Tag: Walt Whitman’s House in Camden New Jersey by Frank Higgins

  • Walt Whitman’s House in Camden, New Jersey by Frank Higgins

    Searching down the burnt out streets
    as if driving through World War II Dresden,
    we pull up to the curb to ask a man directions,
    but he calls us dead meat and we speed away
    past hookers and kids who throw rocks,
    and finally we find Walt Whitman’s house
    like a war-time safe house behind the lines,
    but the door’s locked; we ring the bell
    and wait in the locked car
    till a woman opens the door and welcomes us
    and we try to ignore her knife scar from cheek to chin
    as she guides us to the guest book
    where we notice we’re the first guests in three days,
    and she leads us from room to room
    and shows us his desk, and says,
    “This is where he wrote,”
    and we stand staring at Whitman’s desk
    and recite our favorite lines:
    “Afoot and lighthearted, I take to the open road,”
    “I hear America singing,”
    “I sing the body electric,”
    “And now conceive and show to the world
    what your children en-masse really are,
    (for who except myself has yet conceiv’d
    what your children en-masse really are?)”
    but we’re interrupted by excited voices
    and we look out to see kids kicking our car
    and without a word our guide calls the cops
    and after the kids run from the siren
    we run to our car and take to the open road,
    crossing the Delaware in full retreat
    in a way Washington or Whitman
    or even Jack Kerouac could not conceive:
    a huddled mass yearning to breathe free
    by gunning our engine behind locked doors,
    and with the cops on speed dial.

    Frank Higgins has had plays produced across the country.  He is also the author of two books of poetry and two books of haiku.