Back to Poet Page Sort by:Views |AlphabeticallyTotal Poems: 329 1To You. 2One’s-Self I Sing. 3O Captain! My Captain! 4O Me! O Life! 5As I Ponder’d in Silence. 6To You. 7For Him I Sing. 8Walt Whitman. 9Song at Sunset. ...
Walt Whitman作者及作品介绍 Puritanism(Calvinism),Transcendentalism,Symbolism,Individualism WaltWhitman(1819-1892)WaltWhitman(1819-1892)1)LeavesofGrass(his“single”poem;embodimentofAmericandemocraticideals;anewidea,anewworld,anewlife-style)Selectedpoems:“ThereWasaChildWentForth”;“CavalryCrossingaFord”;“...
TheQuestion and Answersection for Walt Whitman: Poems is a great resource to ask questions, find answers, and discuss the novel. Why do you think Walt Whitman chose a spider to symbolize his soul? Whitman chose the spider because like the spider, his soul is always trying to make connection...
The last version of the book contained more than four hundred poems. By then, Whitman's fame had spread to many nations. In eighteen seventy-three, Walt Whitman suffered a stroke. He spent the last years of his life in Camden, New Jersey. He wrote more poems. He also wrote about ...
into themes of the self, the all-encompassing "I," sexuality, democracy, the human body, and what it means to live in the modern world. Though this poem is short, it alludes to the broad scope of ideas that Whitman will explore in the rest of the poems inInscriptionsandLeaves of ...
One’s-Self I Sing. by Walt Whitman - ONE’S-SELF I sing—a simple, separate Person; Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-masse. Of Physiology
The poem “Song of Myself”is one of themost important poems of Walt Whitman.The poetry “Song of Myself”of the American poetWalt Whitmanconsists of52 free verses, here I present the first and the second section. Below, you canread the text of the poetry: ” Song of Myself ” by ...
‘I Sing the Body Electric’ by Walt Whitman is one of the poet’s well-known and celebrated early poems. It was published in 1855, in the first edition of Leaves of Grass. The speaker compares the body and the soul in this piece. He comes to the conclusion that they are much more...
Whitman is the 19th-century father of free-verse poetry in the English language, basing the form and cadence of his poems on the Psalms of the King James Bible. The two poems featured above take the Victorian-era (even in the U.S.) ...
As is common in Whitman's work, this poem does not have a formal rhyme scheme or structure. It is made up of stanzas of differing length, written in a stream-of-consciousness style. The undisciplined structure (or lack thereof) supports the concept of this poem, in which the speaker stru...