- 1
- Weapon shapely, naked, wan,
- Head from the mother’s bowels drawn,
- Wooded flesh and metal bone, limb only one and lip only one,
- Gray-blue leaf by red-heat grown, helve produced from a little seed sown,
- Resting the grass amid and upon,
- To be lean’d and to lean on.
-
- Strong shapes and attributes of strong shapes, masculine trades,
- sights and sounds.
- Long varied train of an emblem, dabs of music,
- Fingers of the organist skipping staccato over the keys of the great organ.
-
- 2
- Welcome are all earth’s lands, each for its kind,
- Welcome are lands of pine and oak,
- Welcome are lands of the lemon and fig,
- Welcome are lands of gold,
- Welcome are lands of wheat and maize, welcome those of the grape,
- Welcome are lands of sugar and rice,
- Welcome the cotton-lands, welcome those of the white potato and
- sweet potato,
- Welcome are mountains, flats, sands, forests, prairies,
- Welcome the rich borders of rivers, table-lands, openings,
- Welcome the measureless grazing-lands, welcome the teeming soil of
- orchards, flax, honey, hemp;
- Welcome just as much the other more hard-faced lands,
- Lands rich as lands of gold or wheat and fruit lands,
- Lands of mines, lands of the manly and rugged ores,
- Lands of coal, copper, lead, tin, zinc,
- Lands of iron--lands of the make of the axe.
-
- 3
- The log at the wood-pile, the axe supported by it,
- The sylvan hut, the vine over the doorway, the space clear’d for garden,
- The irregular tapping of rain down on the leaves after the storm is lull’d,
- The walling and moaning at intervals, the thought of the sea,
- The thought of ships struck in the storm and put on their beam ends,
- and the cutting away of masts,
- The sentiment of the huge timbers of old-fashion’d houses and barns,
- The remember’d print or narrative, the voyage at a venture of men,
- families, goods,
- The disembarkation, the founding of a new city,
- The voyage of those who sought a New England and found it, the outset
- anywhere,
- The settlements of the Arkansas, Colorado, Ottawa, Willamette,
- The slow progress, the scant fare, the axe, rifle, saddle-bags;
- The beauty of all adventurous and daring persons,
- The beauty of wood-boys and wood-men with their clear untrimm’d faces,
- The beauty of independence, departure, actions that rely on themselves,
- The American contempt for statutes and ceremonies, the boundless
- impatience of restraint,
- The loose drift of character, the inkling through random types, the
- solidification;
- The butcher in the slaughter-house, the hands aboard schooners and
- sloops, the raftsman, the pioneer,
- Lumbermen in their winter camp, daybreak in the woods, stripes of
- snow on the limbs of trees, the occasional snapping,
- The glad clear sound of one’s own voice, the merry song, the natural
- life of the woods, the strong day’s work,
- The blazing fire at night, the sweet taste of supper, the talk, the
- bed of hemlock-boughs and the bear-skin;
- The house-builder at work in cities or anywhere,
- The preparatory jointing, squaring, sawing, mortising,
- The hoist-up of beams, the push of them in their places, laying them
- regular,
- Setting the studs by their tenons in the mortises according as they
- were prepared,
- The blows of mallets and hammers, the attitudes of the men, their
- curv’d limbs,
- Bending, standing, astride the beams, driving in pins, holding on by
- posts and braces,
- The hook’d arm over the plate, the other arm wielding the axe,
- The floor-men forcing the planks close to be nail’d,
- Their postures bringing their weapons downward on the bearers,
- The echoes resounding through the vacant building:
- The huge storehouse carried up in the city well under way,
- The six framing-men, two in the middle and two at each end, carefully
- bearing on their shoulders a heavy stick for a cross-beam,
- The crowded line of masons with trowels in their right hands rapidly
- laying the long side-wall, two hundred feet from front to rear,
- The flexible rise and fall of backs, the continual click of the
- trowels striking the bricks,
- The bricks one after another each laid so workmanlike in its place,
- and set with a knock of the trowel-handle,
- The piles of materials, the mortar on the mortar-boards, and the
- steady replenishing by the hod-men;
- Spar-makers in the spar-yard, the swarming row of well-grown apprentices,
- The swing of their axes on the square-hew’d log shaping it toward
- the shape of a mast,
- The brisk short crackle of the steel driven slantingly into the pine,
- The butter-color’d chips flying off in great flakes and slivers,
- The limber motion of brawny young arms and hips in easy costumes,
- The constructor of wharves, bridges, piers, bulk-heads, floats,
- stays against the sea;
- The city fireman, the fire that suddenly bursts forth in the
- close-pack’d square,
- The arriving engines, the hoarse shouts, the nimble stepping and daring,
- The strong command through the fire-trumpets, the falling in line,
- the rise and fall of the arms forcing the water,
- The slender, spasmic, blue-white jets, the bringing to bear of the
- hooks and ladders and their execution,
- The crash and cut away of connecting wood-work, or through floors
- if the fire smoulders under them,
- The crowd with their lit faces watching, the glare and dense shadows;
- The forger at his forge-furnace and the user of iron after him,
- The maker of the axe large and small, and the welder and temperer,
- The chooser breathing his breath on the cold steel and trying the
- edge with his thumb,
- The one who clean-shapes the handle and sets it firmly in the socket;
- The shadowy processions of the portraits of the past users also,
- The primal patient mechanics, the architects and engineers,
- The far-off Assyrian edifice and Mizra edifice,
- The Roman lictors preceding the consuls,
- The antique European warrior with his axe in combat,
- The uplifted arm, the clatter of blows on the helmeted head,
- The death-howl, the limpsy tumbling body, the rush of friend and foe
- thither,
- The siege of revolted lieges determin’d for liberty,
- The summons to surrender, the battering at castle gates, the truce
- and parley,
- The sack of an old city in its time,
- The bursting in of mercenaries and bigots tumultuously and disorderly,
- Roar, flames, blood, drunkenness, madness,
- Goods freely rifled from houses and temples, screams of women in the
- gripe of brigands,
- Craft and thievery of camp-followers, men running, old persons despairing,
- The hell of war, the cruelties of creeds,
- The list of all executive deeds and words just or unjust,
- The power of personality just or unjust.
-
- 4
- Muscle and pluck forever!
- What invigorates life invigorates death,
- And the dead advance as much as the living advance,
- And the future is no more uncertain than the present,
- For the roughness of the earth and of man encloses as much as the
- delicatesse of the earth and of man,
- And nothing endures but personal qualities.
-
- What do you think endures?
- Do you think a great city endures?
- Or a teeming manufacturing state? or a prepared constitution? or the
- best built steamships?
- Or hotels of granite and iron? or any chef-d’œuvres of engineering,
- forts, armaments?
-
- Away! these are not to be cherish’d for themselves,
- They fill their hour, the dancers dance, the musicians play for them,
- The show passes, all does well enough of course,
- All does very well till one flash of defiance.
-
- A great city is that which has the greatest men and women,
- If it be a few ragged huts it is still the greatest city in the
- whole world.
-
- 5
- The place where a great city stands is not the place of stretch’d
- wharves, docks, manufactures, deposits of produce merely,
- Nor the place of ceaseless salutes of new-comers or the
- anchor-lifters of the departing,
- Nor the place of the tallest and costliest buildings or shops
- selling goods from the rest of the earth,
- Nor the place of the best libraries and schools, nor the place where
- money is plentiest,
- Nor the place of the most numerous population.
-
- Where the city stands with the brawniest breed of orators and bards,
- Where the city stands that is belov’d by these, and loves them in
- return and understands them,
- Where no monuments exist to heroes but in the common words and deeds,
- Where thrift is in its place, and prudence is in its place,
- Where the men and women think lightly of the laws,
- Where the slave ceases, and the master of slaves ceases,
- Where the populace rise at once against the never-ending audacity of
- elected persons,
- Where fierce men and women pour forth as the sea to the whistle of
- death pours its sweeping and unript waves,
- Where outside authority enters always after the precedence of inside
- authority,
- Where the citizen is always the head and ideal, and President,
- Mayor, Governor and what not, are agents for pay,
- Where children are taught to be laws to themselves, and to depend on
- themselves,
- Where equanimity is illustrated in affairs,
- Where speculations on the soul are encouraged,
- Where women walk in public processions in the streets the same as the men,
- Where they enter the public assembly and take places the same as the men;
- Where the city of the faithfulest friends stands,
- Where the city of the cleanliness of the sexes stands,
- Where the city of the healthiest fathers stands,
- Where the city of the best-bodied mothers stands,
- There the great city stands.
-
- 6
- How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!
- How the floridness of the materials of cities shrivels before a
- man’s or woman’s look!
-
- All waits or goes by default till a strong being appears;
- A strong being is the proof of the race and of the ability of the universe,
- When he or she appears materials are overaw’d,
- The dispute on the soul stops,
- The old customs and phrases are confronted, turn’d back, or laid away.
-
- What is your money-making now? what can it do now?
- What is your respectability now?
- What are your theology, tuition, society, traditions, statute-books, now?
- Where are your jibes of being now?
- Where are your cavils about the soul now?
-
- 7
- A sterile landscape covers the ore, there is as good as the best for
- all the forbidding appearance,
- There is the mine, there are the miners,
- The forge-furnace is there, the melt is accomplish’d, the hammersmen
- are at hand with their tongs and hammers,
- What always served and always serves is at hand.
-
- Than this nothing has better served, it has served all,
- Served the fluent-tongued and subtle-sensed Greek, and long ere the Greek,
- Served in building the buildings that last longer than any,
- Served the Hebrew, the Persian, the most ancient Hindustanee,
- Served the mound-raiser on the Mississippi, served those whose
- relics remain in Central America,
- Served Albic temples in woods or on plains, with unhewn pillars and
- the druids,
- Served the artificial clefts, vast, high, silent, on the
- snow-cover’d hills of Scandinavia,
- Served those who time out of mind made on the granite walls rough
- sketches of the sun, moon, stars, ships, ocean waves,
- Served the paths of the irruptions of the Goths, served the pastoral
- tribes and nomads,
- Served the long distant Kelt, served the hardy pirates of the Baltic,
- Served before any of those the venerable and harmless men of Ethiopia,
- Served the making of helms for the galleys of pleasure and the
- making of those for war,
- Served all great works on land and all great works on the sea,
- For the mediaeval ages and before the mediaeval ages,
- Served not the living only then as now, but served the dead.
