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Walt Whitman And Dickinson 's Views Of Death

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When so much of one’s life is left up to chance, it is nice to know that one can find certainty in death. Whereas life can be moulded to perfection and death is a guarantee, there is no way to tell what one will face following death. There are millions of different cultures, religions, and individual beliefs pertaining to the afterlife, but a definitive answer will never be known. The works of Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson express two very unique interpretations of death and what follows. Both Whitman’s and Dickinson’s views of death include an idea of an afterlife, or of a continuation of the soul post death, but where Whitman welcomes the idea of demise without a trace of fear and his overall view of death is more mystical, Dickinson has a negative view of death and, at times, questions the possibility of an afterlife entirely. Both Whitman and Dickinson share a strong view that there is life after death. Whitman’s view of the afterlife focuses on how all the lives from the past helped to create those of the present. In Canto 6 from Song of Myself, Whitman introduces the theme of grass representing the dead and the impact the deceased still have on the world:
And now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves. (110)
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[The dead] are alive and well somewhere,
The smallest sprout shows there is really no death, (125-126)
This passage shows how life can grow from death. While corpses are buried

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