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- Subject: English - Whitman: 'Song of Myself'
- Divinity, Sexuality and the Self
-
- Through his poetry, Whitman's "Song of Myself" makes the soul sensual and
- makes divine the flesh. In Whitman's time, the dichotomy between the soul
- and the body had been clearly defined by centuries of Western philosophy and
- theology. Today, the goodness of the soul and the badness of the flesh
- still remain a significant notion in contemporary thought. Even Whitman's
- literary predecessor, Emerson, chose to distinctly differentiate the soul
- from all nature. Whitman, however, chooses to reevaluate that relationship.
- His exploration of human sensuality, particularly human sexuality, is the
- tool with which he integrates the spirit with the flesh.
-
- Key to this integration is Whitman's notion of the ability of the sexual
- self to define itself. This self-definition is derived from the strongly
- independent autonomy with which his sexuality speaks in the poem. Much of
- the "Song of Myself" consists of a cacophony of Whitman's different selves
- vying for attention. It follows that Whitman's sexual self would likewise
- find itself a voice. A number of passages strongly resonate with Whitman's
- sexuality in their strongly pleasurable sensualities. The thoroughly
- intimate encounter with another individual in section five particularly
- expresses Whitman as a being of desire and libido.
-
- Whitman begins his synthesis of the soul and body through sexuality by
- establishing a relative equality between the two. He pronounces in previous
- stanzas, "You shall listen to all sides and filter them from yourself," and,
- "Not an inch nor a particle of an inch is vile, and none shall be less
- familiar than the rest." Here, he lays foundation for the basic
- egalitarianism with which he treats all aspects of his being for the rest of
- the poem. This equality includes not only his sexuality, but in broader
- terms, his soul and body. In the opening to section five, Whitman
- explicitly articulates that equality in the context of the body and soul: "I
- believe in you my soul, the other I am must not abase itself to you, And you
- must not be abased to the other." He refutes the moral superiority of the
- soul over the flesh historically prevalent throughout Western thought. With
- that level groundwork established, he is free to pursue the relationship
- between the soul and the body on equal footing.
-
- The mechanism of this integration may be one of a number of possibilities
- included in Whitman's work. Whitman's notion that "All truths wait in all
- things" very broadly defines the scope of his desire to distill truth from
- his surroundings. He indicates that "...all the men ever born are also my
- brothers, and the women my sisters and lovers," suggesting that perhaps
- sensual understanding of the interconnectedness of man bridges the spiritual
- to the corporal. Within the context of the passage, the cause/effect
- relationship between sensual contact and transcendent understanding becomes
- clear. His declaration that "I believe in the flesh and the appetites,
- Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles" reinforces the concept that truth is
- directly discerned through the union of the spirit and the senses.
- Human sensuality thus becomes the conduit that bridges the spirit and the
- flesh. Whitman demonstrates the result of that synthesis to be "peace and
- knowledge that pass all the argument of the earth." He expands this
- revelation of truth and understanding as the passage continues, linking it
- to divinity as he invokes the image of "the hand of God" and "the spirit of
- God." The union of the spirit with the body thus becomes a natural, common
- pathway to divinity. This association to the cosmos, facilitated by a union
- of the spiritual and the corporal, is then a direct result of the expression
- of the sexual self.
-
- Whitman's choice of the word "reached" in "...And reach'd till you felt my
- beard, and reach'd till you held my feet," is a powerful image. It connotes
- not only a physical bridging, which Whitman establishes as a elemental force
- in its sensual nature, but also a direct application of the will. In this
- context, this passage echoes Whitman's earlier "Urge and urge and urge,
- always the procreant urge of the world," in its hunger and desire. Both
- words "reached" and "urge" indicate willed effort, revolving around the
- basic function of human nature in sexuality. The centralness of the
- "procreant urge" to both these passages makes the sexual act the volta
- around which comprehension and truth are achieved.
-
- One of the key truths that Whitman explicitly communicates is the notion of
- the interconnectedness of mankind. This theme echoes throughout "Song of
- Myself" in the collection of voices through which Whitman speaks throughout
- the poem, voices of his own and of other persons. In celebrating that
- diversity among all persons and within himself, Whitman reiterates his use
- of the sexuality as an instrument of bridging. Here, the power of the
- sensual self binds all persons together through its universality and its
- inherence in each human being. In claiming "all men ever born are also my
- brothers," Whitman associates himself and his sexual being to the whole of
- collective human experience. His presumption that all persons are fully
- capable of expressing themselves as sexual beings is subtly hinted at in the
- "uniform hieroglyphic" he mentions later. In this instance, Whitman's
- relation between grass, the "uniform hieroglyphic"; and his catalogue of
- different identities, proclaiming, "I give them the same, I receive them the
- same," marks a commonality in the human experience. This notion of people
- as blades of grass, same and equal yet distinctly individual, can be
- extended to encompass Whitman's notion of the sexual self.
-
- As Whitman's transcendental experience continues, the scope of his
- understanding seems to continue outward. The exponential growth of his
- knowledge through his sensual experience claims: "And limitless are leaves
- stiff or drooping in the fields, And brown ants in the little wells beneath
- them." The breadth of his comprehension increases profoundly on both
- macroscopic and microscopic levels. In contemplating the nature of grass in
- the next section, Whitman echoes this notion of infinities giving way to
- infinities: "All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses."
-
- When taken into consideration with his later declaration, "Walt Whitman, a
- kosmos," the concept of the sexual self as part of an external infinity must
- also be weighed against the notion of the sexual self as an integral part of
- an internal infinity. In Whitman's enumerations of different types of
- persons throughout the poem, he strongly suggests that these people are also
- voices manifested in his own being. He later proclaims, "In the faces of
- men and women I see God, and in my own face in the glass." This line near
- the end of the poem strongly ties the sense of externally infinite being to
- Whitman's sense of internal boundlessness. These two otherwise separate
- domains of the external and the internal are thus coupled, completing the
- cycle of the theme of union that Whitman imbues "Song of Myself."
-
- By projecting his sexual self against such broad parameters, Whitman
- generates a decidedly transcendental experience. With such vivid imagery in
- his celebration of the sensual, he elevates the limited faculties of man to
- being capable of limitless understanding. The role of the sexual in his
- work is integral to this sense of active, individual discovery. Whitman's
- notion of sexuality acknowledges it as one of the highest forms of sensual
- pleasure, and one of great personal and communicative importance.
-
- -another imperative from your friendly local interplanetary Imperial regime
- -sulik