Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Walt Whitman

 
Who2 Biography: Walt Whitman, Poet / Writer

  • Born: 31 May 1819
  • Birthplace: Long Island, New York
  • Died: 26 March 1892
  • Best Known As: The poet who wrote Leaves of Grass

Walt Whitman was a 19th century writer whose life's work, Leaves of Grass, made him one of the first American poets to gain international attention. Whitman spent most of his young life in Brooklyn, where he worked as a printer and newspaper journalist through the 1850s. The first edition of Leaves of Grass was privately printed in 1855 and consisted of 12 untitled poems, one of which was to later become famous as "Song of Myself." His literary style was experimental, a free-verse avalanche in celebration of nature and self that has since been described as the first expression of a distinctly American voice. Although Leaves of Grass did not sell well at first, it became popular in literary circles in Europe and, later, the United States, and Whitman published a total of eight editions during his lifetime. During the Civil War Whitman moved to Washington, D.C., where he served as a civil servant and volunteer nurse. There he published the poetry collections Drum Taps and Sequel to Drum Taps (1865-66), the latter containing his famous elegies for Abraham Lincoln, "Where Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" and "O Captain! My Captain!" In 1873 he was paralyzed after a stroke and moved to Camden, New Jersey. By the time of his death he was an international literary celebrity, and he is considered one of the most influential poets in American literature.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics

Walt Whitman, photograph by Mathew Brady.
(click to enlarge)
Walt Whitman, photograph by Mathew Brady. (credit: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.)
(born May 31, 1819, West Hills, Long Island, N.Y., U.S. — died March 26, 1892, Camden, N.J.) U.S. poet, journalist, and essayist. Whitman lived in Brooklyn as a boy and left school at age 12. He went on to hold a great variety of jobs, including writing and editing for periodicals. His revolutionary poetry dealt with extremely private experiences (including sexuality) while celebrating the collective experience of an idealized democratic American life. His Leaves of Grass (1st ed., 1855), revised and much expanded in successive editions that incorporated his subsequent poetry, was too frank and unconventional to win wide acceptance in its day, but it was hailed by figures such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and exerted a strong influence on American and foreign literature. Written without rhyme or traditional metre, poems such as "I Sing the Body Electric" and "Song of Myself" assert the beauty of the human body, physical health, and sexuality; later editions included "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking," and the elegies on Abraham Lincoln "O Captain! My Captain!" and "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd." Whitman served as a volunteer in Washington hospitals during the Civil War. The prose Democratic Vistas (1871) and Specimen Days & Collect (1882 – 83) drew on his wartime experiences and subsequent reflections. His powerful influence in the 20th century can be seen in the work of poets as diverse as Pablo Neruda, Fernando Pessoa, and Allen Ginsberg.

For more information on Walter Whitman, visit Britannica.com.

Biography: Walt Whitman
Top

Walt Whitman (1819-1892) is generally considered to be the most important American poet of the 19th century. He wrote in free verse, relying heavily on the rhythms of native American speech.

In all, over a 37-year period, Walt Whitman published nine separate editions of his masterpiece, Leaves of Grass. The final, 1892 edition, is the one familiar to readers today. He has strongly influenced the direction of 20th-century American poets, especially Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, Carl Sandburg, and, most recently, Allen Ginsberg and other "beat" poets.

Whitman was born on May 31, 1819, in West Hills, Huntington town, Long Island, the second of nine children. His family soon moved to Brooklyn, where he attended school for a few years. By 1830 his formal education was over, and for the next five years he learned the printing trade. For about five years, beginning in 1836, he taught school, on Long Island; during this time he also founded the weekly newspaper Long-Islander.

Journalist and Editor

By 1841 Whitman was in New York City, where his interests turned to journalism. His short stories and poetry of this period were highly derivative and indistinguishable from the popular sentimental claptrap of the day, as was his temperance novel, Franklin Evans, or the Inebriate (1842).

For the next few years Whitman edited several newspapers and contributed to others. He was dismissed from the Brooklyn Eagle because of political differences with the owner. In 1848 he traveled south and for three months worked for the New Orleans Crescent. The sheer physical beauty of the new nation made a vivid impression on him, and he was to draw on this experience in his later poetry. His brief stay in New Orleans also led his early biographers to suggest an early romance with a Creole woman, for which there is no evidence. In his later years, Whitman spoke of fathering six illegitimate children (one being a "living Southern grandchild"), but there is no evidence for this claim either. In 1848 he returned to Brooklyn, where he edited a "free-soil" newspaper. Between this time and 1854, he worked as a carpenter, operated a printing office, did free-lance journalism, built houses, and speculated in real estate.

First Edition of Leaves of Grass

Not much is known of Whitman's literary activities that can account for his sudden transformation from journalist and hack writer into the iconoclastic and revolutionary poet.

The first edition (1855) opened with a rather casual portrait of Whitman, the self-professed "poet of the people," dressed in workman's clothes. In a lengthy preface Whitman announced that his poetry would celebrate the greatness of the new nation - "The Americans of all nations at any time upon the earth have probably the fullest poetical nature. The United States themselves are essentially the greatest poem" - and of the peoples - "The largeness of nature or the nation were monstrous without a corresponding largeness and generosity of the spirit of the citizen." Of the 12 poems (the titles were added later), "Song of Myself," "The Sleepers," "There Was a Child Went Forth," and "I Sing the Body Electric" are the best-known today. In these Whitman turned his back on the literary models of the past. He stressed the rhythms of native American speech, delighting in colloquial and slang expressions. He wrote in free verse, that is, poetry of irregular meter, usually (or in Whitman's case, almost always) without rime.

Whitman stressed contemporary events and everyday happenings. He drew his vocabulary from commerce and industry. He exalted the commonplace: "I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journeywork of the stars,/ And the pismire is equally perfect, and a grain of sand, and the egg of a wren." The worker, the farmer, and the trapper were his muses. He identified strongly with the outcasts of society. Rebelling against the restrictive puritanical code of the day, he delighted in conveying in graphic terms the beauty of the "undraped" human body; he stressed in his poetry the purity of the sexual act - "Urge and urge and urge,/ Always the procreant urge of the world."

The first edition of Leaves sold poorly. Fortunately, Whitman had sent Ralph Waldo Emerson a complimentary copy, and in his now famous reply, Emerson wrote: "I find it the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom that America has yet contributed… . I greet you at the beginning of a great career." Emerson's enthusiasm for Leaves of Grass was understandable, for he had strongly influenced the younger poet. Whitman echoed much of Emerson's philosophy in his preface and poems. Emerson's letter had a profound impact on Whitman, completely overshadowing the otherwise poor reception the volume received.

Second Edition of Leaves of Grass

For the second edition (1856), Whitman added 20 new poems to his original 12. With this edition, he began his lifelong practice of adding new poems to Leaves of Grass and revising those previously published in order to bring them into line with his present moods and feelings. Also, over the years he was to drop a number of poems from Leaves.

Among the new poems in the 1856 edition were "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" (one of Whitman's masterpieces), "Salut au Monde!," "A Woman Waits for Me," and "Spontaneous Me." Most of the 1855 preface he reworked to form the nationalistic poem "By Blue Ontario's Shore." Like the first edition, the second sold poorly.

Third Edition of Leaves of Grass

The third edition (1860) was brought out by a Boston publisher, one of the few times in his career that Whitman did not have to publish Leaves of Grass at his own expense. This edition, referred to by Whitman as his "new Bible," contained the earlier poems plus 146 new ones. For the first time, Whitman arranged many of the poems in special groupings, a practice he continued in all subsequent editions. The most notable of these "groups" were "Children of Adam," a gathering of heterosexual love poems, and "Calamus," a group of poems celebrating the brotherhood and comradeship of men, or, more properly, in Whitman's phrase, "manly love."

