With Husky-Haughty Lips, O Sea!

With Husky-Haughty Lips, O Sea! (1884)
by Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman's "With Husky-Haughty Lips, O Sea!", later a part of Leaves of Grass, originally published in Harper's Monthly in March of 1884.

27063With Husky-Haughty Lips, O Sea!1884Walt Whitman


With husky-haughty lips, O sea!
Where day and night I wend thy surf-beat shore,
Imaging to my sense thy varied strange suggestions,
(I see and plainly list thy talk and conference here,)
Thy troops of white-maned racers racing to the goal,
Thy ample, smiling face, dash'd with the sparkling dimples of the sun,
Thy brooding scowl and murk - thy unloos'd hurricanes,
Thy unsubduedness, caprices, wilfulness;
Great as thou art above the rest, thy many tears-a lack from all
eternity in thy content,
(Naught but the greatest struggles, wrongs, defeats, could make thee greatest - no less could make thee,)
Thy lonely state - something thou ever seekist and seekist, yet never gain
Surely some right withheld-some voice, in huge monotonous rage, of freedom-lover pent,
Some vast heart, like a planet's, chain'd and chafing in those
breakers,
By lengthen'd swell, and spasm, and panting breath,
And rhythmic rasping of thy sands and waves,
And serpent hiss, and savage peals of laughter,
And undertones of distant lion roar,
(Sounding, appealing to the sky's deaf ear-but now, rapport for
once,
A phantom in the night thy confidant for once,)
The first and last confession of the globe,
Outsurging, muttering from thy soul's abysms,
The tale of cosmic elemental passion,
Thou tellest to a kindred soul.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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