- 1
- I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
- And what I assume you shall assume,
- For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
-
- I loafe and invite my soul,
- I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.
-
- My tongue, every atom of my blood, form’d from this soil, this air,
- Born here of parents born here from parents the same, and their
- parents the same,
- I, now thirty-seven years old in perfect health begin,
- Hoping to cease not till death.
-
- Creeds and schools in abeyance,
- Retiring back a while sufficed at what they are, but never forgotten,
- I harbor for good or bad, I permit to speak at every hazard,
- Nature without check with original energy.
-
- 2
- Houses and rooms are full of perfumes, the shelves are crowded with
- perfumes,
- I breathe the fragrance myself and know it and like it,
- The distillation would intoxicate me also, but I shall not let it.
-
- The atmosphere is not a perfume, it has no taste of the
- distillation, it is odorless,
- It is for my mouth forever, I am in love with it,
- I will go to the bank by the wood and become undisguised and naked,
- I am mad for it to be in contact with me.
-
- The smoke of my own breath,
- Echoes, ripples, buzz’d whispers, love-root, silk-thread, crotch and vine,
- My respiration and inspiration, the beating of my heart, the passing
- of blood and air through my lungs,
- The sniff of green leaves and dry leaves, and of the shore and
- dark-color’d sea-rocks, and of hay in the barn,
-
- The sound of the belch’d words of my voice loos’d to the eddies of
- the wind,
- A few light kisses, a few embraces, a reaching around of arms,
- The play of shine and shade on the trees as the supple boughs wag,
- The delight alone or in the rush of the streets, or along the fields
- and hill-sides,
- The feeling of health, the full-noon trill, the song of me rising
- from bed and meeting the sun.
-
- Have you reckon’d a thousand acres much? have you reckon’d the earth much?
- Have you practis’d so long to learn to read?
- Have you felt so proud to get at the meaning of poems?
-
- Stop this day and night with me and you shall possess the origin of
- all poems,
- You shall possess the good of the earth and sun, (there are millions
- of suns left,)
- You shall no longer take things at second or third hand, nor look through
- the eyes of the dead, nor feed on the spectres in books,
- You shall not look through my eyes either, nor take things from me,
- You shall listen to all sides and filter them from your self.
-
- 3
- I have heard what the talkers were talking, the talk of the
- beginning and the end,
- But I do not talk of the beginning or the end.
-
- There was never any more inception than there is now,
- Nor any more youth or age than there is now,
- And will never be any more perfection than there is now,
- Nor any more heaven or hell than there is now.
-
- Urge and urge and urge,
- Always the procreant urge of the world.
-
- Out of the dimness opposite equals advance, always substance and
- increase, always sex,
- Always a knit of identity, always distinction, always a breed of life.
- To elaborate is no avail, learn’d and unlearn’d feel that it is so.
-
- Sure as the most certain sure, plumb in the uprights, well
- entretied, braced in the beams,
- Stout as a horse, affectionate, haughty, electrical,
- I and this mystery here we stand.
-
- Clear and sweet is my soul, and clear and sweet is all that is not my soul.
-
- Lack one lacks both, and the unseen is proved by the seen,
- Till that becomes unseen and receives proof in its turn.
-
- Showing the best and dividing it from the worst age vexes age,
- Knowing the perfect fitness and equanimity of things, while they
- discuss I am silent, and go bathe and admire myself.
-
- Welcome is every organ and attribute of me, and of any man hearty and clean,
- Not an inch nor a particle of an inch is vile, and none shall be
- less familiar than the rest.
-
- I am satisfied--I see, dance, laugh, sing;
- As the hugging and loving bed-fellow sleeps at my side through the night,
- and withdraws at the peep of the day with stealthy tread,
- Leaving me baskets cover’d with white towels swelling the house with
- their plenty,
- Shall I postpone my acceptation and realization and scream at my eyes,
- That they turn from gazing after and down the road,
- And forthwith cipher and show me to a cent,
- Exactly the value of one and exactly the value of two, and which is ahead?
-
- 4
- Trippers and askers surround me,
- People I meet, the effect upon me of my early life or the ward and
- city I live in, or the nation,
- The latest dates, discoveries, inventions, societies, authors old and new,
- My dinner, dress, associates, looks, compliments, dues,
- The real or fancied indifference of some man or woman I love,
- The sickness of one of my folks or of myself, or ill-doing or loss
- or lack of money, or depressions or exaltations,
- Battles, the horrors of fratricidal war, the fever of doubtful news,
- the fitful events;
- These come to me days and nights and go from me again,
- But they are not the Me myself.
-
- Apart from the pulling and hauling stands what I am,
- Stands amused, complacent, compassionating, idle, unitary,
- Looks down, is erect, or bends an arm on an impalpable certain rest,
- Looking with side-curved head curious what will come next,
- Both in and out of the game and watching and wondering at it.
-
- Backward I see in my own days where I sweated through fog with
- linguists and contenders,
- I have no mockings or arguments, I witness and wait.
-
- 5
- I believe in you my soul, the other I am must not abase itself to you,
- And you must not be abased to the other.
-
- Loafe with me on the grass, loose the stop from your throat,
- Not words, not music or rhyme I want, not custom or lecture, not
- even the best,
- Only the lull I like, the hum of your valved voice.
-
- I mind how once we lay such a transparent summer morning,
- How you settled your head athwart my hips and gently turn’d over upon me,
- And parted the shirt from my bosom-bone, and plunged your tongue
- to my bare-stript heart,
- And reach’d till you felt my beard, and reach’d till you held my feet.
-
- Swiftly arose and spread around me the peace and knowledge that pass
- all the argument of the earth,
- And I know that the hand of God is the promise of my own,
- And I know that the spirit of God is the brother of my own,
- And that all the men ever born are also my brothers, and the women
- my sisters and lovers,
- And that a kelson of the creation is love,
- And limitless are leaves stiff or drooping in the fields,
- And brown ants in the little wells beneath them,
- And mossy scabs of the worm fence, heap’d stones, elder, mullein and
- poke-weed.
-
- 6
- A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands;
- How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more than he.
-
- I guess it must be the flag of my disposition, out of hopeful green
- stuff woven.
-
- Or I guess it is the handkerchief of the Lord,
- A scented gift and remembrancer designedly dropt,
- Bearing the owner’s name someway in the corners, that we may see
- and remark, and say Whose?
-
- Or I guess the grass is itself a child, the produced babe of the vegetation.
-
- Or I guess it is a uniform hieroglyphic,
- And it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones,
- Growing among black folks as among white,
- Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman, Cuff, I give them the same, I
- receive them the same.
-
- And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves.
-
- Tenderly will I use you curling grass,
- It may be you transpire from the breasts of young men,
- It may be if I had known them I would have loved them,
- It may be you are from old people, or from offspring taken soon out
- of their mothers’ laps,
- And here you are the mothers’ laps.
-
- This grass is very dark to be from the white heads of old mothers,
- Darker than the colorless beards of old men,
- Dark to come from under the faint red roofs of mouths.
-
- O I perceive after all so many uttering tongues,
- And I perceive they do not come from the roofs of mouths for nothing.
-
- I wish I could translate the hints about the dead young men and women,
- And the hints about old men and mothers, and the offspring taken
- soon out of their laps.
-
- What do you think has become of the young and old men?
- And what do you think has become of the women and children?
-
- They are alive and well somewhere,
- The smallest sprout shows there is really no death,
- And if ever there was it led forward life, and does not wait at the
- end to arrest it,
- And ceas’d the moment life appear’d.
-
- All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses,
- And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.
-
- 7
- Has any one supposed it lucky to be born?
- I hasten to inform him or her it is just as lucky to die, and I know it.
-
- I pass death with the dying and birth with the new-wash’d babe, and
- am not contain’d between my hat and boots,
- And peruse manifold objects, no two alike and every one good,
- The earth good and the stars good, and their adjuncts all good.
-
- I am not an earth nor an adjunct of an earth,
- I am the mate and companion of people, all just as immortal and
- fathomless as myself,
- (They do not know how immortal, but I know.)
-
- Every kind for itself and its own, for me mine male and female,
- For me those that have been boys and that love women,
- For me the man that is proud and feels how it stings to be slighted,
- For me the sweet-heart and the old maid, for me mothers and the
- mothers of mothers,
- For me lips that have smiled, eyes that have shed tears,
- For me children and the begetters of children.
-
- Undrape! you are not guilty to me, nor stale nor discarded,
- I see through the broadcloth and gingham whether or no,
- And am around, tenacious, acquisitive, tireless, and cannot be shaken away.
-
- 8
- The little one sleeps in its cradle,
- I lift the gauze and look a long time, and silently brush away flies
- with my hand.
-
- The youngster and the red-faced girl turn aside up the bushy hill,
- I peeringly view them from the top.
-
- The suicide sprawls on the bloody floor of the bedroom,
- I witness the corpse with its dabbled hair, I note where the pistol
- has fallen.
-
- The blab of the pave, tires of carts, sluff of boot-soles, talk of
- the promenaders,
- The heavy omnibus, the driver with his interrogating thumb, the
- clank of the shod horses on the granite floor,
- The snow-sleighs, clinking, shouted jokes, pelts of snow-balls,
- The hurrahs for popular favorites, the fury of rous’d mobs,
- The flap of the curtain’d litter, a sick man inside borne to the hospital,
- The meeting of enemies, the sudden oath, the blows and fall,
- The excited crowd, the policeman with his star quickly working his
- passage to the centre of the crowd,
- The impassive stones that receive and return so many echoes,
- What groans of over-fed or half-starv’d who fall sunstruck or in fits,
- What exclamations of women taken suddenly who hurry home and
- give birth to babes,
- What living and buried speech is always vibrating here, what howls
- restrain’d by decorum,
- Arrests of criminals, slights, adulterous offers made, acceptances,
- rejections with convex lips,
- I mind them or the show or resonance of them--I come and I depart.
-
- 9
- The big doors of the country barn stand open and ready,
- The dried grass of the harvest-time loads the slow-drawn wagon,
- The clear light plays on the brown gray and green intertinged,
- The armfuls are pack’d to the sagging mow.
-
- I am there, I help, I came stretch’d atop of the load,
- I felt its soft jolts, one leg reclined on the other,
- I jump from the cross-beams and seize the clover and timothy,
- And roll head over heels and tangle my hair full of wisps.
-
- 10
- Alone far in the wilds and mountains I hunt,
- Wandering amazed at my own lightness and glee,
- In the late afternoon choosing a safe spot to pass the night,
- Kindling a fire and broiling the fresh-kill’d game,
- Falling asleep on the gather’d leaves with my dog and gun by my side.
