preview

Thoreau And Transcendentalism

Decent Essays

For centuries, Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson have long been considered the leading benefactors of transcendentalism. Transcendentalism, a system based on the idea that, in order to understand the nature of reality, one must first examine and analyze the reasoning process that governs the nature of experience, is an ideology that the poet Walt Whitman, a quintessential American voice, embodies the lifestyle of. The experience should be one free from social conformity which Thoreau and Emerson are inexplicably governed by. Though both are major steeples in the philosophy, Walt Whitman deserves as much credit for his impact on Transcendentalism. With his commentary about nature, deviation from modern society, and reasons to live …show more content…

His hypocritical nature is problematic as the ideals he expresses are contradicted. For example, in the novel he has several discrepancies, one involving the sound of the train, Thoreau plots against it in a chapter, “that devilish Iron Horse, whose ear-rending neigh is heard throughout the town;” but in the next, he claims that he is “refreshed and expanded when the freight train rattles past me.” Walt Whitman more thoroughly encompasses Transcendentalism without contradictions such as these, making his stance on nature clearer (Schulz). The commentary that Emerson provides is similar, but while Emerson and Thoreau use nature to comment on society, Whitman uses society to comment on nature. His poem, “A Child Said, What Is the Grass” says, “Growing among black folks as among white, Kanuck, Tuckahoe, Congressmen, Cuff, I give them the same, I receive them the same” which expresses that as a society we are blinded by social construction and the dichotomies that separate us (Walt L 3). The environment is not governed by the same social constructions as us so why should humans be? Whitman uses the Transcendental pillar of nature in experience to exemplify how each person is the same as the earth. We all die, we all …show more content…

Using free verse in his poetry was considered outlandishly informal in structured society but the point resonants within contemporary culture as structured aberrance. This is but only one example of his maverick-like annotations. In the poem, “Song of Myself,” Whitman spends fifty-two lines celebrating himself (Wiggins 428). This anomalous form of self love is important, as it coincides heavily within the parameters of how self respect is described within Transcendentalism. The tier of self purpose and living with dignity used to deviate from society. The catechism he uses to assesses this mediocrity are simple inquiries posed to provoke a discussion about

Get Access