Read poetry books for free and without registration


One of the ancients,once said that poetry is "the mirror of the perfect soul." Instead of simply writing down travel notes or, not really thinking about the consequences, expressing your thoughts, memories or on paper, the poetic soul needs to seriously work hard to clothe the perfect content in an even more perfect poetic form.
On our website we can observe huge selection of electronic books for free. The registration in this electronic library isn’t required. Your e-library is always online with you. Reading ebooks on our website will help to be aware of bestsellers , without even leaving home.


What is poetry?


Reading books RomanceThe unity of form and content is what distinguishes poetry from other areas of creativity. However, this is precisely what titanic work implies.
Not every citizen can become a poet. If almost every one of us, at different times, under the influence of certain reasons or trends, was engaged in writing his thoughts, then it is unlikely that the vast majority will be able to admit to themselves that they are a poet.
Genre of poetry touches such strings in the human soul, the existence of which a person either didn’t suspect, or lowered them to the very bottom, intending to give them delight.


There are poets whose work, without exaggeration, belongs to the treasures of human thought and rightly is a world heritage. In our electronic library you will find a wide variety of poetry.
Opening a new collection of poems, the reader thus discovers a new world, a new thought, a new form. Rereading the classics, a person receives a magnificent aesthetic pleasure, which doesn’t disappear with the slamming of the book, but accompanies him for a very long time like a Muse. And it isn’t at all necessary to be a poet in order for the Muse to visit you. It is enough to pick up a volume, inside of which is Poetry. Be with us on our website.

Read books online » Poetry » Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman (red queen free ebook txt) 📖

Book online «Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman (red queen free ebook txt) 📖». Author Walt Whitman



1 ... 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
Go to page:
>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 aides

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, accoutrements.

 

} 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 better

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

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,

Godsent,

(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

Astronomy’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 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 Nazarene,

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,

Shakespere, 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

 

Welcome, Brazilian brother—thy ample place is ready;

A loving hand—a smile from the north—a sunny instant hall!

(Let the future care for itself, where it reveals its troubles,

impedimentas,

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.

 

} 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 unknown

soldiers,

Of the vacant names, as unindented air’s and sea’s—the unreturn’d,

The brief truce after battle, with grim burial-squads, and the

deep-fill’d trenches

Of gather’d from dead all America, North, South, East, West, whence

they came up,

From wooded Maine, New-England’s farms, from fertile Pennsylvania,

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

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 unreconciled,

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 holding hands,

Which he will never release until he reconciles the two,

And wholly and joyously blends them.

 

} Osceola

 

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

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

 

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,

The household wreck’d, the husband and the wife, the engulfed 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.

 

“Finally my children, to envelop each word, each part of the rest,

Allah is all, all,all—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”

 

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 dissolute;

(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.

 

} Mirages

 

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 shopfronts,

(Account for it or not—credit or not—it is all true,

And my mate there could tell you the like—we have often confab’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 to the right in the sky-edge,

Or plainly there to the left on the hilltops.

 

} L. of G.‘s Purport

 

Not to exclude or demarcate, or pick out evils from their formidable

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,

1 ... 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
Go to page:

Free ebook «Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman (red queen free ebook txt) 📖» - read online now

Comments (0)

There are no comments yet. You can be the first!
Add a comment