the crop shall never run out.)
- I see the blood wash’d entirely away from the axe,
- Both blade and helve are clean,
- They spirt no more the blood of European nobles, they clasp no more
- the necks of queens.
- I see the headsman withdraw and become useless,
- I see the scaffold untrodden and mouldy, I see no longer any axe upon it,
- I see the mighty and friendly emblem of the power of my own race,
- the newest, largest race.
- 9
- (America! I do not vaunt my love for you,
- I have what I have.)
- The axe leaps!
- The solid forest gives fluid utterances,
- They tumble forth, they rise and form,
- Hut, tent, landing, survey,
- Flail, plough, pick, crowbar, spade,
- Shingle, rail, prop, wainscot, lamb, lath, panel, gable,
- Citadel, ceiling, saloon, academy, organ, exhibition-house, library,
- Cornice, trellis, pilaster, balcony, window, turret, porch,
- Hoe, rake, pitchfork, pencil, wagon, staff, saw, jack-plane, mallet,
- wedge, rounce,
- Chair, tub, hoop, table, wicket, vane, sash, floor,
- Work-box, chest, string’d instrument, boat, frame, and what not,
- Capitols of States, and capitol of the nation of States,
- Long stately rows in avenues, hospitals for orphans or for the poor or sick,
- Manhattan steamboats and clippers taking the measure of all seas.
- The shapes arise!
- Shapes of the using of axes anyhow, and the users and all that
- neighbors them,
- Cutters down of wood and haulers of it to the Penobscot or Kenebec,
- Dwellers in cabins among the Californian mountains or by the little
- lakes, or on the Columbia,
- Dwellers south on the banks of the Gila or Rio Grande, friendly
- gatherings, the characters and fun,
- Dwellers along the St. Lawrence, or north in Kanada, or down by the
- Yellowstone, dwellers on coasts and off coasts,
- Seal-fishers, whalers, arctic seamen breaking passages through the ice.
- The shapes arise!
- Shapes of factories, arsenals, foundries, markets,
- Shapes of the two-threaded tracks of railroads,
- Shapes of the sleepers of bridges, vast frameworks, girders, arches,
- Shapes of the fleets of barges, tows, lake and canal craft, river craft,
- Ship-yards and dry-docks along the Eastern and Western seas, and in
- many a bay and by-place,
- The live-oak kelsons, the pine planks, the spars, the
- hackmatack-roots for knees,
- The ships themselves on their ways, the tiers of scaffolds, the
- workmen busy outside and inside,
- The tools lying around, the great auger and little auger, the adze,
- bolt, line, square, gouge, and bead-plane.
- 10
- The shapes arise!
- The shape measur’d, saw’d, jack’d, join’d, stain’d,
- The coffin-shape for the dead to lie within in his shroud,
- The shape got out in posts, in the bedstead posts, in the posts of
- the bride’s bed,
- The shape of the little trough, the shape of the rockers beneath,
- the shape of the babe’s cradle,
- The shape of the floor-planks, the floor-planks for dancers’ feet,
- The shape of the planks of the family home, the home of the friendly
- parents and children,
- The shape of the roof of the home of the happy young man and
- woman, the roof over the well-married young man and woman,
- The roof over the supper joyously cook’d by the chaste wife, and joyously
- eaten by the chaste husband, content after his day’s work.
- The shapes arise!
- The shape of the prisoner’s place in the court-room, and of him or
- her seated in the place,
- The shape of the liquor-bar lean’d against by the young rum-drinker
- and the old rum-drinker,
- The shape of the shamed and angry stairs trod by sneaking foot- steps,
- The shape of the sly settee, and the adulterous unwholesome couple,
- The shape of the gambling-board with its devilish winnings and losings,
- The shape of the step-ladder for the convicted and sentenced
- murderer, the murderer with haggard face and pinion’d arms,
- The sheriff at hand with his deputies, the silent and white-lipp’d
- crowd, the dangling of the rope.
- The shapes arise!
- Shapes of doors giving many exits and entrances,
- The door passing the dissever’d friend flush’d and in haste,
- The door that admits good news and bad news,
- The door whence the son left home confident and puff’d up,
- The door he enter’d again from a long and scandalous absence,
- diseas’d, broken down, without innocence, without means.
- 11
- Her shape arises,
- She less guarded than ever, yet more guarded than ever,
- The gross and soil’d she moves among do not make her gross and soil’d,
- She knows the thoughts as she passes, nothing is conceal’d from her,
- She is none the less considerate or friendly therefor,
- She is the best belov’d, it is without exception, she has no reason
- to fear and she does not fear,
- Oaths, quarrels, hiccupp’d songs, smutty expressions, are idle to
- her as she passes,
- She is silent, she is possess’d of herself, they do not offend her,
- She receives them as the laws of Nature receive them, she is strong,
- She too is a law of Nature--there is no law stronger than she is.
- 12
- The main shapes arise!
- Shapes of Democracy total, result of centuries,
- Shapes ever projecting other shapes,
- Shapes of turbulent manly cities,
- Shapes of the friends and home-givers of the whole earth,
- Shapes bracing the earth and braced with the whole earth.
- BOOK XIII
- Song of the Exposition
- 1
- (Ah little recks the laborer,
- How near his work is holding him to God,
- The loving Laborer through space and time.)
- After all not to create only, or found only,
- But to bring perhaps from afar what is already founded,
- To give it our own identity, average, limitless, free,
- To fill the gross the torpid bulk with vital religious fire,
- Not to repel or destroy so much as accept, fuse, rehabilitate,
- To obey as well as command, to follow more than to lead,
- These also are the lessons of our New World;
- While how little the New after all, how much the Old, Old World!
- Long and long has the grass been growing,
- Long and long has the rain been falling,
- Long has the globe been rolling round.
- 2
- Come Muse migrate from Greece and Ionia,
- Cross out please those immensely overpaid accounts,
- That matter of Troy and Achilles’ wrath, and AEneas’, Odysseus’ wanderings,
- Placard “Removed” and “To Let” on the rocks of your snowy Parnassus,
- Repeat at Jerusalem, place the notice high on jaffa’s gate and on
- Mount Moriah,
- The same on the walls of your German, French and Spanish castles,
- and Italian collections,
- For know a better, fresher, busier sphere, a wide, untried domain
- awaits, demands you.
- 3
- Responsive to our summons,
- Or rather to her long-nurs’d inclination,
- Join’d with an irresistible, natural gravitation,
- She comes! I hear the rustling of her gown,
- I scent the odor of her breath’s delicious fragrance,
- I mark her step divine, her curious eyes a-turning, rolling,
- Upon this very scene.
- The dame of dames! can I believe then,
- Those ancient temples, sculptures classic, could none of them retain her?
- Nor shades of Virgil and Dante, nor myriad memories, poems, old
- associations, magnetize and hold on to her?
- But that she’s left them all--and here?
- Yes, if you will allow me to say so,
- I, my friends, if you do not, can plainly see her,
- The same undying soul of earth’s, activity’s, beauty’s, heroism’s
- expression,
- Out from her evolutions hither come, ended the strata of her former themes,
- Hidden and cover’d by to-day’s, foundation of to-day’s,
- Ended, deceas’d through time, her voice by Castaly’s fountain,
- Silent the broken-lipp’d Sphynx in Egypt, silent all those century-
- baffling tombs,
- Ended for aye the epics of Asia’s, Europe’s helmeted warriors, ended
- the primitive call of the muses,
- Calliope’s call forever closed, Clio, Melpomene, Thalia dead,
- Ended the stately rhythmus of Una and Oriana, ended the quest of the
- holy Graal,
- Jerusalem a handful of ashes blown by the wind, extinct,
- The Crusaders’ streams of shadowy midnight troops sped with the sunrise,
- Amadis, Tancred, utterly gone, Charlemagne, Roland, Oliver gone,
- Palmerin, ogre, departed, vanish’d the turrets that Usk from its
- waters reflected,
- Arthur vanish’d with all his knights, Merlin and Lancelot and
- Galahad, all gone, dissolv’d utterly like an exhalation;
- Pass’d! pass’d! for us, forever pass’d, that once so mighty world,
- now void, inanimate, phantom world,
- Embroider’d, dazzling, foreign world, with all its gorgeous legends, myths,
- Its kings and castles proud, its priests and warlike lords and
- courtly dames,
- Pass’d to its charnel vault, coffin’d with crown and armor on,
- Blazon’d with Shakspere’s purple page,
- And dirged by Tennyson’s sweet sad rhyme.
- I say I see, my friends, if you do not, the illustrious emigre, (having it
- is true in her day, although the same, changed, journey’d considerable,)
- Making directly for this rendezvous, vigorously clearing a path for
- herself, striding through the confusion,
- By thud of machinery and shrill steam-whistle undismay’d,
- Bluff’d not a bit by drain-pipe, gasometers, artificial fertilizers,
- Smiling and pleas’d with palpable intent to stay,
- She’s here, install’d amid the kitchen ware!
- 4
- But hold--don’t I forget my manners?
- To introduce the stranger, (what else indeed do I live to chant
- for?) to thee Columbia;
- In liberty’s name welcome immortal! clasp hands,
- And ever henceforth sisters dear be both.
- Fear not O Muse! truly new ways and days receive, surround you,
- I candidly confess a queer, queer race, of novel fashion,
- And yet the same old human race, the same within, without,
- Faces and hearts the same, feelings the same, yearnings the same,
- The same old love, beauty and use the same.
- 5
- We do not blame thee elder World, nor really separate ourselves from thee,
- (Would the son separate himself from the father?)
- Looking back on thee, seeing thee to thy duties, grandeurs, through
- past ages bending, building,
- We build to ours to-day.
- Mightier than Egypt’s tombs,
- Fairer than Grecia’s, Roma’s temples,
- Prouder than Milan’s statued, spired cathedral,
- More picturesque than Rhenish castle-keeps,
- We plan even now to raise, beyond them all,
- Thy great cathedral sacred industry, no tomb,
- A keep for life for practical invention.
- As in a waking vision,
- E’en while I chant I see it rise, I scan and prophesy outside and in,
- Its manifold ensemble.
- Around a palace, loftier, fairer, ampler than any yet,
- Earth’s modern wonder, history’s seven outstripping,
- High rising tier on tier with glass and iron facades,
- Gladdening the sun and sky, enhued in cheerfulest hues,
- Bronze, lilac, robin’s-egg, marine and crimson,
- Over whose golden roof shall flaunt, beneath thy banner Freedom,
- The banners of the States and flags of every land,
- A brood of lofty, fair, but lesser palaces shall cluster.
- Somewhere within their walls shall all that forwards perfect human
- life be started,
- Tried, taught, advanced, visibly exhibited.
- Not only all the world of works, trade, products,
- But all the workmen of the world here to be represented.
- Here shall you trace in flowing operation,
- In every state of practical, busy movement, the rills of civilization,
- Materials here under your eye shall change their shape as if by magic,
- The cotton shall be pick’d almost in the very field,
- Shall be dried, clean’d, ginn’d, baled, spun into thread and cloth
- before you,
- You shall see hands at work at all the old processes and all the new ones,
- You shall see the various grains and how flour is made and then
- bread baked by the bakers,
- You shall see the crude ores of California and Nevada passing on and
- on till they become bullion,
- You shall watch how the printer sets type, and learn what a
- composing-stick is,
- You shall mark in amazement the Hoe press whirling its cylinders,
- shedding the printed leaves steady and fast,
- The photograph, model, watch, pin, nail, shall be created before you.
- In large calm halls, a stately museum shall teach you the infinite
- lessons of minerals,
- In another, woods, plants, vegetation shall be illustrated--in
- another animals, animal life and development.
- One stately house shall be the music house,
- Others for other arts--learning, the sciences, shall all be here,
- None shall be slighted, none but shall here be honor’d, help’d, exampled.
- 6
- (This, this and these, America, shall be your pyramids and obelisks,
- Your Alexandrian Pharos, gardens of Babylon,
- Your temple at Olympia.)
- The male and female many laboring not,
- Shall ever here confront the laboring many,
- With precious benefits to both, glory to all,
- To thee America, and thee eternal Muse.
- And here shall ye inhabit powerful Matrons!
- In your vast state vaster than all the old,
- Echoed through long, long centuries to come,
- To sound of different, prouder songs, with stronger themes,
- Practical, peaceful life, the people’s life, the People themselves,
- Lifted, illumin’d, bathed in peace--elate, secure in peace.
- 7
- Away with themes of war! away with war itself!
- Hence from my shuddering sight to never more return that show of
- blacken’d, mutilated corpses!
- That hell unpent and raid of blood, fit for wild tigers or for
- lop-tongued wolves, not reasoning men,
- And in its stead speed industry’s campaigns,
- With thy undaunted armies, engineering,
- Thy pennants labor, loosen’d to the breeze,
- Thy bugles sounding loud and clear.
- Away with old romance!
- Away with novels, plots and plays of foreign courts,
- Away with love-verses sugar’d in rhyme, the intrigues, amours of idlers,
- Fitted for only banquets of the night where dancers to late music slide,
- The unhealthy pleasures, extravagant dissipations of the few,
- With perfumes, heat and wine, beneath the dazzling chandeliers.
- To you ye reverent sane sisters,
- I raise a voice for far superber themes for poets and for art,
- To exalt the present and the real,
- To teach the average man the glory of his daily walk and trade,
- To sing in songs how exercise and chemical life are never to be baffled,
- To manual work for each and all, to plough, hoe, dig,
- To plant and tend the tree, the berry, vegetables, flowers,
- For every man to see to it that he really do something, for every woman too;
- To use the hammer and the saw, (rip, or cross-cut,)
- To cultivate a turn for carpentering, plastering, painting,
- To work as tailor, tailoress, nurse, hostler, porter,
- To invent a little, something ingenious, to aid the washing, cooking,
- cleaning,
- And hold it no disgrace to take a hand at them themselves.
- I say I bring thee Muse to-day and here,
- All occupations, duties broad and close,
- Toil, healthy toil and sweat, endless, without cessation,
- The old, old practical burdens, interests, joys,
- The family, parentage, childhood, husband and wife,
- The house-comforts, the house itself and all its belongings,
- Food and its preservation, chemistry applied to it,
- Whatever forms the average, strong, complete, sweet-blooded man or
- woman, the perfect longeve personality,
- And helps its present life to health and happiness, and shapes its soul,
- For the eternal real life to come.
- With latest connections, works, the inter-transportation of the world,
- Steam-power, the great express lines, gas, petroleum,
- These triumphs of our time, the Atlantic’s delicate cable,
- The Pacific railroad, the Suez canal, the Mont Cenis and Gothard and
- Hoosac tunnels, the Brooklyn bridge,
- This earth all spann’d with iron rails, with lines of steamships
- threading in every sea,
- Our own rondure, the current globe I bring.
- 8
- And thou America,
- Thy offspring towering e’er so high, yet higher Thee above all towering,
- With Victory on thy left, and at thy right hand Law;
- Thou Union holding all, fusing, absorbing, tolerating all,
- Thee, ever thee, I sing.
- Thou, also thou, a World,
- With all thy wide geographies, manifold, different, distant,
- Rounded by thee in one--one common orbic language,
- One common indivisible destiny for All.
- And by the spells which ye vouchsafe to those your ministers in earnest,
- I here personify and call my themes, to make them pass before ye.
- Behold, America! (and thou, ineffable guest and sister!)
- For thee come trooping up thy waters and thy lands;
- Behold! thy fields and farms, thy far-off woods and mountains,
- As in procession coming.
- Behold, the sea itself,
- And on its limitless, heaving breast, the ships;
- See, where their white sails, bellying in the wind, speckle the
- green and blue,
- See, the steamers coming and going, steaming in or out of port,
- See, dusky and undulating, the long pennants of smoke.
- Behold, in Oregon, far in the north and west,
- Or in Maine, far in the north and east, thy cheerful axemen,
- Wielding all day their axes.
- Behold, on the lakes, thy pilots at their wheels, thy oarsmen,
- How the ash writhes under those muscular arms!
- There by the furnace, and there by the anvil,
- Behold thy sturdy blacksmiths swinging their sledges,
- Overhand so steady, overhand they turn and fall with joyous clank,
- Like a tumult of laughter.
- Mark the spirit of invention everywhere, thy rapid patents,
- Thy continual workshops, foundries, risen or rising,
- See, from their chimneys how the tall flame-fires stream.
- Mark, thy interminable farms, North, South,
- Thy wealthy daughter-states, Eastern and Western,
- The varied products of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Georgia, Texas,
- and the rest,
- Thy limitless crops, grass, wheat, sugar, oil, corn, rice, hemp, hops,
- Thy barns all fill’d, the endless freight-train and the bulging store-house,
- The grapes that ripen on thy vines, the apples in thy orchards,
- Thy incalculable lumber, beef, pork, potatoes, thy coal, thy gold
- and silver,
- The inexhaustible iron in thy mines.
- All thine O sacred Union!
- Ships, farms, shops, barns, factories, mines,
- City and State, North, South, item and aggregate,
- We dedicate, dread Mother, all to thee!
- Protectress absolute, thou! bulwark of all!
- For well we know that while thou givest each and all, (generous as God,)
- Without thee neither all nor each, nor land, home,
- Nor ship, nor mine, nor any here this day secure,
- Nor aught, nor any day secure.
- 9
- And thou, the Emblem waving over all!
- Delicate beauty, a word to thee, (it may be salutary,)
- Remember thou hast not always been as here to-day so comfortably
- ensovereign’d,
- In other scenes than these have I observ’d thee flag,
- Not quite so trim and whole and freshly blooming in folds of
- stainless silk,
- But I have seen thee bunting, to tatters torn upon thy splinter’d staff,
- Or clutch’d to some young color-bearer’s breast with desperate hands,
- Savagely struggled for, for life or death, fought over long,
- ’Mid cannons’ thunder-crash and many a curse and groan and yell, and
- rifle-volleys cracking sharp,
- And moving masses as wild demons surging, and lives as nothing risk’d,
- For thy mere remnant grimed with dirt and smoke and sopp’d in blood,
- For sake of that, my beauty, and that thou might’st dally as now
- secure up there,
- Many a good man have I seen go under.
- Now here and these and hence in peace, all thine O Flag!
- And here and hence for thee, O universal Muse! and thou for them!
- And here and hence O Union, all the work and workmen thine!
- None separate from thee--henceforth One only, we and thou,
- (For the blood of the children, what is it, only the blood maternal?
- And lives and works, what are they all at last, except the roads to
- faith and death?)
- While we rehearse our measureless wealth, it is for thee, dear Mother,
- We own it all and several to-day indissoluble in thee;
- Think not our chant, our show, merely for products gross or lucre--
- it is for thee, the soul in thee, electric, spiritual!
- Our farms, inventions, crops, we own in thee! cities and States in thee!
- Our freedom all in thee! our very lives in thee!
- BOOK XIV
- Song of the Redwood-Tree
- 1
- A California song,
- A prophecy and indirection, a thought impalpable to breathe as air,
- A chorus of dryads, fading, departing, or hamadryads departing,
- A murmuring, fateful, giant voice, out of the earth and sky,
- Voice of a mighty dying tree in the redwood forest dense.
- Farewell my brethren,
- Farewell O earth and sky, farewell ye neighboring waters,
- My time has ended, my term has come.
- Along the northern coast,
- Just back from the rock-bound shore and the caves,
- In the saline air from the sea in the Mendocino country,
- With the surge for base and accompaniment low and hoarse,
- With crackling blows of axes sounding musically driven by strong arms,
- Riven deep by the sharp tongues of the axes, there in the redwood
- forest dense,
- I heard the might tree its death-chant chanting.
- The choppers heard not, the camp shanties echoed not,
- The quick-ear’d teamsters and chain and jack-screw men heard not,
- As the wood-spirits came from their haunts of a thousand years to
- join the refrain,
- But in my soul I plainly heard.
- Murmuring out of its myriad leaves,
- Down from its lofty top rising two hundred feet high,
- Out of its stalwart trunk and limbs, out of its foot-thick bark,
- That chant of the seasons and time, chant not of the past only but
- the future.
- You untold life of me,
- And all you venerable and innocent joys,
- Perennial hardy life of me with joys ’mid rain and many a summer sun,
- And the white snows and night and the wild winds;
- O the great patient rugged joys, my soul’s strong joys unreck’d by man,
- (For know I bear the soul befitting me, I too have consciousness, identity,
- And all the rocks and mountains have, and all the earth,)
- Joys of the life befitting me and brothers mine,
- Our time, our term has come.
- Nor yield we mournfully majestic brothers,
- We who have grandly fill’d our time,
- With Nature’s calm content, with tacit huge delight,
- We welcome what we wrought for through the past,
- And leave the field for them.
- For them predicted long,
- For a superber race, they too to grandly fill their time,
- For them we abdicate, in them ourselves ye forest kings.’
- In them these skies and airs, these mountain peaks, Shasta, Nevadas,
- These huge precipitous cliffs, this amplitude, these valleys, far Yosemite,
- To be in them absorb’d, assimilated.
- Then to a loftier strain,
- Still prouder, more ecstatic rose the chant,
- As if the heirs, the deities of the West,
- Joining with master-tongue bore part.
- Not wan from Asia’s fetiches,
- Nor red from Europe’s old dynastic slaughter-house,
- (Area of murder-plots of thrones, with scent left yet of wars and
- scaffolds everywhere,
- But come from Nature’s long and harmless throes, peacefully builded thence,
- These virgin lands, lands of the Western shore,
- To the new culminating man, to you, the empire new,
- You promis’d long, we pledge, we dedicate.
- You occult deep volitions,
- You average spiritual manhood, purpose of all, pois’d on yourself,
- giving not taking law,
- You womanhood divine, mistress and source of all, whence life and
- love and aught that comes from life and love,
- You unseen moral essence of all the vast materials of America, age
- upon age working in death the same as life,)
- You that, sometimes known, oftener unknown, really shape and mould
- the New World, adjusting it to Time and Space,
- You hidden national will lying in your abysms, conceal’d but ever alert,
- You past and present purposes tenaciously pursued, may-be
- unconscious of yourselves,
- Unswerv’d by all the passing errors, perturbations of the surface;
- You vital, universal, deathless germs, beneath all creeds, arts,
- statutes, literatures,
- Here build your homes for good, establish here, these areas entire,
- lands of the Western shore,
- We pledge, we dedicate to you.
- For man of you, your characteristic race,
- Here may he hardy, sweet, gigantic grow, here tower proportionate to Nature,
- Here climb the vast pure spaces unconfined, uncheck’d by wall or roof,
- Here laugh with storm or sun, here joy, here patiently inure,
- Here heed himself, unfold himself, (not others’ formulas heed,)
- here fill his time,
- To duly fall, to aid, unreck’d at last,
- To disappear, to serve.
- Thus on the northern coast,
- In the echo of teamsters’ calls and the clinking chains, and the
- music of choppers’ axes,
- The falling trunk and limbs, the crash, the muffled shriek, the groan,
- Such words combined from the redwood-tree, as of voices ecstatic,
- ancient and rustling,
- The century-lasting, unseen dryads, singing, withdrawing,
- All their recesses of forests and mountains leaving,
- From the Cascade range to the Wahsatch, or Idaho far, or Utah,
- To the deities of the modern henceforth yielding,
- The chorus and indications, the vistas of coming humanity, the
- settlements, features all,
- In the Mendocino woods I caught.
- 2
- The flashing and golden pageant of California,
- The sudden and gorgeous drama, the sunny and ample lands,
- The long and varied stretch from Puget sound to Colorado south,
- Lands bathed in sweeter, rarer, healthier air, valleys and mountain cliffs,
- The fields of Nature long prepared and fallow, the silent, cyclic chemistry,
- The slow and steady ages plodding, the unoccupied surface ripening,
- the rich ores forming beneath;
- At last the New arriving, assuming, taking possession,
- A swarming and busy race settling and organizing everywhere,
- Ships coming in from the whole round world, and going out to the
- whole world,
- To India and China and Australia and the thousand island paradises
- of the Pacific,
- Populous cities, the latest inventions, the steamers on the rivers,
- the railroads, with many a thrifty farm, with machinery,
- And wool and wheat and the grape, and diggings of yellow gold.
- 3
- But more in you than these, lands of the Western shore,
- (These but the means, the implements, the standing-ground,)
- I see in you, certain to come, the promise of thousands of years,
- till now deferr’d,
- Promis’d to be fulfill’d, our common kind, the race.
- The new society at last, proportionate to Nature,
- In man of you, more than your mountain peaks or stalwart trees imperial,
- In woman more, far more, than all your gold or vines, or even vital air.
- Fresh come, to a new world indeed, yet long prepared,
- I see the genius of the modern, child of the real and ideal,
- Clearing the ground for broad humanity, the true America, heir of
- the past so grand,
- To build a grander future.
- BOOK XV
- A Song for Occupations
- 1
- A song for occupations!
- In the labor of engines and trades and the labor of fields I find
- the developments,
- And find the eternal meanings.
- Workmen and Workwomen!
- Were all educations practical and ornamental well display’d out of
- me, what would it amount to?
- Were I as the head teacher, charitable proprietor, wise statesman,
- what would it amount to?
- Were I to you as the boss employing and paying you, would that satisfy you?
- The learn’d, virtuous, benevolent, and the usual terms,
- A man like me and never the usual terms.
- Neither a servant nor a master I,
- I take no sooner a large price than a small price, I will have my
- own whoever enjoys me,
- I will be even with you and you shall be even with me.
- If you stand at work in a shop I stand as nigh as the nighest in the
- same shop,
- If you bestow gifts on your brother or dearest friend I demand as
- good as your brother or dearest friend,
- If your lover, husband, wife, is welcome by day or night, I must be
- personally as welcome,
- If you become degraded, criminal, ill, then I become so for your sake,
- If you remember your foolish and outlaw’d deeds, do you think I
- cannot remember my own foolish and outlaw’d deeds?
- If you carouse at the table I carouse at the opposite side of the table,
- If you meet some stranger in the streets and love him or her, why
- I often meet strangers in the street and love them.
- Why what have you thought of yourself?
- Is it you then that thought yourself less?
- Is it you that thought the President greater than you?
- Or the rich better off than you? or the educated wiser than you?
- (Because you are greasy or pimpled, or were once drunk, or a thief,
- Or that you are diseas’d, or rheumatic, or a prostitute,
- Or from frivolity or impotence, or that you are no scholar and never
- saw your name in print,
- Do you give in that you are any less immortal?)
- 2
- Souls of men and women! it is not you I call unseen, unheard,
- untouchable and untouching,
- It is not you I go argue pro and con about, and to settle whether
- you are alive or no,
- I own publicly who you are, if nobody else owns.
- Grown, half-grown and babe, of this country and every country,
- in-doors and out-doors, one just as much as the other, I see,
- And all else behind or through them.
- The wife, and she is not one jot less than the husband,
- The daughter, and she is just as good as the son,
- The mother, and she is every bit as much as the father.
- Offspring of ignorant and poor, boys apprenticed to trades,
- Young fellows working on farms and old fellows working on farms,
- Sailor-men, merchant-men, coasters, immigrants,
- All these I see, but nigher and farther the same I see,
- None shall escape me and none shall wish to escape me.
- I bring what you much need yet always have,
- Not money, amours, dress, eating, erudition, but as good,
- I send no agent or medium, offer no representative of value, but
- offer the value itself.
- There is something that comes to one now and perpetually,
- It is not what is printed, preach’d, discussed, it eludes discussion
- and print,
- It is not to be put in a book, it is not in this book,
- It is for you whoever you are, it is no farther from you than your
- hearing and sight are from you,
- It is hinted by nearest, commonest, readiest, it is ever provoked by them.
- You may read in many languages, yet read nothing about it,
- You may read the President’s message and read nothing about it there,
- Nothing in the reports from the State department or Treasury
- department, or in the daily papers or weekly papers,
- Or in the census or revenue returns, prices current, or any accounts
- of stock.
- 3
- The sun and stars that float in the open air,
- The apple-shaped earth and we upon it, surely the drift of them is
- something grand,
- I do not know what it is except that it is grand, and that it is happiness,
- And that the enclosing purport of us here is not a speculation or
- bon-mot or reconnoissance,
- And that it is not something which by luck may turn out well for us,
- and without luck must be a failure for us,
- And not something which may yet be retracted in a certain contingency.
- The light and shade, the curious sense of body and identity, the
- greed that with perfect complaisance devours all things,
- The endless pride and outstretching of man, unspeakable joys and sorrows,
- The wonder every one sees in every one else he sees, and the wonders
- that fill each minute of time forever,
- What have you reckon’d them for, camerado?
- Have you reckon’d them for your trade or farm-work? or for the
- profits of your store?
- Or to achieve yourself a position? or to fill a gentleman’s leisure,
- or a lady’s leisure?
- Have you reckon’d that the landscape took substance and form that it
- might be painted in a picture?
- Or men and women that they might be written of, and songs sung?
- Or the attraction of gravity, and the great laws and harmonious combinations
- and the fluids of the air, as subjects for the savans?
- Or the brown land and the blue sea for maps and charts?
- Or the stars to be put in constellations and named fancy names?
- Or that the growth of seeds is for agricultural tables, or
- agriculture itself?
- Old institutions, these arts, libraries, legends, collections, and
- the practice handed along in manufactures, will we rate them so high?
- Will we rate our cash and business high? I have no objection,
- I rate them as high as the highest--then a child born of a woman and
- man I rate beyond all rate.
- We thought our Union grand, and our Constitution grand,
- I do not say they are not grand and good, for they are,
- I am this day just as much in love with them as you,
- Then I am in love with You, and with all my fellows upon the earth.
- We consider bibles and religions divine--I do not say they are not divine,
- I say they have all grown out of you, and may grow out of you still,
- It is not they who give the life, it is you who give the life,
- Leaves are not more shed from the trees, or trees from the earth,
- than they are shed out of you.
- 4
- The sum of all known reverence I add up in you whoever you are,
- The President is there in the White House for you, it is not you who
- are here for him,
- The Secretaries act in their bureaus for you, not you here for them,
- The Congress convenes every Twelfth-month for you,
- Laws, courts, the forming of States, the charters of cities, the
- going and coming of commerce and malls, are all for you.
- List close my scholars dear,
- Doctrines, politics and civilization exurge from you,
- Sculpture and monuments and any thing inscribed anywhere are tallied in you,
- The gist of histories and statistics as far back as the records
- reach is in you this hour, and myths and tales the same,
- If you were not breathing and walking here, where would they all be?
- The most renown’d poems would be ashes, orations and plays would
- be vacuums.
- All architecture is what you do to it when you look upon it,
- (Did you think it was in the white or gray stone? or the lines of
- the arches and cornices?)
- All music is what awakes from you when you are reminded by the instruments,
- It is not the violins and the cornets, it is not the oboe nor the
- beating drums, nor the score of the baritone singer singing his
- sweet romanza, nor that of the men’s chorus, nor that of the
- women’s chorus,
- It is nearer and farther than they.
- 5
- Will the whole come back then?
- Can each see signs of the best by a look in the looking-glass? is
- there nothing greater or more?
- Does all sit there with you, with the mystic unseen soul?
- Strange and hard that paradox true I give,
- Objects gross and the unseen soul are one.
- House-building, measuring, sawing the boards,
- Blacksmithing, glass-blowing, nail-making, coopering, tin-roofing,
- shingle-dressing,
- Ship-joining, dock-building, fish-curing, flagging of sidewalks by flaggers,
- The pump, the pile-driver, the great derrick, the coal-kiln and brickkiln,
- Coal-mines and all that is down there, the lamps in the darkness,
- echoes, songs, what meditations, what vast native thoughts
- looking through smutch’d faces,
- Iron-works, forge-fires in the mountains or by river-banks, men
- around feeling the melt with huge crowbars, lumps of ore, the
- due combining of ore, limestone, coal,
- The blast-furnace and the puddling-furnace, the loup-lump at the
- bottom of the melt at last, the rolling-mill, the stumpy bars
- of pig-iron, the strong clean-shaped Trail for railroads,
- Oil-works, silk-works, white-lead-works, the sugar-house,
- steam-saws, the great mills and factories,
- Stone-cutting, shapely trimmings for facades or window or door-lintels,
- the mallet, the tooth-chisel, the jib to protect the thumb,
- The calking-iron, the kettle of boiling vault-cement, and the fire
- under the kettle,
- The cotton-bale, the stevedore’s hook, the saw and buck of the
- sawyer, the mould of the moulder, the working-knife of the
- butcher, the ice-saw, and all the work with ice,
- The work and tools of the rigger, grappler, sail-maker, block-maker,
- Goods of gutta-percha, papier-mache, colors, brushes, brush-making,
- glazier’s implements,
- The veneer and glue-pot, the confectioner’s ornaments, the decanter
- and glasses, the shears and flat-iron,
- The awl and knee-strap, the pint measure and quart measure, the
- counter and stool, the writing-pen of quill or metal, the making
- of all sorts of edged tools,
- The brewery, brewing, the malt, the vats, every thing that is done
- by brewers, wine-makers, vinegar-makers,
- Leather-dressing, coach-making, boiler-making, rope-twisting,
- distilling, sign-painting, lime-burning, cotton-picking,
- electroplating, electrotyping, stereotyping,
- Stave-machines, planing-machines, reaping-machines,
- ploughing-machines, thrashing-machines, steam wagons,
- The cart of the carman, the omnibus, the ponderous dray,
- Pyrotechny, letting off color’d fireworks at night, fancy figures and jets;
- Beef on the butcher’s stall, the slaughter-house of the butcher, the
- butcher in his killing-clothes,
- The pens of live pork, the killing-hammer, the hog-hook, the
- scalder’s tub, gutting, the cutter’s cleaver, the packer’s maul,
- and the plenteous winterwork of pork-packing,
- Flour-works, grinding of wheat, rye, maize, rice, the barrels and
- the half and quarter barrels, the loaded barges, the high piles
- on wharves and levees,
- The men and the work of the men on ferries, railroads, coasters,
- fish-boats, canals;
- The hourly routine of your own or any man’s life, the shop, yard,
- store, or factory,
- These shows all near you by day and night--workman! whoever you
- are, your daily life!
- In that and them the heft of the heaviest--in that and them far more
- than you estimated, (and far less also,)
- In them realities for you and me, in them poems for you and me,
- In them, not yourself-you and your soul enclose all things,
- regardless of estimation,
- In them the development good--in them all themes, hints, possibilities.
- I do not affirm that what you see beyond is futile, I do not advise
- you to stop,
- I do not say leadings you thought great are not great,
- But I say that none lead to greater than these lead to.
- 6
- Will you seek afar off? you surely come back at last,
- In things best known to you finding the best, or as good as the best,
- In folks nearest to you finding the sweetest, strongest, lovingest,
- Happiness, knowledge, not in another place but this place, not for
- another hour but this hour,
- Man in the first you see or touch, always in friend, brother,
- nighest neighbor--woman in mother, sister, wife,
- The popular tastes and employments taking precedence in poems or anywhere,
- You workwomen and workmen of these States having your own divine
- and strong life,
- And all else giving place to men and women like you.
- When the psalm sings instead of the singer,
- When the script preaches instead of the preacher,
- When the pulpit descends and goes instead of the carver that carved
- the supporting desk,
- When I can touch the body of books by night or by day, and when they
- touch my body back again,
- When a university course convinces like a slumbering woman and child
- convince,
- When the minted gold in the vault smiles like the night-watchman’s daughter,
- When warrantee deeds loafe in chairs opposite and are my friendly
- companions,
- I intend to reach them my hand, and make as much of them as I do
- of men and women like you.
- BOOK XVI
- A Song of the Rolling Earth
- 1
- A song of the rolling earth, and of words according,
- Were you thinking that those were the words, those upright lines?
- those curves, angles, dots?
- No, those are not the words, the substantial words are in the ground
- and sea,
- They are in the air, they are in you.
- Were you thinking that those were the words, those delicious sounds
- out of your friends’ mouths?
- No, the real words are more delicious than they.
- Human bodies are words, myriads of words,
- (In the best poems re-appears the body, man’s or woman’s,
- well-shaped, natural, gay,
- Every part able, active, receptive, without shame or the need of shame.)
- Air, soil, water, fire--those are words,
- I myself am a word with them--my qualities interpenetrate with
- theirs--my name is nothing to them,
- Though it were told in the three thousand languages, what would
- air, soil, water, fire, know of my name?
- A healthy presence, a friendly or commanding gesture, are words,
- sayings, meanings,
- The charms that go with the mere looks of some men and women,
- are sayings and meanings also.
- The workmanship of souls is by those inaudible words of the earth,
- The masters know the earth’s words and use them more than audible words.
- Amelioration is one of the earth’s words,
- The earth neither lags nor hastens,
- It has all attributes, growths, effects, latent in itself from the jump,
- It is not half beautiful only, defects and excrescences show just as
- much as perfections show.
- The earth does not withhold, it is generous enough,
- The truths of the earth continually wait, they are not so conceal’d either,
- They are calm, subtle, untransmissible by print,
- They are imbued through all things conveying themselves willingly,
- Conveying a sentiment and invitation, I utter and utter,
- I speak not, yet if you hear me not of what avail am I to you?
- To bear, to better, lacking these of what avail am I?
- (Accouche! accouchez!
- Will you rot your own fruit in yourself there?
- Will you squat and stifle there?)
- The earth does not argue,
- Is not pathetic, has no arrangements,
- Does not scream, haste, persuade, threaten, promise,
- Makes no discriminations, has no conceivable failures,
- Closes nothing, refuses nothing, shuts none out,
- Of all the powers, objects, states, it notifies, shuts none out.
- The earth does not exhibit itself nor refuse to exhibit itself,
- possesses still underneath,
- Underneath the ostensible sounds, the august chorus of heroes, the
- wail of slaves,
- Persuasions of lovers, curses, gasps of the dying, laughter of young
- people, accents of bargainers,
- Underneath these possessing words that never fall.
- To her children the words of the eloquent dumb great mother never fail,
- The true words do not fail, for motion does not fail and reflection
- does not fall,
- Also the day and night do not fall, and the voyage we pursue does not fall.
- Of the interminable sisters,
- Of the ceaseless cotillons of sisters,
- Of the centripetal and centrifugal sisters, the elder and younger sisters,
- The beautiful sister we know dances on with the rest.
- With her ample back towards every beholder,
- With the fascinations of youth and the equal fascinations of age,
- Sits she whom I too love like the rest, sits undisturb’d,
- Holding up in her hand what has the character of a mirror, while her
- eyes glance back from it,
- Glance as she sits, inviting none, denying none,
- Holding a mirror day and night tirelessly before her own face.
- Seen at hand or seen at a distance,
- Duly the twenty-four appear in public every day,
- Duly approach and pass with their companions or a companion,
- Looking from no countenances of their own, but from the countenances
- of those who are with them,
- From the countenances of children or women or the manly countenance,
- From the open countenances of animals or from inanimate things,
- From the landscape or waters or from the exquisite apparition of the sky,
- From our countenances, mine and yours, faithfully returning them,
- Every day in public appearing without fall, but never twice with the
- same companions.
- Embracing man, embracing all, proceed the three hundred and
- sixty-five resistlessly round the sun;
- Embracing all, soothing, supporting, follow close three hundred and
- sixty-five offsets of the first, sure and necessary as they.
- Tumbling on steadily, nothing dreading,
- Sunshine, storm, cold, heat, forever withstanding, passing, carrying,
- The soul’s realization and determination still inheriting,
- The fluid vacuum around and ahead still entering and dividing,
- No balk retarding, no anchor anchoring, on no rock striking,
- Swift, glad, content, unbereav’d, nothing losing,
- Of all able and ready at any time to give strict account,
- The divine ship sails the divine sea.
- 2
- Whoever you are! motion and reflection are especially for you,
- The divine ship sails the divine sea for you.
- Whoever you are! you are he or she for whom the earth is solid and liquid,
- You are he or she for whom the sun and moon hang in the sky,
- For none more than you are the present and the past,
- For none more than you is immortality.
- Each man to himself and each woman to herself, is the word of the
- past and present, and the true word of immortality;
- No one can acquire for another--not one,
- Not one can grow for another--not one.
- The song is to the singer, and comes back most to him,
- The teaching is to the teacher, and comes back most to him,
- The murder is to the murderer, and comes back most to him,
- The theft is to the thief, and comes back most to him,
- The love is to the lover, and comes back most to him,
- The gift is to the giver, and comes back most to him--it cannot fail,
- The oration is to the orator, the acting is to the actor and actress
- not to the audience,
- And no man understands any greatness or goodness but his own, or
- the indication of his own.
- 3
- I swear the earth shall surely be complete to him or her who shall
- be complete,
- The earth remains jagged and broken only to him or her who remains
- jagged and broken.
- I swear there is no greatness or power that does not emulate those
- of the earth,
- There can be no theory of any account unless it corroborate the
- theory of the earth,
- No politics, song, religion, behavior, or what not, is of account,
- unless it compare with the amplitude of the earth,
- Unless it face the exactness, vitality, impartiality, rectitude of
- the earth.
- I swear I begin to see love with sweeter spasms than that which
- responds love,
- It is that which contains itself, which never invites and never refuses.
- I swear I begin to see little or nothing in audible words,
- All merges toward the presentation of the unspoken meanings of the earth,
- Toward him who sings the songs of the body and of the truths of the earth,
- Toward him who makes the dictionaries of words that print cannot touch.
- I swear I see what is better than to tell the best,
- It is always to leave the best untold.
- When I undertake to tell the best I find I cannot,
- My tongue is ineffectual on its pivots,
- My breath will not be obedient to its organs,
- I become a dumb man.
- The best of the earth cannot be told anyhow, all or any is best,
- It is not what you anticipated, it is cheaper, easier, nearer,
- Things are not dismiss’d from the places they held before,
- The earth is just as positive and direct as it was before,
- Facts, religions, improvements, politics, trades, are as real as before,
- But the soul is also real, it too is positive and direct,
- No reasoning, no proof has establish’d it,
- Undeniable growth has establish’d it.
- 4
- These to echo the tones of souls and the phrases of souls,
- (If they did not echo the phrases of souls what were they then?
- If they had not reference to you in especial what were they then?)
- I swear I will never henceforth have to do with the faith that tells
- the best,
- I will have to do only with that faith that leaves the best untold.
- Say on, sayers! sing on, singers!
- Delve! mould! pile the words of the earth!
- Work on, age after age, nothing is to be lost,
- It may have to wait long, but it will certainly come in use,
- When the materials are all prepared and ready, the architects shall appear.
- I swear to you the architects shall appear without fall,
- I swear to you they will understand you and justify you,
- The greatest among them shall be he who best knows you, and encloses
- all and is faithful to all,
- He and the rest shall not forget you, they shall perceive that you
- are not an iota less than they,
- You shall be fully glorified in them.
- Youth, Day, Old Age and Night
- Youth, large, lusty, loving--youth full of grace, force, fascination,
- Do you know that Old Age may come after you with equal grace,
- force, fascination?
- Day full-blown and splendid-day of the immense sun, action,
- ambition, laughter,
- The Night follows close with millions of suns, and sleep and
- restoring darkness.
- BOOK XVII. BIRDS OF PASSAGE
- Song of the Universal
- 1
- Come said the Muse,
- Sing me a song no poet yet has chanted,
- Sing me the universal.
- In this broad earth of ours,
- Amid the measureless grossness and the slag,
- Enclosed and safe within its central heart,
- Nestles the seed perfection.
- By every life a share or more or less,
- None born but it is born, conceal’d or unconceal’d the seed is waiting.
- 2
- Lo! keen-eyed towering science,
- As from tall peaks the modern overlooking,
- Successive absolute fiats issuing.
- Yet again, lo! the soul, above all science,
- For it has history gather’d like husks around the globe,
- For it the entire star-myriads roll through the sky.
- In spiral routes by long detours,
- (As a much-tacking ship upon the sea,)
- For it the partial to the permanent flowing,
- For it the real to the ideal tends.
- For it the mystic evolution,
- Not the right only justified, what we call evil also justified.
- Forth from their masks, no matter what,
- From the huge festering trunk, from craft and guile and tears,
- Health to emerge and joy, joy universal.
- Out of the bulk, the morbid and the shallow,
- Out of the bad majority, the varied countless frauds of men and states,
- Electric, antiseptic yet, cleaving, suffusing all,
- Only the good is universal.
- 3
- Over the mountain-growths disease and sorrow,
- An uncaught bird is ever hovering, hovering,
- High in the purer, happier air.
- From imperfection’s murkiest cloud,
- Darts always forth one ray of perfect light,
- One flash of heaven’s glory.
- To fashion’s, custom’s discord,
- To the mad Babel-din, the deafening orgies,
- Soothing each lull a strain is heard, just heard,
- From some far shore the final chorus sounding.
- O the blest eyes, the happy hearts,
- That see, that know the guiding thread so fine,
- Along the mighty labyrinth.
- 4
- And thou America,
- For the scheme’s culmination, its thought and its reality,
- For these (not for thyself) thou hast arrived.
- Thou too surroundest all,
- Embracing carrying welcoming all, thou too by pathways broad and new,
- To the ideal tendest.
- The measure’d faiths of other lands, the grandeurs of the past,
- Are not for thee, but grandeurs of thine own,
- Deific faiths and amplitudes, absorbing, comprehending all,
- All eligible to all.
- All, all for immortality,
- Love like the light silently wrapping all,
- Nature’s amelioration blessing all,
- The blossoms, fruits of ages, orchards divine and certain,
- Forms, objects, growths, humanities, to spiritual images ripening.
- Give me O God to sing that thought,
- Give me, give him or her I love this quenchless faith,
- In Thy ensemble, whatever else withheld withhold not from us,
- Belief in plan of Thee enclosed in Time and Space,
- Health, peace, salvation universal.
- Is it a dream?
- Nay but the lack of it the dream,
- And failing it life’s lore and wealth a dream,
- And all the world a dream.
- Pioneers! O Pioneers!
- Come my tan-faced children,
- Follow well in order, get your weapons ready,
- Have you your pistols? have you your sharp-edged axes?
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- For we cannot tarry here,
- We must march my darlings, we must bear the brunt of danger,
- We the youthful sinewy races, all the rest on us depend,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- O you youths, Western youths,
- So impatient, full of action, full of manly pride and friendship,
- Plain I see you Western youths, see you tramping with the foremost,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Have the elder races halted?
- Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas?
- We take up the task eternal, and the burden and the lesson,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- All the past we leave behind,
- We debouch upon a newer mightier world, varied world,
- Fresh and strong the world we seize, world of labor and the march,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- We detachments steady throwing,
- Down the edges, through the passes, up the mountains steep,
- Conquering, holding, daring, venturing as we go the unknown ways,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- We primeval forests felling,
- We the rivers stemming, vexing we and piercing deep the mines within,
- We the surface broad surveying, we the virgin soil upheaving,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Colorado men are we,
- From the peaks gigantic, from the great sierras and the high plateaus,
- From the mine and from the gully, from the hunting trail we come,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- From Nebraska, from Arkansas,
- Central inland race are we, from Missouri, with the continental
- blood intervein’d,
- All the hands of comrades clasping, all the Southern, all the Northern,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- O resistless restless race!
- O beloved race in all! O my breast aches with tender love for all!
- O I mourn and yet exult, I am rapt with love for all,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Raise the mighty mother mistress,
- Waving high the delicate mistress, over all the starry mistress,
- (bend your heads all,)
- Raise the fang’d and warlike mistress, stern, impassive, weapon’d mistress,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- See my children, resolute children,
- By those swarms upon our rear we must never yield or falter,
- Ages back in ghostly millions frowning there behind us urging,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- On and on the compact ranks,
- With accessions ever waiting, with the places of the dead quickly fill’d,
- Through the battle, through defeat, moving yet and never stopping,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- O to die advancing on!
- Are there some of us to droop and die? has the hour come?
- Then upon the march we fittest die, soon and sure the gap is fill’d.
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- All the pulses of the world,
- Falling in they beat for us, with the Western movement beat,
- Holding single or together, steady moving to the front, all for us,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Life’s involv’d and varied pageants,
- All the forms and shows, all the workmen at their work,
- All the seamen and the landsmen, all the masters with their slaves,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- All the hapless silent lovers,
- All the prisoners in the prisons, all the righteous and the wicked,
- All the joyous, all the sorrowing, all the living, all the dying,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- I too with my soul and body,
- We, a curious trio, picking, wandering on our way,
- Through these shores amid the shadows, with the apparitions pressing,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Lo, the darting bowling orb!
- Lo, the brother orbs around, all the clustering suns and planets,
- All the dazzling days, all the mystic nights with dreams,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- These are of us, they are with us,
- All for primal needed work, while the followers there in embryo wait behind,
- We to-day’s procession heading, we the route for travel clearing,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- O you daughters of the West!
- O you young and elder daughters! O you mothers and you wives!
- Never must you be divided, in our ranks you move united,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Minstrels latent on the prairies!
- (Shrouded bards of other lands, you may rest, you have done your work,)
- Soon I hear you coming warbling, soon you rise and tramp amid us,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Not for delectations sweet,
- Not the cushion and the slipper, not the peaceful and the studious,
- Not the riches safe and palling, not for us the tame enjoyment,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Do the feasters gluttonous feast?
- Do the corpulent sleepers sleep? have they lock’d and bolted doors?
- Still be ours the diet hard, and the blanket on the ground,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Has the night descended?
- Was the road of late so toilsome? did we stop discouraged nodding
- on our way?
- Yet a passing hour I yield you in your tracks to pause oblivious,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- Till with sound of trumpet,
- Far, far off the daybreak call--hark! how loud and clear I hear it wind,
- Swift! to the head of the army!--swift! spring to your places,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
- To You
- Whoever you are, I fear you are walking the walks of dreams,
- I fear these supposed realities are to melt from under your feet and hands,
- Even now your features, joys, speech, house, trade, manners,
- troubles, follies, costume, crimes, dissipate away from you,
- Your true soul and body appear before me.
- They stand forth out of affairs, out of commerce, shops, work,
- farms, clothes, the house, buying, selling, eating, drinking,
- suffering, dying.
- Whoever you are, now I place my hand upon you, that you be my poem,
- I whisper with my lips close to your ear.
- I have loved many women and men, but I love none better than you.
- O I have been dilatory and dumb,
- I should have made my way straight to you long ago,
- I should have blabb’d nothing but you, I should have chanted nothing
- but you.
- I will leave all and come and make the hymns of you,
- None has understood you, but I understand you,
- None has done justice to you, you have not done justice to yourself,
- None but has found you imperfect, I only find no imperfection in you,
- None but would subordinate you, I only am he who will never consent
- to subordinate you,
- I only am he who places over you no master, owner, better, God,
- beyond what waits intrinsically in yourself.
- Painters have painted their swarming groups and the centre-figure of all,
- From the head of the centre-figure spreading a nimbus of gold-color’d light,
- But I paint myriads of heads, but paint no head without its nimbus
- of gold-color’d light,
- From my hand from the brain of every man and woman it streams,
- effulgently flowing forever.
- O I could sing such grandeurs and glories about you!
- You have not known what you are, you have slumber’d upon yourself
- all your life,
- Your eyelids have been the same as closed most of the time,
- What you have done returns already in mockeries,
- (Your thrift, knowledge, prayers, if they do not return in
- mockeries, what is their return?)
- The mockeries are not you,
- Underneath them and within them I see you lurk,
- I pursue you where none else has pursued you,
- Silence, the desk, the flippant expression, the night, the
- accustom’d routine, if these conceal you from others or from
- yourself, they do not conceal you from me,
- The shaved face, the unsteady eye, the impure complexion, if these
- balk others they do not balk me,
- The pert apparel, the deform’d attitude, drunkenness, greed,
- premature death, all these I part aside.
