"Walt whitman song of myself transcendentalism" Essays and Research Papers

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    Soto November 27‚ 2012 Walt Whitman and His Strange Obsession With God 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

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    Walter Whitman Jr. was born in 1819 in Long Island to New York Dutch farmers. He was the second of nine children in a nondescript lower class Quaker family. He grew up with little formal education‚ and because of this‚ started his literary career as a compositor for a local newspaper. As he flourished in the printing trade‚ with skills that were largely self-taught‚ Walt “fell in love with the written word” (Poets.org). From then on‚ he ferociously read classical literature such as Dante‚ Shakespeare

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    history was beginning his world changing works. Walt Whitman wrote over two hundred-eighty poems‚ some of which are yet to be discovered. Before his poetry‚ Whitman lived in a small home on Long Island here he grew up with his eight siblings‚ four of whom were disturbed or psychotic. The father was unheard of and the mother‚ unable to fend for the entire family‚ so at a young age Walt became the true father of his family (Bloom 159). Walt Whitman threaded his poetry with his political beliefs‚ poetic

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    Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson are two notorious literary geniuses whose works influenced the world. These two poets are famous for having unique styles of writing that could be described as a contrasts between one another‚ though they do have similarities between their themes. Walt Whitman’s narrative works are very extensive and descriptive‚ you can see as he paints a picture with his words with his poems versus Dickinson whose writing style is condensed and to the point. Her poems are thought

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    Song of Myself 26-29

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    Whitman Line 26-29 1. The First Line- The speaker decides to do nothing but listen and be attentive to the sounds around him to appreciate them more. There is a threefold repetition of “I hear” in this section and that “I” is referring to Whitman’s speaker‚ to show his own experiences with sound and touch but the sounds he hears relates to everyone. “I” is the kind of person who is fascinated with the simple things people do in their everyday lives and he wants to experience these things with

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    snatching up priceless artwork that we own. In the 40s—and later the 90s in Boston‚—artwork stored in the Midwest was stolen‚ and many worked to try to recover it. We seem to have not gotten very far‚ though. In 1942‚ the Library of Congress lost some of Walt Whitman’s valuable poetry. They sent it to a guarded facility in the Midwest‚ where it was stored inside of sealed containers. This‚ however‚ hasn’t stopped the master thief from snatching up ten of the notebooks. A similar incident happened in Boston

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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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    Poem analysis: “Miracles” by Walt Whitman 1. The first time I read through “Miracles‚” it felt like the positive energy stored in the poem was jumping onto me. I am more of an optimistic person‚ so I tend to be positive in everything I do. I feel very blessed when I’m eating dinner with my family‚ when I’m with friends‚ when I’m riding a school bus‚ and when I’m looking at the sky. So‚ I could relate to this poem very well; it was like the poet read my mind. 2. People may say why make much

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    In their respective fields‚ both Walt Whitman and Ralph Waldo Emerson were considered to be quintessential American writers. Their thoughts and statements regarding nonconformity and individuality were revolutionizing for the era that they lived. Thanks to them‚similar thoughts and statements‚ are now much more mainstream and unexceptional.Although they used different tactics to get their points across‚ their shared opinions become evident. Both Walt Whitman and Ralph Waldo Emerson believed strongly

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    end. The cry of the distress is ignored Causing the pain to go deeper‚ Searching for some escape‚ Who will answer? As I breathe in it enlightens me. Summary of Imitation The poem “The Awakening” was modeled after the poem “Song of Myself” by Walt Whitman and contains many of the same style distinctions. In Whitman’s poem repetition is used as is using the first person “I” which is showed in “The Awakening.” In both poems the senses are both aroused and engaged. There is depth to the words

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