In addition to the pervading optimism and nationalistic fervor he generated in many of the poems in the third edition, Whitman was also very much concerned with the theme of death, the result of some emotional crisis (whose source is unknown) he had experienced in the late 1850s. Several of his great poems of this period testify to this - "As I Ebb'd with the Ocean of Life," "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking," and "Scented Herbage of My Breast." Other well-known poems of this edition were "Starting from Paumanok," "I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing," "As the Time Draws Nigh," and "I Sit and Look Out."

The critical reception of the third edition was mixed, although as usual the unfavorable reviews outnumbered the favorable. Many were repelled by the frank and open sexuality of a number of his poems. (One reviewer's reaction was so violent that he thought Whitman ought to kill himself.) The third edition was selling well - a new experience for Whitman - when his usual bad luck in such matters caught up with him: his publisher went into bankruptcy soon after the beginning of the Civil War. To add to Whitman's troubles, the plates of the third edition later came into the possession of an unscrupulous printer, who is believed to have issued over the years some 10,000 pirated copies of the book.

Whitman and the Civil War

Soon after the outbreak of the Civil War, Whitman went to Virginia to search for his brother George, reported wounded in action. Here Whitman experienced the war at first hand. He remained in Washington, working part-time in the Paymaster's Office. He devoted many long hours serving as a volunteer aide in the hospitals in Washington, ministering to the needs of the sick and wounded soldiers. Whitman's humanity was such that he brought comfort to Federal as well as Confederate soldiers. His daily contact with sickness and death took its toll. Whitman himself became ill with "hospital malaria." Within a few months his health was "quite reestablished." In January 1865 he took a clerk's position in the Indian Bureau of the Department of the Interior.

The impact of the war on Whitman was reflected in his separately published Drum-Taps (1865). In such poems as "Cavalry Crossing a Ford," "The Wound-Dresser," "Come Up from the Fields Father," "Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night," "Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Dim," and "Year That Trembled and Reel'd Beneath Me," Whitman caught with beautiful simplicity of statement the horror, loneliness, and anguish caused by this national calamity.

Fourth Edition of Leaves of Grass

Whitman's revisions for the fourth edition (1867) were made in a blue-covered copy of the third, the so-called Blue Book, which he kept in his desk in the Indian Bureau. The secretary of the interior managed to get hold of it and was scandalized by its sexual references. In June 1865 he discharged Whitman from the clerkship, but an influential friend interceded in the poet's behalf. The next day Whitman was placed in the Attorney General's Office, where, safe from outraged moralists, he remained until 1873.

The upshot of the episode was the publication in 1866 of The Good Gray Poet: A Vindication, written by Whitman's good friend William Douglas O'Connor. The book was so adulatory that Whitman emerged looking less like a poet than a candidate for sainthood. This book marked the beginning of a fiercely partisan, uncritical approach to

Whitman and his poetry by his followers that persisted until recent times. Late in 1865, Whitman published Sequel to Drum-Taps, whose best-known poem was the great elegy on Abraham Lincoln, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd."

If Whitman was neglected at home, his fame was beginning to spread abroad. In England, William Rossetti's selection of poems from Leaves of Grass (1868) was well received.

A Different Emphasis in Themes

Following the Civil War and the publication of the fourth edition, Whitman's poetry became increasingly preoccupied with themes relating to the soul, death, and immortality. He was entering the final phase of his career. Within the span of some dozen years, the poet of the body had given way to the poet of internationalism and the cosmic. Such poems as "Whispers of Heavenly Death," "Darest Thou Now O Soul," "The Last Invocation," and "A Noiseless Patient Spider," with their emphasis on the spiritual, paved the way for "Passage to India" (1871), Whitman's most important (and ambitious) poem of the post-Civil War period.

In "Passage to India," Whitman explored the implications to mankind of three great scientific achievements of the age - the completion in 1869 of the Union Pacific Railroad, spanning the continental United States and of the Suez Canal, connecting Europe with Asia, and the completion, a decade earlier, of the Atlantic cable, connecting America and Europe. To Whitman, these three great events had symbolically brought mankind together in a one-world federation. After centuries of struggle against bitter odds, man had at last achieved a harmony and unity with nature. What remained was for him to achieve his complete spiritual union with God, a transcendent universal spirit, or life force. This was the soul's "Passage to India," a passage to the very cradle of civilization.

Democratic Vistas

In 1871 Whitman published Democratic Vistas, perhaps his most important prose work. He was thoroughly disenchanted with the pervading corruption in the United States during the period of Reconstruction. However, he believed in the ultimate triumph of the democratic ideal in the United States: "Many will say it is a dream … but I confidently expect a time when there will be seen … running … through … America, threads of manly friendship, fond and loving, pure and sweet, strong and life-long, carried to degrees hitherto unknown."

In 1871-1872 and 1876, Whitman published the fifth and sixth editions of Leaves. The most notable poems were "The Base of All Metaphysics," "Prayer of Columbus," and "Song of the Redwood-Tree." In 1873 Whitman suffered a paralytic stroke and moved from Washington to Camden, N.J. Thereafter, he devoted much of his time to putting Leaves of Grass into final order. He had recovered sufficiently from his stroke to take a trip West in 1879 and to Ontario a year later.

In 1881 Whitman settled on the final arrangement of the poems in Leaves of Grass, and thereafter no revisions were made. (All new poems written after 1881 were added as annexes to Leaves. ) The seventh edition was published by James Osgood. The Boston district attorney threatened prosecution against Osgood unless certain objectionable poems were expurgated. When Whitman refused, Osgood dropped publication of the book. However, a Philadelphia publisher reissued the book in 1882.

Specimen Days and Collect

Whitman's reminiscences of the Civil War and other prose pieces were published as Specimen Days and Collect (1882). The so-called "Death-bed Edition" of Leaves of Grass, published in 1892, is the one familiar to readers today.

In his last years Whitman received the homage due a great literary figure and personality. He died on March 26, 1892, in Camden. Leaves of Grass has been widely translated, and his reputation is now worldwide. His emphasis on his native idiom, his frank approach to subject matter hitherto thought unsuitable to poetry, and his variety of poetic expression have all contributed to making him a strong influence on the direction of modern poetry.

Further Reading

The standard edition of Whitman's major work is Leaves of Grass: Comprehensive Reader's Edition, edited by Harold William Blodgett and Sculley Bradley (1965), one volume of the projected 16-volume Collected Writings now in progress under the editorship of Gay Wilson Allen and Sculley Bradley. The definitive, scholarly biography is by Gay Wilson Allen, The Solitary Singer: A Critical Biography of Walt Whitman (1955; rev. ed. 1967). Allen's Walt Whitman (1961; rev. ed. 1969) is a short, illustrated biography. Worth reading is Newton Arvin's study, Whitman (1938; repr. 1969).

The most comprehensive treatment of Whitman's thought and literary techniques is Gay Wilson Allen, Walt Whitman Handbook (1946). Allen's A Reader's Guide to Walt Whitman (1970) is a balanced analytical introduction to Whitman's thought. A stimulating psychological study is Edwin Haviland Miller, Walt Whitman's Poetry: A Psychological Journey (1968). Other sound studies include Frederik Schyberg, Walt Whitman (1933; trans. 1951); James E. Miller, Jr., A Critical Guide to Leaves of Grass (1957); Roger Asselineau, The Evolution of Walt Whitman (trans., 2 vols., 1960-1962); and V. K. Charl, Whitman in the Light of Vedantic Mysticism (1964). See also Joseph Beaver, Walt Whitman: Poet of Science (1951), and Richard Chase, Walt Whitman Reconsidered (1955). F. O. Matthiessen's study of the mid-19th-century literary milieu, American Renaissance (1941), includes a sensitive account of Whitman's "Language Experiment." Recommended for general background are Roy Harvey Pearce, The Continuity of American Poetry (1961), and Hyatt H. Waggoner, American Poets from the Puritans to the Present (1968).