- There is no endowment in man or woman that is not tallied in you,
- There is no virtue, no beauty in man or woman, but as good is in you,
- No pluck, no endurance in others, but as good is in you,
- No pleasure waiting for others, but an equal pleasure waits for you.
- As for me, I give nothing to any one except I give the like carefully
- to you,
- I sing the songs of the glory of none, not God, sooner than I sing
- the songs of the glory of you.
- Whoever you are! claim your own at any hazard!
- These shows of the East and West are tame compared to you,
- These immense meadows, these interminable rivers, you are immense
- and interminable as they,
- These furies, elements, storms, motions of Nature, throes of apparent
- dissolution, you are he or she who is master or mistress over them,
- Master or mistress in your own right over Nature, elements, pain,
- passion, dissolution.
- The hopples fall from your ankles, you find an unfailing sufficiency,
- Old or young, male or female, rude, low, rejected by the rest,
- whatever you are promulges itself,
- Through birth, life, death, burial, the means are provided, nothing
- is scanted,
- Through angers, losses, ambition, ignorance, ennui, what you are
- picks its way.
- France [the 18th Year of these States
- A great year and place
- A harsh discordant natal scream out-sounding, to touch the mother’s
- heart closer than any yet.
- I walk’d the shores of my Eastern sea,
- Heard over the waves the little voice,
- Saw the divine infant where she woke mournfully wailing, amid the
- roar of cannon, curses, shouts, crash of falling buildings,
- Was not so sick from the blood in the gutters running, nor from the single
- corpses, nor those in heaps, nor those borne away in the tumbrils,
- Was not so desperate at the battues of death--was not so shock’d at
- the repeated fusillades of the guns.
- Pale, silent, stern, what could I say to that long-accrued retribution?
- Could I wish humanity different?
- Could I wish the people made of wood and stone?
- Or that there be no justice in destiny or time?
- O Liberty! O mate for me!
- Here too the blaze, the grape-shot and the axe, in reserve, to fetch
- them out in case of need,
- Here too, though long represt, can never be destroy’d,
- Here too could rise at last murdering and ecstatic,
- Here too demanding full arrears of vengeance.
- Hence I sign this salute over the sea,
- And I do not deny that terrible red birth and baptism,
- But remember the little voice that I heard wailing, and wait with
- perfect trust, no matter how long,
- And from to-day sad and cogent I maintain the bequeath’d cause, as
- for all lands,
- And I send these words to Paris with my love,
- And I guess some chansonniers there will understand them,
- For I guess there is latent music yet in France, floods of it,
- O I hear already the bustle of instruments, they will soon be
- drowning all that would interrupt them,
- O I think the east wind brings a triumphal and free march,
- It reaches hither, it swells me to Joyful madness,
- I will run transpose it in words, to justify
- I will yet sing a song for you ma femme.
- Myself and Mine
- Myself and mine gymnastic ever,
- To stand the cold or heat, to take good aim with a gun, to sail a
- boat, to manage horses, to beget superb children,
- To speak readily and clearly, to feel at home among common people,
- And to hold our own in terrible positions on land and sea.
- Not for an embroiderer,
- (There will always be plenty of embroiderers, I welcome them also,)
- But for the fibre of things and for inherent men and women.
- Not to chisel ornaments,
- But to chisel with free stroke the heads and limbs of plenteous
- supreme Gods, that the States may realize them walking and talking.
- Let me have my own way,
- Let others promulge the laws, I will make no account of the laws,
- Let others praise eminent men and hold up peace, I hold up agitation
- and conflict,
- I praise no eminent man, I rebuke to his face the one that was
- thought most worthy.
- (Who are you? and what are you secretly guilty of all your life?
- Will you turn aside all your life? will you grub and chatter all
- your life?
- And who are you, blabbing by rote, years, pages, languages, reminiscences,
- Unwitting to-day that you do not know how to speak properly a single word?)
- Let others finish specimens, I never finish specimens,
- I start them by exhaustless laws as Nature does, fresh and modern
- continually.
- I give nothing as duties,
- What others give as duties I give as living impulses,
- (Shall I give the heart’s action as a duty?)
- Let others dispose of questions, I dispose of nothing, I arouse
- unanswerable questions,
- Who are they I see and touch, and what about them?
- What about these likes of myself that draw me so close by tender
- directions and indirections?
- I call to the world to distrust the accounts of my friends, but
- listen to my enemies, as I myself do,
- I charge you forever reject those who would expound me, for I cannot
- expound myself,
- I charge that there be no theory or school founded out of me,
- I charge you to leave all free, as I have left all free.
- After me, vista!
- O I see life is not short, but immeasurably long,
- I henceforth tread the world chaste, temperate, an early riser, a
- steady grower,
- Every hour the semen of centuries, and still of centuries.
- I must follow up these continual lessons of the air, water, earth,
- I perceive I have no time to lose.
- Year of Meteors [1859-60
- Year of meteors! brooding year!
- I would bind in words retrospective some of your deeds and signs,
- I would sing your contest for the 19th Presidentiad,
- I would sing how an old man, tall, with white hair, mounted the
- scaffold in Virginia,
- (I was at hand, silent I stood with teeth shut close, I watch’d,
- I stood very near you old man when cool and indifferent, but trembling
- with age and your unheal’d wounds you mounted the scaffold;)
- I would sing in my copious song your census returns of the States,
- The tables of population and products, I would sing of your ships
- and their cargoes,
- The proud black ships of Manhattan arriving, some fill’d with
- immigrants, some from the isthmus with cargoes of gold,
- Songs thereof would I sing, to all that hitherward comes would welcome give,
- And you would I sing, fair stripling! welcome to you from me, young
- prince of England!
- (Remember you surging Manhattan’s crowds as you pass’d with your
- cortege of nobles?
- There in the crowds stood I, and singled you out with attachment;)
- Nor forget I to sing of the wonder, the ship as she swam up my bay,
- Well-shaped and stately the Great Eastern swam up my bay, she was
- 600 feet long,
- Her moving swiftly surrounded by myriads of small craft I forget not
- to sing;
- Nor the comet that came unannounced out of the north flaring in heaven,
- Nor the strange huge meteor-procession dazzling and clear shooting
- over our heads,
- (A moment, a moment long it sail’d its balls of unearthly light over
- our heads,
- Then departed, dropt in the night, and was gone;)
- Of such, and fitful as they, I sing--with gleams from them would
- gleam and patch these chants,
- Your chants, O year all mottled with evil and good--year of forebodings!
- Year of comets and meteors transient and strange--lo! even here one
- equally transient and strange!
- As I flit through you hastily, soon to fall and be gone, what is this chant,
- What am I myself but one of your meteors?
- With Antecedents
- 1
- With antecedents,
- With my fathers and mothers and the accumulations of past ages,
- With all which, had it not been, I would not now be here, as I am,
- With Egypt, India, Phenicia, Greece and Rome,
- With the Kelt, the Scandinavian, the Alb and the Saxon,
- With antique maritime ventures, laws, artisanship, wars and journeys,
- With the poet, the skald, the saga, the myth, and the oracle,
- With the sale of slaves, with enthusiasts, with the troubadour, the
- crusader, and the monk,
- With those old continents whence we have come to this new continent,
- With the fading kingdoms and kings over there,
- With the fading religions and priests,
- With the small shores we look back to from our own large and present shores,
- With countless years drawing themselves onward and arrived at these years,
- You and me arrived--America arrived and making this year,
- This year! sending itself ahead countless years to come.
- 2
- O but it is not the years--it is I, it is You,
- We touch all laws and tally all antecedents,
- We are the skald, the oracle, the monk and the knight, we easily
- include them and more,
- We stand amid time beginningless and endless, we stand amid evil and good,
- All swings around us, there is as much darkness as light,
- The very sun swings itself and its system of planets around us,
- Its sun, and its again, all swing around us.
- As for me, (torn, stormy, amid these vehement days,)
- I have the idea of all, and am all and believe in all,
- I believe materialism is true and spiritualism is true, I reject no part.
- (Have I forgotten any part? any thing in the past?
- Come to me whoever and whatever, till I give you recognition.)
- I respect Assyria, China, Teutonia, and the Hebrews,
- I adopt each theory, myth, god, and demigod,
- I see that the old accounts, bibles, genealogies, are true, without
- exception,
- I assert that all past days were what they must have been,
- And that they could no-how have been better than they were,
- And that to-day is what it must be, and that America is,
- And that to-day and America could no-how be better than they are.
- 3
- In the name of these States and in your and my name, the Past,
- And in the name of these States and in your and my name, the Present time.
- I know that the past was great and the future will be great,
- And I know that both curiously conjoint in the present time,
- (For the sake of him I typify, for the common average man’s sake,
- your sake if you are he,)
- And that where I am or you are this present day, there is the centre
- of all days, all races,
- And there is the meaning to us of all that has ever come of races
- and days, or ever will come.
- BOOK XVIII
- A Broadway Pageant
- 1
- Over the Western sea hither from Niphon come,
- Courteous, the swart-cheek’d two-sworded envoys,
- Leaning back in their open barouches, bare-headed, impassive,
- Ride to-day through Manhattan.
- Libertad! I do not know whether others behold what I behold,
- In the procession along with the nobles of Niphon, the errand-bearers,
- Bringing up the rear, hovering above, around, or in the ranks marching,
- But I will sing you a song of what I behold Libertad.
- When million-footed Manhattan unpent descends to her pavements,
- When the thunder-cracking guns arouse me with the proud roar love,
- When the round-mouth’d guns out of the smoke and smell I love
- spit their salutes,
- When the fire-flashing guns have fully alerted me, and
- heaven-clouds canopy my city with a delicate thin haze,
- When gorgeous the countless straight stems, the forests at the
- wharves, thicken with colors,
- When every ship richly drest carries her flag at the peak,
- When pennants trail and street-festoons hang from the windows,
- When Broadway is entirely given up to foot-passengers and
- foot-standers, when the mass is densest,
- When the facades of the houses are alive with people, when eyes
- gaze riveted tens of thousands at a time,
- When the guests from the islands advance, when the pageant moves
- forward visible,
- When the summons is made, when the answer that waited thousands
- of years answers,
- I too arising, answering, descend to the pavements, merge with the
- crowd, and gaze with them.
- 2
- Superb-faced Manhattan!
- Comrade Americanos! to us, then at last the Orient comes.
- To us, my city,
- Where our tall-topt marble and iron beauties range on opposite
- sides, to walk in the space between,
- To-day our Antipodes comes.
- The Originatress comes,
- The nest of languages, the bequeather of poems, the race of eld,
- Florid with blood, pensive, rapt with musings, hot with passion,
- Sultry with perfume, with ample and flowing garments,
- With sunburnt visage, with intense soul and glittering eyes,
- The race of Brahma comes.
- See my cantabile! these and more are flashing to us from the procession,
- As it moves changing, a kaleidoscope divine it moves changing before us.
- For not the envoys nor the tann’d Japanee from his island only,
- Lithe and silent the Hindoo appears, the Asiatic continent itself
- appears, the past, the dead,
- The murky night-morning of wonder and fable inscrutable,
- The envelop’d mysteries, the old and unknown hive-bees,
- The north, the sweltering south, eastern Assyria, the Hebrews, the
- ancient of ancients,
- Vast desolated cities, the gliding present, all of these and more
- are in the pageant-procession.
- Geography, the world, is in it,
- The Great Sea, the brood of islands, Polynesia, the coast beyond,
- The coast you henceforth are facing--you Libertad! from your Western
- golden shores,
- The countries there with their populations, the millions en-masse
- are curiously here,
- The swarming market-places, the temples with idols ranged along the
- sides or at the end, bonze, brahmin, and llama,
- Mandarin, farmer, merchant, mechanic, and fisherman,
- The singing-girl and the dancing-girl, the ecstatic persons, the
- secluded emperors,
- Confucius himself, the great poets and heroes, the warriors, the castes,
- all,
- Trooping up, crowding from all directions, from the Altay mountains,
- From Thibet, from the four winding and far-flowing rivers of China,
- From the southern peninsulas and the demi-continental islands, from
- Malaysia,
- These and whatever belongs to them palpable show forth to me, and
- are seiz’d by me,
- And I am seiz’d by them, and friendlily held by them,
- Till as here them all I chant, Libertad! for themselves and for you.
- For I too raising my voice join the ranks of this pageant,
- I am the chanter, I chant aloud over the pageant,
- I chant the world on my Western sea,
- I chant copious the islands beyond, thick as stars in the sky,
- I chant the new empire grander than any before, as in a vision it
- comes to me,
- I chant America the mistress, I chant a greater supremacy,
- I chant projected a thousand blooming cities yet in time on those
- groups of sea-islands,
- My sail-ships and steam-ships threading the archipelagoes,
- My stars and stripes fluttering in the wind,
- Commerce opening, the sleep of ages having done its work, races
- reborn, refresh’d,
- Lives, works resumed--the object I know not--but the old, the Asiatic
- renew’d as it must be,
- Commencing from this day surrounded by the world.
- 3
- And you Libertad of the world!
- You shall sit in the middle well-pois’d thousands and thousands of years,
- As to-day from one side the nobles of Asia come to you,
- As to-morrow from the other side the queen of England sends her
- eldest son to you.
- The sign is reversing, the orb is enclosed,
- The ring is circled, the journey is done,
- The box-lid is but perceptibly open’d, nevertheless the perfume
- pours copiously out of the whole box.
- Young Libertad! with the venerable Asia, the all-mother,
- Be considerate with her now and ever hot Libertad, for you are all,
- Bend your proud neck to the long-off mother now sending messages
- over the archipelagoes to you,
- Bend your proud neck low for once, young Libertad.
- Here the children straying westward so long? so wide the tramping?
- Were the precedent dim ages debouching westward from Paradise so long?
- Were the centuries steadily footing it that way, all the while
- unknown, for you, for reasons?
- They are justified, they are accomplish’d, they shall now be turn’d
- the other way also, to travel toward you thence,
- They shall now also march obediently eastward for your sake Libertad.
- BOOK XIX. SEA-DRIFT
- Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking
- Out of the cradle endlessly rocking,
- Out of the mocking-bird’s throat, the musical shuttle,
- Out of the Ninth-month midnight,
- Over the sterile sands and the fields beyond, where the child
- leaving his bed wander’d alone, bareheaded, barefoot,
- Down from the shower’d halo,
- Up from the mystic play of shadows twining and twisting as if they
- were alive,
- Out from the patches of briers and blackberries,
- From the memories of the bird that chanted to me,
- From your memories sad brother, from the fitful risings and fallings I heard,
- From under that yellow half-moon late-risen and swollen as if with tears,
- From those beginning notes of yearning and love there in the mist,
- From the thousand responses of my heart never to cease,
- From the myriad thence-arous’d words,
- From the word stronger and more delicious than any,
- From such as now they start the scene revisiting,
- As a flock, twittering, rising, or overhead passing,
- Borne hither, ere all eludes me, hurriedly,
- A man, yet by these tears a little boy again,
- Throwing myself on the sand, confronting the waves,
- I, chanter of pains and joys, uniter of here and hereafter,
- Taking all hints to use them, but swiftly leaping beyond them,
- A reminiscence sing.
- Once Paumanok,
- When the lilac-scent was in the air and Fifth-month grass was growing,
- Up this seashore in some briers,
- Two feather’d guests from Alabama, two together,
- And their nest, and four light-green eggs spotted with brown,
- And every day the he-bird to and fro near at hand,
- And every day the she-bird crouch’d on her nest, silent, with bright eyes,
- And every day I, a curious boy, never too close, never disturbing
- them,
- Cautiously peering, absorbing, translating.
- Shine! shine! shine!
- Pour down your warmth, great sun.’
- While we bask, we two together.
- Two together!
- Winds blow south, or winds blow north,
- Day come white, or night come black,
- Home, or rivers and mountains from home,
- Singing all time, minding no time,
- While we two keep together.
- Till of a sudden,
- May-be kill’d, unknown to her mate,
- One forenoon the she-bird crouch’d not on the nest,
- Nor return’d that afternoon, nor the next,
- Nor ever appear’d again.
- And thenceforward all summer in the sound of the sea,
- And at night under the full of the moon in calmer weather,
- Over the hoarse surging of the sea,
- Or flitting from brier to brier by day,
- I saw, I heard at intervals the remaining one, the he-bird,
- The solitary guest from Alabama.
- Blow! blow! blow!
- Blow up sea-winds along Paumanok’s shore;
- I wait and I wait till you blow my mate to me.
- Yes, when the stars glisten’d,
- All night long on the prong of a moss-scallop’d stake,
- Down almost amid the slapping waves,
- Sat the lone singer wonderful causing tears.
- He call’d on his mate,
- He pour’d forth the meanings which I of all men know.
- Yes my brother I know,
- The rest might not, but I have treasur’d every note,
- For more than once dimly down to the beach gliding,
- Silent, avoiding the moonbeams, blending myself with the shadows,
- Recalling now the obscure shapes, the echoes, the sounds and sights
- after their sorts,
- The white arms out in the breakers tirelessly tossing,
- I, with bare feet, a child, the wind wafting my hair,
- Listen’d long and long.
- Listen’d to keep, to sing, now translating the notes,
- Following you my brother.
- Soothe! soothe! soothe!
- Close on its wave soothes the wave behind,
- And again another behind embracing and lapping, every one close,
- But my love soothes not me, not me.
- Low hangs the moon, it rose late,
- It is lagging--O I think it is heavy with love, with love.
- O madly the sea pushes upon the land,
- With love, with love.
- O night! do I not see my love fluttering out among the breakers?
- What is that little black thing I see there in the white?
- Loud! loud! loud!
- Loud I call to you, my love!
- High and clear I shoot my voice over the waves,
- Surely you must know who is here, is here,
- You must know who I am, my love.
- Low-hanging moon!
- What is that dusky spot in your brown yellow?
- O it is the shape, the shape of my mate.’
- O moon do not keep her from me any longer.
- Land! land! O land!
- Whichever way I turn, O I think you could give me my mate back again
- if you only would,
- For I am almost sure I see her dimly whichever way I look.
- O rising stars!
- Perhaps the one I want so much will rise, will rise with some of you.
- O throat! O trembling throat!
- Sound clearer through the atmosphere!
- Pierce the woods, the earth,
- Somewhere listening to catch you must be the one I want.
- Shake out carols!
- Solitary here, the night’s carols!
- Carols of lonesome love! death’s carols!
- Carols under that lagging, yellow, waning moon!
- O under that moon where she droops almost down into the sea!
- O reckless despairing carols.
- But soft! sink low!
- Soft! let me just murmur,
- And do you wait a moment you husky-nois’d sea,
- For somewhere I believe I heard my mate responding to me,
- So faint, I must be still, be still to listen,
- But not altogether still, for then she might not come immediately to me.
- Hither my love!
- Here I am! here!
- With this just-sustain’d note I announce myself to you,
- This gentle call is for you my love, for you.
- Do not be decoy’d elsewhere,
- That is the whistle of the wind, it is not my voice,
- That is the fluttering, the fluttering of the spray,
- Those are the shadows of leaves.
- O darkness! O in vain!
- O I am very sick and sorrowful
- O brown halo in the sky near the moon, drooping upon the sea!
- O troubled reflection in the sea!
- O throat! O throbbing heart!
- And I singing uselessly, uselessly all the night.
- O past! O happy life! O songs of joy!
- In the air, in the woods, over fields,
- Loved! loved! loved! loved! loved!
- But my mate no more, no more with me!
- We two together no more.
- The aria sinking,
- All else continuing, the stars shining,
- The winds blowing, the notes of the bird continuous echoing,
- With angry moans the fierce old mother incessantly moaning,
- On the sands of Paumanok’s shore gray and rustling,
- The yellow half-moon enlarged, sagging down, drooping, the face of
- the sea almost touching,
- The boy ecstatic, with his bare feet the waves, with his hair the
- atmosphere dallying,
- The love in the heart long pent, now loose, now at last tumultuously
- bursting,
- The aria’s meaning, the ears, the soul, swiftly depositing,
- The strange tears down the cheeks coursing,
- The colloquy there, the trio, each uttering,
- The undertone, the savage old mother incessantly crying,
- To the boy’s soul’s questions sullenly timing, some drown’d secret hissing,
- To the outsetting bard.
- Demon or bird! (said the boy’s soul,)
- Is it indeed toward your mate you sing? or is it really to me?
- For I, that was a child, my tongue’s use sleeping, now I have heard you,
- Now in a moment I know what I am for, I awake,
- And already a thousand singers, a thousand songs, clearer, louder
- and more sorrowful than yours,
- A thousand warbling echoes have started to life within me, never to die.
- O you singer solitary, singing by yourself, projecting me,
- O solitary me listening, never more shall I cease perpetuating you,
- Never more shall I escape, never more the reverberations,
- Never more the cries of unsatisfied love be absent from me,
- Never again leave me to be the peaceful child I was before what
- there in the night,
- By the sea under the yellow and sagging moon,
- The messenger there arous’d, the fire, the sweet hell within,
- The unknown want, the destiny of me.
- O give me the clue! (it lurks in the night here somewhere,)
- O if I am to have so much, let me have more!
- A word then, (for I will conquer it,)
- The word final, superior to all,
- Subtle, sent up--what is it?--I listen;
- Are you whispering it, and have been all the time, you sea-waves?
- Is that it from your liquid rims and wet sands?
- Whereto answering, the sea,
- Delaying not, hurrying not,
- Whisper’d me through the night, and very plainly before daybreak,
- Lisp’d to me the low and delicious word death,
- And again death, death, death, death
- Hissing melodious, neither like the bird nor like my arous’d child’s heart,
- But edging near as privately for me rustling at my feet,
- Creeping thence steadily up to my ears and laving me softly all over,
- Death, death, death, death, death.
- Which I do not forget.
- But fuse the song of my dusky demon and brother,
- That he sang to me in the moonlight on Paumanok’s gray beach,
- With the thousand responsive songs at random,
- My own songs awaked from that hour,
- And with them the key, the word up from the waves,
- The word of the sweetest song and all songs,
- That strong and delicious word which, creeping to my feet,
- (Or like some old crone rocking the cradle, swathed in sweet
- garments, bending aside,)
- The sea whisper’d me.
- As I Ebb’d with the Ocean of Life
- 1
- As I ebb’d with the ocean of life,
- As I wended the shores I know,
- As I walk’d where the ripples continually wash you Paumanok,
- Where they rustle up hoarse and sibilant,
- Where the fierce old mother endlessly cries for her castaways,
- I musing late in the autumn day, gazing off southward,
- Held by this electric self out of the pride of which I utter poems,
- Was seiz’d by the spirit that trails in the lines underfoot,
- The rim, the sediment that stands for all the water and all the land
- of the globe.
- Fascinated, my eyes reverting from the south, dropt, to follow those
- slender windrows,
- Chaff, straw, splinters of wood, weeds, and the sea-gluten,
- Scum, scales from shining rocks, leaves of salt-lettuce, left by the tide,
- Miles walking, the sound of breaking waves the other side of me,
- Paumanok there and then as I thought the old thought of likenesses,
- These you presented to me you fish-shaped island,
- As I wended the shores I know,
- As I walk’d with that electric self seeking types.
- 2
- As I wend to the shores I know not,
- As I list to the dirge, the voices of men and women wreck’d,
- As I inhale the impalpable breezes that set in upon me,
- As the ocean so mysterious rolls toward me closer and closer,
- I too but signify at the utmost a little wash’d-up drift,
- A few sands and dead leaves to gather,
- Gather, and merge myself as part of the sands and drift.
- O baffled, balk’d, bent to the very earth,
- Oppress’d with myself that I have dared to open my mouth,
- Aware now that amid all that blab whose echoes recoil upon me I have
- not once had the least idea who or what I am,
- But that before all my arrogant poems the real Me stands yet
- untouch’d, untold, altogether unreach’d,
- Withdrawn far, mocking me with mock-congratulatory signs and bows,
- With peals of distant ironical laughter at every word I have written,
- Pointing in silence to these songs, and then to the sand beneath.
- I perceive I have not really understood any thing, not a single
- object, and that no man ever can,
- Nature here in sight of the sea taking advantage of me to dart upon
- me and sting me,
- Because I have dared to open my mouth to sing at all.
- 3
- You oceans both, I close with you,
- We murmur alike reproachfully rolling sands and drift, knowing not why,
- These little shreds indeed standing for you and me and all.
- You friable shore with trails of debris,
- You fish-shaped island, I take what is underfoot,
- What is yours is mine my father.
- I too Paumanok,
- I too have bubbled up, floated the measureless float, and been
- wash’d on your shores,
- I too am but a trail of drift and debris,
- I too leave little wrecks upon you, you fish-shaped island.
- I throw myself upon your breast my father,
- I cling to you so that you cannot unloose me,
- I hold you so firm till you answer me something.
- Kiss me my father,
- Touch me with your lips as I touch those I love,
- Breathe to me while I hold you close the secret of the murmuring I envy.
- 4
- Ebb, ocean of life, (the flow will return,)
- Cease not your moaning you fierce old mother,
- Endlessly cry for your castaways, but fear not, deny not me,
- Rustle not up so hoarse and angry against my feet as I touch you or
- gather from you.
- I mean tenderly by you and all,
- I gather for myself and for this phantom looking down where we lead,
- and following me and mine.
- Me and mine, loose windrows, little corpses,
- Froth, snowy white, and bubbles,
- (See, from my dead lips the ooze exuding at last,
- See, the prismatic colors glistening and rolling,)
- Tufts of straw, sands, fragments,
- Buoy’d hither from many moods, one contradicting another,
- From the storm, the long calm, the darkness, the swell,
- Musing, pondering, a breath, a briny tear, a dab of liquid or soil,
- Up just as much out of fathomless workings fermented and thrown,
- A limp blossom or two, torn, just as much over waves floating,
- drifted at random,
- Just as much for us that sobbing dirge of Nature,
- Just as much whence we come that blare of the cloud-trumpets,
- We, capricious, brought hither we know not whence, spread out before you,
- You up there walking or sitting,
- Whoever you are, we too lie in drifts at your feet.
- Tears
- Tears! tears! tears!
- In the night, in solitude, tears,
- On the white shore dripping, dripping, suck’d in by the sand,
- Tears, not a star shining, all dark and desolate,
- Moist tears from the eyes of a muffled head;
- O who is that ghost? that form in the dark, with tears?
- What shapeless lump is that, bent, crouch’d there on the sand?
- Streaming tears, sobbing tears, throes, choked with wild cries;
- O storm, embodied, rising, careering with swift steps along the beach!
- O wild and dismal night storm, with wind--O belching and desperate!
- O shade so sedate and decorous by day, with calm countenance and
- regulated pace,
- But away at night as you fly, none looking--O then the unloosen’d ocean,
- Of tears! tears! tears!
- To the Man-of-War-Bird
- Thou who hast slept all night upon the storm,
- Waking renew’d on thy prodigious pinions,
- (Burst the wild storm? above it thou ascended’st,
- And rested on the sky, thy slave that cradled thee,)
- Now a blue point, far, far in heaven floating,
- As to the light emerging here on deck I watch thee,
- (Myself a speck, a point on the world’s floating vast.)
- Far, far at sea,
- After the night’s fierce drifts have strewn the shore with wrecks,
- With re-appearing day as now so happy and serene,
- The rosy and elastic dawn, the flashing sun,
- The limpid spread of air cerulean,
- Thou also re-appearest.
- Thou born to match the gale, (thou art all wings,)
- To cope with heaven and earth and sea and hurricane,
- Thou ship of air that never furl’st thy sails,
- Days, even weeks untired and onward, through spaces, realms gyrating,
- At dusk that lookist on Senegal, at morn America,
- That sport’st amid the lightning-flash and thunder-cloud,
- In them, in thy experiences, had’st thou my soul,
- What joys! what joys were thine!
- Aboard at a Ship’s Helm
- Aboard at a ship’s helm,
- A young steersman steering with care.
- Through fog on a sea-coast dolefully ringing,
- An ocean-bell--O a warning bell, rock’d by the waves.
- O you give good notice indeed, you bell by the sea-reefs ringing,
- Ringing, ringing, to warn the ship from its wreck-place.
- For as on the alert O steersman, you mind the loud admonition,
- The bows turn, the freighted ship tacking speeds away under her gray sails,
- The beautiful and noble ship with all her precious wealth speeds
- away gayly and safe.
- But O the ship, the immortal ship! O ship aboard the ship!
- Ship of the body, ship of the soul, voyaging, voyaging, voyaging.
- On the Beach at Night
- On the beach at night,
- Stands a child with her father,
- Watching the east, the autumn sky.
- Up through the darkness,
- While ravening clouds, the burial clouds, in black masses spreading,
- Lower sullen and fast athwart and down the sky,
- Amid a transparent clear belt of ether yet left in the east,
- Ascends large and calm the lord-star Jupiter,
- And nigh at hand, only a very little above,
- Swim the delicate sisters the Pleiades.
- From the beach the child holding the hand of her father,
- Those burial-clouds that lower victorious soon to devour all,
- Watching, silently weeps.
- Weep not, child,
- Weep not, my darling,
- With these kisses let me remove your tears,
- The ravening clouds shall not long be victorious,
- They shall not long possess the sky, they devour the stars only in
- apparition,
- Jupiter shall emerge, be patient, watch again another night, the
- Pleiades shall emerge,
- They are immortal, all those stars both silvery and golden shall
- shine out again,
- The great stars and the little ones shall shine out again, they endure,
- The vast immortal suns and the long-enduring pensive moons shall
- again shine.
- Then dearest child mournest thou only for jupiter?
- Considerest thou alone the burial of the stars?
- Something there is,
- (With my lips soothing thee, adding I whisper,
- I give thee the first suggestion, the problem and indirection,)
- Something there is more immortal even than the stars,
- (Many the burials, many the days and nights, passing away,)
- Something that shall endure longer even than lustrous Jupiter
- Longer than sun or any revolving satellite,
- Or the radiant sisters the Pleiades.
- The World below the Brine
- The world below the brine,
- Forests at the bottom of the sea, the branches and leaves,
- Sea-lettuce, vast lichens, strange flowers and seeds, the thick
- tangle openings, and pink turf,
- Different colors, pale gray and green, purple, white, and gold, the
- play of light through the water,
- Dumb swimmers there among the rocks, coral, gluten, grass, rushes,
- and the aliment of the swimmers,
- Sluggish existences grazing there suspended, or slowly crawling
- close to the bottom,
- The sperm-whale at the surface blowing air and spray, or disporting
- with his flukes,
- The leaden-eyed shark, the walrus, the turtle, the hairy
- sea-leopard, and the sting-ray,
- Passions there, wars, pursuits, tribes, sight in those ocean-depths,
- breathing that thick-breathing air, as so many do,
- The change thence to the sight here, and to the subtle air breathed
- by beings like us who walk this sphere,
- The change onward from ours to that of beings who walk other spheres.
- On the Beach at Night Alone
- On the beach at night alone,
- As the old mother sways her to and fro singing her husky song,
- As I watch the bright stars shining, I think a thought of the clef
- of the universes and of the future.
- A vast similitude interlocks all,
- All spheres, grown, ungrown, small, large, suns, moons, planets,
- All distances of place however wide,
- All distances of time, all inanimate forms,
- All souls, all living bodies though they be ever so different, or in
- different worlds,
- All gaseous, watery, vegetable, mineral processes, the fishes, the brutes,
- All nations, colors, barbarisms, civilizations, languages,
- All identities that have existed or may exist on this globe, or any globe,
- All lives and deaths, all of the past, present, future,
- This vast similitude spans them, and always has spann’d,
- And shall forever span them and compactly hold and enclose them.
- Song for All Seas, All Ships
- 1
- To-day a rude brief recitative,
- Of ships sailing the seas, each with its special flag or ship-signal,
- Of unnamed heroes in the ships--of waves spreading and spreading
- far as the eye can reach,
- Of dashing spray, and the winds piping and blowing,
- And out of these a chant for the sailors of all nations,
- Fitful, like a surge.
- Of sea-captains young or old, and the mates, and of all intrepid sailors,
- Of the few, very choice, taciturn, whom fate can never surprise nor
- death dismay.
- Pick’d sparingly without noise by thee old ocean, chosen by thee,
- Thou sea that pickest and cullest the race in time, and unitest nations,
- Suckled by thee, old husky nurse, embodying thee,
- Indomitable, untamed as thee.
- (Ever the heroes on water or on land, by ones or twos appearing,
- Ever the stock preserv’d and never lost, though rare, enough for
- seed preserv’d.)
- 2
- Flaunt out O sea your separate flags of nations!
- Flaunt out visible as ever the various ship-signals!
- But do you reserve especially for yourself and for the soul of man
- one flag above all the rest,
- A spiritual woven signal for all nations, emblem of man elate above death,
- Token of all brave captains and all intrepid sailors and mates,
- And all that went down doing their duty,
- Reminiscent of them, twined from all intrepid captains young or old,
- A pennant universal, subtly waving all time, o’er all brave sailors,
- All seas, all ships.
- Patroling Barnegat
- Wild, wild the storm, and the sea high running,
- Steady the roar of the gale, with incessant undertone muttering,
- Shouts of demoniac laughter fitfully piercing and pealing,
- Waves, air, midnight, their savagest trinity lashing,
- Out in the shadows there milk-white combs careering,
- On beachy slush and sand spirts of snow fierce slanting,
- Where through the murk the easterly death-wind breasting,
- Through cutting swirl and spray watchful and firm advancing,
- (That in the distance! is that a wreck? is the red signal flaring?)
- Slush and sand of the beach tireless till daylight wending,
- Steadily, slowly, through hoarse roar never remitting,
- Along the midnight edge by those milk-white combs careering,
- A group of dim, weird forms, struggling, the night confronting,
- That savage trinity warily watching.
- After the Sea-Ship
- After the sea-ship, after the whistling winds,
- After the white-gray sails taut to their spars and ropes,
- Below, a myriad myriad waves hastening, lifting up their necks,
- Tending in ceaseless flow toward the track of the ship,
- Waves of the ocean bubbling and gurgling, blithely prying,
- Waves, undulating waves, liquid, uneven, emulous waves,
- Toward that whirling current, laughing and buoyant, with curves,
- Where the great vessel sailing and tacking displaced the surface,
- Larger and smaller waves in the spread of the ocean yearnfully flowing,
- The wake of the sea-ship after she passes, flashing and frolicsome
- under the sun,
- A motley procession with many a fleck of foam and many fragments,
- Following the stately and rapid ship, in the wake following.
- BOOK XX. BY THE ROADSIDE
- A Boston Ballad [1854]
- To get betimes in Boston town I rose this morning early,
- Here’s a good place at the corner, I must stand and see the show.
- Clear the way there Jonathan!
- Way for the President’s marshal--way for the government cannon!
- Way for the Federal foot and dragoons, (and the apparitions
- copiously tumbling.)
- I love to look on the Stars and Stripes, I hope the fifes will play
- Yankee Doodle.
- How bright shine the cutlasses of the foremost troops!
- Every man holds his revolver, marching stiff through Boston town.
- A fog follows, antiques of the same come limping,
- Some appear wooden-legged, and some appear bandaged and bloodless.
- Why this is indeed a show--it has called the dead out of the earth!
- The old graveyards of the hills have hurried to see!
- Phantoms! phantoms countless by flank and rear!
- Cock’d hats of mothy mould--crutches made of mist!
- Arms in slings--old men leaning on young men’s shoulders.
- What troubles you Yankee phantoms? what is all this chattering of
- bare gums?
- Does the ague convulse your limbs? do you mistake your crutches for
- firelocks and level them?
- If you blind your eyes with tears you will not see the President’s marshal,
- If you groan such groans you might balk the government cannon.
- For shame old maniacs--bring down those toss’d arms, and let your
- white hair be,
- Here gape your great grandsons, their wives gaze at them from the windows,
- See how well dress’d, see how orderly they conduct themselves.
- Worse and worse--can’t you stand it? are you retreating?
- Is this hour with the living too dead for you?
- Retreat then--pell-mell!
- To your graves--back--back to the hills old limpers!
- I do not think you belong here anyhow.
- But there is one thing that belongs here--shall I tell you what it
- is, gentlemen of Boston?
- I will whisper it to the Mayor, he shall send a committee to England,
- They shall get a grant from the Parliament, go with a cart to the
- royal vault,
- Dig out King George’s coffin, unwrap him quick from the
- graveclothes, box up his bones for a journey,
- Find a swift Yankee clipper--here is freight for you, black-bellied clipper,
- Up with your anchor--shake out your sails--steer straight toward
- Boston bay.
- Now call for the President’s marshal again, bring out the government cannon,
- Fetch home the roarers from Congress, make another procession,
- guard it with foot and dragoons.
- This centre-piece for them;
- Look, all orderly citizens--look from the windows, women!
- The committee open the box, set up the regal ribs, glue those that
- will not stay,
- Clap the skull on top of the ribs, and clap a crown on top of the skull.
- You have got your revenge, old buster--the crown is come to its own,
- and more than its own.
- Stick your hands in your pockets, Jonathan--you are a made man from
- this day,
- You are mighty cute--and here is one of your bargains.
- Europe [The 72d and 73d Years of These States]
- Suddenly out of its stale and drowsy lair, the lair of slaves,
- Like lightning it le’pt forth half startled at itself,
- Its feet upon the ashes and the rags, its hands tight to the throats
- of kings.
- O hope and faith!
- O aching close of exiled patriots’ lives!
- O many a sicken’d heart!
- Turn back unto this day and make yourselves afresh.
- And you, paid to defile the People--you liars, mark!
- Not for numberless agonies, murders, lusts,
- For court thieving in its manifold mean forms, worming from his
- simplicity the poor man’s wages,
- For many a promise sworn by royal lips and broken and laugh’d at in
- the breaking,
- Then in their power not for all these did the blows strike revenge,
- or the heads of the nobles fall;
- The People scorn’d the ferocity of kings.
- But the sweetness of mercy brew’d bitter destruction, and the
- frighten’d monarchs come back,
- Each comes in state with his train, hangman, priest, tax-gatherer,
- Soldier, lawyer, lord, jailer, and sycophant.
- Yet behind all lowering stealing, lo, a shape,
- Vague as the night, draped interminably, head, front and form, in
- scarlet folds,
- Whose face and eyes none may see,
- Out of its robes only this, the red robes lifted by the arm,
- One finger crook’d pointed high over the top, like the head of a
- snake appears.
- Meanwhile corpses lie in new-made graves, bloody corpses of young men,
- The rope of the gibbet hangs heavily, the bullets of princes are
- flying, the creatures of power laugh aloud,
- And all these things bear fruits, and they are good.
- Those corpses of young men,
- Those martyrs that hang from the gibbets, those hearts pierc’d by
- the gray lead,
- Cold and motionless as they seem live elsewhere with unslaughter’d vitality.
- They live in other young men O kings!
- They live in brothers again ready to defy you,
- They were purified by death, they were taught and exalted.
- Not a grave of the murder’d for freedom but grows seed for freedom,
- in its turn to bear seed,
- Which the winds carry afar and re-sow, and the rains and the snows nourish.
- Not a disembodied spirit can the weapons of tyrants let loose,
- But it stalks invisibly over the earth, whispering, counseling, cautioning.
- Liberty, let others despair of you--I never despair of you.
- Is the house shut? is the master away?
- Nevertheless, be ready, be not weary of watching,
- He will soon return, his messengers come anon.
- A Hand-Mirror
- Hold it up sternly--see this it sends back, (who is it? is it you?)
- Outside fair costume, within ashes and filth,
- No more a flashing eye, no more a sonorous voice or springy step,
- Now some slave’s eye, voice, hands, step,
- A drunkard’s breath, unwholesome eater’s face, venerealee’s flesh,
- Lungs rotting away piecemeal, stomach sour and cankerous,
- Joints rheumatic, bowels clogged with abomination,
- Blood circulating dark and poisonous streams,
- Words babble, hearing and touch callous,
- No brain, no heart left, no magnetism of sex;
- Such from one look in this looking-glass ere you go hence,
- Such a result so soon--and from such a beginning!
- Gods
- Lover divine and perfect Comrade,
- Waiting content, invisible yet, but certain,
- Be thou my God.
- Thou, thou, the Ideal Man,
- Fair, able, beautiful, content, and loving,
- Complete in body and dilate in spirit,
- Be thou my God.
- O Death, (for Life has served its turn,)
- Opener and usher to the heavenly mansion,
- Be thou my God.
- Aught, aught of mightiest, best I see, conceive, or know,
- (To break the stagnant tie--thee, thee to free, O soul,)
- Be thou my God.
- All great ideas, the races’ aspirations,
- All heroisms, deeds of rapt enthusiasts,
- Be ye my Gods.
- Or Time and Space,
- Or shape of Earth divine and wondrous,
- Or some fair shape I viewing, worship,
- Or lustrous orb of sun or star by night,
- Be ye my Gods.
- Germs
- Forms, qualities, lives, humanity, language, thoughts,
- The ones known, and the ones unknown, the ones on the stars,
- The stars themselves, some shaped, others unshaped,
- Wonders as of those countries, the soil, trees, cities, inhabitants,
- whatever they may be,
- Splendid suns, the moons and rings, the countless combinations and effects,
- Such-like, and as good as such-like, visible here or anywhere, stand
- provided for a handful of space, which I extend my arm and
- half enclose with my hand,
- That containing the start of each and all, the virtue, the germs of all.
- Thoughts
- Of ownership--as if one fit to own things could not at pleasure enter
- upon all, and incorporate them into himself or herself;
- Of vista--suppose some sight in arriere through the formative chaos,
- presuming the growth, fulness, life, now attain’d on the journey,
- (But I see the road continued, and the journey ever continued;)
- Of what was once lacking on earth, and in due time has become
- supplied--and of what will yet be supplied,
- Because all I see and know I believe to have its main purport in
- what will yet be supplied.
- When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer
- When I heard the learn’d astronomer,
- When the proofs, the figures, were ranged in columns before me,
- When I was shown the charts and diagrams, to add, divide, and measure them,
- When I sitting heard the astronomer where he lectured with much
- applause in the lecture-room,
- How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick,
- Till rising and gliding out I wander’d off by myself,
- In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time,
- Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars.
- Perfections
- Only themselves understand themselves and the like of themselves,
- As souls only understand souls.
- O Me! O Life!
- O me! O life! of the questions of these recurring,
- Of the endless trains of the faithless, of cities fill’d with the foolish,
- Of myself forever reproaching myself, (for who more foolish than I,
- and who more faithless?)
- Of eyes that vainly crave the light, of the objects mean, of the
- struggle ever renew’d,
- Of the poor results of all, of the plodding and sordid crowds I see
- around me,
- Of the empty and useless years of the rest, with the rest me intertwined,
- The question, O me! so sad, recurring--What good amid these, O me, O life?
- Answer.
- That you are here--that life exists and identity,
- That the powerful play goes on, and you may contribute a verse.
- To a President
- All you are doing and saying is to America dangled mirages,
- You have not learn’d of Nature--of the politics of Nature you have
- not learn’d the great amplitude, rectitude, impartiality,
- You have not seen that only such as they are for these States,
- And that what is less than they must sooner or later lift off from
- these States.
- I Sit and Look Out
- I sit and look out upon all the sorrows of the world, and upon all
- oppression and shame,
- I hear secret convulsive sobs from young men at anguish with
- themselves, remorseful after deeds done,
- I see in low life the mother misused by her children, dying,
- neglected, gaunt, desperate,
- I see the wife misused by her husband, I see the treacherous seducer
- of young women,
- I mark the ranklings of jealousy and unrequited love attempted to be
- hid, I see these sights on the earth,
- I see the workings of battle, pestilence, tyranny, I see martyrs and
- prisoners,
- I observe a famine at sea, I observe the sailors casting lots who
- shall be kill’d to preserve the lives of the rest,
- I observe the slights and degradations cast by arrogant persons upon
- laborers, the poor, and upon negroes, and the like;
- All these--all the meanness and agony without end I sitting look out upon,
- See, hear, and am silent.
- To Rich Givers
- What you give me I cheerfully accept,
- A little sustenance, a hut and garden, a little money, as I
- rendezvous with my poems,
- A traveler’s lodging and breakfast as journey through the States,--
- why should I be ashamed to own such gifts? why to advertise for them?
- For I myself am not one who bestows nothing upon man and woman,
- For I bestow upon any man or woman the entrance to all the gifts of
- the universe.
- The Dalliance of the Eagles
- Skirting the river road, (my forenoon walk, my rest,)
- Skyward in air a sudden muffled sound, the dalliance of the eagles,
- The rushing amorous contact high in space together,
- The clinching interlocking claws, a living, fierce, gyrating wheel,
- Four beating wings, two beaks, a swirling mass tight grappling,
- In tumbling turning clustering loops, straight downward falling,
- Till o’er the river pois’d, the twain yet one, a moment’s lull,
- A motionless still balance in the air, then parting, talons loosing,
- Upward again on slow-firm pinions slanting, their separate diverse flight,
- She hers, he his, pursuing.
- Roaming in Thought [After reading Hegel]
- Roaming in thought over the Universe, I saw the little that is Good
- steadily hastening towards immortality,
- And the vast all that is call’d Evil I saw hastening to merge itself
- and become lost and dead.
- A Farm Picture
- Through the ample open door of the peaceful country barn,
- A sunlit pasture field with cattle and horses feeding,
- And haze and vista, and the far horizon fading away.
- A Child’s Amaze
- Silent and amazed even when a little boy,
- I remember I heard the preacher every Sunday put God in his statements,
- As contending against some being or influence.
- The Runner
- On a flat road runs the well-train’d runner,
- He is lean and sinewy with muscular legs,
- He is thinly clothed, he leans forward as he runs,
- With lightly closed fists and arms partially rais’d.
- Beautiful Women
- Women sit or move to and fro, some old, some young,
- The young are beautiful--but the old are more beautiful than the young.
- Mother and Babe
- I see the sleeping babe nestling the breast of its mother,
- The sleeping mother and babe--hush’d, I study them long and long.
- Thought
- Of obedience, faith, adhesiveness;
- As I stand aloof and look there is to me something profoundly
- affecting in large masses of men following the lead of those who
- do not believe in men.
- Visor’d
- A mask, a perpetual natural disguiser of herself,
- Concealing her face, concealing her form,
- Changes and transformations every hour, every moment,
- Falling upon her even when she sleeps.
- Thought
- Of justice--as If could be any thing but the same ample law,
- expounded by natural judges and saviors,
- As if it might be this thing or that thing, according to decisions.
- Gliding O’er all
- Gliding o’er all, through all,
- Through Nature, Time, and Space,
- As a ship on the waters advancing,
- The voyage of the soul--not life alone,
- Death, many deaths I’ll sing.
- Hast Never Come to Thee an Hour
- Hast never come to thee an hour,
- A sudden gleam divine, precipitating, bursting all these bubbles,
- fashions, wealth?
- These eager business aims--books, politics, art, amours,
- To utter nothingness?
- Thought
- Of Equality--as if it harm’d me, giving others the same chances and
- rights as myself--as if it were not indispensable to my own
- rights that others possess the same.
- To Old Age
- I see in you the estuary that enlarges and spreads itself grandly as
- it pours in the great sea.
- Locations and Times
- Locations and times--what is it in me that meets them all, whenever
- and wherever, and makes me at home?
- Forms, colors, densities, odors--what is it in me that corresponds
- with them?
- Offerings
- A thousand perfect men and women appear,
- Around each gathers a cluster of friends, and gay children and
- youths, with offerings.
- To The States [To Identify the 16th, 17th, or 18th Presidentiad]
- Why reclining, interrogating? why myself and all drowsing?
- What deepening twilight-scum floating atop of the waters,
- Who are they as bats and night-dogs askant in the capitol?
- What a filthy Presidentiad! (O South, your torrid suns! O North,
- your arctic freezings!)
- Are those really Congressmen? are those the great Judges? is that
- the President?
- Then I will sleep awhile yet, for I see that these States sleep, for
- reasons;
- (With gathering murk, with muttering thunder and lambent shoots we
- all duly awake,
- South, North, East, West, inland and seaboard, we will surely awake.)
- BOOK XXI. DRUM-TAPS
- First O Songs for a Prelude
- First O songs for a prelude,
- Lightly strike on the stretch’d tympanum pride and joy in my city,
- How she led the rest to arms, how she gave the cue,
- How at once with lithe limbs unwaiting a moment she sprang,
- (O superb! O Manhattan, my own, my peerless!
- O strongest you in the hour of danger, in crisis! O truer than steel!)
- How you sprang--how you threw off the costumes of peace with
- indifferent hand,
- How your soft opera-music changed, and the drum and fife were heard
- in their stead,
- How you led to the war, (that shall serve for our prelude, songs of
- soldiers,)
- How Manhattan drum-taps led.
- Forty years had I in my city seen soldiers parading,
- Forty years as a pageant, till unawares the lady of this teeming and
- turbulent city,
- Sleepless amid her ships, her houses, her incalculable wealth,
- With her million children around her, suddenly,
- At dead of night, at news from the south,
- Incens’d struck with clinch’d hand the pavement.
- A shock electric, the night sustain’d it,
- Till with ominous hum our hive at daybreak pour’d out its myriads.
- From the houses then and the workshops, and through all the doorways,
- Leapt they tumultuous, and lo! Manhattan arming.
- To the drum-taps prompt,
- The young men falling in and arming,
- The mechanics arming, (the trowel, the jack-plane, the blacksmith’s
- hammer, tost aside with precipitation,)
- The lawyer leaving his office and arming, the judge leaving the court,
- The driver deserting his wagon in the street, jumping down, throwing
- the reins abruptly down on the horses’ backs,
- The salesman leaving the store, the boss, book-keeper, porter, all leaving;
- Squads gather everywhere by common consent and arm,
- The new recruits, even boys, the old men show them how to wear their
- accoutrements, they buckle the straps carefully,
- Outdoors arming, indoors arming, the flash of the musket-barrels,
- The white tents cluster in camps, the arm’d sentries around, the
- sunrise cannon and again at sunset,
- Arm’d regiments arrive every day, pass through the city, and embark
- from the wharves,
- (How good they look as they tramp down to the river, sweaty, with
- their guns on their shoulders!
- How I love them! how I could hug them, with their brown faces and
- their clothes and knapsacks cover’d with dust!)
- The blood of the city up-arm’d! arm’d! the cry everywhere,
- The flags flung out from the steeples of churches and from all the
- public buildings and stores,
- The tearful parting, the mother kisses her son, the son kisses his mother,
- (Loth is the mother to part, yet not a word does she speak to detain him,)
- The tumultuous escort, the ranks of policemen preceding, clearing the way,
- The unpent enthusiasm, the wild cheers of the crowd for their favorites,
- The artillery, the silent cannons bright as gold, drawn along,
- rumble lightly over the stones,
- (Silent cannons, soon to cease your silence,
- Soon unlimber’d to begin the red business;)
- All the mutter of preparation, all the determin’d arming,
- The hospital service, the lint, bandages and medicines,
- The women volunteering for nurses, the work begun for in earnest, no
- mere parade now;
- War! an arm’d race is advancing! the welcome for battle, no turning away!
- War! be it weeks, months, or years, an arm’d race is advancing to
- welcome it.
- Mannahatta a-march--and it’s O to sing it well!
- It’s O for a manly life in the camp.
