WALT WHITMAN IS DEAD
Where are you now?
Uncle?
Poet?
Walt?
Old man, child of the Long Island
Free verse son of America,
Teacher & government work-man?
“Human – Being”
Citizen
Man… Mind of the spirit
Spirit, in the flesh
Where have you gone?
Disappeared
Now a ghost
Among the leaves,
The rest.
Uncle,
I see your name written in
School books and upon the wind
And within the rain,
And I still hear your songs fill the air
In the forests & the city streets
Body … Electric.
But father?
Uncle?
Where are you now?
Where have you been?
Gone, gone away from
What you loved most, the land
Yet buried beneath the green
Green meadows, valleys & time
Of ages.
Meditating within the oldest of trees
Silent thru out new ages.
For a book is merely paper
But a voice must ask or say
Invoke yea and awaken others from
The vast darkness & the gray
For uncle, poetic father,
Your America has sadly changed.
No longer the free land
Of promise, no longer do we
Dream like you once dreamt
We still fight wars and without hope
Falter & lose ourselves,
Souls within the damned dark & dense.
So uncle, father.
Return and sit here for a while
And bring some comfort the dying of poets, poetry &
The young boys, and now women…soldiers,
Decimated in faraway lands
You never mentioned in your poems
Or ever heard of.
For it rumored
That you are dead.
And yet?
The 21st century & centuries to come
May yet remember thee still,
And write your verse upon some wall in yet
Another revolution coming.
For it is the same world that
Faces us today Walt Whitman,
One of a new slavery & lack of, death of spirit
That you would not begin to comprehend
Where the poor are now
The slaves of corporation & debt
And prejudice
Still runs rampant…yet hidden
Behind best intentions.
So would you,
Father, Uncle Walt
Still stand insolent? Defiant?
Would you, Walt Whitman
Still stand up & among the
Working class?
But alas,
It is no longer your time here
But your heart & soul remain,
For we, the poets who still struggle
Must create our own new voices & names,
Speak, of what is now & not of the past
To audiences not of one land, but many.
So, Uncle? I owe you an apology.
For you, Walt Whitman are dead.
A timeless friend
And a memory
That we must let rest
To create a new vision.
That one day brings your spirit,
Your uncorrupted vision
“Back”
For if we miss you in one place?
We shall search for you
In another.
__________________
R.M. ENGELHARDT 2011
Reblogged this on R.M. ENGELHARDT and commented:
Happy 200th Birthday Walt …
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