O masters, lords, and rulers
in all lands,
Is this the handiwork you
give to God,
This monstrous thing distorted
and soul-quenched?
How will you ever straighten
up this shape;
Touch it again with immortality;
Give back the upward looking
and the light;
Rebuild in it the music and
the dream;
Make right the immemorial
infamies,
Perfidious wrongs, immedicable
woes?
O masters, lords, and rulers
in all lands,
How will the future reckon
with this Man?
How answer his brute question
in that hour
When whirlwinds of rebellion
shake the world?
How will it be with kingdoms
and with kings—
With those who shaped him
to the thing he is—
When this dumb Terror shall
reply to God,
After the silence of the centuries?
EDWIN MARKHAM.
SONG OF MYSELF.
“The Song of Myself” is one of Walt Whitman’s (1819-92) most characteristic poems. I love the swing and the stride of his great long lines. I love his rough-shod way of trampling down and kicking out of the way the conventionalities that spring up like poisonous mushrooms to make the world a vast labyrinth of petty “proprieties” until everything is nasty. I love the oxygen he pours on the world. I love his genius for brotherliness, his picture of the Negro with rolling eyes and the firelock in the corner. These excerpts are some of his best lines.
I celebrate myself, and sing
myself,
And what I assume you shall
assume,
For every atom belonging to
me as good belongs to you.
I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease
observing a spear of summer grass.
My tongue, every atom of my
blood, form’d from this soil, this air,
Born here of parents born
here from parents the same, and their
parents
the same,
I, now thirty-seven years
old in perfect health begin,
Hoping to cease not till death.
I harbor for good or bad,
I permit to speak at every hazard,
Nature without check with
original energy.
Have you reckoned a thousand
acres much? have you reckon’d the
earth
much?
Have you practised so long
to learn to read?
Have you felt so proud to
get at the meaning of poems?
Stop this day and night with
me and you shall possess the origin
of
all poems,
You shall possess the good
of the earth and sun (there are
millions
of suns left),
You shall no longer take things
at second or third hand, nor look
through
the eyes of the dead, nor feed on the specters in books,
You shall not look through
my eyes either, nor take things from me,
You shall listen to all sides
and filter them from yourself.