Walt Whitman (1819–1892). Prose Works. 1892.
V. November Boughs
11. Some Diary Notes at Random
NEGRO SLAVES IN NEW YORK.—I can myself almost remember negro slaves in New
York State, as my grandfather and great-grandfather (at West Hills, Suffolk County,
New York) own’d a number. The hard labor of the farm was mostly done by
them, and on the floor of the big kitchen, toward sundown, would be squatting
a circle of twelve or fourteen “pickaninnies,” eating their supper
of pudding (Indian corn mush) and milk. A friend of my grandfather, named Wortman,
of Oyster Bay, died in 1810, leaving ten slaves. Jeanette Treadwell, the last
of them, died suddenly in Flushing last Summer (1884,) at the age of ninety-four
years. I remember “old Mose,” one of the liberated West Hills slaves,
well. He was very genial, correct, manly, and cute, and a great friend of my childhood.
1
CANADA NIGHTS.—Late in August.—Three wondrous nights. Effects of moon,
clouds, stars, and night-sheen, never surpass’d. I am out every night, enjoying
all. The sunset begins it. (I have said already how long evening lingers here.)
The moon, an hour high just after eight, is past her half, and looks somehow more
like a human face up there than ever before. As it grows later, we have such gorgeous
and broad cloud-effects, with Luna’s tawny halos, silver edgings—great
fleeces, depths of blue-black in patches, and occasionally long, low bars hanging
silently a while, and then gray bulging masses rolling along stately, sometimes
in long procession. The moon travels in Scorpion to-night, and dims all the stars
of that constellation except fiery Antares, who keeps on shining just to the big
one’s side. 2
COUNTRY DAYS AND NIGHTS.—Sept. 30, ’82, 4.30 A. M.—I am down
in Camden County, New Jersey, at the farm-house of the Staffords—have been
looking a long while at the comet—have in my time seen longer-tail’d
ones, but never one so pronounc’d in cometary character, and so spectral-fierce—so
like some great, pale, living monster of the air or sea. The atmosphere and sky,
an hour or so before sunrise, so cool, still, translucent, give the whole apparition
to great advantage. It is low in the east. The head shows about as big as an ordinary
good-sized saucer—is a perfectly round and defined disk—the tail some
sixty or seventy feet—not a stripe, but quite broad, and gradually expanding.
Impress’d with the silent, inexplicably emotional sight, I linger and look
till all begins to weaken in the break of day. 3
October 2.—The third day of mellow, delicious, sunshiny weather. I am writing
this in the recesses of the old woods, my seat on a big pine log, my back against
a tree. Am down here a few days for a change, to bask in the Autumn sun, to idle
lusciously and simply, and to eat hearty meals, especially my breakfast. Warm
mid-days—the other hours of the twenty-four delightfully fresh and mild—cool
evenings, and early mornings perfect. The scent of the woods, and the peculiar
aroma of a great yet unreap’d maize-field near by—the white butterflies
in every direction by day—the golden-rod, the wild asters, and sunflowers—the
song of the katydid all night. 4
Every day in Cooper’s Woods, enjoying simple existence and the passing hours—taking
short walks—exercising arms and chest with the saplings, or my voice with
army songs or recitations. A perfect week for weather; seven continuous days bright
and dry and cool and sunny. The nights splendid, with full moon—about 10
the grandest of star-shows up in the east and south, Jupiter, Saturn, Capella,
Aldebaran, and great Orion. Am feeling pretty well—am outdoors most of the
time, absorbing the days and nights all I can. 5
CENTRAL PARK NOTES.—American Society from a Park Policeman’s Point
of View.—Am in New York City, upper part—visit Central Park almost
every day (and have for the last three weeks) off and on, taking observations
or short rambles, and sometimes riding around. I talk quite a good deal with one
of the Park policemen, C.C., up toward the Ninetieth street entrance. One day
in particular I got him a-going, and it proved deeply interesting to me. Our talk
floated into sociology and politics. I was curious to find how these things appear’d
on their surfaces to my friend, for he plainly possess’d sharp wits and
good nature, and had been seeing, for years, broad streaks of humanity somewhat
out of my latitude. I found that as he took such appearances the inward caste-spirit
of European “aristocracy” pervaded rich America, with cynicism and
artificiality at the fore. Of the bulk of official persons, Executives, Congressmen,
Legislators, Aldermen, Department heads, etc., etc., or the candidates for those
positions, nineteen in twenty, in the policeman’s judgment, were just players
in a game. Liberty, Equality, Union, and all the grand words of the Republic,
were, in their mouths, but lures, decoys, chisel’d likenesses of dead wood,
to catch the masses. Of fine afternoons, along the broad tracks of the Park, for
many years, had swept by my friend, as he stood on guard, the carriages, etc.,
of American Gentility, not by dozens and scores, but by hundreds and thousands.
