By Mark Edmundson
April
15, 2021 11:30 am ET
As printed in the Wall Street Journal
Walt Whitman and the Fight for Democracy
When
Walt Whitman began conceiving his great volume of poetry, “Leaves of Grass,” in
the 1850s, American democracy was in serious danger over the issue of slavery.
As we celebrate National Poetry Month this month, the problems facing our
democracy are different, but Whitman still has a great deal to teach us about
democratic life, because he saw that we are perpetually in danger of succumbing
to two antidemocratic forces. The first is hatred between Americans, which
Whitman saw erupt into civil war in 1861.
The second danger lies in the hunger for kings. The
European literature and culture that preceded Whitman and surrounded him when
he wrote “Leaves of Grass” was largely what he called “feudal”: It revolved
around the elect, the special, the few. Whitman understood human fascination
with kings and aristocrats, and he sometimes tried to debunk it. But mostly he
asked his readers to shift their interest away from feudalism to the beauties
of democracy and the challenge of sustaining and expanding it.
This
challenge is what inspired him to find his central poetic image for democracy,
the grass: “A child said, What is the grass? fetching it to me with full
hands.” Whitman says that he can’t and won’t offer a literal answer to the
question. Instead he spins into an astonishing array of “guesses.” The grass
“is the flag of my disposition, out of hopeful green stuff woven”; it’s “the
handkerchief of the Lord…Bearing the owner’s name somewhere in the corners,
that we may see and remark and say Whose?”
To Whitman, “the grass is
itself a child…the produced babe of the vegetation.” “Tenderly will I use you,
curling grass,” he writes. “It may be that you are from old people and from
women, and from offspring taken soon out of their mothers’ laps / And here you
are the mothers’ laps.” He offers one metaphor for the grass after another, and
one feels that he could go on forever.
But
mainly Whitman’s grass signifies American equality: “I guess it is a uniform
hieroglyphic,/And it means,/Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow
zones,/Growing among black folks as among white,/Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressman,
Cuff,/I give them the same, I receive them the same.” Whatever our race and
origin, whatever our station in life, we’re all blades of grass. But by joining
together we become part of a resplendent field of green, stretching gloriously
on every side.
Whitman found a
magnificent metaphor for democratic America and its people. Like snowflakes, no
two grass blades are alike. Each one has its own being, a certain kind of
chlorophyll-based individuality. Yet step back and you’ll see that the blades
are all more like each other than not. Americans, too, are at least as much
alike as we are different, and probably more so. America is where we can be
ourselves and yet share deep kinship with our neighbors.
And who are our neighbors?
Kanuck, Congressman, Tuckahoe, Cuff—Canadian, legislator, Virginia planter,
Black man, all of the teeming blades of grass that we see around us. When you
stand back far enough, you can’t see any of the individual blades, but look
closer and there they are—vibrant and unique, no two alike. We say “e pluribus
unum,” from many one. But who could have envisioned what that would look like
and how it would feel before Whitman came along?
The
grass is Whitman’s answer to the problem that bedeviled his contemporary Ralph
Waldo Emerson: how to resolve the tension between the individual and the group.
Emerson is sometimes hopeful that the two can cohere. When you speak your deep
and true thoughts, no matter how controversial, he believed that in time the
mass of men and women will come around to you. Each will say, ‘this is my
music, this is myself,” Emerson says in “The American Scholar.” But mostly he
is skeptical, believing that society is almost inevitably the enemy of genius
and individuality.
Whitman’s image of the
grass suggests that the one and the many can merge, and that discovery allows
him to imagine a world without significant hierarchy. Can any one blade of
grass be all that much more important than any other? When you make the grass
the national flag, as it were, you get to love and appreciate all the people
who surround you. You become part of a community of equals. You can feel at
home.
In “Leaves of Grass,” soon after he offers his master
metaphor Whitman rises up to view American democracy from overhead. The poem’s
famous catalogues of people doing what they do every day are quite simple: “On
the piazza walk five friendly matrons with twined arms;/ The crew of the
fish-smack pack repeated layers of halibut in the hold,/The Missourian crosses
the plains, toting his wares and his cattle,/The fare-collector goes through
the train—he gives notice by the jingling of loose change.”
This is your family, these are your sisters and brothers,
Whitman effectively says. In general, we walk the streets with a sense of
isolation. But if we can move away from our addictions to hierarchy and
exclusive individuality, and embrace Whitman’s trope of the grass, our
experience of day-to-day life can be different. We can look at those we pass
and say not “That is another” but “That too is me. That too I am.” Or so
Whitman hopes.
Of course, the benefits that Whitman promises do not come
for free, or simply by reading his poem. We’ve got to meet his vision halfway,
by being amiable, friendly, humane and nonhierarchical. This repudiation of
hierarchy is not so easy; it’s not clear that even Whitman himself pulls it
off. Isn’t he trying to be a great poet, the first truly American bard? But his
effort matters. He knew that democracy is always vulnerable, that the best hope
for human happiness could disappear from the earth. But Whitman would not let
that happen without a fight.
—Mr. Edmundson is a professor of English at the University of Virginia. This
essay is adapted from his new book “Song of Ourselves: Walt Whitman and the
Fight for Democracy,” published this week by Harvard University Press.
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