-
- 8
- I see the European headsman,
- He stands mask’d, clothed in red, with huge legs and strong naked arms,
- And leans on a ponderous axe.
-
- (Whom have you slaughter’d lately European headsman?
- Whose is that blood upon you so wet and sticky?)
-
- I see the clear sunsets of the martyrs,
- I see from the scaffolds the descending ghosts,
- Ghosts of dead lords, uncrown’d ladies, impeach’d ministers, rejected kings,
- Rivals, traitors, poisoners, disgraced chieftains and the rest.
-
- I see those who in any land have died for the good cause,
- The seed is spare, nevertheless the crop shall never run out,
- (Mind you O foreign kings, O priests, the crop shall never run out.)
-
- I see the blood wash’d entirely away from the axe,
- Both blade and helve are clean,
- They spirt no more the blood of European nobles, they clasp no more
- the necks of queens.
-
- I see the headsman withdraw and become useless,
- I see the scaffold untrodden and mouldy, I see no longer any axe upon it,
-
- I see the mighty and friendly emblem of the power of my own race,
- the newest, largest race.
-
- 9
- (America! I do not vaunt my love for you,
- I have what I have.)
-
- The axe leaps!
- The solid forest gives fluid utterances,
- They tumble forth, they rise and form,
- Hut, tent, landing, survey,
- Flail, plough, pick, crowbar, spade,
- Shingle, rail, prop, wainscot, lamb, lath, panel, gable,
- Citadel, ceiling, saloon, academy, organ, exhibition-house, library,
- Cornice, trellis, pilaster, balcony, window, turret, porch,
- Hoe, rake, pitchfork, pencil, wagon, staff, saw, jack-plane, mallet,
- wedge, rounce,
- Chair, tub, hoop, table, wicket, vane, sash, floor,
- Work-box, chest, string’d instrument, boat, frame, and what not,
- Capitols of States, and capitol of the nation of States,
- Long stately rows in avenues, hospitals for orphans or for the poor or sick,
- Manhattan steamboats and clippers taking the measure of all seas.
-
- The shapes arise!
- Shapes of the using of axes anyhow, and the users and all that
- neighbors them,
- Cutters down of wood and haulers of it to the Penobscot or Kenebec,
- Dwellers in cabins among the Californian mountains or by the little
- lakes, or on the Columbia,
- Dwellers south on the banks of the Gila or Rio Grande, friendly
- gatherings, the characters and fun,
- Dwellers along the St. Lawrence, or north in Kanada, or down by the
- Yellowstone, dwellers on coasts and off coasts,
- Seal-fishers, whalers, arctic seamen breaking passages through the ice.
-
- The shapes arise!
- Shapes of factories, arsenals, foundries, markets,
- Shapes of the two-threaded tracks of railroads,
- Shapes of the sleepers of bridges, vast frameworks, girders, arches,
- Shapes of the fleets of barges, tows, lake and canal craft, river craft,
- Ship-yards and dry-docks along the Eastern and Western seas, and in
- many a bay and by-place,
- The live-oak kelsons, the pine planks, the spars, the
- hackmatack-roots for knees,
- The ships themselves on their ways, the tiers of scaffolds, the
- workmen busy outside and inside,
- The tools lying around, the great auger and little auger, the adze,
- bolt, line, square, gouge, and bead-plane.
-
- 10
- The shapes arise!
- The shape measur’d, saw’d, jack’d, join’d, stain’d,
- The coffin-shape for the dead to lie within in his shroud,
- The shape got out in posts, in the bedstead posts, in the posts of
- the bride’s bed,
- The shape of the little trough, the shape of the rockers beneath,
- the shape of the babe’s cradle,
- The shape of the floor-planks, the floor-planks for dancers’ feet,
- The shape of the planks of the family home, the home of the friendly
- parents and children,
- The shape of the roof of the home of the happy young man and
- woman, the roof over the well-married young man and woman,
- The roof over the supper joyously cook’d by the chaste wife, and joyously
- eaten by the chaste husband, content after his day’s work.
-
- The shapes arise!
- The shape of the prisoner’s place in the court-room, and of him or
- her seated in the place,
- The shape of the liquor-bar lean’d against by the young rum-drinker
- and the old rum-drinker,
- The shape of the shamed and angry stairs trod by sneaking foot- steps,
- The shape of the sly settee, and the adulterous unwholesome couple,
- The shape of the gambling-board with its devilish winnings and losings,
- The shape of the step-ladder for the convicted and sentenced
- murderer, the murderer with haggard face and pinion’d arms,
- The sheriff at hand with his deputies, the silent and white-lipp’d
- crowd, the dangling of the rope.
-
- The shapes arise!
- Shapes of doors giving many exits and entrances,
- The door passing the dissever’d friend flush’d and in haste,
- The door that admits good news and bad news,
- The door whence the son left home confident and puff’d up,
- The door he enter’d again from a long and scandalous absence,
- diseas’d, broken down, without innocence, without means.
-
- 11
- Her shape arises,
- She less guarded than ever, yet more guarded than ever,
- The gross and soil’d she moves among do not make her gross and soil’d,
- She knows the thoughts as she passes, nothing is conceal’d from her,
- She is none the less considerate or friendly therefor,
- She is the best belov’d, it is without exception, she has no reason
- to fear and she does not fear,
- Oaths, quarrels, hiccupp’d songs, smutty expressions, are idle to
- her as she passes,
- She is silent, she is possess’d of herself, they do not offend her,
- She receives them as the laws of Nature receive them, she is strong,
- She too is a law of Nature--there is no law stronger than she is.
-
- 12
- The main shapes arise!
- Shapes of Democracy total, result of centuries,
- Shapes ever projecting other shapes,
- Shapes of turbulent manly cities,
- Shapes of the friends and home-givers of the whole earth,
- Shapes bracing the earth and braced with the whole earth.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XIII
-
-
- Song of the Exposition
-
- 1
- (Ah little recks the laborer,
- How near his work is holding him to God,
- The loving Laborer through space and time.)
-
- After all not to create only, or found only,
- But to bring perhaps from afar what is already founded,
- To give it our own identity, average, limitless, free,
- To fill the gross the torpid bulk with vital religious fire,
- Not to repel or destroy so much as accept, fuse, rehabilitate,
- To obey as well as command, to follow more than to lead,
- These also are the lessons of our New World;
- While how little the New after all, how much the Old, Old World!
-
- Long and long has the grass been growing,
- Long and long has the rain been falling,
- Long has the globe been rolling round.
-
- 2
- Come Muse migrate from Greece and Ionia,
- Cross out please those immensely overpaid accounts,
- That matter of Troy and Achilles’ wrath, and AEneas’, Odysseus’ wanderings,
- Placard “Removed” and “To Let” on the rocks of your snowy Parnassus,
- Repeat at Jerusalem, place the notice high on jaffa’s gate and on
- Mount Moriah,
- The same on the walls of your German, French and Spanish castles,
- and Italian collections,
- For know a better, fresher, busier sphere, a wide, untried domain
- awaits, demands you.
-
- 3
- Responsive to our summons,
- Or rather to her long-nurs’d inclination,
- Join’d with an irresistible, natural gravitation,
- She comes! I hear the rustling of her gown,
- I scent the odor of her breath’s delicious fragrance,
- I mark her step divine, her curious eyes a-turning, rolling,
- Upon this very scene.
-
- The dame of dames! can I believe then,
- Those ancient temples, sculptures classic, could none of them retain her?
- Nor shades of Virgil and Dante, nor myriad memories, poems, old
- associations, magnetize and hold on to her?
- But that she’s left them all--and here?
-
- Yes, if you will allow me to say so,
- I, my friends, if you do not, can plainly see her,
- The same undying soul of earth’s, activity’s, beauty’s, heroism’s
- expression,
- Out from her evolutions hither come, ended the strata of her former themes,
- Hidden and cover’d by to-day’s, foundation of to-day’s,
- Ended, deceas’d through time, her voice by Castaly’s fountain,
- Silent the broken-lipp’d Sphynx in Egypt, silent all those century-
- baffling tombs,
- Ended for aye the epics of Asia’s, Europe’s helmeted warriors, ended
- the primitive call of the muses,
- Calliope’s call forever closed, Clio, Melpomene, Thalia dead,
- Ended the stately rhythmus of Una and Oriana, ended the quest of the
- holy Graal,
- Jerusalem a handful of ashes blown by the wind, extinct,
- The Crusaders’ streams of shadowy midnight troops sped with the sunrise,
- Amadis, Tancred, utterly gone, Charlemagne, Roland, Oliver gone,
- Palmerin, ogre, departed, vanish’d the turrets that Usk from its
- waters reflected,
- Arthur vanish’d with all his knights, Merlin and Lancelot and
- Galahad, all gone, dissolv’d utterly like an exhalation;
- Pass’d! pass’d! for us, forever pass’d, that once so mighty world,
- now void, inanimate, phantom world,
- Embroider’d, dazzling, foreign world, with all its gorgeous legends, myths,
- Its kings and castles proud, its priests and warlike lords and
- courtly dames,
- Pass’d to its charnel vault, coffin’d with crown and armor on,
- Blazon’d with Shakspere’s purple page,
- And dirged by Tennyson’s sweet sad rhyme.
