The Essential Works of Walt Whitman. Walt Whitman

The Essential Works of Walt Whitman - Walt Whitman


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Those with a never-quell’d audacity, those with sweet and lusty

       flesh clear of taint,

       Those that look carelessly in the faces of Presidents and governors,

       as to say Who are you?

       Those of earth-born passion, simple, never constrain’d, never obedient,

       Those of inland America.

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      When I peruse the conquer’d fame of heroes and the victories of

       mighty generals, I do not envy the generals,

       Nor the President in his Presidency, nor the rich in his great house,

       But when I hear of the brotherhood of lovers, how it was with them,

       How together through life, through dangers, odium, unchanging, long

       and long,

       Through youth and through middle and old age, how unfaltering, how

       affectionate and faithful they were,

       Then I am pensive — I hastily walk away fill’d with the bitterest envy.

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      We two boys together clinging,

       One the other never leaving,

       Up and down the roads going, North and South excursions making,

       Power enjoying, elbows stretching, fingers clutching,

       Arm’d and fearless, eating, drinking, sleeping, loving.

       No law less than ourselves owning, sailing, soldiering, thieving,

       threatening,

       Misers, menials, priests alarming, air breathing, water drinking, on

       the turf or the sea-beach dancing,

       Cities wrenching, ease scorning, statutes mocking, feebleness chasing,

       Fulfilling our foray.

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      A promise to California,

       Or inland to the great pastoral Plains, and on to Puget sound and Oregon;

       Sojourning east a while longer, soon I travel toward you, to remain,

       to teach robust American love,

       For I know very well that I and robust love belong among you,

       inland, and along the Western sea;

       For these States tend inland and toward the Western sea, and I will also.

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      Here the frailest leaves of me and yet my strongest lasting,

       Here I shade and hide my thoughts, I myself do not expose them,

       And yet they expose me more than all my other poems.

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      No labor-saving machine,

       Nor discovery have I made,

       Nor will I be able to leave behind me any wealthy bequest to found

       hospital or library,

       Nor reminiscence of any deed of courage for America,

       Nor literary success nor intellect; nor book for the book-shelf,

       But a few carols vibrating through the air I leave,

       For comrades and lovers.

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      A glimpse through an interstice caught,

       Of a crowd of workmen and drivers in a bar-room around the stove

       late of a winter night, and I unremark’d seated in a corner,

       Of a youth who loves me and whom I love, silently approaching and

       seating himself near, that he may hold me by the hand,

       A long while amid the noises of coming and going, of drinking and

       oath and smutty jest,

       There we two, content, happy in being together, speaking little,

       perhaps not a word.

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      A leaf for hand in hand;

       You natural persons old and young!

       You on the Mississippi and on all the branches and bayous of

       the Mississippi!

       You friendly boatmen and mechanics! you roughs!

       You twain! and all processions moving along the streets!

       I wish to infuse myself among you till I see it common for you to

       walk hand in hand.

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      Earth, my likeness,

       Though you look so impassive, ample and spheric there,

       I now suspect that is not all;

       I now suspect there is something fierce in you eligible to burst forth,

       For an athlete is enamour’d of me, and I of him,

       But toward him there is something fierce and terrible in me eligible

       to burst forth,

       I dare not tell it in words, not even in these songs.

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      I dream’d in a dream I saw a city invincible to the attacks of the

       whole of the rest of the earth,

       I dream’d that was the new city of Friends,

       Nothing was greater there than the quality of robust love, it led the rest,

       It was seen every hour in the actions of the men of that city,

       And in all their looks and words.

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      What


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