PS PRIVATE LIBRARY OF JOHN P. DORR. No - PLEASE RETURN AFTER READING. ANNEX TO LEAVES OF GRASS PHILADELPHIA DAVID McKAY, PUBLISHER 23 SOUTH NINTH STREET 1891 COPYRIGHT 1891 BY WALT WHITMAN All rights reserved CONTENTS. PREFACE NOTE TO 20 ANNEX, 5 GOOD- BYE MY FANCY: Sail Out for Good, Eid6lon Yacht, 7 Lingering Last Drops, 7 Good-Bye my Fancy, 7 On, on the Same, ye Jocund Twain, 8 My 7 ist Year, 8 Apparitions, 8 The Pallid Wreath, 9 An Ended Day, 9 Old Age's Ship and Crafty Death's, 10 To the Pending Year, 10 Shakspere-Bacon's Cipher, 10 Long, Long Hence, 10 Bravo, Paris Exposition, II Interpolation Sounds, II To the Sunset Breeze, 12 AN OLD MAN'S REJOINDER, 21 OLD POETS, 24 SHIP AHOY! 28 Old Chants, 12 A Christmas Greeting, 13 Sounds of the Winter, 13 A Twilight Song, 14 When the Full-grown Poet Came, H Osceola, 15 A Voice from Death, 15 A Persian Lesson, 16 The Commonplace, 17 " The Rounded Catalogue Divine Complete," 17 Mirages, 18 L. of G.'s Purport, 1 8 The Unexpress'd, 19 Grand is the Seen, 19 Unseen Buds, 19 Good-Bye my Fancy, 20 FOR QUEEN VICTORIA'S BIRTHDAY, 28 (3) 4 CONTENTS. AMERICAN NATIONAL LITERATURE, 29 GATHERING THE CORN, 35 A DEATH BOUQUET, 37 SOME LAGGARDS YET: The Perfect Human Voice, 39 Shakspere for America, 39 "Unassail'd Renown," 40 Inscription for a Little Book on Giordano Bruno, 41 Splinters, 41 MEMORANDA : A World's Show, 45 New York the Bay the Old Name, 45 A Sick Spell, 46 To be Present Only, 47 " Intestinal Agitation," 47 " Walt Whitman's Last Public,' " 47 IngersolPs Speech, 49 Feeling Fairly, 50 Old Brooklyn Days, 50 Health (Old Style), 42 Gay-heartedness, 43 As in a Swoon, 44 L. of G., 44 After the Argument, 44 For Us Two, Reader Dear, 44 Two Questions, 51 Preface to a Volume, 51 An Engineer's Obituary, 53 Old Actors, Singers, Shows, etc., in New York, 55 Some Personal and Old Age Jot tings, 59 Out in the Open Again, 64 America's Bulk Average, 64 Last Saved Items, 65 PREFACE NOTE TO 2d ANNEX, CONCLUDING L. OF G. 1891. HAD I not better withhold (in this old age and paralysis of me) such little tags and fringe-dots (maybe specks, stains,) as follow a long dusty journey, and witness it afterward ? I have probably not been enough afraid of careless touches, from the first and am not now nor of parrot-like repetitions nor plati tudes and the commonplace. Perhaps I am too democratic for such avoidances. Besides, is not the verse-field, as originally plann'd by my theory, now sufficiently illustrated and full time for me to silently retire ? (indeed amid no loud call or market for my sort of poetic utterance.) In answer, or rather defiance, to that kind of well-put inter rogation, here comes this little cluster, and conclusion of my preceding clusters. Though not at all clear that, as here col lated, it is worth printing (certainly I have nothing fresh to write) I while away the hours of my ^26. year hours of forced confinement in my den by putting in shape this small old age collation : Last droplets of and after spontaneous rain, From many limpid distillations and past showers ; (Will they germinate anything? mere exhalations as they all are the land's and sea's America's ; Will they filter to any deep emotion ? any heart and brain ?) However that may be, I feel like improving to-day's oppor tunity and wind up. During the last two years I have sent out, in the lulls of illness and exhaustion, certain chirps lingering- dying ones probably (undoubtedly) which now I may as well gather and put in fair type while able to see correctly (for my eyes plainly warn me they are dimming, and my brain more and more palpably neglects or refuses, month after month, even slight tasks or revisions.) In fact, here I am these current years 1890 and '91, (each successive fortnight getting stiffer and stuck deeper) much like some hard-cased dilapidated grim ancient shell-fish or time- bang' d conch (no legs, utterly non-locomotive) cast up high and (5) 6 PREFACE NOTE TO 2d ANNEX. dry on the shore-sands, helpless to move anywhere nothing left but behave myself quiet, and while away the days yet assign' d, and discover if there is anything for the said grim and time- bang' d conch to be got at last out of inherited good spirits and primal buoyant centre-pulses down there deep somewhere within his gray-blurr'd old shell (Reader, youmust allowalittle fun here for one reason there are too many of the following poemets about death, &c., and for another the passing hours (July 5, 1890) are so sunny-fine. And old as I am I feel to-day almost a part of some frolicsome wave, or for sporting yet like a kid or kitten probably a streak of physical adjustment and per fection here and now. I believe I have it in me perennially anyhow.) Then behind all, the deep-down consolation (it is a glum one, but I dare not be sorry for the fact of it in the past, nor refrain from dwelling, even vaunting here at the end) that this late-years palsied old shorn and shell-fish condition of me is the indubitable outcome and growth, now near for 20 years along, of too over- zealous, over-continued bodily and emotional excitement and action through the times of 1862, '3, '4 and '5, visiting and waiting on wounded and sick army volunteers, both sides, in campaigns or contests, or after them, or in hospitals or fields south of Washington City, or in that place and elsewhere those hot, sad, wrenching times the army volunteers, all States, or North or South the wounded, suffering, dying the exhausting, sweat ing summers, marches, battles, carnage those trenches hurriedly heap'd by the corpse-thousands, mainly unknown Will the America of the future will this vast rich Union ever realize what itself cost, back there after all ? those hecatombs of bat tle-deaths Those times of which, O far-off reader, this whole book is indeed finally but a reminiscent memorial from thence by me to you ? GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. SAIL OUT FOR GOOD, EIDOLON YACHT! HEAVE the anchor short ! Raise main-sail and jib steer forth, little white-hull' d sloop, now speed on really deep waters, (I will not call it our concluding voyage, But outset and sure entrance to the truest, best, maturest ;) Depart, depart from solid earth no more returning to these shores, Now on for aye our infinite free venture wending, Spurning all yet tried ports, seas, hawsers, densities, gravitation, Sail out for good, eidolon yacht of me ! LINGERING LAST DROPS. AND whence and why come you ? We know not whence, (was the answer,) We only know that we drift here with the rest, That we linger'd and lagg'd but were wafted at last, and are now here, To make the passing shower's concluding drops. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. GOOD-BYE* my fancy (I had a word to say, But 'tis not quite the time The best of any man's word or say, Is when its proper place arrives and for its meaning, 1 keep mine till the last.) * Behind a Good-bye there lurks much of the salutation of another be ginning to me, Development, Continuity, Immortality, Transformation, are the chiefest life-meanings of Nature and Humanity, and are the sine qua ' non of all facts, and each fact. Why do folks dwell so fondly on the last words, advice, appearance, of the departing ? Those last words are not samples of the best, which involve vitality at its full, and balance, and perfect control and scope. But they are valuable beyond measure to confirm and endorse the varied train, facts, theo ries and faith of the whole preceding life. (7) 8 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. ON, ON THE SAME, YE JOCUND TWAIN! ON, on the same, ye jocund twain ! My life and recitative,, containing birth, youth, mid-age years, Fitful as motley-tongues of flame, inseparably twined and merged in one combining all, My single soul aims, confirmations, failures, joys Nor single soul alone, I chant my nation's crucial stage, (America's, haply humanity's) the trial great, the victory great, A strange eclaircissement of all the masses past, the eastern world, the ancient, medieval, Here, here from wanderings, strayings, lessons, wars, defeats here at the west a voice triumphant justifying all, A gladsome pealing cry a song for once of utmost pride and satisfaction ; I chant from it the common bulk, the general average horde, (the best no sooner than the worst) And now I chant old age, (My verses, written first for forenoon life, and for the summer's, autumn's spread, I pass to snow-white hairs the same, and give to pulses winter- cool' d the same ;) As here in careless trill, I and my recitatives, with faith and love, Wafting to other work, to unknown songs, conditions, On, on, ye jocund twain ! continue on the same ! MY 7 ist YEAR. AFTER surmounting three-score and ten, With all their chances, changes, losses, sorrows, My parents' deaths, the vagaries of my life, the many tearing passions of me, the war of '63 and '4, As some old broken soldier, after a long, hot, wearying march, or haply after battle, To-day at twilight, hobbling, answering company roll-call, Here, with vital voice, Reporting yet, saluting yet the Officer over all. APPARITIONS. A VAGUE mist hanging 'round half the pages : (Sometimes how strange and clear to the soul, That all these solid things are indeed but apparitions, concepts, non-realities.) GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. g THE PALLID WREATH. SOMEHOW I cannot let it go yet, funeral though it is, Let it remain back there on its nail suspended, With pink, blue, yellow, all blanch' d, and the white now gray and ashy, One wither' d rose put years ago for thee, dear friend ; But I do not forget thee. Hast thou then faded ? Is the odor exhaled ? Are the colors, vitalities, dead ? No, while memories subtly play the past vivid as ever ; For but last night I woke, and in that spectral ring saw thee, Thy smile, eyes, face, calm, silent, loving as ever : So let the wreath hang still awhile within my eye-reach, It is not yet dead to me, nor even pallid. AN ENDED DAY. THE soothing sanity and blitheness of completion, The pomp and hurried contest-glare and rush are done ; Now triumph ! transformation ! jubilate ! * * NOTE. Summer country life. Several years. In my rambles and explo rations I found a woody place near the creek, where for some reason the birds in happy mood seem'd to resort in unusual numbers. Especially at the beginning of the day, and again at the ending, I was sure to get there the most copious bird-concerts. I repair'd there frequently at sunrise and also at sunset, or just before . . . Once the question arose in me : Which is the best singing, the first or the lattermost? The first always exhilarated, and perhaps seem'd more joyous and stronger; but I always felt the sunset or late after noon sounds more penetrating and sweeter seem'd to touch the soul often the evening thrushes, two or three of them, responding and perhaps blending. Though I miss'd some of the mornings, I found myself getting to be quite strictly punctual at the evening utterances. ANOTHER NOTE. " He went out with the tide and the sunset," was a phrase I heard from a surgeon describing an old sailor's death under pecu liarly gentle conditions. During the Secession War, 1863 and '4, visiting the Army Hospitals around Washington, I form'd the habit, and continued it to the end, whenever the ebb or flood tide began the latter part of day, of punctually visiting those at that time populous wards of suffering men. Somehow (or I thought so) the effect of the hour was palpable. The badly wounded would get some ease, and would like to talk a little, or be talk'd to. Intellectual and emotional natures would be at their best : Deaths were always easier; medicines seem'd to have better effect when given then, and a lulling atmosphere would pervade the wards. Similar influences, similar circumstances and hours, day-close, after great battles, even with all their horrors. I had more than once the same expe rience on the fields cover'd with fallen or dead. 10 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. OLD AGE'S SHIP & CRAFTY DEATH'S. FROM east and west across the horizon's edge, Two mighty masterful vessels sailers steal upon us : But we '11 make race a-time upon the seas a battle-contest yet! bear lively there ! (Our joys of strife and derring-do to the last !) Put on the old ship all her power to-day ! Crowd top-sail, top-gallant and royal studding-sails, Out challenge and defiance flags and flaunting pennants added, As we take to the open take to the deepest, freest waters. TO THE PENDING YEAR. HAVE I no weapon-word, for thee some message brief and fierce ? (Have I fought out and done indeed the battle ?) Is there no shot left, For all thy affectations, lisps, scorns, manifold silliness * Nor for myself my own rebellious self in thee ? Down, down, proud gorge ! though choking thee ; Thy bearded throat and high-borne forehead to the gutter; Crouch low thy neck to eleemosynary gifts. SHAKSPERE-BACON'S CIPHER. I DOUBT it not then more, far more ; In each old song bequeath' d in every noble page or text, (Different something unreck'd before some unsuspected author,) In every object, mountain, tree, and star in every birth and life, As part of each evolv'd from each meaning, behind the os- tent, A mystic cipher waits infolded. LONG, LONG HENCE. AFTER a long, long course, hundreds of years, denials, Accumulations, rous'd love and joy and thought, Hopes, wishes, aspirations, ponderings, victories, myriads of readers, Coating, compassing, covering after ages' and ages' encrus tations, Then only may these songs reach fruition. GOOD-B YE MY FANCY. I j BRAVO, PARIS EXPOSITION! ADD to your show, before you close it, France, With all the rest, visible, concrete, temples, towers, goods, ma chines and ores, Our sentiment wafted from many million heart-throbs, ethereal but solid, (We grand-sons and great -grand-sons do not forget your grand- sires,) From fifty Nations and nebulous Nations, compacted, sent over sea to-day, America's applause, love, memories and good-will. INTERPOLATION SOUNDS. [General Philip Sheridan was buried at the Cathedral, Washington, D. C., August, 1888, with all the pomp, music and ceremonies of the Roman Catholic service.] * OVER and through the burial chant, Organ and solemn service, sermon, bending priests, To me come interpolation sounds not in the show plainly to me, crowding up the aisle and from the window, Of sudden battle's hurry and harsh noises war's grim game to sight and ear in earnest ; The scout call'd up and forward the general mounted and his aids around him the new-brought word the instantaneous order issued ; The rifle crack the cannon thud the rushing forth of men from their tents ; The clank of cavalry the strange celerity of forming ranks the slender bugle note ; The sound of horses' hoofs departing saddles, arms, accoutre ments. *NOTE. CAMDEN, N. J., August 7, 1888. Walt Whitman asks the New York Herald " to add his tribute to Sheridan : " " In the grand constellation of five or six names, under Lincoln's Presi dency, that history will bear for ages in her firmament as marking the last life-throbs of secession, and beaming on its dying gasps, Sheridan's will be bright. One consideration rising out of the now dead soldier's example as it passes my mind, is worth taking notice of. If the war had continued any long time these States, in my opinion, would have shown and proved the most conclusive military talents ever evinced by any nation on earth. That they possess' d a rank and file ahead of all other known in points of quality and limitlessness of number are easily admitted. But we have, too, the eligi bility of organizing, handling and officering equal to the other. These two, with modern arms, transportation, and inventive American genius, would make the United States, with earnestness, not only able to stand the whole world, but conquer that world united against us." 12 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. TO THE SUN-SET BREEZE. AH, whispering, something again, unseen, Where late this heated day thou enterest at my window, door, Thou, laving, tempering all, cool-freshing, gently vitalizing Me, old, alone, sick, weak-down, melted-worn with sweat ; Thou, nestling, folding close and firm yet soft, companion bet ter than talk, book, art, (Thou hast, O Nature ! elements ! utterance to my heart beyond the rest and this is of them,) So sweet thy primitive taste to breathe within thy soothing fingers on my face and hands, Thou, messenger-magical strange bringer to body and spirit of me, (Distances balk'd occult medicines penetrating me from head to foot,) I feel the sky, the prairies vast I feel the mighty northern lakes, I feel the ocean and the forest somehow I feel the globe itself swift-swimming in space ; Thou blown from lips so loved, now gone haply from endless store, God-sent, (For thou art spiritual, Godly, most of all known to my sense,) Minister to speak to me, here and now, what word has never told, and cannot tell, Art thou not universal concrete's distillation ? Law's, all As tronomy's last refinement? Hast thou no soul ? Can I not know, identify thee ? OLD CHANTS. AN ancient song, reciting, ending, Once gazing toward thee, Mother of All, Musing, seeking themes fitted for thee, Accept for me, thou saidst, the elder ballads, And name for me before thou goest each ancient poet. (Of many debts incalculable, Haply our New World's chieftest debt is to old poems.) Ever so far back, preluding thee, America, Old chants, Egyptian priests, and those of Ethiopia, The Hindu epics, the Grecian, Chinese, Persian, The Biblic books and prophets, and deep idyls of the Naza- rene, GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. !