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Old Age Echoes

(POSTHUMOUS ADDITIONS)

AN EXECUTOR'S DIARY NOTE, 1891.

I said to W. W. to-day: "Though you have put the finishing touches on the Leaves, closed them with your good-by, you will go on living a year or two longer and writing more poems. The question is, what will you do with these poems when the time comes to fix their place in the volume?" "Do with them? I am not unprepared — I have even contemplated that emergency — I have a title in reserve: Old Age Echoes - applying not so much to things as to echoes of things, reverberant, an aftermath." "You have dropt enough by the roadside, as you went along, from different editions, to make a volume. Some day the world will demand to have that put together somewhere." "Do you think it ?” Certainly. Should you put it under ban?" "Why should I—how could I? So far as you may have anything to do with it I place upon you the injunction that whatever may be added to the Leaves shall be supplementary, avowed as such, leaving the book complete as I left it, consecutive to the point I left off, marking always an unmistakable, deep down, unobliteratable division line. In the long run the world will do as it pleases with the book, I am determined to have the world know what I was pleased to do."

Here is a late personal note from W. W.: "My tho't is to collect a lot of prose and poetry pieces— small or smallish mostly, but a few larger-appealing to the good will, the heart-sorrowful ones not rejected—but no morbid ones given."

There is no reason for doubt that "A Thought of Columbus," closing "Old Age Echoes," was W. W.'s last deliberate composition, dating December, 1891.

Old Age Echoes

To Soar in Freedom and in Fullness of power.

I HAVE not so much emulated the birds that musically sing,

I have abandon'd myself to flights, broad circles.

The hawk, the seagull, have far more possess'd me than the

canary or mocking-bird.

I have not felt to warble and trill, however sweetly,

I have felt to soar in freedom and in the fullness of power, joy, volition.

Tben Sball Perceive.

IN softness, languor, bloom, and growth,

Thine eyes, ears, all thy sense-thy loftiest attribute-all that

takes cognizance of beauty,

Shall rouse and fill - then shall perceive!

The Few Drops known.

Of heroes, history, grand events, premises, myths, poems,
The few drops known must stand for oceans of the unknown,
On this beautiful and thick peopl'd earth, here and there a little
specimen put on record,

A little of Greeks and Romans, a few Hebrew canticles, a few death odors as from graves, from Egypt

What are they to the long and copious retrospect of antiquity?

One Tbought Ever at the Fore.

ONE thought ever at the fore

That in the Divine Ship, the World, breasting Time and Space, All Peoples of the globe together sail, sail the same voyage, are bound to the same destination.

Wabile Bebind All Firm and Erect.

WHILE behind all, firm and erect as ever,

Undismay'd amid the rapids-amid the irresistible and deadly

urge,

Stands a helmsman, with brow elate and strong hand.

A kiss to the Bride.

Marriage of Nelly Grant, May 21, 1874.

SACRED, blithesome, undenied,

With benisons from East and West,

And salutations North and South,

Through me indeed to-day a million hearts and hands,
Wafting a million loves, a million soulfelt prayers;

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Tender and true remain the arm that shields thee! Fair winds always fill the ship's sails that sail thee!

Clear sun by day, and light stars at night, beam on thee!

Dear girl-through me the ancient privilege too,

For the New World, through me, the old, old wedding greeting:

O youth and health! O sweet Missouri rose! O bonny bride!

Yield thy red cheeks, thy lips, to-day,

Unto a Nation's loving kiss.

Nay, Tell Me Not To-day the Publisb'd Sbame.

Winter of 1873, Congress in Session.

NAY, tell me not to-day the publish'd shame,

Read not to-day the journal's crowded page,

The merciless reports still branding forehead after forehead,
The guilty column following guilty column.

To-day to me the tale refusing,

Turning from it-from the white capitol turning,

Far from these swelling domes, topt with statues,

More endless, jubilant, vital visions rise

Unpublish'd, unreported.

Through all your quiet ways, or North or South, you Equal States, you honest farms,

Your million untold manly healthy lives, or East or West, city

or country,

Your noiseless mothers, sisters, wives, unconscious of their good, Your mass of homes nor poor nor rich, in visions rise- (even your excellent poverties,)

Your self-distilling, never-ceasing virtues, self-denials, graces,

VOL. III-3

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