And I came, on the night of the harvest moon,
this thirteenth
tropical night of the cool ninth month,
and, as I had been
beckoned by bell and raven,
I found myself
before a familiar tomb,
and its door was
ajar and full moon showed me
the undulating form
of a great serpent
(black she was and
beautiful, sleek of skin
as the Queen of
Sheba) and she rose up
and welcomed me.
“Enter!” she said, “You
have I called, as
well as many others,
and only you have tread the dream-realm,
crossed seven thresholds to stand before me.
and only you have tread the dream-realm,
crossed seven thresholds to stand before me.
Are you not afraid?”
“Afraid at his tomb,
he at whose knees I
learned to sing and write?
Much as I fear Death, I do not fear him!”
Much as I fear Death, I do not fear him!”
And a voice inside
the sepulchre uttered:
“Come, be not at
all fearful. Here there is peace,
though my soul is
fitful and weeping.
“I am Walt
Whitman, a man, a citizen of Camden.
Reach out and touch
the stone of my father,
the stone behind
which my mother sleeps.
Touch this rough
stone behind which my bones,
my hair, my ever-sinewed limbs, cannot slumber;
my hair, my ever-sinewed limbs, cannot slumber;
least of all my two
eyes, my third eye celestial,
my mouth that cannot
cease its uttering.
“For it has come
to me that the land is troubled.
I ask, Has it yet
come to pass that a woman sits
in the chair of
Jefferson and Lincoln? I fear not,
and it has come to
me that the occupant who sits
in the White House
in Washington is not a good
or a fair man; that
his hands are full of gold
and not forgiveness;
that a man who reads no books
attempts to make
science; that corruption spreads
like black tar from
a broken well across the land;
“That under
poisoned air and water the earth quakes
fractured with the
greedy extraction of gas,
that shale, which
slept before the dreamings
of sauropods and
tyrannosaurs, is rent
by force of water,
o incompressible!
that the workmen no
longer know
when their labor
begins or ends, that the slaves
are not so called
yet put on chains again, that men
of one color flee
down the streets in terror of arms
and men of no color
at all in rage pursue them;
that it is no shame
among you that some are roofless
and many must bear
the stain of beggary to eat;
that the sick, when
they are healed, are told to pay
until their bank
accounts are drained, their houses lost;
that worse than in debtors’ jails the poor abide
in tents on the
sidewalk, poor-towns behind
the stench-rows of oil
tanks and refineries;
that the
limousine-rich sell death and addiction
while mothers plead
for an unpoisoned tap
from which to feed
and bathe their infants,
while the
Cappuccino-fueled Civil Servant says,
“Well, everyone
has to die of something”;
that refugee
children are caged like rabbits;
that a man with a
turban or a kippa, a woman
whose faith requires
a head-scarf, shall endure
the clenched fist of
an ignorant mob.
“If the occupant
of the White House is not
a good and fair man,
or a good and fair woman,
what hope is there
for the shining star
that cannot emerge
from the night-cloud?
“To these states I
say, as I have always said,
but even more to the
people, one by one:
Resist much, and obey little.
Resist much, and obey little.
And failing this,
must the dead emerge
from their tombs to
admonish you?
Have you no poets or
statesmen?”
With a great sigh,
the voice went dead.
I heard only a
distant siren, a gunshot,
what might have been
a woman’s scream,
then silence. The
great black snake,
which had stood
erect through all the speaking,
sank to the granite
floor of the tomb
and slid into the
darkness. I stood,
my own shadow in
solitary moonbeam
extended to the Good
Gray Poet’s stone
at the back of his
self-made mausoleum.