US History Companion: Whitman, Walt
Top

(1819-1892), poet. Born on Long Island, New York, Whitman was the son of a house builder. Largely self-educated, he learned the printer's trade and taught school. Between 1838 and 1855 he edited papers in New York, Brooklyn, and New Orleans while turning out unremarkable poems, sketches, and stories and immersing himself in political and cultural life. He delighted in oratory and grand opera, became a devotee of phrenology, and mixed happily with urban crowds, relishing ferry-boat pilots, Broadway omnibus drivers, firemen, and Bowery roughs. His mind was "simmering" as he took in the kaleidoscopic scene--his reading Shakespeare, Carlyle, Goethe, George Sand, and, above all, Emerson brought it to a "boil."

Out of this chemistry came Leaves of Grass. What he called a "language experiment" exfoliated in successive stages from the 12 poems of the 1855 edition to the more than 350 poems of the "deathbed" edition of 1891. It was at once a ventilation of his mind and memory and a qualified celebration of American history, politics, geography, occupations, and speech.

Whitman's protean work was slow to win acceptance. Antebellum reviewers, shocked by his anatomical delineations of the "body electric," pronounced him the "dirtiest beast" of his age and mocked his neologisms and stylistic oddities. Today he is recognized as one of the most original and influential American poets and by some as a forerunner of homosexual liberation.

During the Civil War, as "wound-dresser" to the soldiers of both camps in military hospitals, Whitman witnessed the war's carnage. Drum-Taps and Sequel (1865) commemorated the suffering and heroism of the common soldier. "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," the finest threnody on the war, elegized Abraham Lincoln, the emblem of Whitman's idealized republic.

Even before the war, he had been troubled by the money-mania of his fellow citizens and by signs of class polarization. In fact, Leaves can be read as Whitman's effort to stifle his apprehensions about America's future by creating a "Kosmos" in which national blemishes, if not denied, are overwhelmed by geographical space as much as by the energy and latent nobility of the people. The war severely tested that faith. Although the sundered Union coalesced, he could not expunge the memory of an entire nation seemingly "bandaged and bloody in hospital," and the sordidness of the Gilded Age further taxed his confidence.

The hollowness of much of his later verse--rhetorical prophecies churned out for ceremonial occasions--contrasts with the buoyancy and audacity of "Song of Myself," Whitman's most remarkable poem. His prose, however, such as the explosive jeremiad Democratic Vistas (1871) or recollections of a happier past like Specimen Days (1882), retains the old freshness and vigor.

Crippled by strokes, Whitman ended his days more honored abroad than at home. He acknowledged without bitterness "that I have not gain'd acceptance in my own times" and fell back "on fond dreams of the future--anticipations." They would be realized sooner than he supposed.

Bibliography:

Justin Kaplan, Walt Whitman: A Life (1980); M. Wynn Thomas, The Lunar Light of Whitman's Poetry (1987).

Author:

Daniel Aaron

See also Literature.


Spotlight: Walt Whitman
Top

From our Archives: Today's Highlights, May 31, 2006

Walt Whitman, the author of Leaves of Grass, was born on this date in 1819. Experimenting in many different styles of poetry, Whitman published his first volume of Leaves of Grass in 1855, a collection of 12 poems. By its ninth and final edition, published in 1891, the book held nearly 400 poems, including "Song of Myself," "I Sing the Body Electric," and "O Captain! My Captain!" One of America's most influential poets, Whitman was often critized by contemporaries for his bold and earthy writings.
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Walt Whitman
Top
Whitman, Walt (Walter Whitman), 1819-92, American poet, b. West Hills, N.Y. Considered by many to be the greatest of all American poets, Walt Whitman celebrated the freedom and dignity of the individual and sang the praises of democracy and the brotherhood of man. His Leaves of Grass, unconventional in both content and technique, is probably the most influential volume of poems in the history of American literature.

Early Life

Whitman left school in 1830, worked as a printer's devil and later as a compositor. In 1838-39 he taught school on Long Island and edited the Long Islander newspaper. By 1841 he had become a full-time journalist, editing successively several papers and writing prose and verse for New York and Brooklyn journals. His active interest in politics during this period led to the editorship of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, a Democratic party paper; he lost this job, however, because of his vehement advocacy of abolition and the "free-soil" movement. After a brief trip to New Orleans in 1848, Whitman returned to Brooklyn, continued as a journalist, and later worked as a carpenter.

Leaves of Grass

In 1855 Whitman published at his own expense a volume of 12 poems, Leaves of Grass, which he had begun working on probably as early as 1847. Prefaced by a statement of his theories of poetry, the volume included the poem later known as "Song of Myself," in which the author proclaims himself the symbolic representative of common people. Although the book was a commercial failure, critical reviewers recognized the appearance of a bold new voice in poetry. Two larger editions appeared in 1856 and 1860, and they had equally little public success.

Leaves of Grass was criticized because of Whitman's exaltation of the body and sexual love and also because of its innovation in verse form-that it, the use of free verse in long rhythmical lines with a natural, "organic" structure. Emerson was one of the few intellectuals to praise Whitman's work, writing him a famous congratulatory letter. Whitman continued to enlarge and revise further editions of Leaves of Grass; the last edition prepared under his supervision appeared in 1892.

Later Life and Works

From 1862 to 1865 Whitman worked as a volunteer hospital nurse in Washington. His poetry of the Civil War, Drum-Taps (1865), reissued with Sequel to Drum Taps (1865-66), included his two poems about Abraham Lincoln, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," considered one of the finest elegies in the English language, and the much-recited "O Captain! My Captain!" For a while Whitman served as a clerk in the Dept. of the Interior, but he was discharged because Leaves of Grass was considered an immoral book.

In 1873 Whitman suffered a paralytic stroke and afterward lived in a semi-invalid state. His prose collection Democratic Vistas had appeared in 1871, and his last long poem, "Passage to India," was published in the 1871 edition of Leaves of Grass. From 1884 until his death he lived in Camden, N.J., where he continued to write and to revise his earlier work. His last book, November Boughs, appeared in 1888.

Assessment

Whitman was a complex person. He saw himself as the full-blooded, rough-and-ready spokesman for a young democracy, and he cultivated a bearded, shaggy appearance. Indeed, Whitman's early biographers John Burroughs and R. M. Bucke were so affected by the robust "I" of Whitman's poems and by the poet himself that they depicted him as a rowdy, sensual man, a great lover of women, and the father of several illegitimate children. Most of this was false. In reality Whitman was a quiet, gentle, circumspect man, robust in youth but sickly in middle age, who sired no children and is generally acknowledged to have been homosexual. Whitman had an incalculable effect on later poets, inspiring them to experiment in prosody as well as in subject matter.

