"Walt whitman poetry" Essays and Research Papers

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    Dickinson vs. Whitman

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    The Personified Train: Dickinson vs. Whitman Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman are considered to be exceptional influence in American poetry. Both poets possess a different style of writing‚ but many of their poems have similar themes about the environment that surrounds them. Dickinson’s "I Like To See It Lap The Miles" and Whitman’s "To A Locomotive In Winter" revolve around the theme of trains. Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman portray trains to have body parts‚ sounds‚ and movements analogous

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    West from California’s Shores is a poem about American identity in the world. It aims to promote American patriotism‚ while at the same time setting the nature of human psychology in focus‚ and make us wander about our future. “Walt Whitman revolutionised American poetry”‚ discussing topics considered‚ if not taboo‚ then most inappropriate. It is however not only what he wrote‚ but how he wrote. He is often considered to be the father of the free verse‚ a form which allows the poet to write more

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    WHITMAN‚ THE DEMOCRATIC POET When the first edition of Leaves of Grass was originally published in 1855‚ Walt Whitman ’s collection of poems was a slender yet ideologically rich book. Although only fully recognized after his death‚ Whitman ’s body of work has become the emblem of American democracy. If in the beginning he had been scorned‚ ignored‚ or misunderstood‚ slowly and steadily Whitman achieved international fame‚ and is now arguably one of the most

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    Walt Whitman’s poem‚ “Song of Myself”‚ specifically the first section‚ most assuredly provides an accurate reflection of the time in which it was written. • It is a prophetic piece of work‚ not only providing a sense of what was happening during the moments of writing‚ but also alluding to what was to come. • American expansion serves to widen divisions in the country’s unity‚ both socially and economically. • Internal tensions‚ between Northern and Southern states‚ become increasingly

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    Whitman and the Civil War

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    Walt Whitman is one of the best known American poets. His poems promote the cause of freedom while simultaneously praising the dignity of the individual. His poems are usually about himself‚ yet in himself he sees the entire humanity and successfully communicates this to the reader‚ sometimes directly‚ sometimes indirectly. Walt Whitman was a part of the transcendental movement of Poets in America‚ which also included Henry Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson. In Whitman’s poem "Bivouac on a Mountain

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    Whitman vs Hughes

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    After reading two poems from Walt Whitman and Langston Hughes‚ you can see that Whitman speaks about and based his poem on the employed people‚ working and enjoying their jobs. In contrast Langston Hughes focuses more on the other unemployed people having no jobs while maintaining optimism. Therefore‚ Walt Whitman’s “I Hear America Singing” and Langston Hughes’ “I‚ too‚ Sing America” present American way of life in two different prospective. Walt Whitman’s poem‚ “I Hear America Singing” is different

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    Poetry Assesment

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    Nia Williams EG 102 Dr. DiSanza Paper 2: Poetry Due: 11/13/2012 The Importance of Appreciation and Involvement in the Natural World around Us Two poets from two different centuries address a particular theme with two very distinct perceptions. “The World Is Too Much with Us‚” by William Wordsworth of the 18th century‚ and “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer‚” by Walt Whitman of the 19th century‚ both address the importance of appreciation and involvement in the natural world around us.

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    Whitman & Dickinson-Nature Death & Immortality Emily Dickinson & Walt Whitman were both poets of the nineteenth century that both captured their readers by their unique style of writing. Dickinson grew up in a wealthy family where her father and grandfather were lawyers. Although they were very outspoken‚ she was very introverted and put words to paper. Her lifestyle led to her writing poetry‚ in letters to friends‚ cards sent to loved ones but none of her work was seen by the world

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    Whitman in 1855 What was Walt doing at this time? Late in 1854‚ Whitman was working in carpentry. He is assumed to have started his writings for what would later be known‚ and published as Leaves of Grass in late 1854 or early 1855. One of his brothers once commented that Walt would get an idea while working‚ write it down‚ then take the rest of the day off. How did Walt get his book published? Allen contends that Walt probably sought out a commercial publisher to take his book at first‚ though

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    Walt Whitman is unmistakably one of the most renowned and influential early American romantic poets. However‚ his revolutionary style and structure‚ ideologies and unbridled optimism for society and mankind made way for departures from Romanticism towards a new movement; Modernism. Thomson Gale writes that Modernism can be "defined by its rejection of the literary conventions of the nineteenth century and by its opposition to conventional morality‚ taste‚ traditions‚ and economic values." (Thompson

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