Global Posts Rotating Header Image

eidolons

Tara for Nov 12

When I was doing some research on Drum-Taps, I stumbled upon a few authors who claimed that Drum-Taps was the pivot on which Whitman’s work turned.  One critic claimed that it was the pivot that took Whitman from the physical to the spiritual.

There is a good deal of Whitman’s spirituality in these later poems.  Having previously annotated Eidolons, this is where I can shed some light.

Whitman’s spirituality was heavily influenced by Emmanuel Swedenborg’s philosophy of the ultimate.  Swedenborg believed that every material thing had a spiritual counterpart, or ultimate.  In 18…, Balfour Stewart and P.G. Tait published The Unseen Universe.  This Post-Swedenborgianism book takes Swedenborg’s notion of the ultimate to another level.  Stewart and Tait maintained that everything on earth is duplicated in a spiritual facsimile, and they believed in the ultimate unreality of the physical world and true reality of the spiritual realm.   In doing this, Stewart and Tate dissolve the entire physical and social world into spirit. 

In “Eidolons,” included in the Inscriptions, Whitman creates an ultimate that is ever-revolving – an ever-expanding circle that includes all things past-present-and future. 

We see this same notion in “Continuities”

“Nothing is ever really lost, or can be lost,

No birth, identity, form — no object of the world.

Nor life, nor force, nor any visible thing;…”

Undoubtedly, Whitman would find comfort in this belief.  Christianity’s afterlife held nothing for him – since he wanted to be remembered on earth – and cared little about heaven.  In these later poems – even in much of Drum-Taps – there is a consistent mention of being unnamed, forgotten, and alone.  Believing in Swedenborg’s ultimate allows Whitman to console himself in the fact that nothing can be lost… including memory of him and his life’s work. 

Regardless of this belief, however, I think Whitman wanted to be remembered tangibly.  I doubt he was content with being a smokey essence floating endlessly through everything.   

This spiritualism is seen throughout Whitman’s later works.  Just to point a few examples where I recognized it:

In “To-Day and Thee”, the final line, “The heirdom all converged in thee!”, shows this belief – as all of the past converges into today. 

In “You Tides with Ceaseless Swell,” Whitman refers to the “unseen force” as “holding the universe with all its parts as one — as sailing in a ship”. 

(Random interjection: I do wonder if there is any connection with Whitman’s spiritualism and his use of tides.  The tide would be a useful metaphor since it comes and goes, gathering and carrying, always – just as his ultimate (or eidolon).)

In “Going Somewhere” – “we all are onward…speeding slowly/life, life an endless march…/The world, the race, the soul…/All bound as is befitting each”.

I’ll stop here.  I think I’ve belabored his spiritualism enough for one blog. 

__________________________

Swedenborg information from Reynold’s cultural biography (previously sited on this blog)

Tara for Nov 12

When I was doing some research on Drum-Taps, I stumbled upon a few authors who claimed that Drum-Taps was the pivot on which Whitman’s work turned.  One critic claimed that it was the pivot that took Whitman from the physical to the spiritual.

There is a good deal of Whitman’s spirituality in these later poems.  Having previously annotated Eidolons, this is where I can shed some light.

Whitman’s spirituality was heavily influenced by Emmanuel Swedenborg’s philosophy of the ultimate.  Swedenborg believed that every material thing had a spiritual counterpart, or ultimate.  In 18…, Balfour Stewart and P.G. Tait published The Unseen Universe.  This Post-Swedenborgianism book takes Swedenborg’s notion of the ultimate to another level.  Stewart and Tait maintained that everything on earth is duplicated in a spiritual facsimile, and they believed in the ultimate unreality of the physical world and true reality of the spiritual realm.   In doing this, Stewart and Tate dissolve the entire physical and social world into spirit. 

In “Eidolons,” included in the Inscriptions, Whitman creates an ultimate that is ever-revolving – an ever-expanding circle that includes all things past-present-and future. 

We see this same notion in “Continuities”

“Nothing is ever really lost, or can be lost,

No birth, identity, form — no object of the world.

Nor life, nor force, nor any visible thing;…”

Undoubtedly, Whitman would find comfort in this belief.  Christianity’s afterlife held nothing for him – since he wanted to be remembered on earth – and cared little about heaven.  In these later poems – even in much of Drum-Taps – there is a consistent mention of being unnamed, forgotten, and alone.  Believing in Swedenborg’s ultimate allows Whitman to console himself in the fact that nothing can be lost… including memory of him and his life’s work. 

