Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Walt Whitman MEGAPACK

    Page 48
    Prev Next


      Thanks in Old Age

      Life and Death

      The Voice of the Rain

      Soon Shall the Winter’s Foil Be Here

      While Not the Past Forgetting

      The Dying Veteran

      Stronger Lessons

      A Prairie Sunset

      Twenty Years

      Orange Buds by Mail from Florida

      Twilight

      You Lingering Sparse Leaves of Me

      Not Meagre, Latent Boughs Alone

      The Dead Emperor

      As the Greek’s Signal Flame

      The Dismantled Ship

      Now Precedent Songs, Farewell

      An Evening Lull

      Old Age’s Lambent Peaks

      After the Supper and Talk

      BOOK XXXV.

      Sail out for Good, Eidolon Yacht!

      Lingering Last Drops

      Good-Bye My Fancy

      On, on the Same, Ye Jocund Twain!

      My 71st Year

      Apparitions

      The Pallid Wreath

      An Ended Day

      Old Age’s Ship & Crafty Death’s

      To the Pending Year

      Shakspere-Bacon’s Cipher

      Long, Long Hence

      Bravo, Paris Exposition!

      Interpolation Sounds

      To the Sun-Set Breeze

      Old Chants

      A Christmas Greeting

      Sounds of the Winter

      A Twilight Song

      When the Full-Grown Poet Came

      Osceola

      A Voice from Death

      A Persian Lesson

      The Commonplace

      “The Rounded Catalogue Divine Complete”

      Mirages

      L. of G.’s Purport

      The Unexpress’d

      Grand Is the Seen

      Unseen Buds

      Good-Bye My Fancy!

      DRUM-TAPS

      FIRST O SONGS FOR A PRELUDE

      EIGHTEEN SIXTY-ONE

      BEAT! BEAT! DRUMS!

