Walt Whitman Comparisons Essay

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    A reading of “Song of Myself” “Song of myself” is one of Walt Whitman’s excellent poetry of the Leaves of Grass. Referring to the word “myself” from title, it is presumable that the poem is talking about Whitman himself. Moreover, in this poem, he uses several times the word “you”. To some extents, “you” can be referred to his beloved readers. This poem is like a conversation between the speaker and the readers. He tells the readers about his passion to the world and asks us to find him. In addition

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    unorthodox style of writing as well as his innovations in the world of poetry, Walt Whitman could be seen as one of the most influential authors of America. Whitman's most famous work, "Leaves of Grass", a collection of poems, most prominently displays this. His poetry exemplified his beliefs of Romanticism and Transcendentalism in that individuals, community, and nature were important above all. To spread these beliefs, Whitman wrote his poetry in the form of musical carols in his works, "Carol of Occupations"

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    22. Altar Poem Also known as ‘Carmen Figuratum’ or ‘L shaped’ poem, or ‘hieroglyphic poem’. It refers to a poem in which the words, lines and characters, or stanzas are arranged in such a way that when looked carefully as a whole, readers see that they make a design on the page and take the shape of the subject of the poem. The shape can be of any type and depends upon the poet’s arrangement of lines. A notable example is THE ALTAR by GEORGE HERBERT. 23. Ambiguity Also ‘plurisignation’ deals with

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    While Walt Whitman’s “I Hear America Singing,” begins to peel at the veneer of the seemingly all-inclusive American Dream, Sylvia Plath and Langston Hughes fully expose the harsh realities of American life for those who have been woken by a reality devoid of this paradisiacal dream. Through these selections, the illusion that is known to all as the American Dream is shattered, along with any hope for true equality and freedom for women and people of color in the land of the free. In Walt Whitman’s

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    Originally published in 1856, Walt Whitman’s “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” embraces a radical point of view of time. Throughout the poem, the speaker explains his surroundings and observations of the ferry, nature, the city, and the future. Inadvertently, or perhaps intentionally, Whitman makes a hypothesis of how time works relative to his position in the timeline: time happens all at once as Whitman writes the poem and he addresses the reader as if he is talking to them in the present-- as the poet

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    Poetic Comparison of “O Captain! My Captain!” and “Cool Tombs” “O Captain! My Captain!” by Walt Whitman and “Cool Tombs” by Carl Sandburg depict the death of President Lincoln, which reflects the willingness of Civil-War era Americans to sacrifice the safety of their president and the lives of soldiers for the greater socioeconomic purpose. In “O Captain! My Captain!” Whitman employs a metaphor of President Lincoln as a captain of a ship to illustrate the price of modernization, characterizing the

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    where the “black man lives”. Embracing nature and its carefreeness was seen as a dreadful decision, and this changed over time. On the other hand, my second journal was all about imagery and the beauty of nature. Walt Whitman’s “I Saw in Louisiana a Live Oak Growing” is a comparison of a tree and the narrator’s life. The narrator knows he cannot live an independent existence like the oak tree does. He

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    With so many immigrants wanting to start a better life, their number one choice is the U.S. In the poem “I Hear America Singing” by Walt Whitman he shows many different people in America working. “Those of mechanics, each one singing his as it should be blithe and strong... The carpenter singing his as he measures his plank or beam… The shoemaker singing as he sits on his bench, the hatter

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    From a young age, children all over the world are taught that America is the "Land of Opportunity". Their parents and their parents ' parents have experienced some type of fulfillment from the American Dream which prompts them to relay belief in it to the newest generation of Americans. However, nowadays, populations of Americans have become increasingly critical of the American Dream and what that dream entails. That particular group claims that the American Dream is now dead due to many different

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    others. And yet in this time some writers have influenced the work of others. Walt Whitman and Allen Ginsberg who are separated by a time gap have a kind of connection. Both of these amazing writers wrote pieces of work that are considered a catalyst for the Beat Generation. These two courageous writers went against the norm and wrote about something different. Although they are different they both explored new topics. Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself” and Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl” have similarities

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