- And the sturdy artillery,
- The guns bright as gold, the work for giants, to serve well the guns,
- Unlimber them! (no more as the past forty years for salutes for
- courtesies merely,
- Put in something now besides powder and wadding.)
- And you lady of ships, you Mannahatta,
- Old matron of this proud, friendly, turbulent city,
- Often in peace and wealth you were pensive or covertly frown’d amid
- all your children,
- But now you smile with joy exulting old Mannahatta.
- Eighteen Sixty-One
- Arm’d year--year of the struggle,
- No dainty rhymes or sentimental love verses for you terrible year,
- Not you as some pale poetling seated at a desk lisping cadenzas piano,
- But as a strong man erect, clothed in blue clothes, advancing,
- carrying rifle on your shoulder,
- With well-gristled body and sunburnt face and hands, with a knife in
- the belt at your side,
- As I heard you shouting loud, your sonorous voice ringing across the
- continent,
- Your masculine voice O year, as rising amid the great cities,
- Amid the men of Manhattan I saw you as one of the workmen, the
- dwellers in Manhattan,
- Or with large steps crossing the prairies out of Illinois and Indiana,
- Rapidly crossing the West with springy gait and descending the Allghanies,
- Or down from the great lakes or in Pennsylvania, or on deck along
- the Ohio river,
- Or southward along the Tennessee or Cumberland rivers, or at
- Chattanooga on the mountain top,
- Saw I your gait and saw I your sinewy limbs clothed in blue, bearing
- weapons, robust year,
- Heard your determin’d voice launch’d forth again and again,
- Year that suddenly sang by the mouths of the round-lipp’d cannon,
- I repeat you, hurrying, crashing, sad, distracted year.
- Beat! Beat! Drums!
- Beat! beat! drums!--blow! bugles! blow!
- Through the windows--through doors--burst like a ruthless force,
- Into the solemn church, and scatter the congregation,
- Into the school where the scholar is studying;
- Leave not the bridegroom quiet--no happiness must he have now with
- his bride,
- Nor the peaceful farmer any peace, ploughing his field or gathering
- his grain,
- So fierce you whirr and pound you drums--so shrill you bugles blow.
- Beat! beat! drums!--blow! bugles! blow!
- Over the traffic of cities--over the rumble of wheels in the streets;
- Are beds prepared for sleepers at night in the houses? no sleepers
- must sleep in those beds,
- No bargainers’ bargains by day--no brokers or speculators--would
- they continue?
- Would the talkers be talking? would the singer attempt to sing?
- Would the lawyer rise in the court to state his case before the judge?
- Then rattle quicker, heavier drums--you bugles wilder blow.
- Beat! beat! drums!--blow! bugles! blow!
- Make no parley--stop for no expostulation,
- Mind not the timid--mind not the weeper or prayer,
- Mind not the old man beseeching the young man,
- Let not the child’s voice be heard, nor the mother’s entreaties,
- Make even the trestles to shake the dead where they lie awaiting the
- hearses,
- So strong you thump O terrible drums--so loud you bugles blow.
- From Paumanok Starting I Fly Like a Bird
- From Paumanok starting I fly like a bird,
- Around and around to soar to sing the idea of all,
- To the north betaking myself to sing there arctic songs,
- To Kanada till I absorb Kanada in myself, to Michigan then,
- To Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, to sing their songs, (they are inimitable;)
- Then to Ohio and Indiana to sing theirs, to Missouri and Kansas and
- Arkansas to sing theirs,
- To Tennessee and Kentucky, to the Carolinas and Georgia to sing theirs,
- To Texas and so along up toward California, to roam accepted everywhere;
- To sing first, (to the tap of the war-drum if need be,)
- The idea of all, of the Western world one and inseparable,
- And then the song of each member of these States.
- Song of the Banner at Daybreak
- Poet:
- O A new song, a free song,
- Flapping, flapping, flapping, flapping, by sounds, by voices clearer,
- By the wind’s voice and that of the drum,
- By the banner’s voice and child’s voice and sea’s voice and father’s voice,
- Low on the ground and high in the air,
- On the ground where father and child stand,
- In the upward air where their eyes turn,
- Where the banner at daybreak is flapping.
- Words! book-words! what are you?
- Words no more, for hearken and see,
- My song is there in the open air, and I must sing,
- With the banner and pennant a-flapping.
- I’ll weave the chord and twine in,
- Man’s desire and babe’s desire, I’ll twine them in, I’ll put in life,
- I’ll put the bayonet’s flashing point, I’ll let bullets and slugs whizz,
- (As one carrying a symbol and menace far into the future,
- Crying with trumpet voice, Arouse and beware! Beware and arouse!)
- I’ll pour the verse with streams of blood, full of volition, full of joy,
- Then loosen, launch forth, to go and compete,
- With the banner and pennant a-flapping.
- Pennant:
- Come up here, bard, bard,
- Come up here, soul, soul,
- Come up here, dear little child,
- To fly in the clouds and winds with me, and play with the measureless light.
- Child:
- Father what is that in the sky beckoning to me with long finger?
- And what does it say to me all the while?
- Father:
- Nothing my babe you see in the sky,
- And nothing at all to you it says--but look you my babe,
- Look at these dazzling things in the houses, and see you the money-
- shops opening,
- And see you the vehicles preparing to crawl along the streets with goods;
- These, ah these, how valued and toil’d for these!
- How envied by all the earth.
- Poet:
- Fresh and rosy red the sun is mounting high,
- On floats the sea in distant blue careering through its channels,
- On floats the wind over the breast of the sea setting in toward land,
- The great steady wind from west or west-by-south,
- Floating so buoyant with milk-white foam on the waters.
- But I am not the sea nor the red sun,
- I am not the wind with girlish laughter,
- Not the immense wind which strengthens, not the wind which lashes,
- Not the spirit that ever lashes its own body to terror and death,
- But I am that which unseen comes and sings, sings, sings,
- Which babbles in brooks and scoots in showers on the land,
- Which the birds know in the woods mornings and evenings,
- And the shore-sands know and the hissing wave, and that banner and pennant,
- Aloft there flapping and flapping.
- Child:
- O father it is alive--it is full of people--it has children,
- O now it seems to me it is talking to its children,
- I hear it--it talks to me--O it is wonderful!
- O it stretches--it spreads and runs so fast--O my father,
- It is so broad it covers the whole sky.
- Father:
- Cease, cease, my foolish babe,
- What you are saying is sorrowful to me, much ’t displeases me;
- Behold with the rest again I say, behold not banners and pennants aloft,
- But the well-prepared pavements behold, and mark the solid-wall’d houses.
- Banner and Pennant:
- Speak to the child O bard out of Manhattan,
- To our children all, or north or south of Manhattan,
- Point this day, leaving all the rest, to us over all--and yet we know
- not why,
- For what are we, mere strips of cloth profiting nothing,
- Only flapping in the wind?
- Poet:
- I hear and see not strips of cloth alone,
- I hear the tramp of armies, I hear the challenging sentry,
- I hear the jubilant shouts of millions of men, I hear Liberty!
- I hear the drums beat and the trumpets blowing,
- I myself move abroad swift-rising flying then,
- I use the wings of the land-bird and use the wings of the sea-bird,
- and look down as from a height,
- I do not deny the precious results of peace, I see populous cities
- with wealth incalculable,
- I see numberless farms, I see the farmers working in their fields or barns,
- I see mechanics working, I see buildings everywhere founded, going
- up, or finish’d,
- I see trains of cars swiftly speeding along railroad tracks drawn by
- the locomotives,
- I see the stores, depots, of Boston, Baltimore, Charleston, New Orleans,
- I see far in the West the immense area of grain, I dwell awhile hovering,
- I pass to the lumber forests of the North, and again to the Southern
- plantation, and again to California;
- Sweeping the whole I see the countless profit, the busy gatherings,
- earn’d wages,
- See the Identity formed out of thirty-eight spacious and haughty
- States, (and many more to come,)
- See forts on the shores of harbors, see ships sailing in and out;
- Then over all, (aye! aye!) my little and lengthen’d pennant shaped
- like a sword,
- Runs swiftly up indicating war and defiance--and now the halyards
- have rais’d it,
- Side of my banner broad and blue, side of my starry banner,
- Discarding peace over all the sea and land.
- Banner and Pennant:
- Yet louder, higher, stronger, bard! yet farther, wider cleave!
- No longer let our children deem us riches and peace alone,
- We may be terror and carnage, and are so now,
- Not now are we any one of these spacious and haughty States, (nor
- any five, nor ten,)
- Nor market nor depot we, nor money-bank in the city,
- But these and all, and the brown and spreading land, and the mines
- below, are ours,
- And the shores of the sea are ours, and the rivers great and small,
- And the fields they moisten, and the crops and the fruits are ours,
- Bays and channels and ships sailing in and out are ours--while we over all,
- Over the area spread below, the three or four millions of square
- miles, the capitals,
- The forty millions of people,--O bard! in life and death supreme,
- We, even we, henceforth flaunt out masterful, high up above,
- Not for the present alone, for a thousand years chanting through you,
- This song to the soul of one poor little child.
- Child:
- O my father I like not the houses,
- They will never to me be any thing, nor do I like money,
- But to mount up there I would like, O father dear, that banner I like,
- That pennant I would be and must be.
- Father:
- Child of mine you fill me with anguish,
- To be that pennant would be too fearful,
- Little you know what it is this day, and after this day, forever,
- It is to gain nothing, but risk and defy every thing,
- Forward to stand in front of wars--and O, such wars!--what have you
- to do with them?
- With passions of demons, slaughter, premature death?
- Banner:
- Demons and death then I sing,
- Put in all, aye all will I, sword-shaped pennant for war,
- And a pleasure new and ecstatic, and the prattled yearning of children,
- Blent with the sounds of the peaceful land and the liquid wash of the sea,
- And the black ships fighting on the sea envelop’d in smoke,
- And the icy cool of the far, far north, with rustling cedars and pines,
- And the whirr of drums and the sound of soldiers marching, and the
- hot sun shining south,
- And the beach-waves combing over the beach on my Eastern shore,
- and my Western shore the same,
- And all between those shores, and my ever running Mississippi with
- bends and chutes,
- And my Illinois fields, and my Kansas fields, and my fields of Missouri,
- The Continent, devoting the whole identity without reserving an atom,
- Pour in! whelm that which asks, which sings, with all and the yield of all,
- Fusing and holding, claiming, devouring the whole,
- No more with tender lip, nor musical labial sound,
- But out of the night emerging for good, our voice persuasive no more,
- Croaking like crows here in the wind.
- Poet:
- My limbs, my veins dilate, my theme is clear at last,
- Banner so broad advancing out of the night, I sing you haughty and resolute,
- I burst through where I waited long, too long, deafen’d and blinded,
- My hearing and tongue are come to me, (a little child taught me,)
- I hear from above O pennant of war your ironical call and demand,
- Insensate! insensate! (yet I at any rate chant you,) O banner!
- Not houses of peace indeed are you, nor any nor all their
- prosperity, (if need be, you shall again have every one of those
- houses to destroy them,
- You thought not to destroy those valuable houses, standing fast,
- full of comfort, built with money,
- May they stand fast, then? not an hour except you above them and all
- stand fast;)
- O banner, not money so precious are you, not farm produce you, nor
- the material good nutriment,
- Nor excellent stores, nor landed on wharves from the ships,
- Not the superb ships with sail-power or steam-power, fetching and
- carrying cargoes,
- Nor machinery, vehicles, trade, nor revenues--but you as henceforth
- I see you,
- Running up out of the night, bringing your cluster of stars,
- (ever-enlarging stars,)
- Divider of daybreak you, cutting the air, touch’d by the sun,
- measuring the sky,
- (Passionately seen and yearn’d for by one poor little child,
- While others remain busy or smartly talking, forever teaching
- thrift, thrift;)
- O you up there! O pennant! where you undulate like a snake hissing
- so curious,
- Out of reach, an idea only, yet furiously fought for, risking bloody
- death, loved by me,
- So loved--O you banner leading the day with stars brought from the night!
- Valueless, object of eyes, over all and demanding all--(absolute
- owner of all)--O banner and pennant!
- I too leave the rest--great as it is, it is nothing--houses, machines
- are nothing--I see them not,
- I see but you, O warlike pennant! O banner so broad, with stripes,
- sing you only,
- Flapping up there in the wind.
- Rise O Days from Your Fathomless Deeps
- 1
- Rise O days from your fathomless deeps, till you loftier, fiercer sweep,
- Long for my soul hungering gymnastic I devour’d what the earth gave me,
- Long I roam’d amid the woods of the north, long I watch’d Niagara pouring,
- I travel’d the prairies over and slept on their breast, I cross’d
- the Nevadas, I cross’d the plateaus,
- I ascended the towering rocks along the Pacific, I sail’d out to sea,
- I sail’d through the storm, I was refresh’d by the storm,
- I watch’d with joy the threatening maws of the waves,
- I mark’d the white combs where they career’d so high, curling over,
- I heard the wind piping, I saw the black clouds,
- Saw from below what arose and mounted, (O superb! O wild as my
- heart, and powerful!)
- Heard the continuous thunder as it bellow’d after the lightning,
- Noted the slender and jagged threads of lightning as sudden and
- fast amid the din they chased each other across the sky;
- These, and such as these, I, elate, saw--saw with wonder, yet pensive
- and masterful,
- All the menacing might of the globe uprisen around me,
- Yet there with my soul I fed, I fed content, supercilious.
- 2
- ’Twas well, O soul--’twas a good preparation you gave me,
- Now we advance our latent and ampler hunger to fill,
- Now we go forth to receive what the earth and the sea never gave us,
- Not through the mighty woods we go, but through the mightier cities,
- Something for us is pouring now more than Niagara pouring,
- Torrents of men, (sources and rills of the Northwest are you indeed
- inexhaustible?)
- What, to pavements and homesteads here, what were those storms of
- the mountains and sea?
- What, to passions I witness around me to-day? was the sea risen?
- Was the wind piping the pipe of death under the black clouds?
- Lo! from deeps more unfathomable, something more deadly and savage,
- Manhattan rising, advancing with menacing front--Cincinnati, Chicago,
- unchain’d;
- What was that swell I saw on the ocean? behold what comes here,
- How it climbs with daring feet and hands--how it dashes!
- How the true thunder bellows after the lightning--how bright the
- flashes of lightning!
- How Democracy with desperate vengeful port strides on, shown
- through the dark by those flashes of lightning!
- (Yet a mournful wall and low sob I fancied I heard through the dark,
- In a lull of the deafening confusion.)
- 3
- Thunder on! stride on, Democracy! strike with vengeful stroke!
- And do you rise higher than ever yet O days, O cities!
- Crash heavier, heavier yet O storms! you have done me good,
- My soul prepared in the mountains absorbs your immortal strong nutriment,
- Long had I walk’d my cities, my country roads through farms, only
- half satisfied,
- One doubt nauseous undulating like a snake, crawl’d on the ground before me,
- Continually preceding my steps, turning upon me oft, ironically hissing low;
- The cities I loved so well I abandon’d and left, I sped to the
- certainties suitable to me,
- Hungering, hungering, hungering, for primal energies and Nature’s
- dauntlessness,
- I refresh’d myself with it only, I could relish it only,
- I waited the bursting forth of the pent fire--on the water and air
- waited long;
- But now I no longer wait, I am fully satisfied, I am glutted,
- I have witness’d the true lightning, I have witness’d my cities electric,
- I have lived to behold man burst forth and warlike America rise,
- Hence I will seek no more the food of the northern solitary wilds,
- No more the mountains roam or sail the stormy sea.
- Virginia--The West
- The noble sire fallen on evil days,
- I saw with hand uplifted, menacing, brandishing,
- (Memories of old in abeyance, love and faith in abeyance,)
- The insane knife toward the Mother of All.
- The noble son on sinewy feet advancing,
- I saw, out of the land of prairies, land of Ohio’s waters and of Indiana,
- To the rescue the stalwart giant hurry his plenteous offspring,
- Drest in blue, bearing their trusty rifles on their shoulders.
- Then the Mother of All with calm voice speaking,
- As to you Rebellious, (I seemed to hear her say,) why strive against
- me, and why seek my life?
- When you yourself forever provide to defend me?
- For you provided me Washington--and now these also.
- City of Ships
- City of ships!
- (O the black ships! O the fierce ships!
- O the beautiful sharp-bow’d steam-ships and sail-ships!)
- City of the world! (for all races are here,
- All the lands of the earth make contributions here;)
- City of the sea! city of hurried and glittering tides!
- City whose gleeful tides continually rush or recede, whirling in and
- out with eddies and foam!
- City of wharves and stores--city of tall facades of marble and iron!
- Proud and passionate city--mettlesome, mad, extravagant city!
- Spring up O city--not for peace alone, but be indeed yourself, warlike!
- Fear not--submit to no models but your own O city!
- Behold me--incarnate me as I have incarnated you!
- I have rejected nothing you offer’d me--whom you adopted I have adopted,
- Good or bad I never question you--I love all--I do not condemn any thing,
- I chant and celebrate all that is yours--yet peace no more,
- In peace I chanted peace, but now the drum of war is mine,
- War, red war is my song through your streets, O city!
- The Centenarian’s Story
- [Volunteer of 1861-2, at Washington Park, Brooklyn, assisting
- the Centenarian.]
- Give me your hand old Revolutionary,
- The hill-top is nigh, but a few steps, (make room gentlemen,)
- Up the path you have follow’d me well, spite of your hundred and
- extra years,
- You can walk old man, though your eyes are almost done,
- Your faculties serve you, and presently I must have them serve me.
- Rest, while I tell what the crowd around us means,
- On the plain below recruits are drilling and exercising,
- There is the camp, one regiment departs to-morrow,
- Do you hear the officers giving their orders?
- Do you hear the clank of the muskets?
- Why what comes over you now old man?
- Why do you tremble and clutch my hand so convulsively?
- The troops are but drilling, they are yet surrounded with smiles,
- Around them at hand the well-drest friends and the women,
- While splendid and warm the afternoon sun shines down,
- Green the midsummer verdure and fresh blows the dallying breeze,
- O’er proud and peaceful cities and arm of the sea between.
- But drill and parade are over, they march back to quarters,
- Only hear that approval of hands! hear what a clapping!
- As wending the crowds now part and disperse--but we old man,
- Not for nothing have I brought you hither--we must remain,
- You to speak in your turn, and I to listen and tell.
- [The Centenarian]
- When I clutch’d your hand it was not with terror,
- But suddenly pouring about me here on every side,
- And below there where the boys were drilling, and up the slopes they ran,
- And where tents are pitch’d, and wherever you see south and south-
- east and south-west,
- Over hills, across lowlands, and in the skirts of woods,
- And along the shores, in mire (now fill’d over) came again and
- suddenly raged,
- As eighty-five years agone no mere parade receiv’d with applause of friends,
- But a battle which I took part in myself--aye, long ago as it is, I
- took part in it,
- Walking then this hilltop, this same ground.
- Aye, this is the ground,
- My blind eyes even as I speak behold it re-peopled from graves,
- The years recede, pavements and stately houses disappear,
- Rude forts appear again, the old hoop’d guns are mounted,
- I see the lines of rais’d earth stretching from river to bay,
- I mark the vista of waters, I mark the uplands and slopes;
- Here we lay encamp’d, it was this time in summer also.
- As I talk I remember all, I remember the Declaration,
- It was read here, the whole army paraded, it was read to us here,
- By his staff surrounded the General stood in the middle, he held up
- his unsheath’d sword,
- It glitter’d in the sun in full sight of the army.
- ’Twas a bold act then--the English war-ships had just arrived,
- We could watch down the lower bay where they lay at anchor,
- And the transports swarming with soldiers.
- A few days more and they landed, and then the battle.
- Twenty thousand were brought against us,
- A veteran force furnish’d with good artillery.
- I tell not now the whole of the battle,
- But one brigade early in the forenoon order’d forward to engage the
- red-coats,
- Of that brigade I tell, and how steadily it march’d,
- And how long and well it stood confronting death.
- Who do you think that was marching steadily sternly confronting death?
- It was the brigade of the youngest men, two thousand strong,
- Rais’d in Virginia and Maryland, and most of them known personally
- to the General.
- Jauntily forward they went with quick step toward Gowanus’ waters,
- Till of a sudden unlook’d for by defiles through the woods, gain’d at night,
- The British advancing, rounding in from the east, fiercely playing
- their guns,
- That brigade of the youngest was cut off and at the enemy’s mercy.
- The General watch’d them from this hill,
- They made repeated desperate attempts to burst their environment,
- Then drew close together, very compact, their flag flying in the middle,
- But O from the hills how the cannon were thinning and thinning them!
- It sickens me yet, that slaughter!
- I saw the moisture gather in drops on the face of the General.
- I saw how he wrung his hands in anguish.
- Meanwhile the British manœuvr’d to draw us out for a pitch’d battle,
- But we dared not trust the chances of a pitch’d battle.
- We fought the fight in detachments,
- Sallying forth we fought at several points, but in each the luck was
- against us,
- Our foe advancing, steadily getting the best of it, push’d us back
- to the works on this hill,
- Till we turn’d menacing here, and then he left us.
- That was the going out of the brigade of the youngest men, two thousand
- strong,
- Few return’d, nearly all remain in Brooklyn.
- That and here my General’s first battle,
- No women looking on nor sunshine to bask in, it did not conclude
- with applause,
- Nobody clapp’d hands here then.
- But in darkness in mist on the ground under a chill rain,
- Wearied that night we lay foil’d and sullen,
- While scornfully laugh’d many an arrogant lord off against us encamp’d,
- Quite within hearing, feasting, clinking wineglasses together over
- their victory.
- So dull and damp and another day,
- But the night of that, mist lifting, rain ceasing,
- Silent as a ghost while they thought they were sure of him, my
- General retreated.
- I saw him at the river-side,
- Down by the ferry lit by torches, hastening the embarcation;
- My General waited till the soldiers and wounded were all pass’d over,
- And then, (it was just ere sunrise,) these eyes rested on him for
- the last time.
- Every one else seem’d fill’d with gloom,
- Many no doubt thought of capitulation.
- But when my General pass’d me,
- As he stood in his boat and look’d toward the coming sun,
- I saw something different from capitulation.
- [Terminus]
- Enough, the Centenarian’s story ends,
- The two, the past and present, have interchanged,
- I myself as connecter, as chansonnier of a great future, am now speaking.
- And is this the ground Washington trod?
- And these waters I listlessly daily cross, are these the waters he cross’d,
- As resolute in defeat as other generals in their proudest triumphs?
- I must copy the story, and send it eastward and westward,
- I must preserve that look as it beam’d on you rivers of Brooklyn.
- See--as the annual round returns the phantoms return,
- It is the 27th of August and the British have landed,
- The battle begins and goes against us, behold through the smoke
- Washington’s face,
- The brigade of Virginia and Maryland have march’d forth to intercept
- the enemy,
- They are cut off, murderous artillery from the hills plays upon them,
- Rank after rank falls, while over them silently droops the flag,
- Baptized that day in many a young man’s bloody wounds.
- In death, defeat, and sisters’, mothers’ tears.
- Ah, hills and slopes of Brooklyn! I perceive you are more valuable
- than your owners supposed;
- In the midst of you stands an encampment very old,
- Stands forever the camp of that dead brigade.
- Cavalry Crossing a Ford
- A line in long array where they wind betwixt green islands,
- They take a serpentine course, their arms flash in the sun--hark to
- the musical clank,
- Behold the silvery river, in it the splashing horses loitering stop
- to drink,
- Behold the brown-faced men, each group, each person a picture, the
- negligent rest on the saddles,
- Some emerge on the opposite bank, others are just entering the ford--while,
- Scarlet and blue and snowy white,
- The guidon flags flutter gayly in the wind.
- Bivouac on a Mountain Side
- I see before me now a traveling army halting,
- Below a fertile valley spread, with barns and the orchards of summer,
- Behind, the terraced sides of a mountain, abrupt, in places rising high,
- Broken, with rocks, with clinging cedars, with tall shapes dingily seen,
- The numerous camp-fires scatter’d near and far, some away up on the
- mountain,
- The shadowy forms of men and horses, looming, large-sized, flickering,
- And over all the sky--the sky! far, far out of reach, studded,
- breaking out, the eternal stars.
- An Army Corps on the March
- With its cloud of skirmishers in advance,
- With now the sound of a single shot snapping like a whip, and now an
- irregular volley,
- The swarming ranks press on and on, the dense brigades press on,
- Glittering dimly, toiling under the sun--the dust-cover’d men,
- In columns rise and fall to the undulations of the ground,
- With artillery interspers’d--the wheels rumble, the horses sweat,
- As the army corps advances.
- By the Bivouac’s Fitful Flame
- By the bivouac’s fitful flame,
- A procession winding around me, solemn and sweet and slow--but
- first I note,
- The tents of the sleeping army, the fields’ and woods’ dim outline,
- The darkness lit by spots of kindled fire, the silence,
- Like a phantom far or near an occasional figure moving,
- The shrubs and trees, (as I lift my eyes they seem to be stealthily
- watching me,)
- While wind in procession thoughts, O tender and wondrous thoughts,
- Of life and death, of home and the past and loved, and of those that
- are far away;
- A solemn and slow procession there as I sit on the ground,
- By the bivouac’s fitful flame.
- Come Up from the Fields Father
- Come up from the fields father, here’s a letter from our Pete,
- And come to the front door mother, here’s a letter from thy dear son.
- Lo, ’tis autumn,
- Lo, where the trees, deeper green, yellower and redder,
- Cool and sweeten Ohio’s villages with leaves fluttering in the
- moderate wind,
- Where apples ripe in the orchards hang and grapes on the trellis’d vines,
- (Smell you the smell of the grapes on the vines?
- Smell you the buckwheat where the bees were lately buzzing?)
- Above all, lo, the sky so calm, so transparent after the rain, and
- with wondrous clouds,
- Below too, all calm, all vital and beautiful, and the farm prospers well.
- Down in the fields all prospers well,
- But now from the fields come father, come at the daughter’s call.
- And come to the entry mother, to the front door come right away.
- Fast as she can she hurries, something ominous, her steps trembling,
- She does not tarry to smooth her hair nor adjust her cap.
- Open the envelope quickly,
- O this is not our son’s writing, yet his name is sign’d,
- O a strange hand writes for our dear son, O stricken mother’s soul!
- All swims before her eyes, flashes with black, she catches the main
- words only,
- Sentences broken, gunshot wound in the breast, cavalry skirmish,
- taken to hospital,
- At present low, but will soon be better.
- Ah now the single figure to me,
- Amid all teeming and wealthy Ohio with all its cities and farms,
- Sickly white in the face and dull in the head, very faint,
- By the jamb of a door leans.
- Grieve not so, dear mother, (the just-grown daughter speaks through
- her sobs,
- The little sisters huddle around speechless and dismay’d,)
- See, dearest mother, the letter says Pete will soon be better.
- Alas poor boy, he will never be better, (nor may-be needs to be
- better, that brave and simple soul,)
- While they stand at home at the door he is dead already,
- The only son is dead.
- But the mother needs to be better,
- She with thin form presently drest in black,
- By day her meals untouch’d, then at night fitfully sleeping, often waking,
- In the midnight waking, weeping, longing with one deep longing,
- O that she might withdraw unnoticed, silent from life escape and withdraw,
- To follow, to seek, to be with her dear dead son.
- Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night
- Vigil strange I kept on the field one night;
- When you my son and my comrade dropt at my side that day,
- One look I but gave which your dear eyes return’d with a look I
- shall never forget,
- One touch of your hand to mine O boy, reach’d up as you lay on the ground,
- Then onward I sped in the battle, the even-contested battle,
- Till late in the night reliev’d to the place at last again I made my way,
- Found you in death so cold dear comrade, found your body son of
- responding kisses, (never again on earth responding,)
- Bared your face in the starlight, curious the scene, cool blew the
- moderate night-wind,
- Long there and then in vigil I stood, dimly around me the
- battlefield spreading,
- Vigil wondrous and vigil sweet there in the fragrant silent night,
- But not a tear fell, not even a long-drawn sigh, long, long I gazed,
- Then on the earth partially reclining sat by your side leaning my
- chin in my hands,
- Passing sweet hours, immortal and mystic hours with you dearest
- comrade--not a tear, not a word,
- Vigil of silence, love and death, vigil for you my son and my soldier,
- As onward silently stars aloft, eastward new ones upward stole,
- Vigil final for you brave boy, (I could not save you, swift was your death,
- I faithfully loved you and cared for you living, I think we shall
- surely meet again,)
- Till at latest lingering of the night, indeed just as the dawn appear’d,
- My comrade I wrapt in his blanket, envelop’d well his form,
- Folded the blanket well, tucking it carefully over head and
- carefully under feet,
- And there and then and bathed by the rising sun, my son in his
- grave, in his rude-dug grave I deposited,
- Ending my vigil strange with that, vigil of night and battle-field dim,
- Vigil for boy of responding kisses, (never again on earth responding,)
- Vigil for comrade swiftly slain, vigil I never forget, how as day
- brighten’d,
- I rose from the chill ground and folded my soldier well in his blanket,
- And buried him where he fell.
- A March in the Ranks Hard-Prest, and the Road Unknown
- A march in the ranks hard-prest, and the road unknown,
- A route through a heavy wood with muffled steps in the darkness,
- Our army foil’d with loss severe, and the sullen remnant retreating,
- Till after midnight glimmer upon us the lights of a dim-lighted building,
- We come to an open space in the woods, and halt by the dim-lighted building,
- ’Tis a large old church at the crossing roads, now an impromptu hospital,
- Entering but for a minute I see a sight beyond all the pictures and
- poems ever made,
- Shadows of deepest, deepest black, just lit by moving candles and lamps,
- And by one great pitchy torch stationary with wild red flame and
- clouds of smoke,
- By these, crowds, groups of forms vaguely I see on the floor, some
- in the pews laid down,
- At my feet more distinctly a soldier, a mere lad, in danger of
- bleeding to death, (he is shot in the abdomen,)
- I stanch the blood temporarily, (the youngster’s face is white as a lily,)
- Then before I depart I sweep my eyes o’er the scene fain to absorb it all,
- Faces, varieties, postures beyond description, most in obscurity,
- some of them dead,
- Surgeons operating, attendants holding lights, the smell of ether,
- odor of blood,
- The crowd, O the crowd of the bloody forms, the yard outside also fill’d,
- Some on the bare ground, some on planks or stretchers, some in the
- death-spasm sweating,
- An occasional scream or cry, the doctor’s shouted orders or calls,
- The glisten of the little steel instruments catching the glint of
- the torches,
- These I resume as I chant, I see again the forms, I smell the odor,
- Then hear outside the orders given, Fall in, my men, fall in;
- But first I bend to the dying lad, his eyes open, a half-smile gives he me,
- Then the eyes close, calmly close, and I speed forth to the darkness,
- Resuming, marching, ever in darkness marching, on in the ranks,
- The unknown road still marching.
- A Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Dim
- A sight in camp in the daybreak gray and dim,
- As from my tent I emerge so early sleepless,
- As slow I walk in the cool fresh air the path near by the hospital tent,
- Three forms I see on stretchers lying, brought out there untended lying,
- Over each the blanket spread, ample brownish woolen blanket,
- Gray and heavy blanket, folding, covering all.
- Curious I halt and silent stand,
- Then with light fingers I from the face of the nearest the first
- just lift the blanket;
- Who are you elderly man so gaunt and grim, with well-gray’d hair,
- and flesh all sunken about the eyes?
- Who are you my dear comrade?
- Then to the second I step--and who are you my child and darling?
- Who are you sweet boy with cheeks yet blooming?
- Then to the third--a face nor child nor old, very calm, as of
- beautiful yellow-white ivory;
- Young man I think I know you--I think this face is the face of the
- Christ himself,
- Dead and divine and brother of all, and here again he lies.
- As Toilsome I Wander’d Virginia’s Woods
- As toilsome I wander’d Virginia’s woods,
- To the music of rustling leaves kick’d by my feet, (for ’twas autumn,)
- I mark’d at the foot of a tree the grave of a soldier;
- Mortally wounded he and buried on the retreat, (easily all could
- understand,)
- The halt of a mid-day hour, when up! no time to lose--yet this sign left,
- On a tablet scrawl’d and nail’d on the tree by the grave,
- Bold, cautious, true, and my loving comrade.
- Long, long I muse, then on my way go wandering,
- Many a changeful season to follow, and many a scene of life,
- Yet at times through changeful season and scene, abrupt, alone, or
- in the crowded street,
- Comes before me the unknown soldier’s grave, comes the inscription
- rude in Virginia’s woods,
- Bold, cautious, true, and my loving comrade.
- Not the Pilot
- Not the pilot has charged himself to bring his ship into port,
- though beaten back and many times baffled;
- Not the pathfinder penetrating inland weary and long,
- By deserts parch’d, snows chill’d, rivers wet, perseveres till he
- reaches his destination,
- More than I have charged myself, heeded or unheeded, to compose
- march for these States,
- For a battle-call, rousing to arms if need be, years, centuries hence.
- Year That Trembled and Reel’d Beneath Me
- Year that trembled and reel’d beneath me!
- Your summer wind was warm enough, yet the air I breathed froze me,
- A thick gloom fell through the sunshine and darken’d me,
- Must I change my triumphant songs? said I to myself,
- Must I indeed learn to chant the cold dirges of the baffled?
- And sullen hymns of defeat?
- The Wound-Dresser
- 1
- An old man bending I come among new faces,
- Years looking backward resuming in answer to children,
- Come tell us old man, as from young men and maidens that love me,
- (Arous’d and angry, I’d thought to beat the alarum, and urge relentless war,
- But soon my fingers fail’d me, my face droop’d and I resign’d myself,
- To sit by the wounded and soothe them, or silently watch the dead;)
- Years hence of these scenes, of these furious passions, these chances,
- Of unsurpass’d heroes, (was one side so brave? the other was equally brave;)
- Now be witness again, paint the mightiest armies of earth,
- Of those armies so rapid so wondrous what saw you to tell us?
- What stays with you latest and deepest? of curious panics,
- Of hard-fought engagements or sieges tremendous what deepest remains?
- 2
- O maidens and young men I love and that love me,
- What you ask of my days those the strangest and sudden your talking recalls,
- Soldier alert I arrive after a long march cover’d with sweat and dust,
- In the nick of time I come, plunge in the fight, loudly shout in the
- rush of successful charge,
- Enter the captur’d works--yet lo, like a swift-running river they fade,
- Pass and are gone they fade--I dwell not on soldiers’ perils or
- soldiers’ joys,
- (Both I remember well--many the hardships, few the joys, yet I was content.)
- But in silence, in dreams’ projections,
- While the world of gain and appearance and mirth goes on,
- So soon what is over forgotten, and waves wash the imprints off the sand,
- With hinged knees returning I enter the doors, (while for you up there,
- Whoever you are, follow without noise and be of strong heart.)
- Bearing the bandages, water and sponge,
- Straight and swift to my wounded I go,
- Where they lie on the ground after the battle brought in,
- Where their priceless blood reddens the grass the ground,
- Or to the rows of the hospital tent, or under the roof’d hospital,
- To the long rows of cots up and down each side I return,
- To each and all one after another I draw near, not one do I miss,
- An attendant follows holding a tray, he carries a refuse pail,
- Soon to be fill’d with clotted rags and blood, emptied, and fill’d again.
- I onward go, I stop,
- With hinged knees and steady hand to dress wounds,
- I am firm with each, the pangs are sharp yet unavoidable,
- One turns to me his appealing eyes--poor boy! I never knew you,
- Yet I think I could not refuse this moment to die for you, if that
- would save you.
- 3
- On, on I go, (open doors of time! open hospital doors!)
- The crush’d head I dress, (poor crazed hand tear not the bandage away,)
- The neck of the cavalry-man with the bullet through and through examine,
- Hard the breathing rattles, quite glazed already the eye, yet life
- struggles hard,
- (Come sweet death! be persuaded O beautiful death!
- In mercy come quickly.)
- From the stump of the arm, the amputated hand,
- I undo the clotted lint, remove the slough, wash off the matter and blood,
- Back on his pillow the soldier bends with curv’d neck and side falling head,
- His eyes are closed, his face is pale, he dares not look on the
- bloody stump,
- And has not yet look’d on it.
- I dress a wound in the side, deep, deep,
- But a day or two more, for see the frame all wasted and sinking,
- And the yellow-blue countenance see.
- I dress the perforated shoulder, the foot with the bullet-wound,
- Cleanse the one with a gnawing and putrid gangrene, so sickening,
- so offensive,
- While the attendant stands behind aside me holding the tray and pail.
- I am faithful, I do not give out,
- The fractur’d thigh, the knee, the wound in the abdomen,
- These and more I dress with impassive hand, (yet deep in my breast
- a fire, a burning flame.)
- 4
- Thus in silence in dreams’ projections,
- Returning, resuming, I thread my way through the hospitals,
- The hurt and wounded I pacify with soothing hand,
- I sit by the restless all the dark night, some are so young,
- Some suffer so much, I recall the experience sweet and sad,
- (Many a soldier’s loving arms about this neck have cross’d and rested,
- Many a soldier’s kiss dwells on these bearded lips.)
- Long, Too Long America
- Long, too long America,
- Traveling roads all even and peaceful you learn’d from joys and
- prosperity only,
- But now, ah now, to learn from crises of anguish, advancing,
- grappling with direst fate and recoiling not,
- And now to conceive and show to the world what your children
- en-masse really are,
- (For who except myself has yet conceiv’d what your children en-masse
- really are?)
- Give Me the Splendid Silent Sun
- 1
- Give me the splendid silent sun with all his beams full-dazzling,
- Give me autumnal fruit ripe and red from the orchard,
- Give me a field where the unmow’d grass grows,
- Give me an arbor, give me the trellis’d grape,
- Give me fresh corn and wheat, give me serene-moving animals teaching
- content,
- Give me nights perfectly quiet as on high plateaus west of the
- Mississippi, and I looking up at the stars,
- Give me odorous at sunrise a garden of beautiful flowers where I can
- walk undisturb’d,
- Give me for marriage a sweet-breath’d woman of whom I should never tire,
- Give me a perfect child, give me away aside from the noise of the
- world a rural domestic life,
- Give me to warble spontaneous songs recluse by myself, for my own ears only,
- Give me solitude, give me Nature, give me again O Nature your primal
- sanities!
- These demanding to have them, (tired with ceaseless excitement, and
- rack’d by the war-strife,)
- These to procure incessantly asking, rising in cries from my heart,
- While yet incessantly asking still I adhere to my city,
- Day upon day and year upon year O city, walking your streets,
- Where you hold me enchain’d a certain time refusing to give me up,
- Yet giving to make me glutted, enrich’d of soul, you give me forever faces;
- (O I see what I sought to escape, confronting, reversing my cries,
- see my own soul trampling down what it ask’d for.)
- 2
- Keep your splendid silent sun,
- Keep your woods O Nature, and the quiet places by the woods,
- Keep your fields of clover and timothy, and your corn-fields and orchards,
- Keep the blossoming buckwheat fields where the Ninth-month bees hum;
- Give me faces and streets--give me these phantoms incessant and
- endless along the trottoirs!
- Give me interminable eyes--give me women--give me comrades and
- lovers by the thousand!
- Let me see new ones every day--let me hold new ones by the hand every day!
- Give me such shows--give me the streets of Manhattan!
- Give me Broadway, with the soldiers marching--give me the sound of
- the trumpets and drums!
- (The soldiers in companies or regiments--some starting away, flush’d
- and reckless,
- Some, their time up, returning with thinn’d ranks, young, yet very
- old, worn, marching, noticing nothing;)
- Give me the shores and wharves heavy-fringed with black ships!
- O such for me! O an intense life, full to repletion and varied!
- The life of the theatre, bar-room, huge hotel, for me!
- The saloon of the steamer! the crowded excursion for me! the
- torchlight procession!
- The dense brigade bound for the war, with high piled military wagons
- following;
- People, endless, streaming, with strong voices, passions, pageants,
- Manhattan streets with their powerful throbs, with beating drums as now,
- The endless and noisy chorus, the rustle and clank of muskets, (even
- the sight of the wounded,)
- Manhattan crowds, with their turbulent musical chorus!
- Manhattan faces and eyes forever for me.
- Dirge for Two Veterans
- The last sunbeam
- Lightly falls from the finish’d Sabbath,
- On the pavement here, and there beyond it is looking,
- Down a new-made double grave.
- Lo, the moon ascending,
- Up from the east the silvery round moon,
- Beautiful over the house-tops, ghastly, phantom moon,
- Immense and silent moon.
- I see a sad procession,
- And I hear the sound of coming full-key’d bugles,
- All the channels of the city streets they’re flooding,
- As with voices and with tears.
- I hear the great drums pounding,
- And the small drums steady whirring,
- And every blow of the great convulsive drums,
- Strikes me through and through.
- For the son is brought with the father,
- (In the foremost ranks of the fierce assault they fell,
- Two veterans son and father dropt together,
- And the double grave awaits them.)
- Now nearer blow the bugles,
- And the drums strike more convulsive,
- And the daylight o’er the pavement quite has faded,
- And the strong dead-march enwraps me.
- In the eastern sky up-buoying,
- The sorrowful vast phantom moves illumin’d,
- (’Tis some mother’s large transparent face,
- In heaven brighter growing.)
- O strong dead-march you please me!
- O moon immense with your silvery face you soothe me!
- O my soldiers twain! O my veterans passing to burial!
- What I have I also give you.
- The moon gives you light,
- And the bugles and the drums give you music,
- And my heart, O my soldiers, my veterans,
- My heart gives you love.
- Over the Carnage Rose Prophetic a Voice
- Over the carnage rose prophetic a voice,
- Be not dishearten’d, affection shall solve the problems of freedom yet,
- Those who love each other shall become invincible,
- They shall yet make Columbia victorious.
- Sons of the Mother of All, you shall yet be victorious,
- You shall yet laugh to scorn the attacks of all the remainder of the earth.
- No danger shall balk Columbia’s lovers,
- If need be a thousand shall sternly immolate themselves for one.
- One from Massachusetts shall be a Missourian’s comrade,
- From Maine and from hot Carolina, and another an Oregonese, shall
- be friends triune,
- More precious to each other than all the riches of the earth.
- To Michigan, Florida perfumes shall tenderly come,
- Not the perfumes of flowers, but sweeter, and wafted beyond death.
- It shall be customary in the houses and streets to see manly affection,
- The most dauntless and rude shall touch face to face lightly,
- The dependence of Liberty shall be lovers,
- The continuance of Equality shall be comrades.
- These shall tie you and band you stronger than hoops of iron,
- I, ecstatic, O partners! O lands! with the love of lovers tie you.
- (Were you looking to be held together by lawyers?
- Or by an agreement on a paper? or by arms?
- Nay, nor the world, nor any living thing, will so cohere.)
- I Saw Old General at Bay
- I saw old General at bay,
- (Old as he was, his gray eyes yet shone out in battle like stars,)
- His small force was now completely hemm’d in, in his works,
- He call’d for volunteers to run the enemy’s lines, a desperate emergency,
- I saw a hundred and more step forth from the ranks, but two or three
- were selected,
- I saw them receive their orders aside, they listen’d with care, the
- adjutant was very grave,
- I saw them depart with cheerfulness, freely risking their lives.
- The Artilleryman’s Vision
- While my wife at my side lies slumbering, and the wars are over long,
- And my head on the pillow rests at home, and the vacant midnight passes,
- And through the stillness, through the dark, I hear, just hear, the
- breath of my infant,
- There in the room as I wake from sleep this vision presses upon me;
- The engagement opens there and then in fantasy unreal,
- The skirmishers begin, they crawl cautiously ahead, I hear the
- irregular snap! snap!
- I hear the sounds of the different missiles, the short t-h-t! t-h-t!
- of the rifle-balls,
- I see the shells exploding leaving small white clouds, I hear the
- great shells shrieking as they pass,
- The grape like the hum and whirr of wind through the trees,
- (tumultuous now the contest rages,)
- All the scenes at the batteries rise in detail before me again,
- The crashing and smoking, the pride of the men in their pieces,
- The chief-gunner ranges and sights his piece and selects a fuse of
- the right time,
- After firing I see him lean aside and look eagerly off to note the effect;
- Elsewhere I hear the cry of a regiment charging, (the young colonel
- leads himself this time with brandish’d sword,)
- I see the gaps cut by the enemy’s volleys, (quickly fill’d up, no delay,)
- I breathe the suffocating smoke, then the flat clouds hover low
- concealing all;
- Now a strange lull for a few seconds, not a shot fired on either side,
- Then resumed the chaos louder than ever, with eager calls and
- orders of officers,
- While from some distant part of the field the wind wafts to my ears
- a shout of applause, (some special success,)
- And ever the sound of the cannon far or near, (rousing even in
- dreams a devilish exultation and all the old mad joy in the
- depths of my soul,)
- And ever the hastening of infantry shifting positions, batteries,
- cavalry, moving hither and thither,
- (The falling, dying, I heed not, the wounded dripping and red
- heed not, some to the rear are hobbling,)
- Grime, heat, rush, aide-de-camps galloping by or on a full run,
- With the patter of small arms, the warning s-s-t of the rifles,
- (these in my vision I hear or see,)
- And bombs bursting in air, and at night the vari-color’d rockets.
- Ethiopia Saluting the Colors
- Who are you dusky woman, so ancient hardly human,
- With your woolly-white and turban’d head, and bare bony feet?
- Why rising by the roadside here, do you the colors greet?
- (’Tis while our army lines Carolina’s sands and pines,
- Forth from thy hovel door thou Ethiopia com’st to me,
- As under doughty Sherman I march toward the sea.)
- Me master years a hundred since from my parents sunder’d,
- A little child, they caught me as the savage beast is caught,
- Then hither me across the sea the cruel slaver brought.
- No further does she say, but lingering all the day,
- Her high-borne turban’d head she wags, and rolls her darkling eye,
- And courtesies to the regiments, the guidons moving by.
- What is it fateful woman, so blear, hardly human?
- Why wag your head with turban bound, yellow, red and green?
- Are the things so strange and marvelous you see or have seen?
- Not Youth Pertains to Me
- Not youth pertains to me,
- Nor delicatesse, I cannot beguile the time with talk,
- Awkward in the parlor, neither a dancer nor elegant,
- In the learn’d coterie sitting constrain’d and still, for learning
- inures not to me,
- Beauty, knowledge, inure not to me--yet there are two or three things
- inure to me,
- I have nourish’d the wounded and sooth’d many a dying soldier,
- And at intervals waiting or in the midst of camp,
- Composed these songs.
- Race of Veterans
- Race of veterans--race of victors!
- Race of the soil, ready for conflict--race of the conquering march!
- (No more credulity’s race, abiding-temper’d race,)
- Race henceforth owning no law but the law of itself,
- Race of passion and the storm.
- World Take Good Notice
- World take good notice, silver stars fading,
- Milky hue ript, wet of white detaching,
- Coals thirty-eight, baleful and burning,
- Scarlet, significant, hands off warning,
- Now and henceforth flaunt from these shores.
- O Tan-Faced Prairie-Boy
- O tan-faced prairie-boy,
- Before you came to camp came many a welcome gift,
- Praises and presents came and nourishing food, till at last among
- the recruits,
- You came, taciturn, with nothing to give--we but look’d on each other,
- When lo! more than all the gifts of the world you gave me.
- Look Down Fair Moon
- Look down fair moon and bathe this scene,
- Pour softly down night’s nimbus floods on faces ghastly, swollen, purple,
- On the dead on their backs with arms toss’d wide,
- Pour down your unstinted nimbus sacred moon.
- Reconciliation
- Word over all, beautiful as the sky,
- Beautiful that war and all its deeds of carnage must in time be
- utterly lost,
- That the hands of the sisters Death and Night incessantly softly
- wash again, and ever again, this solid world;
- For my enemy is dead, a man divine as myself is dead,
- I look where he lies white-faced and still in the coffin--I draw near,
- Bend down and touch lightly with my lips the white face in the coffin.
- How Solemn As One by One [Washington City, 1865]
- How solemn as one by one,
- As the ranks returning worn and sweaty, as the men file by where stand,
- As the faces the masks appear, as I glance at the faces studying the masks,
- (As I glance upward out of this page studying you, dear friend,
- whoever you are,)
- How solemn the thought of my whispering soul to each in the ranks,
- and to you,
- I see behind each mask that wonder a kindred soul,
- O the bullet could never kill what you really are, dear friend,
- Nor the bayonet stab what you really are;
- The soul! yourself I see, great as any, good as the best,
- Waiting secure and content, which the bullet could never kill,
- Nor the bayonet stab O friend.
- As I Lay with My Head in Your Lap Camerado
- As I lay with my head in your lap camerado,
- The confession I made I resume, what I said to you and the open air
- I resume,
- I know I am restless and make others so,
- I know my words are weapons full of danger, full of death,
- For I confront peace, security, and all the settled laws, to
- unsettle them,
- I am more resolute because all have denied me than I could ever have
- been had all accepted me,
- I heed not and have never heeded either experience, cautions,
- majorities, nor ridicule,
- And the threat of what is call’d hell is little or nothing to me,
- And the lure of what is call’d heaven is little or nothing to me;
- Dear camerado! I confess I have urged you onward with me, and still
- urge you, without the least idea what is our destination,
- Or whether we shall be victorious, or utterly quell’d and defeated.
- Delicate Cluster
- Delicate cluster! flag of teeming life!
- Covering all my lands--all my seashores lining!
- Flag of death! (how I watch’d you through the smoke of battle pressing!
- How I heard you flap and rustle, cloth defiant!)
- Flag cerulean--sunny flag, with the orbs of night dappled!
- Ah my silvery beauty--ah my woolly white and crimson!
- Ah to sing the song of you, my matron mighty!
- My sacred one, my mother.
- To a Certain Civilian
- Did you ask dulcet rhymes from me?
- Did you seek the civilian’s peaceful and languishing rhymes?
- Did you find what I sang erewhile so hard to follow?
- Why I was not singing erewhile for you to follow, to understand--nor
- am I now;
- (I have been born of the same as the war was born,
- The drum-corps’ rattle is ever to me sweet music, I love well the
- martial dirge,
- With slow wail and convulsive throb leading the officer’s funeral;)
- What to such as you anyhow such a poet as I? therefore leave my works,
- And go lull yourself with what you can understand, and with piano-tunes,
- For I lull nobody, and you will never understand me.
- Lo, Victress on the Peaks
- Lo, Victress on the peaks,
- Where thou with mighty brow regarding the world,
- (The world O Libertad, that vainly conspired against thee,)
- Out of its countless beleaguering toils, after thwarting them all,
- Dominant, with the dazzling sun around thee,
- Flauntest now unharm’d in immortal soundness and bloom--lo, in
- these hours supreme,
- No poem proud, I chanting bring to thee, nor mastery’s rapturous verse,
- But a cluster containing night’s darkness and blood-dripping wounds,
- And psalms of the dead.
- Spirit Whose Work Is Done [Washington City, 1865]
- Spirit whose work is done--spirit of dreadful hours!