      FROM PAUMANOK STARTING I FLY LIKE A BIRD

      SONG OF THE BANNER AT DAYBREAK

      RISE O DAYS FROM YOUR FATHOMLESS DEEPS

      VIRGINIA—THE WEST

      CITY OF SHIPS

      THE CENTENARIAN’S STORY

      CAVALRY CROSSING A FORD

      BIVOUAC ON A MOUNTAIN SIDE

      AN ARMY CORPS ON THE MARCH

      BY THE BIVOUAC’S FITFUL FLAME

      COME UP FROM THE FIELDS FATHER

      VIGIL STRANGE I KEPT ON THE FIELD ONE NIGHT

      A MARCH IN THE RANKS HARD-PREST, AND THE ROAD UNKNOWN

      A SIGHT IN CAMP IN THE DAYBREAK GRAY AND DIM

      AS TOILSOME I WANDER’D VIRGINIA’S WOODS

      NOT THE PILOT

      YEAR THAT TREMBLED AND REEL’D BENEATH ME

      THE WOUND-DRESSER

      LONG, TOO LONG AMERICA

      GIVE ME THE SPLENDID SILENT SUN

      DIRGE FOR TWO VETERANS

      OVER THE CARNAGE ROSE PROPHETIC A VOICE

      I SAW OLD GENERAL AT BAY

      THE ARTILLERYMAN’S VISION

      ETHIOPIA SALUTING THE COLOURS

      NOT YOUTH PERTAINS TO ME

      RACE OF VETERANS

      WORLD TAKE GOOD NOTICE

      O TAN-FACED PRAIRIE-BOY

      LOOK DOWN FAIR MOON

      RECONCILIATION

      HOW SOLEMN AS ONE BY ONE

      AS I LAY WITH MY HEAD IN YOUR LAP CAMERADO

      DELICATE CLUSTER

      TO A CERTAIN CIVILIAN

      LO, VICTRESS ON THE PEAKS

      SPIRIT WHOSE WORK IS DONE

      ADIEU TO A SOLDIER

      TURN O LIBERTAD

      TO THE LEAVEN’D SOIL THEY TROD

      THE WOUND DRESSER

      PREFACE

      THE GREAT ARMY OF THE WOUNDED

      LIFE AMONG FIFTY THOUSAND SOLDIERS

      HOSPITAL VISITS

      LETTERS OF 1862-3

      LETTERS OF 1864

      THE LETTERS OF ANNE GILCHRIST AND WALT WHITMAN

      PREFACE

      INTRODUCTION

      A WOMAN’S ESTIMATE OF WALT WHITMAN

      A CONFESSION OF FAITH

      LETTER I

      LETTER II

      LETTER III

      LETTER IV

      LETTER V

      LETTER VI

      LETTER VII

      LETTER VIII

      LETTER IX

      LETTER X

      LETTER XI

      LETTER XII

      LETTER XIII

      LETTER XIV

      LETTER XV

      LETTER XVI

      LETTER XVII

      LETTER XVIII

      LETTER XIX

      LETTER XX

      LETTER XXI

      LETTER XXII

      LETTER XXIII

      LETTER XXIV

      LETTER XXV

      LETTER XXVI

      LETTER XXVII

      LETTER XXVIII

      LETTER XXIX

      LETTER XXX

      LETTER XXXI

      LETTER XXXII

      LETTER XXXIII

      LETTER XXXIV

      LETTER XXXV

      LETTER XXXVI

      LETTER XXXVII

      LETTER XXXVIII

      LETTER XXXIX

      LETTER XL

      LETTER XLI

      LETTER XLII

      LETTER XLIII

      LETTER XLIV

      LETTER XLV

      LETTER XLVI

      LETTER XLVII

      LETTER XLVIII

      LETTER XLIX

      LETTER L

      LETTER LI

      LETTER LII

      LETTER LIII

      LETTER LIV

      LETTER LV

      LETTER LVI

      LETTER LVII

      LETTER LVIII

      LETTER LIX

      LETTER LX

      LETTER LXI

      LETTER LXII

      LETTER LXIII

      LETTER LXIV

      LETTER LXV

      LETTER LXVI

      LETTER LXVII

      LETTER LXVIII

      LETTER LXIX

      LETTER LXX

      LETTER LXXI

      LETTER LXXII

      LETTER LXXIII

      LETTER LXXIV

      LETTER LXXV

      LETTER LXXVI

      DRUM-TAPS

      INTRODUCTION

      When the first days of August loured over the world, time seemed to stand still. A universal astonishment and confusion fell, as upon a flock of sheep perplexed by strange dogs. But now, though never before was a St. Lucy’s Day so black with “absence, darkness, death,” Christmas is gone. Spring comes swiftly, the almond trees flourish. Easter will soon be here. Life breaks into beauty again and we realize that man may bring hell itself into the world, but that Nature ever patiently waits to be his natural paradise. Yet still a kind of instinctive blindness blots out the prospect of the future. Until the long horror of the war is gone from our minds, we shall be able to think of nothing that has not for its background a chaotic darkness. Like every obsession, it gnaws at thought, follows us into our dreams and returns with the morning. But there have been other wars. And humanity, after learning as best it may their brutal lesson, has survived them. Just as the young soldier leaves home behind him and accepts hardship and danger as to the manner born, so, when he returns again, life will resume its old quiet wont. Nature is not idle even in the imagination. It is man’s salvation to forget no less than it is his salvation to remember. And it is wise even in the midst of the conflict to look back on those that are past and to prepare for the returning problems of the future.

      When Whitman wrote his “Democratic Vistas,” the long embittered war between the Northern and Southern States of America was a thing only of yesterday. It is a headlong amorphous production—a tangled meadow of “leaves of grass” in prose. But it is as cogent to-day as it was when it was written:

      To the ostent of the senses and eyes [he writes], the influences which stamp the world’s history are wars, uprisings, or downfalls of dynasties.... These, of course, play their part; yet, it may be, a single new
    thought, imagination, abstract principle ... put in shape by some great literatus, and projected among mankind, may duly cause changes, growths, removals, greater than the longest and bloodiest war, or the most stupendous merely political, dynastic, or commercial overturn.

      The literatus who realized this had his own message in mind. And yet, justly. For those who might point to the worldly prosperity and material comforts of his country, and ask, Are not these better indeed than any utterances even of greatest rhapsodic, artist, or literatus? he has his irrefutable answer. He surveys the New York of 1870, “its façades of marble and iron, of original grandeur and elegance of design,” etc., in his familiar catalogical jargon, and shutting his eyes to its glow and grandeur, inquires in return, Are there indeed men here worthy the name? Are there perfect women? Is there a pervading atmosphere of beautiful manners? Are there arts worthy freedom and a rich people? Is there a great moral and religious civilization—the only justification of a great material one? We ourselves in good time shall have to face and to answer these questions. They search our keenest hopes of the peace that is coming. And we may be fortified perhaps by the following queer proof of history repeating itself:

      Never, in the Old World, was thoroughly upholster’d exterior appearance and show, mental and other, built entirely on the idea of caste, and on the sufficiency of mere outside acquisition—never were glibness, verbal intellect, more the test, the emulation—more loftily elevated as head and sample— than they are on the surface of our Republican States this day. The writers of a time hint the mottoes of its gods. The word of the modern, say these voices, is the word Culture.

