Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Somewhere a Life with You - 2. Part Two – Union Everlasting
.
Part Two – Union Everlasting
Scene One: “Marriage Equality”
No. 12 – Duettino
BARITONE:
I announce justification
TENOR: Of candor and of pride –
I announce uncompromising
TENOR: Freedom and equalness –
I announce our adhesiveness
TENOR: Hand in hand, limitless –
I announce natural persons
TENOR: To rise up and take pride![1]
The diverse shall be no less,
But diverse flow and unite –[2]
As with the general who
Makes a good army himself
TENOR: Has good army without –
As they, happy in themselves,
Genders happiness without –[3]
As with one man, or woman,
No matter who one chooses,
Illustrates the complete law –
Every right, every duty
Is eligible to them.
BARITONE and TENOR:
On the same terms as any![4]
TENOR:
I announce justification
BARITONE: Of candor and of pride –
I announce uncompromising
BARITONE: Freedom and equalness –
I announce our adhesiveness
BARITONE: Hand in hand, limitless –
I announce natural persons
BARITONE: To rise up and take pride![5]
No. 13 – Dialogo
TENOR:
“I wish you would put
The ring on my finger again,
It seems to me
There is something
That is wanting
To complete
Our friendship
When I am with you.
I have tried to study it out,
But cannot find out
What it is.
You know when you
Put it on, there was
But one thing
To part it from me
And that was death.[6]
[For in time, our]
Times have become
Settled, and
Our love sure.”[7]
No. 14 – Cavatina
BASS:
This is the press
Of bashful hands –
This is the float
And fragrance of hair.
This is the murmur,
Subdued in yearning,
The trembling of your lips,
At the touch of mine.
This the thoughtful
Merger of me –
This is the float
And outlet again.[8]
No. 15 – Dialogo
BARITONE:
“[John Emerson and
John Stegall were]
Two Norwegian boys,
And fine specimens
Of their race –
Intelligent, faithful,
And always ready
For duty [to each other.]
[Their devotion] reminded one
Of the stories told
Of the sworn attachment
And […] unfailing devotion
That were common
Between two Goth
Warrior youths. […]
Between them [the soldiers]
Had an overcoat
And a blanket.
At night they lay
Upon the coat
And covered themselves
With the blanket. […]
They never quarreled
With each other.
Their tenderness
And affection were
Remarkable to witness. […]
(recitative)
[But, they] began to go
The way that so
Many were going:
Diarrhea and scurvy set in. […]
I met Emerson one day,
With one leg drawn
Clear out of shape. […]
He was very weak,
But was hobbling
Down to the creek
With a bucket made
From a boot leg.
[I offered to carry
The heavy bucket
Back up the hill, but
He wheezed out:]
TENOR:
‘No – much obliged.
My partner wants
A cool drink,
And I guess
I’d better get it for him.’
BARITONE:
[John Stegall] died in June.”[9]
No. 16 – Duettino
TENOR and BASS:
I will sing the song of partners
I will show what these must compact
I believe an ideal will find
Manly-love worthy between us.
BASS:
I will make my songs
Of materials
For I think they are
The most spiritual.
TENOR:
I will make my songs
Of my body and
Of mortality
For I know they last.
BASS and TENOR:
I think I supply
Myself with my songs;
Of my spirit comes
Immortality.[10]
TENOR and BASS:
I will sing the song of partners
I will show what these must compact
I believe an ideal will find
Manly-love worthy between us.
No. 17 – Cavatina
BARITONE:
Miracle
Every hour
Light and dark
And every inch
Miracle
With the same
The Earth’s surface
Glimmers ‘round me
Inseparable
With the same.[11]
Scene Two: “Everlasting”
No. 18 – Dialogo
BASS:
“I can almost see you
Drowsing and nodding.
I am telling you something
Deep about the heavenly bodies –
And in the midst of it
I look around and find you
Fast asleep, and your head
On my shoulder like
A chunk of wood –
An awful compliment
To my lecturing powers. […]
But, Good Night, Pete – […]
Here is a kiss for you,
Dear boy – on the paper, here –
A good long one. […]
I will imagine you
With your arm
Around my neck, saying
Good Night, Walt –
And me –
Good Night, Pete.”[12]
No. 19 – Cavatina
TENOR:
Mysterious ocean
Where the streams empty,
Prophetic spirits there
Flickering ‘round me
In wondrous interplay,
‘Tween seen and unseen.
