- Thee for my recitative,
- Thee in the driving storm even as now, the snow, the winter-day declining,
- Thee in thy panoply, thy measur’d dual throbbing and thy beat convulsive,
- Thy black cylindric body, golden brass and silvery steel,
- Thy ponderous side-bars, parallel and connecting rods, gyrating,
- shuttling at thy sides,
- Thy metrical, now swelling pant and roar, now tapering in the distance,
- Thy great protruding head-light fix’d in front,
- Thy long, pale, floating vapor-pennants, tinged with delicate purple,
- The dense and murky clouds out-belching from thy smoke-stack,
- Thy knitted frame, thy springs and valves, the tremulous twinkle of
- thy wheels,
- Thy train of cars behind, obedient, merrily following,
- Through gale or calm, now swift, now slack, yet steadily careering;
- Type of the modern--emblem of motion and power--pulse of the continent,
- For once come serve the Muse and merge in verse, even as here I see thee,
- With storm and buffeting gusts of wind and falling snow,
- By day thy warning ringing bell to sound its notes,
- By night thy silent signal lamps to swing.
-
- Fierce-throated beauty!
- Roll through my chant with all thy lawless music, thy swinging lamps
- at night,
- Thy madly-whistled laughter, echoing, rumbling like an earthquake,
- rousing all,
- Law of thyself complete, thine own track firmly holding,
- (No sweetness debonair of tearful harp or glib piano thine,)
- Thy trills of shrieks by rocks and hills return’d,
- Launch’d o’er the prairies wide, across the lakes,
- To the free skies unpent and glad and strong.
-
-
-
-
- O Magnet-South
-
- O magnet-south! O glistening perfumed South! my South!
- O quick mettle, rich blood, impulse and love! good and evil! O all
- dear to me!
- O dear to me my birth-things--all moving things and the trees where
- I was born--the grains, plants, rivers,
- Dear to me my own slow sluggish rivers where they flow, distant,
- over flats of slivery sands or through swamps,
- Dear to me the Roanoke, the Savannah, the Altamahaw, the Pedee, the
- Tombigbee, the Santee, the Coosa and the Sabine,
- O pensive, far away wandering, I return with my soul to haunt their
- banks again,
- Again in Florida I float on transparent lakes, I float on the
- Okeechobee, I cross the hummock-land or through pleasant openings
- or dense forests,
- I see the parrots in the woods, I see the papaw-tree and the
- blossoming titi;
- Again, sailing in my coaster on deck, I coast off Georgia, I coast
- up the Carolinas,
- I see where the live-oak is growing, I see where the yellow-pine,
- the scented bay-tree, the lemon and orange, the cypress, the
- graceful palmetto,
- I pass rude sea-headlands and enter Pamlico sound through an inlet,
- and dart my vision inland;
- O the cotton plant! the growing fields of rice, sugar, hemp!
- The cactus guarded with thorns, the laurel-tree with large white flowers,
- The range afar, the richness and barrenness, the old woods charged
- with mistletoe and trailing moss,
- The piney odor and the gloom, the awful natural stillness, (here in
- these dense swamps the freebooter carries his gun, and the
- fugitive has his conceal’d hut;)
- O the strange fascination of these half-known half-impassable
- swamps, infested by reptiles, resounding with the bellow of the
- alligator, the sad noises of the night-owl and the wild-cat, and
- the whirr of the rattlesnake,
- The mocking-bird, the American mimic, singing all the forenoon,
- singing through the moon-lit night,
- The humming-bird, the wild turkey, the raccoon, the opossum;
- A Kentucky corn-field, the tall, graceful, long-leav’d corn,
- slender, flapping, bright green, with tassels, with beautiful
- ears each well-sheath’d in its husk;
- O my heart! O tender and fierce pangs, I can stand them not, I will depart;
- O to be a Virginian where I grew up! O to be a Carolinian!
- O longings irrepressible! O I will go back to old Tennessee and
- never wander more.
-
-
-
-
- Mannahatta
-
- I was asking for something specific and perfect for my city,
- Whereupon lo! upsprang the aboriginal name.
-
- Now I see what there is in a name, a word, liquid, sane, unruly,
- musical, self-sufficient,
- I see that the word of my city is that word from of old,
- Because I see that word nested in nests of water-bays, superb,
- Rich, hemm’d thick all around with sailships and steamships, an
- island sixteen miles long, solid-founded,
- Numberless crowded streets, high growths of iron, slender, strong,
- light, splendidly uprising toward clear skies,
- Tides swift and ample, well-loved by me, toward sundown,
- The flowing sea-currents, the little islands, larger adjoining
- islands, the heights, the villas,
- The countless masts, the white shore-steamers, the lighters, the
- ferry-boats, the black sea-steamers well-model’d,
- The down-town streets, the jobbers’ houses of business, the houses
- of business of the ship-merchants and money-brokers, the river-streets,
- Immigrants arriving, fifteen or twenty thousand in a week,
- The carts hauling goods, the manly race of drivers of horses, the
- brown-faced sailors,
- The summer air, the bright sun shining, and the sailing clouds aloft,
- The winter snows, the sleigh-bells, the broken ice in the river,
- passing along up or down with the flood-tide or ebb-tide,
- The mechanics of the city, the masters, well-form’d,
- beautiful-faced, looking you straight in the eyes,
- Trottoirs throng’d, vehicles, Broadway, the women, the shops and shows,
- A million people--manners free and superb--open voices--hospitality--
- the most courageous and friendly young men,
- City of hurried and sparkling waters! city of spires and masts!
- City nested in bays! my city!
-
-
-
-
- All Is Truth
-
- O me, man of slack faith so long,
- Standing aloof, denying portions so long,
- Only aware to-day of compact all-diffused truth,
- Discovering to-day there is no lie or form of lie, and can be none,
- but grows as inevitably upon itself as the truth does upon itself,
- Or as any law of the earth or any natural production of the earth does.
-
- (This is curious and may not be realized immediately, but it must be
- realized,
- I feel in myself that I represent falsehoods equally with the rest,
- And that the universe does.)
-
- Where has fail’d a perfect return indifferent of lies or the truth?
- Is it upon the ground, or in water or fire? or in the spirit of man?
- or in the meat and blood?
-
- Meditating among liars and retreating sternly into myself, I see
- that there are really no liars or lies after all,
- And that nothing fails its perfect return, and that what are called
- lies are perfect returns,
- And that each thing exactly represents itself and what has preceded it,
- And that the truth includes all, and is compact just as much as
- space is compact,
- And that there is no flaw or vacuum in the amount of the truth--but
- that all is truth without exception;
- And henceforth I will go celebrate any thing I see or am,
- And sing and laugh and deny nothing.
-
-
-
-
- A Riddle Song
-
- That which eludes this verse and any verse,
- Unheard by sharpest ear, unform’d in clearest eye or cunningest mind,
- Nor lore nor fame, nor happiness nor wealth,
- And yet the pulse of every heart and life throughout the world incessantly,
- Which you and I and all pursuing ever ever miss,
- Open but still a secret, the real of the real, an illusion,
- Costless, vouchsafed to each, yet never man the owner,
- Which poets vainly seek to put in rhyme, historians in prose,
- Which sculptor never chisel’d yet, nor painter painted,
- Which vocalist never sung, nor orator nor actor ever utter’d,
- Invoking here and now I challenge for my song.
-
- Indifferently, ’mid public, private haunts, in solitude,
- Behind the mountain and the wood,
- Companion of the city’s busiest streets, through the assemblage,
- It and its radiations constantly glide.
-
- In looks of fair unconscious babes,
- Or strangely in the coffin’d dead,
- Or show of breaking dawn or stars by night,
- As some dissolving delicate film of dreams,
- Hiding yet lingering.
-
- Two little breaths of words comprising it,
- Two words, yet all from first to last comprised in it.
-
- How ardently for it!
- How many ships have sail’d and sunk for it!
-
- How many travelers started from their homes and neer return’d!
- How much of genius boldly staked and lost for it!
- What countless stores of beauty, love, ventur’d for it!
- How all superbest deeds since Time began are traceable to it--and
- shall be to the end!
- How all heroic martyrdoms to it!
- How, justified by it, the horrors, evils, battles of the earth!
- How the bright fascinating lambent flames of it, in every age and
- land, have drawn men’s eyes,
- Rich as a sunset on the Norway coast, the sky, the islands, and the cliffs,
- Or midnight’s silent glowing northern lights unreachable.
-
- Haply God’s riddle it, so vague and yet so certain,
- The soul for it, and all the visible universe for it,
- And heaven at last for it.
-
-
-
-
- Excelsior
-
- Who has gone farthest? for I would go farther,
- And who has been just? for I would be the most just person of the earth,
- And who most cautious? for I would be more cautious,
- And who has been happiest? O I think it is I--I think no one was
- ever happier than I,
- And who has lavish’d all? for I lavish constantly the best I have,
- And who proudest? for I think I have reason to be the proudest son
- alive--for I am the son of the brawny and tall-topt city,
- And who has been bold and true? for I would be the boldest and
- truest being of the universe,
- And who benevolent? for I would show more benevolence than all the rest,
- And who has receiv’d the love of the most friends? for I know what
- it is to receive the passionate love of many friends,
- And who possesses a perfect and enamour’d body? for I do not believe
- any one possesses a more perfect or enamour’d body than mine,
- And who thinks the amplest thoughts? for I would surround those thoughts,
- And who has made hymns fit for the earth? for I am mad with
- devouring ecstasy to make joyous hymns for the whole earth.
