Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass | Mass-market Monday

Leaves of Grass, Walt Whitman, 1892 (9th ed.), Signet Classics (no print date; 1958 copyright on Gay Wilson Allen’s introduction). No cover artist or designer credited. 430 pages.

Trying to find some hopeful green stuff woven in the New Year; hell, at this point I’m even open to the idea of the Lord dropping a handkerchief so we might ask, Whose? Seems more like the uncut hair of graves lately. My grass is thirsty.


“On the Beach at Night Alone”

by

Walt Whitman


On the beach at night alone,
As the old mother sways her to and fro singing her husky song,
As I watch the bright stars shining, I think a thought of the clef
of the universes and of the future.
A vast similitude interlocks all,
All spheres, grown, ungrown, small, large, suns, moons, planets,
All distances of place however wide,
All distances of time, all inanimate forms,
All souls, all living bodies though they be ever so different, or in
different worlds,
All gaseous, watery, vegetable, mineral processes, the fishes, the
brutes,
All nations, colors, barbarisms, civilizations, languages,
All identities that have existed or may exist on this globe, or any
globe,
All lives and deaths, all of the past, present, future,
This vast similitude spans them, and always has spann’d,
And shall forever span them and compactly hold and enclose them.

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