Regardless of this belief, however, I think Whitman wanted to be remembered tangibly.  I doubt he was content with being a smokey essence floating endlessly through everything.   

This spiritualism is seen throughout Whitman’s later works.  Just to point a few examples where I recognized it:

In “To-Day and Thee”, the final line, “The heirdom all converged in thee!”, shows this belief – as all of the past converges into today. 

In “You Tides with Ceaseless Swell,” Whitman refers to the “unseen force” as “holding the universe with all its parts as one — as sailing in a ship”. 

(Random interjection: I do wonder if there is any connection with Whitman’s spiritualism and his use of tides.  The tide would be a useful metaphor since it comes and goes, gathering and carrying, always – just as his ultimate (or eidolon).)

In “Going Somewhere” – “we all are onward…speeding slowly/life, life an endless march…/The world, the race, the soul…/All bound as is befitting each”.

I’ll stop here.  I think I’ve belabored his spiritualism enough for one blog. 

__________________________

Swedenborg information from Reynold’s cultural biography (previously sited on this blog)

Structured yet Free: The Essence of Whitman’s “Eidòlons”

Thesis: Structured yet free, the form of “Eidólons” mimics, supports, and reinforces its content.

Context – “I MET a seer…”

Emmanuel Swedenborg: – The Seer

  • Swedish scientist turned philosopher
  • Doctrine of Correspondences: Every material thing has a spiritual counterpart, or “ultimate”

Post-Swedenborgian

  • The Unseen Universe
  • Post-Swedenborgian book – Balfour Stewart & P.G. Tait
  • Everything on earth is duplicated in a spiritual facsimile: Ultimate unreality of the physical world, true reality of the spiritual realm.

Whitman knew of both Swedenborg and of The Unseen Universe – and it is here that we find the basis of Whitman’s spiritual beliefs as outlined in this poem.

What is an Eidolon?

  • Denotation: A phantom, apparition; an ideal
  • Whitman’s Connotation: Swedenborg’s “ulimate”, the spiritual essence of all things

Structure

A ballad…

  • Quatrains
  • Incremental Repetition

And not a ballad…

  • No regular rhyme scheme or metrical pattern
  • Rather than alternating 4 and 3 stress lines, Whitman’s 1st and 4th lines have similar stress counts, always fewer than the stress counts of the 2nd and 3rd lines

QUATRAINS AS ROWS

  • Lines create rows
  • “glean eidólons”
  • glean: to gather or pick up ears of corn after the reapers
  • Whitman is gathering eidólons throughout his poem

QUATRAINS AS STRATA

  • Each quatrain = four layers of strata
  • Entire poem = 21 quatrains
  • Deepest layer of strata: eidólon;
  • Visually mimics Whitman’s belief: eidólons are the final layer of everything.

INCREMENTAL REPETITION

  • Repeated but altered lines that end each quatrain
  • Whitman uses it to continue to characterize his “eidólons” as he gathers them

CHARACTERIZATIONS OF EIDOLONS:

  • Contain all life, all space, and all time
  • Everlasting
  • True Realities
  • The entities of entities
  • Fixed, yet unfixed
  • Round, full-orb’d

BUT…Why does Whitman adhere to any form?

Unconventional metrical pattern:

  • Allows the fourth line to be short & concise, thereby illuminating the essence of the poem: eidólons (the final word of every stanza)

Quatrains allow him to:

  • Build Strata
  • Expand a Circle
  • Thus, demonstrate the essence of the “eidólon”

Eidolons as Strata

“Ever the summit and the merge at last, (to surely start again)”

A visual representation of how Whitman builds the eidolons as strata in the poem.
A visual representation of how Whitman builds the eidolons as strata in the poem.

Eidolons as an Expanding Circle

“Ever the growth, the rounding of the circle…”

a visual representation for how Whitman uses his descriptions of eidolons to expand a circle, similarly to the strata
a visual representation for how Whitman uses his descriptions of eidolons to expand a circle, similarly to the strata

Whitman begins small – with himself, “I, you, man, woman” and ends with the infinite future. These and everything in between are what constitute his impression of the spirtual ultimate, eidolons.

“Eidólons” as a Circle

The poem also acts as a circle – as it begins and ends in the same place.