      Whitman had no very tender regard for the Germany of his time. He fancied that the Germans were like the Chinese, only less graceful and refined and more brutish. But neither had he any particular affection for any relic of Europe. “Never again will we trust the moral sense or abstract friendliness of a single Government of the Old World.” He accepted selections from its literature for the new American Adam. But even its greatest poets were not America’s, and though he might welcome even Juvenal, it was for use and not for worship. We have to learn, he insists, that the best culture will always be that of the manly and courageous instincts and loving perceptions, and of self-respect. In our children rests every hope and promise, and therefore in their mothers. “Disengage yourselves from parties.... These savage and wolfish parties alarm me.... Hold yourself judge and master over all of them.” Only faith can save us, the faith in ourselves and in our fellow-men which is of the true faith in goodness and in God. The idea of the mass of men, so fresh and free, so loving and so proud, filled this poet with a singular awe. Passionately he pleads for the dignity of the common people. It is the average man of a land that is important. To win the people back to a proud belief and confidence in life, to rapture in this wonderful world, to love and admiration—this was his burning desire. I demand races of orbic bards, he rhapsodizes, sweet democratic despots, to dominate and even destroy. The Future! Vistas! The throes of birth are upon us. Allons, camarado!

      He could not despair. “Must I indeed learn to chant the cold dirges of the baffled?” he asks himself in “Drum-Taps.” But wildest shuttlecock of criticism though he is, he has never yet been charged with looking only on the dark side of things. Once, he says, “Once, before the war (alas! I dare not say how many times the mood has come!), I too, was fill’d with doubt and gloom.” His part in it soothed, mellowed, deepened his great nature. He had himself witnessed such misery, cruelty, and abomination as it is best just now, perhaps, not to read about. One fact alone is enough; that over fifty thousand Federal soldiers perished of starvation in Southern prisons. Malarial fever contracted in camps and hospitals had wrecked his health. During 1862-65 he visited, he says, eighty to a hundred thousand sick and wounded soldiers, comprehending all, slighting none. Rebel or compatriot, it made no difference. “I loved the young man,” he cries again and again. Pity and fatherliness were in his face, for his heart was full of them. Mr. Gosse has described “the old Gray” as he saw him in 1884, in his bare, littered sun-drenched room in Camden, shared by kitten and canary:

      He sat with a very curious pose of the head thrown backward, as if resting it one vertebra lower down the spinal column than other people do, and thus tilting his face a little upwards. With his head so poised and the whole man fixed in contemplation of the interlocutor he seemed to pass into a state of absolute passivity ... the glassy eyes half closed, the large knotted hands spread out before him. He resembled, in fact, nothing so much as “a great old grey Angora Tom,” alert in repose, serenely blinking under his combed waves of hair, with eyes inscrutably dreaming.... As I stood in dull, deserted Mickle Street once more, my heart was full of affection for this beautiful old man ... this old rhapsodist in his empty room, glorified by patience and philosophy.

      Whitman was then sixty-five. In a portrait of thirty years before there is just a wraith of that feline dream, perhaps, but it is a face of a rare grace and beauty that looks out at us, of a profound kindness and compassion. And, in the eyes, not so much penetration as visionary absorption. Such was the man to whom nothing was unclean, nothing too trivial (except “pale poetlings lisping cadenzas piano,” who then apparently thronged New York) to take to himself. Intensest, indomitablest of individualists, he exulted in all that appertains to that forked radish, Man. This contentious soul of mine, he exclaims ecstatically; Viva: the attack! I have been born the same as the war was born; I lull nobody, and you will never understand me: maybe I am non-literary and un-decorous.... I have written impromptu, and shall let it all go at that. Let me at least be human! Human, indeed, he was, a tender, all-welcoming host of Everyman, of his idolized (if somewhat overpowering) American democracy. Man in the street, in his swarms, poor crazed faces in the State asylum, prisoners in Sing Sing, prostitute, whose dead body reminded him not of a lost soul, but only of a sad, forlorn, and empty house—it mattered not; he opened his heart to them, one and all. “I see beyond each mark that wonder, a kindred soul. O the bullet could never kill what you really are, dear friend.”

