Toward the end of Walt Whitman’s life, the writer Horace Traubel visited him often at his home in Camden, New Jersey, and recorded their conversations on friendship, family, the Civil War, literature, and other topics, producing thousands of pages of transcripts in total. In Walt Whitman Speaks, editor Brenda Wineapple offers selections from their conversations, including these on sex.
*
Damn the expurgated books! I say damn ’em! The dirtiest book in all the world is the expurgated book!
Sex is a red rag to most people. It takes some time to get accustomed
to me, but if the folks will only persevere they will finally feel
right comfortable in my presence. “Children of Adam”—the poems—are very
innocent: they will not shake down a house. A man was here the other day
who asked me: “Don’t you feel rather sorry on the whole that you wrote
the sex poems?” I answered him by asking another question: “Don’t you
feel rather sorry on the whole that I am Walt Whitman?”All this fear of indecency, all this noise about purity and sex and the social order and the Comstockism particular and general is nasty—too nasty to make any compromise with. I never come up against it but I think of what [Heinrich] Heine said to a woman who had expressed to him some suspicion about the body. “Madame,” said Heine, “are we not all naked under our clothes?”
*
We have got so in our civilization, so-called (which is no
civilization at all) that we are afraid to face the body and its
issues—when we shrink from the realities of our bodily life: when we
refer the functions of the man and the woman, their sex, their passion,
their normal necessary desires, to something which is to be kept in the
dark and lied about instead of being avowed and gloried in.The body is stubborn: it craves bodily presences: it has its own peculiar tenacities—we might say aspirations as well as desires.
*
Obscenity? Obscene? Oh! Is the surgeon’s knife obscene? It might just
as well be said of the one as the other. This is a picture to the life,
a cut to the bone. It is not a pleasant book: it is horrible, horrible,
in its truth, its graphic power. ... [mehr] https://lithub.com/walt-whitman-had-some-thoughts-on-sex/
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