Poems by Walt Whitman
"Walt Whitman's Poems."
London Sun,
17 April 1868, p. 31490.
Opening this book has been to us a revelation. Reading it has yielded
us exquisite pleasure.
The remembrance of it sweetens life. Echoes from it haunt us in the
thick of our occupations, 'under
the shade of melancholy boughs,' in the throng of the streets, at our
meals, in the midst of our conversations, anywhere, everywhere, under
the likeliest and the unlikeliest circumstances.
Before the volume now under notice came into our hands, the name
of Walt Whitman was certainly
known to us, but that was all. Now that we have read these selections
- observe, these selections -
from his 'Chants Democratic,' from his Drum Taps, from
his Leaves of Grass, from his 'Songs of
Parting,' we have learnt to love that name of his, it has become
to us a synonym of pleasure, suggestive of thoughts, emotions, aspirations,
expressed as in a new language, and, once so expressed, never afterwards
to be altogether forgotten. To William Michael Rossetti, as the selecter
of these poems, we are not simply, in old-fashioned phrase, beholden,
we are not merely in courtlier terms his most obedient, we are his very
gratefully, and that, moreover, in heartfelt truthfulness. Already in the
columns of the clever but now dead and gone Chronicle, under date
6th July, 1867, the editor of this henceforth to us cherished volume
of Walt Whitman's Poems had sounded the trumpet of admiration in
praise of that particular poet of America. Here, however, he has made good,
in every sense, his high, and, as it might have seemed to some, extravagant
commendations. Of the justice of the estimate thus enunciated, these poems
yield absolute demonstration. Apart from the selection now given to us
by Mr Rossetti, we are desirous that it should be understood at once, however,
by our readers, that we know nothing whatever of the writings of Walt Whitman.
This we would especially premise. And for a sufficient reason. According
to a very general rumour even over here in England, according to the showing
of even so enthusiastic an appreciator of his genius as Mr Rossetti has
(happily for us all) shown himself to be - Walt Whitman has written things
that his own most ardent admirers would willingly let die. Yet, of all
this, the volume now in our hand, here submitted to our consideration,
bears not a particle of evidence. The leering satyrs have been scared away
from among the beautiful umbrage. The dregs lurk no longer in the limpid
draught placed at our lips. We can quaff without a qualm. There is no canker
in the rose-wreath as it is thus brought within
our reach - it is all fragrance and dripping with dew. Not a taint
is here, in bloom, or foliage, or
fruit. The very atmosphere investing these poems is all purity, like
the breath of morning. And yet -
though we never should have conjectured as much from these poems themselves
- the Collective
Writings of Walt Whitman must indubitably be tainted, flawed, polluted
- and that, too, with a taint, a flaw, a pollution in no conceivable way
to be extenuated. Mr Rossetti himself sets forth in regard to
the incriminated poems (all of which he has carefully omitted
in the process of making his selection) not one word, not one hint of extenuation.
He says, indeed, that he considers 'that most of them
would be much better away.' And, whatever else can be said of the editor
of the present volume as a critic of poetic literature, it certainly cannot
be said of him that he is a purist. 'Indecencies,
improprieties, deforming erudities' there are, he tells us, scattered,
it may even be abundantly scattered, here and there, over the Writings
of Walt Whitman. Such they are acknowledged to be, in so many words, even
by the critic thanks to whose judicious hands those damning blemishes have
been discarded. Of their existence at all, we only know, now, by their
own evil reputation. They themselves are not here. Nevertheless this selection
is in no respect what we should call, in the ordinary acceptation of the
words, an Expurgated Edition. There is here no emasculation. The poems
that are given are given in their entirety. Mere parts have been nowhere
selected. Abbreviations, elisions, excisions, the Editor has shrunk from
as from impertinences. He has done his task well and wisely. And yet, task
it can hardly be called - true labour of love as it has been (and no wonder)
throughout. Although containing within it 'a little less,' we are told
'that [sic] half the entire bulk of Whitman's poetry,' this one
volume affords a comprehensive view of the writer's genius in its integrity.
It is no broken gem that is here placed in our hands for examination, but
- 'one entire and perfect chrysolite.' Before commenting upon Walt Whitman's
poetical productions, however, so far as those are here brought within
our survey, a word or two as to the man himself. Abraham Lincoln's exclamation
on seeing him was - 'Well, he looks like a man!' Nor can that
exclamation be wondered at when one comes to sum up his characteristics.