-
- I say I see, my friends, if you do not, the illustrious emigre, (having it
- is true in her day, although the same, changed, journey’d considerable,)
- Making directly for this rendezvous, vigorously clearing a path for
- herself, striding through the confusion,
- By thud of machinery and shrill steam-whistle undismay’d,
- Bluff’d not a bit by drain-pipe, gasometers, artificial fertilizers,
- Smiling and pleas’d with palpable intent to stay,
- She’s here, install’d amid the kitchen ware!
-
- 4
- But hold--don’t I forget my manners?
- To introduce the stranger, (what else indeed do I live to chant
- for?) to thee Columbia;
- In liberty’s name welcome immortal! clasp hands,
- And ever henceforth sisters dear be both.
-
- Fear not O Muse! truly new ways and days receive, surround you,
- I candidly confess a queer, queer race, of novel fashion,
- And yet the same old human race, the same within, without,
- Faces and hearts the same, feelings the same, yearnings the same,
- The same old love, beauty and use the same.
-
- 5
- We do not blame thee elder World, nor really separate ourselves from thee,
- (Would the son separate himself from the father?)
- Looking back on thee, seeing thee to thy duties, grandeurs, through
- past ages bending, building,
- We build to ours to-day.
-
- Mightier than Egypt’s tombs,
- Fairer than Grecia’s, Roma’s temples,
- Prouder than Milan’s statued, spired cathedral,
- More picturesque than Rhenish castle-keeps,
- We plan even now to raise, beyond them all,
- Thy great cathedral sacred industry, no tomb,
- A keep for life for practical invention.
-
- As in a waking vision,
- E’en while I chant I see it rise, I scan and prophesy outside and in,
- Its manifold ensemble.
-
- Around a palace, loftier, fairer, ampler than any yet,
- Earth’s modern wonder, history’s seven outstripping,
- High rising tier on tier with glass and iron facades,
- Gladdening the sun and sky, enhued in cheerfulest hues,
- Bronze, lilac, robin’s-egg, marine and crimson,
- Over whose golden roof shall flaunt, beneath thy banner Freedom,
- The banners of the States and flags of every land,
- A brood of lofty, fair, but lesser palaces shall cluster.
-
- Somewhere within their walls shall all that forwards perfect human
- life be started,
- Tried, taught, advanced, visibly exhibited.
-
- Not only all the world of works, trade, products,
- But all the workmen of the world here to be represented.
-
- Here shall you trace in flowing operation,
- In every state of practical, busy movement, the rills of civilization,
- Materials here under your eye shall change their shape as if by magic,
- The cotton shall be pick’d almost in the very field,
- Shall be dried, clean’d, ginn’d, baled, spun into thread and cloth
- before you,
- You shall see hands at work at all the old processes and all the new ones,
- You shall see the various grains and how flour is made and then
- bread baked by the bakers,
- You shall see the crude ores of California and Nevada passing on and
- on till they become bullion,
- You shall watch how the printer sets type, and learn what a
- composing-stick is,
- You shall mark in amazement the Hoe press whirling its cylinders,
- shedding the printed leaves steady and fast,
- The photograph, model, watch, pin, nail, shall be created before you.
-
- In large calm halls, a stately museum shall teach you the infinite
- lessons of minerals,
- In another, woods, plants, vegetation shall be illustrated--in
- another animals, animal life and development.
-
- One stately house shall be the music house,
- Others for other arts--learning, the sciences, shall all be here,
- None shall be slighted, none but shall here be honor’d, help’d, exampled.
-
- 6
- (This, this and these, America, shall be your pyramids and obelisks,
- Your Alexandrian Pharos, gardens of Babylon,
- Your temple at Olympia.)
-
- The male and female many laboring not,
- Shall ever here confront the laboring many,
- With precious benefits to both, glory to all,
- To thee America, and thee eternal Muse.
-
- And here shall ye inhabit powerful Matrons!
- In your vast state vaster than all the old,
- Echoed through long, long centuries to come,
- To sound of different, prouder songs, with stronger themes,
- Practical, peaceful life, the people’s life, the People themselves,
- Lifted, illumin’d, bathed in peace--elate, secure in peace.
-
- 7
- Away with themes of war! away with war itself!
- Hence from my shuddering sight to never more return that show of
- blacken’d, mutilated corpses!
- That hell unpent and raid of blood, fit for wild tigers or for
- lop-tongued wolves, not reasoning men,
- And in its stead speed industry’s campaigns,
- With thy undaunted armies, engineering,
- Thy pennants labor, loosen’d to the breeze,
- Thy bugles sounding loud and clear.
-
- Away with old romance!
- Away with novels, plots and plays of foreign courts,
- Away with love-verses sugar’d in rhyme, the intrigues, amours of idlers,
- Fitted for only banquets of the night where dancers to late music slide,
- The unhealthy pleasures, extravagant dissipations of the few,
- With perfumes, heat and wine, beneath the dazzling chandeliers.
-
- To you ye reverent sane sisters,
- I raise a voice for far superber themes for poets and for art,
- To exalt the present and the real,
- To teach the average man the glory of his daily walk and trade,
- To sing in songs how exercise and chemical life are never to be baffled,
- To manual work for each and all, to plough, hoe, dig,
- To plant and tend the tree, the berry, vegetables, flowers,
- For every man to see to it that he really do something, for every woman too;
- To use the hammer and the saw, (rip, or cross-cut,)
- To cultivate a turn for carpentering, plastering, painting,
- To work as tailor, tailoress, nurse, hostler, porter,
- To invent a little, something ingenious, to aid the washing, cooking,
- cleaning,
- And hold it no disgrace to take a hand at them themselves.
-
- I say I bring thee Muse to-day and here,
- All occupations, duties broad and close,
- Toil, healthy toil and sweat, endless, without cessation,
- The old, old practical burdens, interests, joys,
- The family, parentage, childhood, husband and wife,
- The house-comforts, the house itself and all its belongings,
- Food and its preservation, chemistry applied to it,
- Whatever forms the average, strong, complete, sweet-blooded man or
- woman, the perfect longeve personality,
- And helps its present life to health and happiness, and shapes its soul,
- For the eternal real life to come.
-
- With latest connections, works, the inter-transportation of the world,
- Steam-power, the great express lines, gas, petroleum,
- These triumphs of our time, the Atlantic’s delicate cable,
- The Pacific railroad, the Suez canal, the Mont Cenis and Gothard and
- Hoosac tunnels, the Brooklyn bridge,
- This earth all spann’d with iron rails, with lines of steamships
- threading in every sea,
- Our own rondure, the current globe I bring.
-
- 8
- And thou America,
- Thy offspring towering e’er so high, yet higher Thee above all towering,
- With Victory on thy left, and at thy right hand Law;
- Thou Union holding all, fusing, absorbing, tolerating all,
- Thee, ever thee, I sing.
-
- Thou, also thou, a World,
- With all thy wide geographies, manifold, different, distant,
- Rounded by thee in one--one common orbic language,
- One common indivisible destiny for All.
-
- And by the spells which ye vouchsafe to those your ministers in earnest,
- I here personify and call my themes, to make them pass before ye.
-
- Behold, America! (and thou, ineffable guest and sister!)
- For thee come trooping up thy waters and thy lands;
- Behold! thy fields and farms, thy far-off woods and mountains,
- As in procession coming.
-
- Behold, the sea itself,
- And on its limitless, heaving breast, the ships;
- See, where their white sails, bellying in the wind, speckle the
- green and blue,
- See, the steamers coming and going, steaming in or out of port,
- See, dusky and undulating, the long pennants of smoke.
-
- Behold, in Oregon, far in the north and west,
- Or in Maine, far in the north and east, thy cheerful axemen,
- Wielding all day their axes.
-
- Behold, on the lakes, thy pilots at their wheels, thy oarsmen,
- How the ash writhes under those muscular arms!
-
- There by the furnace, and there by the anvil,
- Behold thy sturdy blacksmiths swinging their sledges,
- Overhand so steady, overhand they turn and fall with joyous clank,
- Like a tumult of laughter.
-
- Mark the spirit of invention everywhere, thy rapid patents,
- Thy continual workshops, foundries, risen or rising,
- See, from their chimneys how the tall flame-fires stream.
-
- Mark, thy interminable farms, North, South,
- Thy wealthy daughter-states, Eastern and Western,
- The varied products of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Georgia, Texas,
- and the rest,
- Thy limitless crops, grass, wheat, sugar, oil, corn, rice, hemp, hops,
- Thy barns all fill’d, the endless freight-train and the bulging store-house,
- The grapes that ripen on thy vines, the apples in thy orchards,
- Thy incalculable lumber, beef, pork, potatoes, thy coal, thy gold
- and silver,
- The inexhaustible iron in thy mines.
-
- All thine O sacred Union!
- Ships, farms, shops, barns, factories, mines,
- City and State, North, South, item and aggregate,
- We dedicate, dread Mother, all to thee!
-
- Protectress absolute, thou! bulwark of all!
- For well we know that while thou givest each and all, (generous as God,)
- Without thee neither all nor each, nor land, home,
- Nor ship, nor mine, nor any here this day secure,
- Nor aught, nor any day secure.
-
- 9
- And thou, the Emblem waving over all!
- Delicate beauty, a word to thee, (it may be salutary,)
- Remember thou hast not always been as here to-day so comfortably
- ensovereign’d,
- In other scenes than these have I observ’d thee flag,
- Not quite so trim and whole and freshly blooming in folds of
- stainless silk,
- But I have seen thee bunting, to tatters torn upon thy splinter’d staff,
- Or clutch’d to some young color-bearer’s breast with desperate hands,
- Savagely struggled for, for life or death, fought over long,
- ’Mid cannons’ thunder-crash and many a curse and groan and yell, and
- rifle-volleys cracking sharp,
- And moving masses as wild demons surging, and lives as nothing risk’d,
- For thy mere remnant grimed with dirt and smoke and sopp’d in blood,
- For sake of that, my beauty, and that thou might’st dally as now
- secure up there,
- Many a good man have I seen go under.
