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Literary Writing In Walt Whitman's Song Of Myself

Decent Essays

Literary writing has changed from telling stories, to entertaining, and informing other but now it has changed were writers are putting their voice out and making argument. Writers like Walt Whitman, Benjamin Franklin, and Anne Bradstreet were able to express their proposal so that it would reach many individual who feels the same way. It would help those who are in the same position understand their point of view. Their purpose was not to change literary but to show how it can combine it all together and how it can changed others point of view on individualism, civil right, and gender. Walt Whitman’s poem “Song of Myself” was able to reflect individualism. That the start of the poem, Whitman made a connection to the reader by stating, “For every atom belonging to me as good belong to you” (3). It shows how the poem is not just about him but yourself. He was able to put links that ties the persona and the world, “And what I assume you shall assume,” (2). At the same time, states how his individual and the division of that individual into world are in his surroundings. He then relates how grasses are like individuals who are surrounding us. As we look at the grass from a far distant, they may all look the same but in reality they have their own unique style. In the poem there was a child who asked Whitman, “What is grass?” (98). The “grass” can have many different meaning base on one’s point of view. We have to look at other beliefs and the cultures around us in order to have democratic and have people treated with equality. Whitman’s poem wants us to take the pride of every individual and see what they have to offer to the world. It shows us, the individuals, that we are able to speak and share our voice with other. It makes us have a connection with everyone. He was able to put his feeling into the writing and share it with the world.
Benjamin Franklin’s “The Speech of Miss Polly Baker”, touches on the topic of civil right. Instead of using his voice, he allows Miss Baker to use her voice to argue her statement. She first argue, “I am a poor unhappy Woman; who have no Money to Fee Lawyers to plead me, being hard put to it to get a tolerable Living” (pg. 449). She didn’t have the money to pay for the

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