-
-
-
-
- Ah Poverties, Wincings, and Sulky Retreats
-
- Ah poverties, wincings, and sulky retreats,
- Ah you foes that in conflict have overcome me,
- (For what is my life or any man’s life but a conflict with foes, the
- old, the incessant war?)
- You degradations, you tussle with passions and appetites,
- You smarts from dissatisfied friendships, (ah wounds the sharpest of all!)
- You toil of painful and choked articulations, you meannesses,
- You shallow tongue-talks at tables, (my tongue the shallowest of any;)
- You broken resolutions, you racking angers, you smother’d ennuis!
- Ah think not you finally triumph, my real self has yet to come forth,
- It shall yet march forth o’ermastering, till all lies beneath me,
- It shall yet stand up the soldier of ultimate victory.
-
-
-
-
- Thoughts
-
- Of public opinion,
- Of a calm and cool fiat sooner or later, (how impassive! how certain
- and final!)
- Of the President with pale face asking secretly to himself, What
- will the people say at last?
- Of the frivolous Judge--of the corrupt Congressman, Governor,
- Mayor--of such as these standing helpless and exposed,
- Of the mumbling and screaming priest, (soon, soon deserted,)
- Of the lessening year by year of venerableness, and of the dicta of
- officers, statutes, pulpits, schools,
- Of the rising forever taller and stronger and broader of the
- intuitions of men and women, and of Self-esteem and Personality;
- Of the true New World--of the Democracies resplendent en-masse,
- Of the conformity of politics, armies, navies, to them,
- Of the shining sun by them--of the inherent light, greater than the rest,
- Of the envelopment of all by them, and the effusion of all from them.
-
-
-
-
- Mediums
-
- They shall arise in the States,
- They shall report Nature, laws, physiology, and happiness,
- They shall illustrate Democracy and the kosmos,
- They shall be alimentive, amative, perceptive,
- They shall be complete women and men, their pose brawny and supple,
- their drink water, their blood clean and clear,
- They shall fully enjoy materialism and the sight of products, they
- shall enjoy the sight of the beef, lumber, bread-stuffs, of
- Chicago the great city.
- They shall train themselves to go in public to become orators and
- oratresses,
- Strong and sweet shall their tongues be, poems and materials of
- poems shall come from their lives, they shall be makers and finders,
- Of them and of their works shall emerge divine conveyers, to convey gospels,
- Characters, events, retrospections, shall be convey’d in gospels,
- trees, animals, waters, shall be convey’d,
- Death, the future, the invisible faith, shall all be convey’d.
-
-
-
-
- Weave in, My Hardy Life
-
- Weave in, weave in, my hardy life,
- Weave yet a soldier strong and full for great campaigns to come,
- Weave in red blood, weave sinews in like ropes, the senses, sight weave in,
- Weave lasting sure, weave day and night the wet, the warp, incessant
- weave, tire not,
- (We know not what the use O life, nor know the aim, the end, nor
- really aught we know,
- But know the work, the need goes on and shall go on, the
- death-envelop’d march of peace as well as war goes on,)
- For great campaigns of peace the same the wiry threads to weave,
- We know not why or what, yet weave, forever weave.
-
-
-
-
- Spain, 1873-74
-
- Out of the murk of heaviest clouds,
- Out of the feudal wrecks and heap’d-up skeletons of kings,
- Out of that old entire European debris, the shatter’d mummeries,
- Ruin’d cathedrals, crumble of palaces, tombs of priests,
- Lo, Freedom’s features fresh undimm’d look forth--the same immortal
- face looks forth;
- (A glimpse as of thy Mother’s face Columbia,
- A flash significant as of a sword,
- Beaming towards thee.)
-
- Nor think we forget thee maternal;
- Lag’d’st thou so long? shall the clouds close again upon thee?
- Ah, but thou hast thyself now appear’d to us--we know thee,
- Thou hast given us a sure proof, the glimpse of thyself,
- Thou waitest there as everywhere thy time.
-
-
-
-
- By Broad Potomac’s Shore
-
- By broad Potomac’s shore, again old tongue,
- (Still uttering, still ejaculating, canst never cease this babble?)
- Again old heart so gay, again to you, your sense, the full flush
- spring returning,
- Again the freshness and the odors, again Virginia’s summer sky,
- pellucid blue and silver,
- Again the forenoon purple of the hills,
- Again the deathless grass, so noiseless soft and green,
- Again the blood-red roses blooming.
-
- Perfume this book of mine O blood-red roses!
- Lave subtly with your waters every line Potomac!
- Give me of you O spring, before I close, to put between its pages!
- O forenoon purple of the hills, before I close, of you!
- O deathless grass, of you!
-
-
-
-
- From Far Dakota’s Canyons [June 25, 1876]
-
- From far Dakota’s canyons,
- Lands of the wild ravine, the dusky Sioux, the lonesome stretch, the
- silence,
- Haply to-day a mournful wall, haply a trumpet-note for heroes.
-
- The battle-bulletin,
- The Indian ambuscade, the craft, the fatal environment,
- The cavalry companies fighting to the last in sternest heroism,
- In the midst of their little circle, with their slaughter’d horses
- for breastworks,
- The fall of Custer and all his officers and men.
-
- Continues yet the old, old legend of our race,
- The loftiest of life upheld by death,
- The ancient banner perfectly maintain’d,
- O lesson opportune, O how I welcome thee!
-
- As sitting in dark days,
- Lone, sulky, through the time’s thick murk looking in vain for
- light, for hope,
- From unsuspected parts a fierce and momentary proof,
- (The sun there at the centre though conceal’d,
- Electric life forever at the centre,)
- Breaks forth a lightning flash.
-
- Thou of the tawny flowing hair in battle,
- I erewhile saw, with erect head, pressing ever in front, bearing a
- bright sword in thy hand,
- Now ending well in death the splendid fever of thy deeds,
- (I bring no dirge for it or thee, I bring a glad triumphal sonnet,)
- Desperate and glorious, aye in defeat most desperate, most glorious,
- After thy many battles in which never yielding up a gun or a color,
- Leaving behind thee a memory sweet to soldiers,
- Thou yieldest up thyself.
-
-
-
-
- Old War-Dreams
-
- In midnight sleep of many a face of anguish,
- Of the look at first of the mortally wounded, (of that indescribable look,)
- Of the dead on their backs with arms extended wide,
- I dream, I dream, I dream.
-
- Of scenes of Nature, fields and mountains,
- Of skies so beauteous after a storm, and at night the moon so
- unearthly bright,
- Shining sweetly, shining down, where we dig the trenches and
- gather the heaps,
- I dream, I dream, I dream.
-
- Long have they pass’d, faces and trenches and fields,
- Where through the carnage I moved with a callous composure, or away
- from the fallen,
- Onward I sped at the time--but now of their forms at night,
- I dream, I dream, I dream.
-
-
-
-
- Thick-Sprinkled Bunting
-
- Thick-sprinkled bunting! flag of stars!
- Long yet your road, fateful flag--long yet your road, and lined with
- bloody death,
- For the prize I see at issue at last is the world,
- All its ships and shores I see interwoven with your threads greedy banner;
- Dream’d again the flags of kings, highest borne to flaunt unrival’d?
- O hasten flag of man--O with sure and steady step, passing highest
- flags of kings,
- Walk supreme to the heavens mighty symbol--run up above them all,
- Flag of stars! thick-sprinkled bunting!
-
-
-
-
- What Best I See in Thee
- [To U. S. G. return’d from his World’s Tour]
-
- What best I see in thee,
- Is not that where thou mov’st down history’s great highways,
- Ever undimm’d by time shoots warlike victory’s dazzle,
- Or that thou sat’st where Washington sat, ruling the land in peace,
- Or thou the man whom feudal Europe feted, venerable Asia swarm’d upon,
- Who walk’d with kings with even pace the round world’s promenade;
- But that in foreign lands, in all thy walks with kings,
- Those prairie sovereigns of the West, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois,
- Ohio’s, Indiana’s millions, comrades, farmers, soldiers, all to the front,
- Invisibly with thee walking with kings with even pace the round
- world’s promenade,
- Were all so justified.
-
-
-
-
- Spirit That Form’d This Scene
- [Written in Platte Canyon, Colorado]
-
- Spirit that form’d this scene,
- These tumbled rock-piles grim and red,
- These reckless heaven-ambitious peaks,
- These gorges, turbulent-clear streams, this naked freshness,
- These formless wild arrays, for reasons of their own,
- I know thee, savage spirit--we have communed together,
- Mine too such wild arrays, for reasons of their own;
- Wast charged against my chants they had forgotten art?
- To fuse within themselves its rules precise and delicatesse?
- The lyrist’s measur’d beat, the wrought-out temple’s grace--column
- and polish’d arch forgot?
- But thou that revelest here--spirit that form’d this scene,
- They have remember’d thee.
-
-
-
-
- As I Walk These Broad Majestic Days
-
- As I walk these broad majestic days of peace,
- (For the war, the struggle of blood finish’d, wherein, O terrific Ideal,
- Against vast odds erewhile having gloriously won,
- Now thou stridest on, yet perhaps in time toward denser wars,
- Perhaps to engage in time in still more dreadful contests, dangers,
- Longer campaigns and crises, labors beyond all others,)
- Around me I hear that eclat of the world, politics, produce,
- The announcements of recognized things, science,
- The approved growth of cities and the spread of inventions.
