Walt Whitman Comparisons Essay

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    Alyssa Di Mauro Unit 3 Paper The writing I chose to analyze is Song of Myself by Walt Whitman. This poem, considered an American epic, is so long and packed full of a variety of topics, to sum it up in its entirety would be taxing. For the purposes of this paper, I am focusing on only the parts of the poem which are commonly discussed in terms of literary elements. Whitman’s poem is a combination of poetic meditation about the world and all it encompasses interconnectedly, political commentary about

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    In one of the sections from the poem, “Song of Myself” Walt Whitman starts out with a child asking a question, “What is the grass?” Grass is a symbol of life. God, who created both the heavens and the earth also gave birth to life. When Whitman refers to grass as a “handkerchief of the Lord” (7), as a gift. When people look at the grass, they do not think of it as a creation but rather just a plant. Whitman refers to the grass as “a child, the produced babe of vegetation” (11, 12). Here, the grass

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    a trap is slowly set out to bring about the victory. One wraps it around their arms reminiscing on the time spent for this moment to occur. The symbolism created by the poems “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost, “A Noiseless Patient Spider” by Walt Whitman, and “The Sick Rose” by William Blake each held truths of the world involving hardships, doubts, and obstacles in different perspectives but in similar ways. In the poem “The Road Not Taken,” Frost compares two roads to the choices people

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    the United States is like a siren from the Odyssey, alluring but unreliable. The American Dream is a universally understood idea with a uniquely personal reality thought to be welcoming and free like Emma Lazarus, productive and effective like Walt Whitman, or false and unequal like Langston Hughes. Emma Lazarus’ poem, The New Colossus, depicts America as a welcoming harbor for all immigrants seeking freedom. She begins her writing by contrasting Greece and America. Different from the tyrant Greeks

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    Whitman: “A Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Grim” Walt Whitman listened to the warriors’ battle stories and used them as inspiration for some of his poems. Through his volunteer work, Whitman saw firsthand the debilitating effect the war had on the soldiers’ mental health and their physical injuries, all of which were difficult to treat due to the insufficient amount of supplies and knowledgeable people present to help. All of his work with those who served during the Civil War served as

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    Gillian Clarke, Patrolling Barnegat by Walt Whitman, and the poem Storm on the Island by the one and only Seamus Heaney. These poems all portray the feeling of confusion, often it is linked within a theme of some war. Walt Whitman uses some repetition to enhance the power of the storm he is trying to describe. "Wild, Wild the storm, and the sea high running" The repetition of the word wild in this line helps to enforce the power of the deadly storm and nature. Whitman also uses personification in the

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    Seamus Heaney’s Storm on the Island and Walt Whitman’s Patrolling Barnegat which were written in 1966 and 1856 respectively are two classical poems describing vividly How the poems I have studied explored nature and its effect. Seamus Heaney’s Storm on the Island and Walt Whitman’s Patrolling Barnegat which were written in 1966 and 1856 respectively are two classical poems describing vividly the horror and insecurity experienced by human’s during a wild storm. Storm on the Island and

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    Language is all around us, it is how we communicate with one another, it brings meaning to literature, and is cemented into our culture. Walt Whitman, a famous American novelist from the 19 century, highlights the effects of language on the American population in his essay, Slang in America. He focuses on positive aspect of slang, how we adapt slang into the english language, as if it is second nature to use, giving a deeper meaning to everyday phrases and words. By contrast, Politics and the English

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    Walt Whitman was an 19th century American poet and author of “Song of Myself,” a 52-section poem that conveys a lot of the basic premises and themes of transcendentalism. Transcendentalism is the belief in the power of the individual, no one is better then anyone else, everything is interconnected, and the power and value of nature. It was a reaction towards rationalism that resulted in the development of transcendentalism. Walt Whitman shared this values and beliefs and is notable in a lot of his

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    Poetic Tools Describe Life in Walt Whitman's Song of Myself Walt Whitman is commonly known as the bard of America, a poet who wrote about the common man of the country as had never been done before. He was able to do so because he was a common man, as can be seen in lines such as "This is the city and I am one of the citizens." Within his poetry he often used certain tools of the typical epic tale, borrowed from such tales as The Iliad, and The Odyssey. All of these tools can be seen within

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