$ The Iliad, Odyssey, plots, doings, wanderings of Eneas, Hesiod, Eschylus, Sophocles, Merlin, Arthur, The Cid, Roland at Roncesvalles, the Nibelungen, The troubadours, minstrels, minnesingers, skalds, Chaucer, Dante, flocks of singing birds, The Border Minstrelsy, the bye-gone ballads, feudal tales, essays, plays, Shakspere, Schiller, Walter Scott, Tennyson, As some vast wondrous weird dream-presences, The great shadowy groups gathering around, Darting their mighty masterful eyes forward at thee, Thou ! with as now thy bending neck and head, with courteous hand and word, ascending, Thou ! pausing a moment, drooping thine eyes upon them, blent with their music, Well pleased, accepting all, curiously prepared for by them, Thou enterest at thy entrance porch. A CHRISTMAS GREETING. From a Northern Star- Group to a Southern. 1889-' 90. WELCOME, Brazilian brother thy ample place is ready ; A loving hand a smile from the north a sunny instant hail ! (Let the future care for itself, where it reveals its troubles, im- pedimentas, Ours, ours the present throe, the democratic aim, the acceptance and the faith ;) To thee to-day our reaching arm, our turning neck to thee from us the expectant eye, Thou cluster free ! thou brilliant lustrous one ! thou, learning well, The true lesson of a nation's light in the sky, (More shining than the Cross, more than the Crown,) The height to be superb humanity. SOUNDS OF THE WINTER. SOUNDS of the winter too, Sunshine upon the mountains many a distant strain From cheery railroad train from nearer field, barn, house, The whispering air even the mute crops, garner' d apples, corn, Children's and women's tones rhythm of many a farmer and of flail, An old man's garrulous lips among the rest, Think not we give out yet. Forth from these snowy hairs we keep up yet the lilt. 14 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. A TWILIGHT SONG. As I sit in twilight late alone by the flickering oak-flame, Musing on long-pass'd war-scenes of the countless buried un known soldiers, Of the vacant names, as unindented air's and sea's the un- return'd, The brief truce after battle, with grim burial- squads, and the deep-fill'd trenches Of gather' d dead from all America, North, South, East, West, whence they came up, From wooded Maine, New-England's farms, from fertile Penn sylvania, Illinois, Ohio, From the measureless West, Virginia, the South, the Carolinas, Texas, (Even here in my room-shadows and half-lights in the noiseless flickering flames, Again I see the stalwart ranks on-filing, rising I hear the rhythmic tramp of the armies ;) You million unwrit names all, all you dark bequest from all the war, A special verse for you a flash of duty long neglected your mystic roll strangely gather'd here, Each name recall 'd by me from out the darkness and death's ashes, Henceforth to be, deep, deep within my heart recording, for many a future year, Your mystic roll entire of unknown names, or North or South, Embalm' d with love in this twilight song. WHEN THE FULL-GROWN POET CAME. WHEN the full-grown poet came, Out spake pleased Nature (the round impassive globe, with all its shows of day and night,) saying, He is mine ; But out spake too the Soul of man, proud, jealous and unrec onciled, Nay, he is mine alone ; Then the full-grown poet stood between the two, and took each by the hand ; And to-day and ever so stands, as blender, uniter, tightly hold ing hands, Which he will never release until he reconciles the two, And wholly and joyously blends them. GOOD-BYE HY FANCY. 15 OSCEOLA. [When I was nearly grown to manhood in Brooklyn, New York, (middle of 1838,) I met one of the return'd U. S. Marines from Fort Moultrie, S. C., and had long talks with him learn'd the occurrence below described death of Osceola. The latter was a young, brave, leading Seminole in the Florida war of that time was surrender'd to our troops, imprison'd and literally died of " a broken heart," at Fort Moultrie. He sicken'd of his confinement the doctor and officers made every allowance and kindness possible for him then the close :] WHEN his hour for death had come, He slowly rais'd himself from the bed on the floor, Drew on his war-dress, shirt, leggings, and girdled the belt around his waist, Call'd for vermilion paint (his looking-glass was held before him,) Painted half his face and neck, his wrists, and back-hands. Put the scalp-knife carefully in his belt then lying down, resting a moment, Rose again, half sitting, smiled, gave in silence his extended hand to each and all, Sank faintly low to the floor (tightly grasping the tomahawk handle,) Fix'd his look on wife and little children the last : (And here a line in memory of his name and death.) A VOICE FROM DEATH. (The Johnstown, Penn., cataclysm, May 31, 1889.) A VOICE from Death, solemn and strange, in all his sweep and power, With sudden, indescribable blow towns drown'd humanity by thousands slain, The vaunted work of thrift, goods, dwellings, forge, street, iron bridge, Dash'd pell-mell by the blow yet usher'd life continuing on, (Amid the rest, amid the rushing, whirling, wild debris, A suffering woman saved a baby safely born !) Although I come and unannounc'd, in horror and in pang, In pouring flood and fire, and wholesale elemental crash, (this voice so solemn, strange,) I too a minister of Deity. Yea, Death, we bow our faces, veil our eyes to thee, We mourn the old, the young untimely drawn to thee, The fair, the strong, the good, the capable, !6 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. The household wreck'd, the husband and the wife, the engulf 'd forger in his forge, The corpses in the whelming waters and the mud, The gather 'd thousands to their funeral mounds, and thousands never found or gather' d. Then after burying, mourning the dead, (Faithful to them found or unfound, forgetting not, bearing the past, here new musing,) A day a passing moment or an hour America itself bends low, Silent, resign'd, submissive. War, death, cataclysm like this, America, Take deep to thy proud prosperous heart. E'en as I chant, lo ! out of death, and out of ooze and slime, The blossoms rapidly blooming, sympathy, help, love, From West and East, from South and North and over sea, Its hot-spurr'd hearts and hands humanity to human aid moves on; And from within a thought and lesson yet. Thou ever-darting Globe ! through Space and Air ! Thou waters that encompass us ! Thou that in all the life and death of us, in action or in sleep ! Thou laws invisible that permeate them and all, Thou that in all, and over all, and through and under all, incessant ! Thou ! thou ! the vital, universal, giant force resistless, sleepless, calm, Holding Humanity as in thy open hand, as some ephemeral toy, How ill to e'er forget thee ! For I too have forgotten, (Wrapt in these little potencies of progress, politics, culture, wealth, inventions, civilization,) Have lost my recognition of your silent ever-swaying power, ye mighty, elemental throes, In which and upon which we float, and every one of us is buoy'd. A PERSIAN LESSON. FOR his o'erarching and last lesson the greybeard sufi, In the fresh scent of the morning in the open air, On the slope of a teeming Persian rose-garden, Under an ancient chestnut-tree wide spreading its branches, Spoke to the young priests and students. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. ! 7 " Finally my children, to envelop each word, each part of the rest, Allah is all, all, all is immanent in every life and object, May-be at many and many-a-more removes yet Allah, Allah, Allah is there. "Has the estray wander'd far? Is the reason-why strangely hidden ? Would you sound below the restless ocean of the entire world ? Would you know the dissatisfaction ? the urge and spur of every life; The something never still'd never entirely gone? the invisible need of every seed ? " It is the central urge in every atom, (Often unconscious, often evil, downfallen,) To return to its divine source and origin, however distant, Latent the same in subject and in object, without one exception." THE COMMONPLACE. THE commonplace I sing ; How cheap is health ! how cheap nobility ! Abstinence, no falsehood, no gluttony, lust ; The open air I sing, freedom, toleration, (Take here the mainest lesson less from books less from the schools,) The common day and night the common earth and waters, Your farm your work, trade, occupation, The democratic wisdom underneath, like solid ground for all. "THE ROUNDED CATALOGUE DIVINE COMPLETE." [Sunday, . Went this forenoon to church. A college profes sor, Rev. Dr. , gave us a fine sermon, during which I caught the above words ; but the minister included in his " rounded catalogue " letter and spirit, only the esthetic things, and entirely ignored what I name in the following :] THE devilish and the dark, the dying and diseas'd, The countless (nineteen-twentieths) low and evil, crude and savage, The crazed, prisoners in jail, the horrible, rank, malignant, Venom and filth, serpents, the ravenous sharks, liars, the disso lute; (What is the part the wicked and the loathesome bear within earth's orbic scheme ?) Newts, crawling things in slime and mud, poisons, The barren soil, the evil men, the slag and hideous rot. 1 8 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. MIRAGES. (Noted verbatim after a supper-talk outdoors in Nevada -with, two old miners.} MORE experiences and sights, stranger, than you'd think for; Times again, now mostly just after sunrise or before sunset, Sometimes in spring, oftener in autumn, perfectly clear weather, in plain sight, Camps far or near, the crowded streets of cities and the shop- fronts, (Account for it or not credit or not it is all true, And my mate there could tell you the like we have often con fab' d about it,) People and scenes, animals, trees, colors and lines, plain as could be, Farms and dooryards of home, paths border' d with box, lilacs in corners, Weddings in churches, thanksgiving dinners, returns of long- absent sons, Glum funerals, the crape-veil'd mother and the daughters, Trials in courts, jury and judge, the accused in the box, Contestants, battles, crowds, bridges, wharves, Now and then mark'd faces of sorrow or joy, (I could pick them out this moment if I saw them again,) Show'd to me just aloft to the right in the sky-edge, Or plainly there to the left on the hill-tops. L. OF G.'S PURPORT. NOT to exclude or demarcate, or pick out evils from their formid able masses (even to expose them,) But add, fuse, complete, extend and celebrate the immortal and the good. Haughty this song, its words and scope, To span vast realms of space and time, Evolution the cumulative growths and generations. Begun in ripen'd youth and steadily pursued, Wandering, peering, dallying with all war, peace, day and night absorbing, Never even for one brief hour abandoning my task, I end it here in sickness, poverty, and old age. I sing of life, yet mind me well of death : To-day shadowy Death dogs my steps, my seated shape, and has for years Draws sometimes close to me, as face to face. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 19 THE UNEXPRESS'D. How dare one say it ? After the cycles, poems, singers, plays, Vaunted Ionia's, India's Homer, Shakspere the long, long times' thick dotted roads, areas, The shining clusters and the Milky Ways of stars Nature's pulses reap'd, All retrospective passions, heroes, war, love, adoration, All ages' plummets dropt to their utmost depths, All human lives, throats, wishes, brains all experiences' utter ance ; After the countless songs, or long or short, all tongues, all lands, Still something not yet told in poesy's voice or print something lacking, (Who knows ? the best yet unexpress'd and lacking.) GRAND IS THE SEEN. GRAND is the seen, the light, to me grand are the sky and stars, Grand is the earth, and grand are lasting time and space, And grand their laws, so multiform, puzzling, evolutionary ; But grander far the unseen soul of me, comprehending, endow ing all those, Lighting the light, the sky and stars, delving the earth, sailing the sea, (What were all those, indeed, without thee, unseen soul ? of what amount without thee ?) More evolutionary, vast, puzzling, O my soul ! More multiform far more lasting thou than they. UNSEEN BUDS. UNSEEN buds, infinite, hidden well, Under the snow and ice, under the darkness, in every square or cubic inch, Germinal, exquisite, in delicate lace, microscopic, unborn, Like babes in wombs, latent, folded, compact, sleeping Billions of billions, and trillions of trillions of them waiting, (On earth and in the sea the universe the stars there in the heavens,) Urging slowly, surely forward, forming endless, And waiting ever more, forever more behind. 20 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY! GOOD-BYE my Fancy ! Farewell dear mate, dear love ! I'm going away, I know not where, Or to what fortune, or whether I may ever see you again, So Good-bye my Fancy. Now for my last let me look back a moment ; The slower fainter ticking of the clock is in me, Exit, nightfall, and soon the heart-thud stopping. Long have we lived, joy'd, caress'd together ; Delightful ! now separation Good-bye my Fancy. Yet let me not be too hasty, Long indeed have we lived, slept, filter'd, become really blended into one ; Then if we die we die together, (yes, we'll remain one,) If we go anywhere we'll go together to meet what happens, May-be we'll be better off and blither, and learn something, May-be it is yourself now really ushering me to the true songs, (who knows ?) May-be it is you the mortal knob really undoing, turning so now finally, Good-bye and hail ! my Fancy. AN OLD MAN'S REJOINDER. IN the domain of Literature loftily consider'd (an accom- plish'd and veteran critic in his just out work* now says,) 'the kingdom of the Father has pass'd ; the kingdom of the Son is passing; the kingdom of the Spirit begins.' Leaving the reader to chew on and extract the juice and meaning of this, I will proceed to say in melanged form what I have had brought out by the English author's essay (he discusses the poetic art mostly) on my own, real, or by him supposed, views and purports. If I give any answers to him, or explanations of what my books in tend, they will be not direct but indirect and derivative. Of course this brief jotting is personal. Something very like queru lous egotism and growling may break through the narrative (for I have been and am rejected by all the great magazines, carry now my y2d annual burden, and have been a paralytic for 18 years.) No great poem or other literary or artistic work of any scope, old or new, can be essentially consider'd without weighing first the age, politics (or want of politics) and aim, visible forms, unseen soul, and current times, out of the midst of which it rises and is formulated : as the Biblic canticles and their days and spirit as the Homeric, or Dante's utterance, or Shakspere's, or the old Scotch or Irish ballads, or Ossian, or Omar Khayyam. So I have conceiv'd and launch' d, and work'd for years at, my ' Leaves of Grass ' personal emanations only at best, but with specialty of emergence and background the ripening of the nineteenth century, the thought and fact and radiation of indi viduality, of America, the Secession war, and showing the demo cratic conditions supplanting everything that insults them or impedes their aggregate way. Doubtless my poems illustrate (one of novel thousands to come for a long period) those con ditions ; but ' democratic art ' will have to wait long before it is satisfactorily formulated and defined if it ever is. * Two new volumes, ' Essays Speculative and Suggestive,' by John Ad- dington Symonds. One of the Essays is on 'Democratic Art,' in which I and my books are largely alluded to and cited and dissected. It is this part of the vols. that has caused the off-hand lines above (first thanking Mr. S. for his invariable courtesy of personal treatment). (21) 22 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. I will now for one indicative moment lock horns with what many think the greatest thing, the question of art, so-call'd. I have not seen without learning something therefrom, how, with hardly an exception, the poets of this age devote themselves, always mainly, sometimes altogether, to fine rhyme, spicy ver balism, the fabric and cut of the garment, jewelry, concetti, style, art. To-day these adjuncts are certainly the effort, beyond all else. Yet the lesson of Nature undoubtedly is, to proceed with single purpose toward the result necessitated, and for which the time has arrived, utterly regardless of the outputs of shape, ap pearance or criticism, which are always left to settle themselves. I have not only not bother' d much about style, form, art, etc., but confess to more or less apathy (I believe I have sometimes caught myself in decided aversion) toward them throughout, asking nothing of them but negative advantages that they should never impede me, and never under any circumstances, or for their own purposes only, assume any mastery over me. From the beginning I have watch' d the sharp and sometimes heavy and deep-penetrating objections and reviews against my work, and I hope entertain'd and audited them; (for I have probably had an advantage in constructing from a central and unitary principle since the first, but at long intervals and stages sometimes lapses of five or six years, or peace or war.) Ruskin, the Englishman, charges as a fearful and serious lack that my poems have no humor. A profound German critic complains that, compared with the luxuriant and well-accepted songs of the world, there is about my verse a certain coldness, severity, ab sence of spice, polish, or of consecutive meaning and plot. (The book is autobiographic at bottom, and may-be I do not exhibit and make ado about the stock passions : I am partly of Quaker stock.) Then E. C. Stedman finds (or found) mark'd fault with me because while celebrating the common people en masse, I do not allow enough heroism and moral merit and good intentions to the choicer classes, the college-bred, the etat-major. It is quite probable that S. is right in the matter. In the main I myself look, and have from the first look'd, to the bulky demo cratic torso of the United States even for esthetic and moral at tributes of serious account and refused to aim at or accept any thing less. If America is only for the rule and fashion