< Page:Leaves of Grass (1860).djvu
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Leaves of Grass.
:(See! from my dead lips the ooze exuding at last!
- See—the prismatic colors, glistening and rolling!)
- Tufts of straw, sands, fragments,
- Buoyed hither from many moods, one contradicting another,
- From the storm, the long calm, the darkness, the swell,
- Musing, pondering, a breath, a briny tear, a dab of liquid or soil,
- Up just as much out of fathomless workings fermented and thrown,
- A limp blossom or two, torn, just as much over waves floating, drifted at random,
- Just as much for us that sobbing dirge of Nature,
- Just as much, whence we come, that blare of the cloud-trumpets;
- We, capricious, brought hither, we know not whence, spread out before You, up there, walking or sitting,
- Whoever you are—we too lie in drifts at your feet.
2.
1. Great are the myths—I too delight in them,
- Great are Adam and Eve—I too look back and accept them,
- Great the risen and fallen nations, and their poets, women, sages, inventors, rulers, warriors, and priests.
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