"An analysis of crossing brooklyn ferry and out of the cradle endlessly rocking" Essays and Research Papers

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    An Analysis of “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” and “Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking” By Austin Cooley ENGL 2027 – 007 In “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” the story follows the narrator’s experience with life as he takes a beautiful ferry ride. The man talks about the meaning of his life to other people. In this crowd he brings together all of the strangers and finds a connection. His journey through “space and time” is focused on the people. In the first sections‚ Whitman sets the scene by describing his

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    Whitman’s Poem "Out of the CradleEndlessly Rocking‚" is not‚ at first glance‚ an obvious love poem. Most readers would probably consider this a tragic poem about death and love lost. In spite of the fact that the poem is about intrinsically sorrowful events‚ or perhaps because of it‚ Whitman is able to capture a very unique and poignant portrayal of love. There are three major perspectives to examine how Whitman develops the theme of love in Out of the Cradle‚ and by examining each reoccurring

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    Crossing Brooklyn Ferry

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    Crossing Brooklyn Ferry Whitman’s poem “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” seeks to determine the relationship of human beings to one another across time and space. Whitman wonders what he means (not as a poet but as another anonymous individual) to the crowds of strangers he sees every day. In stanza 3 the speaker says‚ “I am with you‚ you men and women of a generation‚ or ever so many/ generations hence”. He assumes that they see the same things he does‚ and that they react in the same way‚ and that

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    Crossing Brooklyn Ferry

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    Crossing Brooklyn Ferry Crossing Brooklyn Ferry is considered one of the greatest lyrical poems of all time. In Crossing Brooklyn Ferry‚ Walt Whitman uses connotative diction‚ prying questions‚ and critical reader engagement to convey a feeling of connection and unity of people through time. By using these certain rhetoric strategies‚ Whitman creates a piece of poetry that seems to be timeless. Whitman carefully chooses certain words and phrases that really highlight his intentions to connect

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    Christine Moloney Adv. English F Block May 10‚ 2011 Walt Whitman’s “Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking” holds an extraordinary group of verbs throughout the poem. Among the commonly used verbs are others that make whole lines entirely more striking. After the first five lines‚ a few verbs really jump out at me. “Down from the shower’d halo” strikes me as a powerful way to illustrate moonbeams (5). The verb “shower’d” is similar to‚ yet much different than a moonbeam that shimmered or shone

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    Journal-" Crossing Brooklyn Ferry " - Walt Whitman       " Crossing Brooklyn Ferry " is a poem told from  a man on a ferry between Manhattan and Brooklyn. The journey begins with the man leaning over a railing look into the water.   The man ( Walt Whitman ) sees the clouds and the sun set reflected in the water and personifies them as "you".  Throughout the poem Whitman will personify many other things in the poem.  The business people and workers on the ferry a reflectively "curious" to him.

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    Everyone’s life is a physical and spiritual journey—from birth to death. Each person’s experience is unique‚ yet very similar to those that came before and those that will come after. Whitman talks about the journey of life in “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry”‚ as he is taking a ferry ride. He illustrates the similarities of his life to those that will take the same trip through the visions and emotions that he ponders while on his voyage. Walt Whitman speaks to not only the physical aspects of going through

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    Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” is a nine section poem written by Walt Whitman that was originally published in 1856‚ then revised and republished in 1881. The poem seems to be an attempt to address the future to an audience that is composed of people from the future. Whitman’s first section opens with imagery of what the character is seeing in his immediate vicinity. Whitman begins to consider the other people on the ferry with him and those that are on the other ferries on the river. With the words:

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    connected to the other passengers on the ferry in his poem Crossing Brooklyn Ferry. “It avails not‚ time nor place – distance avails not‚ I am with you‚ you men and women of a generation‚ or ever so many generations hence‚ Just as you feel when you look on the river and sky‚ so I felt‚ Just as any of you is one of a living crowd‚ I was once of a crowd” (p. 1070). He feels connected to the other people that have in the past and will in the future ride the ferry on their commute home from work. It

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    the American spirit. This freedom from Europe opens the door for America to blossom into the political‚ artistic‚ and intellectual model for the world. Whitman’s “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” displays the interconnectedness of him and his fellow passengers with each generation‚ while at the same time transcending time and space. The ferry is a symbol that represents the ebb and flow of time‚ while the speaker and his fellow passengers transcend space. The American bard is the poet/historian/musician

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