Bibliography

See T. L. Brasher, ed., Early Poems and Fiction (1963) and H. W. Blodgett and S. Bradley, ed., Leaves of Grass (1965); his published prose, ed. by F. Stovall (2 vol., 1963-64); his uncollected prose, ed. by E. F. Grier et al. (6 vol., 1984); his daybooks and notebooks, ed. by W. White (3 vol., 1978); Collected Poetry and Prose (1982); his correspondence, ed. by E. H. Miller (6 vol., 1961-77); G. W. Allen, New Walt Whitman Handbook (1986); biographies by G. W. Allen (1955, rev. ed. 1969), J. Kaplan (1986), and J. Loving (1999); P. Zweig, Walt Whitman: The Making of a Poet (1984); D. S. Reynolds, Walt Whitman's America (1995); R. Roper, Now the Drum of War: Walt Whitman and His Brothers in the Civil War (2008).

Works: Works by Walt Whitman
Top
(1819-1892)

1842Franklin Evans; or, The Inebriate. In this conventional temperance novel indicative of Whitman's own beliefs about liquor, the plot concerns a rural Long Island boy who becomes a drunkard when he moves to New York City. He suffers numerous misfortunes and causes the death of two women he loved, but eventually manages to save a drowning boy, gives up drinking, and becomes a success. Although considered hack work, the novel, Whitman's longest work of fiction, is first serialized in the New World and sells twenty thousand copies.
1845The Half-Breed. Whitman's novella, his second-longest fictional work after Franklin Evans (1842), sympathetically portrays an Indian, wrongfully accused of theft and murder, who accepts his execution with Christ-like forbearance.
1855Leaves of Grass. Published at the author's expense and made up of only twelve poems, the collection of experimental free verse celebrates America and the American character. Whitman would revise and expand it nine times. Although it receives lukewarm critical and commercial response, the book contains a preface that is considered one of the most significant works on American nationalism in literature. One of the poems, "Song of Myself," is one of the crowning achievements of Whitman's career.
1856Leaves of Grass, second edition. Whitman expands the original twelve poems of the 1855 first edition to thirty-two, including poems such as "By Blue Ontario's Shore," "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," and "Song of the Broad-Axe."
1860Leaves of Grass, third edition. Whitman adds 146 new poems, including "Starting from Paumanok" and "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking," alters and renames previously published poems, and for the first time groups them in several "clusters," including the "Calamus" poems dealing with love between men. It sells more copies and provokes more reviews than did earlier editions.
1865Drum-Taps. A collection of verse inspired by Whitman's work in military hospitals during the Civil War. The original printing contains his celebration of American ideals, "Pioneers! O Pioneers!" Only a few copies of this work are bound for sale, however. After Lincoln's death, Sequel to Drum-Taps, which contains Whitman's elegy on Lincoln, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," is quickly appended to the earlier collection, and the two are sold together. Other poems in the collection include "Hymn of the Dead Soldiers," "The Wound Dresser," and "O Captain! My Captain!" Both Drum-Taps and the additional verse in its sequel would be included in the 1867 edition of Leaves of Grass.
1867Leaves of Grass, fourth edition. The so-called workshop edition adds six new poems: "Inscription" (later "One's Self I Sing"), "Small the Theme of My Chant," "The Runner," "Leaves of Grass" number 2 (later "Tears"), "Leaves of Grass" number 3 (later "Aboard at a Ship's Helm"), "When I Read the Book," and "The City of Dead-House."
1871Democratic Vistas. Whitman examines democracy and its problems during the Reconstruction era. He argues for striking a balance between individualism and democracy to attain future greatness, and he suggests that this balance can be best attained by poets and novelists.
1871Leaves of Grass, 1871-1872 edition. The fifth edition of Whitman's evolving masterwork adds twenty-four new poems and incorporates Drum-Taps in a series of new Civil War clusters. Whitman also publishes "Passage to India" in pamphlet form; it would be later included in the 1876 edition of Leaves of Grass. The poem celebrates people from around the globe. The work is inspired by the Atlantic telegraph cable, the Suez Canal, and the Union Pacific Railroad, which Whitman suggests will usher in a new era of peace by connecting the material nature of the Western Hemisphere with the spiritual essence of the Eastern Hemisphere.
1875Memorandum During the War. Whitman's Civil War memoir had been first printed in articles in the New York Weekly Graphic in 1874, is privately printed in 1875, and would be included in the centennial edition of his works and as a section of Specimen Days (1882). The work memorializes the war dead and the war's democratic aims, which Whitman saw as under assault by the self-centered business ethos of the Gilded Age.
1876Leaves of Grass, centennial edition. The sixth edition of Whitman's epic work includes the companion volume Two Rivulets, a collection of typographical and visual experiments designed to break down "the barriers of form between Prose and Poetry."
1881Leaves of Grass, seventh edition. The so-called Osgood edition of Whitman's ever-evolving collection is the first distributed by a mainstream publisher, Boston's James R. Osgood and Company. After selling fifteen hundred copies, Osgood withdrew it after a district attorney threatened to prosecute the publisher for selling obscene literature. In the Osgood edition, Whitman had cut thirty-nine poems, added seventeen, and modified hundreds of lines, while regrouping poems into thematic and dramatic clusters.
1882Specimen Days and Collect. Whitman supplies journal entries and autobiographical recollections about his Long Island childhood and the Civil War, as well as musings on nature, thoughts on his recuperation from a stroke, and literary criticism of authors whom he had met on travels to Boston, Canada, and the American West.
1888November Boughs. A collection of poetry, essays, and criticism, much of which had been previously published in the New York Herald. Most significant is the preface, "A Backward Glance o'er Travel'd Roads," an elucidation of his poetic purpose, which would become the preface to the 1889 edition of Leaves of Grass.
1889Leaves of Grass, eighth edition. This special pocket-size edition includes the poems of November Boughs (1888) and its prose preface, "A Backward Glance o'er Travel'd Roads," in which the poet describes his intention: "to articulate... uncompromisingly my own physical, emotional, moral, intellectual, and aesthetic Personality, in the midst of... current America."
1891Good-Bye My Fancy. Whitman's last miscellany of poetry and prose published during his lifetime offers reflections on his art, life, aging, illness, and death.
1891International copyright law passed. Previous American copyright laws had applied only to American publications, allowing publishers to reprint European books cheaply without compensating authors, undercutting book prices established by the major publishing firms at a disadvantage to American authors. Although American readers benefited from low book prices, a coalition of authors, publishers, and printers successfully lobbies Congress to pass the first international copyright law.
1892Leaves of Grass. The final ninth, so-called Death-Bed Edition, of Whitman's masterwork adds the poems "Old Age Echoes" and "A Backward Glance o'er Travel'd Roads."
1920The Gathering of Forces. The volume collects Whitman's editorials, essays, and literary and dramatic reviews written when he served as the editor of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle in 1846-1847. His Uncollected Poetry and Prose would follow in 1921.

Quotes By: Walt Whitman
Top

Quotes:

"Nothing can happen more beautiful than death."

"To die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier."

"There is that indescribable freshness and unconsciousness about an illiterate person that humbles and mocks the power of the noblest expressive genius."

"I no doubt deserved my enemies, but I don't believe I deserved my friends."

"Produce great men, the rest follows."

"This face is a dog's snout sniffing for garbage, snakes nest in that mouth, I hear the sibilant threat."

See more famous quotes by Walt Whitman

Wikipedia: Walt Whitman
Top
Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman, 1887
Born May 31, 1819(1819-05-31)
West Hills, Town of Huntington, Long Island, New York
Died March 26, 1892 (aged 72)
Camden, New Jersey

Walter Whitman (May 31, 1819 – March 26, 1892) was an American poet, essayist, journalist, and humanist. He was a part of the transition between Transcendentalism and realism, incorporating both views in his works. Whitman is among the most influential poets in the American canon, often called the father of free verse.[1] His work was very controversial in its time, particularly his poetry collection Leaves of Grass, which was described as obscene for its overt sexuality.