- Ere departing fade from my eyes your forests of bayonets;
- Spirit of gloomiest fears and doubts, (yet onward ever unfaltering
- pressing,)
- Spirit of many a solemn day and many a savage scene--electric spirit,
- That with muttering voice through the war now closed, like a
- tireless phantom flitted,
- Rousing the land with breath of flame, while you beat and beat the drum,
- Now as the sound of the drum, hollow and harsh to the last,
- reverberates round me,
- As your ranks, your immortal ranks, return, return from the battles,
- As the muskets of the young men yet lean over their shoulders,
- As I look on the bayonets bristling over their shoulders,
- As those slanted bayonets, whole forests of them appearing in the
- distance, approach and pass on, returning homeward,
- Moving with steady motion, swaying to and fro to the right and left,
- Evenly lightly rising and falling while the steps keep time;
- Spirit of hours I knew, all hectic red one day, but pale as death next day,
- Touch my mouth ere you depart, press my lips close,
- Leave me your pulses of rage--bequeath them to me--fill me with
- currents convulsive,
- Let them scorch and blister out of my chants when you are gone,
- Let them identify you to the future in these songs.
- Adieu to a Soldier
- Adieu O soldier,
- You of the rude campaigning, (which we shared,)
- The rapid march, the life of the camp,
- The hot contention of opposing fronts, the long manœuvre,
- Red battles with their slaughter, the stimulus, the strong terrific game,
- Spell of all brave and manly hearts, the trains of time through you
- and like of you all fill’d,
- With war and war’s expression.
- Adieu dear comrade,
- Your mission is fulfill’d--but I, more warlike,
- Myself and this contentious soul of mine,
- Still on our own campaigning bound,
- Through untried roads with ambushes opponents lined,
- Through many a sharp defeat and many a crisis, often baffled,
- Here marching, ever marching on, a war fight out--aye here,
- To fiercer, weightier battles give expression.
- Turn O Libertad
- Turn O Libertad, for the war is over,
- From it and all henceforth expanding, doubting no more, resolute,
- sweeping the world,
- Turn from lands retrospective recording proofs of the past,
- From the singers that sing the trailing glories of the past,
- From the chants of the feudal world, the triumphs of kings, slavery, caste,
- Turn to the world, the triumphs reserv’d and to come--give up that
- backward world,
- Leave to the singers of hitherto, give them the trailing past,
- But what remains remains for singers for you--wars to come are for you,
- (Lo, how the wars of the past have duly inured to you, and the wars
- of the present also inure;)
- Then turn, and be not alarm’d O Libertad--turn your undying face,
- To where the future, greater than all the past,
- Is swiftly, surely preparing for you.
- To the Leaven’d Soil They Trod
- To the leaven’d soil they trod calling I sing for the last,
- (Forth from my tent emerging for good, loosing, untying the tent-ropes,)
- In the freshness the forenoon air, in the far-stretching circuits
- and vistas again to peace restored,
- To the fiery fields emanative and the endless vistas beyond, to the
- South and the North,
- To the leaven’d soil of the general Western world to attest my songs,
- To the Alleghanian hills and the tireless Mississippi,
- To the rocks I calling sing, and all the trees in the woods,
- To the plains of the poems of heroes, to the prairies spreading wide,
- To the far-off sea and the unseen winds, and the sane impalpable air;
- And responding they answer all, (but not in words,)
- The average earth, the witness of war and peace, acknowledges mutely,
- The prairie draws me close, as the father to bosom broad the son,
- The Northern ice and rain that began me nourish me to the end,
- But the hot sun of the South is to fully ripen my songs.
- BOOK XXII. MEMORIES OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN
- When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d
- 1
- When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom’d,
- And the great star early droop’d in the western sky in the night,
- I mourn’d, and yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.
- Ever-returning spring, trinity sure to me you bring,
- Lilac blooming perennial and drooping star in the west,
- And thought of him I love.
- 2
- O powerful western fallen star!
- O shades of night--O moody, tearful night!
- O great star disappear’d--O the black murk that hides the star!
- O cruel hands that hold me powerless--O helpless soul of me!
- O harsh surrounding cloud that will not free my soul.
- 3
- In the dooryard fronting an old farm-house near the white-wash’d palings,
- Stands the lilac-bush tall-growing with heart-shaped leaves of rich green,
- With many a pointed blossom rising delicate, with the perfume strong I love,
- With every leaf a miracle--and from this bush in the dooryard,
- With delicate-color’d blossoms and heart-shaped leaves of rich green,
- A sprig with its flower I break.
- 4
- In the swamp in secluded recesses,
- A shy and hidden bird is warbling a song.
- Solitary the thrush,
- The hermit withdrawn to himself, avoiding the settlements,
- Sings by himself a song.
- Song of the bleeding throat,
- Death’s outlet song of life, (for well dear brother I know,
- If thou wast not granted to sing thou wouldst surely die.)
- 5
- Over the breast of the spring, the land, amid cities,
- Amid lanes and through old woods, where lately the violets peep’d
- from the ground, spotting the gray debris,
- Amid the grass in the fields each side of the lanes, passing the
- endless grass,
- Passing the yellow-spear’d wheat, every grain from its shroud in the
- dark-brown fields uprisen,
- Passing the apple-tree blows of white and pink in the orchards,
- Carrying a corpse to where it shall rest in the grave,
- Night and day journeys a coffin.
- 6
- Coffin that passes through lanes and streets,
- Through day and night with the great cloud darkening the land,
- With the pomp of the inloop’d flags with the cities draped in black,
- With the show of the States themselves as of crape-veil’d women standing,
- With processions long and winding and the flambeaus of the night,
- With the countless torches lit, with the silent sea of faces and the
- unbared heads,
- With the waiting depot, the arriving coffin, and the sombre faces,
- With dirges through the night, with the thousand voices rising strong
- and solemn,
- With all the mournful voices of the dirges pour’d around the coffin,
- The dim-lit churches and the shuddering organs--where amid these
- you journey,
- With the tolling tolling bells’ perpetual clang,
- Here, coffin that slowly passes,
- I give you my sprig of lilac.
- 7
- (Nor for you, for one alone,
- Blossoms and branches green to coffins all I bring,
- For fresh as the morning, thus would I chant a song for you O sane
- and sacred death.
- All over bouquets of roses,
- O death, I cover you over with roses and early lilies,
- But mostly and now the lilac that blooms the first,
- Copious I break, I break the sprigs from the bushes,
- With loaded arms I come, pouring for you,
- For you and the coffins all of you O death.)
- 8
- O western orb sailing the heaven,
- Now I know what you must have meant as a month since I walk’d,
- As I walk’d in silence the transparent shadowy night,
- As I saw you had something to tell as you bent to me night after night,
- As you droop’d from the sky low down as if to my side, (while the
- other stars all look’d on,)
- As we wander’d together the solemn night, (for something I know not
- what kept me from sleep,)
- As the night advanced, and I saw on the rim of the west how full you
- were of woe,
- As I stood on the rising ground in the breeze in the cool transparent night,
- As I watch’d where you pass’d and was lost in the netherward black
- of the night,
- As my soul in its trouble dissatisfied sank, as where you sad orb,
- Concluded, dropt in the night, and was gone.
- 9
- Sing on there in the swamp,
- O singer bashful and tender, I hear your notes, I hear your call,
- I hear, I come presently, I understand you,
- But a moment I linger, for the lustrous star has detain’d me,
- The star my departing comrade holds and detains me.
- 10
- O how shall I warble myself for the dead one there I loved?
- And how shall I deck my song for the large sweet soul that has gone?
- And what shall my perfume be for the grave of him I love?
- Sea-winds blown from east and west,
- Blown from the Eastern sea and blown from the Western sea, till
- there on the prairies meeting,
- These and with these and the breath of my chant,
- I’ll perfume the grave of him I love.
- 11
- O what shall I hang on the chamber walls?
- And what shall the pictures be that I hang on the walls,
- To adorn the burial-house of him I love?
- Pictures of growing spring and farms and homes,
- With the Fourth-month eve at sundown, and the gray smoke lucid and bright,
- With floods of the yellow gold of the gorgeous, indolent, sinking
- sun, burning, expanding the air,
- With the fresh sweet herbage under foot, and the pale green leaves
- of the trees prolific,
- In the distance the flowing glaze, the breast of the river, with a
- wind-dapple here and there,
- With ranging hills on the banks, with many a line against the sky,
- and shadows,
- And the city at hand with dwellings so dense, and stacks of chimneys,
- And all the scenes of life and the workshops, and the workmen
- homeward returning.
- 12
- Lo, body and soul--this land,
- My own Manhattan with spires, and the sparkling and hurrying tides,
- and the ships,
- The varied and ample land, the South and the North in the light,
- Ohio’s shores and flashing Missouri,
- And ever the far-spreading prairies cover’d with grass and corn.
- Lo, the most excellent sun so calm and haughty,
- The violet and purple morn with just-felt breezes,
- The gentle soft-born measureless light,
- The miracle spreading bathing all, the fulfill’d noon,
- The coming eve delicious, the welcome night and the stars,
- Over my cities shining all, enveloping man and land.
- 13
- Sing on, sing on you gray-brown bird,
- Sing from the swamps, the recesses, pour your chant from the bushes,
- Limitless out of the dusk, out of the cedars and pines.
- Sing on dearest brother, warble your reedy song,
- Loud human song, with voice of uttermost woe.
- O liquid and free and tender!
- O wild and loose to my soul--O wondrous singer!
- You only I hear--yet the star holds me, (but will soon depart,)
- Yet the lilac with mastering odor holds me.
- 14
- Now while I sat in the day and look’d forth,
- In the close of the day with its light and the fields of spring, and
- the farmers preparing their crops,
- In the large unconscious scenery of my land with its lakes and forests,
- In the heavenly aerial beauty, (after the perturb’d winds and the storms,)
- Under the arching heavens of the afternoon swift passing, and the
- voices of children and women,
- The many-moving sea-tides, and I saw the ships how they sail’d,
- And the summer approaching with richness, and the fields all busy
- with labor,
- And the infinite separate houses, how they all went on, each with
- its meals and minutia of daily usages,
- And the streets how their throbbings throbb’d, and the cities pent--
- lo, then and there,
- Falling upon them all and among them all, enveloping me with the rest,
- Appear’d the cloud, appear’d the long black trail,
- And I knew death, its thought, and the sacred knowledge of death.
- Then with the knowledge of death as walking one side of me,
- And the thought of death close-walking the other side of me,
- And I in the middle as with companions, and as holding the hands of
- companions,
- I fled forth to the hiding receiving night that talks not,
- Down to the shores of the water, the path by the swamp in the dimness,
- To the solemn shadowy cedars and ghostly pines so still.
- And the singer so shy to the rest receiv’d me,
- The gray-brown bird I know receiv’d us comrades three,
- And he sang the carol of death, and a verse for him I love.
- From deep secluded recesses,
- From the fragrant cedars and the ghostly pines so still,
- Came the carol of the bird.
- And the charm of the carol rapt me,
- As I held as if by their hands my comrades in the night,
- And the voice of my spirit tallied the song of the bird.
- Come lovely and soothing death,
- Undulate round the world, serenely arriving, arriving,
- In the day, in the night, to all, to each,
- Sooner or later delicate death.
- Prais’d be the fathomless universe,
- For life and joy, and for objects and knowledge curious,
- And for love, sweet love--but praise! praise! praise!
- For the sure-enwinding arms of cool-enfolding death.
- Dark mother always gliding near with soft feet,
- Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome?
- Then I chant it for thee, I glorify thee above all,
- I bring thee a song that when thou must indeed come, come unfalteringly.
- Approach strong deliveress,
- When it is so, when thou hast taken them I joyously sing the dead,
- Lost in the loving floating ocean of thee,
- Laved in the flood of thy bliss O death.
- From me to thee glad serenades,
- Dances for thee I propose saluting thee, adornments and feastings for thee,
- And the sights of the open landscape and the high-spread shy are fitting,
- And life and the fields, and the huge and thoughtful night.
- The night in silence under many a star,
- The ocean shore and the husky whispering wave whose voice I know,
- And the soul turning to thee O vast and well-veil’d death,
- And the body gratefully nestling close to thee.
- Over the tree-tops I float thee a song,
- Over the rising and sinking waves, over the myriad fields and the
- prairies wide,
- Over the dense-pack’d cities all and the teeming wharves and ways,
- I float this carol with joy, with joy to thee O death.
- 15
- To the tally of my soul,
- Loud and strong kept up the gray-brown bird,
- With pure deliberate notes spreading filling the night.
- Loud in the pines and cedars dim,
- Clear in the freshness moist and the swamp-perfume,
- And I with my comrades there in the night.
- While my sight that was bound in my eyes unclosed,
- As to long panoramas of visions.
- And I saw askant the armies,
- I saw as in noiseless dreams hundreds of battle-flags,
- Borne through the smoke of the battles and pierc’d with missiles I saw them,
- And carried hither and yon through the smoke, and torn and bloody,
- And at last but a few shreds left on the staffs, (and all in silence,)
- And the staffs all splinter’d and broken.
- I saw battle-corpses, myriads of them,
- And the white skeletons of young men, I saw them,
- I saw the debris and debris of all the slain soldiers of the war,
- But I saw they were not as was thought,
- They themselves were fully at rest, they suffer’d not,
- The living remain’d and suffer’d, the mother suffer’d,
- And the wife and the child and the musing comrade suffer’d,
- And the armies that remain’d suffer’d.
- 16
- Passing the visions, passing the night,
- Passing, unloosing the hold of my comrades’ hands,
- Passing the song of the hermit bird and the tallying song of my soul,
- Victorious song, death’s outlet song, yet varying ever-altering song,
- As low and wailing, yet clear the notes, rising and falling,
- flooding the night,
- Sadly sinking and fainting, as warning and warning, and yet again
- bursting with joy,
- Covering the earth and filling the spread of the heaven,
- As that powerful psalm in the night I heard from recesses,
- Passing, I leave thee lilac with heart-shaped leaves,
- I leave thee there in the door-yard, blooming, returning with spring.
- I cease from my song for thee,
- From my gaze on thee in the west, fronting the west, communing with thee,
- O comrade lustrous with silver face in the night.
- Yet each to keep and all, retrievements out of the night,
- The song, the wondrous chant of the gray-brown bird,
- And the tallying chant, the echo arous’d in my soul,
- With the lustrous and drooping star with the countenance full of woe,
- With the holders holding my hand nearing the call of the bird,
- Comrades mine and I in the midst, and their memory ever to keep, for
- the dead I loved so well,
- For the sweetest, wisest soul of all my days and lands--and this for
- his dear sake,
- Lilac and star and bird twined with the chant of my soul,
- There in the fragrant pines and the cedars dusk and dim.
- O Captain! My Captain!
- O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done,
- The ship has weather’d every rack, the prize we sought is won,
- The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
- While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
- But O heart! heart! heart!
- O the bleeding drops of red,
- Where on the deck my Captain lies,
- Fallen cold and dead.
- O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
- Rise up--for you the flag is flung--for you the bugle trills,
- For you bouquets and ribbon’d wreaths--for you the shores a-crowding,
- For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
- Here Captain! dear father!
- This arm beneath your head!
- It is some dream that on the deck,
- You’ve fallen cold and dead.
- My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still,
- My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will,
- The ship is anchor’d safe and sound, its voyage closed and done,
- From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;
- Exult O shores, and ring O bells!
- But I with mournful tread,
- Walk the deck my Captain lies,
- Fallen cold and dead.
- Hush’d Be the Camps To-Day [May 4, 1865
- Hush’d be the camps to-day,
- And soldiers let us drape our war-worn weapons,
- And each with musing soul retire to celebrate,
- Our dear commander’s death.
- No more for him life’s stormy conflicts,
- Nor victory, nor defeat--no more time’s dark events,
- Charging like ceaseless clouds across the sky.
- But sing poet in our name,
- Sing of the love we bore him--because you, dweller in camps, know it truly.
- As they invault the coffin there,
- Sing--as they close the doors of earth upon him--one verse,
- For the heavy hearts of soldiers.
- This Dust Was Once the Man
- This dust was once the man,
- Gentle, plain, just and resolute, under whose cautious hand,
- Against the foulest crime in history known in any land or age,
- Was saved the Union of these States.
- BOOK XXIII
- By Blue Ontario’s Shore
- By blue Ontario’s shore,
- As I mused of these warlike days and of peace return’d, and the
- dead that return no more,
- A Phantom gigantic superb, with stern visage accosted me,
- Chant me the poem, it said, that comes from the soul of America,
- chant me the carol of victory,
- And strike up the marches of Libertad, marches more powerful yet,
- And sing me before you go the song of the throes of Democracy.
- (Democracy, the destin’d conqueror, yet treacherous lip-smiles everywhere,
- And death and infidelity at every step.)
- 2
- A Nation announcing itself,
- I myself make the only growth by which I can be appreciated,
- I reject none, accept all, then reproduce all in my own forms.
- A breed whose proof is in time and deeds,
- What we are we are, nativity is answer enough to objections,
- We wield ourselves as a weapon is wielded,
- We are powerful and tremendous in ourselves,
- We are executive in ourselves, we are sufficient in the variety of
- ourselves,
- We are the most beautiful to ourselves and in ourselves,
- We stand self-pois’d in the middle, branching thence over the world,
- From Missouri, Nebraska, or Kansas, laughing attacks to scorn.
- Nothing is sinful to us outside of ourselves,
- Whatever appears, whatever does not appear, we are beautiful or
- sinful in ourselves only.
- (O Mother--O Sisters dear!
- If we are lost, no victor else has destroy’d us,
- It is by ourselves we go down to eternal night.)
- 3
- Have you thought there could be but a single supreme?
- There can be any number of supremes--one does not countervail
- another any more than one eyesight countervails another, or
- one life countervails another.
- All is eligible to all,
- All is for individuals, all is for you,
- No condition is prohibited, not God’s or any.
- All comes by the body, only health puts you rapport with the universe.
- Produce great Persons, the rest follows.
- 4
- Piety and conformity to them that like,
- Peace, obesity, allegiance, to them that like,
- I am he who tauntingly compels men, women, nations,
- Crying, Leap from your seats and contend for your lives!
- I am he who walks the States with a barb’d tongue, questioning every
- one I meet,
- Who are you that wanted only to be told what you knew before?
- Who are you that wanted only a book to join you in your nonsense?
- (With pangs and cries as thine own O bearer of many children,
- These clamors wild to a race of pride I give.)
- O lands, would you be freer than all that has ever been before?
- If you would be freer than all that has been before, come listen to me.
- Fear grace, elegance, civilization, delicatesse,
- Fear the mellow sweet, the sucking of honey--juice,
- Beware the advancing mortal ripening of Nature,
- Beware what precedes the decay of the ruggedness of states and men.
- 5
- Ages, precedents, have long been accumulating undirected materials,
- America brings builders, and brings its own styles.
- The immortal poets of Asia and Europe have done their work and
- pass’d to other spheres,
- A work remains, the work of surpassing all they have done.
- America, curious toward foreign characters, stands by its own at all
- hazards,
- Stands removed, spacious, composite, sound, initiates the true use
- of precedents,
- Does not repel them or the past or what they have produced under
- their forms,
- Takes the lesson with calmness, perceives the corpse slowly borne
- from the house,
- Perceives that it waits a little while in the door, that it was
- fittest for its days,
- That its life has descended to the stalwart and well-shaped heir who
- approaches,
- And that he shall be fittest for his days.
- Any period one nation must lead,
- One land must be the promise and reliance of the future.
- These States are the amplest poem,
- Here is not merely a nation but a teeming Nation of nations,
- Here the doings of men correspond with the broadcast doings of the
- day and night,
- Here is what moves in magnificent masses careless of particulars,
- Here are the roughs, beards, friendliness, combativeness, the soul loves,
- Here the flowing trains, here the crowds, equality, diversity, the
- soul loves.
- 6
- Land of lands and bards to corroborate!
- Of them standing among them, one lifts to the light a west-bred face,
- To him the hereditary countenance bequeath’d both mother’s and father’s,
- His first parts substances, earth, water, animals, trees,
- Built of the common stock, having room for far and near,
- Used to dispense with other lands, incarnating this land,
- Attracting it body and soul to himself, hanging on its neck with
- incomparable love,
- Plunging his seminal muscle into its merits and demerits,
- Making its cities, beginnings, events, diversities, wars, vocal in him,
- Making its rivers, lakes, bays, embouchure in him,
- Mississippi with yearly freshets and changing chutes, Columbia,
- Niagara, Hudson, spending themselves lovingly in him,
- If the Atlantic coast stretch or the Pacific coast stretch, he
- stretching with them North or South,
- Spanning between them East and West, and touching whatever is between them,
- Growths growing from him to offset the growths of pine, cedar, hemlock,
- live-oak, locust, chestnut, hickory, cottonwood, orange, magnolia,
- Tangles as tangled in him as any canebrake or swamp,
- He likening sides and peaks of mountains, forests coated with
- northern transparent ice,
- Off him pasturage sweet and natural as savanna, upland, prairie,
- Through him flights, whirls, screams, answering those of the
- fish-hawk, mocking-bird, night-heron, and eagle,
- His spirit surrounding his country’s spirit, unclosed to good and evil,
- Surrounding the essences of real things, old times and present times,
- Surrounding just found shores, islands, tribes of red aborigines,
- Weather-beaten vessels, landings, settlements, embryo stature and muscle,
- The haughty defiance of the Year One, war, peace, the formation of
- the Constitution,
- The separate States, the simple elastic scheme, the immigrants,
- The Union always swarming with blatherers and always sure and impregnable,
- The unsurvey’d interior, log-houses, clearings, wild animals,
- hunters, trappers,
- Surrounding the multiform agriculture, mines, temperature, the
- gestation of new States,
- Congress convening every Twelfth-month, the members duly coming
- up from the uttermost parts,
- Surrounding the noble character of mechanics and farmers, especially
- the young men,
- Responding their manners, speech, dress, friendships, the gait they
- have of persons who never knew how it felt to stand in the
- presence of superiors,
- The freshness and candor of their physiognomy, the copiousness and
- decision of their phrenology,
- The picturesque looseness of their carriage, their fierceness when wrong’d,
- The fluency of their speech, their delight in music, their curiosity,
- good temper and open-handedness, the whole composite make,
- The prevailing ardor and enterprise, the large amativeness,
- The perfect equality of the female with the male, the fluid movement
- of the population,
- The superior marine, free commerce, fisheries, whaling, gold-digging,
- Wharf-hemm’d cities, railroad and steamboat lines intersecting all points,
- Factories, mercantile life, labor-saving machinery, the Northeast,
- Northwest, Southwest,
- Manhattan firemen, the Yankee swap, southern plantation life,
- Slavery--the murderous, treacherous conspiracy to raise it upon the
- ruins of all the rest,
- On and on to the grapple with it--Assassin! then your life or ours
- be the stake, and respite no more.
- 7
- (Lo, high toward heaven, this day,
- Libertad, from the conqueress’ field return’d,
- I mark the new aureola around your head,
- No more of soft astral, but dazzling and fierce,
- With war’s flames and the lambent lightnings playing,
- And your port immovable where you stand,
- With still the inextinguishable glance and the clinch’d and lifted fist,
- And your foot on the neck of the menacing one, the scorner utterly
- crush’d beneath you,
- The menacing arrogant one that strode and advanced with his
- senseless scorn, bearing the murderous knife,
- The wide-swelling one, the braggart that would yesterday do so much,
- To-day a carrion dead and damn’d, the despised of all the earth,
- An offal rank, to the dunghill maggots spurn’d.)
- 8
- Others take finish, but the Republic is ever constructive and ever
- keeps vista,
- Others adorn the past, but you O days of the present, I adorn you,
- O days of the future I believe in you--I isolate myself for your sake,
- O America because you build for mankind I build for you,
- O well-beloved stone-cutters, I lead them who plan with decision
- and science,
- Lead the present with friendly hand toward the future.
- (Bravas to all impulses sending sane children to the next age!
- But damn that which spends itself with no thought of the stain,
- pains, dismay, feebleness, it is bequeathing.)
- 9
- I listened to the Phantom by Ontario’s shore,
- I heard the voice arising demanding bards,
- By them all native and grand, by them alone can these States be
- fused into the compact organism of a Nation.
- To hold men together by paper and seal or by compulsion is no account,
- That only holds men together which aggregates all in a living principle,
- as the hold of the limbs of the body or the fibres of plants.
- Of all races and eras these States with veins full of poetical stuff most
- need poets, and are to have the greatest, and use them the greatest,
- Their Presidents shall not be their common referee so much as their
- poets shall.
- (Soul of love and tongue of fire!
- Eye to pierce the deepest deeps and sweep the world!
- Ah Mother, prolific and full in all besides, yet how long barren, barren?)
- 10
- Of these States the poet is the equable man,
- Not in him but off from him things are grotesque, eccentric, fail of
- their full returns,
- Nothing out of its place is good, nothing in its place is bad,
- He bestows on every object or quality its fit proportion, neither
- more nor less,
- He is the arbiter of the diverse, he is the key,
- He is the equalizer of his age and land,
- He supplies what wants supplying, he checks what wants checking,
- In peace out of him speaks the spirit of peace, large, rich,
- thrifty, building populous towns, encouraging agriculture, arts,
- commerce, lighting the study of man, the soul, health,
- immortality, government,
- In war he is the best backer of the war, he fetches artillery as
- good as the engineer’s, he can make every word he speaks draw blood,
- The years straying toward infidelity he withholds by his steady faith,
- He is no arguer, he is judgment, (Nature accepts him absolutely,)
- He judges not as the judge judges but as the sun failing round
- helpless thing,
- As he sees the farthest he has the most faith,
- His thoughts are the hymns of the praise of things,
- In the dispute on God and eternity he is silent,
- He sees eternity less like a play with a prologue and denouement,
- He sees eternity in men and women, he does not see men and women
- as dreams or dots.
- For the great Idea, the idea of perfect and free individuals,
- For that, the bard walks in advance, leader of leaders,
- The attitude of him cheers up slaves and horrifies foreign despots.
- Without extinction is Liberty, without retrograde is Equality,
- They live in the feelings of young men and the best women,
- (Not for nothing have the indomitable heads of the earth been always
- ready to fall for Liberty.)
- 11
- For the great Idea,
- That, O my brethren, that is the mission of poets.
- Songs of stern defiance ever ready,
- Songs of the rapid arming and the march,
- The flag of peace quick-folded, and instead the flag we know,
- Warlike flag of the great Idea.
- (Angry cloth I saw there leaping!
- I stand again in leaden rain your flapping folds saluting,
- I sing you over all, flying beckoning through the fight--O the
- hard-contested fight!
- The cannons ope their rosy-flashing muzzles--the hurtled balls scream,
- The battle-front forms amid the smoke--the volleys pour incessant
- from the line,
- Hark, the ringing word Charge!--now the tussle and the furious
- maddening yells,
- Now the corpses tumble curl’d upon the ground,
- Cold, cold in death, for precious life of you,
- Angry cloth I saw there leaping.)
- 12
- Are you he who would assume a place to teach or be a poet here in
- the States?
- The place is august, the terms obdurate.
- Who would assume to teach here may well prepare himself body and mind,
- He may well survey, ponder, arm, fortify, harden, make lithe himself,
- He shall surely be question’d beforehand by me with many and stern questions.
- Who are you indeed who would talk or sing to America?
- Have you studied out the land, its idioms and men?
- Have you learn’d the physiology, phrenology, politics, geography,
- pride, freedom, friendship of the land? its substratums and objects?
- Have you consider’d the organic compact of the first day of the
- first year of Independence, sign’d by the Commissioners, ratified
- by the States, and read by Washington at the head of the army?
- Have you possess’d yourself of the Federal Constitution?
- Do you see who have left all feudal processes and poems behind them,
- and assumed the poems and processes of Democracy?
- Are you faithful to things? do you teach what the land and sea, the
- bodies of men, womanhood, amativeness, heroic angers, teach?
- Have you sped through fleeting customs, popularities?
- Can you hold your hand against all seductions, follies, whirls,
- fierce contentions? are you very strong? are you really of the
- whole People?
- Are you not of some coterie? some school or mere religion?
- Are you done with reviews and criticisms of life? animating now to
- life itself?
- Have you vivified yourself from the maternity of these States?
- Have you too the old ever-fresh forbearance and impartiality?
- Do you hold the like love for those hardening to maturity? for the
- last-born? little and big? and for the errant?
- What is this you bring my America?
- Is it uniform with my country?
- Is it not something that has been better told or done before?
- Have you not imported this or the spirit of it in some ship?
- Is it not a mere tale? a rhyme? a prettiness?--Is the good old cause in it?
- Has it not dangled long at the heels of the poets, politicians,
- literats, of enemies’ lands?
- Does it not assume that what is notoriously gone is still here?
- Does it answer universal needs? will it improve manners?
- Does it sound with trumpet-voice the proud victory of the Union in
- that secession war?
- Can your performance face the open fields and the seaside?
- Will it absorb into me as I absorb food, air, to appear again in my
- strength, gait, face?
- Have real employments contributed to it? original makers, not mere
- amanuenses?
- Does it meet modern discoveries, calibres, facts, face to face?
- What does it mean to American persons, progresses, cities? Chicago,
- Kanada, Arkansas?
- Does it see behind the apparent custodians the real custodians
- standing, menacing, silent, the mechanics, Manhattanese, Western
- men, Southerners, significant alike in their apathy, and in the
- promptness of their love?
- Does it see what finally befalls, and has always finally befallen,
- each temporizer, patcher, outsider, partialist, alarmist,
- infidel, who has ever ask’d any thing of America?
- What mocking and scornful negligence?
- The track strew’d with the dust of skeletons,
- By the roadside others disdainfully toss’d.
- 13
- Rhymes and rhymers pass away, poems distill’d from poems pass away,
- The swarms of reflectors and the polite pass, and leave ashes,
- Admirers, importers, obedient persons, make but the soil of literature,
- America justifies itself, give it time, no disguise can deceive it
- or conceal from it, it is impassive enough,
- Only toward the likes of itself will it advance to meet them,
- If its poets appear it will in due time advance to meet them, there
- is no fear of mistake,
- (The proof of a poet shall be sternly deferr’d till his country
- absorbs him as affectionately as he has absorb’d it.)
- He masters whose spirit masters, he tastes sweetest who results
- sweetest in the long run,
- The blood of the brawn beloved of time is unconstraint;
- In the need of songs, philosophy, an appropriate native grand-opera,
- shipcraft, any craft,
- He or she is greatest who contributes the greatest original
- practical example.
- Already a nonchalant breed, silently emerging, appears on the streets,
- People’s lips salute only doers, lovers, satisfiers, positive knowers,
- There will shortly be no more priests, I say their work is done,
- Death is without emergencies here, but life is perpetual emergencies here,
- Are your body, days, manners, superb? after death you shall be superb,
- Justice, health, self-esteem, clear the way with irresistible power;
- How dare you place any thing before a man?
- 14
- Fall behind me States!
- A man before all--myself, typical, before all.
- Give me the pay I have served for,
- Give me to sing the songs of the great Idea, take all the rest,
- I have loved the earth, sun, animals, I have despised riches,
- I have given aims to every one that ask’d, stood up for the stupid
- and crazy, devoted my income and labor to others,
- Hated tyrants, argued not concerning God, had patience and indulgence
- toward the people, taken off my hat to nothing known or unknown,
- Gone freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young,
- and with the mothers of families,
- Read these leaves to myself in the open air, tried them by trees,
- stars, rivers,
- Dismiss’d whatever insulted my own soul or defiled my body,
- Claim’d nothing to myself which I have not carefully claim’d for
- others on the same terms,
- Sped to the camps, and comrades found and accepted from every State,
- (Upon this breast has many a dying soldier lean’d to breathe his last,
- This arm, this hand, this voice, have nourish’d, rais’d, restored,
- To life recalling many a prostrate form;)
- I am willing to wait to be understood by the growth of the taste of myself,
- Rejecting none, permitting all.
- (Say O Mother, have I not to your thought been faithful?
- Have I not through life kept you and yours before me?)
- 15
- I swear I begin to see the meaning of these things,
- It is not the earth, it is not America who is so great,
- It is I who am great or to be great, it is You up there, or any one,
- It is to walk rapidly through civilizations, governments, theories,
- Through poems, pageants, shows, to form individuals.
- Underneath all, individuals,
- I swear nothing is good to me now that ignores individuals,
- The American compact is altogether with individuals,
- The only government is that which makes minute of individuals,
- The whole theory of the universe is directed unerringly to one
- single individual--namely to You.
- (Mother! with subtle sense severe, with the naked sword in your hand,
- I saw you at last refuse to treat but directly with individuals.)
- 16
- Underneath all, Nativity,
- I swear I will stand by my own nativity, pious or impious so be it;
- I swear I am charm’d with nothing except nativity,
- Men, women, cities, nations, are only beautiful from nativity.
- Underneath all is the Expression of love for men and women,
- (I swear I have seen enough of mean and impotent modes of expressing
- love for men and women,
- After this day I take my own modes of expressing love for men and
- women.) in myself,
- I swear I will have each quality of my race in myself,
- (Talk as you like, he only suits these States whose manners favor
- the audacity and sublime turbulence of the States.)
- Underneath the lessons of things, spirits, Nature, governments,
- ownerships, I swear I perceive other lessons,
- Underneath all to me is myself, to you yourself, (the same
- monotonous old song.)
- 17
- O I see flashing that this America is only you and me,
- Its power, weapons, testimony, are you and me,
- Its crimes, lies, thefts, defections, are you and me,
- Its Congress is you and me, the officers, capitols, armies, ships,
- are you and me,
- Its endless gestations of new States are you and me,
- The war, (that war so bloody and grim, the war I will henceforth
- forget), was you and me,
- Natural and artificial are you and me,
- Freedom, language, poems, employments, are you and me,
- Past, present, future, are you and me.
- I dare not shirk any part of myself,
- Not any part of America good or bad,
- Not to build for that which builds for mankind,
- Not to balance ranks, complexions, creeds, and the sexes,
- Not to justify science nor the march of equality,
- Nor to feed the arrogant blood of the brawn belov’d of time.
- I am for those that have never been master’d,
- For men and women whose tempers have never been master’d,
- For those whom laws, theories, conventions, can never master.
- I am for those who walk abreast with the whole earth,
- Who inaugurate one to inaugurate all.
- I will not be outfaced by irrational things,
- I will penetrate what it is in them that is sarcastic upon me,
- I will make cities and civilizations defer to me,
- This is what I have learnt from America--it is the amount, and it I
- teach again.
- (Democracy, while weapons were everywhere aim’d at your breast,
- I saw you serenely give birth to immortal children, saw in dreams
- your dilating form,
- Saw you with spreading mantle covering the world.)
- 18
- I will confront these shows of the day and night,
- I will know if I am to be less than they,
- I will see if I am not as majestic as they,
- I will see if I am not as subtle and real as they,
- I will see if I am to be less generous than they,
- I will see if I have no meaning, while the houses and ships have meaning,
- I will see if the fishes and birds are to be enough for themselves,
- and I am not to be enough for myself.
- I match my spirit against yours you orbs, growths, mountains, brutes,
- Copious as you are I absorb you all in myself, and become the master myself,
- America isolated yet embodying all, what is it finally except myself?
- These States, what are they except myself?
- I know now why the earth is gross, tantalizing, wicked, it is for my sake,
- I take you specially to be mine, you terrible, rude forms.
- (Mother, bend down, bend close to me your face,
- I know not what these plots and wars and deferments are for,
- I know not fruition’s success, but I know that through war and crime
- your work goes on, and must yet go on.)
- 19
- Thus by blue Ontario’s shore,
- While the winds fann’d me and the waves came trooping toward me,
- I thrill’d with the power’s pulsations, and the charm of my theme
- was upon me,
- Till the tissues that held me parted their ties upon me.
- And I saw the free souls of poets,
- The loftiest bards of past ages strode before me,
- Strange large men, long unwaked, undisclosed, were disclosed to me.
- 20
- O my rapt verse, my call, mock me not!
- Not for the bards of the past, not to invoke them have I launch’d
- you forth,
- Not to call even those lofty bards here by Ontario’s shores,
- Have I sung so capricious and loud my savage song.
- Bards for my own land only I invoke,
- (For the war the war is over, the field is clear’d,)
- Till they strike up marches henceforth triumphant and onward,
- To cheer O Mother your boundless expectant soul.
- Bards of the great Idea! bards of the peaceful inventions! (for the
- war, the war is over!)
- Yet bards of latent armies, a million soldiers waiting ever-ready,
- Bards with songs as from burning coals or the lightning’s fork’d stripes!
- Ample Ohio’s, Kanada’s bards--bards of California! inland bards--
- bards of the war!
- You by my charm I invoke.
- Reversals
- Let that which stood in front go behind,
- Let that which was behind advance to the front,
- Let bigots, fools, unclean persons, offer new propositions,
- Let the old propositions be postponed,
- Let a man seek pleasure everywhere except in himself,
- Let a woman seek happiness everywhere except in herself
- BOOK XXIV. AUTUMN RIVULETS
- As Consequent, Etc.
- As consequent from store of summer rains,
- Or wayward rivulets in autumn flowing,
- Or many a herb-lined brook’s reticulations,
- Or subterranean sea-rills making for the sea,
- Songs of continued years I sing.
- Life’s ever-modern rapids first, (soon, soon to blend,
- With the old streams of death.)
- Some threading Ohio’s farm-fields or the woods,
- Some down Colorado’s canons from sources of perpetual snow,
- Some half-hid in Oregon, or away southward in Texas,
- Some in the north finding their way to Erie, Niagara, Ottawa,
- Some to Atlantica’s bays, and so to the great salt brine.
- In you whoe’er you are my book perusing,
- In I myself, in all the world, these currents flowing,
- All, all toward the mystic ocean tending.
- Currents for starting a continent new,
- Overtures sent to the solid out of the liquid,
- Fusion of ocean and land, tender and pensive waves,
- (Not safe and peaceful only, waves rous’d and ominous too,
- Out of the depths the storm’s abysmic waves, who knows whence?
- Raging over the vast, with many a broken spar and tatter’d sail.)
- Or from the sea of Time, collecting vasting all, I bring,
- A windrow-drift of weeds and shells.
- O little shells, so curious-convolute, so limpid-cold and voiceless,
- Will you not little shells to the tympans of temples held,
- Murmurs and echoes still call up, eternity’s music faint and far,
- Wafted inland, sent from Atlantica’s rim, strains for the soul of
- the prairies,
- Whisper’d reverberations, chords for the ear of the West joyously sounding,
- Your tidings old, yet ever new and untranslatable,
- Infinitesimals out of my life, and many a life,
- (For not my life and years alone I give--all, all I give,)
- These waifs from the deep, cast high and dry,
- Wash’d on America’s shores?
- The Return of the Heroes
- 1
- For the lands and for these passionate days and for myself,
- Now I awhile retire to thee O soil of autumn fields,
- Reclining on thy breast, giving myself to thee,
- Answering the pulses of thy sane and equable heart,
- Turning a verse for thee.
- O earth that hast no voice, confide to me a voice,
- O harvest of my lands--O boundless summer growths,
- O lavish brown parturient earth--O infinite teeming womb,
- A song to narrate thee.
- 2
- Ever upon this stage,
- Is acted God’s calm annual drama,
- Gorgeous processions, songs of birds,
- Sunrise that fullest feeds and freshens most the soul,
- The heaving sea, the waves upon the shore, the musical, strong waves,
- The woods, the stalwart trees, the slender, tapering trees,
- The liliput countless armies of the grass,
- The heat, the showers, the measureless pasturages,
- The scenery of the snows, the winds’ free orchestra,
- The stretching light-hung roof of clouds, the clear cerulean and the
- silvery fringes,
- The high-dilating stars, the placid beckoning stars,
- The moving flocks and herds, the plains and emerald meadows,
- The shows of all the varied lands and all the growths and products.
- 3
- Fecund America--today,
- Thou art all over set in births and joys!
- Thou groan’st with riches, thy wealth clothes thee as a swathing-garment,
- Thou laughest loud with ache of great possessions,
- A myriad-twining life like interlacing vines binds all thy vast demesne,
- As some huge ship freighted to water’s edge thou ridest into port,
- As rain falls from the heaven and vapors rise from earth, so have
- the precious values fallen upon thee and risen out of thee;
- Thou envy of the globe! thou miracle!
- Thou, bathed, choked, swimming in plenty,
- Thou lucky Mistress of the tranquil barns,
- Thou Prairie Dame that sittest in the middle and lookest out upon
- thy world, and lookest East and lookest West,
- Dispensatress, that by a word givest a thousand miles, a million
- farms, and missest nothing,
- Thou all-acceptress--thou hospitable, (thou only art hospitable as
- God is hospitable.)
- 4
- When late I sang sad was my voice,
- Sad were the shows around me with deafening noises of hatred and
- smoke of war;
- In the midst of the conflict, the heroes, I stood,
- Or pass’d with slow step through the wounded and dying.
- But now I sing not war,
- Nor the measur’d march of soldiers, nor the tents of camps,
- Nor the regiments hastily coming up deploying in line of battle;
- No more the sad, unnatural shows of war.
- Ask’d room those flush’d immortal ranks, the first forth-stepping armies?
- Ask room alas the ghastly ranks, the armies dread that follow’d.
- (Pass, pass, ye proud brigades, with your tramping sinewy legs,
- With your shoulders young and strong, with your knapsacks and your muskets;
- How elate I stood and watch’d you, where starting off you march’d.
- Pass--then rattle drums again,
- For an army heaves in sight, O another gathering army,
- Swarming, trailing on the rear, O you dread accruing army,
- O you regiments so piteous, with your mortal diarrhoea, with your fever,
- O my land’s maim’d darlings, with the plenteous bloody bandage and
- the crutch,
- Lo, your pallid army follows.)
- 5
- But on these days of brightness,
- On the far-stretching beauteous landscape, the roads and lanes the
- high-piled farm-wagons, and the fruits and barns,
- Should the dead intrude?
- Ah the dead to me mar not, they fit well in Nature,
- They fit very well in the landscape under the trees and grass,
- And along the edge of the sky in the horizon’s far margin.
- Nor do I forget you Departed,
- Nor in winter or summer my lost ones,
- But most in the open air as now when my soul is rapt and at peace,
- like pleasing phantoms,
- Your memories rising glide silently by me.
- 6
- I saw the day the return of the heroes,
- (Yet the heroes never surpass’d shall never return,
- Them that day I saw not.)
- I saw the interminable corps, I saw the processions of armies,
- I saw them approaching, defiling by with divisions,
- Streaming northward, their work done, camping awhile in clusters of
- mighty camps.
- No holiday soldiers--youthful, yet veterans,
- Worn, swart, handsome, strong, of the stock of homestead and workshop,
- Harden’d of many a long campaign and sweaty march,
- Inured on many a hard-fought bloody field.
- A pause--the armies wait,
- A million flush’d embattled conquerors wait,
- The world too waits, then soft as breaking night and sure as dawn,
- They melt, they disappear.
- Exult O lands! victorious lands!
- Not there your victory on those red shuddering fields,
- But here and hence your victory.
- Melt, melt away ye armies--disperse ye blue-clad soldiers,
- Resolve ye back again, give up for good your deadly arms,
- Other the arms the fields henceforth for you, or South or North,
- With saner wars, sweet wars, life-giving wars.
- 7
- Loud O my throat, and clear O soul!
- The season of thanks and the voice of full-yielding,
- The chant of joy and power for boundless fertility.
- All till’d and untill’d fields expand before me,
- I see the true arenas of my race, or first or last,
- Man’s innocent and strong arenas.
- I see the heroes at other toils,
- I see well-wielded in their hands the better weapons.
- I see where the Mother of All,
- With full-spanning eye gazes forth, dwells long,
- And counts the varied gathering of the products.
- Busy the far, the sunlit panorama,
- Prairie, orchard, and yellow grain of the North,
- Cotton and rice of the South and Louisianian cane,
- Open unseeded fallows, rich fields of clover and timothy,
- Kine and horses feeding, and droves of sheep and swine,
- And many a stately river flowing and many a jocund brook,
- And healthy uplands with herby-perfumed breezes,
- And the good green grass, that delicate miracle the ever-recurring grass.
- 8
- Toil on heroes! harvest the products!
- Not alone on those warlike fields the Mother of All,
- With dilated form and lambent eyes watch’d you.
- Toil on heroes! toil well! handle the weapons well!
- The Mother of All, yet here as ever she watches you.
- Well-pleased America thou beholdest,
- Over the fields of the West those crawling monsters,
- The human-divine inventions, the labor-saving implements;
- Beholdest moving in every direction imbued as with life the
- revolving hay-rakes,
- The steam-power reaping-machines and the horse-power machines
- The engines, thrashers of grain and cleaners of grain, well
- separating the straw, the nimble work of the patent pitchfork,
- Beholdest the newer saw-mill, the southern cotton-gin, and the
- rice-cleanser.
- Beneath thy look O Maternal,
- With these and else and with their own strong hands the heroes harvest.
- All gather and all harvest,
- Yet but for thee O Powerful, not a scythe might swing as now in security,
- Not a maize-stalk dangle as now its silken tassels in peace.
- Under thee only they harvest, even but a wisp of hay under thy great
- face only,
- Harvest the wheat of Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, every barbed spear
- under thee,
- Harvest the maize of Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, each ear in its
- light-green sheath,
- Gather the hay to its myriad mows in the odorous tranquil barns,
- Oats to their bins, the white potato, the buckwheat of Michigan, to theirs;
- Gather the cotton in Mississippi or Alabama, dig and hoard the
- golden the sweet potato of Georgia and the Carolinas,
- Clip the wool of California or Pennsylvania,
- Cut the flax in the Middle States, or hemp or tobacco in the Borders,
- Pick the pea and the bean, or pull apples from the trees or bunches
- of grapes from the vines,
- Or aught that ripens in all these States or North or South,
- Under the beaming sun and under thee.
- There Was a Child Went Forth
- There was a child went forth every day,
- And the first object he look’d upon, that object he became,
- And that object became part of him for the day or a certain part of the day,
- Or for many years or stretching cycles of years.
- The early lilacs became part of this child,
- And grass and white and red morning-glories, and white and red
- clover, and the song of the phoebe-bird,
- And the Third-month lambs and the sow’s pink-faint litter, and the
- mare’s foal and the cow’s calf,
- And the noisy brood of the barnyard or by the mire of the pond-side,
- And the fish suspending themselves so curiously below there, and the
- beautiful curious liquid,
- And the water-plants with their graceful flat heads, all became part of him.
- The field-sprouts of Fourth-month and Fifth-month became part of him,
- Winter-grain sprouts and those of the light-yellow corn, and the
- esculent roots of the garden,
- And the apple-trees cover’d with blossoms and the fruit afterward,
- and wood-berries, and the commonest weeds by the road,
- And the old drunkard staggering home from the outhouse of the
- tavern whence he had lately risen,
- And the schoolmistress that pass’d on her way to the school,
- And the friendly boys that pass’d, and the quarrelsome boys,
- And the tidy and fresh-cheek’d girls, and the barefoot negro boy and girl,
- And all the changes of city and country wherever he went.
- His own parents, he that had father’d him and she that had conceiv’d
- him in her womb and birth’d him,
- They gave this child more of themselves than that,
- They gave him afterward every day, they became part of him.
- The mother at home quietly placing the dishes on the supper-table,
- The mother with mild words, clean her cap and gown, a wholesome
- odor falling off her person and clothes as she walks by,
- The father, strong, self-sufficient, manly, mean, anger’d, unjust,
- The blow, the quick loud word, the tight bargain, the crafty lure,
- The family usages, the language, the company, the furniture, the
- yearning and swelling heart,
- Affection that will not be gainsay’d, the sense of what is real, the
- thought if after all it should prove unreal,
- The doubts of day-time and the doubts of night-time, the curious
- whether and how,
- Whether that which appears so is so, or is it all flashes and specks?
- Men and women crowding fast in the streets, if they are not flashes
- and specks what are they?
- The streets themselves and the facades of houses, and goods in the windows,
- Vehicles, teams, the heavy-plank’d wharves, the huge crossing at
- the ferries,
- The village on the highland seen from afar at sunset, the river between,
- Shadows, aureola and mist, the light falling on roofs and gables of
- white or brown two miles off,
- The schooner near by sleepily dropping down the tide, the little
- boat slack-tow’d astern,
- The hurrying tumbling waves, quick-broken crests, slapping,
- The strata of color’d clouds, the long bar of maroon-tint away
- solitary by itself, the spread of purity it lies motionless in,
- The horizon’s edge, the flying sea-crow, the fragrance of salt marsh
- and shore mud,
- These became part of that child who went forth every day, and who
- now goes, and will always go forth every day.
- Old Ireland
- Far hence amid an isle of wondrous beauty,
- Crouching over a grave an ancient sorrowful mother,
- Once a queen, now lean and tatter’d seated on the ground,
- Her old white hair drooping dishevel’d round her shoulders,
- At her feet fallen an unused royal harp,
- Long silent, she too long silent, mourning her shrouded hope and heir,
- Of all the earth her heart most full of sorrow because most full of love.
- Yet a word ancient mother,
- You need crouch there no longer on the cold ground with forehead
- between your knees,
- O you need not sit there veil’d in your old white hair so dishevel’d,
- For know you the one you mourn is not in that grave,
- It was an illusion, the son you love was not really dead,
- The Lord is not dead, he is risen again young and strong in another country,
- Even while you wept there by your fallen harp by the grave,
- What you wept for was translated, pass’d from the grave,
- The winds favor’d and the sea sail’d it,
- And now with rosy and new blood,
- Moves to-day in a new country.
- The City Dead-House
- By the city dead-house by the gate,
- As idly sauntering wending my way from the clangor,
- I curious pause, for lo, an outcast form, a poor dead prostitute brought,
- Her corpse they deposit unclaim’d, it lies on the damp brick pavement,
- The divine woman, her body, I see the body, I look on it alone,
- That house once full of passion and beauty, all else I notice not,
- Nor stillness so cold, nor running water from faucet, nor odors
- morbific impress me,
- But the house alone--that wondrous house--that delicate fair house
- --that ruin!
- That immortal house more than all the rows of dwellings ever built!
- Or white-domed capitol with majestic figure surmounted, or all the
- old high-spired cathedrals,
- That little house alone more than them all--poor, desperate house!
- Fair, fearful wreck--tenement of a soul--itself a soul,
- Unclaim’d, avoided house--take one breath from my tremulous lips,
- Take one tear dropt aside as I go for thought of you,
- Dead house of love--house of madness and sin, crumbled, crush’d,
- House of life, erewhile talking and laughing--but ah, poor house,
- dead even then,
- Months, years, an echoing, garnish’d house--but dead, dead, dead.
- This Compost
- 1
- Something startles me where I thought I was safest,
- I withdraw from the still woods I loved,
- I will not go now on the pastures to walk,
- I will not strip the clothes from my body to meet my lover the sea,
- I will not touch my flesh to the earth as to other flesh to renew me.
- O how can it be that the ground itself does not sicken?
- How can you be alive you growths of spring?
- How can you furnish health you blood of herbs, roots, orchards, grain?
- Are they not continually putting distemper’d corpses within you?
- Is not every continent work’d over and over with sour dead?
- Where have you disposed of their carcasses?
- Those drunkards and gluttons of so many generations?
- Where have you drawn off all the foul liquid and meat?
- I do not see any of it upon you to-day, or perhaps I am deceiv’d,
- I will run a furrow with my plough, I will press my spade through
- the sod and turn it up underneath,
- I am sure I shall expose some of the foul meat.
- 2
- Behold this compost! behold it well!
- Perhaps every mite has once form’d part of a sick person--yet behold!
