Song of the Open Road
Song of the Open Road
Introduction: The poem Song of the Open Road was published in 1856. It was
first named ‘Poem of the Road’ which mingled excellent pictorial imagery of a
wandering vagabond with the idea of the spiritual journey. The vagabond is none
other than the New World Personality going on his journey, listening, observing,
absorbing, discovering himself and the soul, and finally the travel of the soul in
this universe.
Summary: Song of the Open Road launches the vagabond poet on his journey.
The poet jogs along observing what life has to offer first hand. There is gaiety in
the steps of the vagabond as he trots along the open road. He is healthy, free,
strong and content as he travels. There is no hindrance to his enjoying what the
open road has to offer. He is content with observing what the Earth has to provide.
He associates himself with the people he sees on the road irrespective of their
status. The mutual recognition of his ‘self’ in others is already reached by the end
of Section 1 when he says:
James Miller aptly says: “The poem elaborates two aspects of the vagabond’s
life: (i) the wandering, the sheer joy of movement and diversity of experience; (ii)
the direct involvement with nature in the innocence and validity of its naturalness,
its original and uncorrupted forms”.
In Section 2, the road assumes deep symbolic significance. The poet feels that
the open road is broadminded. It has no bias towards anyone. All are equal on the
road-irrespective of caste, color, religion, sex, education, or wealth or poverty. This
indirectly throws light on the democratic ideals which Whitman held. All are equal
in a democracy. The road also becomes symbolic of the world which becomes
receptive of all people-rich or poor, black or white, sick or healthy, literate or
illiterate. The open road symbolizing the world is not only contained in the present.
It is the eternal link of the past, the present and the future. The open road embraces
everyone that comes to it, be it:
flagged walk of the cities! You strong curbs at the edges! You ferries!....you row of
houses!
He talks of what he sees on the open road and also tells of those unseen things
which make the way of life interesting. As a poet he hears and sees more than what
is there is to be seen. He discovers a kinship with various objects ferries, wharves,
ships, houses, roofs, etc., and wants them to impart to him what has been imparted
to them by people who had lived there or passed through.
In Section 4, the poet feels that the open road has a message for him the voice
of the people. It seems as if the road whispers to him:
It tells mankind to be courageous, to grow strong and as hard beaten as the road
to face the problems in life. If mankind does not follow the open road, it may feel
helpless and lost. The open road is there to remind man to be as strong as ever. The
poet emphasizes that it is only by taking to the open road that both heroic deeds
and happiness can be achieved:
... heroic deeds were all conceive in the open air and all free poems also...
In Section 5, he feels that trotting along the open road, a feeling of freshness
and liveliness with no limitations, overpowers him. He feels his own self
expanding as he inhales “great draughts of space”, he becomes larger when he tries
to conceive the whole world around him within himself. He is surprised at his own
capacity for goodness. The entire life around him seemed to have been bathed in
beauty. The grandeur that permeates the external world synchronizes with the
beautiful mind of the poet.
In Section 6, the poet elaborates on the virtues of the open road. A man
becomes a perfect human being according to the poet: “Now I see the secret of the
making of the best persons, it is to grow in the open air and to eat and sleep with
the earth”. He realizes that wisdom is not the result of studying in schools and
colleges, but it is the test which a human being undergoes on the road of life.
Experiences on the road prove the worth and wisdom of a person. Philosophies and
religions may have value in the lecture halls, but the real test of a person’s wisdom
is on the open road. The road also makes strangers into comrades. Friendship is
established. Whitman once again stresses the point that man can never survive
alone.
In Section 7, the poet tries to probe the nature of the happiness he feels on the
open road. Whether he meets a man or a woman, a driver or a fisherman, the poet
establishes affinity and identity with them as he walks on the open road. Though
the passers-by on the road are strangers to him, the poet feels that there is a
common link between them. The poet experiences this exhilaration as he goes on
the open road in the fresh air. He feels himself charged with a certain feeling of
joy. This joy he recognizes in the strangers passing by.
Continuing his exploration into the nature of happiness on the open road, the
poet says in Section 8
Love and sympathy and freshness flow out, of all men and women leading to
friendship and attachment. The poet asserts that whatever happens, a person must
forever go on and on. On the open road” he should never stop.
In Section 9, the poet invites every individual to recognize his individual self,
enjoy life and go on in life. There are good things and bad things in life. A little of
both form the essence of life. A taste of both molds the individual personality of a
human being. Too much of anything will not suit a person’s constitution. Hence
the poet, comparing the world to a open road, advises the human beings:
The poet thus shows the transitory phase of a man’s life. He must not become
stagnant, stopping somewhere. He must be full of zest and nerve and on the move
like a vagabond tasting the good and the bad in life. No man is a permanent
customer of this Earth.