-
- I see the ships, (they will last a few years,)
- The vast factories with their foremen and workmen,
- And hear the indorsement of all, and do not object to it.
-
- But I too announce solid things,
- Science, ships, politics, cities, factories, are not nothing,
- Like a grand procession to music of distant bugles pouring,
- triumphantly moving, and grander heaving in sight,
- They stand for realities--all is as it should be.
-
- Then my realities;
- What else is so real as mine?
- Libertad and the divine average, freedom to every slave on the face
- of the earth,
- The rapt promises and lumine of seers, the spiritual world, these
- centuries-lasting songs,
- And our visions, the visions of poets, the most solid announcements
- of any.
-
-
-
-
- A Clear Midnight
-
- This is thy hour O Soul, thy free flight into the wordless,
- Away from books, away from art, the day erased, the lesson done,
- Thee fully forth emerging, silent, gazing, pondering the themes thou
- lovest best,
- Night, sleep, death and the stars.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XXXIII. SONGS OF PARTING
-
-
- As the Time Draws Nigh
-
- As the time draws nigh glooming a cloud,
- A dread beyond of I know not what darkens me.
-
- I shall go forth,
- I shall traverse the States awhile, but I cannot tell whither or how long,
- Perhaps soon some day or night while I am singing my voice will
- suddenly cease.
-
- O book, O chants! must all then amount to but this?
- Must we barely arrive at this beginning of us? --and yet it is
- enough, O soul;
- O soul, we have positively appear’d--that is enough.
-
-
-
-
- Years of the Modern
-
- Years of the modern! years of the unperform’d!
- Your horizon rises, I see it parting away for more august dramas,
- I see not America only, not only Liberty’s nation but other nations
- preparing,
- I see tremendous entrances and exits, new combinations, the solidarity
- of races,
- I see that force advancing with irresistible power on the world’s stage,
- (Have the old forces, the old wars, played their parts? are the acts
- suitable to them closed?)
- I see Freedom, completely arm’d and victorious and very haughty,
- with Law on one side and Peace on the other,
- A stupendous trio all issuing forth against the idea of caste;
- What historic denouements are these we so rapidly approach?
- I see men marching and countermarching by swift millions,
- I see the frontiers and boundaries of the old aristocracies broken,
- I see the landmarks of European kings removed,
- I see this day the People beginning their landmarks, (all others give way;)
- Never were such sharp questions ask’d as this day,
- Never was average man, his soul, more energetic, more like a God,
- Lo, how he urges and urges, leaving the masses no rest!
- His daring foot is on land and sea everywhere, he colonizes the
- Pacific, the archipelagoes,
- With the steamship, the electric telegraph, the newspaper, the
- wholesale engines of war,
- With these and the world-spreading factories he interlinks all
- geography, all lands;
- What whispers are these O lands, running ahead of you, passing under
- the seas?
- Are all nations communing? is there going to be but one heart to the globe?
- Is humanity forming en-masse? for lo, tyrants tremble, crowns grow dim,
- The earth, restive, confronts a new era, perhaps a general divine war,
- No one knows what will happen next, such portents fill the days and nights;
- Years prophetical! the space ahead as I walk, as I vainly try to
- pierce it, is full of phantoms,
- Unborn deeds, things soon to be, project their shapes around me,
- This incredible rush and heat, this strange ecstatic fever of dreams
- O years!
- Your dreams O years, how they penetrate through me! (I know not
- whether I sleep or wake;)
- The perform’d America and Europe grow dim, retiring in shadow behind me,
- The unperform’d, more gigantic than ever, advance, advance upon me.
-
-
-
-
- Ashes of Soldiers
-
- Ashes of soldiers South or North,
- As I muse retrospective murmuring a chant in thought,
- The war resumes, again to my sense your shapes,
- And again the advance of the armies.
-
- Noiseless as mists and vapors,
- From their graves in the trenches ascending,
- From cemeteries all through Virginia and Tennessee,
- From every point of the compass out of the countless graves,
- In wafted clouds, in myriads large, or squads of twos or threes or
- single ones they come,
- And silently gather round me.
-
- Now sound no note O trumpeters,
- Not at the head of my cavalry parading on spirited horses,
- With sabres drawn and glistening, and carbines by their thighs, (ah
- my brave horsemen!
- My handsome tan-faced horsemen! what life, what joy and pride,
- With all the perils were yours.)
-
- Nor you drummers, neither at reveille at dawn,
- Nor the long roll alarming the camp, nor even the muffled beat for burial,
- Nothing from you this time O drummers bearing my warlike drums.
-
- But aside from these and the marts of wealth and the crowded promenade,
- Admitting around me comrades close unseen by the rest and voiceless,
- The slain elate and alive again, the dust and debris alive,
- I chant this chant of my silent soul in the name of all dead soldiers.
-
- Faces so pale with wondrous eyes, very dear, gather closer yet,
- Draw close, but speak not.
-
- Phantoms of countless lost,
- Invisible to the rest henceforth become my companions,
- Follow me ever--desert me not while I live.
-
- Sweet are the blooming cheeks of the living--sweet are the musical
- voices sounding,
- But sweet, ah sweet, are the dead with their silent eyes.
-
- Dearest comrades, all is over and long gone,
- But love is not over--and what love, O comrades!
- Perfume from battle-fields rising, up from the foetor arising.
-
- Perfume therefore my chant, O love, immortal love,
- Give me to bathe the memories of all dead soldiers,
- Shroud them, embalm them, cover them all over with tender pride.
-
- Perfume all--make all wholesome,
- Make these ashes to nourish and blossom,
- O love, solve all, fructify all with the last chemistry.
-
- Give me exhaustless, make me a fountain,
- That I exhale love from me wherever I go like a moist perennial dew,
- For the ashes of all dead soldiers South or North.
-
-
-
-
- Thoughts
-
- 1
- Of these years I sing,
- How they pass and have pass’d through convuls’d pains, as through
- parturitions,
- How America illustrates birth, muscular youth, the promise, the sure
- fulfilment, the absolute success, despite of people--illustrates
- evil as well as good,
- The vehement struggle so fierce for unity in one’s-self,
- How many hold despairingly yet to the models departed, caste, myths,
- obedience, compulsion, and to infidelity,
- How few see the arrived models, the athletes, the Western States, or
- see freedom or spirituality, or hold any faith in results,
- (But I see the athletes, and I see the results of the war glorious
- and inevitable, and they again leading to other results.)
-
- How the great cities appear--how the Democratic masses, turbulent,
- willful, as I love them,
- How the whirl, the contest, the wrestle of evil with good, the
- sounding and resounding, keep on and on,
- How society waits unform’d, and is for a while between things ended
- and things begun,
- How America is the continent of glories, and of the triumph of
- freedom and of the Democracies, and of the fruits of society, and
- of all that is begun,
- And how the States are complete in themselves--and how all triumphs
- and glories are complete in themselves, to lead onward,
- And how these of mine and of the States will in their turn be
- convuls’d, and serve other parturitions and transitions,
- And how all people, sights, combinations, the democratic masses too,
- serve--and how every fact, and war itself, with all its horrors,
- serves,
- And how now or at any time each serves the exquisite transition of death.
-
- 2
- Of seeds dropping into the ground, of births,
- Of the steady concentration of America, inland, upward, to
- impregnable and swarming places,
- Of what Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas, and the rest, are to be,
- Of what a few years will show there in Nebraska, Colorado, Nevada,
- and the rest,
- (Or afar, mounting the Northern Pacific to Sitka or Aliaska,)
- Of what the feuillage of America is the preparation for--and of what
- all sights, North, South, East and West, are,
- Of this Union welded in blood, of the solemn price paid, of the
- unnamed lost ever present in my mind;
- Of the temporary use of materials for identity’s sake,
- Of the present, passing, departing--of the growth of completer men
- than any yet,
- Of all sloping down there where the fresh free giver the mother, the
- Mississippi flows,
- Of mighty inland cities yet unsurvey’d and unsuspected,
- Of the new and good names, of the modern developments, of
- inalienable homesteads,
- Of a free and original life there, of simple diet and clean and
- sweet blood,
- Of litheness, majestic faces, clear eyes, and perfect physique there,
- Of immense spiritual results future years far West, each side of the
- Anahuacs,
- Of these songs, well understood there, (being made for that area,)
- Of the native scorn of grossness and gain there,
- (O it lurks in me night and day--what is gain after all to savageness
- and freedom?)
-
-
-
-
- Song at Sunset
-
- Splendor of ended day floating and filling me,
- Hour prophetic, hour resuming the past,
- Inflating my throat, you divine average,
- You earth and life till the last ray gleams I sing.
-
- Open mouth of my soul uttering gladness,
- Eyes of my soul seeing perfection,
- Natural life of me faithfully praising things,
- Corroborating forever the triumph of things.
-
- Illustrious every one!
- Illustrious what we name space, sphere of unnumber’d spirits,
- Illustrious the mystery of motion in all beings, even the tiniest insect,
- Illustrious the attribute of speech, the senses, the body,
- Illustrious the passing light--illustrious the pale reflection on
- the new moon in the western sky,
- Illustrious whatever I see or hear or touch, to the last.
-
- Good in all,
- In the satisfaction and aplomb of animals,
- In the annual return of the seasons,
- In the hilarity of youth,
- In the strength and flush of manhood,
- In the grandeur and exquisiteness of old age,
- In the superb vistas of death.
-
- Wonderful to depart!
- Wonderful to be here!