Lofty in stature, admirably well proportioned, of vigorous strength, of
abounding health - forty-nine years of age on the last day of next month
- his eyes of a light blue, his complexion florid, his beard fleecy and
flowing, but already quite grey - cheerful and masculine in appearance
- having a predilection for the society of common people - intensely fond
of fine music, and with a great natural taste for works of art - absolutely
indifferent 'as to either praise or blame of what he writes' -such, in
brief, is Walt Whitman. Born on the 31st of May, 1819, at the farm village
of West Hills, Long Island, in the state of New York, somewhere about thirty
miles from the great American capital and outport - he is but now in the
prime or meridian of his manhood, though already old-looking in spite of
his health, of his wholesome out-door life, his temperate habits, and his
vigorous constitution. A schoolboy up to thirteen, afterwards a compositor,
then a country teacher, then a press writer, then a newspaper editor, then
a master printer, then (like his father) a carpenter and builder, then,
throughout the Great Civil War, to the Northern Army, what Miss Nightingale
was to the British Army at Scutari throughout the War in the Crimea. And,
yet all along, and at last wholly and solely, what he is now for the rest
of his days - a Poet. Before considering him as such, it is but justice
to remark of him in his capacity as a practical philanthropist when attending
the poor soldiers all through that tremendous struggle between North and
South, between the Federals and the Confederates in America, that 'It is
said that by the end of the war he had personally ministered to upwards
of 100,000 sick and wounded.' Honour, therefore, to the brave, true heart,
if only in remembrance of that one recorded fact in his history - a fact
evidencing that Walt Whitman not only 'looks' but acts 'like a man.'
Turning our glance, however, from the man himself to his productions, to
those Poems of his which have been here selected for us from his 'Songs
of Parting,' his Leaves of Grass, his Drum Taps, and so on
- one peculiarity is at once especially noticeable in regard to them, and
that is their startling, intense, and absolute originality. In their manner,
they are unlike any other poems that have ever previously made their appearance.
As a rule, they are rhymeless. But, always, always they are rhythmical,
and yet rhythmical after a manner peculiarly and exceptionally their own.
The lines are of any length - sometimes abbreviated to a little more than
a monosyllable - occasionally running out to the extent of half-a-dozen
alexandrines. Now standing, as one might say, on one foot, and that a-tip-toe
-now running along upon as many feet as those of a centipede. But - with
all this whimsicality and abandon of manner, with all this wild
defiance of the hitherto dominant laws of poetical, and, for that matter
even at times of rhetorical, construction - O the charm, the grace, the
tenderness, the pathos, the abounding and captivating beauties scattered
broadcast, with a lavish hand, with an affluent fancy, with the royal prodigality
of genius, over these pages of true poetry! Nor can the daring originality
thus manifested by Walt Whitman in the mere manner of his composition be
regarded as so wholly unexampled. As has been admirably well asked
-
'Was genius awed by Aristotle's rules
When Shakespeare burst the cobwebs of the schools?'
Flinging to the winds of heaven all the precedents of literature, this
new poet of the New World, a poet intensely sui generis, one racy
of the soil from which he has sprung, carves out his own way
with a pen as trenchant as an axe, and goes upon that way of his rejoicing.
About the only one rhymed passage in the whole of this otherwise quite
rhymeless volume of poetry, is the opening of the song in celebration of
the broad-axe in the 'Chants Democratic.' And, having but just now - in
total forgetfulness at the moment, alike of that especial passage and of
that particular song - likened Walt Whitman's pen, in the trenchant sweep
of it, to an axe, such as it might be seen gleaming and crashing when wielded
in the grip of a backwoodsman of thews and sinews like his own - upon our
sudden remembrance immediately afterwards of his own words, the simile
appears more than ever most appropriate. For, thus it is that Walt Whitman,
in his 'Song of the Broad Axe,' apostrophises that -
'Weapon, shapely, naked, wan;
Head from the mother's bowels drawn!
Wooded flesh and metal bone; limb only one, and lip only
one!
Grey-blue leaf by red-heat grown! helve produced from
a light seed sown!
Resting the grass amid and upon,
To be leaned, and to lean on.'
A pen no less potent, keen, piercing, than such a broad axe, 'to be leaned
and to lean on,' resting the grass [Leaves of Grass] amid and upon'
- is, most assuredly, for us the pen of Walt Whitman. Otherwise than in
one fragmentary instance like the foregoing, the book is, as we have said,
altogether rhymeless. Wonderfully rhythmical throughout, though in lines
of the most oddly varying
lengths, the poems of Walt Whitman - when the reader has once passed
the Rubicon - exercise
over that initiated reader's mind a potent and irresistible fascination.
