"Compare whitman and longfellow" Essays and Research Papers

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    of Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman can best be described as strikingly similar in themes‚ tones‚ and motifs yet curiously independent in language and style. Reading their poetry is like hearing the same speech from two different great orators that have completely different speaking styles. One is markedly eloquent and repetitively descriptive while the others words are punishingly quaint and powerfully rich in essence. This is the situation I confront when I compare and contrast Dickinson’s‚ “A

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    Walt Whitman: Sexuality Debate The debate of one’s sexuality has more commonly come into the picture of American society towards the very end of the 19th century. A captious discussion is the lifestyle of Walt Whitman: American poet‚ essayist and journalist. Though modern critics tend to debate his sexuality‚ there is great disagreement as to whether Whitman ever had sexual relations with men‚ expressed alongside his poetry. Walt Whitman was born on Long Island on May 31st‚ 1819‚ just thirty

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    all social classes should be held in equal importance—a belief that had been forgotten by many in the restrictive‚ uptight society of the Victorian era—‚ but goes beyond the original meaning to extend this equality to minorities and women as well. Whitman glorifies the settings and inhabitants of nature as a model for human society in “Song of Myself‚” using it to extend equality and liberty to new groups of people‚ among them minorities and women. While “Song of Myself” is crammed with significant

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    Ebay Case Meg Whitman

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    weren’t for [the] community.” In 1998‚ Meg Whitman was brought in as CEO to strengthen the eBay brand and to develop a stronger marketing strategy. In this‚ she was remarkably successful. In little over a year‚ eBay registrants grew from 88‚000 to 3.8 million users. The company successfully went public‚ revenue just about doubled every quarter‚ and acquisitions and partnerships were made to increase the customer base. However‚ the rapid growth under Whitman caused a major problem for eBay: it put

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    The poem doesn’t have plot itself‚ as Walt Whitman presents the unity of his “I”‚ as the hero of the poem‚ with the people he meets and with life itself. Lines from the part 15 of the poem fully demonstrate it: “The living sleep for their time‚ the dead sleep for their time/The old husband sleeps

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    Walt Whitman and Civil War

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    Walt Whitman Author(s): HENRY NEUMANN Reviewed work(s): Source: The American Scholar‚ Vol. 2‚ No. 3 (July 1933)‚ pp. 260-268 Published by: The Phi Beta Kappa Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41203967 . Accessed: 05/02/2013 12:59 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars‚ researchers‚ and students discover

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    Locomotive in Winter" and Emily Dickinson’s poem "I Like to See it Lap Miles" are both based on what had been upcoming in their era: locomotives. Whitman used Old English to protray his admiration with the train‚ especially it’s physique and ’will’‚ while Dickinson uses modern language to observe what the train does and how it acts. It almost seems as though Whitman is sexually describing the train‚ as if it’s a romantic poem of someone he loves. He describes the train as a‚ "fierce-throated beauty!" He

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    Everyone loved Longfellow’s poems‚ all adults and children have read his poems. Longfellow went to Harvard for college and made a amazing work there. He had a good life growing up and he well just did amazing things. But do you see the diffrence between this two authors? One came from a bad life and the other not so much. As i see it

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    Walt Whitman Whitman’s different views of writing Walt Whitman is one of the first great American poets. He was born in 1819 on Long Island and he was one of ten children. Whitman only went to school for a few years until he turned eleven and concluded formal schooling. He then attempted to find work to support his future family. He found a job as an office boy and then moved on to be an apprentice with a local paper where he learned all about the printing press. The following summer he joined

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    Walt Whitman was a man who believed in individuality and self-teaching. This is displayed throughout many of his poem and literary works. In Walt Whitman’s America: A Cultural Biography‚ it is said that Whitman was a teacher of others‚ even though he did believe in a method of self-teaching. (Reynolds) He saw self-education as a very productive and effective way of being taught. While this was one view‚ he also believed being taught by another was beneficial. Walt Whitman’s pedagogy involved the

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