Leaves of Grass: First and Death-Bed Editions

Home > Fantasy > Leaves of Grass: First and Death-Bed Editions > Page 74
Leaves of Grass: First and Death-Bed Editions Page 74

by Walt Whitman


  By it how poor must prove

  The pomp, and tinsel, and parade,

  Which pleasure’s followers love.

  Leave the wide city’s noisy din—

  The busy haunts of men—

  And here enjoy a tranquil life,

  Unvexed by guilt or pain.

  THE INCA’S DAUGHTER

  Before the dark-brow’d sons of Spain,

  A captive Indian maiden stood;

  Imprison’d where the moon before

  Her race as princes trod.

  The rack had riven her frame that day—

  But not a sigh or murmur broke

  Forth from her breast; calmly she stood,

  And sternly thus she spoke:—

  “The glory of Peru is gone;

  Her proudest warriors in the fight—

  Her armies, and her Inca’s power

  Bend to the Spaniard’s might.

  “And I—a Daughter of the Sun—

  Shall I ingloriously still live?

  Shall a Peruvian monarch’s child

  Become the white lord’s slave?

  “No: I’d not meet my father’s frown

  In the free spirit’s place of rest,

  Nor seem a stranger midst the bands

  Whom Manitou has blest.”

  Her snake-like eye, her cheek of fire,

  Glowed with intenser, deeper hue;

  She smiled in scorn, and from her robe

  A poisoned arrow drew.

  “Now, paleface see! the Indian girl

  Can teach thee how to bravely die:

  Hail! spirits of my kindred slain,

  A sister ghost is nigh!”

  Her hand was clenched and lifted high—

  Each breath, and pulse, and limb was still’d;

  An instant more the arrow fell:

  Thus died the Inca’s child.

  THE LOVE THAT IS HEREAFTER

  O, beauteous is the earth! and fair

  The splendors of Creation are:

  Nature’s green robe, the shining sky,

  The winds that through the tree-tops sigh,

  All speak a bounteous God.

  The noble trees, the sweet young flowers,

  The birds that sing in forest bowers,

  The rivers grand that murmuring roll,

  And all which joys or calms the soul

  Are made by gracious might.

  The flocks and droves happy and free,

  The dwellers of the boundless sea,

  Each living thing on air or land,

  Created by our Master’s hand,

  Is formed for joy and peace.

  But man—weak, proud, and erring man,

  Of truth ashamed, of folly vain—

  Seems singled out to know no rest

  And of all things that move, feels least

  The sweets of happiness.

  Yet he it is whose little life

  Is passed in useless, vexing strife,

  And all the glorious earth to him

  Is rendered dull, and poor, and dim,

  From hope unsatisfied.

  He faints with grief—he toils through care—

  And from the cradle to the bier

  He wearily plods on—till Death

  Cuts short his transient, panting breath,

  And sends him to his sleep.

  O, mighty powers of Destiny!

  When from this coil of flesh I’m free—

  When through my second life I rove,

  Let me but find one heart to love,

  As I would wish to love:

  Let me but meet a single breast,

  Where this tired soul its hope may rest,

  In never-dying faith: ah, then,

  That would be bliss all free from pain,

  And sickness of the heart.

  For vainly through this world below

  We seek affection. Nought but wo

  Is with our earthly journey wove;

  And so the heart must look above,

  Or die in dull despair.

  WE ALL SHALL REST AT LAST

  On earth are many sights of woe,

  And many sounds of agony,

  And many a sorrow-wither’d check,

  And many a pain-dulled eye.

  The wretched weep, the poor complain,

  And luckless love pines on unknown;

  And faintly from the midnight couch

  Sounds out the sick child’s moan.

  Each has his care—old age fears death;

  The young man’s ills are pride, desire,

  And heart-sickness; and in his breast

  The heat of passion’s fire.

  All, all know grief, and, at the close,

  All lie earth’s spreading arms within—

  The poor, the black-soul‘d, proud, and low,

  Virtue, despair, and sin.

  O, foolish, then, with pain to shrink

  From the sure doom we each must meet.

  Is earth so fair—or heaven so dark—

  Or life so passing sweet?

  No; dread ye not the fearful hour—

  The coffin, and the pall’s dark gloom,

  For there’s a calm to throbbing hearts,

  And rest, down in the tomb.

  Then our long journey will be o‘er,

  And throwing off this load of woes,

  The pallid brow, the feebled limbs,

  Will sink in soft repose.

  Nor only this: for wise men say

  That when we leave our land of care,

  We float to a mysterious shore,

  Peaceful, and pure, and fair.