-
- The Yankee clipper is under her sky-sails, she cuts the sparkle and scud,
- My eyes settle the land, I bend at her prow or shout joyously from the deck.
-
- The boatmen and clam-diggers arose early and stopt for me,
- I tuck’d my trowser-ends in my boots and went and had a good time;
- You should have been with us that day round the chowder-kettle.
-
- I saw the marriage of the trapper in the open air in the far west,
- the bride was a red girl,
- Her father and his friends sat near cross-legged and dumbly smoking,
- they had moccasins to their feet and large thick blankets
- hanging from their shoulders,
- On a bank lounged the trapper, he was drest mostly in skins, his luxuriant
- beard and curls protected his neck, he held his bride by the hand,
- She had long eyelashes, her head was bare, her coarse straight locks
- descended upon her voluptuous limbs and reach’d to her feet.
-
- The runaway slave came to my house and stopt outside,
- I heard his motions crackling the twigs of the woodpile,
- Through the swung half-door of the kitchen I saw him limpsy and weak,
- And went where he sat on a log and led him in and assured him,
- And brought water and fill’d a tub for his sweated body and bruis’d feet,
- And gave him a room that enter’d from my own, and gave him some
- coarse clean clothes,
- And remember perfectly well his revolving eyes and his awkwardness,
- And remember putting plasters on the galls of his neck and ankles;
- He staid with me a week before he was recuperated and pass’d north,
- I had him sit next me at table, my fire-lock lean’d in the corner.
-
- 11
- Twenty-eight young men bathe by the shore,
- Twenty-eight young men and all so friendly;
- Twenty-eight years of womanly life and all so lonesome.
-
- She owns the fine house by the rise of the bank,
- She hides handsome and richly drest aft the blinds of the window.
-
- Which of the young men does she like the best?
- Ah the homeliest of them is beautiful to her.
-
- Where are you off to, lady? for I see you,
- You splash in the water there, yet stay stock still in your room.
-
- Dancing and laughing along the beach came the twenty-ninth bather,
- The rest did not see her, but she saw them and loved them.
-
- The beards of the young men glisten’d with wet, it ran from their long hair,
- Little streams pass’d all over their bodies.
-
- An unseen hand also pass’d over their bodies,
- It descended tremblingly from their temples and ribs.
-
- The young men float on their backs, their white bellies bulge to the
- sun, they do not ask who seizes fast to them,
- They do not know who puffs and declines with pendant and bending arch,
- They do not think whom they souse with spray.
-
- 12
- The butcher-boy puts off his killing-clothes, or sharpens his knife
- at the stall in the market,
- I loiter enjoying his repartee and his shuffle and break-down.
-
- Blacksmiths with grimed and hairy chests environ the anvil,
- Each has his main-sledge, they are all out, there is a great heat in
- the fire.
-
- From the cinder-strew’d threshold I follow their movements,
- The lithe sheer of their waists plays even with their massive arms,
- Overhand the hammers swing, overhand so slow, overhand so sure,
- They do not hasten, each man hits in his place.
-
- 13
- The negro holds firmly the reins of his four horses, the block swags
- underneath on its tied-over chain,
- The negro that drives the long dray of the stone-yard, steady and
- tall he stands pois’d on one leg on the string-piece,
- His blue shirt exposes his ample neck and breast and loosens over
- his hip-band,
- His glance is calm and commanding, he tosses the slouch of his hat
- away from his forehead,
- The sun falls on his crispy hair and mustache, falls on the black of
- his polish’d and perfect limbs.
-
- I behold the picturesque giant and love him, and I do not stop there,
- I go with the team also.
-
- In me the caresser of life wherever moving, backward as well as
- forward sluing,
- To niches aside and junior bending, not a person or object missing,
- Absorbing all to myself and for this song.
-
- Oxen that rattle the yoke and chain or halt in the leafy shade, what
- is that you express in your eyes?
- It seems to me more than all the print I have read in my life.
-
- My tread scares the wood-drake and wood-duck on my distant and
- day-long ramble,
- They rise together, they slowly circle around.
-
- I believe in those wing’d purposes,
- And acknowledge red, yellow, white, playing within me,
- And consider green and violet and the tufted crown intentional,
- And do not call the tortoise unworthy because she is not something else,
- And the jay in the woods never studied the gamut, yet trills pretty well to me,
- And the look of the bay mare shames silliness out of me.
-
- 14
- The wild gander leads his flock through the cool night,
- Ya-honk he says, and sounds it down to me like an invitation,
- The pert may suppose it meaningless, but I listening close,
- Find its purpose and place up there toward the wintry sky.
-
- The sharp-hoof’d moose of the north, the cat on the house-sill, the
- chickadee, the prairie-dog,
- The litter of the grunting sow as they tug at her teats,
- The brood of the turkey-hen and she with her half-spread wings,
- I see in them and myself the same old law.
-
- The press of my foot to the earth springs a hundred affections,
- They scorn the best I can do to relate them.
-
- I am enamour’d of growing out-doors,
- Of men that live among cattle or taste of the ocean or woods,
- Of the builders and steerers of ships and the wielders of axes and
- mauls, and the drivers of horses,
- I can eat and sleep with them week in and week out.
-
- What is commonest, cheapest, nearest, easiest, is Me,
- Me going in for my chances, spending for vast returns,
- Adorning myself to bestow myself on the first that will take me,
- Not asking the sky to come down to my good will,
- Scattering it freely forever.
-
- 15
- The pure contralto sings in the organ loft,
- The carpenter dresses his plank, the tongue of his foreplane
- whistles its wild ascending lisp,
- The married and unmarried children ride home to their Thanksgiving dinner,
- The pilot seizes the king-pin, he heaves down with a strong arm,
- The mate stands braced in the whale-boat, lance and harpoon are ready,
- The duck-shooter walks by silent and cautious stretches,
- The deacons are ordain’d with cross’d hands at the altar,
- The spinning-girl retreats and advances to the hum of the big wheel,
- The farmer stops by the bars as he walks on a First-day loafe and
- looks at the oats and rye,
- The lunatic is carried at last to the asylum a confirm’d case,
- (He will never sleep any more as he did in the cot in his mother’s
- bed-room;)
- The jour printer with gray head and gaunt jaws works at his case,
- He turns his quid of tobacco while his eyes blurr with the manuscript;
- The malform’d limbs are tied to the surgeon’s table,
- What is removed drops horribly in a pail;
- The quadroon girl is sold at the auction-stand, the drunkard nods by
- the bar-room stove,
- The machinist rolls up his sleeves, the policeman travels his beat,
- the gate-keeper marks who pass,
- The young fellow drives the express-wagon, (I love him, though I do
- not know him;)
- The half-breed straps on his light boots to compete in the race,
- The western turkey-shooting draws old and young, some lean on their
- rifles, some sit on logs,
- Out from the crowd steps the marksman, takes his position, levels his piece;
- The groups of newly-come immigrants cover the wharf or levee,
- As the woolly-pates hoe in the sugar-field, the overseer views them
- from his saddle,
- The bugle calls in the ball-room, the gentlemen run for their
- partners, the dancers bow to each other,
- The youth lies awake in the cedar-roof’d garret and harks to the
- musical rain,
- The Wolverine sets traps on the creek that helps fill the Huron,
- The squaw wrapt in her yellow-hemm’d cloth is offering moccasins and
- bead-bags for sale,
- The connoisseur peers along the exhibition-gallery with half-shut
- eyes bent sideways,
- As the deck-hands make fast the steamboat the plank is thrown for
- the shore-going passengers,
- The young sister holds out the skein while the elder sister winds it
- off in a ball, and stops now and then for the knots,
- The one-year wife is recovering and happy having a week ago borne
- her first child,
- The clean-hair’d Yankee girl works with her sewing-machine or in the
- factory or mill,
- The paving-man leans on his two-handed rammer, the reporter’s lead
- flies swiftly over the note-book, the sign-painter is lettering
- with blue and gold,
- The canal boy trots on the tow-path, the book-keeper counts at his
- desk, the shoemaker waxes his thread,
- The conductor beats time for the band and all the performers follow him,
- The child is baptized, the convert is making his first professions,
- The regatta is spread on the bay, the race is begun, (how the white
- sails sparkle!)
- The drover watching his drove sings out to them that would stray,
- The pedler sweats with his pack on his back, (the purchaser higgling
- about the odd cent;)
- The bride unrumples her white dress, the minute-hand of the clock
- moves slowly,
- The opium-eater reclines with rigid head and just-open’d lips,
- The prostitute draggles her shawl, her bonnet bobs on her tipsy and
- pimpled neck,
- The crowd laugh at her blackguard oaths, the men jeer and wink to
- each other,
- (Miserable! I do not laugh at your oaths nor jeer you;)
- The President holding a cabinet council is surrounded by the great
- Secretaries,
- On the piazza walk three matrons stately and friendly with twined arms,
- The crew of the fish-smack pack repeated layers of halibut in the hold,
- The Missourian crosses the plains toting his wares and his cattle,
- As the fare-collector goes through the train he gives notice by the
- jingling of loose change,
- The floor-men are laying the floor, the tinners are tinning the
- roof, the masons are calling for mortar,
- In single file each shouldering his hod pass onward the laborers;
- Seasons pursuing each other the indescribable crowd is gather’d, it
- is the fourth of Seventh-month, (what salutes of cannon and small arms!)
- Seasons pursuing each other the plougher ploughs, the mower mows,
- and the winter-grain falls in the ground;
- Off on the lakes the pike-fisher watches and waits by the hole in
- the frozen surface,
- The stumps stand thick round the clearing, the squatter strikes deep
- with his axe,
- Flatboatmen make fast towards dusk near the cotton-wood or pecan-trees,
- Coon-seekers go through the regions of the Red river or through
- those drain’d by the Tennessee, or through those of the Arkansas,
- Torches shine in the dark that hangs on the Chattahooche or Altamahaw,
- Patriarchs sit at supper with sons and grandsons and great-grandsons
- around them,
- In walls of adobie, in canvas tents, rest hunters and trappers after
- their day’s sport,
- The city sleeps and the country sleeps,
- The living sleep for their time, the dead sleep for their time,
- The old husband sleeps by his wife and the young husband sleeps by his wife;
- And these tend inward to me, and I tend outward to them,
- And such as it is to be of these more or less I am,
- And of these one and all I weave the song of myself.