and small typicality of other lands (the rule of the etat-major} it is not the land I take it for, and should to-day feel that my literary aim and theory had been blanks and misdirections. Strictly judged, most modern poems are but larger or smaller lumps of sugar, or slices of toothsome sweet cake even the banqueters dwelling on those glucose flavors as a main part of the dish. Which perhaps GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 23 leads to something : to have great heroic poetry we need great readers a heroic appetite and audience. Have we at present any such ? Then the thought at the centre, never too often repeated. Boundless material wealth, free political organization, immense geographic area, and unprecedented 'business' and products even the most active intellect and * culture ' will not place this Com monwealth of ours on the topmost range of history and humanity or any eminence of ' democratic art ' to say nothing of its pinnacle. Only the production (and on the most copious scale) of loftiest moral, spiritual and heroic personal illustrations a great native Literature headed with a Poetry stronger and sweeter than any yet. If there can be any such thing as a kosmic mod ern and original song, America needs it, and is worthy of it. In my opinion to-day (bitter as it is to say so) the outputs through civilized nations everywhere from the great words Litera ture, Art, Religion, etc., with their conventional administerers, stand squarely in the way of what the vitalities of those great words signify, more than they really prepare the soil for them or plant the seeds, or cultivate or garner the crop. My own opinion has long been, that for New World service our ideas of beauty (inherited from the Greeks, and so on to Shakspere query perverted from them ?) need to be radically changed, and made anew for to-day's purposes and finer standards. But if so, it will all come in due time the real change will be an autochthonic, interior, constitutional, even local one, from which our notions of beauty (lines and colors are wondrous lovely, but character is lovelier) will branch or offshoot. So much have I now rattled off (old age's garrulity,) that there is not space for explaining the most important and pregnant principle of all, viz., that Art is one, is not partial, but includes all times and forms and sorts is not exclusively aristocratic or democratic, or oriental or occidental. My favorite symbol would be a good font of type, where the impeccable long-primer rejects nothing. Or the old Dutch flour-miller who said, -' I never bother myself what road the folks come I only want good wheat and rye.' The font is about the same forever. Democratic art results of democratic development, from tinge, true nationality, belief, in the one setting up from it. OLD POETS. POETRY (I am clear) is eligible of something far more ripen'd and ample, our lands and pending days, than it has yet produced from any utterance old or new. Modern or new poetry, too, (viewing or challenging it with severe criticism,) is largely a-void -while the very cognizance, or even suspicion of that void, and the need of rilling it, proves a certainty of the hidden and wait ing supply. Leaving other lands and languages to speak for themselves, we can abruptly but deeply suggest it best from our own going first to oversea illustrations, and standing on them. Think of Byron, Burns, Shelley, Keats, (even first-raters, " the brothers of the radiant summit," as William O'Connor calls them,) as having done only their precursory and 'prentice work, and all their best and real poems being left yet unwrought, un- touch'd. Is it difficult to imagine ahead of us and them, evolv'd from them, poesy completer far than any they themselves fulfill'd ? One has in his eye and mind some very large, very old, entirely sound and vital tree or vine, like certain hardy, ever-fruitful specimens in California and Canada, or down in Mexico, (and indeed in all lands) beyond the chronological records illustra tions of growth, continuity, power, amplitude and exploitation, almost beyond statement, but proving fact and possibility, out side of argument. Perhaps, indeed, the rarest and most blessed quality of trans cendent noble poetry as of law, and of the profoundest wisdom and aestheticism is, (I would suggest,) from sane, completed, vital, capable old age. The final proof of song or personality is a sort of matured, accreted, superb, evoluted, almost divine, im palpable diffuseness and atmosphere or invisible magnetism, dis solving and embracing all and not any special achievement of passion, pride, metrical form, epigram, plot, thought, or what is call'd beauty. The bud of the rose or the half- blown flower is beautiful, of course, but only the perfected bloom or apple or finish' d wheat-head is beyond the rest. Completed fruitage like this comes (in my opinion) to a grand age, in man or woman, through an essentially sound continuated physiology and psychol ogy (both important) and is the culminating glorious aureole of all and several preceding. Like the tree or vine just mention'd, (24) GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 25 it stands at last in a beauty, power and productiveness of its own, above all others, and of a sort and style uniting all criticisms, proofs and adherences. Let us diversify the matter a little by portraying some of the American poets from our own point of view. Longfellow, reminiscent, polish' d, elegant, with the air of finest conventional library, picture-gallery or parlor, with ladies and gentlemen in them, and plush and rosewood, and ground- glass lamps, and mahogany and ebony furniture, and a silver inkstand and scented satin paper to write on. Whittier stands for morality (not in any all-accepting philo sophic or Hegelian sense, but) filter 'd through a Puritanical or Quaker filter is incalculably valuable as a genuine utterance, (and the finest,) with many local and Yankee and genre bits all hued with anti-slavery coloring (the genre and anti-slavery contributions all precious all help.) Whittier' s is rather a grand figure, but pretty lean and ascetic no Greek not universal and composite enough (don't try don't wish to be) for ideal Amer icanism. Ideal Americanism would take the Greek spirit and law, and democratize and scientize and (thence) truly Christian ize them for the whole, the globe, all history, all ranks and lands, all facts, all good and bad. (Ah this bad this nineteen-twen- tieths of us all ! What a stumbling-block it remains for poets and metaphysicians what a chance (the strange, clear-as-ever inscription on the old dug-up tablet) it offers yet for being trans lated what can be its purpose in the God-scheme of this universe, and all?) Then William Cullen Bryant meditative, serious, from first to last tending to threnodies his genius mainly lyrical when read ing his pieces who could expect or ask for more magnificent ones than such as "The Battle-Field," and "A Forest Hymn"? Bryant, unrolling, prairie-like, notwithstanding his mountains and lakes moral enough (yet worldly and conventional) a naturalist, pedestrian, gardener and fruiter well aware of books, but mixing to the last in cities and society. I am not sure but his name ought to lead the list of American bards. Years ago I thought Emerson pre-eminent (and as to the last polish and in tellectual cuteness may-be I think so still) but, for reasons, I have been gradually tending to give the file-leading place for American native poesy to W. C. B. Of Emerson I have to confirm my already avow'd opinion re garding his highest bardic and personal attitude. Of the galaxy of the past of Poe, Halleck, Mrs. Sigourney, Allston, Willis, Dana, John Pierpont, W. G. Simms, Robert Sands, Drake, Hill- house, Theodore Fay, Margaret Fuller, Epes Sargent, Boker, Paul 26 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. Hayne, Lanier, and others, I fitly in essaying such a theme as this, and reverence for their memories, may at least give a heart- benison on the list of their names. Time and New World humanity having the venerable resem blances more than anything else, and being "the same subject continued," just here in 1890, one gets a curious nourishment and lift (I do) from all those grand old veterans, Bancroft, Kos- suth, von Moltke and such typical specimen-reminiscences as Sophocles and Goethe, genius, health, beauty of person, riches, rank, renown and length of days, all combining and centering in one case. Above everything, what could humanity and literature do without the mellow, last-justifying, averaging, bringing-up of many, many years a great old age amplified? Every really first-class production has likely to pass through the crucial tests of a generation, perhaps several generations. Lord Bacon says the first sight of any work really new and first-rate in beauty and originality always arouses something disagreeable and repulsive. Voltaire term'd the Shaksperean works "a huge dunghill"; Hamlet he described (to the Academy, whose members listen'd with approbation) as "the dream of a drunken savage, with a few flashes of beautiful thoughts." And not the Ferney sage alone ; the orthodox judges and law-givers of France, such as La Harpe, J. L. Geoffrey, and Chateaubriand, either join'd in Voltaire's verdict, or went further. Indeed the classicists and regulars there still hold to it. The lesson is very significant in all departments. People resent anything new as a personal in sult. When umbrellas were first used in England, those who carried them were hooted and pelted so furiously that their lives were endanger'd. The same rage encounter'd the attempt in theatricals to perform women's parts by real women, which was publicly consider' d disgusting and outrageous. Byron thought Pope's verse incomparably ahead of Homer and Shakspere. One of the prevalent objections, in the days of Columbus was, the learn' d men boldly asserted that if a ship should reach India she would never get back again, because the rotundity of the globe would present a kind of mountain, up which it would be impos sible to sail even with the most favorable wind. "Modern poets," says a leading Boston journal, "enjoy lon gevity. Browning lived to be seventy-seven. Wordsworth, Bryant, Emerson, and Longfellow were old men. Whittier, Tennyson, and Walt Whitman still live." Started out by that item on Old Poets and Poetry for chyle to inner American sustenance I have thus gossipp'd about it all, and treated it from my own point of view, taking the privilege of rambling wherever the talk carried GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 27 me. Browning is lately dead ; Bryant, Emerson and Longfellow have not long pass'd away; and yes, Whittier and Tennyson re main, over eighty years old the latter having sent out not long since a fresh volume, which the English-speaking Old and New Worlds are yet reading. I have already put on record my no tions of T. and his effusions : they are very attractive and flowery to me but flowers, too, are at least as profound as anything; and by common consent T. is settled as the poetic cream-skimmer of our age's melody, iftftttf and polish a verdict in which I agree, and should say that nobody (not even Shakspere) goes deeper in those exquisitely touch' d and half-hidden hints and indirec tions left like faint perfumes in the crevices of his lines. Of Browning I don't know enough to say much; he must be studied deeply out, too, and quite certainly repays the trouble but I am old and indolent, and cannot study (and never did.) Grand as to-day's accumulative fund of poetry is, there is cer tainly something unborn, not yet come forth, different from any thing now formulated in any verse, or contributed by the past in any land something waited for, craved, hitherto non-express'd. What it will be, and how, no one knows. It will probably have to prove itself by itself and its readers. One thing", it must run through entire humanity (this new word and meaning Solidarity has arisen to us moderns) twining all lands like a divine thread, stringing all beads, pebbles or gold, from God and the soul, and like God's dynamics and sunshine illustrating all and having reference to all. From anything like a cosmical point of view, the entirety of imaginative literature's themes and results as we get them to-day seems painfully narrow. All that has been put in statement, tremendous as it is, what is it compared with the vast fields and values and varieties left unreap'd ? Of our own country, the splendid races North or South, and especially of the Western and Pacific regions, it sometimes seems to me their myriad noblest Homeric and Biblic elements are all untouch'd, left as if ashamed of, and only certain very minor occasional delirium tremens glints studiously sought and put in print, in short tales, " poetry " or books. I give these speculations, or notions, in all their audacity, for the comfort of thousands perhaps a majority of ardent minds, women's and young men's who stand in awe and despair before the immensity of suns and stars already in the firmament. Even in the Iliad and Shakspere there is (is there not?) a certain humiliation produced to us by the absorption of them, unless we sound in equality, or above them, the songs due our own demo cratic era and surroundings, and the full assertion of ourselves. And in vain (such is my opinion) will America seek successfully 2 8 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. to tune any superb national song unless the heart-strings of the people start it from their own breasts to be return'd and echoed there again. SHIP AHOY! IN dreams I was a ship, and sail'd the boundless seas, Sailing and ever sailing all seas and into every port, or out upon the offing, Saluting, cheerily hailing each mate, met or pass'd, little or big, " Ship ahoy ! " thro' trumpet or by voice if nothing more, some friendly merry word at least, For companionship and good will for ever to all and each. FOR QUEEN VICTORIA'S BIRTHDAY. An American arbutus bunch to be put in a little vase on the royal breakfast table, May 2^th, 1890. LADY, accept a birth-day thought haply an idle gift and token, Right from the scented soil's May-utterance here, (Smelling of countless blessings, prayers, and old-time thanks,)* A bunch of white and pink arbutus, silent, spicy, shy, From Hudson's, Delaware's, or Potomac's woody banks. * NOTE. Very little, as we Americans stand this day, with our sixty-five or seventy millions of population, an immense surplus in the treasury, and all that actual power or reserve power (land and sea) so dear to nations very little I say do we realize that curious crawling national shudder when the " Trent affair " promis'd to bring upon us a war with Great Britain follow' d unquestionably, as that war would have, by recognition of the Southern Con federacy from all the leading European nations. It is now certain that all this then inevitable train of calamity hung on arrogant and peremptory phrases in the prepared and written missive of the British Minister, to America, which the Queen (and Prince Albert latent) positively and promptly cancell'd ; and which her firm attitude did alone actually erase and leave out, against all the other official prestige and Court of St. James's. On such minor and personal incidents (so to call them,) often depend the great growths and turns of civil ization. This moment of a woman and a queen surely swung the grandest oscillation of modern history's pendulum. Many sayings and doings of that period, from foreign potentates and powers, might well be dropt in oblivion by America but never this, if I could have my way. W. W. AMERICAN NATIONAL LITERATURE. Is there any such thing or can there ever be ? So you want an essay about American National Literature, (tremendous and fearful subject!) do you?