Blog

I.

I do not see I do much good, but I cannot leave. 

Some youngster holds on to me convulsively. 

I do what I can: stop with him, sit near for hours.

II.

The Brooklyn frost of Dec 16, ’62

crowded the Whitman family windows. 

On North Portland Avenue, I snatched up 

 

the Tribune, laid it flat 

on the kitchen table for us

to scan the list of regimental casualties. 

 

Under the 51st New York, First Lieutenant 

G. W. Whitmore, Company D.

Make quick with the day—I packed clothes, 

 

notebooks, fifty dollars from mother’s savings.

Visualizing the horror I perceived at Broadway Hospital,

I knew all too well—my brother’s amputation—

 

performed by a doctor ill-versed in the tearing 

& cutting of flesh to bone. I hurried to Washington D.C., 

trekking to the Mall’s northern edge: a stagnant canal 

 

borders up against Armory Square devastation. 

My brother? Have you seen my brother?

Dead cats, broken whiskey bottles floated 

 

on the fetid surface. I threw my head back.

I write Mother: Trying to get information, trying 

to get access to big people. These eyes arrived

 

in Virginia to a Camp Hospital on the banks 

of the Rappahannock, only the worst cases. 

I pressed my frazzled hand into George’s. 

 

Remember your galliant Son is a Capting.

A shell fragment gashed through his check: 

a soldier’s scratch. He’d seen the elephant. 

III.

The wounded lie on the frozen ground, 

lucky if their blankets spread on layers of pine 

or hemlock twigs or small leaves. No cots; seldom 

 

even a mattress. At the foot of a tree, I perceive a heap 

of amputated feet, legs, arms, hands; a full load 

for a one-horse cart. In the dooryard towards the river—

 

fresh graves—their names on pieces of barrel-staves 

or broken board, stuck in the dirt. I cannot go back 

to Brooklyn. My place is here.

 

Reference

Whitman, Walt. Memoranda During the War: Civil War Journals, 1863 — 1865. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 2010. 5 – 6. Print.