-
- 16
- I am of old and young, of the foolish as much as the wise,
- Regardless of others, ever regardful of others,
- Maternal as well as paternal, a child as well as a man,
- Stuff’d with the stuff that is coarse and stuff’d with the stuff
- that is fine,
- One of the Nation of many nations, the smallest the same and the
- largest the same,
- A Southerner soon as a Northerner, a planter nonchalant and
- hospitable down by the Oconee I live,
- A Yankee bound my own way ready for trade, my joints the limberest
- joints on earth and the sternest joints on earth,
- A Kentuckian walking the vale of the Elkhorn in my deer-skin
- leggings, a Louisianian or Georgian,
- A boatman over lakes or bays or along coasts, a Hoosier, Badger, Buckeye;
- At home on Kanadian snow-shoes or up in the bush, or with fishermen
- off Newfoundland,
- At home in the fleet of ice-boats, sailing with the rest and tacking,
- At home on the hills of Vermont or in the woods of Maine, or the
- Texan ranch,
- Comrade of Californians, comrade of free North-Westerners, (loving
- their big proportions,)
- Comrade of raftsmen and coalmen, comrade of all who shake hands
- and welcome to drink and meat,
- A learner with the simplest, a teacher of the thoughtfullest,
- A novice beginning yet experient of myriads of seasons,
- Of every hue and caste am I, of every rank and religion,
- A farmer, mechanic, artist, gentleman, sailor, quaker,
- Prisoner, fancy-man, rowdy, lawyer, physician, priest.
-
- I resist any thing better than my own diversity,
- Breathe the air but leave plenty after me,
- And am not stuck up, and am in my place.
-
- (The moth and the fish-eggs are in their place,
- The bright suns I see and the dark suns I cannot see are in their place,
- The palpable is in its place and the impalpable is in its place.)
-
- 17
- These are really the thoughts of all men in all ages and lands, they
- are not original with me,
- If they are not yours as much as mine they are nothing, or next to nothing,
- If they are not the riddle and the untying of the riddle they are nothing,
- If they are not just as close as they are distant they are nothing.
-
- This is the grass that grows wherever the land is and the water is,
- This the common air that bathes the globe.
-
- 18
- With music strong I come, with my cornets and my drums,
- I play not marches for accepted victors only, I play marches for
- conquer’d and slain persons.
-
- Have you heard that it was good to gain the day?
- I also say it is good to fall, battles are lost in the same spirit
- in which they are won.
-
- I beat and pound for the dead,
- I blow through my embouchures my loudest and gayest for them.
-
- Vivas to those who have fail’d!
- And to those whose war-vessels sank in the sea!
- And to those themselves who sank in the sea!
- And to all generals that lost engagements, and all overcome heroes!
- And the numberless unknown heroes equal to the greatest heroes known!
-
- 19
- This is the meal equally set, this the meat for natural hunger,
- It is for the wicked just same as the righteous, I make appointments
- with all,
- I will not have a single person slighted or left away,
- The kept-woman, sponger, thief, are hereby invited,
- The heavy-lipp’d slave is invited, the venerealee is invited;
- There shall be no difference between them and the rest.
-
- This is the press of a bashful hand, this the float and odor of hair,
- This the touch of my lips to yours, this the murmur of yearning,
- This the far-off depth and height reflecting my own face,
- This the thoughtful merge of myself, and the outlet again.
-
- Do you guess I have some intricate purpose?
- Well I have, for the Fourth-month showers have, and the mica on the
- side of a rock has.
-
- Do you take it I would astonish?
- Does the daylight astonish? does the early redstart twittering
- through the woods?
- Do I astonish more than they?
-
- This hour I tell things in confidence,
- I might not tell everybody, but I will tell you.
-
- 20
- Who goes there? hankering, gross, mystical, nude;
- How is it I extract strength from the beef I eat?
-
- What is a man anyhow? what am I? what are you?
-
- All I mark as my own you shall offset it with your own,
- Else it were time lost listening to me.
-
- I do not snivel that snivel the world over,
- That months are vacuums and the ground but wallow and filth.
-
- Whimpering and truckling fold with powders for invalids, conformity
- goes to the fourth-remov’d,
- I wear my hat as I please indoors or out.
-
- Why should I pray? why should I venerate and be ceremonious?
-
- Having pried through the strata, analyzed to a hair, counsel’d with
- doctors and calculated close,
- I find no sweeter fat than sticks to my own bones.
-
- In all people I see myself, none more and not one a barley-corn less,
- And the good or bad I say of myself I say of them.
-
- I know I am solid and sound,
- To me the converging objects of the universe perpetually flow,
- All are written to me, and I must get what the writing means.
-
- I know I am deathless,
- I know this orbit of mine cannot be swept by a carpenter’s compass,
- I know I shall not pass like a child’s carlacue cut with a burnt
- stick at night.
-
- I know I am august,
- I do not trouble my spirit to vindicate itself or be understood,
- I see that the elementary laws never apologize,
- (I reckon I behave no prouder than the level I plant my house by,
- after all.)
-
- I exist as I am, that is enough,
- If no other in the world be aware I sit content,
- And if each and all be aware I sit content.
-
- One world is aware and by far the largest to me, and that is myself,
- And whether I come to my own to-day or in ten thousand or ten
- million years,
- I can cheerfully take it now, or with equal cheerfulness I can wait.
-
- My foothold is tenon’d and mortis’d in granite,
- I laugh at what you call dissolution,
- And I know the amplitude of time.
-
- 21
- I am the poet of the Body and I am the poet of the Soul,
- The pleasures of heaven are with me and the pains of hell are with me,
- The first I graft and increase upon myself, the latter I translate
- into new tongue.
-
- I am the poet of the woman the same as the man,
- And I say it is as great to be a woman as to be a man,
- And I say there is nothing greater than the mother of men.
-
- I chant the chant of dilation or pride,
- We have had ducking and deprecating about enough,
- I show that size is only development.
-
- Have you outstript the rest? are you the President?
- It is a trifle, they will more than arrive there every one, and
- still pass on.
-
- I am he that walks with the tender and growing night,
- I call to the earth and sea half-held by the night.
-
- Press close bare-bosom’d night--press close magnetic nourishing night!
- Night of south winds--night of the large few stars!
- Still nodding night--mad naked summer night.
-
- Smile O voluptuous cool-breath’d earth!
- Earth of the slumbering and liquid trees!
- Earth of departed sunset--earth of the mountains misty-topt!
- Earth of the vitreous pour of the full moon just tinged with blue!
- Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
- Earth of the limpid gray of clouds brighter and clearer for my sake!
- Far-swooping elbow’d earth--rich apple-blossom’d earth!
- Smile, for your lover comes.
-
- Prodigal, you have given me love--therefore I to you give love!
- O unspeakable passionate love.
-
- Thruster holding me tight and that I hold tight!
- We hurt each other as the bridegroom and the bride hurt each other.
-
- 22
- You sea! I resign myself to you also--I guess what you mean,
- I behold from the beach your crooked fingers,
- I believe you refuse to go back without feeling of me,
- We must have a turn together, I undress, hurry me out of sight of the land,
- Cushion me soft, rock me in billowy drowse,
- Dash me with amorous wet, I can repay you.
-
- Sea of stretch’d ground-swells,
- Sea breathing broad and convulsive breaths,
- Sea of the brine of life and of unshovell’d yet always-ready graves,
- Howler and scooper of storms, capricious and dainty sea,
- I am integral with you, I too am of one phase and of all phases.
-
- Partaker of influx and efflux I, extoller of hate and conciliation,
- Extoller of amies and those that sleep in each others’ arms.
-
- I am he attesting sympathy,
- (Shall I make my list of things in the house and skip the house that
- supports them?)
-
- I am not the poet of goodness only, I do not decline to be the poet
- of wickedness also.
-
- What blurt is this about virtue and about vice?
- Evil propels me and reform of evil propels me, I stand indifferent,
- My gait is no fault-finder’s or rejecter’s gait,
- I moisten the roots of all that has grown.
-
- Did you fear some scrofula out of the unflagging pregnancy?
- Did you guess the celestial laws are yet to be work’d over and rectified?
-
- I find one side a balance and the antipedal side a balance,
- Soft doctrine as steady help as stable doctrine,
- Thoughts and deeds of the present our rouse and early start.
-
- This minute that comes to me over the past decillions,
- There is no better than it and now.
-
- What behaved well in the past or behaves well to-day is not such wonder,
- The wonder is always and always how there can be a mean man or an infidel.
-
- 23
- Endless unfolding of words of ages!
- And mine a word of the modern, the word En-Masse.
-
- A word of the faith that never balks,
- Here or henceforward it is all the same to me, I accept Time absolutely.
-
- It alone is without flaw, it alone rounds and completes all,
- That mystic baffling wonder alone completes all.
-
- I accept Reality and dare not question it,
- Materialism first and last imbuing.
-
- Hurrah for positive science! long live exact demonstration!
- Fetch stonecrop mixt with cedar and branches of lilac,
- This is the lexicographer, this the chemist, this made a grammar of
- the old cartouches,
- These mariners put the ship through dangerous unknown seas.
- This is the geologist, this works with the scalper, and this is a
- mathematician.
-
- Gentlemen, to you the first honors always!
- Your facts are useful, and yet they are not my dwelling,
- I but enter by them to an area of my dwelling.
-
- Less the reminders of properties told my words,
- And more the reminders they of life untold, and of freedom and extrication,
- And make short account of neuters and geldings, and favor men and
- women fully equipt,
- And beat the gong of revolt, and stop with fugitives and them that
- plot and conspire.
-
- 24
- Walt Whitman, a kosmos, of Manhattan the son,
- Turbulent, fleshy, sensual, eating, drinking and breeding,
- No sentimentalist, no stander above men and women or apart from them,
- No more modest than immodest.
-
- Unscrew the locks from the doors!
- Unscrew the doors themselves from their jambs!
-
- Whoever degrades another degrades me,
- And whatever is done or said returns at last to me.
-
- Through me the afflatus surging and surging, through me the current
- and index.
-
- I speak the pass-word primeval, I give the sign of democracy,
- By God! I will accept nothing which all cannot have their
- counterpart of on the same terms.
-
- Through me many long dumb voices,
- Voices of the interminable generations of prisoners and slaves,
- Voices of the diseas’d and despairing and of thieves and dwarfs,
- Voices of cycles of preparation and accretion,
- And of the threads that connect the stars, and of wombs and of the
- father-stuff,
- And of the rights of them the others are down upon,
- Of the deform’d, trivial, flat, foolish, despised,
- Fog in the air, beetles rolling balls of dung.
-
- Through me forbidden voices,
- Voices of sexes and lusts, voices veil’d and I remove the veil,
- Voices indecent by me clarified and transfigur’d.
-
- I do not press my fingers across my mouth,
- I keep as delicate around the bowels as around the head and heart,
- Copulation is no more rank to me than death is.
-
- I believe in the flesh and the appetites,
- Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part and tag of me
- is a miracle.
