WW:
Themes etc:
Many reviewers believed he was vulgar, Emerson did not
-celebrates greatness of poetry
-greatness of common people
-transcendental, romantic
-poet = equalizer of age and land
-inclusiveness of poems [e.g. all people’s experiences helped pull him closer to goodness]
-poetry comes from the soul, there is no higher form of expression
-like Thoreau, stresses simplicity of life
-We need a new way to address the old- e.g. religion must morph outer shell while maintaining essential constancy
-“grow or die”
-devoted himself to celebrating glories of life through poetry
-imitation is suicide
-All is good- unity in the goodness of all things- e.g. “stuff outside of my soul is just as good as stuff inside it”
-singing=happiness
-Two ways to knowledge:
II. emotional, firsthand, sublime, soul
Techniques:
-antithesis [pairing of opposites to show totality of current experience]à illustrates inclusiveness
-anaphora [the repetition of the same word or expression at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, sentences, or lines for rhetorical or poetic effect, as in Lincoln's "we cannot dedicate- we cannot consecrate-we cannot hallow this ground"] - *this is one of the most characteristic traits of Whitman’s writing, there is almost certain to be an example of it in the given poems
-apostrophe [talking at an animal or object, a type of personification] e.g. the thrush singing in "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd"
[sometimes wrote elegies:
elegy:
general elegy- a general reflection upon death
specific elegy- death of a specific person
three parts of elegies:
I-evocation
II-grief
III-consolation]
ED:
wrote four types of poems:
-art [expressive style, a recognition of her isolation]
-love [soul as seat of love- greek psyche]
-death [sometimes the speaker is already dead]
-nature
-wrote more on death than anything else
-isolation over inclusiveness, nobody is there for her etc
-all people have perfect soulmate- the soul chooses, witdraws from the majority
-difficult to understand subjective choices of the soul
-unique ungoverned by fixed values
-deprivation breeds appreciation
-Like Keats,
-Writing poetry may have served
-
-To casual readers of poetry, it may seem that
Techniques:
Onomatopoeia [
Synecdoche [part of the whole - a literary technique in which the whole is represented by naming one of its parts (genus named for species), or vice versa (species named for genus). Example: “You’ve got to come take a look at my new set of wheels.” The vehicle here is represented by its parts, or wheels.]
Synaesthesia [stimulation of two or more senses in a single image- when one type of sensation evokes another sense. For example when a sound is experienced in part as a color, or when a color prompts a sound]
(OVER)USE OF THE DASH “––”
Alliteration
Repetition
Personification
- Some poems are unfinished; a few even seem to be rough drafts.
- More than one version exists of a number of poems. Because she did not publish these poems, she did not have to make a final decision about which word, line, or stanza she preferred. Also, she included poems in her letters, changing them to fit her correspondent or the subject of the letter.
- In her letters, she sometimes writes poems as prose and prose as poetry, so that it is hard to distinguish them.
- Her occasionally idiosyncratic spelling, punctuation, and word choice can be distracting to readers, so that editors have to decide whether to change her text to conform to modern usage.
