1) What images can you visualize?
I can visualize a vast sailing ship with huge white colored sails sailing in the ocean water. Along the sides of the boat, there are waves which seem to be wanting to lift up. I can visualize these waves 'following' the ship because as the ship moves, it displaces the water and causes waves. I can visualize the waves seem to be endlessly having fun in banging into the boat and flow with the current.
2) What do you think the songwriter is trying to describe to you?
I think that the author is trying to describe to us a large ship which is sailing in the water, causing waves to form behind it. The waves are seeming to be be very 'energetic and are seeming to want to go further up the ships hull than just a meter.
3) Write a response "letter" back to the writer.
Hi Mr. Whitman,
I think you have done a great job in expressing your visualization of a scene as simple as a ship sailing in the water I think you have used many types of poetry elements such as rhythm and alliterations which make your poem interesting to read.
After the Sea-Ship-after the whistling winds;
After the white-gray sails, taut to their spars and ropes,
Below, a myriad, myriad waves, hastening, lifting up their necks,
Tending in ceaseless flow toward the track of the ship:
Waves of the ocean, bubbling and gurgling, blithely prying,
Waves, undulating waves-liquid, uneven, emulous waves,
Toward that whirling current, laughing and buoyant, with curves,
Where the great Vessel, sailing and tacking, displaced the surface;
"After the Sea-Ship" by Walt Whitman is a free verse poem that captures the poet's reflections on life's journey and transitions. It explores themes of departure, transformation, and the continuity of life. Whitman's use of vivid imagery and rhythmic language creates a sense of movement and fluidity that mirrors the ebb and flow of the sea.
i think it's free verse cause it doesn't follow any pattern
He was Writing this because he was dreaming about fishing and maybe he fell off and watched his friends float away not noticing him.
By Tristan Larsen
The poem "Miracles" by Walt Whitman has 32 lines.
No, Walt Whitman's poem "Tears" was not published in 1842. Whitman's collection "Leaves of Grass," where the poem appears, was first published in 1855.
'Passage to India' is a poem by Walt Whitman. 'The Raven' is a poem by Edgar Allan Poe.
Walt Whitman's famous poem is "Song of Myself", which is a part of his collection "Leaves of Grass". The poem celebrates the individual, nature, and the interconnectedness of all things.
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The tone of Walt Whitman's poem "Miracles" is celebratory and reverent. Whitman marvels at the wonders of the world, finding beauty and awe in the simplest of things like a leaf or a blade of grass. The poem expresses a sense of wonder and gratitude for the miracles found in everyday life.
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Walt Whitman wrote The Runner
No, Walt Whitman did not write a poem titled "Of Him you Love Day and Night." This phrase does not correspond to any known work by Whitman.
It is not an actual poem, rather a series of Poems by Walt Whitman in a book. He named the book Leaves of Grass. He revised the poems and added more into the novel all the way up until his death.
Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself" is a poem in his collection "Leaves of Grass." It is the first poem in the collection, often serving as an introduction or prologue to his work. Whitman explores themes of individuality, democracy, nature, and the interconnectedness of all things in this iconic poem.
Walt Whitman