- The heart, to jet the all-alike and innocent blood!
- To breathe the air, how delicious!
- To speak--to walk--to seize something by the hand!
- To prepare for sleep, for bed, to look on my rose-color’d flesh!
- To be conscious of my body, so satisfied, so large!
- To be this incredible God I am!
- To have gone forth among other Gods, these men and women I love.
-
- Wonderful how I celebrate you and myself
- How my thoughts play subtly at the spectacles around!
- How the clouds pass silently overhead!
- How the earth darts on and on! and how the sun, moon, stars, dart on and on!
- How the water sports and sings! (surely it is alive!)
- How the trees rise and stand up, with strong trunks, with branches
- and leaves!
- (Surely there is something more in each of the trees, some living soul.)
-
- O amazement of things--even the least particle!
- O spirituality of things!
- O strain musical flowing through ages and continents, now reaching
- me and America!
- I take your strong chords, intersperse them, and cheerfully pass
- them forward.
-
- I too carol the sun, usher’d or at noon, or as now, setting,
- I too throb to the brain and beauty of the earth and of all the
- growths of the earth,
- I too have felt the resistless call of myself.
-
- As I steam’d down the Mississippi,
- As I wander’d over the prairies,
- As I have lived, as I have look’d through my windows my eyes,
- As I went forth in the morning, as I beheld the light breaking in the east,
- As I bathed on the beach of the Eastern Sea, and again on the beach
- of the Western Sea,
- As I roam’d the streets of inland Chicago, whatever streets I have roam’d,
- Or cities or silent woods, or even amid the sights of war,
- Wherever I have been I have charged myself with contentment and triumph.
-
- I sing to the last the equalities modern or old,
- I sing the endless finales of things,
- I say Nature continues, glory continues,
- I praise with electric voice,
- For I do not see one imperfection in the universe,
- And I do not see one cause or result lamentable at last in the universe.
-
- O setting sun! though the time has come,
- I still warble under you, if none else does, unmitigated adoration.
-
-
-
-
- As at Thy Portals Also Death
-
- As at thy portals also death,
- Entering thy sovereign, dim, illimitable grounds,
- To memories of my mother, to the divine blending, maternity,
- To her, buried and gone, yet buried not, gone not from me,
- (I see again the calm benignant face fresh and beautiful still,
- I sit by the form in the coffin,
- I kiss and kiss convulsively again the sweet old lips, the cheeks,
- the closed eyes in the coffin;)
- To her, the ideal woman, practical, spiritual, of all of earth,
- life, love, to me the best,
- I grave a monumental line, before I go, amid these songs,
- And set a tombstone here.
-
-
-
-
- My Legacy
-
- The business man the acquirer vast,
- After assiduous years surveying results, preparing for departure,
- Devises houses and lands to his children, bequeaths stocks, goods,
- funds for a school or hospital,
- Leaves money to certain companions to buy tokens, souvenirs of gems
- and gold.
-
- But I, my life surveying, closing,
- With nothing to show to devise from its idle years,
- Nor houses nor lands, nor tokens of gems or gold for my friends,
- Yet certain remembrances of the war for you, and after you,
- And little souvenirs of camps and soldiers, with my love,
- I bind together and bequeath in this bundle of songs.
-
-
-
-
- Pensive on Her Dead Gazing
-
- Pensive on her dead gazing I heard the Mother of All,
- Desperate on the torn bodies, on the forms covering the battlefields gazing,
- (As the last gun ceased, but the scent of the powder-smoke linger’d,)
- As she call’d to her earth with mournful voice while she stalk’d,
- Absorb them well O my earth, she cried, I charge you lose not my
- sons, lose not an atom,
- And you streams absorb them well, taking their dear blood,
- And you local spots, and you airs that swim above lightly impalpable,
- And all you essences of soil and growth, and you my rivers’ depths,
- And you mountain sides, and the woods where my dear children’s
- blood trickling redden’d,
- And you trees down in your roots to bequeath to all future trees,
- My dead absorb or South or North--my young men’s bodies absorb,
- and their precious precious blood,
- Which holding in trust for me faithfully back again give me many a
- year hence,
- In unseen essence and odor of surface and grass, centuries hence,
- In blowing airs from the fields back again give me my darlings, give
- my immortal heroes,
- Exhale me them centuries hence, breathe me their breath, let not an
- atom be lost,
- O years and graves! O air and soil! O my dead, an aroma sweet!
- Exhale them perennial sweet death, years, centuries hence.
-
-
-
-
- Camps of Green
-
- Nor alone those camps of white, old comrades of the wars,
- When as order’d forward, after a long march,
- Footsore and weary, soon as the light lessens we halt for the night,
- Some of us so fatigued carrying the gun and knapsack, dropping
- asleep in our tracks,
- Others pitching the little tents, and the fires lit up begin to sparkle,
- Outposts of pickets posted surrounding alert through the dark,
- And a word provided for countersign, careful for safety,
- Till to the call of the drummers at daybreak loudly beating the drums,
- We rise up refresh’d, the night and sleep pass’d over, and resume our
- journey,
- Or proceed to battle.
-
- Lo, the camps of the tents of green,
- Which the days of peace keep filling, and the days of war keep filling,
- With a mystic army, (is it too order’d forward? is it too only
- halting awhile,
- Till night and sleep pass over?)
-
- Now in those camps of green, in their tents dotting the world,
- In the parents, children, husbands, wives, in them, in the old and young,
- Sleeping under the sunlight, sleeping under the moonlight, content
- and silent there at last,
- Behold the mighty bivouac-field and waiting-camp of all,
- Of the corps and generals all, and the President over the corps and
- generals all,
- And of each of us O soldiers, and of each and all in the ranks we fought,
- (There without hatred we all, all meet.)
-
- For presently O soldiers, we too camp in our place in the
- bivouac-camps of green,
- But we need not provide for outposts, nor word for the countersign,
- Nor drummer to beat the morning drum.
-
-
-
-
- The Sobbing of the Bells [Midnight, Sept. 19-20, 1881]
-
- The sobbing of the bells, the sudden death-news everywhere,
- The slumberers rouse, the rapport of the People,
- (Full well they know that message in the darkness,
- Full well return, respond within their breasts, their brains, the
- sad reverberations,)
- The passionate toll and clang--city to city, joining, sounding, passing,
- Those heart-beats of a Nation in the night.
-
-
-
-
- As They Draw to a Close
-
- As they draw to a close,
- Of what underlies the precedent songs--of my aims in them,
- Of the seed I have sought to plant in them,
- Of joy, sweet joy, through many a year, in them,
- (For them, for them have I lived, in them my work is done,)
- Of many an aspiration fond, of many a dream and plan;
- Through Space and Time fused in a chant, and the flowing eternal identity,
- To Nature encompassing these, encompassing God--to the joyous,
- electric all,
- To the sense of Death, and accepting exulting in Death in its turn
- the same as life,
- The entrance of man to sing;
- To compact you, ye parted, diverse lives,
- To put rapport the mountains and rocks and streams,
- And the winds of the north, and the forests of oak and pine,
- With you O soul.
-
-
-
-
- Joy, Shipmate, Joy!
-
- Joy, shipmate, Joy!
- (Pleas’d to my soul at death I cry,)
- Our life is closed, our life begins,
- The long, long anchorage we leave,
- The ship is clear at last, she leaps!
- She swiftly courses from the shore,
- Joy, shipmate, joy.
-
-
-
-
- The Untold Want
-
- The untold want by life and land ne’er granted,
- Now voyager sail thou forth to seek and find.
-
-
-
-
- Portals
-
- What are those of the known but to ascend and enter the Unknown?
- And what are those of life but for Death?
-
-
-
-
- These Carols
-
- These carols sung to cheer my passage through the world I see,
- For completion I dedicate to the Invisible World.
-
-
-
-
- Now Finale to the Shore
-
- Now finale to the shore,
- Now land and life finale and farewell,
- Now Voyager depart, (much, much for thee is yet in store,)
- Often enough hast thou adventur’d o’er the seas,
- Cautiously cruising, studying the charts,
- Duly again to port and hawser’s tie returning;
- But now obey thy cherish’d secret wish,
- Embrace thy friends, leave all in order,
- To port and hawser’s tie no more returning,
- Depart upon thy endless cruise old Sailor.
-
-
-
-
- So Long!
-
- To conclude, I announce what comes after me.
-
- I remember I said before my leaves sprang at all,
- I would raise my voice jocund and strong with reference to consummations.
-
- When America does what was promis’d,
- When through these States walk a hundred millions of superb persons,
- When the rest part away for superb persons and contribute to them,
- When breeds of the most perfect mothers denote America,
- Then to me and mine our due fruition.
-
- I have press’d through in my own right,
- I have sung the body and the soul, war and peace have I sung, and
- the songs of life and death,
- And the songs of birth, and shown that there are many births.
-
- I have offer’d my style to every one, I have journey’d with confident step;
- While my pleasure is yet at the full I whisper So long!
- And take the young woman’s hand and the young man’s hand for the last time.
-
- I announce natural persons to arise,
- I announce justice triumphant,
- I announce uncompromising liberty and equality,
- I announce the justification of candor and the justification of pride.
-
- I announce that the identity of these States is a single identity only,
- I announce the Union more and more compact, indissoluble,
- I announce splendors and majesties to make all the previous politics
- of the earth insignificant.
-
- I announce adhesiveness, I say it shall be limitless, unloosen’d,
- I say you shall yet find the friend you were looking for.