-
- Divine am I inside and out, and I make holy whatever I touch or am
- touch’d from,
- The scent of these arm-pits aroma finer than prayer,
- This head more than churches, bibles, and all the creeds.
-
- If I worship one thing more than another it shall be the spread of
- my own body, or any part of it,
- Translucent mould of me it shall be you!
- Shaded ledges and rests it shall be you!
- Firm masculine colter it shall be you!
- Whatever goes to the tilth of me it shall be you!
- You my rich blood! your milky stream pale strippings of my life!
- Breast that presses against other breasts it shall be you!
- My brain it shall be your occult convolutions!
- Root of wash’d sweet-flag! timorous pond-snipe! nest of guarded
- duplicate eggs! it shall be you!
- Mix’d tussled hay of head, beard, brawn, it shall be you!
- Trickling sap of maple, fibre of manly wheat, it shall be you!
- Sun so generous it shall be you!
- Vapors lighting and shading my face it shall be you!
- You sweaty brooks and dews it shall be you!
- Winds whose soft-tickling genitals rub against me it shall be you!
- Broad muscular fields, branches of live oak, loving lounger in my
- winding paths, it shall be you!
- Hands I have taken, face I have kiss’d, mortal I have ever touch’d,
- it shall be you.
-
- I dote on myself, there is that lot of me and all so luscious,
- Each moment and whatever happens thrills me with joy,
- I cannot tell how my ankles bend, nor whence the cause of my faintest wish,
- Nor the cause of the friendship I emit, nor the cause of the
- friendship I take again.
-
- That I walk up my stoop, I pause to consider if it really be,
- A morning-glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics
- of books.
-
- To behold the day-break!
- The little light fades the immense and diaphanous shadows,
- The air tastes good to my palate.
-
- Hefts of the moving world at innocent gambols silently rising
- freshly exuding,
- Scooting obliquely high and low.
-
- Something I cannot see puts upward libidinous prongs,
- Seas of bright juice suffuse heaven.
-
- The earth by the sky staid with, the daily close of their junction,
- The heav’d challenge from the east that moment over my head,
- The mocking taunt, See then whether you shall be master!
-
- 25
- Dazzling and tremendous how quick the sun-rise would kill me,
- If I could not now and always send sun-rise out of me.
-
- We also ascend dazzling and tremendous as the sun,
- We found our own O my soul in the calm and cool of the daybreak.
-
- My voice goes after what my eyes cannot reach,
- With the twirl of my tongue I encompass worlds and volumes of worlds.
-
- Speech is the twin of my vision, it is unequal to measure itself,
- It provokes me forever, it says sarcastically,
- Walt you contain enough, why don’t you let it out then?
-
- Come now I will not be tantalized, you conceive too much of
- articulation,
- Do you not know O speech how the buds beneath you are folded?
- Waiting in gloom, protected by frost,
- The dirt receding before my prophetical screams,
- I underlying causes to balance them at last,
- My knowledge my live parts, it keeping tally with the meaning of all things,
- Happiness, (which whoever hears me let him or her set out in search
- of this day.)
-
- My final merit I refuse you, I refuse putting from me what I really am,
- Encompass worlds, but never try to encompass me,
- I crowd your sleekest and best by simply looking toward you.
-
- Writing and talk do not prove me,
- I carry the plenum of proof and every thing else in my face,
- With the hush of my lips I wholly confound the skeptic.
-
- 26
- Now I will do nothing but listen,
- To accrue what I hear into this song, to let sounds contribute toward it.
-
- I hear bravuras of birds, bustle of growing wheat, gossip of flames,
- clack of sticks cooking my meals,
- I hear the sound I love, the sound of the human voice,
- I hear all sounds running together, combined, fused or following,
- Sounds of the city and sounds out of the city, sounds of the day and night,
- Talkative young ones to those that like them, the loud laugh of
- work-people at their meals,
- The angry base of disjointed friendship, the faint tones of the sick,
- The judge with hands tight to the desk, his pallid lips pronouncing
- a death-sentence,
- The heave’e’yo of stevedores unlading ships by the wharves, the
- refrain of the anchor-lifters,
- The ring of alarm-bells, the cry of fire, the whirr of swift-streaking
- engines and hose-carts with premonitory tinkles and color’d lights,
- The steam-whistle, the solid roll of the train of approaching cars,
- The slow march play’d at the head of the association marching two and two,
- (They go to guard some corpse, the flag-tops are draped with black muslin.)
-
- I hear the violoncello, (’tis the young man’s heart’s complaint,)
- I hear the key’d cornet, it glides quickly in through my ears,
- It shakes mad-sweet pangs through my belly and breast.
-
- I hear the chorus, it is a grand opera,
- Ah this indeed is music--this suits me.
-
- A tenor large and fresh as the creation fills me,
- The orbic flex of his mouth is pouring and filling me full.
-
- I hear the train’d soprano (what work with hers is this?)
- The orchestra whirls me wider than Uranus flies,
- It wrenches such ardors from me I did not know I possess’d them,
- It sails me, I dab with bare feet, they are lick’d by the indolent waves,
- I am cut by bitter and angry hail, I lose my breath,
- Steep’d amid honey’d morphine, my windpipe throttled in fakes of death,
- At length let up again to feel the puzzle of puzzles,
- And that we call Being.
-
- 27
- To be in any form, what is that?
- (Round and round we go, all of us, and ever come back thither,)
- If nothing lay more develop’d the quahaug in its callous shell were enough.
-
- Mine is no callous shell,
- I have instant conductors all over me whether I pass or stop,
- They seize every object and lead it harmlessly through me.
-
- I merely stir, press, feel with my fingers, and am happy,
- To touch my person to some one else’s is about as much as I can stand.
-
- 28
- Is this then a touch? quivering me to a new identity,
- Flames and ether making a rush for my veins,
- Treacherous tip of me reaching and crowding to help them,
- My flesh and blood playing out lightning to strike what is hardly
- different from myself,
- On all sides prurient provokers stiffening my limbs,
- Straining the udder of my heart for its withheld drip,
- Behaving licentious toward me, taking no denial,
- Depriving me of my best as for a purpose,
- Unbuttoning my clothes, holding me by the bare waist,
- Deluding my confusion with the calm of the sunlight and pasture-fields,
- Immodestly sliding the fellow-senses away,
- They bribed to swap off with touch and go and graze at the edges of me,
- No consideration, no regard for my draining strength or my anger,
- Fetching the rest of the herd around to enjoy them a while,
- Then all uniting to stand on a headland and worry me.
-
- The sentries desert every other part of me,
- They have left me helpless to a red marauder,
- They all come to the headland to witness and assist against me.
-
- I am given up by traitors,
- I talk wildly, I have lost my wits, I and nobody else am the
- greatest traitor,
- I went myself first to the headland, my own hands carried me there.
-
- You villain touch! what are you doing? my breath is tight in its throat,
- Unclench your floodgates, you are too much for me.
-
- 29
- Blind loving wrestling touch, sheath’d hooded sharp-tooth’d touch!
- Did it make you ache so, leaving me?
-
- Parting track’d by arriving, perpetual payment of perpetual loan,
- Rich showering rain, and recompense richer afterward.
-
- Sprouts take and accumulate, stand by the curb prolific and vital,
- Landscapes projected masculine, full-sized and golden.
-
- 30
- All truths wait in all things,
- They neither hasten their own delivery nor resist it,
- They do not need the obstetric forceps of the surgeon,
- The insignificant is as big to me as any,
- (What is less or more than a touch?)
-
- Logic and sermons never convince,
- The damp of the night drives deeper into my soul.
-
- (Only what proves itself to every man and woman is so,
- Only what nobody denies is so.)
-
- A minute and a drop of me settle my brain,
- I believe the soggy clods shall become lovers and lamps,
- And a compend of compends is the meat of a man or woman,
- And a summit and flower there is the feeling they have for each other,
- And they are to branch boundlessly out of that lesson until it
- becomes omnific,
- And until one and all shall delight us, and we them.
-
- 31
- I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey work of the stars,
- And the pismire is equally perfect, and a grain of sand, and the egg
- of the wren,
- And the tree-toad is a chef-d’œuvre for the highest,
- And the running blackberry would adorn the parlors of heaven,
- And the narrowest hinge in my hand puts to scorn all machinery,
- And the cow crunching with depress’d head surpasses any statue,
- And a mouse is miracle enough to stagger sextillions of infidels.
-
- I find I incorporate gneiss, coal, long-threaded moss, fruits,
- grains, esculent roots,
- And am stucco’d with quadrupeds and birds all over,
- And have distanced what is behind me for good reasons,
- But call any thing back again when I desire it.
-
- In vain the speeding or shyness,
- In vain the plutonic rocks send their old heat against my approach,
- In vain the mastodon retreats beneath its own powder’d bones,
- In vain objects stand leagues off and assume manifold shapes,
- In vain the ocean settling in hollows and the great monsters lying low,
- In vain the buzzard houses herself with the sky,
- In vain the snake slides through the creepers and logs,
- In vain the elk takes to the inner passes of the woods,
- In vain the razor-bill’d auk sails far north to Labrador,
- I follow quickly, I ascend to the nest in the fissure of the cliff.
-
- 32
- I think I could turn and live with animals, they are so placid and
- self-contain’d,
- I stand and look at them long and long.
-
- They do not sweat and whine about their condition,
- They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,
- They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,
- Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of
- owning things,
- Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of
- years ago,
- Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.
-
- So they show their relations to me and I accept them,
- They bring me tokens of myself, they evince them plainly in their
- possession.
-
- I wonder where they get those tokens,
- Did I pass that way huge times ago and negligently drop them?
-
- Myself moving forward then and now and forever,
- Gathering and showing more always and with velocity,
- Infinite and omnigenous, and the like of these among them,
- Not too exclusive toward the reachers of my remembrancers,
- Picking out here one that I love, and now go with him on brotherly terms.
-
- A gigantic beauty of a stallion, fresh and responsive to my caresses,
- Head high in the forehead, wide between the ears,
- Limbs glossy and supple, tail dusting the ground,
- Eyes full of sparkling wickedness, ears finely cut, flexibly moving.
-
- His nostrils dilate as my heels embrace him,
- His well-built limbs tremble with pleasure as we race around and return.
-
- I but use you a minute, then I resign you, stallion,
- Why do I need your paces when I myself out-gallop them?
- Even as I stand or sit passing faster than you.
-
- 33
- Space and Time! now I see it is true, what I guess’d at,
- What I guess’d when I loaf’d on the grass,
- What I guess’d while I lay alone in my bed,
- And again as I walk’d the beach under the paling stars of the morning.
-
- My ties and ballasts leave me, my elbows rest in sea-gaps,
- I skirt sierras, my palms cover continents,
- I am afoot with my vision.
