O Captain My Captain Essay

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    Lincoln’s Killer by James L. Swanson, Swanson characterizes President Abraham Lincoln and his assassin, John Wilkes Booth, similar to portrayals in other texts. Chasing Lincoln’s Killer and Captain! My Captain. by Walt Whitman, Lincoln is well-respected and portrayed as a hero. Chasing Lincoln’s Killer and Captain! My Captain, Abraham Lincoln is described as a cherished savior. For instance, in Chasing Lincoln’s Killer, Swanson states, “At this supreme moment, the people cheered on the man who, after a shaky

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    Figurative Language

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    are meant to be interpreted beyond its literal meaning to create a deeper feeling of the story or poem. Many authors use figurative language to create and develop the mood, or how the author feels during the story. Walt Whitman, author of “O Captain! My Captain!”, uses figurative language, such as metaphor and imagery, to create a solemn mood. A metaphor is a type of figurative language that compares two things without using the words like or as. This device helps create the mood because it gives

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    My Captain,” Whitman portrays Lincoln as a father figure who soldiers loved. Coming back from a “fearful trip,”(1) the ship’s crew hears the cheers of the crowd at the port. The captain, symbolizing Lincoln, falls dead just as they arrive home (Napierkowski). This depicts the life of Lincoln, how he won the “prize” by winning the war and being elected president, but was assassinated at his peek of contentment (2). Representing the captain as still living, the narrator

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    turning point for Whitman………………………………….6 5. Walt Whitman’s four poems on the American nation’s grief…………………7 5.1 Hush 'd Be the Camps To-day…………………………………………………..7 5.2. When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom 'd…………………………………7 5.3 O Captain! My Captain!................................................................................8 5.4 This Dust Was Once the Man…………………………………………………10 6. Summary……………………………………………………………………………..10 7.

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    write, “O CAPTAIN! My Captain!”(Whitman 1), a poem that illustrates a nation morning for their fallen leader. Walt Whitman was born on

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    Wheatley, Phillis. “On Being Brought from Africa to America.” Poetry Foundation, Poetry Foundation, www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45465/on-being-brought-from-africa-to-america. Accessed 4 Sept. 2017. Phillis Wheatley was the first African American and one of the first women to publish poetry in the colonies. Slave traders took her from West Africa and enslaved her in Boston where her slaveholders educated her, allowing her to develop the ability to write and read. In the poem “On Being Brought from

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    O Captain My Captain, what a beautiful portrayal of our great nation and some of the many amazing things we have overcome to get to where we now are today. To begin analyzing this poem we must first look at the context of when the poem was written. This poem was written by Walt Whitman in 1865 after the assassination of a beloved president, Abraham Lincoln. The death of this beloved president left the entire country devastated. Walt Whitman was a very strong admirer of Abraham Lincoln and often saw

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    effort to strengthen the Union. These undertakings not only aided the Union, but also brought Whitman closer to his idol, Lincoln, who also wanted to preserve the Union. Devastated by the assassination of President Lincoln, Walt Whitman wrote “O Captain! My Captain!,” “This Dust Was Once the Man,” and

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    Melville’s first hand experiences and observations impacted their work, and ultimately became their inspiration for their poems. Walt Whitman and Herman Melville shared common views about war in their poems, such as, Whitman’s “Song of Myself” and “O Captain! My Captain!” and Melville’s “Shiloh”, “The March into Virginia”, and “The College Colonial”. “Song of Myself” was arguably Whitman’s most famous work. A common theme in his work is war. Written just a few years before The Civil War in 1855, he believes

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    American culture in the nineteenth century can often be seen in pieces of writing from this time period. Upon comparing the 1894 short story The Story of An Hour by Kate Chopin and the 1865 poem O Captain! My Captain! by Walt Whitman, one can find that each of these are representative of American culture from the time period wherein it was written. In The Story of An Hour, Louise Mallard receives news that her husband has died in a railroad disaster. This fact is the first hint towards American

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