Philosopher & Poet Frame: The Mediators

  • I MET a seer…”
  • “The prophet and the bard

Song Frame: The Medium

  • “Put in thy chants said he…”
  • “Thy very songs not in thy songs…”

The Philosopher and the Poet are the mediators between the physical and the spiritual world – and the medium through which the poet mediates is the song (i.e. the poem).

Works Cited

Abrams, N.H. and Geoffrey Galt Harpham. “Ballad.” Glossary of Literary Terms. 9th ed. United States: Wadsworth, 2009, 21-23.

Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman’s America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Vintage Books, 1996.

Whitman, Walt. “Eidólons.” Whitman Poetry and Prose. New York: The Library of America, 1996. 168-170.

Structured yet Free: The Essence of Whitman’s “Eidòlons”

Thesis: Structured yet free, the form of “Eidólons” mimics, supports, and reinforces its content.

Context – “I MET a seer…”

Emmanuel Swedenborg: – The Seer

  • Swedish scientist turned philosopher
  • Doctrine of Correspondences: Every material thing has a spiritual counterpart, or “ultimate”

Post-Swedenborgian

  • The Unseen Universe
  • Post-Swedenborgian book – Balfour Stewart & P.G. Tait
  • Everything on earth is duplicated in a spiritual facsimile: Ultimate unreality of the physical world, true reality of the spiritual realm.

Whitman knew of both Swedenborg and of The Unseen Universe – and it is here that we find the basis of Whitman’s spiritual beliefs as outlined in this poem.

What is an Eidolon?

  • Denotation: A phantom, apparition; an ideal
  • Whitman’s Connotation: Swedenborg’s “ulimate”, the spiritual essence of all things

Structure

A ballad…

  • Quatrains
  • Incremental Repetition

And not a ballad…

  • No regular rhyme scheme or metrical pattern
  • Rather than alternating 4 and 3 stress lines, Whitman’s 1st and 4th lines have similar stress counts, always fewer than the stress counts of the 2nd and 3rd lines

QUATRAINS AS ROWS

  • Lines create rows
  • “glean eidólons”
  • glean: to gather or pick up ears of corn after the reapers
  • Whitman is gathering eidólons throughout his poem

QUATRAINS AS STRATA

  • Each quatrain = four layers of strata
  • Entire poem = 21 quatrains
  • Deepest layer of strata: eidólon;
  • Visually mimics Whitman’s belief: eidólons are the final layer of everything.

INCREMENTAL REPETITION

  • Repeated but altered lines that end each quatrain
  • Whitman uses it to continue to characterize his “eidólons” as he gathers them

CHARACTERIZATIONS OF EIDOLONS:

  • Contain all life, all space, and all time
  • Everlasting
  • True Realities
  • The entities of entities
  • Fixed, yet unfixed
  • Round, full-orb’d

BUT…Why does Whitman adhere to any form?

Unconventional metrical pattern:

  • Allows the fourth line to be short & concise, thereby illuminating the essence of the poem: eidólons (the final word of every stanza)

Quatrains allow him to:

  • Build Strata
  • Expand a Circle
  • Thus, demonstrate the essence of the “eidólon”

Eidolons as Strata

“Ever the summit and the merge at last, (to surely start again)”

A visual representation of how Whitman builds the eidolons as strata in the poem.
A visual representation of how Whitman builds the eidolons as strata in the poem.

Eidolons as an Expanding Circle

“Ever the growth, the rounding of the circle…”

a visual representation for how Whitman uses his descriptions of eidolons to expand a circle, similarly to the strata
a visual representation for how Whitman uses his descriptions of eidolons to expand a circle, similarly to the strata

Whitman begins small – with himself, “I, you, man, woman” and ends with the infinite future. These and everything in between are what constitute his impression of the spirtual ultimate, eidolons.

“Eidólons” as a Circle

The poem also acts as a circle – as it begins and ends in the same place.

Philosopher & Poet Frame: The Mediators

  • I MET a seer…”
  • “The prophet and the bard

Song Frame: The Medium

  • “Put in thy chants said he…”
  • “Thy very songs not in thy songs…”

The Philosopher and the Poet are the mediators between the physical and the spiritual world – and the medium through which the poet mediates is the song (i.e. the poem).

Works Cited

Abrams, N.H. and Geoffrey Galt Harpham. “Ballad.” Glossary of Literary Terms. 9th ed. United States: Wadsworth, 2009, 21-23.

Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman’s America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Vintage Books, 1996.

Whitman, Walt. “Eidólons.” Whitman Poetry and Prose. New York: The Library of America, 1996. 168-170.

Skip to toolbar