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Analysis Of Walt Whitman's Song Of Myself

Decent Essays

Walt Whitman’s 1892 poem “Song of Myself” is an extensive selection consisting of 52 separate sections expressing Whitman’s different perspectives on different subjects concerning things such as his own inner personality, nature and the human perspective. Each, as expected, helps to reveal a part of Whitman’s psyche. In the case of Section 6 of “Song of Myself”, Whitman talks at length about the most worldly of the Earth’s creations, grass. Grass is used as a metaphor for many things throughout the section, from life to death to equality and, most importantly, the presence of the unknown, which connects back to the previous themes mentioned. Whitman establishes the theme of the unknown through his primary subject matter, thoughtful use of diction and his poetic form. Whitman helped to show what questioning and marveling at the world could do to help better an individual as they journey through the confusion that is human existence. Section 6 starts off very simply with a bit of narration from the speaker saying,“A child said What is the grass? Fetching it to me with full hands…” (473). The first thing to note in this opening line is the identity of person talking to the speaker. The child is anonymous in this story, he is not given a name and the speaker does not seem to recognize who this child is, shown by the informal attitude with which the speaker addresses the child. It is not made clear whether the child is physically a child or just seen as someone who is naive

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