-
- By the city’s quadrangular houses--in log huts, camping with lumber-men,
- Along the ruts of the turnpike, along the dry gulch and rivulet bed,
- Weeding my onion-patch or hosing rows of carrots and parsnips,
- crossing savannas, trailing in forests,
- Prospecting, gold-digging, girdling the trees of a new purchase,
- Scorch’d ankle-deep by the hot sand, hauling my boat down the
- shallow river,
- Where the panther walks to and fro on a limb overhead, where the
- buck turns furiously at the hunter,
- Where the rattlesnake suns his flabby length on a rock, where the
- otter is feeding on fish,
- Where the alligator in his tough pimples sleeps by the bayou,
- Where the black bear is searching for roots or honey, where the
- beaver pats the mud with his paddle-shaped tall;
- Over the growing sugar, over the yellow-flower’d cotton plant, over
- the rice in its low moist field,
- Over the sharp-peak’d farm house, with its scallop’d scum and
- slender shoots from the gutters,
- Over the western persimmon, over the long-leav’d corn, over the
- delicate blue-flower flax,
- Over the white and brown buckwheat, a hummer and buzzer there with
- the rest,
- Over the dusky green of the rye as it ripples and shades in the breeze;
- Scaling mountains, pulling myself cautiously up, holding on by low
- scragged limbs,
- Walking the path worn in the grass and beat through the leaves of the brush,
- Where the quail is whistling betwixt the woods and the wheat-lot,
- Where the bat flies in the Seventh-month eve, where the great
- goldbug drops through the dark,
- Where the brook puts out of the roots of the old tree and flows to
- the meadow,
- Where cattle stand and shake away flies with the tremulous
- shuddering of their hides,
- Where the cheese-cloth hangs in the kitchen, where andirons straddle
- the hearth-slab, where cobwebs fall in festoons from the rafters;
- Where trip-hammers crash, where the press is whirling its cylinders,
- Wherever the human heart beats with terrible throes under its ribs,
- Where the pear-shaped balloon is floating aloft, (floating in it
- myself and looking composedly down,)
- Where the life-car is drawn on the slip-noose, where the heat
- hatches pale-green eggs in the dented sand,
- Where the she-whale swims with her calf and never forsakes it,
- Where the steam-ship trails hind-ways its long pennant of smoke,
- Where the fin of the shark cuts like a black chip out of the water,
- Where the half-burn’d brig is riding on unknown currents,
- Where shells grow to her slimy deck, where the dead are corrupting below;
- Where the dense-starr’d flag is borne at the head of the regiments,
- Approaching Manhattan up by the long-stretching island,
- Under Niagara, the cataract falling like a veil over my countenance,
- Upon a door-step, upon the horse-block of hard wood outside,
- Upon the race-course, or enjoying picnics or jigs or a good game of
- base-ball,
- At he-festivals, with blackguard gibes, ironical license,
- bull-dances, drinking, laughter,
- At the cider-mill tasting the sweets of the brown mash, sucking the
- juice through a straw,
- At apple-peelings wanting kisses for all the red fruit I find,
- At musters, beach-parties, friendly bees, huskings, house-raisings;
- Where the mocking-bird sounds his delicious gurgles, cackles,
- screams, weeps,
- Where the hay-rick stands in the barn-yard, where the dry-stalks are
- scatter’d, where the brood-cow waits in the hovel,
- Where the bull advances to do his masculine work, where the stud to
- the mare, where the cock is treading the hen,
- Where the heifers browse, where geese nip their food with short jerks,
- Where sun-down shadows lengthen over the limitless and lonesome prairie,
- Where herds of buffalo make a crawling spread of the square miles
- far and near,
- Where the humming-bird shimmers, where the neck of the long-lived
- swan is curving and winding,
- Where the laughing-gull scoots by the shore, where she laughs her
- near-human laugh,
- Where bee-hives range on a gray bench in the garden half hid by the
- high weeds,
- Where band-neck’d partridges roost in a ring on the ground with
- their heads out,
- Where burial coaches enter the arch’d gates of a cemetery,
- Where winter wolves bark amid wastes of snow and icicled trees,
- Where the yellow-crown’d heron comes to the edge of the marsh at
- night and feeds upon small crabs,
- Where the splash of swimmers and divers cools the warm noon,
- Where the katy-did works her chromatic reed on the walnut-tree over
- the well,
- Through patches of citrons and cucumbers with silver-wired leaves,
- Through the salt-lick or orange glade, or under conical firs,
- Through the gymnasium, through the curtain’d saloon, through the
- office or public hall;
- Pleas’d with the native and pleas’d with the foreign, pleas’d with
- the new and old,
- Pleas’d with the homely woman as well as the handsome,
- Pleas’d with the quakeress as she puts off her bonnet and talks melodiously,
- Pleas’d with the tune of the choir of the whitewash’d church,
- Pleas’d with the earnest words of the sweating Methodist preacher,
- impress’d seriously at the camp-meeting;
- Looking in at the shop-windows of Broadway the whole forenoon,
- flatting the flesh of my nose on the thick plate glass,
- Wandering the same afternoon with my face turn’d up to the clouds,
- or down a lane or along the beach,
- My right and left arms round the sides of two friends, and I in the middle;
- Coming home with the silent and dark-cheek’d bush-boy, (behind me
- he rides at the drape of the day,)
- Far from the settlements studying the print of animals’ feet, or the
- moccasin print,
- By the cot in the hospital reaching lemonade to a feverish patient,
- Nigh the coffin’d corpse when all is still, examining with a candle;
- Voyaging to every port to dicker and adventure,
- Hurrying with the modern crowd as eager and fickle as any,
- Hot toward one I hate, ready in my madness to knife him,
- Solitary at midnight in my back yard, my thoughts gone from me a long while,
- Walking the old hills of Judaea with the beautiful gentle God by my side,
- Speeding through space, speeding through heaven and the stars,
- Speeding amid the seven satellites and the broad ring, and the
- diameter of eighty thousand miles,
- Speeding with tail’d meteors, throwing fire-balls like the rest,
- Carrying the crescent child that carries its own full mother in its belly,
- Storming, enjoying, planning, loving, cautioning,
- Backing and filling, appearing and disappearing,
- I tread day and night such roads.
-
- I visit the orchards of spheres and look at the product,
- And look at quintillions ripen’d and look at quintillions green.
-
- I fly those flights of a fluid and swallowing soul,
- My course runs below the soundings of plummets.
-
- I help myself to material and immaterial,
- No guard can shut me off, no law prevent me.
-
- I anchor my ship for a little while only,
- My messengers continually cruise away or bring their returns to me.
-
- I go hunting polar furs and the seal, leaping chasms with a
- pike-pointed staff, clinging to topples of brittle and blue.
-
- I ascend to the foretruck,
- I take my place late at night in the crow’s-nest,
- We sail the arctic sea, it is plenty light enough,
- Through the clear atmosphere I stretch around on the wonderful beauty,
- The enormous masses of ice pass me and I pass them, the scenery is
- plain in all directions,
- The white-topt mountains show in the distance, I fling out my
- fancies toward them,
- We are approaching some great battle-field in which we are soon to
- be engaged,
- We pass the colossal outposts of the encampment, we pass with still
- feet and caution,
- Or we are entering by the suburbs some vast and ruin’d city,
- The blocks and fallen architecture more than all the living cities
- of the globe.
-
- I am a free companion, I bivouac by invading watchfires,
- I turn the bridegroom out of bed and stay with the bride myself,
- I tighten her all night to my thighs and lips.
-
- My voice is the wife’s voice, the screech by the rail of the stairs,
- They fetch my man’s body up dripping and drown’d.
-
- I understand the large hearts of heroes,
- The courage of present times and all times,
- How the skipper saw the crowded and rudderless wreck of the
- steamship, and Death chasing it up and down the storm,
- How he knuckled tight and gave not back an inch, and was faithful of
- days and faithful of nights,
- And chalk’d in large letters on a board, Be of good cheer, we will
- not desert you;
- How he follow’d with them and tack’d with them three days and
- would not give it up,
- How he saved the drifting company at last,
- How the lank loose-gown’d women look’d when boated from the
- side of their prepared graves,
- How the silent old-faced infants and the lifted sick, and the
- sharp-lipp’d unshaved men;
- All this I swallow, it tastes good, I like it well, it becomes mine,
- I am the man, I suffer’d, I was there.
-
- The disdain and calmness of martyrs,
- The mother of old, condemn’d for a witch, burnt with dry wood, her
- children gazing on,
- The hounded slave that flags in the race, leans by the fence,
- blowing, cover’d with sweat,
- The twinges that sting like needles his legs and neck, the murderous
- buckshot and the bullets,
- All these I feel or am.
-
- I am the hounded slave, I wince at the bite of the dogs,
- Hell and despair are upon me, crack and again crack the marksmen,
- I clutch the rails of the fence, my gore dribs, thinn’d with the
- ooze of my skin,
- I fall on the weeds and stones,
- The riders spur their unwilling horses, haul close,
- Taunt my dizzy ears and beat me violently over the head with whip-stocks.
-
- Agonies are one of my changes of garments,
- I do not ask the wounded person how he feels, I myself become the
- wounded person,
- My hurts turn livid upon me as I lean on a cane and observe.
-
- I am the mash’d fireman with breast-bone broken,
- Tumbling walls buried me in their debris,
- Heat and smoke I inspired, I heard the yelling shouts of my comrades,
- I heard the distant click of their picks and shovels,
- They have clear’d the beams away, they tenderly lift me forth.
-
- I lie in the night air in my red shirt, the pervading hush is for my sake,
- Painless after all I lie exhausted but not so unhappy,
- White and beautiful are the faces around me, the heads are bared
- of their fire-caps,
- The kneeling crowd fades with the light of the torches.
-
- Distant and dead resuscitate,
- They show as the dial or move as the hands of me, I am the clock myself.
-
- I am an old artillerist, I tell of my fort’s bombardment,
- I am there again.
-
- Again the long roll of the drummers,
- Again the attacking cannon, mortars,
- Again to my listening ears the cannon responsive.
-
- I take part, I see and hear the whole,
- The cries, curses, roar, the plaudits for well-aim’d shots,
- The ambulanza slowly passing trailing its red drip,
- Workmen searching after damages, making indispensable repairs,
- The fall of grenades through the rent roof, the fan-shaped explosion,
- The whizz of limbs, heads, stone, wood, iron, high in the air.
-
- Again gurgles the mouth of my dying general, he furiously waves
- with his hand,
- He gasps through the clot Mind not me--mind--the entrenchments.