-
- I announce a man or woman coming, perhaps you are the one, (So long!)
- I announce the great individual, fluid as Nature, chaste,
- affectionate, compassionate, fully arm’d.
-
- I announce a life that shall be copious, vehement, spiritual, bold,
- I announce an end that shall lightly and joyfully meet its translation.
-
- I announce myriads of youths, beautiful, gigantic, sweet-blooded,
- I announce a race of splendid and savage old men.
-
- O thicker and faster--(So long!)
- O crowding too close upon me,
- I foresee too much, it means more than I thought,
- It appears to me I am dying.
-
- Hasten throat and sound your last,
- Salute me--salute the days once more. Peal the old cry once more.
-
- Screaming electric, the atmosphere using,
- At random glancing, each as I notice absorbing,
- Swiftly on, but a little while alighting,
- Curious envelop’d messages delivering,
- Sparkles hot, seed ethereal down in the dirt dropping,
- Myself unknowing, my commission obeying, to question it never daring,
- To ages and ages yet the growth of the seed leaving,
- To troops out of the war arising, they the tasks I have set
- promulging,
- To women certain whispers of myself bequeathing, their affection
- me more clearly explaining,
- To young men my problems offering--no dallier I--I the muscle of
- their brains trying,
- So I pass, a little time vocal, visible, contrary,
- Afterward a melodious echo, passionately bent for, (death making
- me really undying,)
- The best of me then when no longer visible, for toward that I have
- been incessantly preparing.
-
- What is there more, that I lag and pause and crouch extended with
- unshut mouth?
- Is there a single final farewell?
- My songs cease, I abandon them,
- From behind the screen where I hid I advance personally solely to you.
-
- Camerado, this is no book,
- Who touches this touches a man,
- (Is it night? are we here together alone?)
- It is I you hold and who holds you,
- I spring from the pages into your arms--decease calls me forth.
-
- O how your fingers drowse me,
- Your breath falls around me like dew, your pulse lulls the tympans
- of my ears,
- I feel immerged from head to foot,
- Delicious, enough.
-
- Enough O deed impromptu and secret,
- Enough O gliding present--enough O summ’d-up past.
-
- Dear friend whoever you are take this kiss,
- I give it especially to you, do not forget me,
- I feel like one who has done work for the day to retire awhile,
- I receive now again of my many translations, from my avataras
- ascending, while others doubtless await me,
- An unknown sphere more real than I dream’d, more direct, darts
- awakening rays about me, So long!
- Remember my words, I may again return,
- I love you, I depart from materials,
- I am as one disembodied, triumphant, dead.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK XXXIV. SANDS AT SEVENTY
-
-
- Mannahatta
-
- My city’s fit and noble name resumed,
- Choice aboriginal name, with marvellous beauty, meaning,
- A rocky founded island--shores where ever gayly dash the coming,
- going, hurrying sea waves.
-
-
-
-
- Paumanok
-
- Sea-beauty! stretch’d and basking!
- One side thy inland ocean laving, broad, with copious commerce,
- steamers, sails,
- And one the Atlantic’s wind caressing, fierce or gentle--mighty hulls
- dark-gliding in the distance.
- Isle of sweet brooks of drinking-water--healthy air and soil!
- Isle of the salty shore and breeze and brine!
-
-
-
-
- From Montauk Point
-
- I stand as on some mighty eagle’s beak,
- Eastward the sea absorbing, viewing, (nothing but sea and sky,)
- The tossing waves, the foam, the ships in the distance,
- The wild unrest, the snowy, curling caps--that inbound urge and urge
- of waves,
- Seeking the shores forever.
-
-
-
-
- To Those Who’ve Fail’d
-
- To those who’ve fail’d, in aspiration vast,
- To unnam’d soldiers fallen in front on the lead,
- To calm, devoted engineers--to over-ardent travelers--to pilots on
- their ships,
- To many a lofty song and picture without recognition--I’d rear
- laurel-cover’d monument,
- High, high above the rest--To all cut off before their time,
- Possess’d by some strange spirit of fire,
- Quench’d by an early death.
-
-
-
-
- A Carol Closing Sixty-Nine
-
- A carol closing sixty-nine--a resume--a repetition,
- My lines in joy and hope continuing on the same,
- Of ye, O God, Life, Nature, Freedom, Poetry;
- Of you, my Land--your rivers, prairies, States--you, mottled Flag I love,
- Your aggregate retain’d entire--Of north, south, east and west, your
- items all;
- Of me myself--the jocund heart yet beating in my breast,
- The body wreck’d, old, poor and paralyzed--the strange inertia
- falling pall-like round me,
- The burning fires down in my sluggish blood not yet extinct,
- The undiminish’d faith--the groups of loving friends.
-
-
-
-
- The Bravest Soldiers
-
- Brave, brave were the soldiers (high named to-day) who lived through
- the fight;
- But the bravest press’d to the front and fell, unnamed, unknown.
-
-
-
-
- A Font of Type
-
- This latent mine--these unlaunch’d voices--passionate powers,
- Wrath, argument, or praise, or comic leer, or prayer devout,
- (Not nonpareil, brevier, bourgeois, long primer merely,)
- These ocean waves arousable to fury and to death,
- Or sooth’d to ease and sheeny sun and sleep,
- Within the pallid slivers slumbering.
-
-
-
-
- As I Sit Writing Here
-
- As I sit writing here, sick and grown old,
- Not my least burden is that dulness of the years, querilities,
- Ungracious glooms, aches, lethargy, constipation, whimpering ennui,
- May filter in my dally songs.
-
-
-
-
- My Canary Bird
-
- Did we count great, O soul, to penetrate the themes of mighty books,
- Absorbing deep and full from thoughts, plays, speculations?
- But now from thee to me, caged bird, to feel thy joyous warble,
- Filling the air, the lonesome room, the long forenoon,
- Is it not just as great, O soul?
-
-
-
-
- Queries to My Seventieth Year
-
- Approaching, nearing, curious,
- Thou dim, uncertain spectre--bringest thou life or death?
- Strength, weakness, blindness, more paralysis and heavier?
- Or placid skies and sun? Wilt stir the waters yet?
- Or haply cut me short for good? Or leave me here as now,
- Dull, parrot-like and old, with crack’d voice harping, screeching?
-
-
-
-
- The Wallabout Martyrs
-
- Greater than memory of Achilles or Ulysses,
- More, more by far to thee than tomb of Alexander,
- Those cart loads of old charnel ashes, scales and splints of mouldy bones,
- Once living men--once resolute courage, aspiration, strength,
- The stepping stones to thee to-day and here, America.
-
-
-
-
- The First Dandelion
-
- Simple and fresh and fair from winter’s close emerging,
- As if no artifice of fashion, business, politics, had ever been,
- Forth from its sunny nook of shelter’d grass--innocent, golden, calm
- as the dawn,
- The spring’s first dandelion shows its trustful face.
-
-
-
-
- America
-
- Centre of equal daughters, equal sons,
- All, all alike endear’d, grown, ungrown, young or old,
- Strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich,
- Perennial with the Earth, with Freedom, Law and Love,
- A grand, sane, towering, seated Mother,
- Chair’d in the adamant of Time.
-
-
-
-
- Memories
-
- How sweet the silent backward tracings!
- The wanderings as in dreams--the meditation of old times resumed
- --their loves, joys, persons, voyages.
-
-
-
-
- To-Day and Thee
-
- The appointed winners in a long-stretch’d game;
- The course of Time and nations--Egypt, India, Greece and Rome;
- The past entire, with all its heroes, histories, arts, experiments,
- Its store of songs, inventions, voyages, teachers, books,
- Garner’d for now and thee--To think of it!
- The heirdom all converged in thee!
-
-
-
-
- After the Dazzle of Day
-
- After the dazzle of day is gone,
- Only the dark, dark night shows to my eyes the stars;
- After the clangor of organ majestic, or chorus, or perfect band,
- Silent, athwart my soul, moves the symphony true.
-
-
-
-
- Abraham Lincoln, Born Feb. 12, 1809
-
- To-day, from each and all, a breath of prayer--a pulse of thought,
- To memory of Him--to birth of Him.
-
-
-
-
- Out of May’s Shows Selected
-
- Apple orchards, the trees all cover’d with blossoms;
- Wheat fields carpeted far and near in vital emerald green;
- The eternal, exhaustless freshness of each early morning;
- The yellow, golden, transparent haze of the warm afternoon sun;
- The aspiring lilac bushes with profuse purple or white flowers.
-
-
-
-
- Halcyon Days
-
- Not from successful love alone,
- Nor wealth, nor honor’d middle age, nor victories of politics or war;
- But as life wanes, and all the turbulent passions calm,
- As gorgeous, vapory, silent hues cover the evening sky,
- As softness, fulness, rest, suffuse the frame, like freshier, balmier air,
- As the days take on a mellower light, and the apple at last hangs
- really finish’d and indolent-ripe on the tree,
- Then for the teeming quietest, happiest days of all!
- The brooding and blissful halcyon days!
-
-
-
- FANCIES AT NAVESINK
-
- [I] The Pilot in the Mist
-
- Steaming the northern rapids--(an old St. Lawrence reminiscence,
- A sudden memory-flash comes back, I know not why,
- Here waiting for the sunrise, gazing from this hill;)
- Again ’tis just at morning--a heavy haze contends with daybreak,
- Again the trembling, laboring vessel veers me--I press through
- foam-dash’d rocks that almost touch me,
- Again I mark where aft the small thin Indian helmsman
- Looms in the mist, with brow elate and governing hand.