* Well, if you will let me put down some melanged cogitations regarding the matter, hap-hazard, and from my own points of view, I will try. Horace Greeley wrote a book named " Hints toward Reforms," and the title-line was consider'd the best part of all. In the present case I will give a few thoughts and suggestions, of good and ambitious intent enough anyhow first reiterating the question right out plainly : American National Literature is there distinctively any such thing, or can there ever be ? First to me comes an almost indescribably august form, the People, with varied typical shapes and attitudes then the divine mirror, Literature. As things are, probably no more puzzling question ever offer' d itself than (going back to old Nile for a trope,) What bread-seeds of printed mentality shall we cast upon America's waters, to grow and return after many days ? Is there for the future authorship of the United States any better way than submission to the teem ing facts, events, activities, and importations already vital through and beneath them all? I have often ponder'd it, and felt myself disposed to let it go at that. Indeed, are not those facts and activities and importations potent and certain to fulfil themselves all through our Commonwealth, irrespective of any attempt from individual guidance ? But allowing all, and even at that, a good part of the matter being honest discussion, examination, and ear nest personal presentation, we may even for sanitary exercise and contact plunge boldly into the spread of the many waves and cross-tides, as follows. Or, to change the figure, I will present my varied little collation (what is our Country itself but an in finitely vast and varied collation?) in the hope that the show itself indicates a duty getting more and more incumbent every day. In general, civilization's totality or real representative Na- * The essay was for the North American Review, in answer to the formal request of the editor. It appear' d in March, 1891. (29) 30 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. tional Literature formates itself (like language, or " the weather") not from two or three influences, however important, nor from any learned syllabus, or criticism, or what ought to be, nor from any minds or advice of toploftical quarters and indeed not at all from the influences and ways ostensibly supposed (though they too are adopted, after a sort) but slowly, slowly, curiously, from many more and more, deeper mixings and siftings (especially in America) and generations and years and races, and what largely appears to be chance but is not chance at all. First of all, for future National Literature in America, New England (the technically moral and schoolmaster region, as a cynical fellow I know calls it) and the three or four great Atlantic-coast cities, highly as they to-day suppose they dominate the whole, will have to haul in their horns. Ensemble is the tap-root of National Literature. America is become already a huge world of peoples, rounded and orbic climates, idiocrasies, and geographies forty- four Nations curiously and irresistibly blent and aggregated in ONE NATION, with one imperial language, and one unitary set of social and legal standards over all and (I predict) a yet to be National Literature. (In my mind this last, if it ever comes, is to prove grander and more important for the Commonwealth than its politics and material wealth and trade, vast and indispensable as those are.) Think a moment what must, beyond peradventure, be the real permanent sub-bases, or lack of them. Books profoundly con sider' d show a great nation more than anything else more than laws or manners. (This is, of course, probably the deep-down meaning of that well-buried but ever-vital platitude, Let me sing the people's songs, and I don't care who makes their laws.) Books too reflect humanity en masse, and surely show them splendidly, or the reverse, and prove or celebrate their prevalent traits (these last the main things.) Homer grew out of and has held the ages, and holds to-day, by the universal admiration for personal prowess, courage, rankness, amour propre, leadership, inherent in the whole human race. Shakspere concentrates the brilliancy of the centu ries of feudalism on the proud personalities they produced, and paints the amorous passion. The books of the Bible stand for the final superiority of devout emotions over the rest, and of re ligious adoration, and ultimate absolute justice, more powerful than haughtiest kings or millionares or majorities. What the United States are working out and establishing needs imperatively the connivance of something subtler than ballots and legislators. The Goethean theory and lesson (if I may briefly state it so) of the exclusive sufficiency of artistic, scientific, liter ary equipment to the character, irrespective of any strong claims GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 31 of the political ties of nation, state, or city, could have answer'd under the conventionality and pettiness of Weimar, or the Ger many, or even Europe, of those times; but it will not do for America to-day at all. We have not only to exploit our own theory above any that has preceded us, but we have entirely dif ferent, and deeper-rooted, and infinitely broader themes. When I have had a chance to see and observe a sufficient crowd of American boys or maturer youths or well-grown men, all the States, as in my experiences in the Secession War among the sol diers, or west, east, north, or south, or my wanderings and loiter- ings through cities (especially New York and in Washington,) I have invariably found coming to the front three prevailing per sonal traits, to be named here for brevity's sake under the heads Good-Nature, Decorum, and Intelligence. (I make Good-Nature first, as it deserves to be it is a splendid resultant of all the rest, like health or fine weather.) Essentially these lead the inherent list of the high average personal born and bred qualities of the young fellows everywhere through the United States, as any sharp observer can find out for himself. Surely these make the vertebral stock of superbest and noblest nations ! May the destinies show it so forthcoming. I mainly confide the whole future of our Commonwealth to the fact of these three bases. Need I say I demand the same in the elements and spirit and fruitage of National Literature? Another, perhaps a born root or branch, comes under the words Noblesse Oblige, even for a national rule or motto. My opinion is that this foregoing phrase, and its spirit, should influ ence and permeate official America and its representatives in Congress, the Executive Departments, the Presidency, and the individual States should be one of their chiefest mottoes, and be carried out practically. (I got the idea from my dear friend the democratic Englishwoman, Mrs. Anne Gilchrist, now dead. "The beautiful words Noblesse Oblige," said she to me once, " are not best for some develop' d gentleman or lord, but some rich and develop'd nation and especially for your America.") Then another and very grave point (for this discussion is deep, deep not for trifles, or pretty seemings.) I am not sure but the establish' d and old (and superb and profound, and, one may say, needed as old) conception of Deity as mainly of moral constitu ency (goodness, purity, sinlessness, &c.) has been undermined by nineteenth-century ideas and science. What does this immense and almost abnormal development of Philanthropy mean among the moderns ? One doubts if there ever will come a day when the moral laws and moral standards will be supplanted as over all : while time proceeds (I find it so myself) they will probably 32 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. be intrench' d deeper and expanded wider. Then the expanded scientific and democratic and truly philosophic and poetic quality of modernism demands a Deific identity and scope superior to all limitations, and essentially including just as well the so-call'd evil and crime and criminals all the malformations, the defec tive and abortions of the universe. Sometimes the bulk of the common people (who are far more 'cute than the critics suppose) relish a well-hidden allusion or hint carelessly dropt, faintly indicated, and left to be disinterr'd or not. Some of the very old ballads have delicious morsels of this kind. Greek Aristophanes and Pindar abounded in them. (I sometimes fancy the old Hellenic audiences must have been as generally keen and knowing as any of their poets.) Shakspere is full of them. Tennyson has them. It is always a capital compliment from author to reader, and worthy the peering brains of America. The mere smartness of the common folks, however, does not need encouraging, but qualities more solid and opportune. What are now deepest wanted in the States as roots for their literature are Patriotism, Nationality, Ensemble, or the ideas of these, and the uncompromising genesis and saturation of these. Not the mere bawling and braggadocio of them, but the radical emotion-facts, the fervor and perennial fructifying spirit at fountain-head. And at the risk of being misunderstood I should dwell on and repeat that a great imaginative literatus for America can never be merely good and moral in the conventional method. Puritanism and what radiates from it must always be mention' d by me with respect ; then I should say, for this vast and varied Commonwealth, geographically and artistically, the puritanical standards are constipated, narrow, and non-philosophic. In the main I adhere to my positions in " Democratic Vistas," and especially to my summing-up of American literature as far as to-day is concern'd. In Scientism, the Medical Profession, Practical Inventions, and Journalism, the United States have press' d forward to the glorious front rank of advanced civilized lands, as also in the popular dissemination of printed matter (of a superficial nature perhaps, but that is an indispensable prepara tory stage,) and have gone in common education, so-call'd, far beyond any other land or age. Yet the high-pitch'd taunt of Margaret Fuller, forty years ago, still sounds in the air: "It does not follow, because the United States print and read more books, magazines, and newspapers than all the rest of the world, that they really have therefore a literature. ' ' For perhaps it is not alone the free schools and newspapers, nor railroads and fac tories, nor all the iron, cotton, wheat, pork, and petroleum, nor GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 33 the gold and silver, nor the surplus of a hundred or several hun dred millions, nor the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, nor the last national census, that can put this Commonweal high or highest on the cosmical scale of history. Something else is indispensable. All that record is lofty, but there is a loftier. The great current points are perhaps simple, after all : first, that the highest developments of the New World and Democracy, and probably the best society of the civilized world all over, are to be only reach'd and spinally nourish'd (in my notion) by a new evolutionary sense and treatment ; and, secondly, that the evolution-principle, which is the greatest law through nature, and of course in these States, has now reach'd us markedly for and in our literature. In other writings I have tried to show how vital to any aspir ing Nationality must ever be its autochthonic song, and how for a really great people there can be no complete and glorious Name, short of emerging out of and even rais'd on such born poetic expression, coming from its own soil and soul, its area, spread, idiosyncrasies, and (like showers of rain, originally rising impalpably, distilPd from land and sea,) duly returning there again. Nor do I forget what we all owe to our ancestry ; though perhaps we are apt to forgive and bear too much for that alone. One part of the national American literatus's task is (and it is not an easy one) to treat the old hereditaments, legends, poems, theologies, and even customs, with fitting respect and toleration, and at the same time clearly understand and justify, and be de voted to and exploit our own day, its diffused light, freedom, responsibilities, with all it necessitates, and that our New- World circumstances and stages of development demand and make proper. For American literature we want mighty authors, not even Carlyle- and Heine-like, born and brought up in (and more or less essentially partaking and giving out) that vast abnormal ward or hysterical sick-chamber which in many respects Europe, with all its glories, would seem to be. The greatest feature in current poetry (perhaps in literature anyhow) is the almost total lack of first-class power, and simple, natural health, flourishing and produced at first hand, typifying our own era. Modern verse generally lacks quite altogether the modern, and is oftener possess'd in spirit with the past and feudal, dressed may-be in late fashions. For novels and plays often the plots and surfaces are contemporary but the spirit, even the fun, is morbid and effete. There is an essential difference between the Old and New. The poems of Asia and Europe are rooted in the long past. They celebrate man and his intellections and relativenesses as they 34 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. have been. But America, in as high a strain as ever, is to sing them all as they are and are to be. (I know, of course, that the past is probably a main factor in what we are and know and must be.) At present the States are absorb'd in business, money- making, politics, agriculture, the development of mines, inter communications, and other material attents which all shove for ward and appear at their height as, consistently with modern civilization, they must be and should be. Then even these are but the inevitable precedents and providers for home-born, tran scendent, democratic literature to be shown in superior, more heroic, more spiritual, more emotional, personalities and songs. A national literature is, of course, in one sense, a great mirror or reflector. There must however be something before something to reflect. I should say now, since the Secession War, there has been, and to-day unquestionably exists, that something. Certainly, anyhow, the United States do not so far utter poetry, first-rate literature, or any of the so-call'd arts, to any lofty admiration or advantage are not dominated or penetrated from actual inherence or plain bent to the said poetry and arts. Other work, other needs, current inventions, productions, have occupied and to-day mainly occupy them. They are very 'cute and imitative and proud can't bear being left too glaringly away far behind the other high-class nations and so we set up some home "poets," "artists," painters, musicians, literati,*n&. so forth, all our own (thus claim' d.) The whole matter has gone on, and exists to-day, probably as it should have been, and should be ; as, for the present, it must be. To all which we conclude, and repeat the terrible query : American National Lit erature is there distinctively any such thing, or can there ever be? GATHERING THE CORN Last of October. Now mellow, crisp Autumn days, bright moonlight nights, and gathering the corn "cutting up," as the farmers call it. Now, or of late, all over the country, a certain green and brown-drab eloquence seeming to call out, " You that pretend to give the news, and all that's going, why not give us a notice ? " Truly, O fields, as for the notice, " Take, we give it willingly." Only we must do it our own way. Leaving the domestic, dietary, and commercial parts of the question (which are enor mous, in fact, hardly second to those of any other of our great soil-products), we will just saunter down a lane we know, on an average West Jersey farm, and let the fancy of the hour itemize America's most typical agricultural show and specialty. Gathering the Corn the British call it Maize, the old Yankee farmer Indian Corn. The great plumes, the ears well-en velor/d in their husks, the long and pointed leaves, in summer, like green or purple ribands, with a yellow stem-line in the middle, all now turn'd dingy; the sturdy stalks, and the rustling in the breeze the breeze itself well tempering the sunny noon The varied reminiscences recall' d the ploughing and planting in spring (the whole family in the field, even the little girls and boys dropping seed in the hill) the gorgeous sight through July and August the walk and observation early in the day the cheery call of the robin, and the low whirr of insects in the grass -the Western husking party, when ripe the November moonlight gathering, and the calls, songs, laughter of the young fellows. Not to forget, hereabouts, in the Middle States, the old worm fences, with the gray rails and their scabs of moss and lichen those old rails, weather beaten, but strong yet. Why not come down from literary dignity, and confess we are sitting on one now, under the shade of a great walnut tree ? Why not confide that these lines are pencill'd on the edge of a woody bank, with a glistening pond and creek seen through the trees south, and the corn we are writing about close at hand on the north ? Why (35) 36 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. not put in the delicious scent of the " life everlasting" that yet lingers so profusely in every direction the chromatic song of the one persevering locust (the insect is scarcer this fall and the past summer than for many years) beginning slowly, rising and swelling to much emphasis, and then abruptly falling so appro priate to the scene, so quaint, so racy and suggestive in the warm sunbeams, we could sit here and look and listen for an hour ? Why not even the tiny, turtle-shaped, yellow-back'd, black- spotted lady-bug that has lit on the shirt-sleeve of the arm indit ing this ? Ending our list with the fall-drying grass, the Autumn days themselves, " Sweet days ; so cool, so calm, so bright," (yet not so cool either, about noon) the horse-mint, the wild carrot, the mullein, and the bumble-bee. How the half-mad vision of William Blake how the far freer, far firmer fantasy that wrote "Midsummer Night's Dream" would have revell'd night or day, and beyond stint, in one of our American corn fields ! Truly, in color, outline, material and spiritual suggestiveness, where any more inclosing theme for idealist, poet, literary artist ? What we have written has been at noon day but perhaps better still (for this collation,) to steal off by yourself these fine nights, and go slowly, musingly down the lane, when the dry and green-gray frost-touch' d leaves seem whisper-gossipping all over the field in low tones, as if every hill had something to say and you sit or lean recluse near by, and inhale that rare, rich, ripe and peculiar odor of the gather' d plant which comes out best only to the night air. The complex impressions of the far- spread fields and woods in the night, are blended mystically, soothingly, indefinitely, and yet palpably to you (appealing curiously, perhaps mostly, to the sense of smell.) All is com parative silence and clear-shadow below, and the stars are up there with Jupiter lording it over westward ; sulky Saturn in the east, and over head the moon. A rare well-shadow'd hour ! By no means the least of the eligibilities of the gather'd corn ! A DEATH-BOUQUET. Pic ltd Noontime, Early January, 1890. DEATH too great a subject to be treated so indeed the greatest subject and yet I am giving you but a few random lines about it as one writes hurriedly the last part of a letter to catch the closing mail. Only I trust the lines, especially the poetic bits quoted, may leave a lingering odor of spiritual hero ism afterward. For I am probably fond of viewing all really great themes indirectly, and by side-ways and suggestions. Cer tain music from wondrous voices or skilful players then poetic glints still more put the soul in rapport with death, or toward it. Hear a strain from Tennyson's late " Crossing the Bar " : " Twilight and evening bell, And after that the dark ! And may there be no sadness of farewell, When I embark; " For tho' from out our bourne of Time and