- The grass of spring covers the prairies,
- The bean bursts noiselessly through the mould in the garden,
- The delicate spear of the onion pierces upward,
- The apple-buds cluster together on the apple-branches,
- The resurrection of the wheat appears with pale visage out of its graves,
- The tinge awakes over the willow-tree and the mulberry-tree,
- The he-birds carol mornings and evenings while the she-birds sit on
- their nests,
- The young of poultry break through the hatch’d eggs,
- The new-born of animals appear, the calf is dropt from the cow, the
- colt from the mare,
- Out of its little hill faithfully rise the potato’s dark green leaves,
- Out of its hill rises the yellow maize-stalk, the lilacs bloom in
- the dooryards,
- The summer growth is innocent and disdainful above all those strata
- of sour dead.
- What chemistry!
- That the winds are really not infectious,
- That this is no cheat, this transparent green-wash of the sea which
- is so amorous after me,
- That it is safe to allow it to lick my naked body all over with its tongues,
- That it will not endanger me with the fevers that have deposited
- themselves in it,
- That all is clean forever and forever,
- That the cool drink from the well tastes so good,
- That blackberries are so flavorous and juicy,
- That the fruits of the apple-orchard and the orange-orchard, that
- melons, grapes, peaches, plums, will none of them poison me,
- That when I recline on the grass I do not catch any disease,
- Though probably every spear of grass rises out of what was once
- catching disease.
- Now I am terrified at the Earth, it is that calm and patient,
- It grows such sweet things out of such corruptions,
- It turns harmless and stainless on its axis, with such endless
- successions of diseas’d corpses,
- It distills such exquisite winds out of such infused fetor,
- It renews with such unwitting looks its prodigal, annual, sumptuous crops,
- It gives such divine materials to men, and accepts such leavings
- from them at last.
- To a Foil’d European Revolutionaire
- Courage yet, my brother or my sister!
- Keep on--Liberty is to be subserv’d whatever occurs;
- That is nothing that is quell’d by one or two failures, or any
- number of failures,
- Or by the indifference or ingratitude of the people, or by any
- unfaithfulness,
- Or the show of the tushes of power, soldiers, cannon, penal statutes.
- What we believe in waits latent forever through all the continents,
- Invites no one, promises nothing, sits in calmness and light, is
- positive and composed, knows no discouragement,
- Waiting patiently, waiting its time.
- (Not songs of loyalty alone are these,
- But songs of insurrection also,
- For I am the sworn poet of every dauntless rebel the world over,
- And he going with me leaves peace and routine behind him,
- And stakes his life to be lost at any moment.)
- The battle rages with many a loud alarm and frequent advance and retreat,
- The infidel triumphs, or supposes he triumphs,
- The prison, scaffold, garrote, handcuffs, iron necklace and
- leadballs do their work,
- The named and unnamed heroes pass to other spheres,
- The great speakers and writers are exiled, they lie sick in distant lands,
- The cause is asleep, the strongest throats are choked with their own blood,
- The young men droop their eyelashes toward the ground when they meet;
- But for all this Liberty has not gone out of the place, nor the
- infidel enter’d into full possession.
- When liberty goes out of a place it is not the first to go, nor the
- second or third to go,
- It waits for all the rest to go, it is the last.
- When there are no more memories of heroes and martyrs,
- And when all life and all the souls of men and women are discharged
- from any part of the earth,
- Then only shall liberty or the idea of liberty be discharged from
- that part of the earth,
- And the infidel come into full possession.
- Then courage European revolter, revoltress!
- For till all ceases neither must you cease.
- I do not know what you are for, (I do not know what I am for myself,
- nor what any thing is for,)
- But I will search carefully for it even in being foil’d,
- In defeat, poverty, misconception, imprisonment--for they too are great.
- Did we think victory great?
- So it is--but now it seems to me, when it cannot be help’d, that
- defeat is great,
- And that death and dismay are great.
- Unnamed Land
- Nations ten thousand years before these States, and many times ten
- thousand years before these States,
- Garner’d clusters of ages that men and women like us grew up and
- travel’d their course and pass’d on,
- What vast-built cities, what orderly republics, what pastoral tribes
- and nomads,
- What histories, rulers, heroes, perhaps transcending all others,
- What laws, customs, wealth, arts, traditions,
- What sort of marriage, what costumes, what physiology and phrenology,
- What of liberty and slavery among them, what they thought of death
- and the soul,
- Who were witty and wise, who beautiful and poetic, who brutish and
- undevelop’d,
- Not a mark, not a record remains--and yet all remains.
- O I know that those men and women were not for nothing, any more
- than we are for nothing,
- I know that they belong to the scheme of the world every bit as much
- as we now belong to it.
- Afar they stand, yet near to me they stand,
- Some with oval countenances learn’d and calm,
- Some naked and savage, some like huge collections of insects,
- Some in tents, herdsmen, patriarchs, tribes, horsemen,
- Some prowling through woods, some living peaceably on farms,
- laboring, reaping, filling barns,
- Some traversing paved avenues, amid temples, palaces, factories,
- libraries, shows, courts, theatres, wonderful monuments.
- Are those billions of men really gone?
- Are those women of the old experience of the earth gone?
- Do their lives, cities, arts, rest only with us?
- Did they achieve nothing for good for themselves?
- I believe of all those men and women that fill’d the unnamed lands,
- every one exists this hour here or elsewhere, invisible to us.
- In exact proportion to what he or she grew from in life, and out of
- what he or she did, felt, became, loved, sinn’d, in life.
- I believe that was not the end of those nations or any person of
- them, any more than this shall be the end of my nation, or of me;
- Of their languages, governments, marriage, literature, products,
- games, wars, manners, crimes, prisons, slaves, heroes, poets,
- I suspect their results curiously await in the yet unseen world,
- counterparts of what accrued to them in the seen world,
- I suspect I shall meet them there,
- I suspect I shall there find each old particular of those unnamed lands.
- Song of Prudence
- Manhattan’s streets I saunter’d pondering,
- On Time, Space, Reality--on such as these, and abreast with them Prudence.
- The last explanation always remains to be made about prudence,
- Little and large alike drop quietly aside from the prudence that
- suits immortality.
- The soul is of itself,
- All verges to it, all has reference to what ensues,
- All that a person does, says, thinks, is of consequence,
- Not a move can a man or woman make, that affects him or her in a day,
- month, any part of the direct lifetime, or the hour of death,
- But the same affects him or her onward afterward through the
- indirect lifetime.
- The indirect is just as much as the direct,
- The spirit receives from the body just as much as it gives to the
- body, if not more.
- Not one word or deed, not venereal sore, discoloration, privacy of
- the onanist,
- Putridity of gluttons or rum-drinkers, peculation, cunning,
- betrayal, murder, seduction, prostitution,
- But has results beyond death as really as before death.
- Charity and personal force are the only investments worth any thing.
- No specification is necessary, all that a male or female does, that
- is vigorous, benevolent, clean, is so much profit to him or her,
- In the unshakable order of the universe and through the whole scope
- of it forever.
- Who has been wise receives interest,
- Savage, felon, President, judge, farmer, sailor, mechanic, literat,
- young, old, it is the same,
- The interest will come round--all will come round.
- Singly, wholly, to affect now, affected their time, will forever affect,
- all of the past and all of the present and all of the future,
- All the brave actions of war and peace,
- All help given to relatives, strangers, the poor, old, sorrowful,
- young children, widows, the sick, and to shunn’d persons,
- All self-denial that stood steady and aloof on wrecks, and saw
- others fill the seats of the boats,
- All offering of substance or life for the good old cause, or for a
- friend’s sake, or opinion’s sake,
- All pains of enthusiasts scoff’d at by their neighbors,
- All the limitless sweet love and precious suffering of mothers,
- All honest men baffled in strifes recorded or unrecorded,
- All the grandeur and good of ancient nations whose fragments we inherit,
- All the good of the dozens of ancient nations unknown to us by name,
- date, location,
- All that was ever manfully begun, whether it succeeded or no,
- All suggestions of the divine mind of man or the divinity of his
- mouth, or the shaping of his great hands,
- All that is well thought or said this day on any part of the globe,
- or on any of the wandering stars, or on any of the fix’d stars,
- by those there as we are here,
- All that is henceforth to be thought or done by you whoever you are,
- or by any one,
- These inure, have inured, shall inure, to the identities from which
- they sprang, or shall spring.
- Did you guess any thing lived only its moment?
- The world does not so exist, no parts palpable or impalpable so exist,
- No consummation exists without being from some long previous
- consummation, and that from some other,
- Without the farthest conceivable one coming a bit nearer the
- beginning than any.
- Whatever satisfies souls is true;
- Prudence entirely satisfies the craving and glut of souls,
- Itself only finally satisfies the soul,
- The soul has that measureless pride which revolts from every lesson
- but its own.
- Now I breathe the word of the prudence that walks abreast with time,
- space, reality,
- That answers the pride which refuses every lesson but its own.
- What is prudence is indivisible,
- Declines to separate one part of life from every part,
- Divides not the righteous from the unrighteous or the living from the dead,
- Matches every thought or act by its correlative,
- Knows no possible forgiveness or deputed atonement,
- Knows that the young man who composedly peril’d his life and lost it
- has done exceedingly well for himself without doubt,
- That he who never peril’d his life, but retains it to old age in
- riches and ease, has probably achiev’d nothing for himself worth
- mentioning,
- Knows that only that person has really learn’d who has learn’d to
- prefer results,
- Who favors body and soul the same,
- Who perceives the indirect assuredly following the direct,
- Who in his spirit in any emergency whatever neither hurries nor
- avoids death.
- The Singer in the Prison
- O sight of pity, shame and dole!
- O fearful thought--a convict soul.
- 1
- Rang the refrain along the hall, the prison,
- Rose to the roof, the vaults of heaven above,
- Pouring in floods of melody in tones so pensive sweet and strong the
- like whereof was never heard,
- Reaching the far-off sentry and the armed guards, who ceas’d their pacing,
- Making the hearer’s pulses stop for ecstasy and awe.
- 2
- The sun was low in the west one winter day,
- When down a narrow aisle amid the thieves and outlaws of the land,
- (There by the hundreds seated, sear-faced murderers, wily counterfeiters,
- Gather’d to Sunday church in prison walls, the keepers round,
- Plenteous, well-armed, watching with vigilant eyes,)
- Calmly a lady walk’d holding a little innocent child by either hand,
- Whom seating on their stools beside her on the platform,
- She, first preluding with the instrument a low and musical prelude,
- In voice surpassing all, sang forth a quaint old hymn.
- A soul confined by bars and bands,
- Cries, help! O help! and wrings her hands,
- Blinded her eyes, bleeding her breast,
- Nor pardon finds, nor balm of rest.
- Ceaseless she paces to and fro,
- O heart-sick days! O nights of woe!
- Nor hand of friend, nor loving face,
- Nor favor comes, nor word of grace.
- It was not I that sinn’d the sin,
- The ruthless body dragg’d me in;
- Though long I strove courageously,
- The body was too much for me.
- Dear prison’d soul bear up a space,
- For soon or late the certain grace;
- To set thee free and bear thee home,
- The heavenly pardoner death shall come.
- Convict no more, nor shame, nor dole!
- Depart--a God-enfranchis’d soul!
- 3
- The singer ceas’d,
- One glance swept from her clear calm eyes o’er all those upturn’d faces,
- Strange sea of prison faces, a thousand varied, crafty, brutal,
- seam’d and beauteous faces,
- Then rising, passing back along the narrow aisle between them,
- While her gown touch’d them rustling in the silence,
- She vanish’d with her children in the dusk.
- While upon all, convicts and armed keepers ere they stirr’d,
- (Convict forgetting prison, keeper his loaded pistol,)
- A hush and pause fell down a wondrous minute,
- With deep half-stifled sobs and sound of bad men bow’d and moved to weeping,
- And youth’s convulsive breathings, memories of home,
- The mother’s voice in lullaby, the sister’s care, the happy childhood,
- The long-pent spirit rous’d to reminiscence;
- A wondrous minute then--but after in the solitary night, to many,
- many there,
- Years after, even in the hour of death, the sad refrain, the tune,
- the voice, the words,
- Resumed, the large calm lady walks the narrow aisle,
- The wailing melody again, the singer in the prison sings,
- O sight of pity, shame and dole!
- O fearful thought--a convict soul.
- Warble for Lilac-Time
- Warble me now for joy of lilac-time, (returning in reminiscence,)
- Sort me O tongue and lips for Nature’s sake, souvenirs of earliest summer,
- Gather the welcome signs, (as children with pebbles or stringing shells,)
- Put in April and May, the hylas croaking in the ponds, the elastic air,
- Bees, butterflies, the sparrow with its simple notes,
- Blue-bird and darting swallow, nor forget the high-hole flashing his
- golden wings,
- The tranquil sunny haze, the clinging smoke, the vapor,
- Shimmer of waters with fish in them, the cerulean above,
- All that is jocund and sparkling, the brooks running,
- The maple woods, the crisp February days and the sugar-making,
- The robin where he hops, bright-eyed, brown-breasted,
- With musical clear call at sunrise, and again at sunset,
- Or flitting among the trees of the apple-orchard, building the nest
- of his mate,
- The melted snow of March, the willow sending forth its yellow-green sprouts,
- For spring-time is here! the summer is here! and what is this in it
- and from it?
- Thou, soul, unloosen’d--the restlessness after I know not what;
- Come, let us lag here no longer, let us be up and away!
- O if one could but fly like a bird!
- O to escape, to sail forth as in a ship!
- To glide with thee O soul, o’er all, in all, as a ship o’er the waters;
- Gathering these hints, the preludes, the blue sky, the grass, the
- morning drops of dew,
- The lilac-scent, the bushes with dark green heart-shaped leaves,
- Wood-violets, the little delicate pale blossoms called innocence,
- Samples and sorts not for themselves alone, but for their atmosphere,
- To grace the bush I love--to sing with the birds,
- A warble for joy of returning in reminiscence.
- Outlines for a Tomb [G. P., Buried 1870]
- 1
- What may we chant, O thou within this tomb?
- What tablets, outlines, hang for thee, O millionnaire?
- The life thou lived’st we know not,
- But that thou walk’dst thy years in barter, ’mid the haunts of
- brokers,
- Nor heroism thine, nor war, nor glory.
- 2
- Silent, my soul,
- With drooping lids, as waiting, ponder’d,
- Turning from all the samples, monuments of heroes.
- While through the interior vistas,
- Noiseless uprose, phantasmic, (as by night Auroras of the north,)
- Lambent tableaus, prophetic, bodiless scenes,
- Spiritual projections.
- In one, among the city streets a laborer’s home appear’d,
- After his day’s work done, cleanly, sweet-air’d, the gaslight burning,
- The carpet swept and a fire in the cheerful stove.
- In one, the sacred parturition scene,
- A happy painless mother birth’d a perfect child.
- In one, at a bounteous morning meal,
- Sat peaceful parents with contented sons.
- In one, by twos and threes, young people,
- Hundreds concentring, walk’d the paths and streets and roads,
- Toward a tall-domed school.
- In one a trio beautiful,
- Grandmother, loving daughter, loving daughter’s daughter, sat,
- Chatting and sewing.
- In one, along a suite of noble rooms,
- ’Mid plenteous books and journals, paintings on the walls, fine statuettes,
- Were groups of friendly journeymen, mechanics young and old,
- Reading, conversing.
- All, all the shows of laboring life,
- City and country, women’s, men’s and children’s,
- Their wants provided for, hued in the sun and tinged for once with joy,
- Marriage, the street, the factory, farm, the house-room, lodging-room,
- Labor and toll, the bath, gymnasium, playground, library, college,
- The student, boy or girl, led forward to be taught,
- The sick cared for, the shoeless shod, the orphan father’d and mother’d,
- The hungry fed, the houseless housed;
- (The intentions perfect and divine,
- The workings, details, haply human.)
- 3
- O thou within this tomb,
- From thee such scenes, thou stintless, lavish giver,
- Tallying the gifts of earth, large as the earth,
- Thy name an earth, with mountains, fields and tides.
- Nor by your streams alone, you rivers,
- By you, your banks Connecticut,
- By you and all your teeming life old Thames,
- By you Potomac laving the ground Washington trod, by you Patapsco,
- You Hudson, you endless Mississippi--nor you alone,
- But to the high seas launch, my thought, his memory.
- Out from Behind This Mask [To Confront a Portrait]
- 1
- Out from behind this bending rough-cut mask,
- These lights and shades, this drama of the whole,
- This common curtain of the face contain’d in me for me, in you for
- you, in each for each,
- (Tragedies, sorrows, laughter, tears--0 heaven!
- The passionate teeming plays this curtain hid!)
- This glaze of God’s serenest purest sky,
- This film of Satan’s seething pit,
- This heart’s geography’s map, this limitless small continent, this
- soundless sea;
- Out from the convolutions of this globe,
- This subtler astronomic orb than sun or moon, than Jupiter, Venus, Mars,
- This condensation of the universe, (nay here the only universe,
- Here the idea, all in this mystic handful wrapt;)
- These burin’d eyes, flashing to you to pass to future time,
- To launch and spin through space revolving sideling, from these to emanate,
- To you whoe’er you are--a look.
- 2
- A traveler of thoughts and years, of peace and war,
- Of youth long sped and middle age declining,
- (As the first volume of a tale perused and laid away, and this the second,
- Songs, ventures, speculations, presently to close,)
- Lingering a moment here and now, to you I opposite turn,
- As on the road or at some crevice door by chance, or open’d window,
- Pausing, inclining, baring my head, you specially I greet,
- To draw and clinch your soul for once inseparably with mine,
- Then travel travel on.
- Vocalism
- 1
- Vocalism, measure, concentration, determination, and the divine
- power to speak words;
- Are you full-lung’d and limber-lipp’d from long trial? from vigorous
- practice? from physique?
- Do you move in these broad lands as broad as they?
- Come duly to the divine power to speak words?
- For only at last after many years, after chastity, friendship,
- procreation, prudence, and nakedness,
- After treading ground and breasting river and lake,
- After a loosen’d throat, after absorbing eras, temperaments, races,
- after knowledge, freedom, crimes,
- After complete faith, after clarifyings, elevations, and removing
- obstructions,
- After these and more, it is just possible there comes to a man,
- woman, the divine power to speak words;
- Then toward that man or that woman swiftly hasten all--none
- refuse, all attend,
- Armies, ships, antiquities, libraries, paintings, machines, cities,
- hate, despair, amity, pain, theft, murder, aspiration, form in
- close ranks,
- They debouch as they are wanted to march obediently through the
- mouth of that man or that woman.
- 2
- O what is it in me that makes me tremble so at voices?
- Surely whoever speaks to me in the right voice, him or her I shall follow,
- As the water follows the moon, silently, with fluid steps, anywhere
- around the globe.
- All waits for the right voices;
- Where is the practis’d and perfect organ? where is the develop’d soul?
- For I see every word utter’d thence has deeper, sweeter, new sounds,
- impossible on less terms.
- I see brains and lips closed, tympans and temples unstruck,
- Until that comes which has the quality to strike and to unclose,
- Until that comes which has the quality to bring forth what lies
- slumbering forever ready in all words.
- To Him That Was Crucified
- My spirit to yours dear brother,
- Do not mind because many sounding your name do not understand you,
- I do not sound your name, but I understand you,
- I specify you with joy O my comrade to salute you, and to salute
- those who are with you, before and since, and those to come also,
- That we all labor together transmitting the same charge and succession,
- We few equals indifferent of lands, indifferent of times,
- We, enclosers of all continents, all castes, allowers of all theologies,
- Compassionaters, perceivers, rapport of men,
- We walk silent among disputes and assertions, but reject not the
- disputers nor any thing that is asserted,
- We hear the bawling and din, we are reach’d at by divisions,
- jealousies, recriminations on every side,
- They close peremptorily upon us to surround us, my comrade,
- Yet we walk unheld, free, the whole earth over, journeying up and
- down till we make our ineffaceable mark upon time and the diverse eras,
- Till we saturate time and eras, that the men and women of races,
- ages to come, may prove brethren and lovers as we are.
- You Felons on Trial in Courts
- You felons on trial in courts,
- You convicts in prison-cells, you sentenced assassins chain’d and
- handcuff’d with iron,
- Who am I too that I am not on trial or in prison?
- Me ruthless and devilish as any, that my wrists are not chain’d with
- iron, or my ankles with iron?
- You prostitutes flaunting over the trottoirs or obscene in your rooms,
- Who am I that I should call you more obscene than myself?
- O culpable! I acknowledge--I expose!
- (O admirers, praise not me--compliment not me--you make me wince,
- I see what you do not--I know what you do not.)
- Inside these breast-bones I lie smutch’d and choked,
- Beneath this face that appears so impassive hell’s tides continually run,
- Lusts and wickedness are acceptable to me,
- I walk with delinquents with passionate love,
- I feel I am of them--I belong to those convicts and prostitutes myself,
- And henceforth I will not deny them--for how can I deny myself?
- Laws for Creations
- Laws for creations,
- For strong artists and leaders, for fresh broods of teachers and
- perfect literats for America,
- For noble savans and coming musicians.
- All must have reference to the ensemble of the world, and the
- compact truth of the world,
- There shall be no subject too pronounced--all works shall illustrate
- the divine law of indirections.
- What do you suppose creation is?
- What do you suppose will satisfy the soul, except to walk free and
- own no superior?
- What do you suppose I would intimate to you in a hundred ways, but
- that man or woman is as good as God?
- And that there is no God any more divine than Yourself?
- And that that is what the oldest and newest myths finally mean?
- And that you or any one must approach creations through such laws?
- To a Common Prostitute
- Be composed--be at ease with me--I am Walt Whitman, liberal and
- lusty as Nature,
- Not till the sun excludes you do I exclude you,
- Not till the waters refuse to glisten for you and the leaves to
- rustle for you, do my words refuse to glisten and rustle for you.
- My girl I appoint with you an appointment, and I charge you that you
- make preparation to be worthy to meet me,
- And I charge you that you be patient and perfect till I come.
- Till then I salute you with a significant look that you do not forget me.
- I Was Looking a Long While
- I was looking a long while for Intentions,
- For a clew to the history of the past for myself, and for these
- chants--and now I have found it,
- It is not in those paged fables in the libraries, (them I neither
- accept nor reject,)
- It is no more in the legends than in all else,
- It is in the present--it is this earth to-day,
- It is in Democracy--(the purport and aim of all the past,)
- It is the life of one man or one woman to-day--the average man of to-day,
- It is in languages, social customs, literatures, arts,
- It is in the broad show of artificial things, ships, machinery,
- politics, creeds, modern improvements, and the interchange of nations,
- All for the modern--all for the average man of to-day.
- Thought
- Of persons arrived at high positions, ceremonies, wealth,
- scholarships, and the like;
- (To me all that those persons have arrived at sinks away from them,
- except as it results to their bodies and souls,
- So that often to me they appear gaunt and naked,
- And often to me each one mocks the others, and mocks himself or herself,
- And of each one the core of life, namely happiness, is full of the
- rotten excrement of maggots,
- And often to me those men and women pass unwittingly the true
- realities of life, and go toward false realities,
- And often to me they are alive after what custom has served them,
- but nothing more,
- And often to me they are sad, hasty, unwaked sonnambules walking the dusk.)
- Miracles
- Why, who makes much of a miracle?
- As to me I know of nothing else but miracles,
- Whether I walk the streets of Manhattan,
- Or dart my sight over the roofs of houses toward the sky,
- Or wade with naked feet along the beach just in the edge of the water,
- Or stand under trees in the woods,
- Or talk by day with any one I love, or sleep in the bed at night
- with any one I love,
- Or sit at table at dinner with the rest,
- Or look at strangers opposite me riding in the car,
- Or watch honey-bees busy around the hive of a summer forenoon,
- Or animals feeding in the fields,
- Or birds, or the wonderfulness of insects in the air,
- Or the wonderfulness of the sundown, or of stars shining so quiet
- and bright,
- Or the exquisite delicate thin curve of the new moon in spring;
- These with the rest, one and all, are to me miracles,
- The whole referring, yet each distinct and in its place.
- To me every hour of the light and dark is a miracle,
- Every cubic inch of space is a miracle,
- Every square yard of the surface of the earth is spread with the same,
- Every foot of the interior swarms with the same.
- To me the sea is a continual miracle,
- The fishes that swim--the rocks--the motion of the waves--the
- ships with men in them,
- What stranger miracles are there?
- Sparkles from the Wheel
- Where the city’s ceaseless crowd moves on the livelong day,
- Withdrawn I join a group of children watching, I pause aside with them.
- By the curb toward the edge of the flagging,
- A knife-grinder works at his wheel sharpening a great knife,
- Bending over he carefully holds it to the stone, by foot and knee,
- With measur’d tread he turns rapidly, as he presses with light but
- firm hand,
- Forth issue then in copious golden jets,
- Sparkles from the wheel.
- The scene and all its belongings, how they seize and affect me,
- The sad sharp-chinn’d old man with worn clothes and broad
- shoulder-band of leather,
- Myself effusing and fluid, a phantom curiously floating, now here
- absorb’d and arrested,
- The group, (an unminded point set in a vast surrounding,)
- The attentive, quiet children, the loud, proud, restive base of the streets,
- The low hoarse purr of the whirling stone, the light-press’d blade,
- Diffusing, dropping, sideways-darting, in tiny showers of gold,
- Sparkles from the wheel.
- To a Pupil
- Is reform needed? is it through you?
- The greater the reform needed, the greater the Personality you need
- to accomplish it.
- You! do you not see how it would serve to have eyes, blood,
- complexion, clean and sweet?
- Do you not see how it would serve to have such a body and soul that
- when you enter the crowd an atmosphere of desire and command
- enters with you, and every one is impress’d with your Personality?
- O the magnet! the flesh over and over!
- Go, dear friend, if need be give up all else, and commence to-day to
- inure yourself to pluck, reality, self-esteem, definiteness,
- elevatedness,
- Rest not till you rivet and publish yourself of your own Personality.
- Unfolded out of the Folds
- Unfolded out of the folds of the woman man comes unfolded, and is
- always to come unfolded,
- Unfolded only out of the superbest woman of the earth is to come the
- superbest man of the earth,
- Unfolded out of the friendliest woman is to come the friendliest man,
- Unfolded only out of the perfect body of a woman can a man be
- form’d of perfect body,
- Unfolded only out of the inimitable poems of woman can come the
- poems of man, (only thence have my poems come;)
- Unfolded out of the strong and arrogant woman I love, only thence
- can appear the strong and arrogant man I love,
- Unfolded by brawny embraces from the well-muscled woman
- love, only thence come the brawny embraces of the man,
- Unfolded out of the folds of the woman’s brain come all the folds
- of the man’s brain, duly obedient,
- Unfolded out of the justice of the woman all justice is unfolded,
- Unfolded out of the sympathy of the woman is all sympathy;
- A man is a great thing upon the earth and through eternity, but
- every of the greatness of man is unfolded out of woman;
- First the man is shaped in the woman, he can then be shaped in himself.
- What Am I After All
- What am I after all but a child, pleas’d with the sound of my own
- name? repeating it over and over;
- I stand apart to hear--it never tires me.
- To you your name also;
- Did you think there was nothing but two or three pronunciations in
- the sound of your name?
- Kosmos
- Who includes diversity and is Nature,
- Who is the amplitude of the earth, and the coarseness and sexuality of
- the earth, and the great charity of the earth, and the equilibrium also,
- Who has not look’d forth from the windows the eyes for nothing,
- or whose brain held audience with messengers for nothing,
- Who contains believers and disbelievers, who is the most majestic lover,
- Who holds duly his or her triune proportion of realism,
- spiritualism, and of the aesthetic or intellectual,
- Who having consider’d the body finds all its organs and parts good,
- Who, out of the theory of the earth and of his or her body
- understands by subtle analogies all other theories,
- The theory of a city, a poem, and of the large politics of these States;
- Who believes not only in our globe with its sun and moon, but in
- other globes with their suns and moons,
- Who, constructing the house of himself or herself, not for a day
- but for all time, sees races, eras, dates, generations,
- The past, the future, dwelling there, like space, inseparable together.
- Others May Praise What They Like
- Others may praise what they like;
- But I, from the banks of the running Missouri, praise nothing in art
- or aught else,
- Till it has well inhaled the atmosphere of this river, also the
- western prairie-scent,
- And exudes it all again.
- Who Learns My Lesson Complete?
- Who learns my lesson complete?
- Boss, journeyman, apprentice, churchman and atheist,
- The stupid and the wise thinker, parents and offspring, merchant,
- clerk, porter and customer,
- Editor, author, artist, and schoolboy--draw nigh and commence;
- It is no lesson--it lets down the bars to a good lesson,
- And that to another, and every one to another still.
- The great laws take and effuse without argument,
- I am of the same style, for I am their friend,
- I love them quits and quits, I do not halt and make salaams.
- I lie abstracted and hear beautiful tales of things and the reasons
- of things,
- They are so beautiful I nudge myself to listen.
- I cannot say to any person what I hear--I cannot say it to myself--
- it is very wonderful.
- It is no small matter, this round and delicious globe moving so
- exactly in its orbit for ever and ever, without one jolt or
- the untruth of a single second,
- I do not think it was made in six days, nor in ten thousand years,
- nor ten billions of years,
- Nor plann’d and built one thing after another as an architect plans
- and builds a house.
- I do not think seventy years is the time of a man or woman,
- Nor that seventy millions of years is the time of a man or woman,
- Nor that years will ever stop the existence of me, or any one else.
- Is it wonderful that I should be immortal? as every one is immortal;
- I know it is wonderful, but my eyesight is equally wonderful, and
- how I was conceived in my mother’s womb is equally wonderful,
- And pass’d from a babe in the creeping trance of a couple of
- summers and winters to articulate and walk--all this is
- equally wonderful.
- And that my soul embraces you this hour, and we affect each other
- without ever seeing each other, and never perhaps to see
- each other, is every bit as wonderful.
- And that I can think such thoughts as these is just as wonderful,
- And that I can remind you, and you think them and know them to
- be true, is just as wonderful.
- And that the moon spins round the earth and on with the earth, is
- equally wonderful,
- And that they balance themselves with the sun and stars is equally
- wonderful.
- Tests
- All submit to them where they sit, inner, secure, unapproachable to
- analysis in the soul,
- Not traditions, not the outer authorities are the judges,
- They are the judges of outer authorities and of all traditions,
- They corroborate as they go only whatever corroborates themselves,
- and touches themselves;
- For all that, they have it forever in themselves to corroborate far
- and near without one exception.
- The Torch
- On my Northwest coast in the midst of the night a fishermen’s group
- stands watching,
- Out on the lake that expands before them, others are spearing salmon,
- The canoe, a dim shadowy thing, moves across the black water,
- Bearing a torch ablaze at the prow.
- O Star of France [1870-71]
- O star of France,
- The brightness of thy hope and strength and fame,
- Like some proud ship that led the fleet so long,
- Beseems to-day a wreck driven by the gale, a mastless hulk,
- And ’mid its teeming madden’d half-drown’d crowds,
- Nor helm nor helmsman.
- Dim smitten star,
- Orb not of France alone, pale symbol of my soul, its dearest hopes,
- The struggle and the daring, rage divine for liberty,
- Of aspirations toward the far ideal, enthusiast’s dreams of brotherhood,
- Of terror to the tyrant and the priest.
- Star crucified--by traitors sold,
- Star panting o’er a land of death, heroic land,
- Strange, passionate, mocking, frivolous land.
- Miserable! yet for thy errors, vanities, sins, I will not now rebuke thee,
- Thy unexampled woes and pangs have quell’d them all,
- And left thee sacred.
- In that amid thy many faults thou ever aimedst highly,
- In that thou wouldst not really sell thyself however great the price,
- In that thou surely wakedst weeping from thy drugg’d sleep,
- In that alone among thy sisters thou, giantess, didst rend the ones
- that shamed thee,
- In that thou couldst not, wouldst not, wear the usual chains,
- This cross, thy livid face, thy pierced hands and feet,
- The spear thrust in thy side.
- O star! O ship of France, beat back and baffled long!
- Bear up O smitten orb! O ship continue on!
- Sure as the ship of all, the Earth itself,
- Product of deathly fire and turbulent chaos,
- Forth from its spasms of fury and its poisons,
- Issuing at last in perfect power and beauty,
- Onward beneath the sun following its course,
- So thee O ship of France!
- Finish’d the days, the clouds dispel’d
- The travail o’er, the long-sought extrication,
- When lo! reborn, high o’er the European world,
- (In gladness answering thence, as face afar to face, reflecting ours
- Columbia,)
- Again thy star O France, fair lustrous star,
- In heavenly peace, clearer, more bright than ever,
- Shall beam immortal.
- The Ox-Tamer
- In a far-away northern county in the placid pastoral region,
- Lives my farmer friend, the theme of my recitative, a famous tamer of oxen,
- There they bring him the three-year-olds and the four-year-olds to
- break them,
- He will take the wildest steer in the world and break him and tame him,
- He will go fearless without any whip where the young bullock
- chafes up and down the yard,
- The bullock’s head tosses restless high in the air with raging eyes,
- Yet see you! how soon his rage subsides--how soon this tamer tames him;
- See you! on the farms hereabout a hundred oxen young and old,
- and he is the man who has tamed them,
- They all know him, all are affectionate to him;
- See you! some are such beautiful animals, so lofty looking;
- Some are buff-color’d, some mottled, one has a white line running
- along his back, some are brindled,
- Some have wide flaring horns (a good sign)--see you! the bright hides,
- See, the two with stars on their foreheads--see, the round bodies
- and broad backs,
- How straight and square they stand on their legs--what fine sagacious eyes!
- How straight they watch their tamer--they wish him near them--how
- they turn to look after him!
- What yearning expression! how uneasy they are when he moves away from them;
- Now I marvel what it can be he appears to them, (books, politics,
- poems, depart--all else departs,)
- I confess I envy only his fascination--my silent, illiterate friend,
- Whom a hundred oxen love there in his life on farms,
- In the northern county far, in the placid pastoral region.
- An Old Man’s Thought of School
- [For the Inauguration of a Public School, Camden, New Jersey, 1874]
- An old man’s thought of school,
- An old man gathering youthful memories and blooms that youth itself cannot.
- Now only do I know you,
- O fair auroral skies--O morning dew upon the grass!
- And these I see, these sparkling eyes,
- These stores of mystic meaning, these young lives,
- Building, equipping like a fleet of ships, immortal ships,
- Soon to sail out over the measureless seas,
- On the soul’s voyage.
- Only a lot of boys and girls?
- Only the tiresome spelling, writing, ciphering classes?
- Only a public school?
- Ah more, infinitely more;
- (As George Fox rais’d his warning cry, “Is it this pile of brick and
- mortar, these dead floors, windows, rails, you call the church?
- Why this is not the church at all--the church is living, ever living
- souls.”)
- And you America,
- Cast you the real reckoning for your present?
- The lights and shadows of your future, good or evil?
- To girlhood, boyhood look, the teacher and the school.
- Wandering at Morn
- Wandering at morn,
- Emerging from the night from gloomy thoughts, thee in my thoughts,
- Yearning for thee harmonious Union! thee, singing bird divine!
- Thee coil’d in evil times my country, with craft and black dismay,
- with every meanness, treason thrust upon thee,
- This common marvel I beheld--the parent thrush I watch’d feeding its young,
- The singing thrush whose tones of joy and faith ecstatic,
- Fail not to certify and cheer my soul.
- There ponder’d, felt I,
- If worms, snakes, loathsome grubs, may to sweet spiritual songs be turn’d,
- If vermin so transposed, so used and bless’d may be,
- Then may I trust in you, your fortunes, days, my country;
- Who knows but these may be the lessons fit for you?
- From these your future song may rise with joyous trills,
- Destin’d to fill the world.
- Italian Music in Dakota
- [“The Seventeenth--the finest Regimental Band I ever heard.”]
- Through the soft evening air enwinding all,
- Rocks, woods, fort, cannon, pacing sentries, endless wilds,
- In dulcet streams, in flutes’ and cornets’ notes,
- Electric, pensive, turbulent, artificial,
- (Yet strangely fitting even here, meanings unknown before,
- Subtler than ever, more harmony, as if born here, related here,
- Not to the city’s fresco’d rooms, not to the audience of the opera house,
- Sounds, echoes, wandering strains, as really here at home,
- Sonnambula’s innocent love, trios with Norma’s anguish,
- And thy ecstatic chorus Poliuto;)
- Ray’d in the limpid yellow slanting sundown,
- Music, Italian music in Dakota.
- While Nature, sovereign of this gnarl’d realm,
- Lurking in hidden barbaric grim recesses,
- Acknowledging rapport however far remov’d,
- (As some old root or soil of earth its last-born flower or fruit,)
- Listens well pleas’d.
- With All Thy Gifts
- With all thy gifts America,
- Standing secure, rapidly tending, overlooking the world,
- Power, wealth, extent, vouchsafed to thee--with these and like of
- these vouchsafed to thee,
- What if one gift thou lackest? (the ultimate human problem never solving,)
- The gift of perfect women fit for thee--what if that gift of gifts
- thou lackest?
- The towering feminine of thee? the beauty, health, completion, fit for thee?
- The mothers fit for thee?
- My Picture-Gallery
- In a little house keep I pictures suspended, it is not a fix’d house,
- It is round, it is only a few inches from one side to the other;
- Yet behold, it has room for all the shows of the world, all memories!
- Here the tableaus of life, and here the groupings of death;
- Here, do you know this? this is cicerone himself,
- With finger rais’d he points to the prodigal pictures.
- The Prairie States
- A newer garden of creation, no primal solitude,
- Dense, joyous, modern, populous millions, cities and farms,
- With iron interlaced, composite, tied, many in one,
- By all the world contributed--freedom’s and law’s and thrift’s society,
- The crown and teeming paradise, so far, of time’s accumulations,
- To justify the past.
- BOOK XXV
- Proud Music of the Storm
- 1
- Proud music of the storm,
- Blast that careers so free, whistling across the prairies,
- Strong hum of forest tree-tops--wind of the mountains,
- Personified dim shapes--you hidden orchestras,
- You serenades of phantoms with instruments alert,
- Blending with Nature’s rhythmus all the tongues of nations;
- You chords left as by vast composers--you choruses,
- You formless, free, religious dances--you from the Orient,
- You undertone of rivers, roar of pouring cataracts,
- You sounds from distant guns with galloping cavalry,
- Echoes of camps with all the different bugle-calls,
- Trooping tumultuous, filling the midnight late, bending me powerless,
- Entering my lonesome slumber-chamber, why have you seiz’d me?
- 2
- Come forward O my soul, and let the rest retire,
- Listen, lose not, it is toward thee they tend,
- Parting the midnight, entering my slumber-chamber,
- For thee they sing and dance O soul.
- A festival song,
- The duet of the bridegroom and the bride, a marriage-march,
- With lips of love, and hearts of lovers fill’d to the brim with love,
- The red-flush’d cheeks and perfumes, the cortege swarming full of
- friendly faces young and old,
- To flutes’ clear notes and sounding harps’ cantabile.
- Now loud approaching drums,
- Victoria! seest thou in powder-smoke the banners torn but flying?
- the rout of the baffled?
- Hearest those shouts of a conquering army?
- (Ah soul, the sobs of women, the wounded groaning in agony,
- The hiss and crackle of flames, the blacken’d ruins, the embers of cities,
- The dirge and desolation of mankind.)
- Now airs antique and mediaeval fill me,
- I see and hear old harpers with their harps at Welsh festivals,
- I hear the minnesingers singing their lays of love,
- I hear the minstrels, gleemen, troubadours, of the middle ages.
- Now the great organ sounds,
- Tremulous, while underneath, (as the hid footholds of the earth,
- On which arising rest, and leaping forth depend,
- All shapes of beauty, grace and strength, all hues we know,
- Green blades of grass and warbling birds, children that gambol and
- play, the clouds of heaven above,)
- The strong base stands, and its pulsations intermits not,
- Bathing, supporting, merging all the rest, maternity of all the rest,
- And with it every instrument in multitudes,
- The players playing, all the world’s musicians,
- The solemn hymns and masses rousing adoration,
- All passionate heart-chants, sorrowful appeals,
- The measureless sweet vocalists of ages,
- And for their solvent setting earth’s own diapason,
- Of winds and woods and mighty ocean waves,
- A new composite orchestra, binder of years and climes, ten-fold renewer,
- As of the far-back days the poets tell, the Paradiso,
- The straying thence, the separation long, but now the wandering done,
- The journey done, the journeyman come home,
- And man and art with Nature fused again.
- Tutti! for earth and heaven;
- (The Almighty leader now for once has signal’d with his wand.)
- The manly strophe of the husbands of the world,
- And all the wives responding.
- The tongues of violins,
- (I think O tongues ye tell this heart, that cannot tell itself,
- This brooding yearning heart, that cannot tell itself.)
- 3
- Ah from a little child,
- Thou knowest soul how to me all sounds became music,
- My mother’s voice in lullaby or hymn,
- (The voice, O tender voices, memory’s loving voices,
- Last miracle of all, O dearest mother’s, sister’s, voices;)
- The rain, the growing corn, the breeze among the long-leav’d corn,
- The measur’d sea-surf beating on the sand,
- The twittering bird, the hawk’s sharp scream,
- The wild-fowl’s notes at night as flying low migrating north or south,
- The psalm in the country church or mid the clustering trees, the
- open air camp-meeting,
- The fiddler in the tavern, the glee, the long-strung sailor-song,
- The lowing cattle, bleating sheep, the crowing cock at dawn.
- All songs of current lands come sounding round me,
- The German airs of friendship, wine and love,
- Irish ballads, merry jigs and dances, English warbles,
- Chansons of France, Scotch tunes, and o’er the rest,
- Italia’s peerless compositions.
- Across the stage with pallor on her face, yet lurid passion,
- Stalks Norma brandishing the dagger in her hand.
- I see poor crazed Lucia’s eyes’ unnatural gleam,
- Her hair down her back falls loose and dishevel’d.
- I see where Ernani walking the bridal garden,
- Amid the scent of night-roses, radiant, holding his bride by the hand,
- Hears the infernal call, the death-pledge of the horn.
- To crossing swords and gray hairs bared to heaven,
- The clear electric base and baritone of the world,
- The trombone duo, Libertad forever!
- From Spanish chestnut trees’ dense shade,
- By old and heavy convent walls a wailing song,
- Song of lost love, the torch of youth and life quench’d in despair,
- Song of the dying swan, Fernando’s heart is breaking.
- Awaking from her woes at last retriev’d Amina sings,
- Copious as stars and glad as morning light the torrents of her joy.
- (The teeming lady comes,
- The lustrious orb, Venus contralto, the blooming mother,
- Sister of loftiest gods, Alboni’s self I hear.)
- 4
- I hear those odes, symphonies, operas,
- I hear in the William Tell the music of an arous’d and angry people,
- I hear Meyerbeer’s Huguenots, the Prophet, or Robert,
- Gounod’s Faust, or Mozart’s Don Juan.
- I hear the dance-music of all nations,
- The waltz, some delicious measure, lapsing, bathing me in bliss,
- The bolero to tinkling guitars and clattering castanets.
- I see religious dances old and new,
- I hear the sound of the Hebrew lyre,
- I see the crusaders marching bearing the cross on high, to the
- martial clang of cymbals,
- I hear dervishes monotonously chanting, interspers’d with frantic
- shouts, as they spin around turning always towards Mecca,
- I see the rapt religious dances of the Persians and the Arabs,
- Again, at Eleusis, home of Ceres, I see the modern Greeks dancing,
- I hear them clapping their hands as they bend their bodies,
- I hear the metrical shuffling of their feet.
- I see again the wild old Corybantian dance, the performers wounding
- each other,
- I see the Roman youth to the shrill sound of flageolets throwing and
- catching their weapons,
- As they fall on their knees and rise again.
- I hear from the Mussulman mosque the muezzin calling,
- I see the worshippers within, nor form nor sermon, argument nor word,
- But silent, strange, devout, rais’d, glowing heads, ecstatic faces.
- I hear the Egyptian harp of many strings,
- The primitive chants of the Nile boatmen,
- The sacred imperial hymns of China,
- To the delicate sounds of the king, (the stricken wood and stone,)
- Or to Hindu flutes and the fretting twang of the vina,
- A band of bayaderes.
- 5
- Now Asia, Africa leave me, Europe seizing inflates me,
- To organs huge and bands I hear as from vast concourses of voices,
- Luther’s strong hymn Eine feste Burg ist unser Gott,
- Rossini’s Stabat Mater dolorosa,
- Or floating in some high cathedral dim with gorgeous color’d windows,
- The passionate Agnus Dei or Gloria in Excelsis.
- Composers! mighty maestros!
- And you, sweet singers of old lands, soprani, tenori, bassi!
- To you a new bard caroling in the West,
- Obeisant sends his love.
- (Such led to thee O soul,
- All senses, shows and objects, lead to thee,
- But now it seems to me sound leads o’er all the rest.)
- I hear the annual singing of the children in St. Paul’s cathedral,
- Or, under the high roof of some colossal hall, the symphonies,
- oratorios of Beethoven, Handel, or Haydn,
- The Creation in billows of godhood laves me.
- Give me to hold all sounds, (I madly struggling cry,)
- Fill me with all the voices of the universe,
- Endow me with their throbbings, Nature’s also,
- The tempests, waters, winds, operas and chants, marches and dances,
- Utter, pour in, for I would take them all!
- 6
- Then I woke softly,
- And pausing, questioning awhile the music of my dream,
- And questioning all those reminiscences, the tempest in its fury,
- And all the songs of sopranos and tenors,
- And those rapt oriental dances of religious fervor,
- And the sweet varied instruments, and the diapason of organs,
- And all the artless plaints of love and grief and death,
- I said to my silent curious soul out of the bed of the slumber-chamber,
- Come, for I have found the clew I sought so long,
- Let us go forth refresh’d amid the day,
- Cheerfully tallying life, walking the world, the real,
- Nourish’d henceforth by our celestial dream.
- And I said, moreover,
- Haply what thou hast heard O soul was not the sound of winds,
- Nor dream of raging storm, nor sea-hawk’s flapping wings nor harsh scream,
- Nor vocalism of sun-bright Italy,
- Nor German organ majestic, nor vast concourse of voices, nor layers
- of harmonies,
- Nor strophes of husbands and wives, nor sound of marching soldiers,
- Nor flutes, nor harps, nor the bugle-calls of camps,
- But to a new rhythmus fitted for thee,
- Poems bridging the way from Life to Death, vaguely wafted in night
- air, uncaught, unwritten,
- Which let us go forth in the bold day and write.
- BOOK XXVI
- Passage to India
- 1
- Singing my days,
- Singing the great achievements of the present,
- Singing the strong light works of engineers,
- Our modern wonders, (the antique ponderous Seven outvied,)
- In the Old World the east the Suez canal,
- The New by its mighty railroad spann’d,
- The seas inlaid with eloquent gentle wires;
- Yet first to sound, and ever sound, the cry with thee O soul,
- The Past! the Past! the Past!
- The Past--the dark unfathom’d retrospect!
- The teeming gulf--the sleepers and the shadows!
- The past--the infinite greatness of the past!
- For what is the present after all but a growth out of the past?
- (As a projectile form’d, impell’d, passing a certain line, still keeps on,
- So the present, utterly form’d, impell’d by the past.)
- 2
- Passage O soul to India!
- Eclaircise the myths Asiatic, the primitive fables.
- Not you alone proud truths of the world,
- Nor you alone ye facts of modern science,
- But myths and fables of eld, Asia’s, Africa’s fables,
- The far-darting beams of the spirit, the unloos’d dreams,
- The deep diving bibles and legends,
- The daring plots of the poets, the elder religions;
- O you temples fairer than lilies pour’d over by the rising sun!
- O you fables spurning the known, eluding the hold of the known,
- mounting to heaven!
- You lofty and dazzling towers, pinnacled, red as roses, burnish’d
- with gold!
- Towers of fables immortal fashion’d from mortal dreams!
- You too I welcome and fully the same as the rest!
- You too with joy I sing.
- Passage to India!
- Lo, soul, seest thou not God’s purpose from the first?
- The earth to be spann’d, connected by network,
- The races, neighbors, to marry and be given in marriage,
- The oceans to be cross’d, the distant brought near,
- The lands to be welded together.
- A worship new I sing,
- You captains, voyagers, explorers, yours,
- You engineers, you architects, machinists, yours,
- You, not for trade or transportation only,
- But in God’s name, and for thy sake O soul.
- 3
- Passage to India!
- Lo soul for thee of tableaus twain,
- I see in one the Suez canal initiated, open’d,
- I see the procession of steamships, the Empress Engenie’s leading the van,
- I mark from on deck the strange landscape, the pure sky, the level
- sand in the distance,
- I pass swiftly the picturesque groups, the workmen gather’d,
- The gigantic dredging machines.
- In one again, different, (yet thine, all thine, O soul, the same,)
- I see over my own continent the Pacific railroad surmounting every barrier,
- I see continual trains of cars winding along the Platte carrying
- freight and passengers,
- I hear the locomotives rushing and roaring, and the shrill steam-whistle,
- I hear the echoes reverberate through the grandest scenery in the world,
- I cross the Laramie plains, I note the rocks in grotesque shapes,
- the buttes,
- I see the plentiful larkspur and wild onions, the barren, colorless,
- sage-deserts,
- I see in glimpses afar or towering immediately above me the great
- mountains, I see the Wind river and the Wahsatch mountains,
- I see the Monument mountain and the Eagle’s Nest, I pass the
- Promontory, I ascend the Nevadas,
- I scan the noble Elk mountain and wind around its base,
- I see the Humboldt range, I thread the valley and cross the river,
- I see the clear waters of lake Tahoe, I see forests of majestic pines,
- Or crossing the great desert, the alkaline plains, I behold
- enchanting mirages of waters and meadows,
- Marking through these and after all, in duplicate slender lines,
- Bridging the three or four thousand miles of land travel,
- Tying the Eastern to the Western sea,
- The road between Europe and Asia.
- (Ah Genoese thy dream! thy dream!
- Centuries after thou art laid in thy grave,
- The shore thou foundest verifies thy dream.)
- 4
- Passage to India!
- Struggles of many a captain, tales of many a sailor dead,
- Over my mood stealing and spreading they come,
- Like clouds and cloudlets in the unreach’d sky.
- Along all history, down the slopes,
- As a rivulet running, sinking now, and now again to the surface rising,
- A ceaseless thought, a varied train--lo, soul, to thee, thy sight,
- they rise,
- The plans, the voyages again, the expeditions;
- Again Vasco de Gama sails forth,
- Again the knowledge gain’d, the mariner’s compass,
- Lands found and nations born, thou born America,
- For purpose vast, man’s long probation fill’d,
- Thou rondure of the world at last accomplish’d.
- 5
- O vast Rondure, swimming in space,
- Cover’d all over with visible power and beauty,
- Alternate light and day and the teeming spiritual darkness,
- Unspeakable high processions of sun and moon and countless stars above,
- Below, the manifold grass and waters, animals, mountains, trees,
- With inscrutable purpose, some hidden prophetic intention,
- Now first it seems my thought begins to span thee.
- Down from the gardens of Asia descending radiating,
- Adam and Eve appear, then their myriad progeny after them,
- Wandering, yearning, curious, with restless explorations,
- With questionings, baffled, formless, feverish, with never-happy hearts,
- With that sad incessant refrain, Wherefore unsatisfied soul? and
- Whither O mocking life?
- Ah who shall soothe these feverish children?
- Who Justify these restless explorations?
- Who speak the secret of impassive earth?