Lucky brokers, capitalists, contractors, grocery-men, successful political strikers,
rich butchers, dry goods’ folk, &c. And on a large proportion of these
vehicles, on panels or horse-trappings, were conspicuously borne heraldic family
crests. (Can this really be true?) In wish and willingness (and if that were so,
what matter about the reality?) titles of nobility, with a court and spheres fit
for the capitalists, the highly educated, and the carriage-riding classes—to
fence them off from “the common people”—were the heart’s
desire of the “good society”of our great cities—aye, of North
and South. 6
So much for my police friend’s speculations—which rather took me aback—and
which I have thought I would just print as the gave them (as a doctor records
symptoms.) 7
PLATE, GLASS NOTES.—St. Louis, Missouri, November, ’79.—What
do you think I find manufactur’d out here—and of a kind the clearest
and largest, best, and the most finish’d and luxurious in the world—and
with ample demand for it too? Plate glass! One would suppose that was the last
dainty outcome of an old, almost effete-growing civilization; and yet here it
is, a few miles from St. Louis, on a charming little river, in the wilds of the
West, near the Mississippi. I went down that way to-day by the Iron Mountain Railroad—was
switch’d off on a side-track four miles through woods and ravines, to Swash
Creek, so-call’d, and there found Crystal City, and immense Glass Works,
built (and evidently built to stay) right in the pleasant rolling forest. Spent
most of the day, and examin’d the inexhaustible and peculiar sand the glass
is made of—the original whity-gray stuff in the banks—saw the melting
in the pots (a wondrous process, a real poem)—saw the delicate preparation
the clay material undergoes for these great pots (it has to be kneaded finally
by human feet, no machinery answering, and I watch’d the picturesque bare-legged
Africans treading it)—saw the molten stuff (a great mass of a glowing pale
yellow color) taken out of the furnaces (I shall never forget that Pot, shape,
color, concomitants, more beautiful than any antique statue,) pass’d into
the adjoining casting-room, lifted by powerful machinery, pour’d out on
its bed (all glowing, a newer, vaster study for colorists, indescribable, a pale
red-tinged yellow, of tarry consistence, all lambent,) roll’d by a heavy
roller into rough plate glass, I should say ten feet by fourteen, then rapidly
shov’d into the annealing oven, which stood ready for it. The polishing
and grinding rooms afterward—the great glass slabs, hundreds of them, on
their flat beds, and the see-saw music of the steam machinery constantly at work
polishing them—the myriads of human figures (the works employ’d 400
men) moving about, with swart arms and necks, and no superfluous clothing—the
vast, rude halls, with immense play of shifting shade, and slow-moving currents
of smoke and steam, and shafts of light, sometimes sun, striking in from above
with effects that would have fill’d Michel Angelo with rapture. 8
Coming back to St. Louis this evening, at sundown, and for over an hour afterward,
we follow’d the Mississippi, close by its western bank, giving me an ampler
view of the river, and with effects a little different from any yet. In the eastern
sky hung the planet Mars, just up, and of a very clear and vivid yellow. It was
a soothing and pensive hour—the spread of the river off there in the half-light—the
glints of the down-bound steamboats plodding along—and that yellow orb (apparently
twice as large and significant as usual) above the Illinois shore. (All along,
these nights, nothing can exceed the calm, fierce, golden, glistening domination
of Mars over all the stars in the sky.) 9
As we came nearer St. Louis, the night having well set in, I saw some (to me)
novel effects in the zinc smelting establishments, the tall chimneys belching
flames at the top, while inside through the openings at the facades of the great
tanks burst forth (in regular position) hundreds of fierce tufts of a peculiar
blue (or green) flame, of a purity and intensity, like electric lights—illuminating
not only the great buildings themselves, but far and near outside, like hues of
the aurora borealis, only more vivid. (So that—remembering the Pot from
the crystal furnace—my jaunt seem’d to give me new revelations in
the color line.)