Place The floods may bear me far, I hope to see my Pilot face to face When I have crost the bar." Am I starting the sail-craft of poets in line? Here then a quatrain of Phrynichus long ago to one of old Athens' favor ites: " Thrice-happy Sophocles ! in good old age, Bless'd as a man, and as a craftsman bless'd, He died ; his many tragedies were fair, And fair his end, nor knew he any sorrow." Certain music, indeed, especially voluntaries by a good player, at twilight or idle rambles alone by the shore, or over prairie or on mountain road, for that matter favor the right mood. Words are difficult even impossible. No doubt any one will recall ballads or songs or hymns (may-be instrumental perform ances) that have arous'd so curiously, yet definitely, the thought of death, the mystic, the after-realm, as no statement or sermon could and brought it hovering near. (37) 3 g GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. A happy (to call it so) and easy death is at least as much a physiological result as a psychological one. The foundation of it really begins before birth, and is thence directly or indirectly shaped and affected, even constituted, (the base stomachic) by every thing from that minute till the time of its occurrence. And yet here is something (Whittier's " Burning Driftwood") of an opposite coloring : " I know the solemn monotone Of waters calling unto me ; I know from whence the airs have blown, That whisper of the Eternal Sea ; As low my fires of driftwood burn, I hear that sea's deep sounds increase, And, fair in sunset light, discern Its mirage-lifted Isles of Peace." Like an invisible breeze after a long and sultry day, death sometimes sets in at last, soothingly and refreshingly, almost vitally. In not a few cases the termination even appears to be a sort of ecstasy. Of course there are painful deaths, but I do not believe such is at all the general rule. Of the many hundreds I myself saw die in the fields and hospitals during the Secession War the cases of mark'd suffering or agony in extremis were very rare. (It is a curious suggestion of immortality that the mental and emotional powers remain to their clearest through all, while the senses of pain and flesh-volition are blunted or even gone.) Then to give the following, and cease before the thought gets threadbare : " Now, land and life, finale, and farewell ! Now Voyager depart ! (much, much for thee is yet in store ;) Often enough hast thou adventur'd o'er the seas, Cautiously cruising, studying the charts, Duly again to port and hawser's tie returning. But now obey thy cherish' d, secret wish, Embrace thy friends leave all in order ; To port and hawser's tie no more returning, Depart upon thy endless cruise, old Sailor! " SOME LAGGARDS YET. THE PERFECT HUMAN VOICE. STATING it briefly and pointedly I should suggest that the human voice is a cultivation or form'd growth on a fair native foundation. This foundation probably exists in nine cases out of ten. Sometimes nature affords the vocal organ in perfection, or rather I would say near enough to whet one's appreciation and appetite for a voice that might be truly call'd perfection. To me the grand voice is mainly physiological (by which I by no means ignore the mental help, but wish to keep the emphasis where it belongs.) Emerson says manners form the representa tive apex and final charm and captivation of humanity : but he might as well have changed the typicality to voice. Of course there is much taught and written about elocution, the best reading, speaking, etc., but it finally settles down to best human vocalization. Beyond all other power and beauty, there is something in the quality and power of the right voice (timbre the schools call it) that touches the soul, the abysms. It was not for nothing that the Greeks depended, at their highest, on poetry's and wisdom's vocal utterance by tete-a-tete lectures (indeed all the ancients did.) Of celebrated people possessing this wonderful vocal power, patent to me, in former days, I should specify the contralto Alboni, Elias Hicks, Father Taylor, the tenor Bettini, Fanny Kemble, and the old actor Booth, and in private life many cases, often women. I sometimes wonder whether the best philosophy and poetry, or something like the best, after all these centuries, perhaps waits to be rous'd out yet, or suggested, by the perfect physiological human voice. SHAKSPERE FOR AMERICA. LET me send you a supplementary word to that "view" of Shakspere attributed to me, publish' d in your July number, * and * This bit was in " Poet-lore " monthly for September, 1890. (39) 40 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. so courteously worded by the reviewer (thanks ! dear friend.) But you have left out what, perhaps, is the main point, as follows : " Even the one who at present reigns unquestion'd of Shak- spere for all he stands for so much in modern literature, he stands entirely for the mighty aesthetic sceptres of the past, not for the spiritual and democratic, the sceptres of the future." (See pp. 55-58 in "November Boughs," and also some of my further notions on Shakspere.) The Old World (Europe and Asia) is the region of the poetry of concrete and real things, the past, the aesthetic, palaces, etiquette, the literature of war and love, the mythological gods, and the myths anyhow. But the New World (America) is the region of the future, and its poetry must be spiritual and demo cratic. Evolution is not the rule in Nature, in Politics, and Inventions only, but in Verse. I know our age is greatly mate rialistic, but it is greatly spiritual, too, and the future will be, too. Even what we moderns have come to mean by spirituality (while including what the Hebraic utterers, and mainly perhaps all the Greek and other old typical poets, and also the later ones, meant) has so expanded and color'd and vivified the compre hension of the term, that it is quite a different one from the past. Then science, the final critic of all, has the casting vote for future poetry. "UNASSAIL'D RENOWN." THE N. Y. Critic, Nov: 24, 1889, propounded a circular to several persons, and giving the responses, says, " Walt Whitman's views [as follow] are, naturally, more radical than those of any other contributor to the discussion ' ' : Briefly to answer impromptu your request of Oct : 19 the ques tion whether I think any American poet not now living deserves a place among the thirteen "English inheritors of unassail'd renown" (Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspere, Milton, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Burns, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats,) and which American poets would be truly worthy, &c. Though to me the deep of the matter goes down, down beneath. I remem ber the London Times at the time, in opportune, profound and friendly articles on Bryant's and Longfellow's deaths, spoke of the embarrassment, warping effect, and confusion on America (her poets and poetic students) "coming in possession of a great estate they had never lifted a hand to form or earn " ; and the further contingency of "the English language ever having an- nex'd to it a lot of first-class Poetry that would be American, not European" proving then something precious over all, and be- GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 4 ! yond valuation. But perhaps that is venturing outside the ques tion. Of the thirteen British immortals mention'd after placing Shakspere on a sort of pre-eminence of fame not to be invaded yet the names of Bryant, Emerson, Whittier and Longfellow (with even added names, sometimes Southerners, sometimes West ern or other writers of only one or two pieces,) deserve in my opinion an equally high niche of renown as belongs to any on the dozen of that glorious list. INSCRIPTION FOR A LITTLE BOOK ON GIORDANO BRUNO. As America's mental courage (the thought comes to me to-day) is so indebted, above all current lands and peoples, to the noble army of Old-World martyrs past, how incumbent on us that we clear those martyrs' lives and names, and hold them up for rev erent admiration, as well as beacons. And typical of this, and standing for it and all perhaps, Giordano Bruno may well be put, to-day and to come, in our New World's thankfulest heart and memory. W. W. February 24th, 1890. Camden, N. J. SPLINTERS. WHILE I stand in reverence before the fact of Humanity, the People, I will confess, in writing my L of G, the least consider ation out of all that has had to do with it has been the consider ation of " the public " at any rate as it now exists. Strange as it may sound for a democrat to say so, I am clear that no free and original and lofty-soaring poem, or one ambitious of those achievements, can possibly be fulfill'd by any writer who has largely in his thought the public or the question, What will establish' d literature What will the current authorities say about it? As far as I have sought any, not the best laid out garden or parterre has been my model but Nature has been. I know that in a sense the garden is nature too, but I had to choose I could not give both. Besides the gardens are well represented in poetry; while Nature (in letter and in spirit, in the divine essence,) little if at all. Certainly, (while I have not hit it by a long shot,) I have aim'd at the most ambitious, the best and sometimes feel to advance that aim (even with all its arrogance) as the most re deeming part of my books. I have never so much cared to feed 42 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. the esthetic or intellectual palates but if I could arouse from its slumbers that eligibility in every soul for its own true exercise ! if I could only wield that lever ! Out from the well-tended concrete and the physical and in them and from them only radiate the spiritual and heroic. Undoubtedly many points belonging to this essay perhaps of the greatest necessity, fitness and importance to it have been left out or forgotten. But the amount of the whole matter poems, preface and everything is merely to make one of those little punctures or eye-lets the actors possess in the theatre-cur tains to look out upon "the house" one brief, honest, living glance. HEALTH, (OLD STYLE.) IN that condition the whole body is elevated to a state by others unknown inwardly and outwardly illuminated, purified, made solid, strong, yet buoyant. A singular charm, more than beauty, flickers out of, and over, the face a curious transparency beams in the eyes, both in the iris and the white the temper partakes also. Nothing that happens no event, rencontre, weather, etc. but it is confronted nothing but is subdued into sustenance such is the marvellous transformation from the old timorousness and the old process of causes and effects. Sorrows and disappointments cease there is no more borrowing trouble in advance. A man realizes the venerable myth he is a god walking the earth, he sees new eligibilities, powers and beauties everywhere ; he himself has a new eyesight and hearing. The play of the body in motion takes a previously unknown grace. Merely to move is then a happiness, a pleasure to breathe, to see, is also. All the beforehand gratifications, drink, spirits, coffee, grease, stimulants, mixtures, late hours, luxuries, deeds of the night, seem as vexatious dreams, and now the awakening ; many fall into their natural places, wholesome, conveying di viner joys. What I append Health, old style I have long treasur'd found originally in some scrap-book fifty years ago a favorite of mine (but quite a glaring contrast to my present bodily state :) ON a high rock above the vast abyss, Whose solid base tumultuous waters lave ; Whose airy high-top balmy breezes kiss, Fresh from the white foam of the circling wave There ruddy HEALTH, in rude majestic state, His clust'ring forelock combatting the winds Bares to each season's change his breast elate, And still fresh vigor from th* encounter finds : GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 43 With mighty mind to every fortune braced, To every climate each corporeal power, And high-proof heart, impenetrably cased, He mocks the quick transitions of the hour. Now could he hug bleak Zembla's bolted snow, Now to Arabia's heated deserts turn, Yet bids the biting blast more fiercely blow, The scorching sun without abatement burn. There this bold Outlaw, rising with the morn, His sinewy functions fitted for the toil, Pursues, with tireless steps, the rapturous horn, And bears in triumph back the shaggy spoil. Or, on his rugged range of towering hills, Turns the stiff glebe behind his hardy team ; His wide-spread heaths to blithest measures tills, And boasts the joys of life are not a dream ! Then to his airy hut, at eve, retires, Clasps to his open breast his buxom spouse, Basks in his faggot's blaze, his passions fires, And strait supine to rest unbroken bows. On his smooth forehead, Time's old annual score, Tho' left to furrow, yet disdains to lie ; He bids weak sorrow tantalize no more, And puts the cup of care contemptuous by. If, from some inland height, that, skirting, bears Its rude encroachments far into the vale, He views where poor dishonor'd nature wears On her soft cheek alone the lily pale ; How will he scorn alliance with the race, Those aspin shoots that shiver at a breath ; Children of sloth, that danger dare not face, And find in life but an extended death : Then from the silken reptiles will he fly, To the bold cliff in bounding transports run, And stretch' d o'er many a wave his ardent eye, Embrace the enduring Sea-Boy as his son ! Yes ! thine alone from pain, from sorrow free, The lengthen'd life with peerless joys replete; Then let me, Lord of Mountains, share with thee The hard, the early toil the relaxation sweet. GAY-HEARTEDNES3. WALKING on the old Navy Yard bridge, Washington, D. C., once with a companion, Mr. Marshall, from England, a great traveler and observer, as a squad of laughing young black girls 44 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. pass'd us then two copper-color 'd boys, one good-looking lad 15 or 1 6, barefoot, running after "What gay creatures they all appear to be," said Mr. M. Then we fell to talking about the general lack of buoyant animal spirits. " I think," said Mr. M., "that in all my travels, and all my intercourse with people of every and any class, especially the cultivated ones, (the liter ary and fashionable folks,) I have never yet come across what I should call a really GAY-HEARTED MAN." It was a terrible criticism cut into me like a surgeon's lance. Made me silent the whole walk home. AS IN A SWOON. As in a swoon, one instant, Another sun, ineffable, full-dazzles me, And all the orbs I knew and brighter, unknown orbs ; One instant of the future land, Heaven's land. L OF G. THOUGHTS, suggestions, aspirations, pictures, Cities and farms by day and night book of peace and war, Of platitudes and of the commonplace. For out-door health, the land and sea for good will, For America for all the earth, all nations, the common people, (Not of one nation only not America only.) In it each claim, ideal, line, by all lines, claims, ideals, temper'd ; Each right and wish by other wishes, rights. AFTER THE ARGUMENT. A GROUP of little children with their ways and chatter flow in, Like welcome rippling water o'er my heated nerves and flesh. FOR US TWO, READER DEAR. SIMPLE, spontaneous, curious, two souls interchanging, With the original testimony for us continued to the last. MEMORANDA. [Let me indeed turn upon myself a little of the light I have been so fond of casting on others. Of course these few exceptional later mems are far far short of one's concluding history or thoughts or life-giving only a hap-hazard pinch of all. But the old Greek proverb put it, "Anybody who really has a good quality" (or bad one either, I guess) "has all." There's something in the proverb; but you mustn't carry it too far. I will not reject any theme or subject because the treatment is too personal. As my stuff settles into shape, I am told (and sometimes myself discover, un easily, but feel all right about it in calmer moments) it is mainly autobiographic, and even egotistic after all which I finally accept, and am contented so. If this little volume betrays, as it doubtless does, a weakening hand, and decrepitude, remember it is knit together out of accumulated sickness, inertia, physical disablement, acute pain, and listlessness. My fear will be that at last my pieces show indooredness, and being chain'd to a chair as never be fore. Only the resolve to keep up, and on, and to add a remnant, and even perhaps obstinately see what failing powers and decay may contribute too, have produced it. And now as from some fisherman's net hauling all sorts, and disbursing the same.] A WORLD'S SHOW. New York, Great Exposition opened in 1853. * went a time (nearly a year) days and nights especially the latter as it was finely lighted, and had a very large and copious ex hibition gallery of paintings (shown at best at night, I tho't) hundreds of pictures from Europe, many masterpieces all an exhaustless study and, scatter'd thro' the building, sculptures, single figures or groups among the rest, Thorwaldsen's "Apos tles," colossal in size and very many fine bronzes, pieces of plate from English silversmiths, and curios from everywhere abroad with woods from all lands of the earth all sorts of fabrics and products and handiwork from the workers of all nations. NEW YORK THE BAY THE OLD NAME. Commencement of a gossipy travelling letter in a New York city paper, May 10, 1879- My month's visit is about up; but before I get back to Camden let me print some jottings of the last four weeks. Have you not, reader dear, among your intimate friends, some one, temporarily absent, whose letters to you, avoiding all the big topics and disquisitions, give only minor, gossipy sights and scenes just as they come subjects disdain'd by solid (45) 46 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. writers, but interesting to you because they were such as