-
- Now here and these and hence in peace, all thine O Flag!
- And here and hence for thee, O universal Muse! and thou for them!
- And here and hence O Union, all the work and workmen thine!
- None separate from thee--henceforth One only, we and thou,
- (For the blood of the children, what is it, only the blood maternal?
- And lives and works, what are they all at last, except the roads to
- faith and death?)
-
- While we rehearse our measureless wealth, it is for thee, dear Mother,
- We own it all and several to-day indissoluble in thee;
- Think not our chant, our show, merely for products gross or lucre--
- it is for thee, the soul in thee, electric, spiritual!
- Our farms, inventions, crops, we own in thee! cities and States in thee!
- Our freedom all in thee! our very lives in thee!
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XIV
-
-
- Song of the Redwood-Tree
-
- 1
- A California song,
- A prophecy and indirection, a thought impalpable to breathe as air,
- A chorus of dryads, fading, departing, or hamadryads departing,
- A murmuring, fateful, giant voice, out of the earth and sky,
- Voice of a mighty dying tree in the redwood forest dense.
-
- Farewell my brethren,
- Farewell O earth and sky, farewell ye neighboring waters,
- My time has ended, my term has come.
-
- Along the northern coast,
- Just back from the rock-bound shore and the caves,
- In the saline air from the sea in the Mendocino country,
- With the surge for base and accompaniment low and hoarse,
- With crackling blows of axes sounding musically driven by strong arms,
- Riven deep by the sharp tongues of the axes, there in the redwood
- forest dense,
- I heard the might tree its death-chant chanting.
-
- The choppers heard not, the camp shanties echoed not,
- The quick-ear’d teamsters and chain and jack-screw men heard not,
- As the wood-spirits came from their haunts of a thousand years to
- join the refrain,
- But in my soul I plainly heard.
-
- Murmuring out of its myriad leaves,
- Down from its lofty top rising two hundred feet high,
- Out of its stalwart trunk and limbs, out of its foot-thick bark,
- That chant of the seasons and time, chant not of the past only but
- the future.
-
- You untold life of me,
- And all you venerable and innocent joys,
- Perennial hardy life of me with joys ’mid rain and many a summer sun,
- And the white snows and night and the wild winds;
- O the great patient rugged joys, my soul’s strong joys unreck’d by man,
- (For know I bear the soul befitting me, I too have consciousness, identity,
- And all the rocks and mountains have, and all the earth,)
- Joys of the life befitting me and brothers mine,
- Our time, our term has come.
-
- Nor yield we mournfully majestic brothers,
- We who have grandly fill’d our time,
- With Nature’s calm content, with tacit huge delight,
- We welcome what we wrought for through the past,
- And leave the field for them.
-
- For them predicted long,
- For a superber race, they too to grandly fill their time,
- For them we abdicate, in them ourselves ye forest kings.’
- In them these skies and airs, these mountain peaks, Shasta, Nevadas,
- These huge precipitous cliffs, this amplitude, these valleys, far Yosemite,
- To be in them absorb’d, assimilated.
-
- Then to a loftier strain,
- Still prouder, more ecstatic rose the chant,
- As if the heirs, the deities of the West,
- Joining with master-tongue bore part.
-
- Not wan from Asia’s fetiches,
- Nor red from Europe’s old dynastic slaughter-house,
- (Area of murder-plots of thrones, with scent left yet of wars and
- scaffolds everywhere,
- But come from Nature’s long and harmless throes, peacefully builded thence,
- These virgin lands, lands of the Western shore,
- To the new culminating man, to you, the empire new,
- You promis’d long, we pledge, we dedicate.
-
- You occult deep volitions,
- You average spiritual manhood, purpose of all, pois’d on yourself,
- giving not taking law,
- You womanhood divine, mistress and source of all, whence life and
- love and aught that comes from life and love,
- You unseen moral essence of all the vast materials of America, age
- upon age working in death the same as life,)
- You that, sometimes known, oftener unknown, really shape and mould
- the New World, adjusting it to Time and Space,
- You hidden national will lying in your abysms, conceal’d but ever alert,
- You past and present purposes tenaciously pursued, may-be
- unconscious of yourselves,
- Unswerv’d by all the passing errors, perturbations of the surface;
- You vital, universal, deathless germs, beneath all creeds, arts,
- statutes, literatures,
- Here build your homes for good, establish here, these areas entire,
- lands of the Western shore,
- We pledge, we dedicate to you.
-
- For man of you, your characteristic race,
- Here may he hardy, sweet, gigantic grow, here tower proportionate to Nature,
- Here climb the vast pure spaces unconfined, uncheck’d by wall or roof,
- Here laugh with storm or sun, here joy, here patiently inure,
- Here heed himself, unfold himself, (not others’ formulas heed,)
- here fill his time,
- To duly fall, to aid, unreck’d at last,
- To disappear, to serve.
-
- Thus on the northern coast,
- In the echo of teamsters’ calls and the clinking chains, and the
- music of choppers’ axes,
- The falling trunk and limbs, the crash, the muffled shriek, the groan,
- Such words combined from the redwood-tree, as of voices ecstatic,
- ancient and rustling,
- The century-lasting, unseen dryads, singing, withdrawing,
- All their recesses of forests and mountains leaving,
- From the Cascade range to the Wahsatch, or Idaho far, or Utah,
- To the deities of the modern henceforth yielding,
- The chorus and indications, the vistas of coming humanity, the
- settlements, features all,
- In the Mendocino woods I caught.
-
- 2
- The flashing and golden pageant of California,
- The sudden and gorgeous drama, the sunny and ample lands,
- The long and varied stretch from Puget sound to Colorado south,
- Lands bathed in sweeter, rarer, healthier air, valleys and mountain cliffs,
- The fields of Nature long prepared and fallow, the silent, cyclic chemistry,
- The slow and steady ages plodding, the unoccupied surface ripening,
- the rich ores forming beneath;
- At last the New arriving, assuming, taking possession,
- A swarming and busy race settling and organizing everywhere,
- Ships coming in from the whole round world, and going out to the
- whole world,
- To India and China and Australia and the thousand island paradises
- of the Pacific,
- Populous cities, the latest inventions, the steamers on the rivers,
- the railroads, with many a thrifty farm, with machinery,
- And wool and wheat and the grape, and diggings of yellow gold.
-
- 3
- But more in you than these, lands of the Western shore,
- (These but the means, the implements, the standing-ground,)
- I see in you, certain to come, the promise of thousands of years,
- till now deferr’d,
- Promis’d to be fulfill’d, our common kind, the race.
-
- The new society at last, proportionate to Nature,
- In man of you, more than your mountain peaks or stalwart trees imperial,
- In woman more, far more, than all your gold or vines, or even vital air.
-
- Fresh come, to a new world indeed, yet long prepared,
- I see the genius of the modern, child of the real and ideal,
- Clearing the ground for broad humanity, the true America, heir of
- the past so grand,
- To build a grander future.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XV
-
-
- A Song for Occupations
-
- 1
- A song for occupations!
- In the labor of engines and trades and the labor of fields I find
- the developments,
- And find the eternal meanings.
-
- Workmen and Workwomen!
- Were all educations practical and ornamental well display’d out of
- me, what would it amount to?
- Were I as the head teacher, charitable proprietor, wise statesman,
- what would it amount to?
- Were I to you as the boss employing and paying you, would that satisfy you?
-
- The learn’d, virtuous, benevolent, and the usual terms,
- A man like me and never the usual terms.
-
- Neither a servant nor a master I,
- I take no sooner a large price than a small price, I will have my
- own whoever enjoys me,
- I will be even with you and you shall be even with me.
-
- If you stand at work in a shop I stand as nigh as the nighest in the
- same shop,
- If you bestow gifts on your brother or dearest friend I demand as
- good as your brother or dearest friend,
- If your lover, husband, wife, is welcome by day or night, I must be
- personally as welcome,
- If you become degraded, criminal, ill, then I become so for your sake,
- If you remember your foolish and outlaw’d deeds, do you think I
- cannot remember my own foolish and outlaw’d deeds?
- If you carouse at the table I carouse at the opposite side of the table,
- If you meet some stranger in the streets and love him or her, why
- I often meet strangers in the street and love them.
-
- Why what have you thought of yourself?
- Is it you then that thought yourself less?
- Is it you that thought the President greater than you?
- Or the rich better off than you? or the educated wiser than you?
-
- (Because you are greasy or pimpled, or were once drunk, or a thief,
- Or that you are diseas’d, or rheumatic, or a prostitute,
- Or from frivolity or impotence, or that you are no scholar and never
- saw your name in print,
- Do you give in that you are any less immortal?)
-
- 2
- Souls of men and women! it is not you I call unseen, unheard,
- untouchable and untouching,
- It is not you I go argue pro and con about, and to settle whether
- you are alive or no,
- I own publicly who you are, if nobody else owns.
-
- Grown, half-grown and babe, of this country and every country,
- in-doors and out-doors, one just as much as the other, I see,
- And all else behind or through them.
-
- The wife, and she is not one jot less than the husband,
- The daughter, and she is just as good as the son,
- The mother, and she is every bit as much as the father.
-
- Offspring of ignorant and poor, boys apprenticed to trades,
- Young fellows working on farms and old fellows working on farms,
- Sailor-men, merchant-men, coasters, immigrants,
- All these I see, but nigher and farther the same I see,
- None shall escape me and none shall wish to escape me.
-
- I bring what you much need yet always have,
- Not money, amours, dress, eating, erudition, but as good,
- I send no agent or medium, offer no representative of value, but
- offer the value itself.
-
- There is something that comes to one now and perpetually,
- It is not what is printed, preach’d, discussed, it eludes discussion
- and print,
- It is not to be put in a book, it is not in this book,
- It is for you whoever you are, it is no farther from you than your
- hearing and sight are from you,
- It is hinted by nearest, commonest, readiest, it is ever provoked by them.