In Section 12, the poem is raised to a philosophic level, when the world is
compared to a road, with all the people passing through it to reach the ultimate
goal of self-realization or freedom from death.
To know the universe itself as a road as many roads, as roads for traveling souls....
As the procession of souls travels along the road of the universe, all religions,
politics, philosophies etc. become meaningless. The soul expands to freedom.
Laughing, dancing and smart dresses are all superficialities. Reality lies on the
open road.
The poet adds that only those who have self-realization, the dauntless spirit,
will be able to comprehend the poet’s philosophy of the open road. In Section
14, he calls for active battle and rebellion. He appeals to the readers to be strong on
the open road. It is an endless trek, fraught with the difficulties of starvation,
poverty, enemies and desertions.
In the 15th and last Section, the poet tells the people not to delay, tempted by
lectures, or money, or books. He readily offers to give a helping hand:
The poet sets out to free himself and his society from all age-old dogmas. He
shows a-new path full of the breath of fresh air.
The poet takes his readers into confidence. He presents a panoramic view of
the sights and scenes as he goes on the open road. He eulogizes the Open Road. He
calls on mankind to become as hard as the road in facing adversities in life. He
takes the readers on to a higher level of thinking when he calls the universe the
open road on which the souls are the voyagers.
New ideals: The poem also reflects the poet Whitman opening new vistas of
ideals before mankind. According to him, the poet here is seen singing in praise of
the democratic ideals and reality that all are equal on this open road-be it a beggar,
or an illiterate person, a sick person or rich, the elite, educated or healthy.
The poem is very earthly in the sense that it deals with the description of the
external world, as it is. Whitman lived a natural and unsophisticated life. He was a
poet of the people. He considered all Americans - men, women, children, high and
low, belonging to any profession, the gentlemen and the vagabond, the virtuous
and the wicked, the generous and the mean - his brethren as they belonged to the
common humanity. He made them all part of his poems. The poem shows
Whitman’s felicity of phrasing and his mastery over free verse.
In the poem he sings of humanity and its hopes; he sings of animate and
inanimate things. He is a friend of the natural elements and becomes one with the
wind, rain, ocean, water, mountains and soil. His vision becomes cosmic when it
embraces the entire universe. The catalog technique suggests effectively the variety
of life.
Symbol of new way of life: The poem assumes deep symbolic value. The open
road is the symbol of the new way of life - of experiencing everything with joy and
freshness, of discarding custom and obsolete traditions in favor of enthusiastic,
intuitive approach to life. To travel the open road means to be self-reliant and close
to achievement of divine selfhood. And in this discovery the poet invites all
readers to participate.
These words of Whitman show that he has a certain affinity for the road. He
admires it. It has a lesson for every man. It teaches man to become strong, hard-
beaten, to face the struggles in this life. The poet is not afraid of the road, he feels
sad to go away from it. He conveys the idea that the road is more full of buzzing
life and it expresses itself better than the poet. He considers it to be more valuable
to him than his poem.
The poet in the beginning deals with the physical movement of the people on
the open road. A man can nourish his soul and body as he goes on the open road.
He has plenty of questions. The replies are eternally present in the open air. He
becomes charged with those replies. His soul is enriched with the knowledge, and
happiness is the result. This happiness pervades the entire atmosphere. There is a
deep underlying meaning in the words of the poet. A human being learns about the
mysteries of life in the course of his journey on the open road which symbolizes
the world. He is filled with happiness and as his soul charges him with happiness,
with the awareness of the facts of life, hence, ‘the efflux of the soul is happiness.’
5. To know the universe itself as a road, as many roads, as roads for traveling
souls,
All parts away for the progress of souls.
The poet has taken the reader on to a higher strata of thinking in these lines. It
is not a mere reference to the plain open road. The poet calls the universe itself the
open road. Everyone has got to take that road of the Universe. But only those who
have self-realization and awareness of the soul will be able to understand the trek
of the souls towards the ultimate. The souls will progress well on the road of the
Universe to merge in the ultimate soul as they become free of all the hampering
aspects of life such as religion, politics, material attachments, etc.
6. ...My call is the call of battle, I nourish active rebellion, He going with me must
go well arm'd,
He going with me goes often with spare diet, poverty, angry enemies, desertions....