Virginia--the West
Walt Whitman
THE noble Sire, fallen on evil days, I saw, with hand uplifted, menacing, brandishing, (Memories of old in abeyance--love and faith in abeyance,) The insane knife toward the Mother of All. The noble Son, on sinewy feet advancing, I saw--out of the land of prairies--land of Ohio's waters, and of Indiana, To the rescue, the stalwart giant, hurry his plenteous offspring, Drest in blue, bearing their trusty rifles on their shoulders. Then the Mother of All, with calm voice speaking, As to you, Virginia, (I seemed to hear her say,) why strive against me--and why seek my life? 10 When you yourself forever provide to defend me? For you provided me Washington--and now these also.
Next 10 Poems
- Walt Whitman : Visor'd
- Walt Whitman : Voices
- Walt Whitman : Walt Whitman's Caution
- Walt Whitman : Wandering At Morn
- Walt Whitman : Warble Of Lilac-time
- Walt Whitman : We Two Boys Together Clinging
- Walt Whitman : We Two-how Long We Were Fool'd
- Walt Whitman : Weave In, Weave In, My Hardy Life
- Walt Whitman : What Am I, After All?
- Walt Whitman : What Best I See In Thee
Previous 10 Poems
- Walt Whitman : Virgil Strange I Kept On The Field
- Walt Whitman : Vicouac On A Mountain Side
- Walt Whitman : Unnamed Lands
- Walt Whitman : Unfolded Out Of The Folds
- Walt Whitman : Two Rivulets
- Walt Whitman : Turn, O Libertad
- Walt Whitman : Trinckle, Drops
- Walt Whitman : To You
- Walt Whitman : To Think Of Time
- Walt Whitman : To Thee, Old Cause!