- Who bind it to us? what is this separate Nature so unnatural?
- What is this earth to our affections? (unloving earth, without a
- throb to answer ours,
- Cold earth, the place of graves.)
- Yet soul be sure the first intent remains, and shall be carried out,
- Perhaps even now the time has arrived.
- After the seas are all cross’d, (as they seem already cross’d,)
- After the great captains and engineers have accomplish’d their work,
- After the noble inventors, after the scientists, the chemist, the
- geologist, ethnologist,
- Finally shall come the poet worthy that name,
- The true son of God shall come singing his songs.
- Then not your deeds only O voyagers, O scientists and inventors,
- shall be justified,
- All these hearts as of fretted children shall be sooth’d,
- All affection shall be fully responded to, the secret shall be told,
- All these separations and gaps shall be taken up and hook’d and
- link’d together,
- The whole earth, this cold, impassive, voiceless earth, shall be
- completely Justified,
- Trinitas divine shall be gloriously accomplish’d and compacted by
- the true son of God, the poet,
- (He shall indeed pass the straits and conquer the mountains,
- He shall double the cape of Good Hope to some purpose,)
- Nature and Man shall be disjoin’d and diffused no more,
- The true son of God shall absolutely fuse them.
- 6
- Year at whose wide-flung door I sing!
- Year of the purpose accomplish’d!
- Year of the marriage of continents, climates and oceans!
- (No mere doge of Venice now wedding the Adriatic,)
- I see O year in you the vast terraqueous globe given and giving all,
- Europe to Asia, Africa join’d, and they to the New World,
- The lands, geographies, dancing before you, holding a festival garland,
- As brides and bridegrooms hand in hand.
- Passage to India!
- Cooling airs from Caucasus far, soothing cradle of man,
- The river Euphrates flowing, the past lit up again.
- Lo soul, the retrospect brought forward,
- The old, most populous, wealthiest of earth’s lands,
- The streams of the Indus and the Ganges and their many affluents,
- (I my shores of America walking to-day behold, resuming all,)
- The tale of Alexander on his warlike marches suddenly dying,
- On one side China and on the other side Persia and Arabia,
- To the south the great seas and the bay of Bengal,
- The flowing literatures, tremendous epics, religions, castes,
- Old occult Brahma interminably far back, the tender and junior Buddha,
- Central and southern empires and all their belongings, possessors,
- The wars of Tamerlane,the reign of Aurungzebe,
- The traders, rulers, explorers, Moslems, Venetians, Byzantium, the
- Arabs, Portuguese,
- The first travelers famous yet, Marco Polo, Batouta the Moor,
- Doubts to be solv’d, the map incognita, blanks to be fill’d,
- The foot of man unstay’d, the hands never at rest,
- Thyself O soul that will not brook a challenge.
- The mediaeval navigators rise before me,
- The world of 1492, with its awaken’d enterprise,
- Something swelling in humanity now like the sap of the earth in spring,
- The sunset splendor of chivalry declining.
- And who art thou sad shade?
- Gigantic, visionary, thyself a visionary,
- With majestic limbs and pious beaming eyes,
- Spreading around with every look of thine a golden world,
- Enhuing it with gorgeous hues.
- As the chief histrion,
- Down to the footlights walks in some great scena,
- Dominating the rest I see the Admiral himself,
- (History’s type of courage, action, faith,)
- Behold him sail from Palos leading his little fleet,
- His voyage behold, his return, his great fame,
- His misfortunes, calumniators, behold him a prisoner, chain’d,
- Behold his dejection, poverty, death.
- (Curious in time I stand, noting the efforts of heroes,
- Is the deferment long? bitter the slander, poverty, death?
- Lies the seed unreck’d for centuries in the ground? lo, to God’s due
- occasion,
- Uprising in the night, it sprouts, blooms,
- And fills the earth with use and beauty.)
- 7
- Passage indeed O soul to primal thought,
- Not lands and seas alone, thy own clear freshness,
- The young maturity of brood and bloom,
- To realms of budding bibles.
- O soul, repressless, I with thee and thou with me,
- Thy circumnavigation of the world begin,
- Of man, the voyage of his mind’s return,
- To reason’s early paradise,
- Back, back to wisdom’s birth, to innocent intuitions,
- Again with fair creation.
- 8
- O we can wait no longer,
- We too take ship O soul,
- Joyous we too launch out on trackless seas,
- Fearless for unknown shores on waves of ecstasy to sail,
- Amid the wafting winds, (thou pressing me to thee, I thee to me, O soul,)
- Caroling free, singing our song of God,
- Chanting our chant of pleasant exploration.
- With laugh and many a kiss,
- (Let others deprecate, let others weep for sin, remorse, humiliation,)
- O soul thou pleasest me, I thee.
- Ah more than any priest O soul we too believe in God,
- But with the mystery of God we dare not dally.
- O soul thou pleasest me, I thee,
- Sailing these seas or on the hills, or waking in the night,
- Thoughts, silent thoughts, of Time and Space and Death, like waters flowing,
- Bear me indeed as through the regions infinite,
- Whose air I breathe, whose ripples hear, lave me all over,
- Bathe me O God in thee, mounting to thee,
- I and my soul to range in range of thee.
- O Thou transcendent,
- Nameless, the fibre and the breath,
- Light of the light, shedding forth universes, thou centre of them,
- Thou mightier centre of the true, the good, the loving,
- Thou moral, spiritual fountain--affection’s source--thou reservoir,
- (O pensive soul of me--O thirst unsatisfied--waitest not there?
- Waitest not haply for us somewhere there the Comrade perfect?)
- Thou pulse--thou motive of the stars, suns, systems,
- That, circling, move in order, safe, harmonious,
- Athwart the shapeless vastnesses of space,
- How should I think, how breathe a single breath, how speak, if, out
- of myself,
- I could not launch, to those, superior universes?
- Swiftly I shrivel at the thought of God,
- At Nature and its wonders, Time and Space and Death,
- But that I, turning, call to thee O soul, thou actual Me,
- And lo, thou gently masterest the orbs,
- Thou matest Time, smilest content at Death,
- And fillest, swellest full the vastnesses of Space.
- Greater than stars or suns,
- Bounding O soul thou journeyest forth;
- What love than thine and ours could wider amplify?
- What aspirations, wishes, outvie thine and ours O soul?
- What dreams of the ideal? what plans of purity, perfection, strength?
- What cheerful willingness for others’ sake to give up all?
- For others’ sake to suffer all?
- Reckoning ahead O soul, when thou, the time achiev’d,
- The seas all cross’d, weather’d the capes, the voyage done,
- Surrounded, copest, frontest God, yieldest, the aim attain’d,
- As fill’d with friendship, love complete, the Elder Brother found,
- The Younger melts in fondness in his arms.
- 9
- Passage to more than India!
- Are thy wings plumed indeed for such far flights?
- O soul, voyagest thou indeed on voyages like those?
- Disportest thou on waters such as those?
- Soundest below the Sanscrit and the Vedas?
- Then have thy bent unleash’d.
- Passage to you, your shores, ye aged fierce enigmas!
- Passage to you, to mastership of you, ye strangling problems!
- You, strew’d with the wrecks of skeletons, that, living, never reach’d you.
- Passage to more than India!
- O secret of the earth and sky!
- Of you O waters of the sea! O winding creeks and rivers!
- Of you O woods and fields! of you strong mountains of my land!
- Of you O prairies! of you gray rocks!
- O morning red! O clouds! O rain and snows!
- O day and night, passage to you!
- O sun and moon and all you stars! Sirius and Jupiter!
- Passage to you!
- Passage, immediate passage! the blood burns in my veins!
- Away O soul! hoist instantly the anchor!
- Cut the hawsers--haul out--shake out every sail!
- Have we not stood here like trees in the ground long enough?
- Have we not grovel’d here long enough, eating and drinking like mere brutes?
- Have we not darken’d and dazed ourselves with books long enough?
- Sail forth--steer for the deep waters only,
- Reckless O soul, exploring, I with thee, and thou with me,
- For we are bound where mariner has not yet dared to go,
- And we will risk the ship, ourselves and all.
- O my brave soul!
- O farther farther sail!
- O daring joy, but safe! are they not all the seas of God?
- O farther, farther, farther sail!
- BOOK XXVII
- Prayer of Columbus
- A batter’d, wreck’d old man,
- Thrown on this savage shore, far, far from home,
- Pent by the sea and dark rebellious brows, twelve dreary months,
- Sore, stiff with many toils, sicken’d and nigh to death,
- I take my way along the island’s edge,
- Venting a heavy heart.
- I am too full of woe!
- Haply I may not live another day;
- I cannot rest O God, I cannot eat or drink or sleep,
- Till I put forth myself, my prayer, once more to Thee,
- Breathe, bathe myself once more in Thee, commune with Thee,
- Report myself once more to Thee.
- Thou knowest my years entire, my life,
- My long and crowded life of active work, not adoration merely;
- Thou knowest the prayers and vigils of my youth,
- Thou knowest my manhood’s solemn and visionary meditations,
- Thou knowest how before I commenced I devoted all to come to Thee,
- Thou knowest I have in age ratified all those vows and strictly kept them,
- Thou knowest I have not once lost nor faith nor ecstasy in Thee,
- In shackles, prison’d, in disgrace, repining not,
- Accepting all from Thee, as duly come from Thee.
- All my emprises have been fill’d with Thee,
- My speculations, plans, begun and carried on in thoughts of Thee,
- Sailing the deep or journeying the land for Thee;
- Intentions, purports, aspirations mine, leaving results to Thee.
- O I am sure they really came from Thee,
- The urge, the ardor, the unconquerable will,
- The potent, felt, interior command, stronger than words,
- A message from the Heavens whispering to me even in sleep,
- These sped me on.
- By me and these the work so far accomplish’d,
- By me earth’s elder cloy’d and stifled lands uncloy’d, unloos’d,
- By me the hemispheres rounded and tied, the unknown to the known.
- The end I know not, it is all in Thee,
- Or small or great I know not--haply what broad fields, what lands,
- Haply the brutish measureless human undergrowth I know,
- Transplanted there may rise to stature, knowledge worthy Thee,
- Haply the swords I know may there indeed be turn’d to reaping-tools,
- Haply the lifeless cross I know, Europe’s dead cross, may bud and
- blossom there.
- One effort more, my altar this bleak sand;
- That Thou O God my life hast lighted,
- With ray of light, steady, ineffable, vouchsafed of Thee,
- Light rare untellable, lighting the very light,
- Beyond all signs, descriptions, languages;
- For that O God, be it my latest word, here on my knees,
- Old, poor, and paralyzed, I thank Thee.
- My terminus near,
- The clouds already closing in upon me,
- The voyage balk’d, the course disputed, lost,
- I yield my ships to Thee.
- My hands, my limbs grow nerveless,
- My brain feels rack’d, bewilder’d,
- Let the old timbers part, I will not part,
- I will cling fast to Thee, O God, though the waves buffet me,
- Thee, Thee at least I know.
- Is it the prophet’s thought I speak, or am I raving?
- What do I know of life? what of myself?
- I know not even my own work past or present,
- Dim ever-shifting guesses of it spread before me,
- Of newer better worlds, their mighty parturition,
- Mocking, perplexing me.
- And these things I see suddenly, what mean they?
- As if some miracle, some hand divine unseal’d my eyes,
- Shadowy vast shapes smile through the air and sky,
- And on the distant waves sail countless ships,
- And anthems in new tongues I hear saluting me.
- BOOK XXVIII
- The Sleepers
- 1
- I wander all night in my vision,
- Stepping with light feet, swiftly and noiselessly stepping and stopping,
- Bending with open eyes over the shut eyes of sleepers,
- Wandering and confused, lost to myself, ill-assorted, contradictory,
- Pausing, gazing, bending, and stopping.
- How solemn they look there, stretch’d and still,
- How quiet they breathe, the little children in their cradles.
- The wretched features of ennuyes, the white features of corpses, the
- livid faces of drunkards, the sick-gray faces of onanists,
- The gash’d bodies on battle-fields, the insane in their
- strong-door’d rooms, the sacred idiots, the new-born emerging
- from gates, and the dying emerging from gates,
- The night pervades them and infolds them.
- The married couple sleep calmly in their bed, he with his palm on
- the hip of the wife, and she with her palm on the hip of the husband,
- The sisters sleep lovingly side by side in their bed,
- The men sleep lovingly side by side in theirs,
- And the mother sleeps with her little child carefully wrapt.
- The blind sleep, and the deaf and dumb sleep,
- The prisoner sleeps well in the prison, the runaway son sleeps,
- The murderer that is to be hung next day, how does he sleep?
- And the murder’d person, how does he sleep?
- The female that loves unrequited sleeps,
- And the male that loves unrequited sleeps,
- The head of the money-maker that plotted all day sleeps,
- And the enraged and treacherous dispositions, all, all sleep.
- I stand in the dark with drooping eyes by the worst-suffering and
- the most restless,
- I pass my hands soothingly to and fro a few inches from them,
- The restless sink in their beds, they fitfully sleep.
- Now I pierce the darkness, new beings appear,
- The earth recedes from me into the night,
- I saw that it was beautiful, and I see that what is not the earth is
- beautiful.
- I go from bedside to bedside, I sleep close with the other sleepers
- each in turn,
- I dream in my dream all the dreams of the other dreamers,
- And I become the other dreamers.
- I am a dance--play up there! the fit is whirling me fast!
- I am the ever-laughing--it is new moon and twilight,
- I see the hiding of douceurs, I see nimble ghosts whichever way look,
- Cache and cache again deep in the ground and sea, and where it is
- neither ground nor sea.
- Well do they do their jobs those journeymen divine,
- Only from me can they hide nothing, and would not if they could,
- I reckon I am their boss and they make me a pet besides,
- And surround me and lead me and run ahead when I walk,
- To lift their cunning covers to signify me with stretch’d arms, and
- resume the way;
- Onward we move, a gay gang of blackguards! with mirth-shouting
- music and wild-flapping pennants of joy!
- I am the actor, the actress, the voter, the politician,
- The emigrant and the exile, the criminal that stood in the box,
- He who has been famous and he who shall be famous after to-day,
- The stammerer, the well-form’d person, the wasted or feeble person.
- I am she who adorn’d herself and folded her hair expectantly,
- My truant lover has come, and it is dark.
- Double yourself and receive me darkness,
- Receive me and my lover too, he will not let me go without him.
- I roll myself upon you as upon a bed, I resign myself to the dusk.
- He whom I call answers me and takes the place of my lover,
- He rises with me silently from the bed.
- Darkness, you are gentler than my lover, his flesh was sweaty and panting,
- I feel the hot moisture yet that he left me.
- My hands are spread forth, I pass them in all directions,
- I would sound up the shadowy shore to which you are journeying.
- Be careful darkness! already what was it touch’d me?
- I thought my lover had gone, else darkness and he are one,
- I hear the heart-beat, I follow, I fade away.
- 2
- I descend my western course, my sinews are flaccid,
- Perfume and youth course through me and I am their wake.
- It is my face yellow and wrinkled instead of the old woman’s,
- I sit low in a straw-bottom chair and carefully darn my grandson’s
- stockings.
- It is I too, the sleepless widow looking out on the winter midnight,
- I see the sparkles of starshine on the icy and pallid earth.
- A shroud I see and I am the shroud, I wrap a body and lie in the coffin,
- It is dark here under ground, it is not evil or pain here, it is
- blank here, for reasons.
- (It seems to me that every thing in the light and air ought to be happy,
- Whoever is not in his coffin and the dark grave let him know he has enough.)
- 3
- I see a beautiful gigantic swimmer swimming naked through the eddies
- of the sea,
- His brown hair lies close and even to his head, he strikes out with
- courageous arms, he urges himself with his legs,
- I see his white body, I see his undaunted eyes,
- I hate the swift-running eddies that would dash him head-foremost on
- the rocks.
- What are you doing you ruffianly red-trickled waves?
- Will you kill the courageous giant? will you kill him in the prime
- of his middle age?
- Steady and long he struggles,
- He is baffled, bang’d, bruis’d, he holds out while his strength
- holds out,
- The slapping eddies are spotted with his blood, they bear him away,
- they roll him, swing him, turn him,
- His beautiful body is borne in the circling eddies, it is
- continually bruis’d on rocks,
- Swiftly and ought of sight is borne the brave corpse.
- 4
- I turn but do not extricate myself,
- Confused, a past-reading, another, but with darkness yet.
- The beach is cut by the razory ice-wind, the wreck-guns sound,
- The tempest lulls, the moon comes floundering through the drifts.
- I look where the ship helplessly heads end on, I hear the burst as
- she strikes, I hear the howls of dismay, they grow fainter and fainter.
- I cannot aid with my wringing fingers,
- I can but rush to the surf and let it drench me and freeze upon me.
- I search with the crowd, not one of the company is wash’d to us alive,
- In the morning I help pick up the dead and lay them in rows in a barn.
- 5
- Now of the older war-days, the defeat at Brooklyn,
- Washington stands inside the lines, he stands on the intrench’d
- hills amid a crowd of officers.
- His face is cold and damp, he cannot repress the weeping drops,
- He lifts the glass perpetually to his eyes, the color is blanch’d
- from his cheeks,
- He sees the slaughter of the southern braves confided to him by
- their parents.
- The same at last and at last when peace is declared,
- He stands in the room of the old tavern, the well-belov’d soldiers
- all pass through,
- The officers speechless and slow draw near in their turns,
- The chief encircles their necks with his arm and kisses them on the cheek,
- He kisses lightly the wet cheeks one after another, he shakes hands
- and bids good-by to the army.
- 6
- Now what my mother told me one day as we sat at dinner together,
- Of when she was a nearly grown girl living home with her parents on
- the old homestead.
- A red squaw came one breakfast-time to the old homestead,
- On her back she carried a bundle of rushes for rush-bottoming chairs,
- Her hair, straight, shiny, coarse, black, profuse, half-envelop’d
- her face,
- Her step was free and elastic, and her voice sounded exquisitely as
- she spoke.
- My mother look’d in delight and amazement at the stranger,
- She look’d at the freshness of her tall-borne face and full and
- pliant limbs,
- The more she look’d upon her she loved her,
- Never before had she seen such wonderful beauty and purity,
- She made her sit on a bench by the jamb of the fireplace, she cook’d
- food for her,
- She had no work to give her, but she gave her remembrance and fondness.
- The red squaw staid all the forenoon, and toward the middle of the
- afternoon she went away,
- O my mother was loth to have her go away,
- All the week she thought of her, she watch’d for her many a month,
- She remember’d her many a winter and many a summer,
- But the red squaw never came nor was heard of there again.
- 7
- A show of the summer softness--a contact of something unseen--an
- amour of the light and air,
- I am jealous and overwhelm’d with friendliness,
- And will go gallivant with the light and air myself.
- O love and summer, you are in the dreams and in me,
- Autumn and winter are in the dreams, the farmer goes with his thrift,
- The droves and crops increase, the barns are well-fill’d.
- Elements merge in the night, ships make tacks in the dreams,
- The sailor sails, the exile returns home,
- The fugitive returns unharm’d, the immigrant is back beyond months
- and years,
- The poor Irishman lives in the simple house of his childhood with
- the well known neighbors and faces,
- They warmly welcome him, he is barefoot again, he forgets he is well off,
- The Dutchman voyages home, and the Scotchman and Welshman voyage
- home, and the native of the Mediterranean voyages home,
- To every port of England, France, Spain, enter well-fill’d ships,
- The Swiss foots it toward his hills, the Prussian goes his way, the
- Hungarian his way, and the Pole his way,
- The Swede returns, and the Dane and Norwegian return.
- The homeward bound and the outward bound,
- The beautiful lost swimmer, the ennuye, the onanist, the female that
- loves unrequited, the money-maker,
- The actor and actress, those through with their parts and those
- waiting to commence,
- The affectionate boy, the husband and wife, the voter, the nominee
- that is chosen and the nominee that has fail’d,
- The great already known and the great any time after to-day,
- The stammerer, the sick, the perfect-form’d, the homely,
- The criminal that stood in the box, the judge that sat and sentenced
- him, the fluent lawyers, the jury, the audience,
- The laugher and weeper, the dancer, the midnight widow, the red squaw,
- The consumptive, the erysipalite, the idiot, he that is wrong’d,
- The antipodes, and every one between this and them in the dark,
- I swear they are averaged now--one is no better than the other,
- The night and sleep have liken’d them and restored them.
- I swear they are all beautiful,
- Every one that sleeps is beautiful, every thing in the dim light is
- beautiful,
- The wildest and bloodiest is over, and all is peace.
- Peace is always beautiful,
- The myth of heaven indicates peace and night.
- The myth of heaven indicates the soul,
- The soul is always beautiful, it appears more or it appears less, it
- comes or it lags behind,
- It comes from its embower’d garden and looks pleasantly on itself
- and encloses the world,
- Perfect and clean the genitals previously jetting,and perfect and
- clean the womb cohering,
- The head well-grown proportion’d and plumb, and the bowels and
- joints proportion’d and plumb.
- The soul is always beautiful,
- The universe is duly in order, every thing is in its place,
- What has arrived is in its place and what waits shall be in its place,
- The twisted skull waits, the watery or rotten blood waits,
- The child of the glutton or venerealee waits long, and the child of
- the drunkard waits long, and the drunkard himself waits long,
- The sleepers that lived and died wait, the far advanced are to go on
- in their turns, and the far behind are to come on in their turns,
- The diverse shall be no less diverse, but they shall flow and unite--
- they unite now.
- 8
- The sleepers are very beautiful as they lie unclothed,
- They flow hand in hand over the whole earth from east to west as
- they lie unclothed,
- The Asiatic and African are hand in hand, the European and American
- are hand in hand,
- Learn’d and unlearn’d are hand in hand, and male and female are hand
- in hand,
- The bare arm of the girl crosses the bare breast of her lover, they
- press close without lust, his lips press her neck,
- The father holds his grown or ungrown son in his arms with
- measureless love, and the son holds the father in his arms with
- measureless love,
- The white hair of the mother shines on the white wrist of the daughter,
- The breath of the boy goes with the breath of the man, friend is
- inarm’d by friend,
- The scholar kisses the teacher and the teacher kisses the scholar,
- the wrong ’d made right,
- The call of the slave is one with the master’s call, and the master
- salutes the slave,
- The felon steps forth from the prison, the insane becomes sane, the
- suffering of sick persons is reliev’d,
- The sweatings and fevers stop, the throat that was unsound is sound,
- the lungs of the consumptive are resumed, the poor distress’d
- head is free,
- The joints of the rheumatic move as smoothly as ever, and smoother
- than ever,
- Stiflings and passages open, the paralyzed become supple,
- The swell’d and convuls’d and congested awake to themselves in condition,
- They pass the invigoration of the night and the chemistry of the
- night, and awake.
- I too pass from the night,
- I stay a while away O night, but I return to you again and love you.
- Why should I be afraid to trust myself to you?
- I am not afraid, I have been well brought forward by you,
- I love the rich running day, but I do not desert her in whom I lay so long,
- I know not how I came of you and I know not where I go with you, but
- I know I came well and shall go well.
- I will stop only a time with the night, and rise betimes,
- I will duly pass the day O my mother, and duly return to you.
- Transpositions
- Let the reformers descend from the stands where they are forever
- bawling--let an idiot or insane person appear on each of the stands;
- Let judges and criminals be transposed--let the prison-keepers be
- put in prison--let those that were prisoners take the keys;
- Let them that distrust birth and death lead the rest.
- BOOK XXIX
- To Think of Time
- 1
- To think of time--of all that retrospection,
- To think of to-day, and the ages continued henceforward.
- Have you guess’d you yourself would not continue?
- Have you dreaded these earth-beetles?
- Have you fear’d the future would be nothing to you?
- Is to-day nothing? is the beginningless past nothing?
- If the future is nothing they are just as surely nothing.
- To think that the sun rose in the east--that men and women were
- flexible, real, alive--that every thing was alive,
- To think that you and I did not see, feel, think, nor bear our part,
- To think that we are now here and bear our part.
- 2
- Not a day passes, not a minute or second without an accouchement,
- Not a day passes, not a minute or second without a corpse.
- The dull nights go over and the dull days also,
- The soreness of lying so much in bed goes over,
- The physician after long putting off gives the silent and terrible
- look for an answer,
- The children come hurried and weeping, and the brothers and sisters
- are sent for,
- Medicines stand unused on the shelf, (the camphor-smell has long
- pervaded the rooms,)
- The faithful hand of the living does not desert the hand of the dying,
- The twitching lips press lightly on the forehead of the dying,
- The breath ceases and the pulse of the heart ceases,
- The corpse stretches on the bed and the living look upon it,
- It is palpable as the living are palpable.
- The living look upon the corpse with their eyesight,
- But without eyesight lingers a different living and looks curiously
- on the corpse.
- 3
- To think the thought of death merged in the thought of materials,
- To think of all these wonders of city and country, and others taking
- great interest in them, and we taking no interest in them.
- To think how eager we are in building our houses,
- To think others shall be just as eager, and we quite indifferent.
- (I see one building the house that serves him a few years, or
- seventy or eighty years at most,
- I see one building the house that serves him longer than that.)
- Slow-moving and black lines creep over the whole earth--they never
- cease--they are the burial lines,
- He that was President was buried, and he that is now President shall
- surely be buried.
- 4
- A reminiscence of the vulgar fate,
- A frequent sample of the life and death of workmen,
- Each after his kind.
- Cold dash of waves at the ferry-wharf, posh and ice in the river,
- half-frozen mud in the streets,
- A gray discouraged sky overhead, the short last daylight of December,
- A hearse and stages, the funeral of an old Broadway stage-driver,
- the cortege mostly drivers.
- Steady the trot to the cemetery, duly rattles the death-bell,
- The gate is pass’d, the new-dug grave is halted at, the living
- alight, the hearse uncloses,
- The coffin is pass’d out, lower’d and settled, the whip is laid on
- the coffin, the earth is swiftly shovel’d in,
- The mound above is flatted with the spades--silence,
- A minute--no one moves or speaks--it is done,
- He is decently put away--is there any thing more?
- He was a good fellow, free-mouth’d, quick-temper’d, not bad-looking,
- Ready with life or death for a friend, fond of women, gambled, ate
- hearty, drank hearty,
- Had known what it was to be flush, grew low-spirited toward the
- last, sicken’d, was help’d by a contribution,
- Died, aged forty-one years--and that was his funeral.
- Thumb extended, finger uplifted, apron, cape, gloves, strap,
- wet-weather clothes, whip carefully chosen,
- Boss, spotter, starter, hostler, somebody loafing on you, you
- loafing on somebody, headway, man before and man behind,
- Good day’s work, bad day’s work, pet stock, mean stock, first out,
- last out, turning-in at night,
- To think that these are so much and so nigh to other drivers, and he
- there takes no interest in them.
- 5
- The markets, the government, the working-man’s wages, to think what
- account they are through our nights and days,
- To think that other working-men will make just as great account of
- them, yet we make little or no account.
- The vulgar and the refined, what you call sin and what you call
- goodness, to think how wide a difference,
- To think the difference will still continue to others, yet we lie
- beyond the difference.
- To think how much pleasure there is,
- Do you enjoy yourself in the city? or engaged in business? or
- planning a nomination and election? or with your wife and family?
- Or with your mother and sisters? or in womanly housework? or the
- beautiful maternal cares?
- These also flow onward to others, you and I flow onward,
- But in due time you and I shall take less interest in them.
- Your farm, profits, crops--to think how engross’d you are,
- To think there will still be farms, profits, crops, yet for you of
- what avail?
- 6
- What will be will be well, for what is is well,
- To take interest is well, and not to take interest shall be well.
- The domestic joys, the dally housework or business, the building of
- houses, are not phantasms, they have weight, form, location,
- Farms, profits, crops, markets, wages, government, are none of them
- phantasms,
- The difference between sin and goodness is no delusion,
- The earth is not an echo, man and his life and all the things of his
- life are well-consider’d.
- You are not thrown to the winds, you gather certainly and safely
- around yourself,
- Yourself! yourself!. yourself, for ever and ever!
- 7
- It is not to diffuse you that you were born of your mother and
- father, it is to identify you,
- It is not that you should be undecided, but that you should be decided,
- Something long preparing and formless is arrived and form’d in you,
- You are henceforth secure, whatever comes or goes.
- The threads that were spun are gather’d, the wet crosses the warp,
- the pattern is systematic.
- The preparations have every one been justified,
- The orchestra have sufficiently tuned their instruments, the baton
- has given the signal.
- The guest that was coming, he waited long, he is now housed,
- He is one of those who are beautiful and happy, he is one of those
- that to look upon and be with is enough.
- The law of the past cannot be eluded,
- The law of the present and future cannot be eluded,
- The law of the living cannot be eluded, it is eternal,
- The law of promotion and transformation cannot be eluded,
- The law of heroes and good-doers cannot be eluded,
- The law of drunkards, informers, mean persons, not one iota thereof
- can be eluded.
- 8
- Slow moving and black lines go ceaselessly over the earth,
- Northerner goes carried and Southerner goes carried, and they on the
- Atlantic side and they on the Pacific,
- And they between, and all through the Mississippi country, and all
- over the earth.
- The great masters and kosmos are well as they go, the heroes and
- good-doers are well,
- The known leaders and inventors and the rich owners and pious and
- distinguish’d may be well,
- But there is more account than that, there is strict account of all.
- The interminable hordes of the ignorant and wicked are not nothing,
- The barbarians of Africa and Asia are not nothing,
- The perpetual successions of shallow people are not nothing as they go.
- Of and in all these things,
- I have dream’d that we are not to be changed so much, nor the law of
- us changed,
- I have dream’d that heroes and good-doers shall be under the present
- and past law,
- And that murderers, drunkards, liars, shall be under the present and
- past law,
- For I have dream’d that the law they are under now is enough.
- And I have dream’d that the purpose and essence of the known life,
- the transient,
- Is to form and decide identity for the unknown life, the permanent.
- If all came but to ashes of dung,
- If maggots and rats ended us, then Alarum! for we are betray’d,
- Then indeed suspicion of death.
- Do you suspect death? if I were to suspect death I should die now,
- Do you think I could walk pleasantly and well-suited toward annihilation?
- Pleasantly and well-suited I walk,
- Whither I walk I cannot define, but I know it is good,
- The whole universe indicates that it is good,
- The past and the present indicate that it is good.
- How beautiful and perfect are the animals!
- How perfect the earth, and the minutest thing upon it!
- What is called good is perfect, and what is called bad is just as perfect,
- The vegetables and minerals are all perfect, and the imponderable
- fluids perfect;
- Slowly and surely they have pass’d on to this, and slowly and surely
- they yet pass on.
- 9
- I swear I think now that every thing without exception has an eternal soul!
- The trees have, rooted in the ground! the weeds of the sea have! the
- animals!
- I swear I think there is nothing but immortality!
- That the exquisite scheme is for it, and the nebulous float is for
- it, and the cohering is for it!
- And all preparation is for it--and identity is for it--and life and
- materials are altogether for it!
- BOOK XXX. WHISPERS OF HEAVENLY DEATH
- Darest Thou Now O Soul
- Darest thou now O soul,
- Walk out with me toward the unknown region,
- Where neither ground is for the feet nor any path to follow?
- No map there, nor guide,
- Nor voice sounding, nor touch of human hand,
- Nor face with blooming flesh, nor lips, nor eyes, are in that land.
- I know it not O soul,
- Nor dost thou, all is a blank before us,
- All waits undream’d of in that region, that inaccessible land.
- Till when the ties loosen,
- All but the ties eternal, Time and Space,
- Nor darkness, gravitation, sense, nor any bounds bounding us.
- Then we burst forth, we float,
- In Time and Space O soul, prepared for them,
- Equal, equipt at last, (O joy! O fruit of all!) them to fulfil O soul.
- Whispers of Heavenly Death
- Whispers of heavenly death murmur’d I hear,
- Labial gossip of night, sibilant chorals,
- Footsteps gently ascending, mystical breezes wafted soft and low,
- Ripples of unseen rivers, tides of a current flowing, forever flowing,
- (Or is it the plashing of tears? the measureless waters of human tears?)
- I see, just see skyward, great cloud-masses,
- Mournfully slowly they roll, silently swelling and mixing,
- With at times a half-dimm’d sadden’d far-off star,
- Appearing and disappearing.
- (Some parturition rather, some solemn immortal birth;
- On the frontiers to eyes impenetrable,
- Some soul is passing over.)
- Chanting the Square Deific
- 1
- Chanting the square deific, out of the One advancing, out of the sides,
- Out of the old and new, out of the square entirely divine,
- Solid, four-sided, (all the sides needed,) from this side Jehovah am I,
- Old Brahm I, and I Saturnius am;
- Not Time affects me--I am Time, old, modern as any,
- Unpersuadable, relentless, executing righteous judgments,
- As the Earth, the Father, the brown old Kronos, with laws,
- Aged beyond computation, yet never new, ever with those mighty laws rolling,
- Relentless I forgive no man--whoever sins dies--I will have that man’s life;
- Therefore let none expect mercy--have the seasons, gravitation, the
- appointed days, mercy? no more have I,
- But as the seasons and gravitation, and as all the appointed days
- that forgive not,
- I dispense from this side judgments inexorable without the least remorse.
- 2
- Consolator most mild, the promis’d one advancing,
- With gentle hand extended, the mightier God am I,
- Foretold by prophets and poets in their most rapt prophecies and poems,
- From this side, lo! the Lord Christ gazes--lo! Hermes I--lo! mine is
- Hercules’ face,
- All sorrow, labor, suffering, I, tallying it, absorb in myself,
- Many times have I been rejected, taunted, put in prison, and
- crucified, and many times shall be again,
- All the world have I given up for my dear brothers’ and sisters’
- sake, for the soul’s sake,
- Wanding my way through the homes of men, rich or poor, with the kiss
- of affection,
- For I am affection, I am the cheer-bringing God, with hope and
- all-enclosing charity,
- With indulgent words as to children, with fresh and sane words, mine only,
- Young and strong I pass knowing well I am destin’d myself to an
- early death;
- But my charity has no death--my wisdom dies not, neither early nor late,
- And my sweet love bequeath’d here and elsewhere never dies.
- 3
- Aloof, dissatisfied, plotting revolt,
- Comrade of criminals, brother of slaves,
- Crafty, despised, a drudge, ignorant,
- With sudra face and worn brow, black, but in the depths of my heart,
- proud as any,
- Lifted now and always against whoever scorning assumes to rule me,
- Morose, full of guile, full of reminiscences, brooding, with many wiles,
- (Though it was thought I was baffled, and dispel’d, and my wiles
- done, but that will never be,)
- Defiant, I, Satan, still live, still utter words, in new lands duly
- appearing, (and old ones also,)
- Permanent here from my side, warlike, equal with any, real as any,
- Nor time nor change shall ever change me or my words.
- 4
- Santa Spirita, breather, life,
- Beyond the light, lighter than light,
- Beyond the flames of hell, joyous, leaping easily above hell,
- Beyond Paradise, perfumed solely with mine own perfume,
- Including all life on earth, touching, including God, including
- Saviour and Satan,
- Ethereal, pervading all, (for without me what were all? what were God?)
- Essence of forms, life of the real identities, permanent, positive,
- (namely the unseen,)
- Life of the great round world, the sun and stars, and of man, I, the
- general soul,
- Here the square finishing, the solid, I the most solid,
- Breathe my breath also through these songs.
- Of Him I Love Day and Night
- Of him I love day and night I dream’d I heard he was dead,
- And I dream’d I went where they had buried him I love, but he was
- not in that place,
- And I dream’d I wander’d searching among burial-places to find him,
- And I found that every place was a burial-place;
- The houses full of life were equally full of death, (this house is now,)
- The streets, the shipping, the places of amusement, the Chicago,
- Boston, Philadelphia, the Mannahatta, were as full of the dead as
- of the living,
- And fuller, O vastly fuller of the dead than of the living;
- And what I dream’d I will henceforth tell to every person and age,
- And I stand henceforth bound to what I dream’d,
- And now I am willing to disregard burial-places and dispense with them,
- And if the memorials of the dead were put up indifferently everywhere,
- even in the room where I eat or sleep, I should be satisfied,
- And if the corpse of any one I love, or if my own corpse, be duly
- render’d to powder and pour’d in the sea, I shall be satisfied,
- Or if it be distributed to the winds I shall be satisfied.
- Yet, Yet, Ye Downcast Hours
- Yet, yet, ye downcast hours, I know ye also,
- Weights of lead, how ye clog and cling at my ankles,
- Earth to a chamber of mourning turns--I hear the o’erweening, mocking
- voice,
- Matter is conqueror--matter, triumphant only, continues onward.
- Despairing cries float ceaselessly toward me,
- The call of my nearest lover, putting forth, alarm’d, uncertain,
- The sea I am quickly to sail, come tell me,
- Come tell me where I am speeding, tell me my destination.
- I understand your anguish, but I cannot help you,
- I approach, hear, behold, the sad mouth, the look out of the eyes,
- your mute inquiry,
- Whither I go from the bed I recline on, come tell me,--
- Old age, alarm’d, uncertain--a young woman’s voice, appealing to
- me for comfort;
- A young man’s voice, Shall I not escape?
- As If a Phantom Caress’d Me
- As if a phantom caress’d me,
- I thought I was not alone walking here by the shore;
- But the one I thought was with me as now I walk by the shore, the
- one I loved that caress’d me,
- As I lean and look through the glimmering light, that one has
- utterly disappear’d.
- And those appear that are hateful to me and mock me.
- Assurances
- I need no assurances, I am a man who is preoccupied of his own soul;
- I do not doubt that from under the feet and beside the hands and
- face I am cognizant of, are now looking faces I am not cognizant
- of, calm and actual faces,
- I do not doubt but the majesty and beauty of the world are latent in
- any iota of the world,
- I do not doubt I am limitless, and that the universes are limitless,
- in vain I try to think how limitless,
- I do not doubt that the orbs and the systems of orbs play their
- swift sports through the air on purpose, and that I shall one day
- be eligible to do as much as they, and more than they,
- I do not doubt that temporary affairs keep on and on millions of years,
- I do not doubt interiors have their interiors, and exteriors have
- their exteriors, and that the eyesight has another eyesight, and
- the hearing another hearing, and the voice another voice,
- I do not doubt that the passionately-wept deaths of young men are
- provided for, and that the deaths of young women and the
- deaths of little children are provided for,
- (Did you think Life was so well provided for, and Death, the purport
- of all Life, is not well provided for?)
- I do not doubt that wrecks at sea, no matter what the horrors of
- them, no matter whose wife, child, husband, father, lover, has
- gone down, are provided for, to the minutest points,
- I do not doubt that whatever can possibly happen anywhere at any
- time, is provided for in the inherences of things,
- I do not think Life provides for all and for Time and Space, but I
- believe Heavenly Death provides for all.
- Quicksand Years
- Quicksand years that whirl me I know not whither,
- Your schemes, politics, fail, lines give way, substances mock and elude me,
- Only the theme I sing, the great and strong-possess’d soul, eludes not,
- One’s-self must never give way--that is the final substance--that
- out of all is sure,
- Out of politics, triumphs, battles, life, what at last finally remains?
- When shows break up what but One’s-Self is sure?
- That Music Always Round Me
- That music always round me, unceasing, unbeginning, yet long
- untaught I did not hear,
- But now the chorus I hear and am elated,
- A tenor, strong, ascending with power and health, with glad notes of
- daybreak I hear,
- A soprano at intervals sailing buoyantly over the tops of immense waves,
- A transparent base shuddering lusciously under and through the universe,
- The triumphant tutti, the funeral wailings with sweet flutes and
- violins, all these I fill myself with,
- I hear not the volumes of sound merely, I am moved by the exquisite
- meanings,
- I listen to the different voices winding in and out, striving,
- contending with fiery vehemence to excel each other in emotion;
- I do not think the performers know themselves--but now I think
- begin to know them.
- What Ship Puzzled at Sea
- What ship puzzled at sea, cons for the true reckoning?
- Or coming in, to avoid the bars and follow the channel a perfect
- pilot needs?
- Here, sailor! here, ship! take aboard the most perfect pilot,
- Whom, in a little boat, putting off and rowing, I hailing you offer.
- A Noiseless Patient Spider
- A noiseless patient spider,
- I mark’d where on a little promontory it stood isolated,
- Mark’d how to explore the vacant vast surrounding,
- It launch’d forth filament, filament, filament out of itself,
- Ever unreeling them, ever tirelessly speeding them.
- And you O my soul where you stand,
- Surrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of space,
- Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to
- connect them,
- Till the bridge you will need be form’d, till the ductile anchor hold,
- Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul.
- O Living Always, Always Dying
- O living always, always dying!
- O the burials of me past and present,
- O me while I stride ahead, material, visible, imperious as ever;
- O me, what I was for years, now dead, (I lament not, I am content;)
- O to disengage myself from those corpses of me, which I turn and
- look at where I cast them,
- To pass on, (O living! always living!) and leave the corpses behind.
- To One Shortly to Die
- From all the rest I single out you, having a message for you,
- You are to die--let others tell you what they please, I cannot prevaricate,
- I am exact and merciless, but I love you--there is no escape for you.
- Softly I lay my right hand upon you, you ’ust feel it,
- I do not argue, I bend my head close and half envelop it,
- I sit quietly by, I remain faithful,
- I am more than nurse, more than parent or neighbor,
- I absolve you from all except yourself spiritual bodily, that is
- eternal, you yourself will surely escape,
- The corpse you will leave will be but excrementitious.
- The sun bursts through in unlooked-for directions,
- Strong thoughts fill you and confidence, you smile,
- You forget you are sick, as I forget you are sick,
- You do not see the medicines, you do not mind the weeping friends,
- I am with you,
- I exclude others from you, there is nothing to be commiserated,
- I do not commiserate, I congratulate you.
- Night on the Prairies
- Night on the prairies,
- The supper is over, the fire on the ground burns low,
- The wearied emigrants sleep, wrapt in their blankets;
- I walk by myself--I stand and look at the stars, which I think now
- never realized before.
- Now I absorb immortality and peace,
- I admire death and test propositions.
- How plenteous! how spiritual! how resume!
- The same old man and soul--the same old aspirations, and the same content.
- I was thinking the day most splendid till I saw what the not-day exhibited,
- I was thinking this globe enough till there sprang out so noiseless
- around me myriads of other globes.
- Now while the great thoughts of space and eternity fill me I will
- measure myself by them,
- And now touch’d with the lives of other globes arrived as far along
- as those of the earth,
- Or waiting to arrive, or pass’d on farther than those of the earth,
- I henceforth no more ignore them than I ignore my own life,
- Or the lives of the earth arrived as far as mine, or waiting to arrive.
- O I see now that life cannot exhibit all to me, as the day cannot,
- I see that I am to wait for what will be exhibited by death.
- Thought
- As I sit with others at a great feast, suddenly while the music is playing,
- To my mind, (whence it comes I know not,) spectral in mist of a
- wreck at sea,
- Of certain ships, how they sail from port with flying streamers and
- wafted kisses, and that is the last of them,
- Of the solemn and murky mystery about the fate of the President,
- Of the flower of the marine science of fifty generations founder’d
- off the Northeast coast and going down--of the steamship Arctic
- going down,
- Of the veil’d tableau-women gather’d together on deck, pale, heroic,
- waiting the moment that draws so close--O the moment!
- A huge sob--a few bubbles--the white foam spirting up--and then the
- women gone,
- Sinking there while the passionless wet flows on--and I now
- pondering, Are those women indeed gone?
- Are souls drown’d and destroy’d so?
- Is only matter triumphant?
- The Last Invocation
- At the last, tenderly,
- From the walls of the powerful fortress’d house,
- From the clasp of the knitted locks, from the keep of the well-closed doors,
- Let me be wafted.
- Let me glide noiselessly forth;
- With the key of softness unlock the locks--with a whisper,
- Set ope the doors O soul.
- Tenderly--be not impatient,
- (Strong is your hold O mortal flesh,
- Strong is your hold O love.)
- As I Watch the Ploughman Ploughing
- As I watch’d the ploughman ploughing,
- Or the sower sowing in the fields, or the harvester harvesting,
- I saw there too, O life and death, your analogies;
- (Life, life is the tillage, and Death is the harvest according.)
- Pensive and Faltering
- Pensive and faltering,
- The words the Dead I write,
- For living are the Dead,
- (Haply the only living, only real,
- And I the apparition, I the spectre.)
- BOOK XXXI
- Thou Mother with Thy Equal Brood
- 1
- Thou Mother with thy equal brood,
- Thou varied chain of different States, yet one identity only,
- A special song before I go I’d sing o’er all the rest,
- For thee, the future.
- I’d sow a seed for thee of endless Nationality,
- I’d fashion thy ensemble including body and soul,
- I’d show away ahead thy real Union, and how it may be accomplish’d.
- The paths to the house I seek to make,
- But leave to those to come the house itself.
- Belief I sing, and preparation;
- As Life and Nature are not great with reference to the present only,
- But greater still from what is yet to come,
- Out of that formula for thee I sing.
- 2
- As a strong bird on pinions free,
- Joyous, the amplest spaces heavenward cleaving,
- Such be the thought I’d think of thee America,
- Such be the recitative I’d bring for thee.
- The conceits of the poets of other lands I’d bring thee not,
- Nor the compliments that have served their turn so long,
- Nor rhyme, nor the classics, nor perfume of foreign court or indoor
- library;
- But an odor I’d bring as from forests of pine in Maine, or breath of
- an Illinois prairie,
- With open airs of Virginia or Georgia or Tennessee, or from Texas
- uplands, or Florida’s glades,
- Or the Saguenay’s black stream, or the wide blue spread of Huron,
- With presentment of Yellowstone’s scenes, or Yosemite,
- And murmuring under, pervading all, I’d bring the rustling sea-sound,
- That endlessly sounds from the two Great Seas of the world.
- And for thy subtler sense subtler refrains dread Mother,
- Preludes of intellect tallying these and thee, mind-formulas fitted
- for thee, real and sane and large as these and thee,
- Thou! mounting higher, diving deeper than we knew, thou
- transcendental Union!
- By thee fact to be justified, blended with thought,
- Thought of man justified, blended with God,
- Through thy idea, lo, the immortal reality!
- Through thy reality, lo, the immortal idea!
- 3
- Brain of the New World, what a task is thine,
- To formulate the Modern--out of the peerless grandeur of the modern,
- Out of thyself, comprising science, to recast poems, churches, art,
- (Recast, may-be discard them, end them--maybe their work is done,
- who knows?)
- By vision, hand, conception, on the background of the mighty past, the dead,
- To limn with absolute faith the mighty living present.
- And yet thou living present brain, heir of the dead, the Old World brain,
- Thou that lay folded like an unborn babe within its folds so long,
- Thou carefully prepared by it so long--haply thou but unfoldest it,
- only maturest it,
- It to eventuate in thee--the essence of the by-gone time contain’d in thee,
- Its poems, churches, arts, unwitting to themselves, destined with
- reference to thee;
- Thou but the apples, long, long, long a-growing,
- The fruit of all the Old ripening to-day in thee.
- 4
- Sail, sail thy best, ship of Democracy,
- Of value is thy freight, ’tis not the Present only,
- The Past is also stored in thee,
- Thou holdest not the venture of thyself alone, not of the Western
- continent alone,
- Earth’s resume entire floats on thy keel O ship, is steadied by thy spars,
- With thee Time voyages in trust, the antecedent nations sink or
- swim with thee,
- With all their ancient struggles, martyrs, heroes, epics, wars, thou
- bear’st the other continents,
- Theirs, theirs as much as thine, the destination-port triumphant;
- Steer then with good strong hand and wary eye O helmsman, thou
- carriest great companions,
- Venerable priestly Asia sails this day with thee,
- And royal feudal Europe sails with thee.
- 5
- Beautiful world of new superber birth that rises to my eyes,
- Like a limitless golden cloud filling the westernr sky,
- Emblem of general maternity lifted above all,
- Sacred shape of the bearer of daughters and sons,
- Out of thy teeming womb thy giant babes in ceaseless procession issuing,
- Acceding from such gestation, taking and giving continual strength
- and life,
- World of the real--world of the twain in one,
- World of the soul, born by the world of the real alone, led to
- identity, body, by it alone,
- Yet in beginning only, incalculable masses of composite precious materials,
- By history’s cycles forwarded, by every nation, language, hither sent,
- Ready, collected here, a freer, vast, electric world, to be
- constructed here,
- (The true New World, the world of orbic science, morals, literatures
- to come,)
- Thou wonder world yet undefined, unform’d, neither do I define thee,
- How can I pierce the impenetrable blank of the future?
- I feel thy ominous greatness evil as well as good,
- I watch thee advancing, absorbing the present, transcending the past,
- I see thy light lighting, and thy shadow shadowing, as if the entire globe,
- But I do not undertake to define thee, hardly to comprehend thee,
- I but thee name, thee prophesy, as now,
- I merely thee ejaculate!
- Thee in thy future,
- Thee in thy only permanent life, career, thy own unloosen’d mind,
- thy soaring spirit,
- Thee as another equally needed sun, radiant, ablaze, swift-moving,
- fructifying all,
- Thee risen in potent cheerfulness and joy, in endless great hilarity,
- Scattering for good the cloud that hung so long, that weigh’d so
- long upon the mind of man,
- The doubt, suspicion, dread, of gradual, certain decadence of man;
- Thee in thy larger, saner brood of female, male--thee in thy
- athletes, moral, spiritual, South, North, West, East,
- (To thy immortal breasts, Mother of All, thy every daughter, son,
- endear’d alike, forever equal,)
- Thee in thy own musicians, singers, artists, unborn yet, but certain,
- Thee in thy moral wealth and civilization, (until which thy proudest
- material civilization must remain in vain,)
- Thee in thy all-supplying, all-enclosing worship--thee in no single
- bible, saviour, merely,
- Thy saviours countless, latent within thyself, thy bibles incessant
- within thyself, equal to any, divine as any,
- (Thy soaring course thee formulating, not in thy two great wars, nor
- in thy century’s visible growth,
- But far more in these leaves and chants, thy chants, great Mother!)
- Thee in an education grown of thee, in teachers, studies, students,
- born of thee,
- Thee in thy democratic fetes en-masse, thy high original festivals,
- operas, lecturers, preachers,
- Thee in thy ultimate, (the preparations only now completed, the
- edifice on sure foundations tied,)
- Thee in thy pinnacles, intellect, thought, thy topmost rational
- joys, thy love and godlike aspiration,
- In thy resplendent coming literati, thy full-lung’d orators, thy
- sacerdotal bards, kosmic savans,
- These! these in thee, (certain to come,) to-day I prophesy.
- 6
- Land tolerating all, accepting all, not for the good alone, all good
- for thee,
- Land in the realms of God to be a realm unto thyself,
- Under the rule of God to be a rule unto thyself.
- (Lo, where arise three peerless stars,
- To be thy natal stars my country, Ensemble, Evolution, Freedom,
- Set in the sky of Law.)
- Land of unprecedented faith, God’s faith,
- Thy soil, thy very subsoil, all upheav’d,
- The general inner earth so long so sedulously draped over, now hence
- for what it is boldly laid bare,
- Open’d by thee to heaven’s light for benefit or bale.