  So, welcome death! Whene‘er the time

  That the dread summons must be met,

  I’ll yield without one pang of awe,

  Or sigh, or vain regret.

  But like unto a wearied child,

  That over field and wood all day

  Has ranged and struggled, and at last,

  Worn out with toil and play,

  Goes up at evening to his home,

  And throws him, sleepy, tired, and sore,

  Upon his bed, and rests him there,

  His pain and trouble o‘er.

  THE SPANISH LADY1

  On a low couch reclining,

  When slowly waned the day,

  Wrapt in gentle slumber,

  A Spanish maiden lay.

  O beauteous was that lady;

  And the splendour of the place

  Matched well her form so graceful,

  And her sweet, angelic face.

  But what doth she lonely,

  Who ought in courts to reign?

  For the form that there lies sleeping

  Owns the proudest name in Spain.

  Tis the lovely Lady Inez.

  De Castro’s daughter fair,

  Who in the castle chamber,

  Slumbers so sweetly there.

  O, better had she laid her

  Mid the couches of the dead;

  O better had she slumbered

  Where the poisonous snake lay hid.

  For worse than deadly serpent,

  Or mouldering skeleton,

  Are the fierce bloody hands of men,

  By hate and fear urged on.

  O Lady Inez, pleasant

  Be the thoughts that now have birth

  In thy visions; they are last of all

  That thou shalt dream on earth.

  Now noiseless on its hinges

  Opens the chamber door,

  And one whose trade is blood and crime

  Steals slow across the floor.

  High gleams the assassin’s dagger;

  And by the road that it has riven,

  The soul of that fair lady

  Has passed from earth to heaven.

  THE END OF ALL

  Behold around us pomp and pride;

  The rich, the lofty, and the gay,

  Glitter before our dazzled eyes—

  Live out the
ir brief but brilliant day;

  Then when the hour for fame is o‘er,

  Unheeded pass away.

  The warrior builds a mighty name,

  The object of his hopes and fears,

  That future times may see it where

  Her tower aspiring Glory rears.

  Desist, O, fool! think what thou‘lt be

  In a few fleeting years.

  Beside his ponderous age worn book

  A student shades his weary brow;

  He walks Philosophy’s dark path—

  That journey difficult and slow:

  But vain is all that teeming mind,

  He, too, to earth must go.

  The statesman’s sleepless, plodding brain

  Schemes out a nation’s destiny;

  His is the voice that awes the crowd,

  And his, the bold, commanding eye;

  But transient is his high renown—

  He like the rest must die.

  And beauty sweet, and all the fair,

  Who sail on fortune’s sunniest wave;

  The poor, with him of countless gold,

  Owner of all that mortals crave,

  Alike are fated soon to lie

  Down in the silent grave.

  Children of folly here behold

  How soon the fame of man is gone:

  Time levels all. Trophies and names,

  Inscription that the proud have drawn

  Surpassing strength—pillars and thrones

  Sink as the waves roll on.

  Why, then, O, insects of an hour!

  Why, then, with struggling toil, contend

  For honors you so soon must yield,

  When Death shall his stern summons send?

  For honor, glory, fortune, wit,

  This is, to all, end.

  Think not when you attain your wish,

  Content will banish grief and care;

  High though your stand, though round you thrown

  The robes that rank and splendor wear,

  A secret poison in the heart

  Will stick and rankle there.

  In night to view the solemn stars,

  Ever in majesty the same—

  Creation’s world’s; how poor must seem

  The mightiest honors earth can name—

  And most of all this silly strife

  After the bubble, Fame!

  THE COLUMBIAN’S SONG

  What a fair and happy place

  Is the one where Freedom lives,

  And the knowledge that our arm is strong,

  A haughty bearing gives!

  For each sun that gilds the east,

  When at dawn it first doth rise,

  Sets at night,

  Red and bright,

  On a people where the prize

  Which millions in the battle fight

  Have sought with hope forlorn,

  Grows brighter every hour,

  In strength, and grace, and power,

  And the sun this land doth leave

  Mightier at filmy eve,

  Than when it first arose, in the morn.

  Beat the sounding note of joy!

  Let it echo o‘er the hills,

  Till shore and forest hear the pride,

  That a bondless bosom fills.

  And on the plain where patriot sires

  Rest underneath the sod,

  Where the stern resolve for liberty

  Was writ in gushing blood,

  Freeman go,

  With upright brow,

  And render thanks to God.