-
- 34
- Now I tell what I knew in Texas in my early youth,
- (I tell not the fall of Alamo,
- Not one escaped to tell the fall of Alamo,
- The hundred and fifty are dumb yet at Alamo,)
- ’Tis the tale of the murder in cold blood of four hundred and twelve
- young men.
-
- Retreating they had form’d in a hollow square with their baggage for
- breastworks,
- Nine hundred lives out of the surrounding enemies, nine times their
- number, was the price they took in advance,
- Their colonel was wounded and their ammunition gone,
- They treated for an honorable capitulation, receiv’d writing and
- seal, gave up their arms and march’d back prisoners of war.
-
- They were the glory of the race of rangers,
- Matchless with horse, rifle, song, supper, courtship,
- Large, turbulent, generous, handsome, proud, and affectionate,
- Bearded, sunburnt, drest in the free costume of hunters,
- Not a single one over thirty years of age.
-
- The second First-day morning they were brought out in squads and
- massacred, it was beautiful early summer,
- The work commenced about five o’clock and was over by eight.
-
- None obey’d the command to kneel,
- Some made a mad and helpless rush, some stood stark and straight,
- A few fell at once, shot in the temple or heart, the living and dead
- lay together,
- The maim’d and mangled dug in the dirt, the new-comers saw them there,
- Some half-kill’d attempted to crawl away,
- These were despatch’d with bayonets or batter’d with the blunts of muskets,
- A youth not seventeen years old seiz’d his assassin till two more
- came to release him,
- The three were all torn and cover’d with the boy’s blood.
-
- At eleven o’clock began the burning of the bodies;
- That is the tale of the murder of the four hundred and twelve young men.
-
- 35
- Would you hear of an old-time sea-fight?
- Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars?
- List to the yarn, as my grandmother’s father the sailor told it to me.
-
- Our foe was no skulk in his ship I tell you, (said he,)
- His was the surly English pluck, and there is no tougher or truer,
- and never was, and never will be;
- Along the lower’d eve he came horribly raking us.
-
- We closed with him, the yards entangled, the cannon touch’d,
- My captain lash’d fast with his own hands.
-
- We had receiv’d some eighteen pound shots under the water,
- On our lower-gun-deck two large pieces had burst at the first fire,
- killing all around and blowing up overhead.
-
- Fighting at sun-down, fighting at dark,
- Ten o’clock at night, the full moon well up, our leaks on the gain,
- and five feet of water reported,
- The master-at-arms loosing the prisoners confined in the after-hold
- to give them a chance for themselves.
-
- The transit to and from the magazine is now stopt by the sentinels,
- They see so many strange faces they do not know whom to trust.
-
- Our frigate takes fire,
- The other asks if we demand quarter?
- If our colors are struck and the fighting done?
-
- Now I laugh content, for I hear the voice of my little captain,
- We have not struck, he composedly cries, we have just begun our part
- of the fighting.
-
- Only three guns are in use,
- One is directed by the captain himself against the enemy’s main-mast,
- Two well serv’d with grape and canister silence his musketry and
- clear his decks.
-
- The tops alone second the fire of this little battery, especially
- the main-top,
- They hold out bravely during the whole of the action.
-
- Not a moment’s cease,
- The leaks gain fast on the pumps, the fire eats toward the powder-magazine.
-
- One of the pumps has been shot away, it is generally thought we are sinking.
-
- Serene stands the little captain,
- He is not hurried, his voice is neither high nor low,
- His eyes give more light to us than our battle-lanterns.
-
- Toward twelve there in the beams of the moon they surrender to us.
-
- 36
- Stretch’d and still lies the midnight,
- Two great hulls motionless on the breast of the darkness,
- Our vessel riddled and slowly sinking, preparations to pass to the
- one we have conquer’d,
- The captain on the quarter-deck coldly giving his orders through a
- countenance white as a sheet,
- Near by the corpse of the child that serv’d in the cabin,
- The dead face of an old salt with long white hair and carefully
- curl’d whiskers,
- The flames spite of all that can be done flickering aloft and below,
- The husky voices of the two or three officers yet fit for duty,
- Formless stacks of bodies and bodies by themselves, dabs of flesh
- upon the masts and spars,
- Cut of cordage, dangle of rigging, slight shock of the soothe of waves,
- Black and impassive guns, litter of powder-parcels, strong scent,
- A few large stars overhead, silent and mournful shining,
- Delicate sniffs of sea-breeze, smells of sedgy grass and fields by
- the shore, death-messages given in charge to survivors,
- The hiss of the surgeon’s knife, the gnawing teeth of his saw,
- Wheeze, cluck, swash of falling blood, short wild scream, and long,
- dull, tapering groan,
- These so, these irretrievable.
-
- 37
- You laggards there on guard! look to your arms!
- In at the conquer’d doors they crowd! I am possess’d!
- Embody all presences outlaw’d or suffering,
- See myself in prison shaped like another man,
- And feel the dull unintermitted pain.
-
- For me the keepers of convicts shoulder their carbines and keep watch,
- It is I let out in the morning and barr’d at night.
-
- Not a mutineer walks handcuff’d to jail but I am handcuff’d to him
- and walk by his side,
- (I am less the jolly one there, and more the silent one with sweat
- on my twitching lips.)
-
- Not a youngster is taken for larceny but I go up too, and am tried
- and sentenced.
-
- Not a cholera patient lies at the last gasp but I also lie at the last gasp,
- My face is ash-color’d, my sinews gnarl, away from me people retreat.
-
- Askers embody themselves in me and I am embodied in them,
- I project my hat, sit shame-faced, and beg.
-
- 38
- Enough! enough! enough!
- Somehow I have been stunn’d. Stand back!
- Give me a little time beyond my cuff’d head, slumbers, dreams, gaping,
- I discover myself on the verge of a usual mistake.
-
- That I could forget the mockers and insults!
- That I could forget the trickling tears and the blows of the
- bludgeons and hammers!
- That I could look with a separate look on my own crucifixion and
- bloody crowning.
-
- I remember now,
- I resume the overstaid fraction,
- The grave of rock multiplies what has been confided to it, or to any graves,
- Corpses rise, gashes heal, fastenings roll from me.
-
- I troop forth replenish’d with supreme power, one of an average
- unending procession,
- Inland and sea-coast we go, and pass all boundary lines,
- Our swift ordinances on their way over the whole earth,
- The blossoms we wear in our hats the growth of thousands of years.
-
- Eleves, I salute you! come forward!
- Continue your annotations, continue your questionings.
-
- 39
- The friendly and flowing savage, who is he?
- Is he waiting for civilization, or past it and mastering it?
-
- Is he some Southwesterner rais’d out-doors? is he Kanadian?
- Is he from the Mississippi country? Iowa, Oregon, California?
- The mountains? prairie-life, bush-life? or sailor from the sea?
-
- Wherever he goes men and women accept and desire him,
- They desire he should like them, touch them, speak to them, stay with them.
-
- Behavior lawless as snow-flakes, words simple as grass, uncomb’d
- head, laughter, and naivete,
- Slow-stepping feet, common features, common modes and emanations,
- They descend in new forms from the tips of his fingers,
- They are wafted with the odor of his body or breath, they fly out of
- the glance of his eyes.
-
- 40
- Flaunt of the sunshine I need not your bask--lie over!
- You light surfaces only, I force surfaces and depths also.
-
- Earth! you seem to look for something at my hands,
- Say, old top-knot, what do you want?
-
- Man or woman, I might tell how I like you, but cannot,
- And might tell what it is in me and what it is in you, but cannot,
- And might tell that pining I have, that pulse of my nights and days.
-
- Behold, I do not give lectures or a little charity,
- When I give I give myself.
-
- You there, impotent, loose in the knees,
- Open your scarf’d chops till I blow grit within you,
- Spread your palms and lift the flaps of your pockets,
- I am not to be denied, I compel, I have stores plenty and to spare,
- And any thing I have I bestow.
-
- I do not ask who you are, that is not important to me,
- You can do nothing and be nothing but what I will infold you.
-
- To cotton-field drudge or cleaner of privies I lean,
- On his right cheek I put the family kiss,
- And in my soul I swear I never will deny him.
-
- On women fit for conception I start bigger and nimbler babes.
- (This day I am jetting the stuff of far more arrogant republics.)
-
- To any one dying, thither I speed and twist the knob of the door.
- Turn the bed-clothes toward the foot of the bed,
- Let the physician and the priest go home.
-
- I seize the descending man and raise him with resistless will,
- O despairer, here is my neck,
- By God, you shall not go down! hang your whole weight upon me.
-
- I dilate you with tremendous breath, I buoy you up,
- Every room of the house do I fill with an arm’d force,
- Lovers of me, bafflers of graves.
-
- Sleep--I and they keep guard all night,
- Not doubt, not decease shall dare to lay finger upon you,
- I have embraced you, and henceforth possess you to myself,
- And when you rise in the morning you will find what I tell you is so.
-
- 41
- I am he bringing help for the sick as they pant on their backs,
- And for strong upright men I bring yet more needed help.
-
- I heard what was said of the universe,
- Heard it and heard it of several thousand years;
- It is middling well as far as it goes--but is that all?
-
- Magnifying and applying come I,
- Outbidding at the start the old cautious hucksters,
- Taking myself the exact dimensions of Jehovah,
- Lithographing Kronos, Zeus his son, and Hercules his grandson,
- Buying drafts of Osiris, Isis, Belus, Brahma, Buddha,
- In my portfolio placing Manito loose, Allah on a leaf, the crucifix
- engraved,
- With Odin and the hideous-faced Mexitli and every idol and image,
- Taking them all for what they are worth and not a cent more,
- Admitting they were alive and did the work of their days,
- (They bore mites as for unfledg’d birds who have now to rise and fly
- and sing for themselves,)
- Accepting the rough deific sketches to fill out better in myself,
- bestowing them freely on each man and woman I see,
- Discovering as much or more in a framer framing a house,
- Putting higher claims for him there with his roll’d-up sleeves
- driving the mallet and chisel,
- Not objecting to special revelations, considering a curl of smoke or
- a hair on the back of my hand just as curious as any revelation,
- Lads ahold of fire-engines and hook-and-ladder ropes no less to me
- than the gods of the antique wars,
- Minding their voices peal through the crash of destruction,
- Their brawny limbs passing safe over charr’d laths, their white
- foreheads whole and unhurt out of the flames;
- By the mechanic’s wife with her babe at her nipple interceding for
- every person born,
- Three scythes at harvest whizzing in a row from three lusty angels
- with shirts bagg’d out at their waists,
- The snag-tooth’d hostler with red hair redeeming sins past and to come,
- Selling all he possesses, traveling on foot to fee lawyers for his
- brother and sit by him while he is tried for forgery;
- What was strewn in the amplest strewing the square rod about me, and
- not filling the square rod then,
- The bull and the bug never worshipp’d half enough,
- Dung and dirt more admirable than was dream’d,
- The supernatural of no account, myself waiting my time to be one of
- the supremes,
- The day getting ready for me when I shall do as much good as the
- best, and be as prodigious;
- By my life-lumps! becoming already a creator,
- Putting myself here and now to the ambush’d womb of the shadows.