Born on Long Island, Whitman worked as a journalist, a teacher, a government clerk, and a volunteer nurse during the American Civil War in addition to publishing his poetry. Early in his career, he also produced a temperance novel, Franklin Evans (1842). Whitman's major work, Leaves of Grass, was first published in 1855 with his own money. The work was an attempt at reaching out to the common person with an American epic. He continued expanding and revising it until his death in 1892. After a stroke towards the end of his life, he moved to Camden, New Jersey where his health further declined. He died at age 72 and his funeral became a public spectacle.[2][3]

Whitman's sexuality is often discussed alongside his poetry. Though biographers continue to debate his sexuality, he is usually described as either homosexual or bisexual in his feelings and attractions.[4] However, there is disagreement among biographers as to whether Whitman had actual sexual experiences with men.[5] Whitman was concerned with politics throughout his life. He supported the Wilmot Proviso and opposed the extension of slavery generally. His poetry presented an egalitarian view of the races, and at one point he called for the abolition of slavery, but later he saw the abolitionist movement as a threat to democracy.[6]

Contents

Life and work

Early life

Walter Whitman was born on May 31, 1819, in West Hills, Town of Huntington, Long Island, to parents with interest in Quaker thought, Walter and Louisa Van Velsor Whitman. He was the second of nine children[7] and was immediately nicknamed "Walt" to distinguish him from his father.[8] Walter Whitman Sr. named three of his seven sons after American leaders: Andrew Jackson, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. The oldest was named Jesse and another boy died unnamed at the age of six months. The couple's sixth son, the youngest, was named Edward.[8] At age four, Whitman moved with his family from West Hills to Brooklyn, living in a series of homes in part due to bad investments.[9] Whitman looked back on his childhood as generally restless and unhappy due to his family's difficult economic status.[10] One happy moment that he later recalled was when he was lifted in the air and kissed on the cheek by the Marquis de Lafayette during a celebration in Brooklyn on July 4, 1825.[11]

At age eleven Whitman concluded formal schooling.[12] He then sought employment for further income for his family; he was an office boy for two lawyers and later was an apprentice and printer's devil for the weekly Long Island newspaper the Patriot, edited by Samuel E. Clements.[13] There, Whitman learned about the printing press and typesetting.[14] He may have written "sentimental bits" of filler material for occasional issues.[15] Clements aroused controversy when he and two friends attempted to dig up the corpse of Elias Hicks to create a plaster mold of his head.[16] Clements left the Patriot shortly after, possibly as a result of the controversy.[17]

Early career

The following summer Whitman worked for another printer, Erastus Worthington, in Brooklyn.[18] His family moved back to West Hills in the spring, but Whitman remained and took a job at the shop of Alden Spooner, editor of the leading Whig weekly newspaper the Long-Island Star.[18] While at the Star, Whitman became a regular patron of the local library, joined a town debating society, began attending theater performances,[19] and anonymously published some of his earliest poetry in the New York Mirror.[20] At age 16 in May 1835, Whitman left the Star and Brooklyn.[21] He moved to New York City to work as a compositor[22] though, in later years, Whitman could not remember where.[23] He attempted to find further work but had difficulty in part due to a severe fire in the printing and publishing district[23] and in part due to a general collapse in the economy leading up to the Panic of 1837.[24] In May 1836, he rejoined his family, now living in Hempstead, Long Island.[25] Whitman taught intermittently at various schools until the spring of 1838, though he was not satisfied as a teacher.[26]

After his teaching attempts, Whitman went back to Huntington, New York to found his own newspaper, the Long Islander. Whitman served as publisher, editor, pressman, and distributor and even provided home delivery. After ten months, he sold the publication to E. O. Crowell, whose first issue appeared on July 12, 1839.[27] No copies of the Long-Islander published under Whitman survive.[28] By the summer of 1839, he found a job as a typesetter in Jamaica, Queens with the Long Island Democrat, edited by James J. Brenton.[27] He left shortly thereafter, and made another attempt at teaching from the winter of 1840 to the spring of 1841,[29] During this time, he published a series of ten editorials called "Sun-Down Papers—From the Desk of a Schoolmaster" in three newspapers between the winter of 1840 and July 1841. In these essays, he adopted a constructed persona, a technique he would employ throughout his career.[30] Whitman moved to New York City in May, initially working a low-level job at the New World, working under Park Benjamin, Sr. and Rufus Wilmot Griswold.[31] He continued working for short periods of time for various newspapers; in 1842 he was editor of the Aurora and from 1846 to 1848 he was editor of the Brooklyn Eagle.[32] He also contributed freelance fiction and poetry throughout the 1840s.[33] Whitman lost his position at the Brooklyn Eagle in 1848 after siding with the free-soil "Barnburner" wing of the Democratic party against the newspaper's owner, Isaac Van Anden, who belonged to the conservative, or "Hunker", wing of the party.[34] Whitman was a delegate to the 1848 founding convention of the Free Soil Party.

Leaves of Grass

Walt Whitman, age 37, frontispiece to Leaves of Grass, Fulton St., Brooklyn, N.Y., steel engraving by Samuel Hollyer from a lost daguerreotype by Gabriel Harrison.

Whitman claimed that after years of competing for "the usual rewards", he determined to become a poet.[35] He first experimented with a variety of popular literary genres which appealed to the cultural tastes of the period.[36] As early as 1850, he began writing what would become Leaves of Grass,[37] a collection of poetry which he would continue editing and revising until his death.[38] Whitman intended to write a distinctly American epic[39] and used free verse with a cadence based on the Bible.[40] At the end of June 1855, Whitman surprised his brothers with the already-printed first edition of Leaves of Grass. George "didn't think it worth reading".[41]

Whitman paid for the publication of the first edition of Leaves of Grass himself[41] and had it printed at a local print shop during their breaks from commercial jobs.[42] A total of 795 copies were printed.[43] No name is given as author; instead, facing the title page was an engraved portrait done by Samuel Hollyer[44], but in the body of the text he calls himself "Walt Whitman, an American, one of the roughs, a kosmos, disorderly, fleshly, and sensual, no sentimentalist, no stander above men or women or apart from them, no more modest than immodest"[45]. The book received its strongest praise from Ralph Waldo Emerson, who wrote a flattering five page letter to Whitman and spoke highly of the book to friends.[46] The first edition of Leaves of Grass was widely distributed and stirred up significant interest,[47] in part due to Emerson's approval,[48] but was occasionally criticized for the seemingly "obscene" nature of the poetry.[49] Geologist John Peter Lesley wrote to Emerson, calling the book "trashy, profane & obscene" and the author "a pretentious ass".[50] On July 11, 1855, a few days after Leaves of Grass was published, Whitman's father died at the age of 65.[51]

In the months following the first edition of Leaves of Grass, critical responses began focusing more on the potentially offensive sexual themes. Though the second edition was already printed and bound, the publisher almost did not release it.[52] In the end, the edition went to retail, with 20 additional poems,[53] in August 1856.[54] Leaves of Grass was revised and re-released in 1860[55] again in 1867, and several more times throughout the remainder of Whitman's life. Several well-known writers admired the work enough to visit Whitman, including Bronson Alcott and Henry David Thoreau.[56]

During the first publications of Leaves of Grass, Whitman had financial difficulties and was forced to work as a journalist again, specifically with Brooklyn's Daily Times starting in May 1857.[57] As an editor, he oversaw the paper's contents, contributed book reviews, and wrote editorials.[58] He left the job in 1859, though it is unclear if he was fired or chose to leave.[59] Whitman, who typically kept detailed notebooks and journals, left very little information about himself in the late 1850s.[60]

