Walt Whitman

Not Heaving from My Ribb'd Breast Only

Not Heaving from My Ribb'd Breast Only - meaning Summary

Desire Beyond Bodily Signs

Whitman rejects the idea that attachment or passion is only a set of bodily symptoms, noises, or dramatic outbursts. The speaker lists sighs, broken vows, dreams, pulses, and gestures to insist that the impulse called "adhesiveness" is not exhausted by those external or physiological signs. Instead the poem claims a deeper, inner pulse of life and connection that does not need constant proof or display.

Read Complete Analyses

NOT heaving from my ribb’d breast only; Not in sighs at night, in rage, dissatisfied with myself; Not in those long-drawn, ill-supprest sighs; Not in many an oath and promise broken; Not in my wilful and savage soul’s volition; Not in the subtle nourishment of the air; Not in this beating and pounding at my temples and wrists; Not in the curious systole and diastole within, which will one day cease; Not in many a hungry wish, told to the skies only; Not in cries, laughter, defiances, thrown from me when alone, far in the wilds; Not in husky pantings through clench’d teeth; Not in sounded and resounded words—chattering words, echoes, dead words; Not in the murmurs of my dreams while I sleep, Nor the other murmurs of these incredible dreams of every day; Nor in the limbs and senses of my body, that take you and dismiss you continually—Not there; Not in any or all of them, O adhesiveness! O pulse of my life! Need I that you exist and show yourself, any more than in these songs.

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