-
-
- 42
- A call in the midst of the crowd,
- My own voice, orotund sweeping and final.
-
- Come my children,
- Come my boys and girls, my women, household and intimates,
- Now the performer launches his nerve, he has pass’d his prelude on
- the reeds within.
-
- Easily written loose-finger’d chords--I feel the thrum of your
- climax and close.
-
- My head slues round on my neck,
- Music rolls, but not from the organ,
- Folks are around me, but they are no household of mine.
-
- Ever the hard unsunk ground,
- Ever the eaters and drinkers, ever the upward and downward sun, ever
- the air and the ceaseless tides,
- Ever myself and my neighbors, refreshing, wicked, real,
- Ever the old inexplicable query, ever that thorn’d thumb, that
- breath of itches and thirsts,
- Ever the vexer’s hoot! hoot! till we find where the sly one hides
- and bring him forth,
- Ever love, ever the sobbing liquid of life,
- Ever the bandage under the chin, ever the trestles of death.
-
- Here and there with dimes on the eyes walking,
- To feed the greed of the belly the brains liberally spooning,
- Tickets buying, taking, selling, but in to the feast never once going,
- Many sweating, ploughing, thrashing, and then the chaff for payment
- receiving,
- A few idly owning, and they the wheat continually claiming.
-
- This is the city and I am one of the citizens,
- Whatever interests the rest interests me, politics, wars, markets,
- newspapers, schools,
- The mayor and councils, banks, tariffs, steamships, factories,
- stocks, stores, real estate and personal estate.
-
- The little plentiful manikins skipping around in collars and tail’d coats
- I am aware who they are, (they are positively not worms or fleas,)
- I acknowledge the duplicates of myself, the weakest and shallowest
- is deathless with me,
- What I do and say the same waits for them,
- Every thought that flounders in me the same flounders in them.
-
- I know perfectly well my own egotism,
- Know my omnivorous lines and must not write any less,
- And would fetch you whoever you are flush with myself.
-
- Not words of routine this song of mine,
- But abruptly to question, to leap beyond yet nearer bring;
- This printed and bound book--but the printer and the
- printing-office boy?
- The well-taken photographs--but your wife or friend close and solid
- in your arms?
- The black ship mail’d with iron, her mighty guns in her turrets--but
- the pluck of the captain and engineers?
- In the houses the dishes and fare and furniture--but the host and
- hostess, and the look out of their eyes?
- The sky up there--yet here or next door, or across the way?
- The saints and sages in history--but you yourself?
- Sermons, creeds, theology--but the fathomless human brain,
- And what is reason? and what is love? and what is life?
-
- 43
- I do not despise you priests, all time, the world over,
- My faith is the greatest of faiths and the least of faiths,
- Enclosing worship ancient and modern and all between ancient and modern,
- Believing I shall come again upon the earth after five thousand years,
- Waiting responses from oracles, honoring the gods, saluting the sun,
- Making a fetich of the first rock or stump, powowing with sticks in
- the circle of obis,
- Helping the llama or brahmin as he trims the lamps of the idols,
- Dancing yet through the streets in a phallic procession, rapt and
- austere in the woods a gymnosophist,
- Drinking mead from the skull-cap, to Shastas and Vedas admirant,
- minding the Koran,
- Walking the teokallis, spotted with gore from the stone and knife,
- beating the serpent-skin drum,
- Accepting the Gospels, accepting him that was crucified, knowing
- assuredly that he is divine,
- To the mass kneeling or the puritan’s prayer rising, or sitting
- patiently in a pew,
- Ranting and frothing in my insane crisis, or waiting dead-like till
- my spirit arouses me,
- Looking forth on pavement and land, or outside of pavement and land,
- Belonging to the winders of the circuit of circuits.
-
- One of that centripetal and centrifugal gang I turn and talk like
- man leaving charges before a journey.
-
- Down-hearted doubters dull and excluded,
- Frivolous, sullen, moping, angry, affected, dishearten’d, atheistical,
- I know every one of you, I know the sea of torment, doubt, despair
- and unbelief.
-
- How the flukes splash!
- How they contort rapid as lightning, with spasms and spouts of blood!
-
- Be at peace bloody flukes of doubters and sullen mopers,
- I take my place among you as much as among any,
- The past is the push of you, me, all, precisely the same,
- And what is yet untried and afterward is for you, me, all, precisely
- the same.
-
- I do not know what is untried and afterward,
- But I know it will in its turn prove sufficient, and cannot fail.
-
- Each who passes is consider’d, each who stops is consider’d, not
- single one can it fall.
-
- It cannot fall the young man who died and was buried,
- Nor the young woman who died and was put by his side,
- Nor the little child that peep’d in at the door, and then drew back
- and was never seen again,
- Nor the old man who has lived without purpose, and feels it with
- bitterness worse than gall,
- Nor him in the poor house tubercled by rum and the bad disorder,
- Nor the numberless slaughter’d and wreck’d, nor the brutish koboo
- call’d the ordure of humanity,
- Nor the sacs merely floating with open mouths for food to slip in,
- Nor any thing in the earth, or down in the oldest graves of the earth,
- Nor any thing in the myriads of spheres, nor the myriads of myriads
- that inhabit them,
- Nor the present, nor the least wisp that is known.
-
- 44
- It is time to explain myself--let us stand up.
-
- What is known I strip away,
- I launch all men and women forward with me into the Unknown.
-
- The clock indicates the moment--but what does eternity indicate?
-
- We have thus far exhausted trillions of winters and summers,
- There are trillions ahead, and trillions ahead of them.
-
- Births have brought us richness and variety,
- And other births will bring us richness and variety.
-
- I do not call one greater and one smaller,
- That which fills its period and place is equal to any.
-
- Were mankind murderous or jealous upon you, my brother, my sister?
- I am sorry for you, they are not murderous or jealous upon me,
- All has been gentle with me, I keep no account with lamentation,
- (What have I to do with lamentation?)
-
- I am an acme of things accomplish’d, and I an encloser of things to be.
-
- My feet strike an apex of the apices of the stairs,
- On every step bunches of ages, and larger bunches between the steps,
- All below duly travel’d, and still I mount and mount.
-
- Rise after rise bow the phantoms behind me,
- Afar down I see the huge first Nothing, I know I was even there,
- I waited unseen and always, and slept through the lethargic mist,
- And took my time, and took no hurt from the fetid carbon.
-
- Long I was hugg’d close--long and long.
-
- Immense have been the preparations for me,
- Faithful and friendly the arms that have help’d me.
-
- Cycles ferried my cradle, rowing and rowing like cheerful boatmen,
- For room to me stars kept aside in their own rings,
- They sent influences to look after what was to hold me.
-
- Before I was born out of my mother generations guided me,
- My embryo has never been torpid, nothing could overlay it.
-
- For it the nebula cohered to an orb,
- The long slow strata piled to rest it on,
- Vast vegetables gave it sustenance,
- Monstrous sauroids transported it in their mouths and deposited it
- with care.
-
- All forces have been steadily employ’d to complete and delight me,
- Now on this spot I stand with my robust soul.
-
-
- 45
- O span of youth! ever-push’d elasticity!
- O manhood, balanced, florid and full.
-
- My lovers suffocate me,
- Crowding my lips, thick in the pores of my skin,
- Jostling me through streets and public halls, coming naked to me at night,
- Crying by day, Ahoy! from the rocks of the river, swinging and
- chirping over my head,
- Calling my name from flower-beds, vines, tangled underbrush,
- Lighting on every moment of my life,
- Bussing my body with soft balsamic busses,
- Noiselessly passing handfuls out of their hearts and giving them to be mine.
-
- Old age superbly rising! O welcome, ineffable grace of dying days!
-
- Every condition promulges not only itself, it promulges what grows
- after and out of itself,
- And the dark hush promulges as much as any.
-
- I open my scuttle at night and see the far-sprinkled systems,
- And all I see multiplied as high as I can cipher edge but the rim of
- the farther systems.
-
- Wider and wider they spread, expanding, always expanding,
- Outward and outward and forever outward.
-
- My sun has his sun and round him obediently wheels,
- He joins with his partners a group of superior circuit,
- And greater sets follow, making specks of the greatest inside them.
-
- There is no stoppage and never can be stoppage,
- If I, you, and the worlds, and all beneath or upon their surfaces,
- were this moment reduced back to a pallid float, it would
- not avail the long run,
- We should surely bring up again where we now stand,
- And surely go as much farther, and then farther and farther.
-
- A few quadrillions of eras, a few octillions of cubic leagues, do
- not hazard the span or make it impatient,
- They are but parts, any thing is but a part.
-
- See ever so far, there is limitless space outside of that,
- Count ever so much, there is limitless time around that.
-
- My rendezvous is appointed, it is certain,
- The Lord will be there and wait till I come on perfect terms,
- The great Camerado, the lover true for whom I pine will be there.
-
- 46
- I know I have the best of time and space, and was never measured and
- never will be measured.
-
- I tramp a perpetual journey, (come listen all!)
- My signs are a rain-proof coat, good shoes, and a staff cut from the woods,
- No friend of mine takes his ease in my chair,
- I have no chair, no church, no philosophy,
- I lead no man to a dinner-table, library, exchange,
- But each man and each woman of you I lead upon a knoll,
- My left hand hooking you round the waist,
- My right hand pointing to landscapes of continents and the public road.
-
- Not I, not any one else can travel that road for you,
- You must travel it for yourself.
-
- It is not far, it is within reach,
- Perhaps you have been on it since you were born and did not know,
- Perhaps it is everywhere on water and on land.
-
- Shoulder your duds dear son, and I will mine, and let us hasten forth,
- Wonderful cities and free nations we shall fetch as we go.
-
- If you tire, give me both burdens, and rest the chuff of your hand
- on my hip,
- And in due time you shall repay the same service to me,
- For after we start we never lie by again.
-
- This day before dawn I ascended a hill and look’d at the crowded heaven,
- And I said to my spirit When we become the enfolders of those orbs,
- and the pleasure and knowledge of every thing in them, shall we
- be fill’d and satisfied then?
- And my spirit said No, we but level that lift to pass and continue beyond.
-
- You are also asking me questions and I hear you,
- I answer that I cannot answer, you must find out for yourself.