Civil War years

Walt Whitman, circa 1860, by Mathew Brady

As the American Civil War was beginning, Whitman published his poem "Beat! Beat! Drums!" as a patriotic rally call for the North.[61] Whitman's brother George had joined the Union army and began sending Whitman several vividly detailed letters of the battle front.[62] On December 16, 1862, a listing of fallen and wounded soldiers in the New York Tribune included "First Lieutenant G. W. Whitmore", which Whitman worried was a reference to his brother George.[63] He made his way south immediately to find him, though his wallet was stolen on the way.[64] "Walking all day and night, unable to ride, trying to get information, trying to get access to big people", Whitman later wrote,[65] he eventually found George alive, with only a superficial wound on his cheek.[63] Whitman, profoundly affected by seeing the wounded soldiers and the heaps of their amputated limbs, left for Washington on December 28, 1862 with the intention of never returning to New York.[64]

In Washington, D.C., Whitman's friend Charley Eldridge helped him obtain part-time work in the army paymaster's office, leaving time for Whitman to volunteer as a nurse in the army hospitals.[66] He would write of this experience in "The Great Army of the Sick", published in a New York newspaper in 1863[67] and, 12 years later, in a book called Memoranda During the War.[68] He then contacted Emerson, this time to ask for help in obtaining a government post.[64] Another friend, John Trowbridge, passed on a letter of recommendation from Emerson to Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury, hoping he would grant Whitman a position in that department. Chase, however, did not want to hire the author of such a disreputable book as Leaves of Grass.[69]

The Whitman family had a difficult end to 1864. On September 30, 1864, Whitman's brother George was captured by Confederates in Virginia,[70] another brother, Andrew Jackson, died of tuberculosis compounded by alcoholism on December 3.[71] That month, Whitman committed his brother Jesse to the Kings County Lunatic Asylum.[72] Whitman's spirits were raised, however, when he finally got a better-paying government post as a low-grade clerk in the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Department of the Interior – thanks to his friend William Douglas O'Connor. O'Connor, a poet, daguerreotypist and an editor at the Saturday Evening Post, had written to William Tod Otto, Assistant Secretary of the Interior, on Whitman's behalf.[73] Whitman began the new appointment on January 24, 1865, with a yearly salary of $1,200.[74] A month later, on February 24, 1865, George was released from capture and granted a furlough because of his poor health.[73] By May 1, Whitman received a promotion to a slightly higher clerkship[74] and published Drum-Taps.[75]

Effective June 30, 1865, however, Whitman was fired from his job.[75] His dismissal came from the new Secretary of the Interior, former Iowa Senator James Harlan.[74] Though Harlan dismissed several clerks who "were seldom at their respective desks", he may have fired Whitman on moral grounds after finding an 1860 edition of Leaves of Grass.[76] O'Connor protested until J. Hubley Ashton had Whitman transferred to the Attorney General's office on July 1.[77] O'Connor, though, was still upset and vindicated Whitman by publishing a biased and exaggerated biographical study, The Good Gray Poet, in January 1866. The fifty-cent pamphlet defended Whitman as a wholesome patriot, established the poet's nickname and increased his popularity.[78] Also aiding in his popularity was the publication of "O Captain! My Captain!", a relatively conventional poem on the death of Abraham Lincoln, the only poem to appear in anthologies during Whitman's lifetime.[79]

Part of Whitman's role at the Attorney General's office was interviewing former Confederate soldiers for Presidential pardons. "There are real characters among them", he later wrote, "and you know I have a fancy for anything out of the ordinary."[80] In August 1866, he took a month off in order to prepare a new edition of Leaves of Grass which would not be published until 1867 after difficulty in finding a publisher.[81] He hoped it would be its last edition.[82] In February 1868 Poems of Walt Whitman was published in England thanks to the influence of William Michael Rossetti,[83] with minor changes that Whitman reluctantly approved.[84] The edition became popular in England, especially with endorsements from the highly respected writer Anne Gilchrist.[85] Another edition of Leaves of Grass was issued in 1871, the same year it was mistakenly reported that its author died in a railroad accident.[86] As Whitman's international fame increased, he remained at the attorney general's office until January 1872.[87] He spent much of 1872 caring for his mother who was now nearly eighty and struggling with arthritis.[88] He also traveled and was invited to Dartmouth College to give the commencement address on June 26, 1872.[89]

Health decline and death

Walt Whitman spent his last few years at his home in Camden, New Jersey. Today, it is open to the public as the Walt Whitman House.

Early in 1873, Whitman suffered a paralytic stroke; his mother died in May the same year. Both events were difficult for Whitman and left him depressed.[90] He moved to Camden, New Jersey to live with his brother George, paying room and board until he bought his own house on Mickle St. in 1884.[91] Around this time, he began socializing with Mary Oakes Davis, the widow of a sea captain, who lived nearby.[92] She moved in with Whitman on February 24, 1885 to serve as his housekeeper in exchange for free rent. She brought with her a cat, a dog, two turtledoves, a canary, and other assorted animals.[93] During this time, Whitman produced further editions of Leaves of Grass in 1876, 1881, and 1889.

As the end of 1891 approached, he prepared a final edition of Leaves of Grass, an edition which has been nicknamed the "Deathbed Edition". He wrote, "L. of G. at last complete—after 33 y'rs of hackling at it, all times & moods of my life, fair weather & foul, all parts of the land, and peace & war, young & old".[94] Preparing for death, Whitman commissioned a granite mausoleum shaped like a house for $4,000[95] and visited it often during construction.[96] In the last week of his life, he was too weak to lift a knife or fork and wrote: "I suffer all the time: I have no relief, no escape: it is monotony — monotony — monotony — in pain."[97]

Whitman died on March 26, 1892.[98] An autopsy revealed his lungs had diminished to one-eighth their normal breathing capacity, a result of bronchial pneumonia,[95] and that an egg-sized abscess on his chest had eroded one of his ribs. The cause of death was officially listed as "pleurisy of the left side, consumption of the right lung, general miliary tuberculosis and parenchymatous nephritis."[99] A public viewing of his body was held at his Camden home; over one thousand people visited in three hours[2] and Whitman's oak coffin was barely visible because of all the flowers and wreaths left for him.[99] He was buried in his tomb at Harleigh Cemetery in Camden four days after his death.[2] Another public ceremony was held at the cemetery, with friends giving speeches, live music, and refreshments.[3] Whitman's friend, the orator Robert Ingersoll, delivered the eulogy.[100] Later, the remains of Whitman's parents and two of his brothers and their families were moved to the mausoleum.[101]

Writing

Whitman's work breaks the boundaries of poetic form and is generally prose-like.[1] He also used unusual images and symbols in his poetry, including rotting leaves, tufts of straw, and debris.[102] He also openly wrote about death and sexuality, including prostitution.[82] He is often labeled as the father of free verse, though he did not invent it.[1]

Poetic theory

Whitman wrote in the preface to the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass, "The proof of a poet is that his country absorbs him as affectionately as he has absorbed it." He believed there was a vital, symbiotic relationship between the poet and society.[103] This connection was emphasized especially in "Song of Myself" by using an all-powerful first-person narration.[104] As an American epic, it deviated from the historic use of an elevated hero and instead assumed the identity of the common people.[105] Leaves of Grass also responded to the impact that recent urbanization in the United States had on the masses.[106]