-
- You may read in many languages, yet read nothing about it,
- You may read the President’s message and read nothing about it there,
- Nothing in the reports from the State department or Treasury
- department, or in the daily papers or weekly papers,
- Or in the census or revenue returns, prices current, or any accounts
- of stock.
-
- 3
- The sun and stars that float in the open air,
- The apple-shaped earth and we upon it, surely the drift of them is
- something grand,
- I do not know what it is except that it is grand, and that it is happiness,
- And that the enclosing purport of us here is not a speculation or
- bon-mot or reconnoissance,
- And that it is not something which by luck may turn out well for us,
- and without luck must be a failure for us,
- And not something which may yet be retracted in a certain contingency.
-
- The light and shade, the curious sense of body and identity, the
- greed that with perfect complaisance devours all things,
- The endless pride and outstretching of man, unspeakable joys and sorrows,
- The wonder every one sees in every one else he sees, and the wonders
- that fill each minute of time forever,
- What have you reckon’d them for, camerado?
- Have you reckon’d them for your trade or farm-work? or for the
- profits of your store?
- Or to achieve yourself a position? or to fill a gentleman’s leisure,
- or a lady’s leisure?
-
- Have you reckon’d that the landscape took substance and form that it
- might be painted in a picture?
- Or men and women that they might be written of, and songs sung?
- Or the attraction of gravity, and the great laws and harmonious combinations
- and the fluids of the air, as subjects for the savans?
- Or the brown land and the blue sea for maps and charts?
- Or the stars to be put in constellations and named fancy names?
- Or that the growth of seeds is for agricultural tables, or
- agriculture itself?
-
- Old institutions, these arts, libraries, legends, collections, and
- the practice handed along in manufactures, will we rate them so high?
- Will we rate our cash and business high? I have no objection,
- I rate them as high as the highest--then a child born of a woman and
- man I rate beyond all rate.
-
- We thought our Union grand, and our Constitution grand,
- I do not say they are not grand and good, for they are,
- I am this day just as much in love with them as you,
- Then I am in love with You, and with all my fellows upon the earth.
-
- We consider bibles and religions divine--I do not say they are not divine,
- I say they have all grown out of you, and may grow out of you still,
- It is not they who give the life, it is you who give the life,
- Leaves are not more shed from the trees, or trees from the earth,
- than they are shed out of you.
-
- 4
- The sum of all known reverence I add up in you whoever you are,
- The President is there in the White House for you, it is not you who
- are here for him,
- The Secretaries act in their bureaus for you, not you here for them,
- The Congress convenes every Twelfth-month for you,
- Laws, courts, the forming of States, the charters of cities, the
- going and coming of commerce and malls, are all for you.
-
- List close my scholars dear,
- Doctrines, politics and civilization exurge from you,
- Sculpture and monuments and any thing inscribed anywhere are tallied in you,
- The gist of histories and statistics as far back as the records
- reach is in you this hour, and myths and tales the same,
- If you were not breathing and walking here, where would they all be?
- The most renown’d poems would be ashes, orations and plays would
- be vacuums.
-
- All architecture is what you do to it when you look upon it,
- (Did you think it was in the white or gray stone? or the lines of
- the arches and cornices?)
-
- All music is what awakes from you when you are reminded by the instruments,
- It is not the violins and the cornets, it is not the oboe nor the
- beating drums, nor the score of the baritone singer singing his
- sweet romanza, nor that of the men’s chorus, nor that of the
- women’s chorus,
- It is nearer and farther than they.
-
- 5
- Will the whole come back then?
- Can each see signs of the best by a look in the looking-glass? is
- there nothing greater or more?
- Does all sit there with you, with the mystic unseen soul?
-
- Strange and hard that paradox true I give,
- Objects gross and the unseen soul are one.
-
- House-building, measuring, sawing the boards,
- Blacksmithing, glass-blowing, nail-making, coopering, tin-roofing,
- shingle-dressing,
- Ship-joining, dock-building, fish-curing, flagging of sidewalks by flaggers,
- The pump, the pile-driver, the great derrick, the coal-kiln and brickkiln,
- Coal-mines and all that is down there, the lamps in the darkness,
- echoes, songs, what meditations, what vast native thoughts
- looking through smutch’d faces,
- Iron-works, forge-fires in the mountains or by river-banks, men
- around feeling the melt with huge crowbars, lumps of ore, the
- due combining of ore, limestone, coal,
- The blast-furnace and the puddling-furnace, the loup-lump at the
- bottom of the melt at last, the rolling-mill, the stumpy bars
- of pig-iron, the strong clean-shaped Trail for railroads,
- Oil-works, silk-works, white-lead-works, the sugar-house,
- steam-saws, the great mills and factories,
- Stone-cutting, shapely trimmings for facades or window or door-lintels,
- the mallet, the tooth-chisel, the jib to protect the thumb,
- The calking-iron, the kettle of boiling vault-cement, and the fire
- under the kettle,
- The cotton-bale, the stevedore’s hook, the saw and buck of the
- sawyer, the mould of the moulder, the working-knife of the
- butcher, the ice-saw, and all the work with ice,
- The work and tools of the rigger, grappler, sail-maker, block-maker,
- Goods of gutta-percha, papier-mache, colors, brushes, brush-making,
- glazier’s implements,
- The veneer and glue-pot, the confectioner’s ornaments, the decanter
- and glasses, the shears and flat-iron,
- The awl and knee-strap, the pint measure and quart measure, the
- counter and stool, the writing-pen of quill or metal, the making
- of all sorts of edged tools,
- The brewery, brewing, the malt, the vats, every thing that is done
- by brewers, wine-makers, vinegar-makers,
- Leather-dressing, coach-making, boiler-making, rope-twisting,
- distilling, sign-painting, lime-burning, cotton-picking,
- electroplating, electrotyping, stereotyping,
- Stave-machines, planing-machines, reaping-machines,
- ploughing-machines, thrashing-machines, steam wagons,
- The cart of the carman, the omnibus, the ponderous dray,
- Pyrotechny, letting off color’d fireworks at night, fancy figures and jets;
- Beef on the butcher’s stall, the slaughter-house of the butcher, the
- butcher in his killing-clothes,
- The pens of live pork, the killing-hammer, the hog-hook, the
- scalder’s tub, gutting, the cutter’s cleaver, the packer’s maul,
- and the plenteous winterwork of pork-packing,
- Flour-works, grinding of wheat, rye, maize, rice, the barrels and
- the half and quarter barrels, the loaded barges, the high piles
- on wharves and levees,
- The men and the work of the men on ferries, railroads, coasters,
- fish-boats, canals;
- The hourly routine of your own or any man’s life, the shop, yard,
- store, or factory,
- These shows all near you by day and night--workman! whoever you
- are, your daily life!
-
- In that and them the heft of the heaviest--in that and them far more
- than you estimated, (and far less also,)
- In them realities for you and me, in them poems for you and me,
- In them, not yourself-you and your soul enclose all things,
- regardless of estimation,
- In them the development good--in them all themes, hints, possibilities.
-
- I do not affirm that what you see beyond is futile, I do not advise
- you to stop,
- I do not say leadings you thought great are not great,
- But I say that none lead to greater than these lead to.
-
- 6
- Will you seek afar off? you surely come back at last,
- In things best known to you finding the best, or as good as the best,
- In folks nearest to you finding the sweetest, strongest, lovingest,
- Happiness, knowledge, not in another place but this place, not for
- another hour but this hour,
- Man in the first you see or touch, always in friend, brother,
- nighest neighbor--woman in mother, sister, wife,
- The popular tastes and employments taking precedence in poems or anywhere,
- You workwomen and workmen of these States having your own divine
- and strong life,
- And all else giving place to men and women like you.
- When the psalm sings instead of the singer,
-
- When the script preaches instead of the preacher,
- When the pulpit descends and goes instead of the carver that carved
- the supporting desk,
- When I can touch the body of books by night or by day, and when they
- touch my body back again,
- When a university course convinces like a slumbering woman and child
- convince,
- When the minted gold in the vault smiles like the night-watchman’s daughter,
- When warrantee deeds loafe in chairs opposite and are my friendly
- companions,
- I intend to reach them my hand, and make as much of them as I do
- of men and women like you.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XVI
-
-
- A Song of the Rolling Earth
-
- 1
- A song of the rolling earth, and of words according,
- Were you thinking that those were the words, those upright lines?
- those curves, angles, dots?
- No, those are not the words, the substantial words are in the ground
- and sea,
- They are in the air, they are in you.
-
- Were you thinking that those were the words, those delicious sounds
- out of your friends’ mouths?
- No, the real words are more delicious than they.
-
- Human bodies are words, myriads of words,
- (In the best poems re-appears the body, man’s or woman’s,
- well-shaped, natural, gay,
- Every part able, active, receptive, without shame or the need of shame.)
-
- Air, soil, water, fire--those are words,
- I myself am a word with them--my qualities interpenetrate with
- theirs--my name is nothing to them,
- Though it were told in the three thousand languages, what would
- air, soil, water, fire, know of my name?
-
- A healthy presence, a friendly or commanding gesture, are words,
- sayings, meanings,
- The charms that go with the mere looks of some men and women,
- are sayings and meanings also.
-
- The workmanship of souls is by those inaudible words of the earth,
- The masters know the earth’s words and use them more than audible words.
-
- Amelioration is one of the earth’s words,
- The earth neither lags nor hastens,
- It has all attributes, growths, effects, latent in itself from the jump,
- It is not half beautiful only, defects and excrescences show just as
- much as perfections show.
-
- The earth does not withhold, it is generous enough,
- The truths of the earth continually wait, they are not so conceal’d either,
- They are calm, subtle, untransmissible by print,
- They are imbued through all things conveying themselves willingly,
- Conveying a sentiment and invitation, I utter and utter,
- I speak not, yet if you hear me not of what avail am I to you?
- To bear, to better, lacking these of what avail am I?