-
- Sit a while dear son,
- Here are biscuits to eat and here is milk to drink,
- But as soon as you sleep and renew yourself in sweet clothes, I kiss you
- with a good-by kiss and open the gate for your egress hence.
-
- Long enough have you dream’d contemptible dreams,
- Now I wash the gum from your eyes,
- You must habit yourself to the dazzle of the light and of every
- moment of your life.
-
- Long have you timidly waded holding a plank by the shore,
- Now I will you to be a bold swimmer,
- To jump off in the midst of the sea, rise again, nod to me, shout,
- and laughingly dash with your hair.
-
- 47
- I am the teacher of athletes,
- He that by me spreads a wider breast than my own proves the width of my own,
- He most honors my style who learns under it to destroy the teacher.
-
- The boy I love, the same becomes a man not through derived power,
- but in his own right,
- Wicked rather than virtuous out of conformity or fear,
- Fond of his sweetheart, relishing well his steak,
- Unrequited love or a slight cutting him worse than sharp steel cuts,
- First-rate to ride, to fight, to hit the bull’s eye, to sail a
- skiff, to sing a song or play on the banjo,
- Preferring scars and the beard and faces pitted with small-pox over
- all latherers,
- And those well-tann’d to those that keep out of the sun.
-
- I teach straying from me, yet who can stray from me?
- I follow you whoever you are from the present hour,
- My words itch at your ears till you understand them.
-
- I do not say these things for a dollar or to fill up the time while
- I wait for a boat,
- (It is you talking just as much as myself, I act as the tongue of you,
- Tied in your mouth, in mine it begins to be loosen’d.)
-
- I swear I will never again mention love or death inside a house,
- And I swear I will never translate myself at all, only to him or her
- who privately stays with me in the open air.
-
- If you would understand me go to the heights or water-shore,
- The nearest gnat is an explanation, and a drop or motion of waves key,
- The maul, the oar, the hand-saw, second my words.
-
- No shutter’d room or school can commune with me,
- But roughs and little children better than they.
-
- The young mechanic is closest to me, he knows me well,
- The woodman that takes his axe and jug with him shall take me with
- him all day,
- The farm-boy ploughing in the field feels good at the sound of my voice,
- In vessels that sail my words sail, I go with fishermen and seamen
- and love them.
-
- The soldier camp’d or upon the march is mine,
- On the night ere the pending battle many seek me, and I do not fail them,
- On that solemn night (it may be their last) those that know me seek me.
- My face rubs to the hunter’s face when he lies down alone in his blanket,
- The driver thinking of me does not mind the jolt of his wagon,
- The young mother and old mother comprehend me,
- The girl and the wife rest the needle a moment and forget where they are,
- They and all would resume what I have told them.
-
- 48
- I have said that the soul is not more than the body,
- And I have said that the body is not more than the soul,
- And nothing, not God, is greater to one than one’s self is,
- And whoever walks a furlong without sympathy walks to his own
- funeral drest in his shroud,
- And I or you pocketless of a dime may purchase the pick of the earth,
- And to glance with an eye or show a bean in its pod confounds the
- learning of all times,
- And there is no trade or employment but the young man following it
- may become a hero,
- And there is no object so soft but it makes a hub for the wheel’d universe,
- And I say to any man or woman, Let your soul stand cool and composed
- before a million universes.
-
- And I say to mankind, Be not curious about God,
- For I who am curious about each am not curious about God,
- (No array of terms can say how much I am at peace about God and
- about death.)
-
- I hear and behold God in every object, yet understand God not in the least,
- Nor do I understand who there can be more wonderful than myself.
-
- Why should I wish to see God better than this day?
- I see something of God each hour of the twenty-four, and each moment then,
- In the faces of men and women I see God, and in my own face in the glass,
- I find letters from God dropt in the street, and every one is sign’d
- by God’s name,
- And I leave them where they are, for I know that wheresoe’er I go,
- Others will punctually come for ever and ever.
-
- 49
- And as to you Death, and you bitter hug of mortality, it is idle to
- try to alarm me.
-
- To his work without flinching the accoucheur comes,
- I see the elder-hand pressing receiving supporting,
- I recline by the sills of the exquisite flexible doors,
- And mark the outlet, and mark the relief and escape.
-
- And as to you Corpse I think you are good manure, but that does not
- offend me,
- I smell the white roses sweet-scented and growing,
- I reach to the leafy lips, I reach to the polish’d breasts of melons.
-
- And as to you Life I reckon you are the leavings of many deaths,
- (No doubt I have died myself ten thousand times before.)
-
- I hear you whispering there O stars of heaven,
- O suns--O grass of graves--O perpetual transfers and promotions,
- If you do not say any thing how can I say any thing?
-
- Of the turbid pool that lies in the autumn forest,
- Of the moon that descends the steeps of the soughing twilight,
- Toss, sparkles of day and dusk--toss on the black stems that decay
- in the muck,
- Toss to the moaning gibberish of the dry limbs.
-
- I ascend from the moon, I ascend from the night,
- I perceive that the ghastly glimmer is noonday sunbeams reflected,
- And debouch to the steady and central from the offspring great or small.
-
- 50
- There is that in me--I do not know what it is--but I know it is in me.
-
- Wrench’d and sweaty--calm and cool then my body becomes,
- I sleep--I sleep long.
-
- I do not know it--it is without name--it is a word unsaid,
- It is not in any dictionary, utterance, symbol.
-
- Something it swings on more than the earth I swing on,
- To it the creation is the friend whose embracing awakes me.
-
- Perhaps I might tell more. Outlines! I plead for my brothers and sisters.
-
- Do you see O my brothers and sisters?
- It is not chaos or death--it is form, union, plan--it is eternal
- life--it is Happiness.
-
- 51
- The past and present wilt--I have fill’d them, emptied them.
- And proceed to fill my next fold of the future.
-
- Listener up there! what have you to confide to me?
- Look in my face while I snuff the sidle of evening,
- (Talk honestly, no one else hears you, and I stay only a minute longer.)
-
- Do I contradict myself?
- Very well then I contradict myself,
- (I am large, I contain multitudes.)
-
- I concentrate toward them that are nigh, I wait on the door-slab.
-
- Who has done his day’s work? who will soonest be through with his supper?
- Who wishes to walk with me?
-
- Will you speak before I am gone? will you prove already too late?
-
- 52
- The spotted hawk swoops by and accuses me, he complains of my gab
- and my loitering.
-
- I too am not a bit tamed, I too am untranslatable,
- I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world.
-
- The last scud of day holds back for me,
- It flings my likeness after the rest and true as any on the shadow’d wilds,
- It coaxes me to the vapor and the dusk.
-
- I depart as air, I shake my white locks at the runaway sun,
- I effuse my flesh in eddies, and drift it in lacy jags.
-
- I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love,
- If you want me again look for me under your boot-soles.
-
- You will hardly know who I am or what I mean,
- But I shall be good health to you nevertheless,
- And filter and fibre your blood.
-
- Failing to fetch me at first keep encouraged,
- Missing me one place search another,
- I stop somewhere waiting for you.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK IV. CHILDREN OF ADAM
-
-
- To the Garden the World
-
- To the garden the world anew ascending,
- Potent mates, daughters, sons, preluding,
- The love, the life of their bodies, meaning and being,
- Curious here behold my resurrection after slumber,
- The revolving cycles in their wide sweep having brought me again,
- Amorous, mature, all beautiful to me, all wondrous,
- My limbs and the quivering fire that ever plays through them, for
- reasons, most wondrous,
- Existing I peer and penetrate still,
- Content with the present, content with the past,
- By my side or back of me Eve following,
- Or in front, and I following her just the same.
-
-
-
-
- From Pent-Up Aching Rivers
-
- From pent-up aching rivers,
- From that of myself without which I were nothing,
- From what I am determin’d to make illustrious, even if I stand sole
- among men,
- From my own voice resonant, singing the phallus,
- Singing the song of procreation,
- Singing the need of superb children and therein superb grown people,
- Singing the muscular urge and the blending,
- Singing the bedfellow’s song, (O resistless yearning!
- O for any and each the body correlative attracting!
- O for you whoever you are your correlative body! O it, more than all
- else, you delighting!)
- From the hungry gnaw that eats me night and day,
- From native moments, from bashful pains, singing them,
- Seeking something yet unfound though I have diligently sought it
- many a long year,
- Singing the true song of the soul fitful at random,
- Renascent with grossest Nature or among animals,
- Of that, of them and what goes with them my poems informing,
- Of the smell of apples and lemons, of the pairing of birds,
- Of the wet of woods, of the lapping of waves,
- Of the mad pushes of waves upon the land, I them chanting,
- The overture lightly sounding, the strain anticipating,
- The welcome nearness, the sight of the perfect body,
- The swimmer swimming naked in the bath, or motionless on his back
- lying and floating,
- The female form approaching, I pensive, love-flesh tremulous aching,
- The divine list for myself or you or for any one making,
- The face, the limbs, the index from head to foot, and what it arouses,
- The mystic deliria, the madness amorous, the utter abandonment,
- (Hark close and still what I now whisper to you,
- I love you, O you entirely possess me,
- O that you and I escape from the rest and go utterly off, free and lawless,
- Two hawks in the air, two fishes swimming in the sea not more
- lawless than we;)
- The furious storm through me careering, I passionately trembling.
- The oath of the inseparableness of two together, of the woman that
- loves me and whom I love more than my life, that oath swearing,
- (O I willingly stake all for you,
- O let me be lost if it must be so!
- O you and I! what is it to us what the rest do or think?
- What is all else to us? only that we enjoy each other and exhaust
- each other if it must be so;)
- From the master, the pilot I yield the vessel to,
- The general commanding me, commanding all, from him permission taking,
- From time the programme hastening, (I have loiter’d too long as it is,)
- From sex, from the warp and from the woof,
- From privacy, from frequent repinings alone,
- From plenty of persons near and yet the right person not near,
- From the soft sliding of hands over me and thrusting of fingers
- through my hair and beard,
- From the long sustain’d kiss upon the mouth or bosom,
- From the close pressure that makes me or any man drunk, fainting
- with excess,
- From what the divine husband knows, from the work of fatherhood,
- From exultation, victory and relief, from the bedfellow’s embrace in
- the night,
- From the act-poems of eyes, hands, hips and bosoms,
- From the cling of the trembling arm,
- From the bending curve and the clinch,
- From side by side the pliant coverlet off-throwing,
- From the one so unwilling to have me leave, and me just as unwilling
- to leave,
- (Yet a moment O tender waiter, and I return,)
- From the hour of shining stars and dropping dews,
- From the night a moment I emerging flitting out,
- Celebrate you act divine and you children prepared for,
- And you stalwart loins.