Lifestyle and beliefs

Alcohol

Whitman was a vocal proponent of temperance and in his youth rarely drank alcohol. He once claimed he did not taste "strong liquor" until he was thirty[107] and occasionally argued for prohibition.[108] One of his earliest long fiction works, the novel Franklin Evans; or, The Inebriate, first published November 23, 1842, is a temperance novel.[109] Whitman wrote the novel at the height of popularity of the Washingtonian movement though the movement itself was plagued with contradictions, as was Franklin Evans.[110] Years later Whitman claimed he was embarrassed by the book[111] and called it a "damned rot".[112] He dismissed it by saying he wrote the novel in three days solely for money while he was under the influence of alcohol himself.[113] Even so, he wrote other pieces recommending temperance, including The Madman and a short story "Reuben's Last Wish".[114] Later in life he was more liberal with alcohol, enjoying local wines and champagne.[115]

Religion

Whitman was deeply influenced by deism. He denied any one faith was more important than another, and embraced all religions equally.[116] In "Song of Myself", he gave an inventory of major religions and indicated he respected and accepted all of them – a sentiment he further emphasized in his poem "With Antecedents", affirming: "I adopt each theory, myth, god, and demi-god, / I see that the old accounts, bibles, genealogies, are true, without exception".[116] In 1874, he was invited to write a poem about the Spiritualism movement, to which he responded, "It seems to me nearly altogether a poor, cheap, crude humbug."[117] Whitman was a religious skeptic: though he accepted all churches, he believed in none.[116]

Sexuality

Whitman and Peter Doyle, one of the men with whom Whitman was believed to have had an intimate relationship

Whitman's sexuality is generally assumed to be homosexual or bisexual based on his poetry, though that has been at times disputed.[4] His poetry depicts love and sexuality in a more earthy, individualistic way common in American culture before the medicalization of sexuality in the late 1800s.[118] Though Leaves of Grass was often labeled pornographic or obscene, only one critic remarked on its author's presumed sexual activity: in a November 1855 review, Rufus Wilmot Griswold suggested Whitman was guilty of "that horrible sin not to be mentioned among Christians".[119] Whitman had intense friendships with many men and boys throughout his life. Some biographers have claimed that he may not have actually engaged in sexual relationships with males,[5] while others cite letters, journal entries and other sources which they claim as proof of the sexual nature of some of his relationships.[120]

Peter Doyle may be the most likely candidate for the love of Whitman's life, according to biographer David S. Reynolds.[121] Doyle was a bus conductor whom Whitman met around 1866 and the two were inseparable for several years. Interviewed in 1895, Doyle said: "We were familiar at once — I put my hand on his knee — we understood. He did not get out at the end of the trip — in fact went all the way back with me."[122] In his notebooks, Whitman disguised Doyle's initials using the code "16.4".[123] A more direct second-hand account comes from Oscar Wilde. Wilde met Whitman in America in 1882 and wrote to the homosexual rights activist George Cecil Ives that there was "no doubt" about the great American poet's sexual orientation — "I have the kiss of Walt Whitman still on my lips," he boasted.[124] The only explicit description of Whitman's sexual activities is second hand. In 1924 Edward Carpenter, then an old man, described an erotic encounter he had had in his youth with Whitman to Gavin Arthur, who recorded it in detail in his journal.[125][126] Late in his life, when Whitman was asked outright if his series of "Calamus" poems were homosexual, he chose not to respond.[127]

Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett

Another possible lover was Bill Duckett. As a young teenage boy he lived in on the same street in Camden and moved in with Whitman, living with him a number of years and serving him in various roles. Their relationship was close, with the youth sharing Whitman's money when he had it. Whitman described their friendship as "thick." Though some biographers describe him as a boarder, others identify him as a lover.[128]Their photograph [pictured] is described as "modeled on the conventions of a marriage portrait," part of a series of portraits of the poet with his young male friends, and encrypting male-male desire.[129]Yet another intense relationship with a young man was the one with Harry Stafford, with whose family he stayed when at Timber Creek, and whom he first met when the young man was 18, in 1876. Whitman gave young Stafford a ring, which was returned and given back over the course of a stormy relationship lasting a number of years. Of that ring Stafford wrote to Whitman, "You know when you put it on there was but one thing to part it from me, and that was death."[130]

There is also some evidence that Whitman may have had sexual relationships with women. He had a romantic friendship with a New York actress named Ellen Grey in the spring of 1862, but it is not known whether or not it was also sexual. He still had a photo of her decades later when he moved to Camden and referred to her as "an old sweetheart of mine".[131] In a letter dated August 21, 1890 he claimed, "I have had six children - two are dead". This claim has never been corroborated.[132] Toward the end of his life, he often told stories of previous girlfriends and sweethearts and denied an allegation from the New York Herald that he had "never had a love affair".[133] As Whitman biographer Jerome Loving wrote, "the discussion of Whitman's sexual orientation will probably continue in spite of whatever evidence emerges."[5]

Shakespeare authorship

Whitman was a proponent of the Shakespeare authorship question, refusing to believe in the historic attribution of the works to William Shakespeare of Stratford-upon-Avon. Whitman comments in his November Boughs (1888) regarding Shakespeare's historical plays:

Conceiv'd out of the fullest heat and pulse of European feudalism -personifying ill unparalleled ways the medieval aristocracy, its towering spirit of ruthless and gigantic caste, with its own peculiar air and arrogance (no mere imitation) -only one of the "wolfish earls" so plenteous in the plays themselves, or some born descendant and knower, might seem to be the true author of those amazing works -works in some respects greater than anything else in recorded literature."[134]

Slavery

Whitman opposed the extension of slavery in the United States and supported the Wilmot Proviso.[135] At first he was opposed to abolitionism, believing the movement did more harm than good. In 1846, he wrote that the abolitionists had, in fact, slowed the advancement of their cause by their "ultraism and officiousness".[136] His main concern was that their methods disrupted the democratic process, as did the refusal of the Southern states to put the interests of the nation as a whole above their own.[135] In 1856, in his unpublished The Eighteenth Presidency, addressing the men of the South, he wrote "you are either to abolish slavery or it will abolish you". Whitman also subscribed to the widespread opinion that even free African-Americans should not vote[137] and was concerned at the increasing number of African-Americans in the legislature.[138]

Legacy and influence

Portrait of Whitman by Thomas Eakins, 1887-88

Walt Whitman has been claimed as America's first "poet of democracy", a title meant to reflect his ability to write in a singularly American character. A British friend of Walt Whitman, Mary Smith Whitall Costelloe, wrote: "You cannot really understand America without Walt Whitman, without Leaves of Grass... He has expressed that civilization, 'up to date,' as he would say, and no student of the philosophy of history can do without him."[139] Modernist poet Ezra Pound called Whitman "America's poet... He is America."[140] Andrew Carnegie called him "the great poet of America so far".[141] Whitman considered himself a messiah-like figure in poetry.[142] Others agreed: one of his admirers, William Sloane Kennedy, speculated that "people will be celebrating the birth of Walt Whitman as they are now the birth of Christ".[143]

The literary critic, Harold Bloom wrote, as the introduction for the 150th anniversary of Leaves of Grass:

If you are American, then Walt Whitman is your imaginative father and mother, even if, like myself, you have never composed a line of verse. You can nominate a fair number of literary works as candidates for the secular Scripture of the United States. They might include Melville's Moby-Dick, Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and Emerson's two series of Essays and The Conduct of Life. None of those, not even Emerson's, are as central as the first edition of Leaves of Grass.[144]

Whitman's vagabond lifestyle was adopted by the Beat movement and its leaders such as Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac in the 1950s and 1960s as well as anti-war poets like Adrienne Rich and Gary Snyder.[145] Whitman also influenced Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, and was the model for the character of Dracula. Stoker said in his notes that Dracula represented the quintessential male which, to Stoker, was Whitman, with whom he corresponded until Whitman's death.[146]