The Rubicon must be passed,
however, as a preliminary, as the first and all-essential preliminary
of initiation. Meaning by that,
simply, that any one coming to the examination of Walt Whitman's poems
with a view to their
complete appreciation, must begin by, we won't say taking this and
that for granted, we won't
even say by making such and such allowances, for, so expressing
ourselves, we might seem to be
slighting the high inherent claims to respect of a great original writer,
such as Walt Whitman: instead
of that we will say then simply - that the all-essential preliminary
we are alluding to is one purely
of concession. Concede to Whitman the fashion of his verse - concede
to him his terse but never
bald realism - concede to him his exotic verbiage, his coinage of words
occasionally, with a daring
disregard alike of the laws of syntax and of philology - and the spell
of the magician is felt at once
and for ever! We are within the circle of his poetic incantations!
He 'hath his will' thenceforth - as he
lists - at his own pleasure over our hearts, our emotions, our imaginations.
As exemplars, to begin with, of his magical power in mere word-painting
- take almost haphazard a single line or verse
picked out here and there from the midst of his descriptions: -
'Evening- me in my room - the setting sun,
The setting summer sun shining in my open windows, showing
the swarm of flies, suspended, balancing in
the air in the centre
of the room, darting athwart, up and down,
casting swift
shadows in specks on the opposite wall, where
the shine is.'
The irregular tapping of rain down on the leaves, after the storm
is lulled.'
'Me observing the spiral flight of two little yellow butterflies shuffling
between each other,ascending high in the air.'
'And the fish suspending themselves below there - and the beautiful
curious liquid.'
'In the distance the flowing glaze, the breast of the river, with a
wind-dapple here and there.'
These word paintings of Whitman's sometimes pass by their very vividness
into whimsicalities, yet are, for all that, wondrous word-paintings nevertheless:
as where he speaks of -
'... dabs of
music;
Fingers of the
organist skipping staccato over the keys of the great organ.'
His word-painting power goes with him everywhere. Into the ship-building
yard, for example, where we see with him, as if we, too, were there -
'The butter-coloured chips flying off in great flakes,
and slivers.'
It goes with him, and we with it and with him through even the swinging
of a door -
'The door passing the dissevered friend, flushed
and in haste.'
Sometimes the secret of it lies even in a word -
'The dim-lit church and the shuddering organ.'
Or, again, as where conjuring up shapes before him in his reverie, he speaks,
among others, of -
'The shape of the shamed and angry stairs, trod
by sneaking footsteps.'
Or, yet more even, where brooding over many exquisite imaginings, he says
most oddly and
whimsically -
'They are so beautiful I nudge myself to listen.'
Or, again in the same way, when, by one subtle word, we note the last agonised
kiss of bereaved
affection, when -
'The twitching lips press lightly on the
forehead of the dying.'
The merest specks and atoms of beauty, however, are these little word-pictures
noticeable in
casual lines and phrases in Walt Whitman's poetry. Immeasurably more
noteworthy are the large humanity and the wide philosophy evidenced and
inculcated by his utterances. His cry is that of Happiness and of Adoration
-
'For I do not see one imperfection in the universe.'
Another while he declares -
'That all the things of the universe are perfect
miracles, each as profound as any.'
And another while he ejaculates: -
'The sun and stars that float in the open air;
The apple-shaped earth and we upon it - surely the
drift
of them is something
grand!'
Adding -
'I do not know what it is, except that it is grand,
and that it is happiness.'
Again, he is full of wonderment at the abounding wonders around him, among
others at -
'The wonder every one sees in every one else he sees,
and the wonders that fill each
minute of time forever.'
The wonder of wonders to him, however - the glory and consolation of his
life -(the enunciation of
which, of the joy and solace of which to fellow mortals, is among the
most dearly-cherished
aspirations of his ambition) - the one great end worth living for,
being, according to Walt Whitman -
Death. Thus he exclaims -
'And I will show that whatever happens to anybody
it may
be turned to beautiful
results - and I will show that nothing
can happen more beautiful
than Death.'
It is thus that he speaks in his 'Song at Sunset' of - 'the superb vistas
of Death.' It is thus that in his poem addressed 'To one Shortly to Die,'
he closes it not in pity but in felicitation -
'I do not commiserate - I congratulate you.'
It is thus he sings exultantly -
'I shall go with the rest.
We cannot be stopped at a given point - that is
no satisfaction,
To show us a good thing, or a few good things,
for a space of time
- that is no satisfaction;
We must have the indestructible breed of the best,
regardless of time.
If otherwise, all these things come but to ashes
of dung
If maggots and rats ended us, then alarum! for we
are betrayed!