Living beings
Identities
Doubtless near us
Misting in the air
Know we are there
Though we doubt them.
Ecstasy everywhere
Touches and thrills me,
There in contact daily,
Hours and minutes.
Hints demanding me write,
So I release them.[13]
No. 20 – Duettino
BASS:
O you, whom I often
Come up silently to
In my thoughts that I may
Be with you at your side –
Walk with you as you go,
Sit near you when at rest.
BARITONE:
O you, who do not know
Come up silently too
In my thoughts that I may
Raise subtle, electric
Tingles in you of me –
When you think I am near.[14]
(a due at recapitulation)
No. 21 – Dialogo
BARITONE:
“I have Walt’s [overcoat] here…
I now and then put it on,
Lay down, think I am
In the old times.
Then he is with me again.
It’s the only thing
I kept amongst
Many old things.
When I get it on
And stretch out
On the old sofa
I am very well contented. […]
He understood me –
I understood him.
We loved each other deeply.
[I may have regrets,]
But it is all right.
Walt realized
I never swerved from him –
He knows it now –
That is enough.
You gentlemen,
Take the glasses.
There, I will drink
right from the bottle.
Now, here’s to the old man
And the dear old times –
And the new times too,
And to every one that’s to come.”[15]
No. 22 – Recitetivo ed Aria
BASS:
(recitative)
I sit and look upon the sorrows
That oppress and shame the entire world;
I hear the secret convulsive sobs,
Young men anguish for deeds done/undone.
I see love’s misuse by those who love,
Jealous ranklings unrequited,
All these – meanness and all agony –
I sit and look upon without end.[16]
(aria)
O, me of slack faith for so long,
Denying proportions aloof,
Me with my mole eyes unrisen
To buoyancy and vision free
Only aware today of that
Compact, all-diffuse truth of me.
Today there is no lie in form
As it grows inevitably,
As truth grows truth upon itself,
Or as any law of the Earth
Shows the way out of Earthly woe.[17]
(recap: “O, me of slack faith….” etc)
No. 23 – Finale
BARITONE and BASS:
Whoever walks a furlong
Without any sympathy
Walks a callous, unloving step
Behind his own casket.
TENOR:
To glance with a human eye,
Or show a bean in its pod,
Confounds the learnings of time.
BARITONE and BASS:
You or I though pocketless
Of dollar or dime may still,
Minted with caring empathy,
Purchase the pick of the Earth.
TENOR:
There’s not trade or employment,
But the young man following
May lead him to a hero.
BARITONE and BASS:
Any man or woman shall,
Knowing they lived in kindness,
Stand cool and spotlessly pure
Before far universes.
TENOR:
There is no bosom so soft
That it cannot make a hub
For great-wheeled universes.[18]
TUTTI:
(fuga)
A vast similitude
Interlocks all.
This vast similitude
Compactly holds.
All high spheres –
Grown, ungrown, large and small
All base things –
Earth, feelings, dirt and air
All our souls –
Same, different, close and far
All actions –
Good, callous, fine and coarse
All nations –
Pure, compact, free and held
All living –
Now or dead, once and coming.[19]
A vast similitude
Interlocks all.
This vast similitude
Compactly holds.
(Darkness – Fine di Cantata)
[1] LG = After p.453
[2] LG = After p.437
[3] LG = After p.421
[4] LG = After p.453
[5] LG = After p.453
[6] LS = p.229 Harry Stafford to Whitman, November 1877 (spelling updated)
[7] LS = p.230 Harry Stafford to Whitman, July 1877 (spelling updated)
[8] LG = After p.47
[9] LS = ps.139-141 memoirs, John McElroy, 1879
[10] LG = After ps.9-10
[11] LG = After p.220
[12] LS = ps.169-170 letter, Whitman to Peter Doyle, August 1870
[13] LG = After p.13
[14] LG = After p.377
[15] LS = p.177 interview, Peter Doyle to Horace Traubel, 1895
[16] LG = After p.236
[17] LG = After p.237
[18] LG = After ps.100 and 101
- 1
- 3
- 1
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Recommended Comments
Chapter Comments
-
Newsletter
Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter. Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.