To mark the 150th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination, let’s hear from one of the most American poets of all
time, Walt Whitman.
Already in his forties when the War Between the States
broke out, Whitman hadn’t intended to join the army, although he was a firm
supporter of the Union cause. But after searching for his wounded brother at
the end of 1862 (he found him), he took a part-time job with the Paymaster
General in Washington, and volunteered as a nurse in army hospitals.
Whitman’s most famous poem about Lincoln’s death, “When
Lilacs Last in the Courtyard Bloom’d” is longer than I like to post. And I
want to go a different route anyhow. So here’s “Cavalry Crossing a Ford”, which
I find highly evocative. I’ve not given you any poetry from this period
(because I find so much of it awful), so let’s run with this one for a bit.
“Cavalry Crossing a Ford”
A LINE in long array, where they wind betwixt green
islands;
Some emerge on the opposite bank—others are just entering
the ford—while,
Scarlet, and blue, and snowy white,
The guidon flags flutter gaily in the wind.
And, closer to the mark for the end of the war and the
loss of Lincoln:
“Reconciliation”
WORD
over all, beautiful as the sky!
Beautiful
that war, and all its deeds of carnage, must in time be utterly lost;
That
the hands of the sisters Death and Night, incessantly softly wash again, and
ever again, this soil’d world:
...
For my enemy is dead—a man divine as myself is dead;
I
look where he lies, white-faced and still, in the coffin—I draw near;
I
bend down, and touch lightly with my lips the white face in the coffin.
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