-
-
-
- [II] Had I the Choice
-
- Had I the choice to tally greatest bards,
- To limn their portraits, stately, beautiful, and emulate at will,
- Homer with all his wars and warriors--Hector, Achilles, Ajax,
- Or Shakspere’s woe-entangled Hamlet, Lear, Othello--Tennyson’s fair ladies,
- Metre or wit the best, or choice conceit to wield in perfect rhyme,
- delight of singers;
- These, these, O sea, all these I’d gladly barter,
- Would you the undulation of one wave, its trick to me transfer,
- Or breathe one breath of yours upon my verse,
- And leave its odor there.
-
-
-
- [III] You Tides with Ceaseless Swell
-
- You tides with ceaseless swell! you power that does this work!
- You unseen force, centripetal, centrifugal, through space’s spread,
- Rapport of sun, moon, earth, and all the constellations,
- What are the messages by you from distant stars to us? what Sirius’?
- what Capella’s?
- What central heart--and you the pulse--vivifies all? what boundless
- aggregate of all?
- What subtle indirection and significance in you? what clue to all in
- you? what fluid, vast identity,
- Holding the universe with all its parts as one--as sailing in a ship?
-
-
-
- [IV] Last of Ebb, and Daylight Waning
-
- Last of ebb, and daylight waning,
- Scented sea-cool landward making, smells of sedge and salt incoming,
- With many a half-caught voice sent up from the eddies,
- Many a muffled confession--many a sob and whisper’d word,
- As of speakers far or hid.
-
- How they sweep down and out! how they mutter!
- Poets unnamed--artists greatest of any, with cherish’d lost designs,
- Love’s unresponse--a chorus of age’s complaints--hope’s last words,
- Some suicide’s despairing cry, Away to the boundless waste, and
- never again return.
-
- On to oblivion then!
- On, on, and do your part, ye burying, ebbing tide!
- On for your time, ye furious debouche!
-
-
-
- [V] And Yet Not You Alone
-
- And yet not you alone, twilight and burying ebb,
- Nor you, ye lost designs alone--nor failures, aspirations;
- I know, divine deceitful ones, your glamour’s seeming;
- Duly by you, from you, the tide and light again--duly the hinges turning,
- Duly the needed discord-parts offsetting, blending,
- Weaving from you, from Sleep, Night, Death itself,
- The rhythmus of Birth eternal.
-
-
-
- [VI] Proudly the Flood Comes In
-
- Proudly the flood comes in, shouting, foaming, advancing,
- Long it holds at the high, with bosom broad outswelling,
- All throbs, dilates--the farms, woods, streets of cities--workmen at work,
- Mainsails, topsails, jibs, appear in the offing--steamers’ pennants
- of smoke--and under the forenoon sun,
- Freighted with human lives, gaily the outward bound, gaily the
- inward bound,
- Flaunting from many a spar the flag I love.
-
-
-
- [VII] By That Long Scan of Waves
-
- By that long scan of waves, myself call’d back, resumed upon myself,
- In every crest some undulating light or shade--some retrospect,
- Joys, travels, studies, silent panoramas--scenes ephemeral,
- The long past war, the battles, hospital sights, the wounded and the dead,
- Myself through every by-gone phase--my idle youth--old age at hand,
- My three-score years of life summ’d up, and more, and past,
- By any grand ideal tried, intentionless, the whole a nothing,
- And haply yet some drop within God’s scheme’s ensemble--some
- wave, or part of wave,
- Like one of yours, ye multitudinous ocean.
-
-
-
- [VIII] Then Last Of All
-
- Then last of all, caught from these shores, this hill,
- Of you O tides, the mystic human meaning:
- Only by law of you, your swell and ebb, enclosing me the same,
- The brain that shapes, the voice that chants this song.
-
-
-
-
- Election Day, November, 1884
-
- If I should need to name, O Western World, your powerfulest scene and show,
- ’Twould not be you, Niagara--nor you, ye limitless prairies--nor
- your huge rifts of canyons, Colorado,
- Nor you, Yosemite--nor Yellowstone, with all its spasmic
- geyser-loops ascending to the skies, appearing and disappearing,
- Nor Oregon’s white cones--nor Huron’s belt of mighty lakes--nor
- Mississippi’s stream:
- --This seething hemisphere’s humanity, as now, I’d name--the still
- small voice vibrating--America’s choosing day,
- (The heart of it not in the chosen--the act itself the main, the
- quadriennial choosing,)
- The stretch of North and South arous’d--sea-board and inland--
- Texas to Maine--the Prairie States--Vermont, Virginia, California,
- The final ballot-shower from East to West--the paradox and conflict,
- The countless snow-flakes falling--(a swordless conflict,
- Yet more than all Rome’s wars of old, or modern Napoleon’s:) the
- peaceful choice of all,
- Or good or ill humanity--welcoming the darker odds, the dross:
- --Foams and ferments the wine? it serves to purify--while the heart
- pants, life glows:
- These stormy gusts and winds waft precious ships,
- Swell’d Washington’s, Jefferson’s, Lincoln’s sails.
-
-
-
-
- With Husky-Haughty Lips, O Sea!
-
- With husky-haughty lips, O sea!
- Where day and night I wend thy surf-beat shore,
- Imaging to my sense thy varied strange suggestions,
- (I see and plainly list thy talk and conference here,)
- Thy troops of white-maned racers racing to the goal,
- Thy ample, smiling face, dash’d with the sparkling dimples of the sun,
- Thy brooding scowl and murk--thy unloos’d hurricanes,
- Thy unsubduedness, caprices, wilfulness;
- Great as thou art above the rest, thy many tears--a lack from all
- eternity in thy content,
- (Naught but the greatest struggles, wrongs, defeats, could make thee
- greatest--no less could make thee,)
- Thy lonely state--something thou ever seek’st and seek’st, yet
- never gain’st,
- Surely some right withheld--some voice, in huge monotonous rage, of
- freedom-lover pent,
- Some vast heart, like a planet’s, chain’d and chafing in those breakers,
- By lengthen’d swell, and spasm, and panting breath,
- And rhythmic rasping of thy sands and waves,
- And serpent hiss, and savage peals of laughter,
- And undertones of distant lion roar,
- (Sounding, appealing to the sky’s deaf ear--but now, rapport for once,
- A phantom in the night thy confidant for once,)
- The first and last confession of the globe,
- Outsurging, muttering from thy soul’s abysms,
- The tale of cosmic elemental passion,
- Thou tellest to a kindred soul.
-
-
-
-
- Death of General Grant
-
- As one by one withdraw the lofty actors,
- From that great play on history’s stage eterne,
- That lurid, partial act of war and peace--of old and new contending,
- Fought out through wrath, fears, dark dismays, and many a long suspense;
- All past--and since, in countless graves receding, mellowing,
- Victor’s and vanquish’d--Lincoln’s and Lee’s--now thou with them,
- Man of the mighty days--and equal to the days!
- Thou from the prairies!--tangled and many-vein’d and hard has been thy part,
- To admiration has it been enacted!
-
-
-
-
- Red Jacket (From Aloft)
-
- Upon this scene, this show,
- Yielded to-day by fashion, learning, wealth,
- (Nor in caprice alone--some grains of deepest meaning,)
- Haply, aloft, (who knows?) from distant sky-clouds’ blended shapes,
- As some old tree, or rock or cliff, thrill’d with its soul,
- Product of Nature’s sun, stars, earth direct--a towering human form,
- In hunting-shirt of film, arm’d with the rifle, a half-ironical
- smile curving its phantom lips,
- Like one of Ossian’s ghosts looks down.
-
-
-
-
- Washington’s Monument February, 1885
-
- Ah, not this marble, dead and cold:
- Far from its base and shaft expanding--the round zones circling,
- comprehending,
- Thou, Washington, art all the world’s, the continents’ entire--not
- yours alone, America,
- Europe’s as well, in every part, castle of lord or laborer’s cot,
- Or frozen North, or sultry South--the African’s--the Arab’s in his tent,
- Old Asia’s there with venerable smile, seated amid her ruins;
- (Greets the antique the hero new? ’tis but the same--the heir
- legitimate, continued ever,
- The indomitable heart and arm--proofs of the never-broken line,
- Courage, alertness, patience, faith, the same--e’en in defeat
- defeated not, the same:)
- Wherever sails a ship, or house is built on land, or day or night,
- Through teeming cities’ streets, indoors or out, factories or farms,
- Now, or to come, or past--where patriot wills existed or exist,
- Wherever Freedom, pois’d by Toleration, sway’d by Law,
- Stands or is rising thy true monument.
-
-
-
-
- Of That Blithe Throat of Thine
-
- Of that blithe throat of thine from arctic bleak and blank,
- I’ll mind the lesson, solitary bird--let me too welcome chilling drifts,
- E’en the profoundest chill, as now--a torpid pulse, a brain unnerv’d,
- Old age land-lock’d within its winter bay--(cold, cold, O cold!)
- These snowy hairs, my feeble arm, my frozen feet,
- For them thy faith, thy rule I take, and grave it to the last;
- Not summer’s zones alone--not chants of youth, or south’s warm tides alone,
- But held by sluggish floes, pack’d in the northern ice, the cumulus
- of years,
- These with gay heart I also sing.
-
-
-
-
- Broadway
-
- What hurrying human tides, or day or night!
