Walt Whitman, 1819-1892
I INTRODUCTION
Walt Whitman (1819-1892), American
poet, whose work boldly asserts the worth of the individual and the oneness of
all humanity. Whitman’s defiant break with traditional poetic concerns and
style exerted a major influence on American thought and literature.
Born near Huntington, New York, Whitman was the second of a family of
nine children. His father was a carpenter. The poet had a particularly close
relationship with his mother. When Whitman was four years
old, his family moved to
II LEAVES
OF GRASS
In 1855 Whitman issued the first of many editions of Leaves of Grass, a volume of poetry in a
new kind of versification, far different from his sentimental rhymed verse of
the 1840s. Because he immodestly praised the human body and glorified the
senses, Whitman was forced to publish the book at his own expense, setting some
of the type himself. His name did not appear on the title page, but the
engraved frontispiece portrait shows him posed, arms akimbo, in shirt sleeves,
hat cocked at a rakish angle. In a long preface he announced a new democratic
literature, "commensurate with a people," simple and unconquerable,
written by a new kind of poet who was affectionate, brawny, and heroic and who
would lead by the force of his magnetic personality.
Whitman spent the rest of his life striving to become that poet. The 1855
edition of Leaves of Grass contained
12 untitled poems, written in long cadenced lines that resemble the unrhymed
verse of the King James Version of the Bible. The longest and generally
considered the best, later entitled "Song of Myself," was a vision of
a symbolic "I" enraptured by the senses, vicariously embracing all
people and places from the
III LATER
EDITIONS
Stimulated by a letter of congratulations from the
eminent New England essayist and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, Whitman hastily put
together another edition of Leaves of
Grass (1856), with revisions and additions; he would continue to revise the
collection throughout his life. The most significant 1856 poem is
"Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," in which the poet vicariously joins his
readers and all past and future ferry passengers. In the third edition (1860),
Whitman began to give his poetry a more allegorical structure (see Allegory). In "Out of the
Cradle Endlessly Rocking," a mockingbird (the voice of nature) teaches a
little boy (the future poet) the meaning of death. Italian opera, of which
Whitman was extremely fond, strongly influenced the music of this poem. Two new
clusters of poems, "Children of Adam" and "Calamus," deal
with sexual love and male friendship.
Drum-Taps
(1865, later added to the 1867 edition of Leaves)
reflects Whitman’s deepening awareness of the significance of the American Civil
War (1861-1865) and the hope for reconciliation between North and South. Sequel to Drum-Taps (1866) contains
"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d,"
the great elegy for President Abraham Lincoln, and one of Whitman’s most
popular works, "O Captain! My Captain!""Passage to
Finally, in 1881, Whitman arranged his poems to his satisfaction, but he continued
to add new poems to the various editions of Leaves
of Grass until the final version was produced in 1892. A posthumous
cluster, "Old Age Echoes," appeared in 1897. All of his poems were
included in the definitive "Reader’s Edition" of Leaves of Grass (1965), edited by Harold W. Blodgett and Sculley Bradley.
IV CIVIL
WAR AND LATER LIFE
During the Civil War Whitman
ministered to wounded soldiers in Union army hospitals in Washington, D.C. He
remained there, working as a government clerk, until 1873, when he suffered a
stroke that left him partially paralyzed. He then
went to live with his brother George in Camden, New Jersey, until 1884, when he
bought his own house. He lived there, writing and revising Leaves of Grass, despite failing health, until his death. In his
later years Whitman also wrote some prose of lasting value. The essays in
Democratic Vistas (1871) are now considered a classic discussion of the theory
of democracy and its possibilities. The collection Specimen Days & Collect (1882-1883) contains his earliest
recollections, descriptions of the war years and of the assassination of
Lincoln, and nature notes written in old age.
V WHITMAN’S
REPUTATION
Today, Whitman’s poetry has
been translated into every major language. It is widely recognized as a
formative influence on the work of such American writers as Hart Crane, William
Carlos Williams, and Wallace Stevens. Allen Ginsberg in particular was inspired
by Whitman’s bold treatment of sexuality. Many modern scholars have sought to
assess Whitman’s life and literary career. Works such as the 5-volume edition
of his correspondence (1961-1969) and the 16-volume definitive edition of his Collected Writings (1963-1980) provide a
balanced view of his achievements.
Contributed
By:
Gay Wilson Allen
Encarta Encyclopedia 1999
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