Ralph Waldo Emerson was born in Boston on May 25, 1803 and died on April 27, 1882. According to Encyclopedia.com and other sources such as poets.org, Emerson’s family was “fairly well-known.” It also states that his father passed away when Emerson was just eight years-old, leading his family into poverty. Although he was faced with a financial need, Emerson attended Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts at the age of fourteen, enlisted under a scholarship. After graduating, he began to teach and later moved into the ministry, at Boston’s Second Church. He then wedded Ellen Tucker in September of 1829. Their is one major experience that might of had influenced Emerson’s writing, which was…
Whitman was most likely inspired by the American Civil War, which was the bloodiest war in American history. The Southern states broke from the Union under the name “Confederate States of America” in an attempt to preserve slavery. However, during September…
As a child and young man, Charles Whitman was kind, quiet, and known by all as a "good boy" —serving as both an altar boy and an Eagle Scout. As a student at the University of Texas, however, he began to experience severe headaches, assaulted his wife, and became involved in numerous fights. He confided to his psychiatrist that he was fighting the urge toward even more extreme violent behavior. He lost the fight. Climbing to the top of the campus observation tower with a high-powered rifle, he shot wildly at his fellow student, ultimately killing 14 people and wounding more than 20 before the police finally killed him. An autopsy on Whitman 's body revealed a large tumor pressing against his amygdala.…
In “Song of Myself” Walt Whitman is trying to see self as a whole. He wants to find strength and beauty as to make self whole and to be unified with humanity and nature. While people are condemning him, because the expression of a sexual content and a connection that makes use body and soul as well as the shock value. Whitman’s friend Ralph Waldo Emerson decides to back him in his writing. Emerson’s letter to Whitman calling Leaves of Grass "the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom that America has yet contributed" saved Whitman 's self-published first edition from sinking into obscurity. Yet even more important, Emerson 's work as a whole helped to prepare readers for the liberal, post-Christian spirituality that pervades Leaves of Grass. (Insert my source). Whitman wants to bring…
One of the most credited poets throughout the Civil War period was Walt Whitman, who wrote about the hardships of war in his work. In particular, two of his poems are not only heavily intertwined based on topic, but in structure and used literary techniques. “Beat! Beat! Drums!” and “O Captain! O Captain!” both share many similar qualities among figurative, sound and structural devices that Whitman uses to help further enhance the theme of how negatively war can impact individuals.…
Walt Whitman was a great american poet that wrote about the CIvil War and life in general. In 1886, at the young age of 17, he became a school teacher and later became a journalist just five years later. In 1855 Whitman made Leaves of Grass, his first step toward poetry. He wrote this book of twelve poems and published it himself. Walt Whitman made, edited, and published many great american poems, including O Captain! My Captain! and Song of Myself, that he often included his views about transcendentalism and realism.…
In the poem “When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer”, by Walt Whitman, the speaker “[becomes] tired and sick” of the learned astronomer's “proofs, [and] figures” used to observe the stars. While the others attending the lecture applaud the astronomer for his approach to the stars, the speaker, however, exits the lecture hall to enjoy the stars in his preferred method of going outside in the “perfect silence”. These contrasting scenes expose the dichotomous relationship of the speaker’s and the astronomer's approach to observing the stars. The use of structure, diction, and imagery reveal how the astronomer’s approach of observing the stars is far too mechanical and structured to truly see their beauty.…
Walt Whitman and Donald Hall--These names incite a sense of excitement in almost every individual who enjoys poetry. The two American poets hail from different time periods, different backgrounds, and different lifestyles that have led to different experiences. However, despite their differences, the two poets appear to be very similar upon analyzing their works. “A Song of Myself” by Whitman and “My Son My Executioner” by Hall are poems that portray their fascination with the same theme – the cyclical nature of life. Another similarity that exists between the two poets is they both portray their views through utilizing examples from nature. In “A Song of Myself,” Whitman uses grass to highlight the cyclical nature of life,…
