Walt Whitman Comparisons Essay

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    “The smallest sprouts show there is really no death, And if ever there was it led forward life”, declares Walt Whitman, an American poet and nature enthusiast, in his classic poem: ‘A Child Said, What Is The Grass’? Whitman correlates the roots of grass to the circle of life. The poem leads off with a child asks an existential question about grass. The author, unsure how to respond, ponders the existence of grass in relation to the existence of humanity and even himself. My belief is that although

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    Few poets can craft a piece of work that is as simplistic as it is complex. Walt Whitman does just this in his poem “A Noiseless Patient Spider”. Although only two stanzas for a total of ten lines, the amount of thought and intention put into this work is innumerable. A close read could provide countless hours of discussion for even the most highly intelligent of minds. This simple beauty is what makes a poem like “A Noiseless Patient Spider” great. In the piece, an observer watches a spider begin

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    Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson had many comparisons and many contrasts in their modern views of poetry. They are so similar, but yet so unique in their forms of poetry. Although Whitman and Dickinson had many similarities, they couldn’t be farther from the same. Similarities include: love of nature, life, self-reliance, both believed that religion is found in nature, and both emphasize the pros and cons of death. Whitman and Dickinson both modernized poetry and are vital to the influence of poets

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    For a brief description of the concept of “courtly love”, a few characteristics must be highlighted. Courtly love appeared in Provence (southern France) in the eleventh century. It consists on the expression of love in its most sincere, chivalric and noble form. It tended to be chaste and adulterous. It was also secret and, in general, always took place between the members of the higher classes of society. Andreas Capellanus defines it in The Art of Courtly Love as “the pure love which binds together

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    Post WWII culture in the United States was built on conformity and intolerance, and free spirits, anti-capitalists, and homosexuals had been repressed. After the victory of the Second World War the constrained consumer demand drove the U.S. economy to grow exponentially. The automobile industry effectively converted back to producing cars and previously minor industries such as aviation and electronics grew into major corporations. A housing boom, that had been influenced by easily affordable mortgages

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    How are you known? A last name is what defines them, it tells their past. It tells what they should be like in relation to ancestors. When the word amerca comes to mind do you consider it part of you? Walt whitman was a man that was born in New York, he knew what america came from. Whitman wrote a poem called I Hear America Singing. In this poem he tells of citizens doing their job or daily duty while singing America. Later on in history a man named Langston Hughes, he was an African american poet

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    through. As a matter of fact, in “A Noiseless Patient Spider,” by Walt Whitman, the spider and the human soul are unwinding and trying to seek attachment since the symbolism occurs as the spider repeatedly shoots his silk. In line 10, “Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul.” the author uses the gossamer thread to remind us of the spider by positioning the two ideas next to each other as if they were one. Walt Whitman does not directly announce that his soul is like a spider, but

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    My Passion For My Life

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    that, at a first reading, sounds like a woman driven insane. However it is more meaningful if you assume her sane. The outside pattern is the outside of a person, what role they play, what expectations there are about them, et cetera, hence the comparison to bars. The inner pattern is of course, the person behind the bars. It may be a story of madness, but only to those who aren’t paying attention. One of the longer texts I enjoyed was Herman Melville’s “Moby Dick.” This story is one of literal

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    In his canonical collection, Leaves of Grass, Walt Whitman creates a poetic persona that envisages a particularly American brand of nationalism. Written almost a century after the instrumental document of American republicanism; the Declaration of Independence (1776) was actualized; Whitman’s poems draw on some of its key tenets, mainly equality and liberty. Like the Declaration of Independence, his poems perpetuate a framework of American democracy and the importance of the democratic individual

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    Whitman and Hughes (A detailed comparison of Walt Whitman’s I Hear America Singing and Langston Hughes I Too Sing America) Beginning after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the United Stated of America has yet to reach a time of unity like in years past. Why this is so is unclear, however it can clearly be seen that in the America today, unity is not a major theme in society. This was not always the case, as in 1880 Walt Whitman published a portion of his work entitled, I Hear America Singing (Hear

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