Then indeed suspicion of death.
Do you suspect death? If I were to suspect death
I should die now:
Do you think I could walk pleasantly and well suited
toward annihilation?'
Consonant with his rapturous exultation in the thought of Death, consonant
with his homage for the perfection of the universe, are his absolute
confidence in the reality of the future, and his profound sense that all
that is holiest has never yet in any way been adequately realised or appreciated:
-
'I say the whole earth, and all the stars in the
sky,
are for religion's
sake.
I say no man has ever yet been half devout enough,
None has ever yet adored or worshipped half enough;
None has begun to think how divine he himself is,
and how certain the
future is.'
Hence he sings, hence he is a Poet, hence he undertakes in these poems
of his to write the 'evangel-
poem of comrades and love.' Akin to his overflowing delight in the
thought of the Now and the
Hereafter, are the largeness and the depth, the exquisite self-abnegation
and the all-embracing
comprehensiveness of his humanity. To the very dregs and scum and squalor
of the evil streets
of a bad city he cries out - by a subtle violation of grammar, as it
seems to us, i.e., in the verb we
have italicised in the subjoined quotation, appealing to them as though
he spoke with them from their
own level -
'Because you are greasy and pimpled, or that
you was drunk,
or a thief,
Or diseased, or rheumatic, or a prostitute, or are
so now,
Or from frivolity or impotence, or that you are
no scholar, and
never saw your name
in print,
Do you give in that you are any less immortal?'
At the City Dead House in his Leaves of Grass, we see him standing
- gazing -yearning, in
tenderest pity and commiseration over - what? over 'an outcast form,'
indeed, over the body of a poor dead prostitute -
'The divine woman, her body - I see her body - I
look on it alone,
That house, once full of passion and beauty - all
else I notice not;
No stillness so cold, nor running water from faucet,
nor odours
morbific impress me;
But the house alone - that wondrous house - that
delicate fair
house - that ruin!
That immortal house, more than all the rows of dwellings
ever built,
Or white domed Capitol itself, with majestic figures
surmounted -
or all the old high-spired
cathedrals,
That little house alone more than them all - poor
desperate house!
Fair, fearful work! tenement of a Soul! itself a
Soul!
Unclaimed, avoided house! take one breath from my
tremulous lips;
Take one tear, dropped aside as I go, for thought
of you,
Dead house of love! house of madness and sin, crumbled!
crushed!
House of life - ere while talking and laughing -
but, oh, poor house!
dead even then;
Months, years, an echoing, garnished house - but
dead dead, dead.'
So wide, so profound, so insatiable are the yearnings of this great heart
for sympathy, that on turning
to his poem on 'Envy' what do we find to be the cause of his Envy?
Not a perusal of the records
of heroism, not the thought of Mighty Generals or Men in Power,
but - when he reads of the
brotherhood of lovers -
'How through life, through dangers, odium, unchanging,
long and long,
Through youth, and through middle and through old
age, how unfaltering,
how affectionate,
and faithful they were,
Then I am pensive - I hastily put down the book,
and walk away,
filled with the bitterest
envy.'
In illustration of the same thought, or rather of the same tender, yearning
for sympathy, read his
commemoration of 'Parting Friends,' -
'Two simple men I saw to-day on the pier, in the
midst of the
crowd parting the
parting of dear friends;
The one to remain hung on the other's neck and passionately
kissed him,
Whilst the one to depart tightly pressed the one
to remain in his arms.'
Or, still more, the Poet's apostrophe 'To a Stranger': -
'Passing stranger! you do not know how longingly
I look upon you.'
Most of all this yearning for sympathy shines forth when it is recognised
'Among the
Multitude'; when, in other words, the Poet foresees it, thus -
'Among the men and women, the multitude
I perceive one picking me out by secret and divine
signs,
Acknowledging none else - not parent, wife, husband,
brother,
child, any nearer
than I am:
Some are baffled - But that one is not - that one
knows me.
Ah! lover and perfect equal!
I meant that you should discover me so, by my faint
indirections;
And I, when I meet you, mean to discover you by
the like in you.'
So, too, he sees them afar off in foreign lands, those breasts with whom
his own could sympathise could they be brought into communion: -
'O I know we should be brethren and lovers -
I know I should be happy with them.'
It were idle, however, attempting to afford the reader any adequate notion
of these poems as a
symmetrical whole, through mere fragmentary or incidental quotations
like those to which a
reviewer is necessarily restricted. It would be worse than the
proffering of the specimen-brick by the house-vendor in Hierocles - it
would be the production of a handful of splinters chipped off the
Apollo Belvidere, or of a stray finger torn from the Venus de Medici.
