| Walt Whitman (18191892). Prose Works. 1892. |
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| I. Specimen Days |
| 28. The White House by Moonlight |
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| February 24th.A SPELL of fine soft weather. I wander about a good deal, sometimes at night under the moon. To-night took a long look at the Presidents house. The white porticothe palace-like, tall, round columns, spotless as snowthe walls alsothe tender and soft moonlight, flooding the pale marble, and making peculiar faint languishing shades, not shadowseverywhere a soft transparent hazy, thin, blue moon-lace, hanging in the airthe brilliant and extra-plentiful clusters of gas, on and around the facade, columns, portico, &c.everything so white, so marbly pure and dazzling, yet softthe White House of future poems, and of dreams and dramas, there in the soft and copious moonthe gorgeous front, in the trees, under the lustrous flooding moon, full of reality, full of illusionthe forms of the trees, leafless, silent, in trunk and myriad-angles of branches, under the stars and skythe White House of the land, and of beauty and nightsentries at the gates, and by the portico, silent, pacing there in blue overcoatsstopping you not at all, but eyeing you with sharp eyes, whichever way you move. | 1 |
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