Whitman

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    Noiseless Patient Spider

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    metaphors in his poem, “A Noiseless Patient Spider.” Topic Sentence: Whitman’s use of visual imagery throughout his poem demonstrates the metaphor of a spider and the soul representing isolation similar to the human race. In the first line of the poem, Whitman establishes an image of a hardworking and quiet spider, which outlays the big picture for the rest of the poem. The spider is depicted as weaving a web quietly, secluded from the rest of his environment, which right away set off the mood…

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    note 3 incidents you find particularly surprising, interesting, or baffling. Discuss. I was surprised that he quit school, but was still very successful. He was also fired or quit his job editing the Daily Eagle. His life had many ups and downs. Whitman was very depressed from everything going on. Something interesting was that he denied a marriage proposal, which could’ve been because he was depressed. He had a paralytic stroke twice in his life and then dies of pneumonia. You could say his…

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    America Singing (1860), Walt Whitman conveys his concept of America as a unified nation. His poem explores the differing sort of people that Whitman contributes to creating America. They are exuberant, and strong. Although the poem is focused on the people, the title of the poem, I Hear America Singing, shows that Whitman thinks of these people as ‘America.’ These are the people that represent everything America is, in present day (1860,) with their traits and workmanship. Whitman uses…

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    Ginsberg: A Modern Whitman with a Twist Postmodernism, a movement in the late 20th century, followed the Modernism movement during the late 19th and early 20th century. The Modernism movement is characterized as a movement that steered away from 19th century traditions in art, religion and faith, and literature. It encouraged rebellion against the cultural norm, was a change for the believed “outdated” day to day life, and focused on finding the meaning/root. At the time, it was…

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    A Noiseless Spider Central Idea In Walt Whitman’s “A Noiseless Spider” the central idea is that an isolated soul, facing the vast unknown will instinctively explore and reach out, in attempts to find a connection that would allow them to further understand their place in life. The human soul, when alone in uncharted territories will strive to explore, similar to how the spider “stood isolated” and is left to “explore the vacant vast surrounding.” The spider, all alone in the tremendous unknown…

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    applicable to modern society. Whitman draws attention to the unity of all living things through using symbolism and parallel sentence structure. The “leaves of grass” reappear throughout the poem and represent unity of life. For example, Whitman describes the “grass is itself a child, the produced babe of the vegetation”(6). This comparison illuminates that the grass is a symbol for the human self. Just as grass sprouts anew from the earth, humans also start out young…

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    Walt Whitman, born in 1819, is profoundly known for his later start in poetry. His works primarily focus on his personal experience within the Civil War. His two works deeply reflect his time spent as a nurse for the Union side of the war. Although one being fiction and the other nonfiction, Whitman is capable of getting his tone and ideas across to the reader in both The Artilleryman’s Vision and Letter to His Mother. Both works and their depictions articulate the Civil War experience through…

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    Walt Whitman was a poet who lived throughout most of the nineteenth century and drew a wide following by disregarding “classic” conventions and using imagery that angered many. Whitman promoted himself greatly by writing anonymous reviews of his own work and sending his work to other prominent poets and writers for reviews and support. He worked in many areas of the newspaper business before becoming a nurse during the Civil War. He believed in transcendentalism. The theory that everything and…

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    Walt Whitman was an American poet, teacher, and journalist that lived from 1819 to 1892 (PBS). The themes of his work were heavily influenced by social and political events as well as experiences from his own life. Individualism and American idealism were two of the major themes that Whitman used in his poems. Events like the abolitionist movement, the Civil War, and the migration of pioneer families to the newly acquired Western portion of the United States also influenced his work (Poets).…

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    accomplishment of Walt Whitman is his famous poem collection, “Leaves of Grass”. With its uprising popularity in the 19th century until now, explains and teaches life lessons of the universe and how nature and society should coincide together and be one. The poem “Song of Myself” was one of the twelve poems that were unnamed in his first edition that was printed in 1855. The poem was given the name “A Poem of Walt Whitman, an American” in 1856, and later changed to “Walt Whitman” in 1860.…

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