(7) Walt Whitman

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Walt WhitmanIn American Transcendental period, there were two important poets who can be called really American. They are Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson. So, today let’s learn about Walt Whitman.Whitman is a giant of American letters. His Leaves of Grass has always been considered a monumental work which commands great attention because of its uniquely poetic embodiment of American democratic ideals. He is the poets of common people and the prophet and singer of democracy.Life●He was born in l8l9 into a working-class family and grew up in Brooklyn, NewYork. Son of a carpenter, Whitman left his schooling for good at eleven, and became an office boy.●Later on he changed several jobs. He worked as an office boy, a printer’sapprentice, schoolmaster, printer, editor and journalist. Those experiences would be of great help in his literary career.●By this early age he had already shown his strong love for literature, reading agreat deal on his own, especially the works of Shakespeare and Milton, and developed his potential for the writing career in the future.●Before he was l7 years old he had already had his poems printed on a paper,although these early works were not comparable to his later and mature ones.●In 1848, Whitman traveled to New Orleans and saw very much of the Mississippiheartlands. This experience with the people and the country furnished both the material and the guiding spirit for this epic, Leaves of Grass. When it was firstly published, it did not sell well, but it made a stir on the American literary scene. It broke with the poetic convention, and its sexuality and exotic and vulgar language brought harsh criticisms on it.●During the Civil War, Whitman worked as a volunteer nurse, an experience whichfurther enriched his knowledge of life and the world.●Whitman died in 1892, still rearranging and revising his Leaves of Grass.The themes in Whitman's poetry●His poetry is filled with optimistic expectation and enthusiasm about new thingsand new epoch.●Whitman believed that poetry could play a vital part in the process of creating anew nation. It could enable Americans to celebrate their release from the Old World and the colonial rule. And it could also help them understand their new status and to define themselves in the new world of possibilities.●Hence, the abundance of themes in his poetry voices freshness.(l) He shows concern for the whole hard-working people and the burgeoning life of cities. To Whitman, the fast growth of industry and wealth in cities indicated a lively future of the nation, despite the crowded, noisy, and squalid conditions and the slackness in morality.(2) He advocates the realization of the individual value. Most of the poems in Leaves of Grass sing of the "en-masse" and the self as well.(3) Pursuit of love and happiness is approved of repeatedly and affectionately in his lines. Sexual love, a rather taboo topic of the time, is displayed candidly as something adorable. The individual person and his desires must be respected.Leaves of GrassWalt Whitman is a poet with a strong sense of mission, having devoted all his life to the creation of the “single” poem, Leaves of Grass.●TitleIt is significant that Whitman entitled his book Leaves of Grass . He said that where there is earth, where there is water, there is grass. Grass, the most common thing with the greatest vitality, is an image of the poet himself, a symbol of the then rising American nation and an embodiment of his ideals about democracy andfreedom.●ThemeIn this giant work, openness, freedom, and above all, individualism (the belief that the rights and freedom of individual people are most important) are all that concerned him. Whitman brings the hard-working farmers and laborers into American literature, attack the slavery system and racial discrimination. In this book he also extols nature, democracy, labor and creation ,and sings of man's dignity and equality, and of the brightest future of mankind .Most of the poems in Leaves of Grass sing of the "en-masse" and the self as well.●The poet's essential purposeHis aim was nothing less than to express some new poetical feelings and to initiate a poetic tradition in which difference should be recognized. The genuine participation of a poet in a common cultural effort was, according to Whitman, to behave as a supreme individualist; however, the poet's essential purpose was to identify his ego with the world, and more specifically with the democratic "en-masse" of America, which is established in the opening lines of "Song of Myself".●Whitman's poetic style and languageTo dramatize the nature of these new poetical feelings, Whitman employed brand-new means in his poetry, which would first be discerned in his style and language.(l) Whitman's poetic style is marked, first of all, by the use of the poetic "I." Whitman becomes all those people in his poems and yet still remains "Walt Whitman", hence a discovery of the self in the other with such an identification. In such a manner, Whitman invites his readers to participate in the process of sympathetic identification.(2)Whitman is also radically innovative in terms of the form of his poetry. He adopted "free verse," that is, poetry without a fixed beat or regular rhyme scheme. A looser and more open-ended syntactical structure is frequently favored. Lines and sentences of different lengths are left lying side by side just as things are, undisturbedand separate.There are few compound sentences to draw objects and experiences into a system of hierarchy. Whitman was the first American to use free verse extensively. By means of "free verse," Whitman turned the poem into an open field, an area of vital possibility where the reader can allow his own imagination to play.(3)Whitman is conversational and casual, in the fluid, expansive, and unstructured style of talking. However, there is a strong sense of the poems being rhythmical. The reader can feel the rhythm of Whitman's thought and cadences of his feeling. Parallelism and phonetic recurrence at the beginning of the lines also contribute to the musicality of his poems.Whitman's languageContrary to the rhetoric of traditional poetry, Whitman's is relatively simple and even rather crude.(a) Most of the pictures he painted with words are honest, undistorted images of different aspects of America of the day. The particularity about these images is that they are unconventional in the way they break down the social division based on religion, gender, class, and race. One of the most often-used methods in Whitman's poems is to make colors and images fleet past the mind's eye of the reader.(b) Another characteristic in Whitman's language is his strong tendency to use oral English.(c) Whitman's vocabulary is amazing. He would use powerful, colorful, as well as rarely-used words, words of foreign origin and sometimes even wrong words. Walt Whitman has proved a great figure in the literary history of the United States because he embodies a new ideal, a new world and a new life-style, and his influence over the following generations is significant and incredible.。