-
- (Accouche! accouchez!
- Will you rot your own fruit in yourself there?
- Will you squat and stifle there?)
-
- The earth does not argue,
- Is not pathetic, has no arrangements,
- Does not scream, haste, persuade, threaten, promise,
- Makes no discriminations, has no conceivable failures,
- Closes nothing, refuses nothing, shuts none out,
- Of all the powers, objects, states, it notifies, shuts none out.
-
- The earth does not exhibit itself nor refuse to exhibit itself,
- possesses still underneath,
- Underneath the ostensible sounds, the august chorus of heroes, the
- wail of slaves,
- Persuasions of lovers, curses, gasps of the dying, laughter of young
- people, accents of bargainers,
- Underneath these possessing words that never fall.
-
- To her children the words of the eloquent dumb great mother never fail,
- The true words do not fail, for motion does not fail and reflection
- does not fall,
- Also the day and night do not fall, and the voyage we pursue does not fall.
-
- Of the interminable sisters,
- Of the ceaseless cotillons of sisters,
- Of the centripetal and centrifugal sisters, the elder and younger sisters,
- The beautiful sister we know dances on with the rest.
-
- With her ample back towards every beholder,
- With the fascinations of youth and the equal fascinations of age,
- Sits she whom I too love like the rest, sits undisturb’d,
- Holding up in her hand what has the character of a mirror, while her
- eyes glance back from it,
- Glance as she sits, inviting none, denying none,
- Holding a mirror day and night tirelessly before her own face.
-
- Seen at hand or seen at a distance,
- Duly the twenty-four appear in public every day,
- Duly approach and pass with their companions or a companion,
- Looking from no countenances of their own, but from the countenances
- of those who are with them,
- From the countenances of children or women or the manly countenance,
- From the open countenances of animals or from inanimate things,
- From the landscape or waters or from the exquisite apparition of the sky,
- From our countenances, mine and yours, faithfully returning them,
- Every day in public appearing without fall, but never twice with the
- same companions.
-
- Embracing man, embracing all, proceed the three hundred and
- sixty-five resistlessly round the sun;
- Embracing all, soothing, supporting, follow close three hundred and
- sixty-five offsets of the first, sure and necessary as they.
-
- Tumbling on steadily, nothing dreading,
- Sunshine, storm, cold, heat, forever withstanding, passing, carrying,
- The soul’s realization and determination still inheriting,
- The fluid vacuum around and ahead still entering and dividing,
- No balk retarding, no anchor anchoring, on no rock striking,
- Swift, glad, content, unbereav’d, nothing losing,
- Of all able and ready at any time to give strict account,
- The divine ship sails the divine sea.
-
- 2
- Whoever you are! motion and reflection are especially for you,
- The divine ship sails the divine sea for you.
-
- Whoever you are! you are he or she for whom the earth is solid and liquid,
- You are he or she for whom the sun and moon hang in the sky,
- For none more than you are the present and the past,
- For none more than you is immortality.
-
- Each man to himself and each woman to herself, is the word of the
- past and present, and the true word of immortality;
- No one can acquire for another--not one,
- Not one can grow for another--not one.
-
- The song is to the singer, and comes back most to him,
- The teaching is to the teacher, and comes back most to him,
- The murder is to the murderer, and comes back most to him,
- The theft is to the thief, and comes back most to him,
- The love is to the lover, and comes back most to him,
- The gift is to the giver, and comes back most to him--it cannot fail,
- The oration is to the orator, the acting is to the actor and actress
- not to the audience,
- And no man understands any greatness or goodness but his own, or
- the indication of his own.
-
- 3
- I swear the earth shall surely be complete to him or her who shall
- be complete,
- The earth remains jagged and broken only to him or her who remains
- jagged and broken.
-
- I swear there is no greatness or power that does not emulate those
- of the earth,
- There can be no theory of any account unless it corroborate the
- theory of the earth,
- No politics, song, religion, behavior, or what not, is of account,
- unless it compare with the amplitude of the earth,
- Unless it face the exactness, vitality, impartiality, rectitude of
- the earth.
-
- I swear I begin to see love with sweeter spasms than that which
- responds love,
- It is that which contains itself, which never invites and never refuses.
-
- I swear I begin to see little or nothing in audible words,
- All merges toward the presentation of the unspoken meanings of the earth,
- Toward him who sings the songs of the body and of the truths of the earth,
- Toward him who makes the dictionaries of words that print cannot touch.
-
- I swear I see what is better than to tell the best,
- It is always to leave the best untold.
-
- When I undertake to tell the best I find I cannot,
- My tongue is ineffectual on its pivots,
- My breath will not be obedient to its organs,
- I become a dumb man.
-
- The best of the earth cannot be told anyhow, all or any is best,
- It is not what you anticipated, it is cheaper, easier, nearer,
- Things are not dismiss’d from the places they held before,
- The earth is just as positive and direct as it was before,
- Facts, religions, improvements, politics, trades, are as real as before,
- But the soul is also real, it too is positive and direct,
- No reasoning, no proof has establish’d it,
- Undeniable growth has establish’d it.
-
- 4
- These to echo the tones of souls and the phrases of souls,
- (If they did not echo the phrases of souls what were they then?
- If they had not reference to you in especial what were they then?)
-
- I swear I will never henceforth have to do with the faith that tells
- the best,
- I will have to do only with that faith that leaves the best untold.
-
- Say on, sayers! sing on, singers!
- Delve! mould! pile the words of the earth!
- Work on, age after age, nothing is to be lost,
- It may have to wait long, but it will certainly come in use,
- When the materials are all prepared and ready, the architects shall appear.
-
- I swear to you the architects shall appear without fall,
- I swear to you they will understand you and justify you,
- The greatest among them shall be he who best knows you, and encloses
- all and is faithful to all,
- He and the rest shall not forget you, they shall perceive that you
- are not an iota less than they,
- You shall be fully glorified in them.
-
-
-
-
- Youth, Day, Old Age and Night
-
- Youth, large, lusty, loving--youth full of grace, force, fascination,
- Do you know that Old Age may come after you with equal grace,
- force, fascination?
-
- Day full-blown and splendid-day of the immense sun, action,
- ambition, laughter,
- The Night follows close with millions of suns, and sleep and
- restoring darkness.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XVII. BIRDS OF PASSAGE
-
-
- Song of the Universal
-
- 1
- Come said the Muse,
- Sing me a song no poet yet has chanted,
- Sing me the universal.
-
- In this broad earth of ours,
- Amid the measureless grossness and the slag,
- Enclosed and safe within its central heart,
- Nestles the seed perfection.
-
- By every life a share or more or less,
- None born but it is born, conceal’d or unconceal’d the seed is waiting.
-
- 2
- Lo! keen-eyed towering science,
- As from tall peaks the modern overlooking,
- Successive absolute fiats issuing.
-
- Yet again, lo! the soul, above all science,
- For it has history gather’d like husks around the globe,
- For it the entire star-myriads roll through the sky.
-
- In spiral routes by long detours,
- (As a much-tacking ship upon the sea,)
- For it the partial to the permanent flowing,
- For it the real to the ideal tends.
-
- For it the mystic evolution,
- Not the right only justified, what we call evil also justified.
-
- Forth from their masks, no matter what,
- From the huge festering trunk, from craft and guile and tears,
- Health to emerge and joy, joy universal.
-
- Out of the bulk, the morbid and the shallow,
- Out of the bad majority, the varied countless frauds of men and states,
- Electric, antiseptic yet, cleaving, suffusing all,
- Only the good is universal.
-
- 3
- Over the mountain-growths disease and sorrow,
- An uncaught bird is ever hovering, hovering,
- High in the purer, happier air.
-
- From imperfection’s murkiest cloud,
- Darts always forth one ray of perfect light,
- One flash of heaven’s glory.
-
- To fashion’s, custom’s discord,
- To the mad Babel-din, the deafening orgies,
- Soothing each lull a strain is heard, just heard,
- From some far shore the final chorus sounding.
-
- O the blest eyes, the happy hearts,
- That see, that know the guiding thread so fine,
- Along the mighty labyrinth.
-
- 4
- And thou America,
- For the scheme’s culmination, its thought and its reality,
- For these (not for thyself) thou hast arrived.
-
- Thou too surroundest all,
- Embracing carrying welcoming all, thou too by pathways broad and new,
- To the ideal tendest.
-
- The measure’d faiths of other lands, the grandeurs of the past,
- Are not for thee, but grandeurs of thine own,
- Deific faiths and amplitudes, absorbing, comprehending all,
- All eligible to all.
-
- All, all for immortality,
- Love like the light silently wrapping all,
- Nature’s amelioration blessing all,
- The blossoms, fruits of ages, orchards divine and certain,
- Forms, objects, growths, humanities, to spiritual images ripening.
-
- Give me O God to sing that thought,
- Give me, give him or her I love this quenchless faith,
- In Thy ensemble, whatever else withheld withhold not from us,
- Belief in plan of Thee enclosed in Time and Space,
- Health, peace, salvation universal.
-
- Is it a dream?
- Nay but the lack of it the dream,
- And failing it life’s lore and wealth a dream,
- And all the world a dream.
-
-
-
-
- Pioneers! O Pioneers!
-
- Come my tan-faced children,
- Follow well in order, get your weapons ready,
- Have you your pistols? have you your sharp-edged axes?
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- For we cannot tarry here,
- We must march my darlings, we must bear the brunt of danger,
- We the youthful sinewy races, all the rest on us depend,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- O you youths, Western youths,
- So impatient, full of action, full of manly pride and friendship,
- Plain I see you Western youths, see you tramping with the foremost,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Have the elder races halted?
- Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas?