- What passions, winnings, losses, ardors, swim thy waters!
- What whirls of evil, bliss and sorrow, stem thee!
- What curious questioning glances--glints of love!
- Leer, envy, scorn, contempt, hope, aspiration!
- Thou portal--thou arena--thou of the myriad long-drawn lines and groups!
- (Could but thy flagstones, curbs, facades, tell their inimitable tales;
- Thy windows rich, and huge hotels--thy side-walks wide;)
- Thou of the endless sliding, mincing, shuffling feet!
- Thou, like the parti-colored world itself--like infinite, teeming,
- mocking life!
- Thou visor’d, vast, unspeakable show and lesson!
-
-
-
-
- To Get the Final Lilt of Songs
-
- To get the final lilt of songs,
- To penetrate the inmost lore of poets--to know the mighty ones,
- Job, Homer, Eschylus, Dante, Shakespere, Tennyson, Emerson;
- To diagnose the shifting-delicate tints of love and pride and doubt--
- to truly understand,
- To encompass these, the last keen faculty and entrance-price,
- Old age, and what it brings from all its past experiences.
-
-
-
-
- Old Salt Kossabone
-
- Far back, related on my mother’s side,
- Old Salt Kossabone, I’ll tell you how he died:
- (Had been a sailor all his life--was nearly 90--lived with his
- married grandchild, Jenny;
- House on a hill, with view of bay at hand, and distant cape, and
- stretch to open sea;)
- The last of afternoons, the evening hours, for many a year his
- regular custom,
- In his great arm chair by the window seated,
- (Sometimes, indeed, through half the day,)
- Watching the coming, going of the vessels, he mutters to himself--
- And now the close of all:
- One struggling outbound brig, one day, baffled for long--cross-tides
- and much wrong going,
- At last at nightfall strikes the breeze aright, her whole luck veering,
- And swiftly bending round the cape, the darkness proudly entering,
- cleaving, as he watches,
- “She’s free--she’s on her destination”--these the last words--when
- Jenny came, he sat there dead,
- Dutch Kossabone, Old Salt, related on my mother’s side, far back.
-
-
-
-
- The Dead Tenor
-
- As down the stage again,
- With Spanish hat and plumes, and gait inimitable,
- Back from the fading lessons of the past, I’d call, I’d tell and own,
- How much from thee! the revelation of the singing voice from thee!
- (So firm--so liquid-soft--again that tremulous, manly timbre!
- The perfect singing voice--deepest of all to me the lesson--trial
- and test of all:)
- How through those strains distill’d--how the rapt ears, the soul of
- me, absorbing
- Fernando’s heart, Manrico’s passionate call, Ernani’s, sweet Gennaro’s,
- I fold thenceforth, or seek to fold, within my chants transmuting,
- Freedom’s and Love’s and Faith’s unloos’d cantabile,
- (As perfume’s, color’s, sunlight’s correlation:)
- From these, for these, with these, a hurried line, dead tenor,
- A wafted autumn leaf, dropt in the closing grave, the shovel’d earth,
- To memory of thee.
-
-
-
-
- Continuities
-
- Nothing is ever really lost, or can be lost,
- No birth, identity, form--no object of the world.
- Nor life, nor force, nor any visible thing;
- Appearance must not foil, nor shifted sphere confuse thy brain.
- Ample are time and space--ample the fields of Nature.
- The body, sluggish, aged, cold--the embers left from earlier fires,
- The light in the eye grown dim, shall duly flame again;
- The sun now low in the west rises for mornings and for noons continual;
- To frozen clods ever the spring’s invisible law returns,
- With grass and flowers and summer fruits and corn.
-
-
-
-
- Yonnondio
-
- A song, a poem of itself--the word itself a dirge,
- Amid the wilds, the rocks, the storm and wintry night,
- To me such misty, strange tableaux the syllables calling up;
- Yonnondio--I see, far in the west or north, a limitless ravine, with
- plains and mountains dark,
- I see swarms of stalwart chieftains, medicine-men, and warriors,
- As flitting by like clouds of ghosts, they pass and are gone in the
- twilight,
- (Race of the woods, the landscapes free, and the falls!
- No picture, poem, statement, passing them to the future:)
- Yonnondio! Yonnondio!--unlimn’d they disappear;
- To-day gives place, and fades--the cities, farms, factories fade;
- A muffled sonorous sound, a wailing word is borne through the air
- for a moment,
- Then blank and gone and still, and utterly lost.
-
-
-
-
- Life
-
- Ever the undiscouraged, resolute, struggling soul of man;
- (Have former armies fail’d? then we send fresh armies--and fresh again;)
- Ever the grappled mystery of all earth’s ages old or new;
- Ever the eager eyes, hurrahs, the welcome-clapping hands, the loud
- applause;
- Ever the soul dissatisfied, curious, unconvinced at last;
- Struggling to-day the same--battling the same.
-
-
-
-
- “Going Somewhere”
-
- My science-friend, my noblest woman-friend,
- (Now buried in an English grave--and this a memory-leaf for her dear sake,)
- Ended our talk--“The sum, concluding all we know of old or modern
- learning, intuitions deep,
- “Of all Geologies--Histories--of all Astronomy--of Evolution,
- Metaphysics all,
- “Is, that we all are onward, onward, speeding slowly, surely bettering,
- “Life, life an endless march, an endless army, (no halt, but it is
- duly over,)
- “The world, the race, the soul--in space and time the universes,
- “All bound as is befitting each--all surely going somewhere.”
-
-
-
-
- Small the Theme of My Chant
-
- Small the theme of my Chant, yet the greatest--namely, One’s-Self--
- a simple, separate person. That, for the use of the New World, I sing.
- Man’s physiology complete, from top to toe, I sing. Not physiognomy alone,
- nor brain alone, is worthy for the Muse;--I say the Form complete
- is worthier far. The Female equally with the Male, I sing.
- Nor cease at the theme of One’s-Self. I speak the word of the
- modern, the word En-Masse.
- My Days I sing, and the Lands--with interstice I knew of hapless War.
- (O friend, whoe’er you are, at last arriving hither to commence, I
- feel through every leaf the pressure of your hand, which I return.
- And thus upon our journey, footing the road, and more than once, and
- link’d together let us go.)
-
-
-
-
- True Conquerors
-
- Old farmers, travelers, workmen (no matter how crippled or bent,)
- Old sailors, out of many a perilous voyage, storm and wreck,
- Old soldiers from campaigns, with all their wounds, defeats and scars;
- Enough that they’ve survived at all--long life’s unflinching ones!
- Forth from their struggles, trials, fights, to have emerged at all--
- in that alone,
- True conquerors o’er all the rest.
-
-
-
-
- The United States to Old World Critics
-
- Here first the duties of to-day, the lessons of the concrete,
- Wealth, order, travel, shelter, products, plenty;
- As of the building of some varied, vast, perpetual edifice,
- Whence to arise inevitable in time, the towering roofs, the lamps,
- The solid-planted spires tall shooting to the stars.
-
-
-
-
- The Calming Thought of All
-
- That coursing on, whate’er men’s speculations,
- Amid the changing schools, theologies, philosophies,
- Amid the bawling presentations new and old,
- The round earth’s silent vital laws, facts, modes continue.
-
-
-
-
- Thanks in Old Age
-
- Thanks in old age--thanks ere I go,
- For health, the midday sun, the impalpable air--for life, mere life,
- For precious ever-lingering memories, (of you my mother dear--you,
- father--you, brothers, sisters, friends,)
- For all my days--not those of peace alone--the days of war the same,
- For gentle words, caresses, gifts from foreign lands,
- For shelter, wine and meat--for sweet appreciation,
- (You distant, dim unknown--or young or old--countless, unspecified,
- readers belov’d,
- We never met, and neer shall meet--and yet our souls embrace, long,
- close and long;)
- For beings, groups, love, deeds, words, books--for colors, forms,
- For all the brave strong men--devoted, hardy men--who’ve forward
- sprung in freedom’s help, all years, all lands
- For braver, stronger, more devoted men--(a special laurel ere I go,
- to life’s war’s chosen ones,
- The cannoneers of song and thought--the great artillerists--the
- foremost leaders, captains of the soul:)
- As soldier from an ended war return’d--As traveler out of myriads,
- to the long procession retrospective,
- Thanks--joyful thanks!--a soldier’s, traveler’s thanks.
-
-
-
-
- Life and Death
-
- The two old, simple problems ever intertwined,
- Close home, elusive, present, baffled, grappled.
- By each successive age insoluble, pass’d on,
- To ours to-day--and we pass on the same.
-
-
-
-
- The Voice of the Rain
-
- And who art thou? said I to the soft-falling shower,
- Which, strange to tell, gave me an answer, as here translated:
- I am the Poem of Earth, said the voice of the rain,
- Eternal I rise impalpable out of the land and the bottomless sea,
- Upward to heaven, whence, vaguely form’d, altogether changed, and
- yet the same,
- I descend to lave the drouths, atomies, dust-layers of the globe,
- And all that in them without me were seeds only, latent, unborn;
- And forever, by day and night, I give back life to my own origin,
- and make pure and beautify it;
- (For song, issuing from its birth-place, after fulfilment, wandering,
- Reck’d or unreck’d, duly with love returns.)
-
-
-
-
- Soon Shall the Winter’s Foil Be Here
-
- Soon shall the winter’s foil be here;
- Soon shall these icy ligatures unbind and melt--A little while,
- And air, soil, wave, suffused shall be in softness, bloom and
- growth--a thousand forms shall rise
- From these dead clods and chills as from low burial graves.
