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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Walt Whitman > Text of To The Sun-Set Breeze

A poem by Walt Whitman

To The Sun-Set Breeze

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Title:     To The Sun-Set Breeze
Author: Walt Whitman [More Titles by Whitman]

Ah, whispering, something again, unseen,

Where late this heated day thou enterest at my window, door,

Thou, laving, tempering all, cool-freshing, gently vitalizing

Me, old, alone, sick, weak-down, melted-worn with sweat;

Thou, nestling, folding close and firm yet soft, companion better than talk, book, art,

(Thou hast, O Nature! elements! utterance to my heart beyond the rest--and this is of them,)

So sweet thy primitive taste to breathe within--thy soothing fingers my face and hands,

Thou, messenger--magical strange bringer to body and spirit of me,

(Distances balk'd--occult medicines penetrating me from head to foot,)

I feel the sky, the prairies vast--I feel the mighty northern lakes,

I feel the ocean and the forest--somehow I feel the globe itself swift-swimming in space;

Thou blown from lips so loved, now gone--haply from endless store, God-sent,

(For thou art spiritual, Godly, most of all known to my sense,)

Minister to speak to me, here and now, what word has never told, and cannot tell,

Art thou not universal concrete's distillation? Law's, all Astronomy's last refinement?

Hast thou no soul? Can I not know, identify thee?


[The end]
Walt Whitman's poem: To The Sun-Set Breeze

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