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Leaves of Grass

Chapter 165: Dirge for Two Veterans
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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.

Dirge for Two Veterans

       The last sunbeam
  Lightly falls from the finish’d Sabbath,
  On the pavement here, and there beyond it is looking,
       Down a new-made double grave.

       Lo, the moon ascending,
  Up from the east the silvery round moon,
  Beautiful over the house-tops, ghastly, phantom moon,
       Immense and silent moon.

       I see a sad procession,
  And I hear the sound of coming full-key’d bugles,
  All the channels of the city streets they’re flooding,
       As with voices and with tears.

       I hear the great drums pounding,
  And the small drums steady whirring,
  And every blow of the great convulsive drums,
       Strikes me through and through.

       For the son is brought with the father,
  (In the foremost ranks of the fierce assault they fell,
  Two veterans son and father dropt together,
       And the double grave awaits them.)

       Now nearer blow the bugles,
  And the drums strike more convulsive,
  And the daylight o’er the pavement quite has faded,
       And the strong dead-march enwraps me.

       In the eastern sky up-buoying,
  The sorrowful vast phantom moves illumin’d,
  (’Tis some mother’s large transparent face,
       In heaven brighter growing.)

       O strong dead-march you please me!
  O moon immense with your silvery face you soothe me!
  O my soldiers twain! O my veterans passing to burial!
       What I have I also give you.

       The moon gives you light,
  And the bugles and the drums give you music,
  And my heart, O my soldiers, my veterans,
       My heart gives you love.