en

Walt Whitman

  • kyrillhas quoted2 years ago
    must not forget to mention that both these families were near enough to the sea to behold it from the high places, and to hear in still hours the roar of the surf; the latter, after a storm, giving a peculiar sound at night. Then all hands, male and female, went down frequently on beach and bathing parties, and the men on practical expeditions for cutting salt hay, and for clamming and fishing."
  • kyrillhas quoted2 years ago
    smoked tobacco, rode on horseback like a man, managed the most vicious horse, and, becoming a widow in later life, went forth every day over her farm-lands, frequently in the saddle, directing the labor of her slaves, in language in which, on exciting occasions, oaths were not spared. The two immediate grandmothers were, in the best sense, superior women. The maternal one (Amy Williams before marriage) was a Friend, or Quakeress, of sweet, sensible character, house-wifely proclivities, and deeply intuitive and spiritual. The other (Hannah Brush,) was an equally noble, perhaps stronger character, lived to be very old, had quite a family of sons, was a natural lady, was in early life a school-mistress, and had great solidity of mind. W. W. himself makes much of the women of his ancestry."—The Same
  • kyrillhas quoted2 years ago
    the ocean side the great south bay dotted with countless hummocks, mostly small, some quite large, occasionally long bars of sand out two hundred rods to a mile-and-a-half from the shore. While now and then, as at Rockaway and far east along the Hamptons, the beach makes right on the island, the sea dashing up without intervention. Several light-houses on the shores east; a long history of wrecks tragedies, some even of late years. As a youngster, I was in the atmosphere and traditions of many of these wrecks—of one or two almost an observer. Off Hempstead beach for example, was the loss of the ship "Mexico" in 1840, (alluded to in "the Sleepers" in L. of G.) And at Hampton, some years later, the destruction of the brig "Elizabeth," a fearful affair, in one of the worst winter gales, where Margaret Fuller went down, with her husband and child.
  • kyrillhas quoted2 years ago
    We would cut holes in the ice, sometimes striking quite an eel-bonanza, and filling our baskets with great, fat, sweet, white-meated fellows. The scenes, the ice, drawing the hand-sled, cutting holes, spearing the eels, &c., were of course just such fun as is dearest to boyhood.
  • miriam ruiuhas quoted10 months ago
    Phantom arose before me with distrustful aspect,
    Terrible in beauty, age, and power,
    The genius of poets of old lands,
    As to me directing like flame its eyes,
  • Mirko Milovanovichas quotedlast year
    Urge and urge and urge,
    Always the procreant urge of the world.

    Out of the dimness opposite equals advance . . . . Always substance and increase,
    Always a knit of identity . . . . always distinction . . . . always a breed of life.
  • Mirko Milovanovichas quotedlast year
    All goes onward and outward . . . . and nothing collapses,
    And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.

    Has any one supposed it lucky to be born?
    I hasten to inform him or her it is just as lucky to die, and I know it.
  • naihas quoted9 months ago
    Have I forgotten any part? any thing in the past?

    Come to me whoever and whatever, till I give you recognition.)
  • naihas quoted3 months ago
    As I Ebb’d with the Ocean of Life
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