      The moon gives you light,

      And the bugles and drums give you music,

      And my heart, O my soldiers, my veterans,

      My heart gives you love.

      “Yours for you,” he exclaims, welding in a phrase his unparalleled egotism, his beautiful charity, “yours for you, who ever you are, as mine for me.” It is the essence of philosophy and of religion, for all the wonders of heaven and earth are significant “only because of the Me in the centre.”

      This was the secret of his tender, unassuming ministrations. He had none of that shrinking timidity, that fear of intrusion, that uneasiness in the presence of the tragic and the pitiful, which so often numb and oppress those who would willingly give themselves and their best to the needy and suffering, but whose intellect misgives them. He was that formidable phenomenon, a dreamer of action. But he possessed a sovran good sense. Food and rest and clean clothes were his scrupulous preparation for his visits. He always assumed as cheerful an appearance as possible. Armed with bright new five-cent and ten-cent bills (the wounded, he found, were often “broke,” and the sight of a little money “helped their spirits”), with books and stationery and tobacco, for one a twist of good strong green tea, for another a good home-made rice-pudding, or a jar of sparkling but innocent blackberry and cherry syrup, a small bottle of horse-radish pickle, or a large handsome apple, he would “make friends.” “What I have I also give you,” he cried from the bottom of his grieved, tempestuous heart. He would talk, or write letters—passionate love-letters, too—or sit silent, in mute and tender kindness. “Long, long, I gazed ... leaning my chin in my hands, passing sweet hours, immortal and mystic hours, with you, dearest comrade—not a tear, not a word, Vigil of silence, love and death, vigil for you my son and my soldier.” And how many a mother must have blessed the stranger who could bring such last news of a son as this: “And now like many other noble and good
    men, after serving his country as a soldier, he has yielded up his young life at the very outset in her service. Such things are gloomy—yet there is a text, ‘God doeth all things well’—the meaning of which, after due time, appears to the soul.” It is only love that can comfort the loving.

      He forced nothing on these friends of a day, so many of them near their last farewell. A poor wasted young man asks him to read a chapter in the New Testament, and Whitman chooses that which describes Christ’s Crucifixion. He “ask’d me to read the following chapter also, how Christ rose again. I read very slowly, for he was feeble. It pleased him very much, yet the tears were in his eyes. He ask’d me if I enjoy’d religion. I said ‘Perhaps not, my dear, in the way you mean, yet maybe, it is the same thing.’” This is only one of many such serene intimacies in Whitman’s experiences of the war. Through them we reach to an understanding of a poet who chose not signal and beautiful episodes out of the past, nor the rare moments of existence, for theme, but took all life, within and around him in vast bustling America, for his poetic province. Like a benign barbaric sun he surveys the world, ever at noon. I am the man, I suffer’d, I was there, he cries in the “Song of Myself.” I do not despise you priests, all times, the world over.... He could not despise anything, not even his fellow-poets, because he himself was everything. His verse sometimes seems mere verbiage, but it is always a higgledy-piggledy, Santa Claus bagful of things. And he could penetrate to the essential reality. He tells in his “Drum-Taps” how one daybreak he arose in camp, and saw three still forms stretched out in the eastern radiance, how with light fingers he just lifted the blanket from each cold face in turn: the first elderly, gaunt, and grim—Who are you, my dear comrade? The next with cheeks yet blooming—Who are you, sweet boy? The third—Young man, I think I know you. I think this face is the face of the Christ Himself, Dead and divine and brother of all, and here again he lies.

      True poetry focuses experience, not merely transmits it. It must redeem it for ever from transitoriness and evanescence. Whitman incontinently pours experience out in a Niagara-like cataract. But in spite of his habitual publicity he was at heart of a “shy, brooding, impassioned devotional type”; in spite of his self-conscious, arrogant virility, he was to the end of his life an entranced child. He came into the world, saw and babbled. His deliberate method of writing could have had no other issue. A subject would occur to him, a kind of tag. He would scribble it down on a scrap of paper and drop it into a drawer. Day by day this first impulse would evoke fresh “poemets,” until at length the accumulation was exhaustive. Then he merely gutted his treasury and the ode was complete. It was only when sense and feeling attained a sort of ecstasy that he succeeded in distilling the true essence that is poetry and in enstopping it in a crystal phial of form.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026