- We take up the task eternal, and the burden and the lesson,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- All the past we leave behind,
- We debouch upon a newer mightier world, varied world,
- Fresh and strong the world we seize, world of labor and the march,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- We detachments steady throwing,
- Down the edges, through the passes, up the mountains steep,
- Conquering, holding, daring, venturing as we go the unknown ways,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- We primeval forests felling,
- We the rivers stemming, vexing we and piercing deep the mines within,
- We the surface broad surveying, we the virgin soil upheaving,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Colorado men are we,
- From the peaks gigantic, from the great sierras and the high plateaus,
- From the mine and from the gully, from the hunting trail we come,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- From Nebraska, from Arkansas,
- Central inland race are we, from Missouri, with the continental
- blood intervein’d,
- All the hands of comrades clasping, all the Southern, all the Northern,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- O resistless restless race!
- O beloved race in all! O my breast aches with tender love for all!
- O I mourn and yet exult, I am rapt with love for all,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Raise the mighty mother mistress,
- Waving high the delicate mistress, over all the starry mistress,
- (bend your heads all,)
- Raise the fang’d and warlike mistress, stern, impassive, weapon’d mistress,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- See my children, resolute children,
- By those swarms upon our rear we must never yield or falter,
- Ages back in ghostly millions frowning there behind us urging,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- On and on the compact ranks,
- With accessions ever waiting, with the places of the dead quickly fill’d,
- Through the battle, through defeat, moving yet and never stopping,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- O to die advancing on!
- Are there some of us to droop and die? has the hour come?
- Then upon the march we fittest die, soon and sure the gap is fill’d.
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- All the pulses of the world,
- Falling in they beat for us, with the Western movement beat,
- Holding single or together, steady moving to the front, all for us,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Life’s involv’d and varied pageants,
- All the forms and shows, all the workmen at their work,
- All the seamen and the landsmen, all the masters with their slaves,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- All the hapless silent lovers,
- All the prisoners in the prisons, all the righteous and the wicked,
- All the joyous, all the sorrowing, all the living, all the dying,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- I too with my soul and body,
- We, a curious trio, picking, wandering on our way,
- Through these shores amid the shadows, with the apparitions pressing,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Lo, the darting bowling orb!
- Lo, the brother orbs around, all the clustering suns and planets,
- All the dazzling days, all the mystic nights with dreams,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- These are of us, they are with us,
- All for primal needed work, while the followers there in embryo wait behind,
- We to-day’s procession heading, we the route for travel clearing,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- O you daughters of the West!
- O you young and elder daughters! O you mothers and you wives!
- Never must you be divided, in our ranks you move united,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Minstrels latent on the prairies!
- (Shrouded bards of other lands, you may rest, you have done your work,)
- Soon I hear you coming warbling, soon you rise and tramp amid us,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Not for delectations sweet,
- Not the cushion and the slipper, not the peaceful and the studious,
- Not the riches safe and palling, not for us the tame enjoyment,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Do the feasters gluttonous feast?
- Do the corpulent sleepers sleep? have they lock’d and bolted doors?
- Still be ours the diet hard, and the blanket on the ground,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Has the night descended?
- Was the road of late so toilsome? did we stop discouraged nodding
- on our way?
- Yet a passing hour I yield you in your tracks to pause oblivious,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
- Till with sound of trumpet,
- Far, far off the daybreak call--hark! how loud and clear I hear it wind,
- Swift! to the head of the army!--swift! spring to your places,
- Pioneers! O pioneers!
-
-
-
-
- To You
-
- Whoever you are, I fear you are walking the walks of dreams,
- I fear these supposed realities are to melt from under your feet and hands,
- Even now your features, joys, speech, house, trade, manners,
- troubles, follies, costume, crimes, dissipate away from you,
- Your true soul and body appear before me.
- They stand forth out of affairs, out of commerce, shops, work,
- farms, clothes, the house, buying, selling, eating, drinking,
- suffering, dying.
-
- Whoever you are, now I place my hand upon you, that you be my poem,
- I whisper with my lips close to your ear.
- I have loved many women and men, but I love none better than you.
-
- O I have been dilatory and dumb,
- I should have made my way straight to you long ago,
- I should have blabb’d nothing but you, I should have chanted nothing
- but you.
-
- I will leave all and come and make the hymns of you,
- None has understood you, but I understand you,
- None has done justice to you, you have not done justice to yourself,
- None but has found you imperfect, I only find no imperfection in you,
- None but would subordinate you, I only am he who will never consent
- to subordinate you,
- I only am he who places over you no master, owner, better, God,
- beyond what waits intrinsically in yourself.
-
- Painters have painted their swarming groups and the centre-figure of all,
- From the head of the centre-figure spreading a nimbus of gold-color’d light,
- But I paint myriads of heads, but paint no head without its nimbus
- of gold-color’d light,
- From my hand from the brain of every man and woman it streams,
- effulgently flowing forever.
-
- O I could sing such grandeurs and glories about you!
- You have not known what you are, you have slumber’d upon yourself
- all your life,
- Your eyelids have been the same as closed most of the time,
- What you have done returns already in mockeries,
- (Your thrift, knowledge, prayers, if they do not return in
- mockeries, what is their return?)
-
- The mockeries are not you,
- Underneath them and within them I see you lurk,
- I pursue you where none else has pursued you,
- Silence, the desk, the flippant expression, the night, the
- accustom’d routine, if these conceal you from others or from
- yourself, they do not conceal you from me,
- The shaved face, the unsteady eye, the impure complexion, if these
- balk others they do not balk me,
- The pert apparel, the deform’d attitude, drunkenness, greed,
- premature death, all these I part aside.
-
- There is no endowment in man or woman that is not tallied in you,
- There is no virtue, no beauty in man or woman, but as good is in you,
- No pluck, no endurance in others, but as good is in you,
- No pleasure waiting for others, but an equal pleasure waits for you.
-
- As for me, I give nothing to any one except I give the like carefully
- to you,
- I sing the songs of the glory of none, not God, sooner than I sing
- the songs of the glory of you.
-
- Whoever you are! claim your own at any hazard!
- These shows of the East and West are tame compared to you,
- These immense meadows, these interminable rivers, you are immense
- and interminable as they,
- These furies, elements, storms, motions of Nature, throes of apparent
- dissolution, you are he or she who is master or mistress over them,
- Master or mistress in your own right over Nature, elements, pain,
- passion, dissolution.
-
- The hopples fall from your ankles, you find an unfailing sufficiency,
- Old or young, male or female, rude, low, rejected by the rest,
- whatever you are promulges itself,
- Through birth, life, death, burial, the means are provided, nothing
- is scanted,
- Through angers, losses, ambition, ignorance, ennui, what you are
- picks its way.
-
-
-
-
- France [the 18th Year of these States
-
- A great year and place
- A harsh discordant natal scream out-sounding, to touch the mother’s
- heart closer than any yet.
-
- I walk’d the shores of my Eastern sea,
- Heard over the waves the little voice,
- Saw the divine infant where she woke mournfully wailing, amid the
- roar of cannon, curses, shouts, crash of falling buildings,
- Was not so sick from the blood in the gutters running, nor from the single
- corpses, nor those in heaps, nor those borne away in the tumbrils,
- Was not so desperate at the battues of death--was not so shock’d at
- the repeated fusillades of the guns.
-
- Pale, silent, stern, what could I say to that long-accrued retribution?
- Could I wish humanity different?
- Could I wish the people made of wood and stone?
- Or that there be no justice in destiny or time?
-
- O Liberty! O mate for me!
- Here too the blaze, the grape-shot and the axe, in reserve, to fetch
- them out in case of need,
- Here too, though long represt, can never be destroy’d,
- Here too could rise at last murdering and ecstatic,
- Here too demanding full arrears of vengeance.
-
- Hence I sign this salute over the sea,
- And I do not deny that terrible red birth and baptism,
- But remember the little voice that I heard wailing, and wait with
- perfect trust, no matter how long,
- And from to-day sad and cogent I maintain the bequeath’d cause, as
- for all lands,
- And I send these words to Paris with my love,
- And I guess some chansonniers there will understand them,
- For I guess there is latent music yet in France, floods of it,
- O I hear already the bustle of instruments, they will soon be
- drowning all that would interrupt them,
- O I think the east wind brings a triumphal and free march,
- It reaches hither, it swells me to Joyful madness,
- I will run transpose it in words, to justify
- I will yet sing a song for you ma femme.
-
-
-
-
- Myself and Mine
-
- Myself and mine gymnastic ever,
- To stand the cold or heat, to take good aim with a gun, to sail a
- boat, to manage horses, to beget superb children,
- To speak readily and clearly, to feel at home among common people,
- And to hold our own in terrible positions on land and sea.
-
- Not for an embroiderer,
- (There will always be plenty of embroiderers, I welcome them also,)
- But for the fibre of things and for inherent men and women.
-
- Not to chisel ornaments,
- But to chisel with free stroke the heads and limbs of plenteous
- supreme Gods, that the States may realize them walking and talking.
-
- Let me have my own way,
- Let others promulge the laws, I will make no account of the laws,
- Let others praise eminent men and hold up peace, I hold up agitation
- and conflict,
- I praise no eminent man, I rebuke to his face the one that was
- thought most worthy.
-
- (Who are you? and what are you secretly guilty of all your life?
- Will you turn aside all your life? will you grub and chatter all
- your life?
- And who are you, blabbing by rote, years, pages, languages, reminiscences,
- Unwitting to-day that you do not know how to speak properly a single word?)
-
- Let others finish specimens, I never finish specimens,
- I start them by exhaustless laws as Nature does, fresh and modern
- continually.
-
- I give nothing as duties,
- What others give as duties I give as living impulses,
- (Shall I give the heart’s action as a duty?)
-
- Let others dispose of questions, I dispose of nothing, I arouse
- unanswerable questions,
- Who are they I see and touch, and what about them?
- What about these likes of myself that draw me so close by tender
- directions and indirections?
-
- I call to the world to distrust the accounts of my friends, but
- listen to my enemies, as I myself do,
- I charge you forever reject those who would expound me, for I cannot
- expound myself,
- I charge that there be no theory or school founded out of me,
- I charge you to leave all free, as I have left all free.
