“I think I could turn and live with the animals. They are so
placid and self-contained, I stand and look at them long and
long. They do not sweat and whine about their condition.
They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins.
They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God. Not
one is dissatisfied nor not one is demented with the mania of
many things. Not one kneels to another nor to his kind that
lived thousands of years ago. Not one is respectable or
unhappy, over the whole earth.” And that is not irony on
nature, he means just that, life meant no more to him.
He accepted the world just as it is and glorified it, the seemly
and unseemly, the good and the bad. He had no conception
of a difference in people or in things. All men had bodies
and were alike to him, one about as good as another. To live
was to fulfil all natural laws and impulses. To be comfortable
was to be happy. To be happy was the ultimatum. He did
not realize the existence of a conscience or a responsibility.
He had no more thought of good or evil than the folks in
Kipling’s Jungle book.
Walt Whitman ToC
Speaking of monuments reminds one that there is more
talk about a monument to Walt Whitman, “the good,
gray poet.” Just why the adjective good is always applied to
Whitman it is difficult to discover, probably because people
who could not understand him at all took it for granted that
he meant well. If ever there was a poet who had no literary
ethics at all beyond those of nature, it was he. He was neither
good nor bad, any more than are the animals he continually
admired and envied. He was a poet without an exclusive sense
of the poetic, a man without the finer discriminations, enjoying
everything with the unreasoning enthusiasm of a boy. He
was the poet of the dung hill as well as of the mountains,
which is admirable in theory but excruciating in verse. In the
same paragraph he informs you that, “The pure contralto
sings in the organ loft,” and that “The malformed limbs are
tied to the table, what is removed drop horribly into a pail.”
No branch of surgery is poetic, and that hopelessly prosaic
word “pail” would kill a whole volume of sonnets. Whitman’s
poems are reckless rhapsodies over creation in general, some
times sublime, some times ridiculous. He declares that the
ocean with its “imperious waves, commanding” is beautiful,
and that the fly-specks on the walls are also beautiful. Such
catholic taste may go in science, but in poetry their results are
sad. The poet’s task is usually to select the poetic. Whitman
never bothers to do that, he takes everything in the universe
from fly-specks to the fixed stars. His “Leaves of Grass” is a
sort of dictionary of the English language, and in it is the
name of everything in creation set down with great reverence
but without any particular connection.
But however ridiculous Whitman may be there is a primitive
elemental force about him. He is so full of hardiness and
of the joy of life. He looks at all nature in the delighted, admiring
way in which the old Greeks and the primitive poets
did. He exults so in the red blood in his body and the
strength in his arms. He has such a passion for the warmth
and dignity of all that is natural. He has no code but to be
natural, a code that this complex world has so long outgrown.
He is sensual, not after the manner of Swinbourne and Gautier,
who are always seeking for perverted and bizarre effects
on the senses, but in the frank fashion of the old barbarians
who ate and slept and married and smacked their lips over the
mead horn. He is rigidly limited to the physical, things that
quicken his pulses, please his eyes or delight his nostrils.
There is an element of poetry in all this, but it is by no means
the highest. If a joyous elephant should break forth into song,
his lay would probably be very much like Whitman’s famous
“song of myself.” It would have just about as much delicacy
and deftness and discriminations. He says:
“I think I could turn and live with the animals. They are so
placid and self-contained, I stand and look at them long and
long. They do not sweat and whine about their condition.
They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins.
They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God. Not
one is dissatisfied nor not one is demented with the mania of
many things. Not one kneels to another nor to his kind that
lived thousands of years ago. Not one is respectable or
unhappy, over the whole earth.” And that is not irony on
nature, he means just that, life meant no more to him.
He accepted the world just as it is and glorified it, the seemly
and unseemly, the good and the bad. He had no conception
of a difference in people or in things. All men had bodies
and were alike to him, one about as good as another. To live
was to fulfil all natural laws and impulses. To be comfortable
was to be happy. To be happy was the ultimatum. He did
not realize the existence of a conscience or a responsibility.
He had no more thought of good or evil than the folks in
Kipling’s Jungle book.
And yet there is an undeniable charm about this optimistic
vagabond who is made so happy by the warm sunshine and
the smell of spring fields. A sort of good fellowship and
whole-heartedness in every line he wrote. His veneration for
things physical and material, for all that is in water or air or
land, is so real that as you read him you think for the moment
that you would rather like to live so if you could. For the time
you half believe that a sound body and a strong arm are the
greatest things in the world. Perhaps no book shows so much
as “Leaves of Grass” that keen senses do not make a poet.
When you read it you realize how spirited a thing poetry
really is and how great a part spiritual perceptions play in
apparently sensuous verse, if only to select the beautiful from
the gross.
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