happen to everybody, and were the moving entourage to your friend to his or her steps, eyes, mentality ? Well, with an idea something of that kind, I suppose, I set out on the following hurrygraphs of a breezy early-summer visit to New-York City and up the North River especially at present of some hours along Broad way. What I came to New York for. To try the experiment of a lecture to see whether I could stand it, and whether an audience could was my specific object. Some friends had invited me it was by no means clear how it would end I stipulated that they should get only a third-rate hall, and not sound the adver tising trumpets a bit and so I started. I much wanted some thing to do for occupation, consistent with my limping and par alyzed state. And now, since it came off, and since neither my hearers nor I myself really collaps'd at the aforesaid lecture, I intend to go up and down the land (in moderation,) seeking whom I may devour, with lectures, and reading of my own poems short pulls, however never exceeding an hour. Crossing from Jersey City, 5 to 6 p. m. The city part of the North River with its life, breadth, peculiarities the amplitude of sea and wharf, cargo and commerce one don't realize them till one has been away a long time and, as now returning, (cross ing from Jersey City to Desbrosses-st.,) gazes on the unrivall'd panorama, and far down the thin-vapor' d vistas of the bay, to ward the Narrows or northward up the Hudson or on the ample spread and infinite variety, free and floating, of the more immediate views a countless river series everything moving, yet so easy, and such plenty of room ! Little, I say, do folks here appreciate the most ample, eligible, picturesque bay and estuary surroundings in the world ! This is the third time such a conviction has come to me after absence, returning to New- York, dwelling on its magnificent entrances approaching the city by them from any point. More and more, too, the old name absorbs into me MANNA- HATTA, " the place encircled by many swift tides and sparkling waters." How fit a name for America's great democratic island city ! The word itself, how beautiful ! how aboriginal ! how it seems to rise with tall spires, glistening in sunshine, with such New World atmosphere, vista and action ! A SICK SPELL. Christmas Day, 25 th Dec., 1888. Am somewhat easier and freer to-day and the last three days sit up most of the time read and write, and receive my visitors. Have now been in-doors GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 47 sick for seven months half of the time bad, bad, vertigo, indi gestion, bladder, gastric, head trouble, inertia Dr. Bucke, Dr. Osier, Drs. Wharton and Walsh now Edward Wilkins my help and nurse. A fine, splendid, sunny day. My " November Boughs " is printed and out; and my " Complete Works, Poems and Prose," a big volume, 900 pages, also. It is ab't noon, and I sit here pretty comfortable. TO BE PRESENT ONLY. At the Complimentary Dinner, Camden, New Jersey, May 31, 1889. Walt Whitman said : My friends, though announced to give an address, there is no such intention. Following the impulse of the spirit, (for I am at least half of Quaker stock) I have obey'd the command to come and look at you, for a minute, and show myself, face to face ; which is probably the best I can do. But I have felt no com mand to make a speech ; and shall not therefore attempt any. All I have felt the imperative conviction to say I have already printed in my books of poems or prose ; to which I refer any who may be curious. And so, hail and farewell. Deeply acknowl edging this deep compliment, with my best respects and love to you personally 'to Camden to New- Jersey, and to all repre sented here you must excuse me from any word further. Fm Pall-Mall Gazette, London, England, Feb. 8, 1890. "INTESTINAL AGITATION." Mr. Ernest Rhys has just receiv'd an interesting letter from Walt Whitman, dated "Camden, January 22, 1890." The fol lowing is an extract from it : I am still here no very mark'd or significant change or hap pening fairly buoyant spirits, &c. but surely, slowly ebbing. At this moment sitting here, in my den, Mickle Street, by the oakwood fire, in the same big strong old chair with wolf-skin spread over back bright sun, cold, dry winter day. America continues is generally busy enough all over her vast demesnes (intestinal agitation I call it,) talking, plodding, making money, every one trying to get on perhaps to get towards the top but no special individual signalism (just as well, I guess.) "WALT WHITMAN'S LAST 'PUBLIC.'" The gay and crowded audience at the Art Rooms, Philadel phia, Tuesday night, April 15, 1890, says a correspondent of the Boston Transcript, April 19, might not have thought that W. W. crawl' d out of a sick bed a few hours before, crying, 48 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. Dangers retreat when boldly they're confronted, and went over, hoarse and half blind, to deliver his memoranda and essay on the death of Abraham Lincoln, on the twenty-fifth anniversary of that tragedy. He led off with the following new paragraph : " Of Abraham Lincoln, bearing testimony twenty-five years after his death and of that death I am now my friends before you. Few realize the days, the great historic and esthetic per sonalities, with him in the centre, we pass'd through. Abraham Lincoln, familiar, our own, an Illinoisian, modern, yet tallying ancient Moses, Joshua, Ulysses, or later Cromwell, and grander in some respects than any of them ; Abraham Lincoln, that makes the like of Homer, Plutarch, Shakspere, eligible our day or any day. My subject this evening for forty or fifty minutes' talk is the death of this man, and how that death will really filter into America. I am not going to tell you anything new ; and it is doubtless nearly altogether because I ardently wish to commem orate the hour and martyrdom and name I am here. Oft as the rolling years bring back this hour, let it again, however briefly, be dwelt upon. For my own part I hope and intend till my own dying day, whenever the i4th or i5th of April comes, to annu ally gather a few friends and hold its tragic reminiscence. No narrow or sectional reminiscence. It belongs to these States in their entirety not the North only, but the South perhaps be longs most tenderly and devoutly to the South, of all ; for there really this man's birthstock; there and then his antecedent stamp. Why should I not say that thence his manliest traits, his universality, his canny, easy ways and words upon the sur face his inflexible determination at heart ? Have you ever real ized it, my friends, that Lincoln, though grafted on the West, is essentially in personnel and character a Southern contribution ? ' ' The most of the poet's address was devoted to the actual oc currences and details of the murder. We believe the delivery on Tuesday was Whitman's thirteenth of it. The old poet is now physically wreck'd. But his voice and magnetism are the same. For the last month he has been under a severe attack of the lately prevailing influenza, the grip, in accumulation upon his previous ailments, and, above all, that terrible paralysis, the bequest of Secession War times. He was dress'd last Tuesday night in an entire suit of French Canadian grey wool cloth, with broad shirt collar, with no necktie ; long white hair, red face, full beard and moustache, and look'd as though he might weigh two hundred pounds. He had to be help'd and led every step. In five weeks GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 49 more he will begin his seventy-second year. He is still writing a little. From the Camden Post, N. ?., June 2, 1890. INGERSOLL'S SPEECH. He attends and makes a speech at the celebration of Walt Wliitmarf s birthday. Walt Whitman is now in his seventy-sec ond year. His younger friends, literary and personal, men and women, gave him a complimentary supper last Saturday night, to note the close of his seventy-first year, and the late curious and unquestionable "boom" of the old man's wide-spreading popularity, and that of his "Leaves of Grass." There were thirty-five in the room, mostly young, but some old, or begin ning to be. The great feature was Ingersoll's utterance. It was probably, in its way, the most admirable specimen of modern oratory hitherto delivered in the English language, immense as such praise may sound. It was 40 to 50 minutes long, altogether without notes, in a good voice, low enough and not too low, style easy, rather colloquial (over and over again saying " you " to Whitman who sat opposite,) sometimes markedly impassion'd, once or twice humorous amid his whole speech, from interior fires and volition, pulsating and swaying like a first-class Anda- lusian dancer. And such a critical dissection, and flattering summary ! The Whitmanites for the first time in their lives were fully satisfied ; and that is saying a good deal, for they have not put their claims low, by a long shot. Indeed it was a tremendous talk ! Phys ically and mentally Ingersoll (he had been working all day in New York, talking in court and in his office,) is now at his best, like mellow'd wine, or a just ripe apple ; to the artist-sense, too, looks at his best not merely like a bequeath'd Roman bust or fine smooth marble Cicero-head, or even Greek Plato ; for he is modern and vital and vein'd and American, and (far more than the age knows,) justifies us all. We cannot give a full report of this most remarkable talk and supper (which was curiously conversational and Greek-like) but must add the following significant bit of it. After the speaking, and just before the close, Mr. Whitman reverted to Colonel Ingersoll's tribute to his poems, pronouncing it the cap-sheaf of all commendation that he had ever receiv'd. Then, his mind still dwelling upon theColonel's religious doubts, he went on to say that what he himself had in his mind when he wrote " Leaves of Grass " was not only to depict American life, as it existed, and to show the triumphs of science, and the poetry in common things, and the full of an individual democratic 50 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. humanity, for the aggregate, but also to show that there was behind all something which rounded and completed it. " For what," he ask'd, "would this life be without immortality? It would be as a locomotive, the greatest triumph of modern sci ence, with no train to draw after it. If the spiritual is not behind the material, to what purpose is the material ? What is this world without a further Divine purpose in it all ? " Colonel Ingersoll repeated his former argument in reply. FEELING FAIRLY. Friday, July 27, 1890. Feeling fairly these days, and even jovial sleep and appetite good enough to be thankful for had a dish of Maryland blackberries, some good rye bread and a cup of tea, for my breakfast relish' d all fine weather bright sun to-day pleasant north-west breeze blowing in the open win dow as I sit here in my big rattan chair two great fine roses (white and red, blooming, fragrant, sent by mail by W. S. K. and wife, Mass.) are in a glass of water on the table before me. Am now in my 72d year. OLD BROOKLYN DAYS. It must have been in 1822 or '3 that I first came to live in Brooklyn. Lived first in Front street, not far from what was then call'd "the New Ferry," wending the river from the foot of Catharine (or Main) street to New York City. I was a little child (was born in 1819,) but tramp'd freely about the neighborhood and town, even then ; was often on the afore said New Ferry ; remember how I was petted and deadheaded by the gatekeepers and deckhands (all such fellows are kind to little children,) and remember the horses that seem'd to me so queer as they trudg'd around in the central houses of the boats, making the water-power. (For it was just on the eve of the steam-engine, which was soon after introduced on the ferries.) Edward Cope- land (afterward Mayor) had a grocery store then at the corner of Front and Catharine streets. Presently we Whitmans all moved up to Tillary street, near Adams, where my father, who was a carpenter, built a house for himself and us all. It was from here I ' assisted ' the per sonal coming of Lafayette in 1824-5 to Brooklyn. He came over the Old Ferry, as the now Fulton Ferry (partly navigated quite up to that day by 'horse boats,' though the first steamer had begun to be used hereabouts) was then call'd, and was re- ceiv'd at the foot of Fulton street. It was on that occasion that the corner-stone of the Apprentices' Library, at the corner of Cranberry and Henry streets since pull'd down was laid by GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. ST Lafayette's own hands. Numerous children arrived on the grounds, of whom I was one, and were assisted by several gen tlemen to safe spots to view the ceremony. Among others, La fayette, also helping the children, took me up I was five years old, press' d me a moment to his breast gave me a kiss and set me down in a safe spot. Lafayette was at that time between sixty-five and seventy years of age, with a manly figure and a kind face. TWO QUESTIONS. An editor of (or in) a leading monthly magazine (Harper's Monthly, July, 1890,) asks: "A hundred years from now will W. W. be popularly rated a great poet or will he be for gotten?" . . . A mighty ticklish question which can only be left for a hundred years hence perhaps more than that. But whether W. W. has been mainly rejected by his own times is an easier question to answer. All along from 1860 to '91, many of the pieces in L of G, and its annexes, were first sent to publishers or magazine editors before being printed in the L, and were peremptorily rejected by them, and sent back to their author. The " Eidolons " was sent back by Dr. H., of " Scribner's Monthly" with a lengthy, very insulting and contemptuous letter. "To the Sun-Set Breeze," 1 was rejected by the editor of " Harper's Monthly " as being " an improvisation " only. " On, on ye jocund twain " was rejected by the " Century " editor as being personal merely. Several of the pieces went the rounds of all the monthlies, to be thus sum marily rejected. June, '90. The rejects and sends back my little poem r so I am now set out in the cold by every big magazine and pub lisher, and may as well understand and admit it which is just as well, for I find I am palpably losing my sight and ratiocination. PREFA CE to a volume of essays and tales by Wm. D. O' Con nor, puff d posthumously in 1891. A hasty memorandum, not particularly for Preface to the fol lowing tales, but to put on record my respect and affection for as sane, beautiful, cute, tolerant, loving, candid and free and fair- intention 'd a nature as ever vivified our race. In Boston, 1860, I first met WILLIAM DOUGLAS O'CONNOR.* * Born Jan. 2d, 1832. When grown, lived several years in Boston, and edited journals and magazines there went about 1861 to Washington, D. C., and became a U. S. clerk, first in the Light-House Bureau, and then in the U. S. Life-Saving Service, in which branch he was Assistant Superintendent for many years sicken'd in 1887 died there at Washington, May 9th, 1889. 5 2 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. As I saw and knew him then, in his 2Qth year, and for twenty- five further years along, he was a gallant, handsome, gay-hearted, fine-voiced, glowing-eyed man ; lithe-moving on his feet, of healthy and magnetic atmosphere and presence, and the most welcome company in the world. He was a thorough-going anti- slavery believer, speaker and writer, (doctrinaire,) and though I took a fancy to him from the first, I remember I fear'd his ardent abolitionism was afraid it would probably keep us apart. (I was a decided and out-spoken anti-slavery believer myself, then and always ; but shy'd from the extremists, the red-hot fellows of those times.) O'C. was then correcting the proofs of Har rington, an eloquent and fiery novel he had written, and which was printed just before the commencement of the Secession War. He was already married, the father of two fine little children, and was personally and intellectually the most attractive man I had ever met. Last of '62 I found myself led towards the war-field went to Washington City (to become absorb' d in the armies, and in the big hospitals, and to get work in one of the Departments,) and there I met and resumed friendship, and found warm hospitality from O'C. and his noble New England wife. They had just lost by death their little child-boy, Philip ; and O'C. was yet feeling serious about it. The youngster had been vaccinated against the threatening of small-pox which alarm'd the city ; but somehow it led to worse results than it was intended to ward off or at any rate O'C. thought that proved the cause of the boy's death. He had one child left, a fine bright little daughter, and a great com fort to her parents. (Dear Jeannie ! She grew up a most accom- plish'd and superior young woman declined in health, and died about 1 88 1.) On through for months and years to '73 I saw and talk'd with O'C. almost daily. I had soon got employment, first for a short time in the Indian Bureau (in the Interior Department,) and then for a long while in the Attorney General's Office. The Secession War, with its tide of varying fortunes, excitements President Lincoln and the daily sight of him the doings in Congress and at the State Capitals the news from the fields and campaigns, and from foreign governments my visits to the Army Hospitals, daily and nightly, soon absorbing everything else, with a hundred matters, occurrences, personalities, (Greeley, Wendell Phillips, the parties, the Abolitionists, &c.) were the subjects of our talk and discussion. I am not sure from what I heard then, but O'C. was cut out for a first-class public speaker or forensic advocate. No audience or jury could have stood out against him. He had a strange charm of physiologic voice. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 53 He had a power and sharp-cut faculty of statement and persua siveness beyond any man's else. I know it well, for I have felt it many a time. If not as orator, his forte was as critic, newer, deeper than any : also, as literary author. One of his traits was that while he knew all, and welcom'd all sorts of great genre lit erature, all lands and times, from all writers and artists, and not only tolerated each, and defended every attack' d literary person with a skill or heart-catholicism that I never saw equal'd in variably advocated and excused them he kept an idiosyncrasy and identity of his own very mark'd, and without special tinge or undue color from any source. He always applauded the free dom of the masters, whence and whoever. I remember his special defences of Byron, Burns, Poe, Rabelais, Victor Hugo, George Sand, and others. There was always a little touch of pensive cadence in his superb voice ; and I think there was something of the same sadness in his temperament and nature. Perhaps, too, in his literary structure. But he was a very buoyant, jovial, good-natured companion. So much for a hasty melanged reminiscence and note of Wil liam O'Connor, my dear, dear friend, and staunch, (probably my staunchest) literary believer and champion from the first, and throughout without halt or demur, for twenty-five years. No better friend none more reliable through this life of one's ups and downs. On the occurrence of the latter he would be sure to make his appearance on the scene, eager, hopeful, full of fight like a perfect knight of chivalry. For he was a born sample here in the i9th century of the flower and symbol of olden time first- class knighthood. Thrice blessed be his memory ! W. W. F'm the Engineering Record, New York, Dec. 13, 1890. AN ENGINEER'S OBITUARY. THOMAS JEFFERSON WHITMAN was born July 18, 1833, in Brooklyn, N. Y., from a father of English stock, and mother (Louisa Van Velsor) descended from Dutch (Holland) immigra tion. His early years were spent on Long Island, either in the country or Brooklyn. As a lad he show'd a tendency for sur veying and civil engineering, and about at 19 went with Chief Kirkwood, who was then prospecting and outlining for the great city water-works. He remain'd at that construction throughout, was a favorite and confidant of the Chief, and was successively promoted. He continued also under Chief Moses Lane. He married in 1859, and not long after was invited by the Board of Public Works of St. Louis, Missouri, to come there and plan and build a new and fitting water-works for that great city. Whitman 54 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. accepted the call, and moved and settled there, and had been a resident of St. Louis ever since. He plann'd and built the works, which were very successful, and remain' d as superintendent and chief for nearly 20 years. Of the last six years he has been largely occupied as consult ing engineer (divested of his cares and position in St. Louis,) and has engaged in public constructions, bridges, sewers, &c., West and Southwest, and especially the Memphis, Tenn., city water-works. Thomas J. Whitman was a theoretical and practical mechanic of superior order, founded in the soundest personal and profes sional integrity. He was a great favorite among the young en gineers and students ; not a few of them yet remaining in Kings and Queens Counties, and New York City, will remember "Jeff," with old-time good-will and affection. He was mostly self-taught, and was a hard student. He had been troubled of late years from a bad throat and from gastric affection, tending on typhoid, and had been rather seri ously ill with the last malady, but was getting over the worst of it, when he succumb'd under a sudden and severe attack of the heart. He died at St. Louis, November 25, 1890, in his 58th year. Of his family, the wife died in 1873, an d a daughter, Mannahatta, died two years ago. Another daughter, Jessie Louisa, the only child left, is now living in St. Louis. [When Jeff was born I was in my 151)1 year, and had much care of him for many years afterward, and he did not separate from me. He was a very handsome, healthy, affectionate, smart child, and would sit on my lap or hang on my neck half an hour at a time. As he grew a big boy he liked outdoor and water sports, especially boating. We would often go down summers to Peconic Bay, east end of Long Island, and over to Shelter Island. I loved long rambles, and he carried his fowling-piece. O, what happy times, weeks ! Then in Brooklyn and New York City he learn'd printing, and work'd awhile at it ; but eventually (with my approval) he went to employment at land surveying, and merged in the studies and work of topographical engineer ; this satisfied him, and he continued at it. He was of noble nature from the first ; very good-natured, very plain, very friendly. O, how we loved each other how many jovial good times we had ! Once we made a long trip from New York City down over the Allegheny Mountains (the National Road) and via the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, from Cairo to New Orleans.] God's blessing on your name and memory, dear brother Jeff! W. W. GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 55 OLD ACTORS, SINGERS, SHOWS, &c., IN NEW YORK. Flitting mention (with, much left out.) SEEMS to me I ought acknowledge my debt to actors, singers, public speakers, conventions, and the Stage in New York, my youthful days, from 1835 onward say to '60 or '61 and to plays and operas generally. (Which nudges a pretty big dis quisition : of course it should be all elaborated and penetrated more deeply but I will here give only some flitting mentionings of my youth.) Seems to me now when I look back, the Italian contralto Marietta Alboni (she is living yet, in Paris, 1891, in good condition, good voice yet, considering) with the then prominent histrions Booth, Edwin Forrest, and Fanny Kemble and the Italian singer Bettini, have had the deepest and most lasting effect upon me. I should like well if Madame Alboni and the old composer Verdi, (and Bettini the tenor, if he is living) could know how much noble pleasure and happiness they gave me, and how deeply I always remember them and thank them to this day. For theatricals in literature and doubt less upon me personally, including opera, have been of course serious factors. (The experts and musicians of my present friends claim that the new Wagner and his pieces belong far more truly to me, and I to them. Very likely. But I was fed and bred under the Italian dispensation, and absorb' d it, and doubtless show it.) As a young fellow, when possible I always studied a play or libretto quite carefully over, by myself, (sometimes twice through) before seeing it on the stage ; read it the day or two days before. Tried both ways not reading some beforehand ; but I found I gain'd most by getting that sort of mastery first, if the piece had depth. (Surface effects and glitter were much less thought of I am sure those times.) There were many fine old plays, neither tragedies nor comedies the names of them quite unknown to to-day's current audiences. "All is not Gold that Glitters," in which Charlotte Cushman had a superbly enacted part, was of that kind. C. C., who revel'd in them, was great in such pieces ; I think better than in the heavy popular roles. We had some fine music those days. We had the English opera of " Cinderella " (with Henry Placide as the pompous old father, an unsurpassable bit of comedy and music.) We had Bombastes Furioso. Must have been in 1844 (or '5) I saw Charles Kean and Mrs. Kean (Ellen Tree) saw them in the Park in Shakspere's "King John." He, of course, was the chief character. She play'd Queen Constance. Tom Hamblin was Faulconbridge^ and probably the best ever on the stage. It 5 6 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. was an immense show-piece, too ; lots of grand set scenes and fine armor-suits and all kinds of appointments imported from London (where it had been first render'd.) The large brass bands the three or four hundred " supes " the interviews be tween the French and English armies the talk with Hubert (and the hot irons) the delicious acting of Prince Arthur (Mrs. Rich ardson, I think) and all the fine blare and court pomp I re member to this hour. The death-scene of the King in the orchard of Swinstead Abbey, was very effective. Kean rush'd in, gray- pale and yellow, and threw himself on a lounge in the open. His pangs were horribly realistic. (He must have taken lessons in some hospital.) Fanny Kemble play'd to wonderful effect in such pieces as " Fazio, or the Italian wife." The turning-point was jealousy. It was a rapid-running, yet heavy-timber' d, tremendous wrench ing, passionate play. Such old pieces always seem'd to me built like an ancient ship of the line, solid and lock'd from keel up oak and metal and knots. One of the finest characters was a great court lady, Aldabella, enacted by Mrs. Sharpe. O how it all entranced us, and knock' d us about, as the scenes swept on like a cyclone ! Saw Hackett at the old Park many times, and remember him well. His renderings were first-rate in everything. He inaugu rated the true " Rip Van Winkle," and look'd and acted and dialogued it to perfection (he was of Dutch breed, and brought up among old Holland descendants in Kings and Queens coun ties, Long Island.) The play and the acting of it have been adjusted to please popular audiences since ; but there was in that original performance certainly something of a far higher order, more art, more reality, more resemblance, a bit of fine pathos, a lofty brogue, beyond anything afterward. One of my big treats was the rendering at the old Park of Shakspere's "Tempest" in musical version. There was a very fine instrumental band, not numerous, but with a capital leader. Mrs. Austin was the Artel, and Peter Richings the Caliban; both excellent. The drunken song of the latter has probably been never equal 1 d. The perfect actor Clarke (old Clarke) was Pros- pero. Yes ; there were in New York and Brooklyn some fine non technical singing performances, concerts, such as the Hutchinson band, three brothers, and the sister, the red-cheek'd New England carnation, sweet Abby; sometimes plaintive and balladic some times anti-slavery, anti-calomel, and comic. There were concerts by Templeton, Russell, Dempster, the old Alleghanian band, and many others. Then we had lots of " negro minstrels," with cap- GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 57 ital character songs and voices. I often saw Rice the original " Jim Crow " at the old Park Theatre filling up the gap in some short bill and the wild chants and dances were admirable probably ahead of anything since. Every theatre had some superior voice, and it was common to give a favorite song between the acts. " The Sea " at the bijou Olympic, (Broadway near Grand,) was always welcome from a little Englishman named Edwin, a good balladist. At the Bowery the loves of " Sweet William," " When on the Downs the fleet was moor'd," always bro't an encore, and sometimes a treble. I remember Jenny Lind and heard her (1850 I think) several times. She had the most brilliant, captivating, popular musical style and expression of any one known ; (the canary, and several other sweet birds are wondrous fine but there is something in song that goes deeper isn't there?) The great "Egyptian Collection" was well up in Broadway, and I got quite acquainted with Dr. Abbott, the proprietor paid many visits there, and had long talks with him, in connection with my readings of many books and reports on Egypt its antiquities, history, and how things and the scenes really look, and what the old relics stand for, as near as we can now get. (Dr. A. was an Englishman of say 54 had been settled in Cairo as physician for 25 years, and all that time was collecting these relics, and sparing no time or money seeking and getting them. By advice and for a change of base for himself, he brought the collection to America. But the whole enterprise was a fearful disappointment, in the pay and commercial part.) As said, I went to the Egyptian Museum many many times ; sometimes had it all to myself delved at the formidable catalogue and on sev eral occasions had the invaluable personal talk, correction, illus tration and guidance of Dr. A. himself. He was very kind and helpful to me in those studies and examinations; once, by appoint ment, he appear'd in full and exact Turkish (Cairo) costume, which long usage there had made habitual to him. One of the choice places of New York to me then was the "Phrenological Cabinet" of Fowler & Wells, Nassau street near Beekman. Here were all the busts, examples, curios and books of that study obtainable. I went there often, and once for myself had a very elaborate and leisurely examination and "chart of bumps" written out (I have it yet,) by Nelson Fow ler (or was it Sizer?) there. And who remembers the renown'd New York "Tabernacle" of those days "before the war"? It was on the east side of 5 8 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. Broadway, near Pearl street was a great turtle-shaped hall, and you had to walk back from the street entrance, thro' a long wide corridor to get to it was very strong had an immense gallery altogether held three or four thousand people. Here the huge annual conventions of the windy and cyclonic "re formatory societies" of those times were held especially the tumultuous Anti-Slavery ones. I remember hearing Wendell Phillips, Emerson, Cassius Clay, John P. Hale, Beecher, Fred Douglas, the Burleighs, Garrison, and others. Sometimes the Hutchinsons would sing very fine. Sometimes there were angry rows. A chap named Isaiah Rhynders, a fierce politician of those days, with a band of robust supporters, would attempt to contradict the speakers and break up the meetings. But the Anti-Slavery, and Quaker, and Temperance, and Missionary and other conventicles and speakers were tough, tough, and always maintained their ground, and carried out their programs fully. I went frequently to these meetings, May after May learn'd much from them was sure to be on hand when J. P. Hale or Cash Clay made speeches. There were also the smaller and handsome halls of the His torical and Athenaeum Societies up on Broadway. I very well remember W. C. Bryant lecturing on Homoeopathy in one of them, and attending two or three addresses by R. W. Emerson in the other. There was a series of plays and dramatic genre characters by a gentleman bill'd as Ranger very fine, better than merely tech nical, full of exquisite shades, like the light touches of the violin in the hands of a master. There was the actor Anderson, who brought us Gerald Griffin's "Gisippus," and play'd it to ad miration. Among the actors of those times I recall : Cooper, Wallack, Tom Hamblin, Adams (several), Old Gates, Scott, Wm. Sefton, John Sefton, Geo. Jones, Mitchell, Seguin, Old Clarke, Richings, Fisher, H. Placide, T. Placide, Thorne, Ingersoll, Gale (Mazeppa) Edwin, Horncastle. Some of thewomen hastilyremem- ber'd were: Mrs. Vernon, Mrs. Pritchard, Mrs. McClure, Mary Taylor, Clara Fisher, Mrs. Richardson, Mrs. Flynn. Then the singers, English, Italian and other: Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Seguin, Mrs. Austin, Grisi, La Grange, Steffanone, Bosio, Truffi, Parodi, Vestvali, Bertucca, Jenny Lind, Gazzaniga, Laborde. And the opera men : Bettini, Badiali, Marini, Mario, Brignoli, Amodio, Beneventano, and many, many others whose names I do not at this moment recall. In another paper I have described the elder Booth, and the Bowery Theatre of those times. Afterward there was the Chat ham. The elder Thorne, Mrs. Thorne, William and John Sef- GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 59 ton, Kirby, Brougham, and sometimes Edwin Forrest himself play'd there. I remember them all, and many more, and espe cially the fine theatre on Broadway near Pearl, in 1855 and '6. There were very good circus performances, or horsemanship, in New York and Brooklyn. Every winter in the first-named city, a regular place in the Bowery, nearly opposite the old theatre j fine animals and fine riding, which I often witness'd. (Remember seeing near here, a young, fierce, splendid lion, presented by an African Barbary Sultan to President Andrew Jackson. The gift comprised also a lot of jewels, a fine steel sword, and an Arab stallion ; and the lion was made over to a show-man.) If it is worth while I might add that there was a small but well-appointed amateur-theatre up Broadway, with the usual stage, orchestra, pit, boxes, &c., and that I was myself a mem ber for some time, and acted parts in it several times "second parts " as they were call'd. Perhaps it too was a lesson, or help'd that way ; at any rate it was full of fun and enjoyment. And so let us turn off the gas. Out in the brilliancy of the footlights filling the attention of perhaps a crowded audience, and making many a breath and pulse swell and rise O so much passion and imparted life ! over and over again, the season through walking, gesticulating, singing, reciting his or her part But then sooner or later inevitably wending to the flies or exit door vanishing to sight and ear and never materializing on this earth's stage again ! SOME PERSONAL AND OLD-AGE JOTTINGS. ANYTHING like unmitigated acceptance of my Leaves of Grass book, and heart-felt response to it, in a popular however faint de gree, bubbled forth as a fresh spring from the ground in England in 1876. The time was a critical and turning point in my per sonal and literary life. Let me revert to my memorandum book, Camden, New Jersey, that year, fill'd with addresses, receipts, purchases, &c., of the two volumes pub'd then by myself the Leaves, and the Two Rivulets some home customers for them, but mostly from the British Islands. I was seriously paralyzed from the Secession war, poor, in debt, was expecting death, (the doctors put four chances out of five against me,) and I had the books printed during the lingering interim to occupy the tedious- ness of