-
- After me, vista!
- O I see life is not short, but immeasurably long,
- I henceforth tread the world chaste, temperate, an early riser, a
- steady grower,
- Every hour the semen of centuries, and still of centuries.
-
- I must follow up these continual lessons of the air, water, earth,
- I perceive I have no time to lose.
-
-
-
-
- Year of Meteors [1859-60
-
- Year of meteors! brooding year!
- I would bind in words retrospective some of your deeds and signs,
- I would sing your contest for the 19th Presidentiad,
- I would sing how an old man, tall, with white hair, mounted the
- scaffold in Virginia,
- (I was at hand, silent I stood with teeth shut close, I watch’d,
- I stood very near you old man when cool and indifferent, but trembling
- with age and your unheal’d wounds you mounted the scaffold;)
- I would sing in my copious song your census returns of the States,
- The tables of population and products, I would sing of your ships
- and their cargoes,
- The proud black ships of Manhattan arriving, some fill’d with
- immigrants, some from the isthmus with cargoes of gold,
- Songs thereof would I sing, to all that hitherward comes would welcome give,
- And you would I sing, fair stripling! welcome to you from me, young
- prince of England!
- (Remember you surging Manhattan’s crowds as you pass’d with your
- cortege of nobles?
- There in the crowds stood I, and singled you out with attachment;)
- Nor forget I to sing of the wonder, the ship as she swam up my bay,
- Well-shaped and stately the Great Eastern swam up my bay, she was
- 600 feet long,
- Her moving swiftly surrounded by myriads of small craft I forget not
- to sing;
- Nor the comet that came unannounced out of the north flaring in heaven,
- Nor the strange huge meteor-procession dazzling and clear shooting
- over our heads,
- (A moment, a moment long it sail’d its balls of unearthly light over
- our heads,
- Then departed, dropt in the night, and was gone;)
- Of such, and fitful as they, I sing--with gleams from them would
- gleam and patch these chants,
- Your chants, O year all mottled with evil and good--year of forebodings!
- Year of comets and meteors transient and strange--lo! even here one
- equally transient and strange!
- As I flit through you hastily, soon to fall and be gone, what is this chant,
- What am I myself but one of your meteors?
-
-
-
-
- With Antecedents
-
- 1
- With antecedents,
- With my fathers and mothers and the accumulations of past ages,
- With all which, had it not been, I would not now be here, as I am,
- With Egypt, India, Phenicia, Greece and Rome,
- With the Kelt, the Scandinavian, the Alb and the Saxon,
- With antique maritime ventures, laws, artisanship, wars and journeys,
- With the poet, the skald, the saga, the myth, and the oracle,
- With the sale of slaves, with enthusiasts, with the troubadour, the
- crusader, and the monk,
- With those old continents whence we have come to this new continent,
- With the fading kingdoms and kings over there,
- With the fading religions and priests,
- With the small shores we look back to from our own large and present shores,
- With countless years drawing themselves onward and arrived at these years,
- You and me arrived--America arrived and making this year,
- This year! sending itself ahead countless years to come.
-
- 2
- O but it is not the years--it is I, it is You,
- We touch all laws and tally all antecedents,
- We are the skald, the oracle, the monk and the knight, we easily
- include them and more,
- We stand amid time beginningless and endless, we stand amid evil and good,
- All swings around us, there is as much darkness as light,
- The very sun swings itself and its system of planets around us,
- Its sun, and its again, all swing around us.
-
- As for me, (torn, stormy, amid these vehement days,)
- I have the idea of all, and am all and believe in all,
- I believe materialism is true and spiritualism is true, I reject no part.
-
- (Have I forgotten any part? any thing in the past?
- Come to me whoever and whatever, till I give you recognition.)
-
- I respect Assyria, China, Teutonia, and the Hebrews,
- I adopt each theory, myth, god, and demigod,
- I see that the old accounts, bibles, genealogies, are true, without
- exception,
- I assert that all past days were what they must have been,
- And that they could no-how have been better than they were,
- And that to-day is what it must be, and that America is,
- And that to-day and America could no-how be better than they are.
-
- 3
- In the name of these States and in your and my name, the Past,
- And in the name of these States and in your and my name, the Present time.
-
- I know that the past was great and the future will be great,
- And I know that both curiously conjoint in the present time,
- (For the sake of him I typify, for the common average man’s sake,
- your sake if you are he,)
- And that where I am or you are this present day, there is the centre
- of all days, all races,
- And there is the meaning to us of all that has ever come of races
- and days, or ever will come.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XVIII
-
-
- A Broadway Pageant
-
- 1
- Over the Western sea hither from Niphon come,
- Courteous, the swart-cheek’d two-sworded envoys,
- Leaning back in their open barouches, bare-headed, impassive,
- Ride to-day through Manhattan.
-
- Libertad! I do not know whether others behold what I behold,
- In the procession along with the nobles of Niphon, the errand-bearers,
- Bringing up the rear, hovering above, around, or in the ranks marching,
- But I will sing you a song of what I behold Libertad.
-
- When million-footed Manhattan unpent descends to her pavements,
- When the thunder-cracking guns arouse me with the proud roar love,
- When the round-mouth’d guns out of the smoke and smell I love
- spit their salutes,
- When the fire-flashing guns have fully alerted me, and
- heaven-clouds canopy my city with a delicate thin haze,
- When gorgeous the countless straight stems, the forests at the
- wharves, thicken with colors,
- When every ship richly drest carries her flag at the peak,
- When pennants trail and street-festoons hang from the windows,
- When Broadway is entirely given up to foot-passengers and
- foot-standers, when the mass is densest,
- When the facades of the houses are alive with people, when eyes
- gaze riveted tens of thousands at a time,
- When the guests from the islands advance, when the pageant moves
- forward visible,
- When the summons is made, when the answer that waited thousands
- of years answers,
- I too arising, answering, descend to the pavements, merge with the
- crowd, and gaze with them.
-
- 2
- Superb-faced Manhattan!
- Comrade Americanos! to us, then at last the Orient comes.
- To us, my city,
- Where our tall-topt marble and iron beauties range on opposite
- sides, to walk in the space between,
- To-day our Antipodes comes.
-
- The Originatress comes,
- The nest of languages, the bequeather of poems, the race of eld,
- Florid with blood, pensive, rapt with musings, hot with passion,
- Sultry with perfume, with ample and flowing garments,
- With sunburnt visage, with intense soul and glittering eyes,
- The race of Brahma comes.
-
- See my cantabile! these and more are flashing to us from the procession,
- As it moves changing, a kaleidoscope divine it moves changing before us.
-
-
- For not the envoys nor the tann’d Japanee from his island only,
- Lithe and silent the Hindoo appears, the Asiatic continent itself
- appears, the past, the dead,
- The murky night-morning of wonder and fable inscrutable,
- The envelop’d mysteries, the old and unknown hive-bees,
- The north, the sweltering south, eastern Assyria, the Hebrews, the
- ancient of ancients,
- Vast desolated cities, the gliding present, all of these and more
- are in the pageant-procession.
-
- Geography, the world, is in it,
- The Great Sea, the brood of islands, Polynesia, the coast beyond,
- The coast you henceforth are facing--you Libertad! from your Western
- golden shores,
- The countries there with their populations, the millions en-masse
- are curiously here,
- The swarming market-places, the temples with idols ranged along the
- sides or at the end, bonze, brahmin, and llama,
- Mandarin, farmer, merchant, mechanic, and fisherman,
- The singing-girl and the dancing-girl, the ecstatic persons, the
- secluded emperors,
- Confucius himself, the great poets and heroes, the warriors, the castes,
- all,
- Trooping up, crowding from all directions, from the Altay mountains,
- From Thibet, from the four winding and far-flowing rivers of China,
- From the southern peninsulas and the demi-continental islands, from
- Malaysia,
- These and whatever belongs to them palpable show forth to me, and
- are seiz’d by me,
- And I am seiz’d by them, and friendlily held by them,
- Till as here them all I chant, Libertad! for themselves and for you.
-
- For I too raising my voice join the ranks of this pageant,
- I am the chanter, I chant aloud over the pageant,
- I chant the world on my Western sea,
- I chant copious the islands beyond, thick as stars in the sky,
- I chant the new empire grander than any before, as in a vision it
- comes to me,
- I chant America the mistress, I chant a greater supremacy,
- I chant projected a thousand blooming cities yet in time on those
- groups of sea-islands,
- My sail-ships and steam-ships threading the archipelagoes,
- My stars and stripes fluttering in the wind,
- Commerce opening, the sleep of ages having done its work, races
- reborn, refresh’d,
- Lives, works resumed--the object I know not--but the old, the Asiatic
- renew’d as it must be,
- Commencing from this day surrounded by the world.
-
- 3
- And you Libertad of the world!
- You shall sit in the middle well-pois’d thousands and thousands of years,
- As to-day from one side the nobles of Asia come to you,
- As to-morrow from the other side the queen of England sends her
- eldest son to you.
-
- The sign is reversing, the orb is enclosed,
- The ring is circled, the journey is done,
- The box-lid is but perceptibly open’d, nevertheless the perfume
- pours copiously out of the whole box.
-
- Young Libertad! with the venerable Asia, the all-mother,
- Be considerate with her now and ever hot Libertad, for you are all,
- Bend your proud neck to the long-off mother now sending messages
- over the archipelagoes to you,
- Bend your proud neck low for once, young Libertad.
-
- Here the children straying westward so long? so wide the tramping?
- Were the precedent dim ages debouching westward from Paradise so long?
- Were the centuries steadily footing it that way, all the while
- unknown, for you, for reasons?
-
- They are justified, they are accomplish’d, they shall now be turn’d
- the other way also, to travel toward you thence,
- They shall now also march obediently eastward for your sake Libertad.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XIX. SEA-DRIFT