- Not for success alone,
- Not to fair-sail unintermitted always,
- The storm shall dash thy face, the murk of war and worse than war
- shall cover thee all over,
- (Wert capable of war, its tug and trials? be capable of peace, its trials,
- For the tug and mortal strain of nations come at last in prosperous
- peace, not war;)
- In many a smiling mask death shall approach beguiling thee, thou in
- disease shalt swelter,
- The livid cancer spread its hideous claws, clinging upon thy
- breasts, seeking to strike thee deep within,
- Consumption of the worst, moral consumption, shall rouge thy face
- with hectic,
- But thou shalt face thy fortunes, thy diseases, and surmount them all,
- Whatever they are to-day and whatever through time they may be,
- They each and all shall lift and pass away and cease from thee,
- While thou, Time’s spirals rounding, out of thyself, thyself still
- extricating, fusing,
- Equable, natural, mystical Union thou, (the mortal with immortal blent,)
- Shalt soar toward the fulfilment of the future, the spirit of the
- body and the mind,
- The soul, its destinies.
- The soul, its destinies, the real real,
- (Purport of all these apparitions of the real;)
- In thee America, the soul, its destinies,
- Thou globe of globes! thou wonder nebulous!
- By many a throe of heat and cold convuls’d, (by these thyself solidifying,)
- Thou mental, moral orb--thou New, indeed new, Spiritual World!
- The Present holds thee not--for such vast growth as thine,
- For such unparallel’d flight as thine, such brood as thine,
- The FUTURE only holds thee and can hold thee.
- A Paumanok Picture
- Two boats with nets lying off the sea-beach, quite still,
- Ten fishermen waiting--they discover a thick school of mossbonkers
- --they drop the join’d seine-ends in the water,
- The boats separate and row off, each on its rounding course to the
- beach, enclosing the mossbonkers,
- The net is drawn in by a windlass by those who stop ashore,
- Some of the fishermen lounge in their boats, others stand
- ankle-deep in the water, pois’d on strong legs,
- The boats partly drawn up, the water slapping against them,
- Strew’d on the sand in heaps and windrows, well out from the water,
- the green-back’d spotted mossbonkers.
- BOOK XXXII. FROM NOON TO STARRY NIGHT
- Thou Orb Aloft Full-Dazzling
- Thou orb aloft full-dazzling! thou hot October noon!
- Flooding with sheeny light the gray beach sand,
- The sibilant near sea with vistas far and foam,
- And tawny streaks and shades and spreading blue;
- O sun of noon refulgent! my special word to thee.
- Hear me illustrious!
- Thy lover me, for always I have loved thee,
- Even as basking babe, then happy boy alone by some wood edge, thy
- touching-distant beams enough,
- Or man matured, or young or old, as now to thee I launch my invocation.
- (Thou canst not with thy dumbness me deceive,
- I know before the fitting man all Nature yields,
- Though answering not in words, the skies, trees, hear his voice--and
- thou O sun,
- As for thy throes, thy perturbations, sudden breaks and shafts of
- flame gigantic,
- I understand them, I know those flames, those perturbations well.)
- Thou that with fructifying heat and light,
- O’er myriad farms, o’er lands and waters North and South,
- O’er Mississippi’s endless course, o’er Texas’ grassy plains,
- Kanada’s woods,
- O’er all the globe that turns its face to thee shining in space,
- Thou that impartially enfoldest all, not only continents, seas,
- Thou that to grapes and weeds and little wild flowers givest so liberally,
- Shed, shed thyself on mine and me, with but a fleeting ray out of
- thy million millions,
- Strike through these chants.
- Nor only launch thy subtle dazzle and thy strength for these,
- Prepare the later afternoon of me myself--prepare my lengthening shadows,
- Prepare my starry nights.
- Faces
- 1
- Sauntering the pavement or riding the country by-road, faces!
- Faces of friendship, precision, caution, suavity, ideality,
- The spiritual-prescient face, the always welcome common benevolent face,
- The face of the singing of music, the grand faces of natural lawyers
- and judges broad at the back-top,
- The faces of hunters and fishers bulged at the brows, the shaved
- blanch’d faces of orthodox citizens,
- The pure, extravagant, yearning, questioning artist’s face,
- The ugly face of some beautiful soul, the handsome detested or
- despised face,
- The sacred faces of infants, the illuminated face of the mother of
- many children,
- The face of an amour, the face of veneration,
- The face as of a dream, the face of an immobile rock,
- The face withdrawn of its good and bad, a castrated face,
- A wild hawk, his wings clipp’d by the clipper,
- A stallion that yielded at last to the thongs and knife of the gelder.
- Sauntering the pavement thus, or crossing the ceaseless ferry, faces
- and faces and faces,
- I see them and complain not, and am content with all.
- 2
- Do you suppose I could be content with all if I thought them their
- own finale?
- This now is too lamentable a face for a man,
- Some abject louse asking leave to be, cringing for it,
- Some milk-nosed maggot blessing what lets it wrig to its hole.
- This face is a dog’s snout sniffing for garbage,
- Snakes nest in that mouth, I hear the sibilant threat.
- This face is a haze more chill than the arctic sea,
- Its sleepy and wobbling icebergs crunch as they go.
- This is a face of bitter herbs, this an emetic, they need no label,
- And more of the drug-shelf, laudanum, caoutchouc, or hog’s-lard.
- This face is an epilepsy, its wordless tongue gives out the unearthly cry,
- Its veins down the neck distend, its eyes roll till they show
- nothing but their whites,
- Its teeth grit, the palms of the hands are cut by the turn’d-in nails,
- The man falls struggling and foaming to the ground, while he
- speculates well.
- This face is bitten by vermin and worms,
- And this is some murderer’s knife with a half-pull’d scabbard.
- This face owes to the sexton his dismalest fee,
- An unceasing death-bell tolls there.
- 3
- Features of my equals would you trick me with your creas’d and
- cadaverous march?
- Well, you cannot trick me.
- I see your rounded never-erased flow,
- I see ’neath the rims of your haggard and mean disguises.
- Splay and twist as you like, poke with the tangling fores of fishes or rats,
- You’ll be unmuzzled, you certainly will.
- I saw the face of the most smear’d and slobbering idiot they had at
- the asylum,
- And I knew for my consolation what they knew not,
- I knew of the agents that emptied and broke my brother,
- The same wait to clear the rubbish from the fallen tenement,
- And I shall look again in a score or two of ages,
- And I shall meet the real landlord perfect and unharm’d, every inch
- as good as myself.
- 4
- The Lord advances, and yet advances,
- Always the shadow in front, always the reach’d hand bringing up the
- laggards.
- Out of this face emerge banners and horses--O superb! I see what is coming,
- I see the high pioneer-caps, see staves of runners clearing the way,
- I hear victorious drums.
- This face is a life-boat,
- This is the face commanding and bearded, it asks no odds of the rest,
- This face is flavor’d fruit ready for eating,
- This face of a healthy honest boy is the programme of all good.
- These faces bear testimony slumbering or awake,
- They show their descent from the Master himself.
- Off the word I have spoken I except not one--red, white, black, are
- all deific,
- In each house is the ovum, it comes forth after a thousand years.
- Spots or cracks at the windows do not disturb me,
- Tall and sufficient stand behind and make signs to me,
- I read the promise and patiently wait.
- This is a full-grown lily’s face,
- She speaks to the limber-hipp’d man near the garden pickets,
- Come here she blushingly cries, Come nigh to me limber-hipp’d man,
- Stand at my side till I lean as high as I can upon you,
- Fill me with albescent honey, bend down to me,
- Rub to me with your chafing beard, rub to my breast and shoulders.
- 5
- The old face of the mother of many children,
- Whist! I am fully content.
- Lull’d and late is the smoke of the First-day morning,
- It hangs low over the rows of trees by the fences,
- It hangs thin by the sassafras and wild-cherry and cat-brier under them.
- I saw the rich ladies in full dress at the soiree,
- I heard what the singers were singing so long,
- Heard who sprang in crimson youth from the white froth and the water-blue.
- Behold a woman!
- She looks out from her quaker cap, her face is clearer and more
- beautiful than the sky.
- She sits in an armchair under the shaded porch of the farmhouse,
- The sun just shines on her old white head.
- Her ample gown is of cream-hued linen,
- Her grandsons raised the flax, and her grand-daughters spun it with
- the distaff and the wheel.
- The melodious character of the earth,
- The finish beyond which philosophy cannot go and does not wish to go,
- The justified mother of men.
- The Mystic Trumpeter
- 1
- Hark, some wild trumpeter, some strange musician,
- Hovering unseen in air, vibrates capricious tunes to-night.
- I hear thee trumpeter, listening alert I catch thy notes,
- Now pouring, whirling like a tempest round me,
- Now low, subdued, now in the distance lost.
- 2
- Come nearer bodiless one, haply in thee resounds
- Some dead composer, haply thy pensive life
- Was fill’d with aspirations high, unform’d ideals,
- Waves, oceans musical, chaotically surging,
- That now ecstatic ghost, close to me bending, thy cornet echoing, pealing,
- Gives out to no one’s ears but mine, but freely gives to mine,
- That I may thee translate.
- 3
- Blow trumpeter free and clear, I follow thee,
- While at thy liquid prelude, glad, serene,
- The fretting world, the streets, the noisy hours of day withdraw,
- A holy calm descends like dew upon me,
- I walk in cool refreshing night the walks of Paradise,
- I scent the grass, the moist air and the roses;
- Thy song expands my numb’d imbonded spirit, thou freest, launchest me,
- Floating and basking upon heaven’s lake.
- 4
- Blow again trumpeter! and for my sensuous eyes,
- Bring the old pageants, show the feudal world.
- What charm thy music works! thou makest pass before me,
- Ladies and cavaliers long dead, barons are in their castle halls,
- the troubadours are singing,
- Arm’d knights go forth to redress wrongs, some in quest of the holy Graal;
- I see the tournament, I see the contestants incased in heavy armor
- seated on stately champing horses,
- I hear the shouts, the sounds of blows and smiting steel;
- I see the Crusaders’ tumultuous armies--hark, how the cymbals clang,
- Lo, where the monks walk in advance, bearing the cross on high.
- 5
- Blow again trumpeter! and for thy theme,
- Take now the enclosing theme of all, the solvent and the setting,
- Love, that is pulse of all, the sustenance and the pang,
- The heart of man and woman all for love,
- No other theme but love--knitting, enclosing, all-diffusing love.
- O how the immortal phantoms crowd around me!
- I see the vast alembic ever working, I see and know the flames that
- heat the world,
- The glow, the blush, the beating hearts of lovers,
- So blissful happy some, and some so silent, dark, and nigh to death;
- Love, that is all the earth to lovers--love, that mocks time and space,
- Love, that is day and night--love, that is sun and moon and stars,
- Love, that is crimson, sumptuous, sick with perfume,
- No other words but words of love, no other thought but love.
- 6
- Blow again trumpeter--conjure war’s alarums.
- Swift to thy spell a shuddering hum like distant thunder rolls,
- Lo, where the arm’d men hasten--lo, mid the clouds of dust the glint
- of bayonets,
- I see the grime-faced cannoneers, I mark the rosy flash amid the
- smoke, I hear the cracking of the guns;
- Nor war alone--thy fearful music-song, wild player, brings every
- sight of fear,
- The deeds of ruthless brigands, rapine, murder--I hear the cries for help!
- I see ships foundering at sea, I behold on deck and below deck the
- terrible tableaus.
- 7
- O trumpeter, methinks I am myself the instrument thou playest,
- Thou melt’st my heart, my brain--thou movest, drawest, changest
- them at will;
- And now thy sullen notes send darkness through me,
- Thou takest away all cheering light, all hope,
- I see the enslaved, the overthrown, the hurt, the opprest of the
- whole earth,
- I feel the measureless shame and humiliation of my race, it becomes
- all mine,
- Mine too the revenges of humanity, the wrongs of ages, baffled feuds
- and hatreds,
- Utter defeat upon me weighs--all lost--the foe victorious,
- (Yet ’mid the ruins Pride colossal stands unshaken to the last,
- Endurance, resolution to the last.)
- 8
- Now trumpeter for thy close,
- Vouchsafe a higher strain than any yet,
- Sing to my soul, renew its languishing faith and hope,
- Rouse up my slow belief, give me some vision of the future,
- Give me for once its prophecy and joy.
- O glad, exulting, culminating song!
- A vigor more than earth’s is in thy notes,
- Marches of victory--man disenthral’d--the conqueror at last,
- Hymns to the universal God from universal man--all joy!
- A reborn race appears--a perfect world, all joy!
- Women and men in wisdom innocence and health--all joy!
- Riotous laughing bacchanals fill’d with joy!
- War, sorrow, suffering gone--the rank earth purged--nothing but joy left!
- The ocean fill’d with joy--the atmosphere all joy!
- Joy! joy! in freedom, worship, love! joy in the ecstasy of life!
- Enough to merely be! enough to breathe!
- Joy! joy! all over joy!
- To a Locomotive in Winter
- Thee for my recitative,
- Thee in the driving storm even as now, the snow, the winter-day declining,
- Thee in thy panoply, thy measur’d dual throbbing and thy beat convulsive,
- Thy black cylindric body, golden brass and silvery steel,
- Thy ponderous side-bars, parallel and connecting rods, gyrating,
- shuttling at thy sides,
- Thy metrical, now swelling pant and roar, now tapering in the distance,
- Thy great protruding head-light fix’d in front,
- Thy long, pale, floating vapor-pennants, tinged with delicate purple,
- The dense and murky clouds out-belching from thy smoke-stack,
- Thy knitted frame, thy springs and valves, the tremulous twinkle of
- thy wheels,
- Thy train of cars behind, obedient, merrily following,
- Through gale or calm, now swift, now slack, yet steadily careering;
- Type of the modern--emblem of motion and power--pulse of the continent,
- For once come serve the Muse and merge in verse, even as here I see thee,
- With storm and buffeting gusts of wind and falling snow,
- By day thy warning ringing bell to sound its notes,
- By night thy silent signal lamps to swing.
- Fierce-throated beauty!
- Roll through my chant with all thy lawless music, thy swinging lamps
- at night,
- Thy madly-whistled laughter, echoing, rumbling like an earthquake,
- rousing all,
- Law of thyself complete, thine own track firmly holding,
- (No sweetness debonair of tearful harp or glib piano thine,)
- Thy trills of shrieks by rocks and hills return’d,
- Launch’d o’er the prairies wide, across the lakes,
- To the free skies unpent and glad and strong.
- O Magnet-South
- O magnet-south! O glistening perfumed South! my South!
- O quick mettle, rich blood, impulse and love! good and evil! O all
- dear to me!
- O dear to me my birth-things--all moving things and the trees where
- I was born--the grains, plants, rivers,
- Dear to me my own slow sluggish rivers where they flow, distant,
- over flats of slivery sands or through swamps,
- Dear to me the Roanoke, the Savannah, the Altamahaw, the Pedee, the
- Tombigbee, the Santee, the Coosa and the Sabine,
- O pensive, far away wandering, I return with my soul to haunt their
- banks again,
- Again in Florida I float on transparent lakes, I float on the
- Okeechobee, I cross the hummock-land or through pleasant openings
- or dense forests,
- I see the parrots in the woods, I see the papaw-tree and the
- blossoming titi;
- Again, sailing in my coaster on deck, I coast off Georgia, I coast
- up the Carolinas,
- I see where the live-oak is growing, I see where the yellow-pine,
- the scented bay-tree, the lemon and orange, the cypress, the
- graceful palmetto,
- I pass rude sea-headlands and enter Pamlico sound through an inlet,
- and dart my vision inland;
- O the cotton plant! the growing fields of rice, sugar, hemp!
- The cactus guarded with thorns, the laurel-tree with large white flowers,
- The range afar, the richness and barrenness, the old woods charged
- with mistletoe and trailing moss,
- The piney odor and the gloom, the awful natural stillness, (here in
- these dense swamps the freebooter carries his gun, and the
- fugitive has his conceal’d hut;)
- O the strange fascination of these half-known half-impassable
- swamps, infested by reptiles, resounding with the bellow of the
- alligator, the sad noises of the night-owl and the wild-cat, and
- the whirr of the rattlesnake,
- The mocking-bird, the American mimic, singing all the forenoon,
- singing through the moon-lit night,
- The humming-bird, the wild turkey, the raccoon, the opossum;
- A Kentucky corn-field, the tall, graceful, long-leav’d corn,
- slender, flapping, bright green, with tassels, with beautiful
- ears each well-sheath’d in its husk;
- O my heart! O tender and fierce pangs, I can stand them not, I will depart;
- O to be a Virginian where I grew up! O to be a Carolinian!
- O longings irrepressible! O I will go back to old Tennessee and
- never wander more.
- Mannahatta
- I was asking for something specific and perfect for my city,
- Whereupon lo! upsprang the aboriginal name.
- Now I see what there is in a name, a word, liquid, sane, unruly,
- musical, self-sufficient,
- I see that the word of my city is that word from of old,
- Because I see that word nested in nests of water-bays, superb,
- Rich, hemm’d thick all around with sailships and steamships, an
- island sixteen miles long, solid-founded,
- Numberless crowded streets, high growths of iron, slender, strong,
- light, splendidly uprising toward clear skies,
- Tides swift and ample, well-loved by me, toward sundown,
- The flowing sea-currents, the little islands, larger adjoining
- islands, the heights, the villas,
- The countless masts, the white shore-steamers, the lighters, the
- ferry-boats, the black sea-steamers well-model’d,
- The down-town streets, the jobbers’ houses of business, the houses
- of business of the ship-merchants and money-brokers, the river-streets,
- Immigrants arriving, fifteen or twenty thousand in a week,
- The carts hauling goods, the manly race of drivers of horses, the
- brown-faced sailors,
- The summer air, the bright sun shining, and the sailing clouds aloft,
- The winter snows, the sleigh-bells, the broken ice in the river,
- passing along up or down with the flood-tide or ebb-tide,
- The mechanics of the city, the masters, well-form’d,
- beautiful-faced, looking you straight in the eyes,
- Trottoirs throng’d, vehicles, Broadway, the women, the shops and shows,
- A million people--manners free and superb--open voices--hospitality--
- the most courageous and friendly young men,
- City of hurried and sparkling waters! city of spires and masts!
- City nested in bays! my city!
- All Is Truth
- O me, man of slack faith so long,
- Standing aloof, denying portions so long,
- Only aware to-day of compact all-diffused truth,
- Discovering to-day there is no lie or form of lie, and can be none,
- but grows as inevitably upon itself as the truth does upon itself,
- Or as any law of the earth or any natural production of the earth does.
- (This is curious and may not be realized immediately, but it must be
- realized,
- I feel in myself that I represent falsehoods equally with the rest,
- And that the universe does.)
- Where has fail’d a perfect return indifferent of lies or the truth?
- Is it upon the ground, or in water or fire? or in the spirit of man?
- or in the meat and blood?
- Meditating among liars and retreating sternly into myself, I see
- that there are really no liars or lies after all,
- And that nothing fails its perfect return, and that what are called
- lies are perfect returns,
- And that each thing exactly represents itself and what has preceded it,
- And that the truth includes all, and is compact just as much as
- space is compact,
- And that there is no flaw or vacuum in the amount of the truth--but
- that all is truth without exception;
- And henceforth I will go celebrate any thing I see or am,
- And sing and laugh and deny nothing.
- A Riddle Song
- That which eludes this verse and any verse,
- Unheard by sharpest ear, unform’d in clearest eye or cunningest mind,
- Nor lore nor fame, nor happiness nor wealth,
- And yet the pulse of every heart and life throughout the world incessantly,
- Which you and I and all pursuing ever ever miss,
- Open but still a secret, the real of the real, an illusion,
- Costless, vouchsafed to each, yet never man the owner,
- Which poets vainly seek to put in rhyme, historians in prose,
- Which sculptor never chisel’d yet, nor painter painted,
- Which vocalist never sung, nor orator nor actor ever utter’d,
- Invoking here and now I challenge for my song.
- Indifferently, ’mid public, private haunts, in solitude,
- Behind the mountain and the wood,
- Companion of the city’s busiest streets, through the assemblage,
- It and its radiations constantly glide.
- In looks of fair unconscious babes,
- Or strangely in the coffin’d dead,
- Or show of breaking dawn or stars by night,
- As some dissolving delicate film of dreams,
- Hiding yet lingering.
- Two little breaths of words comprising it,
- Two words, yet all from first to last comprised in it.
- How ardently for it!
- How many ships have sail’d and sunk for it!
- How many travelers started from their homes and neer return’d!
- How much of genius boldly staked and lost for it!
- What countless stores of beauty, love, ventur’d for it!
- How all superbest deeds since Time began are traceable to it--and
- shall be to the end!
- How all heroic martyrdoms to it!
- How, justified by it, the horrors, evils, battles of the earth!
- How the bright fascinating lambent flames of it, in every age and
- land, have drawn men’s eyes,
- Rich as a sunset on the Norway coast, the sky, the islands, and the cliffs,
- Or midnight’s silent glowing northern lights unreachable.
- Haply God’s riddle it, so vague and yet so certain,
- The soul for it, and all the visible universe for it,
- And heaven at last for it.
- Excelsior
- Who has gone farthest? for I would go farther,
- And who has been just? for I would be the most just person of the earth,
- And who most cautious? for I would be more cautious,
- And who has been happiest? O I think it is I--I think no one was
- ever happier than I,
- And who has lavish’d all? for I lavish constantly the best I have,
- And who proudest? for I think I have reason to be the proudest son
- alive--for I am the son of the brawny and tall-topt city,
- And who has been bold and true? for I would be the boldest and
- truest being of the universe,
- And who benevolent? for I would show more benevolence than all the rest,
- And who has receiv’d the love of the most friends? for I know what
- it is to receive the passionate love of many friends,
- And who possesses a perfect and enamour’d body? for I do not believe
- any one possesses a more perfect or enamour’d body than mine,
- And who thinks the amplest thoughts? for I would surround those thoughts,
- And who has made hymns fit for the earth? for I am mad with
- devouring ecstasy to make joyous hymns for the whole earth.
- Ah Poverties, Wincings, and Sulky Retreats
- Ah poverties, wincings, and sulky retreats,
- Ah you foes that in conflict have overcome me,
- (For what is my life or any man’s life but a conflict with foes, the
- old, the incessant war?)
- You degradations, you tussle with passions and appetites,
- You smarts from dissatisfied friendships, (ah wounds the sharpest of all!)
- You toil of painful and choked articulations, you meannesses,
- You shallow tongue-talks at tables, (my tongue the shallowest of any;)
- You broken resolutions, you racking angers, you smother’d ennuis!
- Ah think not you finally triumph, my real self has yet to come forth,
- It shall yet march forth o’ermastering, till all lies beneath me,
- It shall yet stand up the soldier of ultimate victory.
- Thoughts
- Of public opinion,
- Of a calm and cool fiat sooner or later, (how impassive! how certain
- and final!)
- Of the President with pale face asking secretly to himself, What
- will the people say at last?
- Of the frivolous Judge--of the corrupt Congressman, Governor,
- Mayor--of such as these standing helpless and exposed,
- Of the mumbling and screaming priest, (soon, soon deserted,)
- Of the lessening year by year of venerableness, and of the dicta of
- officers, statutes, pulpits, schools,
- Of the rising forever taller and stronger and broader of the
- intuitions of men and women, and of Self-esteem and Personality;
- Of the true New World--of the Democracies resplendent en-masse,
- Of the conformity of politics, armies, navies, to them,
- Of the shining sun by them--of the inherent light, greater than the rest,
- Of the envelopment of all by them, and the effusion of all from them.
- Mediums
- They shall arise in the States,
- They shall report Nature, laws, physiology, and happiness,
- They shall illustrate Democracy and the kosmos,
- They shall be alimentive, amative, perceptive,
- They shall be complete women and men, their pose brawny and supple,
- their drink water, their blood clean and clear,
- They shall fully enjoy materialism and the sight of products, they
- shall enjoy the sight of the beef, lumber, bread-stuffs, of
- Chicago the great city.
- They shall train themselves to go in public to become orators and
- oratresses,
- Strong and sweet shall their tongues be, poems and materials of
- poems shall come from their lives, they shall be makers and finders,
- Of them and of their works shall emerge divine conveyers, to convey gospels,
- Characters, events, retrospections, shall be convey’d in gospels,
- trees, animals, waters, shall be convey’d,
- Death, the future, the invisible faith, shall all be convey’d.
- Weave in, My Hardy Life
- Weave in, weave in, my hardy life,
- Weave yet a soldier strong and full for great campaigns to come,
- Weave in red blood, weave sinews in like ropes, the senses, sight weave in,
- Weave lasting sure, weave day and night the wet, the warp, incessant
- weave, tire not,
- (We know not what the use O life, nor know the aim, the end, nor
- really aught we know,
- But know the work, the need goes on and shall go on, the
- death-envelop’d march of peace as well as war goes on,)
- For great campaigns of peace the same the wiry threads to weave,
- We know not why or what, yet weave, forever weave.
- Spain, 1873-74
- Out of the murk of heaviest clouds,
- Out of the feudal wrecks and heap’d-up skeletons of kings,
- Out of that old entire European debris, the shatter’d mummeries,
- Ruin’d cathedrals, crumble of palaces, tombs of priests,
- Lo, Freedom’s features fresh undimm’d look forth--the same immortal
- face looks forth;
- (A glimpse as of thy Mother’s face Columbia,
- A flash significant as of a sword,
- Beaming towards thee.)
- Nor think we forget thee maternal;
- Lag’d’st thou so long? shall the clouds close again upon thee?
- Ah, but thou hast thyself now appear’d to us--we know thee,
- Thou hast given us a sure proof, the glimpse of thyself,
- Thou waitest there as everywhere thy time.
- By Broad Potomac’s Shore
- By broad Potomac’s shore, again old tongue,
- (Still uttering, still ejaculating, canst never cease this babble?)
- Again old heart so gay, again to you, your sense, the full flush
- spring returning,
- Again the freshness and the odors, again Virginia’s summer sky,
- pellucid blue and silver,
- Again the forenoon purple of the hills,
- Again the deathless grass, so noiseless soft and green,
- Again the blood-red roses blooming.
- Perfume this book of mine O blood-red roses!
- Lave subtly with your waters every line Potomac!
- Give me of you O spring, before I close, to put between its pages!
- O forenoon purple of the hills, before I close, of you!
- O deathless grass, of you!
- From Far Dakota’s Canyons [June 25, 1876]
- From far Dakota’s canyons,
- Lands of the wild ravine, the dusky Sioux, the lonesome stretch, the
- silence,
- Haply to-day a mournful wall, haply a trumpet-note for heroes.
- The battle-bulletin,
- The Indian ambuscade, the craft, the fatal environment,
- The cavalry companies fighting to the last in sternest heroism,
- In the midst of their little circle, with their slaughter’d horses
- for breastworks,
- The fall of Custer and all his officers and men.
- Continues yet the old, old legend of our race,
- The loftiest of life upheld by death,
- The ancient banner perfectly maintain’d,
- O lesson opportune, O how I welcome thee!
- As sitting in dark days,
- Lone, sulky, through the time’s thick murk looking in vain for
- light, for hope,
- From unsuspected parts a fierce and momentary proof,
- (The sun there at the centre though conceal’d,
- Electric life forever at the centre,)
- Breaks forth a lightning flash.
- Thou of the tawny flowing hair in battle,
- I erewhile saw, with erect head, pressing ever in front, bearing a
- bright sword in thy hand,
- Now ending well in death the splendid fever of thy deeds,
- (I bring no dirge for it or thee, I bring a glad triumphal sonnet,)
- Desperate and glorious, aye in defeat most desperate, most glorious,
- After thy many battles in which never yielding up a gun or a color,
- Leaving behind thee a memory sweet to soldiers,
- Thou yieldest up thyself.
- Old War-Dreams
- In midnight sleep of many a face of anguish,
- Of the look at first of the mortally wounded, (of that indescribable look,)
- Of the dead on their backs with arms extended wide,
- I dream, I dream, I dream.
- Of scenes of Nature, fields and mountains,
- Of skies so beauteous after a storm, and at night the moon so
- unearthly bright,
- Shining sweetly, shining down, where we dig the trenches and
- gather the heaps,
- I dream, I dream, I dream.
- Long have they pass’d, faces and trenches and fields,
- Where through the carnage I moved with a callous composure, or away
- from the fallen,
- Onward I sped at the time--but now of their forms at night,
- I dream, I dream, I dream.
- Thick-Sprinkled Bunting
- Thick-sprinkled bunting! flag of stars!
- Long yet your road, fateful flag--long yet your road, and lined with
- bloody death,
- For the prize I see at issue at last is the world,
- All its ships and shores I see interwoven with your threads greedy banner;
- Dream’d again the flags of kings, highest borne to flaunt unrival’d?
- O hasten flag of man--O with sure and steady step, passing highest
- flags of kings,
- Walk supreme to the heavens mighty symbol--run up above them all,
- Flag of stars! thick-sprinkled bunting!
- What Best I See in Thee
- [To U. S. G. return’d from his World’s Tour]
- What best I see in thee,
- Is not that where thou mov’st down history’s great highways,
- Ever undimm’d by time shoots warlike victory’s dazzle,
- Or that thou sat’st where Washington sat, ruling the land in peace,
- Or thou the man whom feudal Europe feted, venerable Asia swarm’d upon,
- Who walk’d with kings with even pace the round world’s promenade;
- But that in foreign lands, in all thy walks with kings,
- Those prairie sovereigns of the West, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois,
- Ohio’s, Indiana’s millions, comrades, farmers, soldiers, all to the front,
- Invisibly with thee walking with kings with even pace the round
- world’s promenade,
- Were all so justified.
- Spirit That Form’d This Scene
- [Written in Platte Canyon, Colorado]
- Spirit that form’d this scene,
- These tumbled rock-piles grim and red,
- These reckless heaven-ambitious peaks,
- These gorges, turbulent-clear streams, this naked freshness,
- These formless wild arrays, for reasons of their own,
- I know thee, savage spirit--we have communed together,
- Mine too such wild arrays, for reasons of their own;
- Wast charged against my chants they had forgotten art?
- To fuse within themselves its rules precise and delicatesse?
- The lyrist’s measur’d beat, the wrought-out temple’s grace--column
- and polish’d arch forgot?
- But thou that revelest here--spirit that form’d this scene,
- They have remember’d thee.
- As I Walk These Broad Majestic Days
- As I walk these broad majestic days of peace,
- (For the war, the struggle of blood finish’d, wherein, O terrific Ideal,
- Against vast odds erewhile having gloriously won,
- Now thou stridest on, yet perhaps in time toward denser wars,
- Perhaps to engage in time in still more dreadful contests, dangers,
- Longer campaigns and crises, labors beyond all others,)
- Around me I hear that eclat of the world, politics, produce,
- The announcements of recognized things, science,
- The approved growth of cities and the spread of inventions.
- I see the ships, (they will last a few years,)
- The vast factories with their foremen and workmen,
- And hear the indorsement of all, and do not object to it.
- But I too announce solid things,
- Science, ships, politics, cities, factories, are not nothing,
- Like a grand procession to music of distant bugles pouring,
- triumphantly moving, and grander heaving in sight,
- They stand for realities--all is as it should be.
- Then my realities;
- What else is so real as mine?
- Libertad and the divine average, freedom to every slave on the face
- of the earth,
- The rapt promises and lumine of seers, the spiritual world, these
- centuries-lasting songs,
- And our visions, the visions of poets, the most solid announcements
- of any.
- A Clear Midnight
- This is thy hour O Soul, thy free flight into the wordless,
- Away from books, away from art, the day erased, the lesson done,
- Thee fully forth emerging, silent, gazing, pondering the themes thou
- lovest best,
- Night, sleep, death and the stars.
- BOOK XXXIII. SONGS OF PARTING
- As the Time Draws Nigh
- As the time draws nigh glooming a cloud,
- A dread beyond of I know not what darkens me.
- I shall go forth,
- I shall traverse the States awhile, but I cannot tell whither or how long,
- Perhaps soon some day or night while I am singing my voice will
- suddenly cease.
- O book, O chants! must all then amount to but this?
- Must we barely arrive at this beginning of us? --and yet it is
- enough, O soul;
- O soul, we have positively appear’d--that is enough.
- Years of the Modern
- Years of the modern! years of the unperform’d!
- Your horizon rises, I see it parting away for more august dramas,
- I see not America only, not only Liberty’s nation but other nations
- preparing,
- I see tremendous entrances and exits, new combinations, the solidarity
- of races,
- I see that force advancing with irresistible power on the world’s stage,
- (Have the old forces, the old wars, played their parts? are the acts
- suitable to them closed?)
- I see Freedom, completely arm’d and victorious and very haughty,
- with Law on one side and Peace on the other,
- A stupendous trio all issuing forth against the idea of caste;
- What historic denouements are these we so rapidly approach?
- I see men marching and countermarching by swift millions,
- I see the frontiers and boundaries of the old aristocracies broken,
- I see the landmarks of European kings removed,
- I see this day the People beginning their landmarks, (all others give way;)
- Never were such sharp questions ask’d as this day,
- Never was average man, his soul, more energetic, more like a God,
- Lo, how he urges and urges, leaving the masses no rest!
- His daring foot is on land and sea everywhere, he colonizes the
- Pacific, the archipelagoes,
- With the steamship, the electric telegraph, the newspaper, the
- wholesale engines of war,
- With these and the world-spreading factories he interlinks all
- geography, all lands;
- What whispers are these O lands, running ahead of you, passing under
- the seas?
- Are all nations communing? is there going to be but one heart to the globe?
- Is humanity forming en-masse? for lo, tyrants tremble, crowns grow dim,
- The earth, restive, confronts a new era, perhaps a general divine war,
- No one knows what will happen next, such portents fill the days and nights;
- Years prophetical! the space ahead as I walk, as I vainly try to
- pierce it, is full of phantoms,
- Unborn deeds, things soon to be, project their shapes around me,
- This incredible rush and heat, this strange ecstatic fever of dreams
- O years!
- Your dreams O years, how they penetrate through me! (I know not
- whether I sleep or wake;)
- The perform’d America and Europe grow dim, retiring in shadow behind me,
- The unperform’d, more gigantic than ever, advance, advance upon me.
- Ashes of Soldiers
- Ashes of soldiers South or North,
- As I muse retrospective murmuring a chant in thought,
- The war resumes, again to my sense your shapes,
- And again the advance of the armies.
- Noiseless as mists and vapors,
- From their graves in the trenches ascending,
- From cemeteries all through Virginia and Tennessee,
- From every point of the compass out of the countless graves,
- In wafted clouds, in myriads large, or squads of twos or threes or
- single ones they come,
- And silently gather round me.
- Now sound no note O trumpeters,
- Not at the head of my cavalry parading on spirited horses,
- With sabres drawn and glistening, and carbines by their thighs, (ah
- my brave horsemen!
- My handsome tan-faced horsemen! what life, what joy and pride,
- With all the perils were yours.)
- Nor you drummers, neither at reveille at dawn,
- Nor the long roll alarming the camp, nor even the muffled beat for burial,
- Nothing from you this time O drummers bearing my warlike drums.
- But aside from these and the marts of wealth and the crowded promenade,
- Admitting around me comrades close unseen by the rest and voiceless,
- The slain elate and alive again, the dust and debris alive,
- I chant this chant of my silent soul in the name of all dead soldiers.
- Faces so pale with wondrous eyes, very dear, gather closer yet,
- Draw close, but speak not.
- Phantoms of countless lost,
- Invisible to the rest henceforth become my companions,
- Follow me ever--desert me not while I live.
- Sweet are the blooming cheeks of the living--sweet are the musical
- voices sounding,
- But sweet, ah sweet, are the dead with their silent eyes.
- Dearest comrades, all is over and long gone,
- But love is not over--and what love, O comrades!
- Perfume from battle-fields rising, up from the foetor arising.
- Perfume therefore my chant, O love, immortal love,
- Give me to bathe the memories of all dead soldiers,
- Shroud them, embalm them, cover them all over with tender pride.
- Perfume all--make all wholesome,
- Make these ashes to nourish and blossom,
- O love, solve all, fructify all with the last chemistry.
- Give me exhaustless, make me a fountain,
- That I exhale love from me wherever I go like a moist perennial dew,
- For the ashes of all dead soldiers South or North.
- Thoughts
- 1
- Of these years I sing,
- How they pass and have pass’d through convuls’d pains, as through
- parturitions,
- How America illustrates birth, muscular youth, the promise, the sure
- fulfilment, the absolute success, despite of people--illustrates
- evil as well as good,
- The vehement struggle so fierce for unity in one’s-self,
- How many hold despairingly yet to the models departed, caste, myths,
- obedience, compulsion, and to infidelity,
- How few see the arrived models, the athletes, the Western States, or
- see freedom or spirituality, or hold any faith in results,
- (But I see the athletes, and I see the results of the war glorious
- and inevitable, and they again leading to other results.)
- How the great cities appear--how the Democratic masses, turbulent,
- willful, as I love them,
- How the whirl, the contest, the wrestle of evil with good, the
- sounding and resounding, keep on and on,
- How society waits unform’d, and is for a while between things ended
- and things begun,
- How America is the continent of glories, and of the triumph of
- freedom and of the Democracies, and of the fruits of society, and
- of all that is begun,
- And how the States are complete in themselves--and how all triumphs
- and glories are complete in themselves, to lead onward,
- And how these of mine and of the States will in their turn be
- convuls’d, and serve other parturitions and transitions,
- And how all people, sights, combinations, the democratic masses too,
- serve--and how every fact, and war itself, with all its horrors,
- serves,
- And how now or at any time each serves the exquisite transition of death.
- 2
- Of seeds dropping into the ground, of births,
- Of the steady concentration of America, inland, upward, to
- impregnable and swarming places,
- Of what Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas, and the rest, are to be,
- Of what a few years will show there in Nebraska, Colorado, Nevada,
- and the rest,
- (Or afar, mounting the Northern Pacific to Sitka or Aliaska,)
- Of what the feuillage of America is the preparation for--and of what
- all sights, North, South, East and West, are,
- Of this Union welded in blood, of the solemn price paid, of the
- unnamed lost ever present in my mind;
- Of the temporary use of materials for identity’s sake,
- Of the present, passing, departing--of the growth of completer men
- than any yet,
- Of all sloping down there where the fresh free giver the mother, the
- Mississippi flows,
- Of mighty inland cities yet unsurvey’d and unsuspected,
- Of the new and good names, of the modern developments, of
- inalienable homesteads,
- Of a free and original life there, of simple diet and clean and
- sweet blood,
- Of litheness, majestic faces, clear eyes, and perfect physique there,
- Of immense spiritual results future years far West, each side of the
- Anahuacs,
- Of these songs, well understood there, (being made for that area,)
- Of the native scorn of grossness and gain there,
- (O it lurks in me night and day--what is gain after all to savageness
- and freedom?)
- Song at Sunset
- Splendor of ended day floating and filling me,
- Hour prophetic, hour resuming the past,
- Inflating my throat, you divine average,
- You earth and life till the last ray gleams I sing.
- Open mouth of my soul uttering gladness,
- Eyes of my soul seeing perfection,
- Natural life of me faithfully praising things,
- Corroborating forever the triumph of things.
- Illustrious every one!
- Illustrious what we name space, sphere of unnumber’d spirits,
- Illustrious the mystery of motion in all beings, even the tiniest insect,
- Illustrious the attribute of speech, the senses, the body,
- Illustrious the passing light--illustrious the pale reflection on
- the new moon in the western sky,
- Illustrious whatever I see or hear or touch, to the last.
- Good in all,
- In the satisfaction and aplomb of animals,
- In the annual return of the seasons,
- In the hilarity of youth,
- In the strength and flush of manhood,
- In the grandeur and exquisiteness of old age,
- In the superb vistas of death.
- Wonderful to depart!
- Wonderful to be here!
- The heart, to jet the all-alike and innocent blood!
- To breathe the air, how delicious!
- To speak--to walk--to seize something by the hand!
- To prepare for sleep, for bed, to look on my rose-color’d flesh!
- To be conscious of my body, so satisfied, so large!
- To be this incredible God I am!
- To have gone forth among other Gods, these men and women I love.
- Wonderful how I celebrate you and myself
- How my thoughts play subtly at the spectacles around!
- How the clouds pass silently overhead!
- How the earth darts on and on! and how the sun, moon, stars, dart on and on!
- How the water sports and sings! (surely it is alive!)
- How the trees rise and stand up, with strong trunks, with branches
- and leaves!
- (Surely there is something more in each of the trees, some living soul.)
- O amazement of things--even the least particle!
- O spirituality of things!
- O strain musical flowing through ages and continents, now reaching
- me and America!
- I take your strong chords, intersperse them, and cheerfully pass
- them forward.
- I too carol the sun, usher’d or at noon, or as now, setting,
- I too throb to the brain and beauty of the earth and of all the
- growths of the earth,
- I too have felt the resistless call of myself.
- As I steam’d down the Mississippi,
- As I wander’d over the prairies,
- As I have lived, as I have look’d through my windows my eyes,
- As I went forth in the morning, as I beheld the light breaking in the east,
- As I bathed on the beach of the Eastern Sea, and again on the beach
- of the Western Sea,
- As I roam’d the streets of inland Chicago, whatever streets I have roam’d,
- Or cities or silent woods, or even amid the sights of war,
- Wherever I have been I have charged myself with contentment and triumph.
- I sing to the last the equalities modern or old,
- I sing the endless finales of things,
- I say Nature continues, glory continues,
- I praise with electric voice,
- For I do not see one imperfection in the universe,
- And I do not see one cause or result lamentable at last in the universe.
- O setting sun! though the time has come,
- I still warble under you, if none else does, unmitigated adoration.
- As at Thy Portals Also Death
- As at thy portals also death,
- Entering thy sovereign, dim, illimitable grounds,
- To memories of my mother, to the divine blending, maternity,
- To her, buried and gone, yet buried not, gone not from me,
- (I see again the calm benignant face fresh and beautiful still,
- I sit by the form in the coffin,
- I kiss and kiss convulsively again the sweet old lips, the cheeks,
- the closed eyes in the coffin;)
- To her, the ideal woman, practical, spiritual, of all of earth,
- life, love, to me the best,
- I grave a monumental line, before I go, amid these songs,
- And set a tombstone here.
- My Legacy
- The business man the acquirer vast,
- After assiduous years surveying results, preparing for departure,
- Devises houses and lands to his children, bequeaths stocks, goods,
- funds for a school or hospital,
- Leaves money to certain companions to buy tokens, souvenirs of gems
- and gold.
- But I, my life surveying, closing,
- With nothing to show to devise from its idle years,
- Nor houses nor lands, nor tokens of gems or gold for my friends,
- Yet certain remembrances of the war for you, and after you,
- And little souvenirs of camps and soldiers, with my love,
- I bind together and bequeath in this bundle of songs.
- Pensive on Her Dead Gazing
- Pensive on her dead gazing I heard the Mother of All,
- Desperate on the torn bodies, on the forms covering the battlefields gazing,
- (As the last gun ceased, but the scent of the powder-smoke linger’d,)
- As she call’d to her earth with mournful voice while she stalk’d,
- Absorb them well O my earth, she cried, I charge you lose not my
- sons, lose not an atom,
- And you streams absorb them well, taking their dear blood,
- And you local spots, and you airs that swim above lightly impalpable,
- And all you essences of soil and growth, and you my rivers’ depths,
- And you mountain sides, and the woods where my dear children’s
- blood trickling redden’d,
- And you trees down in your roots to bequeath to all future trees,
- My dead absorb or South or North--my young men’s bodies absorb,
- and their precious precious blood,
- Which holding in trust for me faithfully back again give me many a
- year hence,
- In unseen essence and odor of surface and grass, centuries hence,
- In blowing airs from the fields back again give me my darlings, give
- my immortal heroes,
- Exhale me them centuries hence, breathe me their breath, let not an
- atom be lost,
- O years and graves! O air and soil! O my dead, an aroma sweet!
- Exhale them perennial sweet death, years, centuries hence.
- Camps of Green
- Nor alone those camps of white, old comrades of the wars,
- When as order’d forward, after a long march,
- Footsore and weary, soon as the light lessens we halt for the night,
- Some of us so fatigued carrying the gun and knapsack, dropping
- asleep in our tracks,
- Others pitching the little tents, and the fires lit up begin to sparkle,
- Outposts of pickets posted surrounding alert through the dark,
- And a word provided for countersign, careful for safety,
- Till to the call of the drummers at daybreak loudly beating the drums,
- We rise up refresh’d, the night and sleep pass’d over, and resume our
- journey,
- Or proceed to battle.
- Lo, the camps of the tents of green,
- Which the days of peace keep filling, and the days of war keep filling,
- With a mystic army, (is it too order’d forward? is it too only
- halting awhile,
- Till night and sleep pass over?)
- Now in those camps of green, in their tents dotting the world,
- In the parents, children, husbands, wives, in them, in the old and young,
- Sleeping under the sunlight, sleeping under the moonlight, content
- and silent there at last,
- Behold the mighty bivouac-field and waiting-camp of all,
- Of the corps and generals all, and the President over the corps and
- generals all,
- And of each of us O soldiers, and of each and all in the ranks we fought,
- (There without hatred we all, all meet.)
- For presently O soldiers, we too camp in our place in the
- bivouac-camps of green,
- But we need not provide for outposts, nor word for the countersign,
- Nor drummer to beat the morning drum.
- The Sobbing of the Bells [Midnight, Sept. 19-20, 1881]
- The sobbing of the bells, the sudden death-news everywhere,
- The slumberers rouse, the rapport of the People,
- (Full well they know that message in the darkness,
- Full well return, respond within their breasts, their brains, the
- sad reverberations,)
- The passionate toll and clang--city to city, joining, sounding, passing,
- Those heart-beats of a Nation in the night.
- As They Draw to a Close
- As they draw to a close,
- Of what underlies the precedent songs--of my aims in them,
- Of the seed I have sought to plant in them,
- Of joy, sweet joy, through many a year, in them,
- (For them, for them have I lived, in them my work is done,)
- Of many an aspiration fond, of many a dream and plan;
- Through Space and Time fused in a chant, and the flowing eternal identity,
- To Nature encompassing these, encompassing God--to the joyous,
- electric all,
- To the sense of Death, and accepting exulting in Death in its turn
- the same as life,
- The entrance of man to sing;
- To compact you, ye parted, diverse lives,
- To put rapport the mountains and rocks and streams,
- And the winds of the north, and the forests of oak and pine,
- With you O soul.
- Joy, Shipmate, Joy!
- Joy, shipmate, Joy!
- (Pleas’d to my soul at death I cry,)
- Our life is closed, our life begins,
- The long, long anchorage we leave,
- The ship is clear at last, she leaps!
- She swiftly courses from the shore,
- Joy, shipmate, joy.
- The Untold Want
- The untold want by life and land ne’er granted,
- Now voyager sail thou forth to seek and find.
- Portals
- What are those of the known but to ascend and enter the Unknown?
- And what are those of life but for Death?
- These Carols
- These carols sung to cheer my passage through the world I see,
- For completion I dedicate to the Invisible World.
- Now Finale to the Shore
- Now finale to the shore,
- Now land and life finale and farewell,
- Now Voyager depart, (much, much for thee is yet in store,)
- Often enough hast thou adventur’d o’er the seas,
- Cautiously cruising, studying the charts,
- Duly again to port and hawser’s tie returning;
- But now obey thy cherish’d secret wish,
- Embrace thy friends, leave all in order,
- To port and hawser’s tie no more returning,
- Depart upon thy endless cruise old Sailor.
- So Long!
- To conclude, I announce what comes after me.
- I remember I said before my leaves sprang at all,
- I would raise my voice jocund and strong with reference to consummations.
- When America does what was promis’d,
- When through these States walk a hundred millions of superb persons,
- When the rest part away for superb persons and contribute to them,
- When breeds of the most perfect mothers denote America,
- Then to me and mine our due fruition.
- I have press’d through in my own right,
- I have sung the body and the soul, war and peace have I sung, and
- the songs of life and death,
- And the songs of birth, and shown that there are many births.
- I have offer’d my style to every one, I have journey’d with confident step;
- While my pleasure is yet at the full I whisper So long!
- And take the young woman’s hand and the young man’s hand for the last time.
- I announce natural persons to arise,
- I announce justice triumphant,
- I announce uncompromising liberty and equality,
- I announce the justification of candor and the justification of pride.
- I announce that the identity of these States is a single identity only,
- I announce the Union more and more compact, indissoluble,
- I announce splendors and majesties to make all the previous politics
- of the earth insignificant.
- I announce adhesiveness, I say it shall be limitless, unloosen’d,
- I say you shall yet find the friend you were looking for.
- I announce a man or woman coming, perhaps you are the one, (So long!)
- I announce the great individual, fluid as Nature, chaste,
- affectionate, compassionate, fully arm’d.
- I announce a life that shall be copious, vehement, spiritual, bold,
- I announce an end that shall lightly and joyfully meet its translation.
- I announce myriads of youths, beautiful, gigantic, sweet-blooded,
- I announce a race of splendid and savage old men.
- O thicker and faster--(So long!)
- O crowding too close upon me,
- I foresee too much, it means more than I thought,
- It appears to me I am dying.
- Hasten throat and sound your last,
- Salute me--salute the days once more. Peal the old cry once more.
- Screaming electric, the atmosphere using,
- At random glancing, each as I notice absorbing,
- Swiftly on, but a little while alighting,
- Curious envelop’d messages delivering,
- Sparkles hot, seed ethereal down in the dirt dropping,
- Myself unknowing, my commission obeying, to question it never daring,
- To ages and ages yet the growth of the seed leaving,
- To troops out of the war arising, they the tasks I have set
- promulging,
- To women certain whispers of myself bequeathing, their affection
- me more clearly explaining,
- To young men my problems offering--no dallier I--I the muscle of
- their brains trying,
- So I pass, a little time vocal, visible, contrary,
- Afterward a melodious echo, passionately bent for, (death making
- me really undying,)
- The best of me then when no longer visible, for toward that I have
- been incessantly preparing.
- What is there more, that I lag and pause and crouch extended with
- unshut mouth?
- Is there a single final farewell?
- My songs cease, I abandon them,
- From behind the screen where I hid I advance personally solely to you.
- Camerado, this is no book,
- Who touches this touches a man,
- (Is it night? are we here together alone?)
- It is I you hold and who holds you,
- I spring from the pages into your arms--decease calls me forth.
- O how your fingers drowse me,
- Your breath falls around me like dew, your pulse lulls the tympans
- of my ears,
- I feel immerged from head to foot,
- Delicious, enough.
- Enough O deed impromptu and secret,
- Enough O gliding present--enough O summ’d-up past.
- Dear friend whoever you are take this kiss,
- I give it especially to you, do not forget me,
- I feel like one who has done work for the day to retire awhile,
- I receive now again of my many translations, from my avataras
- ascending, while others doubtless await me,
- An unknown sphere more real than I dream’d, more direct, darts
- awakening rays about me, So long!
- Remember my words, I may again return,
- I love you, I depart from materials,
- I am as one disembodied, triumphant, dead.
- BOOK XXXIV. SANDS AT SEVENTY
- Mannahatta
- My city’s fit and noble name resumed,
- Choice aboriginal name, with marvellous beauty, meaning,
- A rocky founded island--shores where ever gayly dash the coming,
- going, hurrying sea waves.
- Paumanok
- Sea-beauty! stretch’d and basking!
- One side thy inland ocean laving, broad, with copious commerce,
- steamers, sails,
- And one the Atlantic’s wind caressing, fierce or gentle--mighty hulls
- dark-gliding in the distance.