glum days and nights. Curiously, the sale abroad proved prompt, and what one might call copious : the names came in lists and the money with them, by foreign mail. The price was $io a set. Both the cash and the emotional cheer were deep medicines; many paid double or treble price, (Tennyson and 60 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. Ruskin did,) and many sent kind and eulogistic letters ; ladies, clergymen, social leaders, persons of rank, and high officials. Those blessed gales from the British Islands probably (certainly) saved me. Here are some of the names, for I w'd like to pre serve them : Wm. M. and D. G. Rossetti, Lord Houghton, Edwd. Dowden, Mrs. Ann Gilchrist, Keningale Cook, Edwd. Carpenter, Therese Simpson, Rob't Buchanan, Alfred Tennyson, John Rus kin, C. G. Gates, E. T. Wilkinson, T. L. Warren, C. W. Reynell, W. B. Scott, A. G. Dew Smith, E. W. Gosse, T. W. Rolleston, Geo. Wallis, Rafe Leicester, Thos. Dixon, N. MacColl, Mrs. Mat thews, R. Hannah, Geo. Saintsbury, R. S. Watson, Godfrey and Vernon Lushington, G. H. Lewes, G. H. Boughton, Geo. Fraser, W. T. Arnold, A. Ireland, Mrs. M. Taylor, M. D. Conway, Benj. Eyre, E. Dannreather, Rev. T. E. Brown, C. W. Sheppard, E. J. A. Balfour, P. B. Marston, A. C. De Burgh, J. H. McCarthy, J. H. Ingram, Rev. R. P. Graves, Lady Mount-temple, F. S. Ellis, W. Brockie, Rev. A. B. Grosart, Lady Hardy, Hubert Herkomer, Francis Hueffer, H. G. Dakyns, R. L. Nettleship, W. J. Stillman, Miss Blind, Madox Brown, H. R. Ricardo, Messrs. O'Grady and Tyrrel ; and many, many more. Severely scann'd, it was perhaps no very great or vehement success ; but the tide had palpably shifted at any rate, and the sluices were turn'd into my own veins and pockets. That emo tional, audacious, open-handed, friendly-mouth'd just-opportune English action, I say, pluck'd me like a brand from the burning, and gave me life again, to finish my book, since ab't completed. I do not forget it, and shall not ; and if I ever have a biographer I charge him to put it in the narrative. I have had the noblest friends and backers in America; Wm. O'Connor, Dr. R. M, Bucke, John Burroughs, Geo. W. Childs, good ones in Boston r and Carnegie and R. G. Ingersoll in New York ; and yet per haps the tenderest and gratefulest breath of my heart has gone, and ever goes, over the sea-gales across the big pond. About myself at present. I will soon enter upon my 73d year, if I live have pass'd an active life, as country school-teacher, gardener, printer, carpenter, author and journalist, domicil'd in nearly all the United States and principal cities, North and South went to the front (moving about and occupied as army nurse and missionary) during the Secession war, 1861 to '65, and in the Virginia hospitals and after the battles of that time, tending the Northern and Southern wounded alike work'd down South and in Washington city arduously three years contracted the paralysis which I have suffer'd ever since and now live in a little cottage of my own, near the Delaware in New Jersey. My chief book, unrhym'd and unmetrical (it has taken thirty years, peace GOOD-BYE HY FANCY. 6l and war, "a horning") has its aim as once said, "to utter the same old human critter but now in Democratic American mod ern and scientific conditions." Then I have publish'd two prose works "Specimen Days," and a late one "November Boughs." (A little volume " Good-Bye my Fancy" is soon to be out, wh' will finish the matter.) I do not propose here to enter the much- fought field of the literary criticism of any of those works. But for a few portraiture or descriptive bits. To-day in the upper of a little wooden house of two stories near the Delaware river, east shore, sixty miles up from the sea, is a rather large 20-by- 20 low ceiling'd room something like a big old ship's cabin. The floor, three quarters of it with an ingrain carpet, is half cover' d by a deep litter of books, papers, magazines, thrown-down letters and circulars, rejected manuscripts, memoranda, bits of light or strong twine, a bundle to be " express' d," and two or three ven erable scrap books. In the room stand two large tables (one of ancient St. Domingo mahogany with immense leaves) cover'd by a jumble of more papers, a varied and copious array of writing materials, several glass and china vessels or jars, some with cologne-water, others with real honey, granulated sugar, a large bunch of beautiful fresh yellow chrysanthemums, some letters and envelopt papers ready for the post office, many photographs, and a hundred indescribable things besides. There are all around many books, some quite handsome editions, some half cover'd by dust, some within reach, evidently used, (good-sized print, no type less than long primer,) some maps, the Bible, (the strong cheap edition of the English crown,) Homer, Shakspere, Walter Scott, Emerson, Ticknor's "Spanish Literature," John Carlyle's Dante, Felton's Greece, George Sand's Consuelo, a very choice little Epictetus, some novels, the latest foreign and American monthlies, quarterlies, and so on. There being quite a strew of printer's proofs and slips, and the daily papers, the place with its quaint old fashion' d calmness has also a smack of something alert and of current work. There are several trunks and depositaries back'd up at the walls ; (one well-bound and big box came by express lately from Washington city, after storage there for nearly twenty years.) Indeed the whole room is a sort of result and storage collection of my own past life. I have here various edi tions of my own writings, and sell them upon request ; one is a big volume of complete poems and prose, 1000 pages, autograph, essays, speeches, portraits from life, &c. Another is a little Leaves of Grass, latest date, six portraits, morocco bound, in pocket-book form. Fortunately the apartment is quite roomy. There are three windows in front. At one side is the stove, with a cheerful fire 62 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. of oak wood, near by a good supply of fresh sticks, whose faint aroma is plain. On another side is the bed with white coverlid and woollen blankets. Toward the windows is a huge arm-chair, (a Christmas present from Thomas Donaldson's young daughter and son, Philadelphia) timber'd as by some stout ship's spars, yellow polish'd, ample, with rattan-woven seat and back, and over the latter a great wide wolf-skin of hairy black and silver, spread to guard against cold and draught. A time-worn look and scent of old oak attach both to the chair and the person occupying it. But probably (even at the charge of parrot talk) I can give no more authentic brief sketch than " from an old remembrance copy," where I have lately put myself on record as follows: Was born May 31, 1819, in my father's farm-house, at West Hills, L.L, New York State. My parents' folks mostly farmers and sailors on my father's side, of English on my mother's, (Van Velsor's) from Hollandic immigration. There was, first and last, a large family of children ; (I was the second.) We moved to Brooklyn while I was still a little one in frocks and there in B. I grew up out of frocks then as child and boy went to the public schools then to work in a printing office. When only sixteen or seven teen years old, and for three years afterward, I went to teaching country schools down in Queens and Suffolk counties, Long Island, and "boarded round." Then, returning to New York, work'd as printer and writer, (with an occasional shy at "poetry.") 1 848-' 9. About this time after ten or twelve years of expe riences and work and lots of fun in New York and Brooklyn went off on a leisurely journey and working expedition (my brother Jeff with me) through all the Middle States, and down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Lived a while in New Orleans, and work'd there. (Have lived quite a good deal in the South ern States.) After a time, plodded back northward, up the Mis sissippi, the Missouri, &c., and around to, and by way of, the great lakes, Michigan, Huron and Erie, to Niagara Falls and Lower Canada finally returning through Central New York, and down the Hudson. 185 2-' 5 4 Occupied in house-building in Brooklyn. (For a little while of the first part of that time in printing a daily and weekly paper.) 1855. Lost my dear father this year by death. . . . Com menced putting Leaves of Grass to press, for good after many MSS. doings and undoings (I had great trouble in leaving out the stock "poetical" touches but succeeded at last.) The book has since had some eight hitches or stages of growth, with GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 63 one annex, (and another to come out in 1891, which will com plete it.) 1862. In December of this year went down to the field of war in Virginia. My brother George reported badly wounded in the Fredericksburg fight. (For 1863 and '64, see Specimen Days.) 1865 to '71 Had a place as clerk (till well on in '73) in the Attorney General's Office, Washington. (New York and Brooklyn seem more like home, as I was born near, and brought up in them, and lived, man and boy, for 30 years. But I lived some years in Washington, and have visited, and partially lived, in most of the Western and Eastern cities.) 1873. This year lost, by death, my dear dear mother and, just before, my sister Martha the two best and sweetest women I have ever seen or known, or ever expect to see. Same year, February, a sudden climax and prostration from paralysis. Had been simmering inside for several years ; broke out during those times temporarily, and then went over. But now a serious at tack, beyond cure. Dr. Drinkard, my Washington physician, (and a first-rate one,) said it was the result of too extreme bodily and emotional strain continued at Washington and "down in front," in 1863, '4 and '5. I doubt if a heartier, stronger, healthier physique, more balanced upon itself, or more uncon scious, more sound, ever lived, from 1835 to '7 2 - My greatest call (Quaker) to go around and do what I could there in those war-scenes where I had fallen, among the sick and wounded, was, that I seem'd to be so strong and well. (I consider'd myself in vulnerable.) But this last attack shatter'd me completely. Quit work at Washington, and moved to Camden, New Jersey where I have lived since, receiving many buffets and some precious caresses and now write these lines. Since then, (i874-'9i) a long stretch of illness, or half-illness, with occasional lulls. During these latter, have revised and printed over all my books Bro't out "November Boughs" and at intervals leisurely and exploringly travel' d to the Prairie States, the Rocky Mountains, Canada, to New York, to my birthplace in Long Island, and to Boston. But physical disability and the war-paralysis above alluded to have settled upon me more and more, the last year or so. Am now (1891) domicil'd, and have been for some years, in this little old cottage and lot in Mickle Street, Camden, with a house-keeper and man nurse. Bodily I am completely disabled, but still write for publication. I keep generally buoyant spirits, write often as there comes any lull in physical sufferings, get in the sun and down to the river whenever I can, retain fair appe tite, assimilation and digestion, sensibilities acute as ever, the strength and volition of my right arm good, eyesight dimming, ^4 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. but brain normal, and retain my heart's and soul's unmitigated faith not only in their own original literary plans, but in the essential bulk of American humanity east and west, north and south, city and country, through thick and thin, to the last. Nor must I forget, in conclusion, a special, prayerful, thankful God's blessing to my dear firm friends and personal helpers, men and women, home and foreign, old and young. From the Camden Post, April 16, '91. OUT IN THE OPEN AGAIN. WALT WHITMAN got out in the mid-April sun and warmth of yesterday, propelled in his wheel chair, the first time after four months of imprisonment in his sick room. He has had the worst winter yet, mainly from grippe and gastric troubles, and threaten'd blindness; but keeps good spirits, and has a new little forthcoming book in the printer's hands. AMERICA'S BULK AVERAGE. IF I were ask'd persona to specify the one point of America's people on which I mainly rely, I should say the final average or bulk quality of the whole. Happy indeed w'd I consider myself to give a fair reflection and representation of even a portion of shows, questions, hu manity, events, unfoldings, thoughts, &c. &c. my age in these States. The great social, political, historic function of my time has been of course the attempted Secession War. And was there not something grand, and an inside proof of perennial grandeur, in that war ! We talk of our age's and the States' materialism and it is too true. But how amid the whole sordidness the entire devotion of America, at any price, to pecu niary success, merchandise disregarding all but business and profit this war for a bare idea and abstraction a mere, at bot tom, heroic dream and reminiscence burst forth in its great devouring flame and conflagration quickly and fiercely spreading and raging, and enveloping all, defining in two conflicting ideas first the Union cause second the other, a strange deadly inter rogation point, hard to define Can we not now safely confess it ? with magnificent rays, streaks of noblest heroism, fortitude, perseverance, and even conscientiousness, through its pervadingly malignant darkness. What an area and rounded field, upon the whole the spirit, arrogance, grim tenacity of the South the long stretches of murky gloom the general National Will below and behind and GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. 6 S comprehending all not once really wavering, not a day, not an hour What could be, or ever can be, grander? As in that war, its four years as through the whole history and development of the New World these States through all trials, processes, eruptions, deepest dilemmas, (often straining, tugging at society's heart-strings, as if some divine curiosity would find out how much this democracy could stand,) have so far finally and for more than a century best justified themselves by the average impalpable quality and personality of the bulk, the People en masse. ... I am not sure but my main and chief however indefinite claim for any page of mine w'd be its deriva tion, or seeking to derive itself, f 'm that average quality of the American bulk, the people, and getting back to it again. LAST SAVED ITEMS f'm a vast batch left to oblivion. IN its highest aspect, and striking its grandest average, essen tial Poetry expresses and goes along with essential Religion has been and is more the adjunct, and more serviceable to that true religion (for of course there is a false one and plenty of it,) than all the priests and creeds and churches that now exist or have ever existed Even while the temporary prevalent theory and practice of poetry is merely one-side and ornamental and dainty a love-sigh, a bit of jewelry, a feudal conceit, an ingenious tale or intellectual finesse, adjusted to the low taste and calibre that will always sufficiently generally prevail (ranges of stairs necessary to ascend the higher.) The sectarian, church and doctrinal, follies, crimes, fanat icisms, aggregate and individual, so rife all thro' history, are proofs of the radicalness and universality of the indestructible element of humanity's Religion, just as much as any, and are the other side of it. Just as disease proves health, and is the other side of it The philosophy of Greece taught normal ity and the beauty of life. Christianity teaches how to endure illness and death. I have wonder'd whether a third philosophy fusing both, and doing full justice to both, might not be out lined. It will not be enough to say that no Nation ever achiev'd mate rialistic, political and money-making successes, with general physical comfort, as fully as the United States of America are to-day achieving them. I know very well that those are the in dispensable foundations the sine qua non of moral and heroic (poetic) fruitions to come. For if those pre-successes were all 5 66 GOOD-BYE MY FANCY. if they ended at that if nothing more were yielded than so far appears a gross materialistic prosperity only America, tried by subtlest tests, were a failure has not advanced the standard of humanity a bit further than other nations. Or, in plain terms, has but inherited and enjoy'd the results of ordinary claims and preceding ages. Nature seem'd to use me a long while myself all well, able, strong and happy to portray power, freedom, health. But after a while she seems to fancy, may-be I can see and under stand it all better by being deprived of most of those. How difficult it is to add anything more to literature and how unsatisfactory for any earnest spirit to serve merely the amusement of the multitude ! (It even seems to me, said H. Heine, more invigorating to accomplish something bad than something empty.) The Highest said : Don't let us begin so low isn't our range too coarse too gross? The Soul answer'd: No, not when we consider what it is all for the end involved in Time and Space. Essentially my own printed records, all my volumes, are doubt less but off-hand utterances f 'm Personality, spontaneous, follow ing implicitly the inscrutable command, dominated by that Per sonality, vaguely even if decidedly, and with little or nothing of plan, art, erudition, &c. If I have chosen to hold the reins, the mastery, it has mainly been to give the way, the power, the road, to the invisible steeds. (I wanted to see how a Person of Amer ica, the last half of the ipth century, w'd appear, put quite freely and fairly in honest type.) Haven't I given specimen clues, if no more? At any rate I have written enough to weary myself and I will dispatch it to the printers, and cease. But how much how many topics, of the greatest point and cogency, I am leaving untouch'd ! PS 3?)