  O, my soul is drunk with joy,

  And my inmost heart is glad,

  To think my country’s star will not

  Through endless ages fade,

  That on its upward glorious course

  Our red eyed eagle leaps,

  While with the ever moving winds,

  Our dawn-striped banner sweeps:

  That here at length is found

  A wide extending shore,

  Where Freedom’s starry gleam,

  Shines with unvarying beam;

  Not as it did of yore,

  With flickering flash, when CAESAR fell,

  Or haughty GESLER heard his knell,

  Or STUART rolled in gore.

  Nor let our foes presume

  That this heart-prized union band,

  Will e‘er be severed by the stroke

  Of a fraternal hand.

  Though parties sometime rage,

  And Faction rears its form.

  Its jealous eye, its scheming brain,

  To revel in the storm:

  Yet should a danger threaten,

  Or enemy draw nigh,

  Then scattered to the winds of heaven,

  All civil strife would fly;

  And north and south, and east and west,

  Would rally at the cry—

  ’Brethren arise! to battle come,

  For Truth, for Freedom, and for Home,

  And for our Fathers’ Memory!’

  THE PUNISHMENT OF PRIDE2

  Once on his star-gemmed, dazzling throne,

  Sat an all bright and lofty One,

  Unto whom God had given

  To be the mightiest Angel-Lord

  Within the range of Heaven;

  With power of knowing things to come,

  To judge o‘er man, and speak his doom.

  O, he was pure! the fleecy snow,

  Falling through air to earth below,

  Was not more undefiled:

  Sinless he was as the wreathed smile

  On lip of sleeping child.

  Haply, more like the snow was he,

  Freezing—with all its purity.

  Upon his forehead beamed a star,

  Bright as the lamps of even are;

  And his pale robe was worn

  About him with a look of pride,

  A high, majestic scorn,

  Which showed he felt his glorious might,

  His favor with the Lord of Light.

  Years, thus he swayed the things of earth—

  O‘er human crime and human worth—

  Haughty, and high, and stern;

  Nor ever, at sweet Mercy’s call,

  His white neck would he turn;

  But listening not to frailty’s plea,

  Launched forth each just yet stern decree.

  At last, our Father who above

  Sits throned with Might, and Truth, and Love,

  And knows our weakness blind,

  Beheld him—proud, and pitying not

  The errors of mankind;

  And doomed him, for a punishment,

  To be forth from his birth-place sent.

  So down this angel from on high

  Came from his sphere, to live and die

  As mortal men have done;

  That he might know the tempting snares

  Which lure each human son;

  And dwell as all on earth have dwelt.

  And feel the grief we all have felt.

  Then he knew Guilt, while round him weaved

  Their spells, pale Sickness, Love deceived,

  And Fear, and Hate, and Wrath;

  And all the blighting ills of Fate

  Were cast athwart his path:

  He stood upon the grave’s dread brink,

  And felt his soul with terror sink.

  He learned why men to sin give way,

  And how we live our passing day

  In indolence and crime;

  But yet his eye with awe looked on,

  To see in all its prime

  That godlike thing, the human mind,

  A gem in black decay enshrined.

  Long years in penance thus he spent,

  Until the Mighty Parent sent

  His loveliest messenger—

  Who came with step so noiselessly,

  And features passing fair;

  Death was his name; the angel heard

  The
call, and swift to heaven he soared.

  There in his former glory placed,

  The star again his forehead graced;

  But never more that brow

  Was lifted up in scorn of sin;

  His wings were folded now—

  But not in pride: his port, though high,

  No more spoke conscious majesty.

  And O, what double light now shone

  About that pure and heavenly one;

  For in the clouds which made

  The veil around his seat of power,

  In silvery robes arrayed,

  Hovered the seraph Charity,

  And Pity with her melting eye.

  AMBITION

  One day, an obscure youth, a wanderer,

  Known but to few, lay musing with himself

  About the chances of his future life.

  In that youth’s heart, there dwelt the coal Ambition,

  Burning and glowing; and he asked himself,

  “Shall I, in time to come, be great and famed?”

  Now soon an answer wild and mystical

  Seemed to sound forth from out the depths of air;

  And to the gazer’s eye appeared a shape

  Like one as of a cloud—and thus it spoke:

  “O, many a panting, noble heart

  Cherishes in its deep recess

  The hope to win renown o‘er earth

  From Glory’s prized caress.

  “And some will win that envied goal,

  And have their deeds known far and wide;

  And some—by far the most—will sink

  Down in oblivion’s tide.

  “But thou, who visions bright dost cull

  From the imagination’s store,

  With dreams, such as the youthful dream

  Of grandeur, love, and power,

  “Fanciest that thou shalt build a name

  And come to have the nations know

  What conscious might dwells in the brain

  That throbs beneath that brow?

  “And see thick countless ranks of men

  Fix upon thee their reverent gaze—

 

‹ Prev