Walt Whitman was an egotistical, self-absorbed, wild heretic. “I celebrate myself, and sing myself” (Songs of Myself 1). Multiple times in his books and essays he claims to be better than the masses. “I am as bad as the worst, but, thank God, I am as good as the best” (Preface to a Leaves of Grass). Henceforth I ask not good fortune. I myself am good fortune (Songs of the Open Road). Walt Whitman is often thought of as an atheist, but I’m not buying it. In my opinion Whitman deep down believed that there was a God, and not only did he believe that there was a God, he believed himself to be better than God. That’s why it’s nearly impossible to read a Whitman book or poem without seeing some sort of reference to God. I don’t believe in the tooth fairy and that’s about the only quote you’ll get from me regarding the tooth fairy. If I ever end up writing any form of literature I will rarely make, if any, references to the tooth fairy. Whitman claims to not believe in God but you’ll find thousands of quotes of him regarding God. It’s like when one of your friends says that they don’t like a person, yet they never stop talking about that person, it’s safe to say that subconsciously they like that person. Since Whitman won’t stop ranting about God I’m going to say and aim to prove that he subconsciously believed in God, tried to get others to not believe in God, thought of himself as God and that he was better than God.…
What is our purpose in life? What makes our environment around us different than everywhere else? Walt Whitman answers this in his poem “Song of Myself” by analyzing the importance of all the small, inconspicuous details of our lives and the connection it has to our Earth. In “Song of Myself”, every small thing (down to the atom) makes up the world and all the people inside of it. Walt Whitman makes it known that the way we live here shapes the earth and everything around us.…
It is no surprise that having been personally involved with the victims of the Civil War, Whitman himself had very strong feelings on the subject and extreme admiration toward the man that revolutionized America’s history. When the Civil War broke out, Whitman made visits to wounded soldiers at New York-area hospitals and in December of 1862, he traveled to Washington, D.C.to care for…
Thoreau Whitman and Emerson are each classified as writers of the transcendentalist movement. These three writers deeply admire nature and do not view it simply as a beautiful landscape, instead they look past the superficial aspects of nature in order to find the keys in which to live a right…
1. Edgar Allan Poe’s figurative language, such as personifying science as something that preys, gives his presentation of science a negative effect. It is plausible to believe that Poe is angry with science in some kind of way, claiming it “preyest thou thus along the poet’s heart” and he asks, “How should he love thee? or how deem thee wise?”…
What was Walt doing at this time? Late in 1854, Whitman was working in carpentry. He is assumed to have started his writings for what would later be known, and published as Leaves of Grass in late 1854 or early 1855. One of his brothers once commented that Walt would get an idea while working, write it down, then take the rest of the day off. How did Walt get his book published? Allen contends that Walt probably sought out a commercial publisher to take his book at first, though there is no mention or proof of this. However, Whitman took his book to the Rome brothers, James and Thomas, who had a printing shop on the corner of Fulton and Cranberry. These two men were friends of Walt. They let Walt supervise their work and even help in the setting of some of the type. Whitman is thought to have set about ten pages. However, the frontispiece and probably the binding had to be done somewhere else. Some think that the book went on sale on July 4, but it isn't probable that any book stores were open on that day. However, an advertisement appeared in The New York Tribune on July 6 for the book. How did Walt come up with the money for the books? We can't answer this for sure, but one fact may shed some light on the subject: The Whitman's bought a house on May 24, 1855, on Ryerson Street. Mrs. Whitman was given legal permission to sign the papers because her husband was ill. The house was purchased for $1,840. Therefore, it is a possibility that Walt got money from his mother. How did Walt advertise the book? The two bookstores that advertised the book in The New York Tribune were: Swayne, No. 210 Fulton St., Brooklyn, and Fowler and Wells, No. 308 Broadway, NY. However, four days later, Swayne withdrew from the advertisement. Fowler and Wells ran it for the entire month. What of the book? How did it come about? What about that picture? Those who looked at the book were confronted with a steel engraved frontispiece portrait of Whitman. He was wearing work…
Walt Whitman's poem "To a Locomotive in Winter" and Emily Dickinson's poem "I Like to See it Lap Miles" are both based on what had been upcoming in their era: locomotives. Whitman used Old English to protray his admiration with the train, especially it's physique and 'will', while Dickinson uses modern language to observe what the train does and how it acts.…