Whitman's Poems -as is
the case with every true work of art - must be viewed each in its entirety
before there can be any
hope whatever of their accurate appreciation. So regarded, they cannot
fail by any possibility, as we
conceive, to win the admiration to which they are so signally entitled.
After this fashion alone - that
is to say at once, searchingly and comprehensively - ought at any time
to be examined, that noble
apostrophe, beginning at page 310, To Death, that profound and heart-penetrating
epitome of
Human Life, commencing at page 356, that no less effective and affecting
poem upon Night and
Death which opens at page 266, but above all the magnificent Nocturn
upon the Death of
President Lincoln beginning at page 301, and, what is to our mind even
finer than that, the exquisitely pathetic and pre-eminently beautiful celebration
by Walt Whitman of the first revelation to himself of his own powers and
future path in life as a poet, when, as a little barefooted child, he stood
upon
the sea-shore one evening and far on into the night, listening to the
lamentations of the song-bird
bereaved of its mate, himself drowned in tears as he listened - standing,
there, entranced in the moonlight drinking in the music of that delicate
and tender death-chant! Never before was the
song of a bird so put into human language - never before was the rapturous
anguish of the poetic
summons so articulated. It is Béranger's Ma Vocation repeated:
when - speaking of himself as a
mere infant - the old Chansonnier sings to us -
'Une plainte touchante,
De ma bouche sortit;
Le bon Dieu me dit: Chante,
Chante, pauvre petit.'
And now that Whitman has sung (and is still, for that matter, happily singing
in the midst of us) in
obedience to the holy mandate by which every true poet is at the outset
made aware of his
vocation, he has as profound a sense of the reality of that summons,
and of the consequent permanence or security of his reputation as a Poet,
as ever Horace had when proudly forecasting his own poetic immortality.
Assuming to himself at once his right position in English Literature, he
has even, as it happens, like almost all the more remarkable poets in our
language, selected, unconsciously it may be, but unmistakably his own especial
emblem! Henceforth, as it seems to us, his inalienably and no other's!
A floral emblem to be worn by him from this time forth as conspicuously
as the sprig of bloom fastened of old on the helmet of the first Plantaganet.
In this, as we have just now intimated, it is with him, as it has been
before him with his compeer and his congeners, the majority of the great
poets in our language. Has not Moore, for example, in this way taken to
himself for ever as his the shamrock - and Scott the purpling heather -
and Campbell the red velvet strings of love-lies- bleeding? Has not Keats
his sprig of basil - and Blair his branch of funereal yew - and Chatterton
his trail of lamenting willow? But that Burns, again, according [to] his
own showing, was endowed by his Muse (the Muse of Scotland) with the glistening
bough of the holly, he might perchance have contested with Dan Chaucer
the latter's now undisputed right to the possession as his of the darling
blossom of the daisy. As indubitably, moreover, as the daisy belongs to
Chaucer and the holly to Burns - so has Shelley assumed to himself the
sensitive plant, and Wordsworth the little celandine and the daffodils,
and Cowper the rose and the water lily, and Leigh Hunt the flowering
branch of May, and Tennyson the gorgeous blossom of the passion flower,
if only by right of the 'splendid tear' shed upon it at the garden porch
in 'Maud,' and Milton 'the yellow cowslip and the pale primrose,' and Shakespeare,
for that matter, almost every bloom of the parterre or of the wilderness.
And, as it has been with those, so it is now and henceforth with this true
American Poet Walt Whitman, who has made the lilac - the fragrant, blueish-pink
blossoms of the lilac - his own completely. Turning the leaves of these
poems, the reader may say before the book is closed as the Poet himself
says or rather sings with a sort of rapture -
'Yet the lilac with mastering odour holds me.'
For it blossoms, and breathes forth its haunting perfume, and verdantly
unfolds its delicate heart-
shaped leaves, again and again, all through these pages - more especially
in the great Nocturn on the
Death of President Lincoln. And so, with the fragrance of the lilacs
in our nostrils, and with the song
of the lamenting bird in our ears, and with the thought in our hearts
of the manly poet himself going
his sickening rounds in the ghastly hospitals, all through the great
American War, accompanied, as
he went down the wards, by his attendant, bearing sponge, and pail,
and lint, and ointment, for the
cleansing and the binding up of many loathsome wounds, we close this
beautiful volume with a
renewal of our grateful acknowledgments to Mr. Rossetti, and with a
benison to Walt Whitman.
Return to Index.