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Leaves of Grass

Chapter 109: On the Beach at Night
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About This Book

A sweeping collection of free-verse poems that celebrates individual body and spirit while embracing democratic plurality. The voice affirms corporeal experience and sensuality alongside spiritual longings, weaving intimate lyric moments with expansive catalogs of nature, labor, and the American landscape. Themes include comradeship, erotic desire, civic equality, mortality, and the soul’s relation to the cosmos. Poems shift between exuberant, conversational self-portraits, meditative elegies, and maritime and pioneer imagery, often addressing the poet’s vocation and public life. Repetition, lists, and an energetic, inclusive rhythm bind personal revelation to broader social and cosmic perspectives.

On the Beach at Night

  On the beach at night,
  Stands a child with her father,
  Watching the east, the autumn sky.

  Up through the darkness,
  While ravening clouds, the burial clouds, in black masses spreading,
  Lower sullen and fast athwart and down the sky,
  Amid a transparent clear belt of ether yet left in the east,
  Ascends large and calm the lord-star Jupiter,
  And nigh at hand, only a very little above,
  Swim the delicate sisters the Pleiades.

  From the beach the child holding the hand of her father,
  Those burial-clouds that lower victorious soon to devour all,
  Watching, silently weeps.

  Weep not, child,
  Weep not, my darling,
  With these kisses let me remove your tears,
  The ravening clouds shall not long be victorious,
  They shall not long possess the sky, they devour the stars only in
      apparition,
  Jupiter shall emerge, be patient, watch again another night, the
      Pleiades shall emerge,
  They are immortal, all those stars both silvery and golden shall
      shine out again,
  The great stars and the little ones shall shine out again, they endure,
  The vast immortal suns and the long-enduring pensive moons shall
      again shine.

  Then dearest child mournest thou only for jupiter?
  Considerest thou alone the burial of the stars?

  Something there is,
  (With my lips soothing thee, adding I whisper,
  I give thee the first suggestion, the problem and indirection,)
  Something there is more immortal even than the stars,
  (Many the burials, many the days and nights, passing away,)
  Something that shall endure longer even than lustrous Jupiter
  Longer than sun or any revolving satellite,
  Or the radiant sisters the Pleiades.