-
- Thine eyes, ears--all thy best attributes--all that takes cognizance
- of natural beauty,
- Shall wake and fill. Thou shalt perceive the simple shows, the
- delicate miracles of earth,
- Dandelions, clover, the emerald grass, the early scents and flowers,
- The arbutus under foot, the willow’s yellow-green, the blossoming
- plum and cherry;
- With these the robin, lark and thrush, singing their songs--the
- flitting bluebird;
- For such the scenes the annual play brings on.
-
-
-
-
- While Not the Past Forgetting
-
- While not the past forgetting,
- To-day, at least, contention sunk entire--peace, brotherhood uprisen;
- For sign reciprocal our Northern, Southern hands,
- Lay on the graves of all dead soldiers, North or South,
- (Nor for the past alone--for meanings to the future,)
- Wreaths of roses and branches of palm.
-
-
-
-
- The Dying Veteran
-
- Amid these days of order, ease, prosperity,
- Amid the current songs of beauty, peace, decorum,
- I cast a reminiscence--(likely ’twill offend you,
- I heard it in my boyhood;)--More than a generation since,
- A queer old savage man, a fighter under Washington himself,
- (Large, brave, cleanly, hot-blooded, no talker, rather spiritualistic,
- Had fought in the ranks--fought well--had been all through the
- Revolutionary war,)
- Lay dying--sons, daughters, church-deacons, lovingly tending him,
- Sharping their sense, their ears, towards his murmuring, half-caught words:
- “Let me return again to my war-days,
- To the sights and scenes--to forming the line of battle,
- To the scouts ahead reconnoitering,
- To the cannons, the grim artillery,
- To the galloping aides, carrying orders,
- To the wounded, the fallen, the heat, the suspense,
- The perfume strong, the smoke, the deafening noise;
- Away with your life of peace!--your joys of peace!
- Give me my old wild battle-life again!”
-
-
-
-
- Stronger Lessons
-
- Have you learn’d lessons only of those who admired you, and were
- tender with you, and stood aside for you?
- Have you not learn’d great lessons from those who reject you, and
- brace themselves against you? or who treat you with contempt,
- or dispute the passage with you?
-
-
-
-
- A Prairie Sunset
-
- Shot gold, maroon and violet, dazzling silver, emerald, fawn,
- The earth’s whole amplitude and Nature’s multiform power consign’d
- for once to colors;
- The light, the general air possess’d by them--colors till now unknown,
- No limit, confine--not the Western sky alone--the high meridian--
- North, South, all,
- Pure luminous color fighting the silent shadows to the last.
-
-
-
-
- Twenty Years
-
- Down on the ancient wharf, the sand, I sit, with a new-comer chatting:
- He shipp’d as green-hand boy, and sail’d away, (took some sudden,
- vehement notion;)
- Since, twenty years and more have circled round and round,
- While he the globe was circling round and round, --and now returns:
- How changed the place--all the old land-marks gone--the parents dead;
- (Yes, he comes back to lay in port for good--to settle--has a
- well-fill’d purse--no spot will do but this;)
- The little boat that scull’d him from the sloop, now held in leash I see,
- I hear the slapping waves, the restless keel, the rocking in the sand,
- I see the sailor kit, the canvas bag, the great box bound with brass,
- I scan the face all berry-brown and bearded--the stout-strong frame,
- Dress’d in its russet suit of good Scotch cloth:
- (Then what the told-out story of those twenty years? What of the future?)
-
-
-
-
- Orange Buds by Mail from Florida
-
- A lesser proof than old Voltaire’s, yet greater,
- Proof of this present time, and thee, thy broad expanse, America,
- To my plain Northern hut, in outside clouds and snow,
- Brought safely for a thousand miles o’er land and tide,
- Some three days since on their own soil live-sprouting,
- Now here their sweetness through my room unfolding,
- A bunch of orange buds by mall from Florida.
-
-
-
-
- Twilight
-
- The soft voluptuous opiate shades,
- The sun just gone, the eager light dispell’d--(I too will soon be
- gone, dispell’d,)
- A haze--nirwana--rest and night--oblivion.
-
-
-
-
- You Lingering Sparse Leaves of Me
-
- You lingering sparse leaves of me on winter-nearing boughs,
- And I some well-shorn tree of field or orchard-row;
- You tokens diminute and lorn--(not now the flush of May, or July
- clover-bloom--no grain of August now;)
- You pallid banner-staves--you pennants valueless--you overstay’d of time,
- Yet my soul-dearest leaves confirming all the rest,
- The faithfulest--hardiest--last.
-
-
-
-
- Not Meagre, Latent Boughs Alone
-
- Not meagre, latent boughs alone, O songs! (scaly and bare, like
- eagles’ talons,)
- But haply for some sunny day (who knows?) some future spring, some
- summer--bursting forth,
- To verdant leaves, or sheltering shade--to nourishing fruit,
- Apples and grapes--the stalwart limbs of trees emerging--the fresh,
- free, open air,
- And love and faith, like scented roses blooming.
-
-
-
-
- The Dead Emperor
-
- To-day, with bending head and eyes, thou, too, Columbia,
- Less for the mighty crown laid low in sorrow--less for the Emperor,
- Thy true condolence breathest, sendest out o’er many a salt sea mile,
- Mourning a good old man--a faithful shepherd, patriot.
-
-
-
-
- As the Greek’s Signal Flame
-
- As the Greek’s signal flame, by antique records told,
- Rose from the hill-top, like applause and glory,
- Welcoming in fame some special veteran, hero,
- With rosy tinge reddening the land he’d served,
- So I aloft from Mannahatta’s ship-fringed shore,
- Lift high a kindled brand for thee, Old Poet.
-
-
-
-
- The Dismantled Ship
-
- In some unused lagoon, some nameless bay,
- On sluggish, lonesome waters, anchor’d near the shore,
- An old, dismasted, gray and batter’d ship, disabled, done,
- After free voyages to all the seas of earth, haul’d up at last and
- hawser’d tight,
- Lies rusting, mouldering.
-
-
-
-
- Now Precedent Songs, Farewell
-
- Now precedent songs, farewell--by every name farewell,
- (Trains of a staggering line in many a strange procession, waggons,
- From ups and downs--with intervals--from elder years, mid-age, or youth,)
- “In Cabin’d Ships, or Thee Old Cause or Poets to Come
- Or Paumanok, Song of Myself, Calamus, or Adam,
- Or Beat! Beat! Drums! or To the Leaven’d Soil they Trod,
- Or Captain! My Captain! Kosmos, Quicksand Years, or Thoughts,
- Thou Mother with thy Equal Brood,” and many, many more unspecified,
- From fibre heart of mine--from throat and tongue--(My life’s hot
- pulsing blood,
- The personal urge and form for me--not merely paper, automatic type
- and ink,)
- Each song of mine--each utterance in the past--having its long, long
- history,
- Of life or death, or soldier’s wound, of country’s loss or safety,
- (O heaven! what flash and started endless train of all! compared
- indeed to that!
- What wretched shred e’en at the best of all!)
-
-
-
-
- An Evening Lull
-
- After a week of physical anguish,
- Unrest and pain, and feverish heat,
- Toward the ending day a calm and lull comes on,
- Three hours of peace and soothing rest of brain.
-
-
-
-
- Old Age’s Lambent Peaks
-
- The touch of flame--the illuminating fire--the loftiest look at last,
- O’er city, passion, sea--o’er prairie, mountain, wood--the earth itself,
- The airy, different, changing hues of all, in failing twilight,
- Objects and groups, bearings, faces, reminiscences;
- The calmer sight--the golden setting, clear and broad:
- So much i’ the atmosphere, the points of view, the situations whence
- we scan,
- Bro’t out by them alone--so much (perhaps the best) unreck’d before;
- The lights indeed from them--old age’s lambent peaks.
-
-
-
-
- After the Supper and Talk
-
- After the supper and talk--after the day is done,
- As a friend from friends his final withdrawal prolonging,
- Good-bye and Good-bye with emotional lips repeating,
- (So hard for his hand to release those hands--no more will they meet,
- No more for communion of sorrow and joy, of old and young,
- A far-stretching journey awaits him, to return no more,)
- Shunning, postponing severance--seeking to ward off the last word
- ever so little,
- E’en at the exit-door turning--charges superfluous calling back--
- e’en as he descends the steps,
- Something to eke out a minute additional--shadows of nightfall deepening,
- Farewells, messages lessening--dimmer the forthgoer’s visage and form,
- Soon to be lost for aye in the darkness--loth, O so loth to depart!
- Garrulous to the very last.
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- BOOKXXXV. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY
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- Sail out for Good, Eidolon Yacht!
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- Heave the anchor short!
- Raise main-sail and jib--steer forth,
- O little white-hull’d sloop, now speed on really deep waters,
- (I will not call it our concluding voyage,
- But outset and sure entrance to the truest, best, maturest;)
- Depart, depart from solid earth--no more returning to these shores,
- Now on for aye our infinite free venture wending,
- Spurning all yet tried ports, seas, hawsers, densities, gravitation,
- Sail out for good, eidolon yacht of me!
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- Lingering Last Drops
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- And whence and why come you?
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- We know not whence, (was the answer,)
- We only know that we drift here with the rest,
- That we linger’d and lagg’d--but were wafted at last, and are now here,
- To make the passing shower’s concluding drops.