- 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
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- Italian Music in Dakota
- [“The Seventeenth--the finest Regimental Band I ever heard.”]
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- With All Thy Gifts
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- 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?
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- My Picture-Gallery
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- 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.
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- The Prairie States
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- 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.
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- BOOK XXV
-
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- 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?
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-
- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- Tutti! for earth and heaven;
- (The Almighty leader now for once has signal’d with his wand.)
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- The manly strophe of the husbands of the world,
- And all the wives responding.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.)
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- BOOK XXVI