- Isle of sweet brooks of drinking-water--healthy air and soil!
- Isle of the salty shore and breeze and brine!
- From Montauk Point
- I stand as on some mighty eagle’s beak,
- Eastward the sea absorbing, viewing, (nothing but sea and sky,)
- The tossing waves, the foam, the ships in the distance,
- The wild unrest, the snowy, curling caps--that inbound urge and urge
- of waves,
- Seeking the shores forever.
- To Those Who’ve Fail’d
- To those who’ve fail’d, in aspiration vast,
- To unnam’d soldiers fallen in front on the lead,
- To calm, devoted engineers--to over-ardent travelers--to pilots on
- their ships,
- To many a lofty song and picture without recognition--I’d rear
- laurel-cover’d monument,
- High, high above the rest--To all cut off before their time,
- Possess’d by some strange spirit of fire,
- Quench’d by an early death.
- A Carol Closing Sixty-Nine
- A carol closing sixty-nine--a resume--a repetition,
- My lines in joy and hope continuing on the same,
- Of ye, O God, Life, Nature, Freedom, Poetry;
- Of you, my Land--your rivers, prairies, States--you, mottled Flag I love,
- Your aggregate retain’d entire--Of north, south, east and west, your
- items all;
- Of me myself--the jocund heart yet beating in my breast,
- The body wreck’d, old, poor and paralyzed--the strange inertia
- falling pall-like round me,
- The burning fires down in my sluggish blood not yet extinct,
- The undiminish’d faith--the groups of loving friends.
- The Bravest Soldiers
- Brave, brave were the soldiers (high named to-day) who lived through
- the fight;
- But the bravest press’d to the front and fell, unnamed, unknown.
- A Font of Type
- This latent mine--these unlaunch’d voices--passionate powers,
- Wrath, argument, or praise, or comic leer, or prayer devout,
- (Not nonpareil, brevier, bourgeois, long primer merely,)
- These ocean waves arousable to fury and to death,
- Or sooth’d to ease and sheeny sun and sleep,
- Within the pallid slivers slumbering.
- As I Sit Writing Here
- As I sit writing here, sick and grown old,
- Not my least burden is that dulness of the years, querilities,
- Ungracious glooms, aches, lethargy, constipation, whimpering ennui,
- May filter in my dally songs.
- My Canary Bird
- Did we count great, O soul, to penetrate the themes of mighty books,
- Absorbing deep and full from thoughts, plays, speculations?
- But now from thee to me, caged bird, to feel thy joyous warble,
- Filling the air, the lonesome room, the long forenoon,
- Is it not just as great, O soul?
- Queries to My Seventieth Year
- Approaching, nearing, curious,
- Thou dim, uncertain spectre--bringest thou life or death?
- Strength, weakness, blindness, more paralysis and heavier?
- Or placid skies and sun? Wilt stir the waters yet?
- Or haply cut me short for good? Or leave me here as now,
- Dull, parrot-like and old, with crack’d voice harping, screeching?
- The Wallabout Martyrs
- Greater than memory of Achilles or Ulysses,
- More, more by far to thee than tomb of Alexander,
- Those cart loads of old charnel ashes, scales and splints of mouldy bones,
- Once living men--once resolute courage, aspiration, strength,
- The stepping stones to thee to-day and here, America.
- The First Dandelion
- Simple and fresh and fair from winter’s close emerging,
- As if no artifice of fashion, business, politics, had ever been,
- Forth from its sunny nook of shelter’d grass--innocent, golden, calm
- as the dawn,
- The spring’s first dandelion shows its trustful face.
- America
- Centre of equal daughters, equal sons,
- All, all alike endear’d, grown, ungrown, young or old,
- Strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich,
- Perennial with the Earth, with Freedom, Law and Love,
- A grand, sane, towering, seated Mother,
- Chair’d in the adamant of Time.
- Memories
- How sweet the silent backward tracings!
- The wanderings as in dreams--the meditation of old times resumed
- --their loves, joys, persons, voyages.
- To-Day and Thee
- The appointed winners in a long-stretch’d game;
- The course of Time and nations--Egypt, India, Greece and Rome;
- The past entire, with all its heroes, histories, arts, experiments,
- Its store of songs, inventions, voyages, teachers, books,
- Garner’d for now and thee--To think of it!
- The heirdom all converged in thee!
- After the Dazzle of Day
- After the dazzle of day is gone,
- Only the dark, dark night shows to my eyes the stars;
- After the clangor of organ majestic, or chorus, or perfect band,
- Silent, athwart my soul, moves the symphony true.
- Abraham Lincoln, Born Feb. 12, 1809
- To-day, from each and all, a breath of prayer--a pulse of thought,
- To memory of Him--to birth of Him.
- Out of May’s Shows Selected
- Apple orchards, the trees all cover’d with blossoms;
- Wheat fields carpeted far and near in vital emerald green;
- The eternal, exhaustless freshness of each early morning;
- The yellow, golden, transparent haze of the warm afternoon sun;
- The aspiring lilac bushes with profuse purple or white flowers.
- Halcyon Days
- Not from successful love alone,
- Nor wealth, nor honor’d middle age, nor victories of politics or war;
- But as life wanes, and all the turbulent passions calm,
- As gorgeous, vapory, silent hues cover the evening sky,
- As softness, fulness, rest, suffuse the frame, like freshier, balmier air,
- As the days take on a mellower light, and the apple at last hangs
- really finish’d and indolent-ripe on the tree,
- Then for the teeming quietest, happiest days of all!
- The brooding and blissful halcyon days!
- FANCIES AT NAVESINK
- [I] The Pilot in the Mist
- Steaming the northern rapids--(an old St. Lawrence reminiscence,
- A sudden memory-flash comes back, I know not why,
- Here waiting for the sunrise, gazing from this hill;)
- Again ’tis just at morning--a heavy haze contends with daybreak,
- Again the trembling, laboring vessel veers me--I press through
- foam-dash’d rocks that almost touch me,
- Again I mark where aft the small thin Indian helmsman
- Looms in the mist, with brow elate and governing hand.
- [II] Had I the Choice
- Had I the choice to tally greatest bards,
- To limn their portraits, stately, beautiful, and emulate at will,
- Homer with all his wars and warriors--Hector, Achilles, Ajax,
- Or Shakspere’s woe-entangled Hamlet, Lear, Othello--Tennyson’s fair ladies,
- Metre or wit the best, or choice conceit to wield in perfect rhyme,
- delight of singers;
- These, these, O sea, all these I’d gladly barter,
- Would you the undulation of one wave, its trick to me transfer,
- Or breathe one breath of yours upon my verse,
- And leave its odor there.
- [III] You Tides with Ceaseless Swell
- You tides with ceaseless swell! you power that does this work!
- You unseen force, centripetal, centrifugal, through space’s spread,
- Rapport of sun, moon, earth, and all the constellations,
- What are the messages by you from distant stars to us? what Sirius’?
- what Capella’s?
- What central heart--and you the pulse--vivifies all? what boundless
- aggregate of all?
- What subtle indirection and significance in you? what clue to all in
- you? what fluid, vast identity,
- Holding the universe with all its parts as one--as sailing in a ship?
- [IV] Last of Ebb, and Daylight Waning
- Last of ebb, and daylight waning,
- Scented sea-cool landward making, smells of sedge and salt incoming,
- With many a half-caught voice sent up from the eddies,
- Many a muffled confession--many a sob and whisper’d word,
- As of speakers far or hid.
- How they sweep down and out! how they mutter!
- Poets unnamed--artists greatest of any, with cherish’d lost designs,
- Love’s unresponse--a chorus of age’s complaints--hope’s last words,
- Some suicide’s despairing cry, Away to the boundless waste, and
- never again return.
- On to oblivion then!
- On, on, and do your part, ye burying, ebbing tide!
- On for your time, ye furious debouche!
- [V] And Yet Not You Alone
- And yet not you alone, twilight and burying ebb,
- Nor you, ye lost designs alone--nor failures, aspirations;
- I know, divine deceitful ones, your glamour’s seeming;
- Duly by you, from you, the tide and light again--duly the hinges turning,
- Duly the needed discord-parts offsetting, blending,
- Weaving from you, from Sleep, Night, Death itself,
- The rhythmus of Birth eternal.
- [VI] Proudly the Flood Comes In
- Proudly the flood comes in, shouting, foaming, advancing,
- Long it holds at the high, with bosom broad outswelling,
- All throbs, dilates--the farms, woods, streets of cities--workmen at work,
- Mainsails, topsails, jibs, appear in the offing--steamers’ pennants
- of smoke--and under the forenoon sun,
- Freighted with human lives, gaily the outward bound, gaily the
- inward bound,
- Flaunting from many a spar the flag I love.
- [VII] By That Long Scan of Waves
- By that long scan of waves, myself call’d back, resumed upon myself,
- In every crest some undulating light or shade--some retrospect,
- Joys, travels, studies, silent panoramas--scenes ephemeral,
- The long past war, the battles, hospital sights, the wounded and the dead,
- Myself through every by-gone phase--my idle youth--old age at hand,
- My three-score years of life summ’d up, and more, and past,
- By any grand ideal tried, intentionless, the whole a nothing,
- And haply yet some drop within God’s scheme’s ensemble--some
- wave, or part of wave,
- Like one of yours, ye multitudinous ocean.
- [VIII] Then Last Of All
- Then last of all, caught from these shores, this hill,
- Of you O tides, the mystic human meaning:
- Only by law of you, your swell and ebb, enclosing me the same,
- The brain that shapes, the voice that chants this song.
- Election Day, November, 1884
- If I should need to name, O Western World, your powerfulest scene and show,
- ’Twould not be you, Niagara--nor you, ye limitless prairies--nor
- your huge rifts of canyons, Colorado,
- Nor you, Yosemite--nor Yellowstone, with all its spasmic
- geyser-loops ascending to the skies, appearing and disappearing,
- Nor Oregon’s white cones--nor Huron’s belt of mighty lakes--nor
- Mississippi’s stream:
- --This seething hemisphere’s humanity, as now, I’d name--the still
- small voice vibrating--America’s choosing day,
- (The heart of it not in the chosen--the act itself the main, the
- quadriennial choosing,)
- The stretch of North and South arous’d--sea-board and inland--
- Texas to Maine--the Prairie States--Vermont, Virginia, California,
- The final ballot-shower from East to West--the paradox and conflict,
- The countless snow-flakes falling--(a swordless conflict,
- Yet more than all Rome’s wars of old, or modern Napoleon’s:) the
- peaceful choice of all,
- Or good or ill humanity--welcoming the darker odds, the dross:
- --Foams and ferments the wine? it serves to purify--while the heart
- pants, life glows:
- These stormy gusts and winds waft precious ships,
- Swell’d Washington’s, Jefferson’s, Lincoln’s sails.
- With Husky-Haughty Lips, O Sea!
- With husky-haughty lips, O sea!
- Where day and night I wend thy surf-beat shore,
- Imaging to my sense thy varied strange suggestions,
- (I see and plainly list thy talk and conference here,)
- Thy troops of white-maned racers racing to the goal,
- Thy ample, smiling face, dash’d with the sparkling dimples of the sun,
- Thy brooding scowl and murk--thy unloos’d hurricanes,
- Thy unsubduedness, caprices, wilfulness;
- Great as thou art above the rest, thy many tears--a lack from all
- eternity in thy content,
- (Naught but the greatest struggles, wrongs, defeats, could make thee
- greatest--no less could make thee,)
- Thy lonely state--something thou ever seek’st and seek’st, yet
- never gain’st,
- Surely some right withheld--some voice, in huge monotonous rage, of
- freedom-lover pent,
- Some vast heart, like a planet’s, chain’d and chafing in those breakers,
- By lengthen’d swell, and spasm, and panting breath,
- And rhythmic rasping of thy sands and waves,
- And serpent hiss, and savage peals of laughter,
- And undertones of distant lion roar,
- (Sounding, appealing to the sky’s deaf ear--but now, rapport for once,
- A phantom in the night thy confidant for once,)
- The first and last confession of the globe,
- Outsurging, muttering from thy soul’s abysms,
- The tale of cosmic elemental passion,
- Thou tellest to a kindred soul.
- Death of General Grant
- As one by one withdraw the lofty actors,
- From that great play on history’s stage eterne,
- That lurid, partial act of war and peace--of old and new contending,
- Fought out through wrath, fears, dark dismays, and many a long suspense;
- All past--and since, in countless graves receding, mellowing,
- Victor’s and vanquish’d--Lincoln’s and Lee’s--now thou with them,
- Man of the mighty days--and equal to the days!
- Thou from the prairies!--tangled and many-vein’d and hard has been thy part,
- To admiration has it been enacted!
- Red Jacket (From Aloft)
- Upon this scene, this show,
- Yielded to-day by fashion, learning, wealth,
- (Nor in caprice alone--some grains of deepest meaning,)
- Haply, aloft, (who knows?) from distant sky-clouds’ blended shapes,
- As some old tree, or rock or cliff, thrill’d with its soul,
- Product of Nature’s sun, stars, earth direct--a towering human form,
- In hunting-shirt of film, arm’d with the rifle, a half-ironical
- smile curving its phantom lips,
- Like one of Ossian’s ghosts looks down.
- Washington’s Monument February, 1885
- Ah, not this marble, dead and cold:
- Far from its base and shaft expanding--the round zones circling,
- comprehending,
- Thou, Washington, art all the world’s, the continents’ entire--not
- yours alone, America,
- Europe’s as well, in every part, castle of lord or laborer’s cot,
- Or frozen North, or sultry South--the African’s--the Arab’s in his tent,
- Old Asia’s there with venerable smile, seated amid her ruins;
- (Greets the antique the hero new? ’tis but the same--the heir
- legitimate, continued ever,
- The indomitable heart and arm--proofs of the never-broken line,
- Courage, alertness, patience, faith, the same--e’en in defeat
- defeated not, the same:)
- Wherever sails a ship, or house is built on land, or day or night,
- Through teeming cities’ streets, indoors or out, factories or farms,
- Now, or to come, or past--where patriot wills existed or exist,
- Wherever Freedom, pois’d by Toleration, sway’d by Law,
- Stands or is rising thy true monument.
- Of That Blithe Throat of Thine
- Of that blithe throat of thine from arctic bleak and blank,
- I’ll mind the lesson, solitary bird--let me too welcome chilling drifts,
- E’en the profoundest chill, as now--a torpid pulse, a brain unnerv’d,
- Old age land-lock’d within its winter bay--(cold, cold, O cold!)
- These snowy hairs, my feeble arm, my frozen feet,
- For them thy faith, thy rule I take, and grave it to the last;
- Not summer’s zones alone--not chants of youth, or south’s warm tides alone,
- But held by sluggish floes, pack’d in the northern ice, the cumulus
- of years,
- These with gay heart I also sing.
- Broadway
- What hurrying human tides, or day or night!
- What passions, winnings, losses, ardors, swim thy waters!
- What whirls of evil, bliss and sorrow, stem thee!
- What curious questioning glances--glints of love!
- Leer, envy, scorn, contempt, hope, aspiration!
- Thou portal--thou arena--thou of the myriad long-drawn lines and groups!
- (Could but thy flagstones, curbs, facades, tell their inimitable tales;
- Thy windows rich, and huge hotels--thy side-walks wide;)
- Thou of the endless sliding, mincing, shuffling feet!
- Thou, like the parti-colored world itself--like infinite, teeming,
- mocking life!
- Thou visor’d, vast, unspeakable show and lesson!
- To Get the Final Lilt of Songs
- To get the final lilt of songs,
- To penetrate the inmost lore of poets--to know the mighty ones,
- Job, Homer, Eschylus, Dante, Shakespere, Tennyson, Emerson;
- To diagnose the shifting-delicate tints of love and pride and doubt--
- to truly understand,
- To encompass these, the last keen faculty and entrance-price,
- Old age, and what it brings from all its past experiences.
- Old Salt Kossabone
- Far back, related on my mother’s side,
- Old Salt Kossabone, I’ll tell you how he died:
- (Had been a sailor all his life--was nearly 90--lived with his
- married grandchild, Jenny;
- House on a hill, with view of bay at hand, and distant cape, and
- stretch to open sea;)
- The last of afternoons, the evening hours, for many a year his
- regular custom,
- In his great arm chair by the window seated,
- (Sometimes, indeed, through half the day,)
- Watching the coming, going of the vessels, he mutters to himself--
- And now the close of all:
- One struggling outbound brig, one day, baffled for long--cross-tides
- and much wrong going,
- At last at nightfall strikes the breeze aright, her whole luck veering,
- And swiftly bending round the cape, the darkness proudly entering,
- cleaving, as he watches,
- “She’s free--she’s on her destination”--these the last words--when
- Jenny came, he sat there dead,
- Dutch Kossabone, Old Salt, related on my mother’s side, far back.
- The Dead Tenor
- As down the stage again,
- With Spanish hat and plumes, and gait inimitable,
- Back from the fading lessons of the past, I’d call, I’d tell and own,
- How much from thee! the revelation of the singing voice from thee!
- (So firm--so liquid-soft--again that tremulous, manly timbre!
- The perfect singing voice--deepest of all to me the lesson--trial
- and test of all:)
- How through those strains distill’d--how the rapt ears, the soul of
- me, absorbing
- Fernando’s heart, Manrico’s passionate call, Ernani’s, sweet Gennaro’s,
- I fold thenceforth, or seek to fold, within my chants transmuting,
- Freedom’s and Love’s and Faith’s unloos’d cantabile,
- (As perfume’s, color’s, sunlight’s correlation:)
- From these, for these, with these, a hurried line, dead tenor,
- A wafted autumn leaf, dropt in the closing grave, the shovel’d earth,
- To memory of thee.
- Continuities
- Nothing is ever really lost, or can be lost,
- No birth, identity, form--no object of the world.
- Nor life, nor force, nor any visible thing;
- Appearance must not foil, nor shifted sphere confuse thy brain.
- Ample are time and space--ample the fields of Nature.
- The body, sluggish, aged, cold--the embers left from earlier fires,
- The light in the eye grown dim, shall duly flame again;
- The sun now low in the west rises for mornings and for noons continual;
- To frozen clods ever the spring’s invisible law returns,
- With grass and flowers and summer fruits and corn.
- Yonnondio
- A song, a poem of itself--the word itself a dirge,
- Amid the wilds, the rocks, the storm and wintry night,
- To me such misty, strange tableaux the syllables calling up;
- Yonnondio--I see, far in the west or north, a limitless ravine, with
- plains and mountains dark,
- I see swarms of stalwart chieftains, medicine-men, and warriors,
- As flitting by like clouds of ghosts, they pass and are gone in the
- twilight,
- (Race of the woods, the landscapes free, and the falls!
- No picture, poem, statement, passing them to the future:)
- Yonnondio! Yonnondio!--unlimn’d they disappear;
- To-day gives place, and fades--the cities, farms, factories fade;
- A muffled sonorous sound, a wailing word is borne through the air
- for a moment,
- Then blank and gone and still, and utterly lost.
- Life
- Ever the undiscouraged, resolute, struggling soul of man;
- (Have former armies fail’d? then we send fresh armies--and fresh again;)
- Ever the grappled mystery of all earth’s ages old or new;
- Ever the eager eyes, hurrahs, the welcome-clapping hands, the loud
- applause;
- Ever the soul dissatisfied, curious, unconvinced at last;
- Struggling to-day the same--battling the same.
- “Going Somewhere”
- My science-friend, my noblest woman-friend,
- (Now buried in an English grave--and this a memory-leaf for her dear sake,)
- Ended our talk--“The sum, concluding all we know of old or modern
- learning, intuitions deep,
- “Of all Geologies--Histories--of all Astronomy--of Evolution,
- Metaphysics all,
- “Is, that we all are onward, onward, speeding slowly, surely bettering,
- “Life, life an endless march, an endless army, (no halt, but it is
- duly over,)
- “The world, the race, the soul--in space and time the universes,
- “All bound as is befitting each--all surely going somewhere.”
- Small the Theme of My Chant
- Small the theme of my Chant, yet the greatest--namely, One’s-Self--
- a simple, separate person. That, for the use of the New World, I sing.
- Man’s physiology complete, from top to toe, I sing. Not physiognomy alone,
- nor brain alone, is worthy for the Muse;--I say the Form complete
- is worthier far. The Female equally with the Male, I sing.
- Nor cease at the theme of One’s-Self. I speak the word of the
- modern, the word En-Masse.
- My Days I sing, and the Lands--with interstice I knew of hapless War.
- (O friend, whoe’er you are, at last arriving hither to commence, I
- feel through every leaf the pressure of your hand, which I return.
- And thus upon our journey, footing the road, and more than once, and
- link’d together let us go.)
- True Conquerors
- Old farmers, travelers, workmen (no matter how crippled or bent,)
- Old sailors, out of many a perilous voyage, storm and wreck,
- Old soldiers from campaigns, with all their wounds, defeats and scars;
- Enough that they’ve survived at all--long life’s unflinching ones!
- Forth from their struggles, trials, fights, to have emerged at all--
- in that alone,
- True conquerors o’er all the rest.
- The United States to Old World Critics
- Here first the duties of to-day, the lessons of the concrete,
- Wealth, order, travel, shelter, products, plenty;
- As of the building of some varied, vast, perpetual edifice,
- Whence to arise inevitable in time, the towering roofs, the lamps,
- The solid-planted spires tall shooting to the stars.
- The Calming Thought of All
- That coursing on, whate’er men’s speculations,
- Amid the changing schools, theologies, philosophies,
- Amid the bawling presentations new and old,
- The round earth’s silent vital laws, facts, modes continue.
- Thanks in Old Age
- Thanks in old age--thanks ere I go,
- For health, the midday sun, the impalpable air--for life, mere life,
- For precious ever-lingering memories, (of you my mother dear--you,
- father--you, brothers, sisters, friends,)
- For all my days--not those of peace alone--the days of war the same,
- For gentle words, caresses, gifts from foreign lands,
- For shelter, wine and meat--for sweet appreciation,
- (You distant, dim unknown--or young or old--countless, unspecified,
- readers belov’d,
- We never met, and neer shall meet--and yet our souls embrace, long,
- close and long;)
- For beings, groups, love, deeds, words, books--for colors, forms,
- For all the brave strong men--devoted, hardy men--who’ve forward
- sprung in freedom’s help, all years, all lands
- For braver, stronger, more devoted men--(a special laurel ere I go,
- to life’s war’s chosen ones,
- The cannoneers of song and thought--the great artillerists--the
- foremost leaders, captains of the soul:)
- As soldier from an ended war return’d--As traveler out of myriads,
- to the long procession retrospective,
- Thanks--joyful thanks!--a soldier’s, traveler’s thanks.
- Life and Death
- The two old, simple problems ever intertwined,
- Close home, elusive, present, baffled, grappled.
- By each successive age insoluble, pass’d on,
- To ours to-day--and we pass on the same.
- The Voice of the Rain
- And who art thou? said I to the soft-falling shower,
- Which, strange to tell, gave me an answer, as here translated:
- I am the Poem of Earth, said the voice of the rain,
- Eternal I rise impalpable out of the land and the bottomless sea,
- Upward to heaven, whence, vaguely form’d, altogether changed, and
- yet the same,
- I descend to lave the drouths, atomies, dust-layers of the globe,
- And all that in them without me were seeds only, latent, unborn;
- And forever, by day and night, I give back life to my own origin,
- and make pure and beautify it;
- (For song, issuing from its birth-place, after fulfilment, wandering,
- Reck’d or unreck’d, duly with love returns.)
- Soon Shall the Winter’s Foil Be Here
- Soon shall the winter’s foil be here;
- Soon shall these icy ligatures unbind and melt--A little while,
- And air, soil, wave, suffused shall be in softness, bloom and
- growth--a thousand forms shall rise
- From these dead clods and chills as from low burial graves.
- Thine eyes, ears--all thy best attributes--all that takes cognizance
- of natural beauty,
- Shall wake and fill. Thou shalt perceive the simple shows, the
- delicate miracles of earth,
- Dandelions, clover, the emerald grass, the early scents and flowers,
- The arbutus under foot, the willow’s yellow-green, the blossoming
- plum and cherry;
- With these the robin, lark and thrush, singing their songs--the
- flitting bluebird;
- For such the scenes the annual play brings on.
- While Not the Past Forgetting
- While not the past forgetting,
- To-day, at least, contention sunk entire--peace, brotherhood uprisen;
- For sign reciprocal our Northern, Southern hands,
- Lay on the graves of all dead soldiers, North or South,
- (Nor for the past alone--for meanings to the future,)
- Wreaths of roses and branches of palm.
- The Dying Veteran
- Amid these days of order, ease, prosperity,
- Amid the current songs of beauty, peace, decorum,
- I cast a reminiscence--(likely ’twill offend you,
- I heard it in my boyhood;)--More than a generation since,
- A queer old savage man, a fighter under Washington himself,
- (Large, brave, cleanly, hot-blooded, no talker, rather spiritualistic,
- Had fought in the ranks--fought well--had been all through the
- Revolutionary war,)
- Lay dying--sons, daughters, church-deacons, lovingly tending him,
- Sharping their sense, their ears, towards his murmuring, half-caught words:
- “Let me return again to my war-days,
- To the sights and scenes--to forming the line of battle,
- To the scouts ahead reconnoitering,
- To the cannons, the grim artillery,
- To the galloping aides, carrying orders,
- To the wounded, the fallen, the heat, the suspense,
- The perfume strong, the smoke, the deafening noise;
- Away with your life of peace!--your joys of peace!
- Give me my old wild battle-life again!”
- Stronger Lessons
- Have you learn’d lessons only of those who admired you, and were
- tender with you, and stood aside for you?
- Have you not learn’d great lessons from those who reject you, and
- brace themselves against you? or who treat you with contempt,
- or dispute the passage with you?
- A Prairie Sunset
- Shot gold, maroon and violet, dazzling silver, emerald, fawn,
- The earth’s whole amplitude and Nature’s multiform power consign’d
- for once to colors;
- The light, the general air possess’d by them--colors till now unknown,
- No limit, confine--not the Western sky alone--the high meridian--
- North, South, all,
- Pure luminous color fighting the silent shadows to the last.
- Twenty Years
- Down on the ancient wharf, the sand, I sit, with a new-comer chatting:
- He shipp’d as green-hand boy, and sail’d away, (took some sudden,
- vehement notion;)
- Since, twenty years and more have circled round and round,
- While he the globe was circling round and round, --and now returns:
- How changed the place--all the old land-marks gone--the parents dead;
- (Yes, he comes back to lay in port for good--to settle--has a
- well-fill’d purse--no spot will do but this;)
- The little boat that scull’d him from the sloop, now held in leash I see,
- I hear the slapping waves, the restless keel, the rocking in the sand,
- I see the sailor kit, the canvas bag, the great box bound with brass,
- I scan the face all berry-brown and bearded--the stout-strong frame,
- Dress’d in its russet suit of good Scotch cloth:
- (Then what the told-out story of those twenty years? What of the future?)
- Orange Buds by Mail from Florida
- A lesser proof than old Voltaire’s, yet greater,
- Proof of this present time, and thee, thy broad expanse, America,
- To my plain Northern hut, in outside clouds and snow,
- Brought safely for a thousand miles o’er land and tide,
- Some three days since on their own soil live-sprouting,
- Now here their sweetness through my room unfolding,
- A bunch of orange buds by mall from Florida.
- Twilight
- The soft voluptuous opiate shades,
- The sun just gone, the eager light dispell’d--(I too will soon be
- gone, dispell’d,)
- A haze--nirwana--rest and night--oblivion.
- You Lingering Sparse Leaves of Me
- You lingering sparse leaves of me on winter-nearing boughs,
- And I some well-shorn tree of field or orchard-row;
- You tokens diminute and lorn--(not now the flush of May, or July
- clover-bloom--no grain of August now;)
- You pallid banner-staves--you pennants valueless--you overstay’d of time,
- Yet my soul-dearest leaves confirming all the rest,
- The faithfulest--hardiest--last.
- Not Meagre, Latent Boughs Alone
- Not meagre, latent boughs alone, O songs! (scaly and bare, like
- eagles’ talons,)
- But haply for some sunny day (who knows?) some future spring, some
- summer--bursting forth,
- To verdant leaves, or sheltering shade--to nourishing fruit,
- Apples and grapes--the stalwart limbs of trees emerging--the fresh,
- free, open air,
- And love and faith, like scented roses blooming.
- The Dead Emperor
- To-day, with bending head and eyes, thou, too, Columbia,
- Less for the mighty crown laid low in sorrow--less for the Emperor,
- Thy true condolence breathest, sendest out o’er many a salt sea mile,
- Mourning a good old man--a faithful shepherd, patriot.
- As the Greek’s Signal Flame
- As the Greek’s signal flame, by antique records told,
- Rose from the hill-top, like applause and glory,
- Welcoming in fame some special veteran, hero,
- With rosy tinge reddening the land he’d served,
- So I aloft from Mannahatta’s ship-fringed shore,
- Lift high a kindled brand for thee, Old Poet.
- The Dismantled Ship
- In some unused lagoon, some nameless bay,
- On sluggish, lonesome waters, anchor’d near the shore,
- An old, dismasted, gray and batter’d ship, disabled, done,
- After free voyages to all the seas of earth, haul’d up at last and
- hawser’d tight,
- Lies rusting, mouldering.
- Now Precedent Songs, Farewell
- Now precedent songs, farewell--by every name farewell,
- (Trains of a staggering line in many a strange procession, waggons,
- From ups and downs--with intervals--from elder years, mid-age, or youth,)
- “In Cabin’d Ships, or Thee Old Cause or Poets to Come
- Or Paumanok, Song of Myself, Calamus, or Adam,
- Or Beat! Beat! Drums! or To the Leaven’d Soil they Trod,
- Or Captain! My Captain! Kosmos, Quicksand Years, or Thoughts,
- Thou Mother with thy Equal Brood,” and many, many more unspecified,
- From fibre heart of mine--from throat and tongue--(My life’s hot
- pulsing blood,
- The personal urge and form for me--not merely paper, automatic type
- and ink,)
- Each song of mine--each utterance in the past--having its long, long
- history,
- Of life or death, or soldier’s wound, of country’s loss or safety,
- (O heaven! what flash and started endless train of all! compared
- indeed to that!
- What wretched shred e’en at the best of all!)
- An Evening Lull
- After a week of physical anguish,
- Unrest and pain, and feverish heat,
- Toward the ending day a calm and lull comes on,
- Three hours of peace and soothing rest of brain.
- Old Age’s Lambent Peaks
- The touch of flame--the illuminating fire--the loftiest look at last,
- O’er city, passion, sea--o’er prairie, mountain, wood--the earth itself,
- The airy, different, changing hues of all, in failing twilight,
- Objects and groups, bearings, faces, reminiscences;
- The calmer sight--the golden setting, clear and broad:
- So much i’ the atmosphere, the points of view, the situations whence
- we scan,
- Bro’t out by them alone--so much (perhaps the best) unreck’d before;
- The lights indeed from them--old age’s lambent peaks.
- After the Supper and Talk
- After the supper and talk--after the day is done,
- As a friend from friends his final withdrawal prolonging,
- Good-bye and Good-bye with emotional lips repeating,
- (So hard for his hand to release those hands--no more will they meet,
- No more for communion of sorrow and joy, of old and young,
- A far-stretching journey awaits him, to return no more,)
- Shunning, postponing severance--seeking to ward off the last word
- ever so little,
- E’en at the exit-door turning--charges superfluous calling back--
- e’en as he descends the steps,
- Something to eke out a minute additional--shadows of nightfall deepening,
- Farewells, messages lessening--dimmer the forthgoer’s visage and form,
- Soon to be lost for aye in the darkness--loth, O so loth to depart!
- Garrulous to the very last.
- BOOKXXXV. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY
- Sail out for Good, Eidolon Yacht!
- Heave the anchor short!
- Raise main-sail and jib--steer forth,
- O little white-hull’d sloop, now speed on really deep waters,
- (I will not call it our concluding voyage,
- But outset and sure entrance to the truest, best, maturest;)
- Depart, depart from solid earth--no more returning to these shores,
- Now on for aye our infinite free venture wending,
- Spurning all yet tried ports, seas, hawsers, densities, gravitation,
- Sail out for good, eidolon yacht of me!
- Lingering Last Drops
- And whence and why come you?
- We know not whence, (was the answer,)
- We only know that we drift here with the rest,
- That we linger’d and lagg’d--but were wafted at last, and are now here,
- To make the passing shower’s concluding drops.
- Good-Bye My Fancy
- Good-bye my fancy--(I had a word to say,
- But ’tis not quite the time--The best of any man’s word or say,
- Is when its proper place arrives--and for its meaning,
- I keep mine till the last.)
- On, on the Same, Ye Jocund Twain!
- On, on the same, ye jocund twain!
- My life and recitative, containing birth, youth, mid-age years,
- Fitful as motley-tongues of flame, inseparably twined and merged in
- one--combining all,
- My single soul--aims, confirmations, failures, joys--Nor single soul alone,
- I chant my nation’s crucial stage, (America’s, haply humanity’s)--
- the trial great, the victory great,
- A strange eclaircissement of all the masses past, the eastern world,
- the ancient, medieval,
- Here, here from wanderings, strayings, lessons, wars, defeats--here
- at the west a voice triumphant--justifying all,
- A gladsome pealing cry--a song for once of utmost pride and satisfaction;
- I chant from it the common bulk, the general average horde, (the
- best sooner than the worst)--And now I chant old age,
- (My verses, written first for forenoon life, and for the summer’s,
- autumn’s spread,
- I pass to snow-white hairs the same, and give to pulses
- winter-cool’d the same;)
- As here in careless trill, I and my recitatives, with faith and love,
- wafting to other work, to unknown songs, conditions,
- On, on ye jocund twain! continue on the same!
- MY 71st Year
- After surmounting three-score and ten,
- With all their chances, changes, losses, sorrows,
- My parents’ deaths, the vagaries of my life, the many tearing
- passions of me, the war of ’63 and ’4,
- As some old broken soldier, after a long, hot, wearying march, or
- haply after battle,
- To-day at twilight, hobbling, answering company roll-call, Here,
- with vital voice,
- Reporting yet, saluting yet the Officer over all.
- Apparitions
- A vague mist hanging ’round half the pages:
- (Sometimes how strange and clear to the soul,
- That all these solid things are indeed but apparitions, concepts,
- non-realities.)
- The Pallid Wreath
- Somehow I cannot let it go yet, funeral though it is,
- Let it remain back there on its nail suspended,
- With pink, blue, yellow, all blanch’d, and the white now gray and ashy,
- One wither’d rose put years ago for thee, dear friend;
- But I do not forget thee. Hast thou then faded?
- Is the odor exhaled? Are the colors, vitalities, dead?
- No, while memories subtly play--the past vivid as ever;
- For but last night I woke, and in that spectral ring saw thee,
- Thy smile, eyes, face, calm, silent, loving as ever:
- So let the wreath hang still awhile within my eye-reach,
- It is not yet dead to me, nor even pallid.
- An Ended Day
- The soothing sanity and blitheness of completion,
- The pomp and hurried contest-glare and rush are done;
- Now triumph! transformation! jubilate!
- Old Age’s Ship & Crafty Death’s
- From east and west across the horizon’s edge,
- Two mighty masterful vessels sailers steal upon us:
- But we’ll make race a-time upon the seas--a battle-contest yet! bear
- lively there!
- (Our joys of strife and derring-do to the last!)
- Put on the old ship all her power to-day!
- Crowd top-sail, top-gallant and royal studding-sails,
- Out challenge and defiance--flags and flaunting pennants added,
- As we take to the open--take to the deepest, freest waters.
- To the Pending Year
- Have I no weapon-word for thee--some message brief and fierce?
- (Have I fought out and done indeed the battle?) Is there no shot left,
- For all thy affectations, lisps, scorns, manifold silliness?
- Nor for myself--my own rebellious self in thee?
- Down, down, proud gorge!--though choking thee;
- Thy bearded throat and high-borne forehead to the gutter;
- Crouch low thy neck to eleemosynary gifts.
- Shakspere-Bacon’s Cipher
- I doubt it not--then more, far more;
- In each old song bequeath’d--in every noble page or text,
- (Different--something unreck’d before--some unsuspected author,)
- In every object, mountain, tree, and star--in every birth and life,
- As part of each--evolv’d from each--meaning, behind the ostent,
- A mystic cipher waits infolded.
- Long, Long Hence
- After a long, long course, hundreds of years, denials,
- Accumulations, rous’d love and joy and thought,
- Hopes, wishes, aspirations, ponderings, victories, myriads of readers,
- Coating, compassing, covering--after ages’ and ages’ encrustations,
- Then only may these songs reach fruition.
- Bravo, Paris Exposition!
- Add to your show, before you close it, France,
- With all the rest, visible, concrete, temples, towers, goods,
- machines and ores,
- Our sentiment wafted from many million heart-throbs, ethereal but solid,
- (We grand-sons and great-grandsons do not forget your grandsires,)
- From fifty Nations and nebulous Nations, compacted, sent oversea to-day,
- America’s applause, love, memories and good-will.
- Interpolation Sounds
- Over and through the burial chant,
- Organ and solemn service, sermon, bending priests,
- To me come interpolation sounds not in the show--plainly to me,
- crowding up the aisle and from the window,
- Of sudden battle’s hurry and harsh noises--war’s grim game to sight
- and ear in earnest;
- The scout call’d up and forward--the general mounted and his aides
- around him--the new-brought word--the instantaneous order issued;
- The rifle crack--the cannon thud--the rushing forth of men from their
- tents;
- The clank of cavalry--the strange celerity of forming ranks--the
- slender bugle note;
- The sound of horses’ hoofs departing--saddles, arms, accoutrements.
- To the Sun-Set Breeze
- Ah, whispering, something again, unseen,
- Where late this heated day thou enterest at my window, door,
- Thou, laving, tempering all, cool-freshing, gently vitalizing
- Me, old, alone, sick, weak-down, melted-worn with sweat;
- Thou, nestling, folding close and firm yet soft, companion better
- than talk, book, art,
- (Thou hast, O Nature! elements! utterance to my heart beyond the
- rest--and this is of them,)
- So sweet thy primitive taste to breathe within--thy soothing fingers
- my face and hands,
- Thou, messenger--magical strange bringer to body and spirit of me,
- (Distances balk’d--occult medicines penetrating me from head to foot,)
- I feel the sky, the prairies vast--I feel the mighty northern lakes,
- I feel the ocean and the forest--somehow I feel the globe itself
- swift-swimming in space;
- Thou blown from lips so loved, now gone--haply from endless store,
- God-sent,
- (For thou art spiritual, Godly, most of all known to my sense,)
- Minister to speak to me, here and now, what word has never told, and
- cannot tell,
- Art thou not universal concrete’s distillation? Law’s, all
- Astronomy’s last refinement?
- Hast thou no soul? Can I not know, identify thee?
- Old Chants
- An ancient song, reciting, ending,
- Once gazing toward thee, Mother of All,
- Musing, seeking themes fitted for thee,
- Accept me, thou saidst, the elder ballads,
- And name for me before thou goest each ancient poet.
- (Of many debts incalculable,
- Haply our New World’s chieftest debt is to old poems.)
- Ever so far back, preluding thee, America,
- Old chants, Egyptian priests, and those of Ethiopia,
- The Hindu epics, the Grecian, Chinese, Persian,
- The Biblic books and prophets, and deep idyls of the Nazarene,
- The Iliad, Odyssey, plots, doings, wanderings of Eneas,
- Hesiod, Eschylus, Sophocles, Merlin, Arthur,
- The Cid, Roland at Roncesvalles, the Nibelungen,
- The troubadours, minstrels, minnesingers, skalds,
- Chaucer, Dante, flocks of singing birds,
- The Border Minstrelsy, the bye-gone ballads, feudal tales, essays, plays,
- Shakespere, Schiller, Walter Scott, Tennyson,
- As some vast wondrous weird dream-presences,
- The great shadowy groups gathering around,
- Darting their mighty masterful eyes forward at thee,
- Thou! with as now thy bending neck and head, with courteous hand
- and word, ascending,
- Thou! pausing a moment, drooping thine eyes upon them, blent
- with their music,
- Well pleased, accepting all, curiously prepared for by them,
- Thou enterest at thy entrance porch.
- A Christmas Greeting
- Welcome, Brazilian brother--thy ample place is ready;
- A loving hand--a smile from the north--a sunny instant hall!
- (Let the future care for itself, where it reveals its troubles,
- impedimentas,
- Ours, ours the present throe, the democratic aim, the acceptance and
- the faith;)
- To thee to-day our reaching arm, our turning neck--to thee from us
- the expectant eye,
- Thou cluster free! thou brilliant lustrous one! thou, learning well,
- The true lesson of a nation’s light in the sky,
- (More shining than the Cross, more than the Crown,)
- The height to be superb humanity.
- Sounds of the Winter
- Sounds of the winter too,
- Sunshine upon the mountains--many a distant strain
- From cheery railroad train--from nearer field, barn, house,
- The whispering air--even the mute crops, garner’d apples, corn,
- Children’s and women’s tones--rhythm of many a farmer and of flail,
- An old man’s garrulous lips among the rest, Think not we give out yet,
- Forth from these snowy hairs we keep up yet the lilt.
- A Twilight Song
- As I sit in twilight late alone by the flickering oak-flame,
- Musing on long-pass’d war-scenes--of the countless buried unknown
- soldiers,
- Of the vacant names, as unindented air’s and sea’s--the unreturn’d,
- The brief truce after battle, with grim burial-squads, and the
- deep-fill’d trenches
- Of gather’d from dead all America, North, South, East, West, whence
- they came up,
- From wooded Maine, New-England’s farms, from fertile Pennsylvania,
- Illinois, Ohio,
- From the measureless West, Virginia, the South, the Carolinas, Texas,
- (Even here in my room-shadows and half-lights in the noiseless
- flickering flames,
- Again I see the stalwart ranks on-filing, rising--I hear the
- rhythmic tramp of the armies;)
- You million unwrit names all, all--you dark bequest from all the war,
- A special verse for you--a flash of duty long neglected--your mystic
- roll strangely gather’d here,
- Each name recall’d by me from out the darkness and death’s ashes,
- Henceforth to be, deep, deep within my heart recording, for many
- future year,
- Your mystic roll entire of unknown names, or North or South,
- Embalm’d with love in this twilight song.
- When the Full-Grown Poet Came
- When the full-grown poet came,
- Out spake pleased Nature (the round impassive globe, with all its
- shows of day and night,) saying, He is mine;
- But out spake too the Soul of man, proud, jealous and unreconciled,
- Nay he is mine alone;
- --Then the full-grown poet stood between the two, and took each
- by the hand;
- And to-day and ever so stands, as blender, uniter, tightly holding hands,
- Which he will never release until he reconciles the two,
- And wholly and joyously blends them.
- Osceola
- When his hour for death had come,
- He slowly rais’d himself from the bed on the floor,
- Drew on his war-dress, shirt, leggings, and girdled the belt around
- his waist,
- Call’d for vermilion paint (his looking-glass was held before him,)
- Painted half his face and neck, his wrists, and back-hands.
- Put the scalp-knife carefully in his belt--then lying down, resting
- moment,
- Rose again, half sitting, smiled, gave in silence his extended hand
- to each and all,
- Sank faintly low to the floor (tightly grasping the tomahawk handle,)
- Fix’d his look on wife and little children--the last:
- (And here a line in memory of his name and death.)
- A Voice from Death
- A voice from Death, solemn and strange, in all his sweep and power,
- With sudden, indescribable blow--towns drown’d--humanity by
- thousands slain,
- The vaunted work of thrift, goods, dwellings, forge, street, iron bridge,
- Dash’d pell-mell by the blow--yet usher’d life continuing on,
- (Amid the rest, amid the rushing, whirling, wild debris,
- A suffering woman saved--a baby safely born!)
- Although I come and unannounc’d, in horror and in pang,
- In pouring flood and fire, and wholesale elemental crash, (this
- voice so solemn, strange,)
- I too a minister of Deity.
- Yea, Death, we bow our faces, veil our eyes to thee,
- We mourn the old, the young untimely drawn to thee,
- The fair, the strong, the good, the capable,
- The household wreck’d, the husband and the wife, the engulfed forger
- in his forge,
- The corpses in the whelming waters and the mud,
- The gather’d thousands to their funeral mounds, and thousands never
- found or gather’d.
- Then after burying, mourning the dead,
- (Faithful to them found or unfound, forgetting not, bearing the
- past, here new musing,)
- A day--a passing moment or an hour--America itself bends low,
- Silent, resign’d, submissive.
- War, death, cataclysm like this, America,
- Take deep to thy proud prosperous heart.
- E’en as I chant, lo! out of death, and out of ooze and slime,
- The blossoms rapidly blooming, sympathy, help, love,
- From West and East, from South and North and over sea,
- Its hot-spurr’d hearts and hands humanity to human aid moves on;
- And from within a thought and lesson yet.
- Thou ever-darting Globe! through Space and Air!
- Thou waters that encompass us!
- Thou that in all the life and death of us, in action or in sleep!
- Thou laws invisible that permeate them and all,
- Thou that in all, and over all, and through and under all, incessant!
- Thou! thou! the vital, universal, giant force resistless, sleepless, calm,
- Holding Humanity as in thy open hand, as some ephemeral toy,
- How ill to e’er forget thee!
- For I too have forgotten,
- (Wrapt in these little potencies of progress, politics, culture,
- wealth, inventions, civilization,)
- Have lost my recognition of your silent ever-swaying power, ye
- mighty, elemental throes,
- In which and upon which we float, and every one of us is buoy’d.
- A Persian Lesson
- For his o’erarching and last lesson the greybeard sufi,
- In the fresh scent of the morning in the open air,
- On the slope of a teeming Persian rose-garden,
- Under an ancient chestnut-tree wide spreading its branches,
- Spoke to the young priests and students.
- “Finally my children, to envelop each word, each part of the rest,
- Allah is all, all, all--immanent in every life and object,
- May-be at many and many-a-more removes--yet Allah, Allah, Allah is there.
- “Has the estray wander’d far? Is the reason-why strangely hidden?
- Would you sound below the restless ocean of the entire world?
- Would you know the dissatisfaction? the urge and spur of every life;
- The something never still’d--never entirely gone? the invisible need
- of every seed?
- “It is the central urge in every atom,
- (Often unconscious, often evil, downfallen,)
- To return to its divine source and origin, however distant,
- Latent the same in subject and in object, without one exception.”
- The Commonplace
- The commonplace I sing;
- How cheap is health! how cheap nobility!
- Abstinence, no falsehood, no gluttony, lust;
- The open air I sing, freedom, toleration,
- (Take here the mainest lesson--less from books--less from the schools,)
- The common day and night--the common earth and waters,
- Your farm--your work, trade, occupation,
- The democratic wisdom underneath, like solid ground for all.
- “The Rounded Catalogue Divine Complete”
- The devilish and the dark, the dying and diseas’d,
- The countless (nineteen-twentieths) low and evil, crude and savage,
- The crazed, prisoners in jail, the horrible, rank, malignant,
- Venom and filth, serpents, the ravenous sharks, liars, the dissolute;
- (What is the part the wicked and the loathesome bear within earth’s
- orbic scheme?)
- Newts, crawling things in slime and mud, poisons,
- The barren soil, the evil men, the slag and hideous rot.
- Mirages
- More experiences and sights, stranger, than you’d think for;
- Times again, now mostly just after sunrise or before sunset,
- Sometimes in spring, oftener in autumn, perfectly clear weather, in
- plain sight,
- Camps far or near, the crowded streets of cities and the shopfronts,
- (Account for it or not--credit or not--it is all true,
- And my mate there could tell you the like--we have often confab’d
- about it,)
- People and scenes, animals, trees, colors and lines, plain as could be,
- Farms and dooryards of home, paths border’d with box, lilacs in corners,
- Weddings in churches, thanksgiving dinners, returns of long-absent sons,
- Glum funerals, the crape-veil’d mother and the daughters,
- Trials in courts, jury and judge, the accused in the box,
- Contestants, battles, crowds, bridges, wharves,
- Now and then mark’d faces of sorrow or joy,
- (I could pick them out this moment if I saw them again,)
- Show’d to me--just to the right in the sky-edge,
- Or plainly there to the left on the hill-tops.
- L. of G.’s Purport
- Not to exclude or demarcate, or pick out evils from their formidable
- masses (even to expose them,)
- But add, fuse, complete, extend--and celebrate the immortal and the good.
- Haughty this song, its words and scope,
- To span vast realms of space and time,
- Evolution--the cumulative--growths and generations.
- Begun in ripen’d youth and steadily pursued,
- Wandering, peering, dallying with all--war, peace, day and night
- absorbing,
- Never even for one brief hour abandoning my task,
- I end it here in sickness, poverty, and old age.
- I sing of life, yet mind me well of death:
- To-day shadowy Death dogs my steps, my seated shape, and has for years--
- Draws sometimes close to me, as face to face.
- The Unexpress’d
- How dare one say it?
- After the cycles, poems, singers, plays,
- Vaunted Ionia’s, India’s--Homer, Shakspere--the long, long times’
- thick dotted roads, areas,
- The shining clusters and the Milky Ways of stars--Nature’s pulses reap’d,
- All retrospective passions, heroes, war, love, adoration,
- All ages’ plummets dropt to their utmost depths,
- All human lives, throats, wishes, brains--all experiences’ utterance;
- After the countless songs, or long or short, all tongues, all lands,
- Still something not yet told in poesy’s voice or print--something lacking,
- (Who knows? the best yet unexpress’d and lacking.)
- Grand Is the Seen
- Grand is the seen, the light, to me--grand are the sky and stars,
- Grand is the earth, and grand are lasting time and space,
- And grand their laws, so multiform, puzzling, evolutionary;
- But grander far the unseen soul of me, comprehending, endowing all those,
- Lighting the light, the sky and stars, delving the earth, sailing
- the sea,
- (What were all those, indeed, without thee, unseen soul? of what
- amount without thee?)
- More evolutionary, vast, puzzling, O my soul!
- More multiform far--more lasting thou than they.
- Unseen Buds
- Unseen buds, infinite, hidden well,
- Under the snow and ice, under the darkness, in every square or cubic inch,
- Germinal, exquisite, in delicate lace, microscopic, unborn,
- Like babes in wombs, latent, folded, compact, sleeping;
- Billions of billions, and trillions of trillions of them waiting,
- (On earth and in the sea--the universe--the stars there in the
- heavens,)
- Urging slowly, surely forward, forming endless,
- And waiting ever more, forever more behind.
- Good-Bye My Fancy!
- Good-bye my Fancy!
- Farewell dear mate, dear love!
- I’m going away, I know not where,
- Or to what fortune, or whether I may ever see you again,
- So Good-bye my Fancy.
- Now for my last--let me look back a moment;
- The slower fainter ticking of the clock is in me,
- Exit, nightfall, and soon the heart-thud stopping.
- Long have we lived, joy’d, caress’d together;
- Delightful!--now separation--Good-bye my Fancy.
- Yet let me not be too hasty,
- Long indeed have we lived, slept, filter’d, become really blended
- into one;
- Then if we die we die together, (yes, we’ll remain one,)
- If we go anywhere we’ll go together to meet what happens,
- May-be we’ll be better off and blither, and learn something,
- May-be it is yourself now really ushering me to the true songs, (who
- knows?)
- May-be it is you the mortal knob really undoing, turning--so now finally,
- Good-bye--and hail! my Fancy.
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