Whitman is a 2009 inductee of the New Jersey Hall of Fame.[147]

The final stanza of the poem "The Wound-Dresser" by Walt Whitman has been engraved across the top of the massive granite walls encircling the 188-foot north entrance escalators descending to the underground trains at the DuPont Circle stop on the Washington, D.C. transit system. The installation was formally dedicated as a tribute to caregivers for those with HIV/Aids and other devastating illnesses at a ceremony on July 14, 2007.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Reynolds, 314
  2. ^ a b c Loving, 480
  3. ^ a b Reynolds, 589
  4. ^ a b Buckham, Luke. "Walt Whitman's Vision of Liberty", Keene Free Press. October 11, 2006.
  5. ^ a b c Loving, 19
  6. ^ "The Walt WHitman Encyclopedia". http://www.whitmanarchive.org/criticism/current/encyclopedia/entry_51.html. 
  7. ^ Miller, 17
  8. ^ a b Loving, 29
  9. ^ Loving, 30
  10. ^ Reynolds, 24
  11. ^ Reynolds, 33–34
  12. ^ Loving, 32
  13. ^ Reynolds, 44
  14. ^ Kaplan, 74
  15. ^ Callow, 30
  16. ^ Callow, 29
  17. ^ Loving, 34
  18. ^ a b Reynolds, 45
  19. ^ Callow, 32
  20. ^ Kaplan, 79
  21. ^ Kaplan, 77
  22. ^ Callow, 35
  23. ^ a b Kaplan, 81
  24. ^ Loving, 36
  25. ^ Callow, 36
  26. ^ Loving, 37
  27. ^ a b Reynolds, 60
  28. ^ Loving, 38
  29. ^ Kaplan, 93–94
  30. ^ Stacy, 25
  31. ^ Callow, 56
  32. ^ Stacy, 6
  33. ^ Reynolds, 83–84
  34. ^ Stacy, 87–91
  35. ^ Kaplan, 185
  36. ^ Reynolds, 85
  37. ^ Loving, 154
  38. ^ Miller, 55
  39. ^ Miller, 155
  40. ^ Kaplan, 187
  41. ^ a b Callow, 226
  42. ^ Loving, 178
  43. ^ Kaplan, 198
  44. ^ Callow, 227
  45. ^ 1855 review of Leaves of grass
  46. ^ Kaplan, 203
  47. ^ Reynolds, 340
  48. ^ Callow, 232
  49. ^ Loving, 414
  50. ^ Kaplan, 211
  51. ^ Kaplan, 229
  52. ^ Reynolds, 348
  53. ^ Callow, 238
  54. ^ Kaplan, 207
  55. ^ Loving, 238
  56. ^ Reynolds, 363
  57. ^ Callow, 225
  58. ^ Reynolds, 368
  59. ^ Loving, 228
  60. ^ Reynolds, 375
  61. ^ Callow, 283
  62. ^ Reynolds, 410
  63. ^ a b Kaplan, 268
  64. ^ a b c Reynolds, 411
  65. ^ Callow, 286
  66. ^ Callow, 293
  67. ^ Kaplan, 273
  68. ^ Callow, 297
  69. ^ Callow, 295
  70. ^ Loving, 281
  71. ^ Kaplan, 293–294
  72. ^ Reynolds, 454
  73. ^ a b Loving, 283
  74. ^ a b c Reynolds, 455
  75. ^ a b Loving, 290
  76. ^ Loving, 291
  77. ^ Kaplan, 304
  78. ^ Reynolds, 456-457
  79. ^ Kaplan, 309
  80. ^ Loving, 293
  81. ^ Kaplan, 318–319
  82. ^ a b Loving, 314
  83. ^ Callow, 326
  84. ^ Kaplan, 324
  85. ^ Callow, 329
  86. ^ Loving, 331
  87. ^ Reynolds, 464
  88. ^ Kaplan, 340
  89. ^ Loving, 341
  90. ^ Miller, 33
  91. ^ Haas, Irvin. Historic Homes of American Authors. Washington, DC: The Preservation Press, 1991: 141. ISBN 0891331808.
  92. ^ Loving, 432
  93. ^ Reynolds, 548
  94. ^ Reynolds, 586
  95. ^ a b Loving, 479
  96. ^ Kaplan, 49
  97. ^ Reynolds, 587
  98. ^ Callow, 363
  99. ^ a b Reynolds, 588
  100. ^ The Book of Eulogies, Phyllis Theroux (Editor), 1977, Simon & Schuster. Page 30.
  101. ^ Kaplan, 50
  102. ^ Kaplan, 233
  103. ^ Reynolds, 5
  104. ^ Reynolds, 324
  105. ^ Miller, 78
  106. ^ Reynolds, 332
  107. ^ Loving, 71
  108. ^ Callow, 75
  109. ^ Loving, 74
  110. ^ Reynolds, 95
  111. ^ Reynolds, 91
  112. ^ Loving, 75
  113. ^ Reynolds, 97
  114. ^ Loving, 72
  115. ^ Henry Bryan Binns A life of Walt Whitman; p.315
  116. ^ a b c Reynolds, 237
  117. ^ Loving, 353
  118. ^ D'Emilio, John and Estelle B. Freeman, Intimate Matters: A History of Sexuality in America. University of Chicago Press, 1997. ISBN 0-226-14264-7
  119. ^ Loving, 184–185
  120. ^ Norton, Rictor "Walt Whitman, Prophet of Gay Liberation" from The Great Queens of History, updated 18 November 1999
  121. ^ Reynolds, 487
  122. ^ Kaplan, 311–312
  123. ^ Shively, Charley Calamus Lovers: Walt Whitman's Working Class Camerados, Gay Sunshine Press, San Francisco, 1987: 25. ISBN 9780917342189
  124. ^ McKenna, Neil. The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde. Century, 2003: 33. ISBN 0465044387.
  125. ^ Kantrowitz, Arnie. "Carpenter". Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings, eds. New York: Garland Publishing, 1998.
  126. ^ Arthur, Gavin The Circle of Sex, University Books, New York 1966 ASIN: B0006BOHDO
  127. ^ Reynolds, 527
  128. ^ Henry Adams, Thomas Eakins; Eakins revealed: the secret life of an American artist p.289
  129. ^ Ruth L. Bohan; Looking into Walt Whitman: American art, 1850-1920; p.136
  130. ^ The Walt Whitman Archive [1]
  131. ^ Callow, 278
  132. ^ Loving, 123
  133. ^ Reynolds,490
  134. ^ Nelson, Paul A. "Walt Whitman on Shakespeare. Reprinted from The Shakespeare Oxford Society Newsletter, Fall 1992: Volume 28, 4A.
  135. ^ a b Reynolds, 117
  136. ^ Loving, 110
  137. ^ Reynolds, 473
  138. ^ Reynolds, 470
  139. ^ Reynolds, 4
  140. ^ Pound, Ezra. "Walt Whitman", Whitman, Roy Harvey Pearce, ed. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1962: 8
  141. ^ Kaplan, 22
  142. ^ Callow, 83
  143. ^ Loving, 475
  144. ^ Bloom, Harold. Introduction to Leaves of Grass. Penguin Classics, 2005.
  145. ^ Loving, 181
  146. ^ Nuzum, Eric. The Dead Travel Fast: Stalking Vampires from Nosferatu to Count Chocula. Thomas Dunne Books, 2007: 141–147. ISBN 0-31237-111-X
  147. ^ New Jersey to Bon Jovi: You Give Us a Good Name Yahoo News, February 2, 2009

References

  • Callow, Philip. From Noon to Starry Night: A Life of Walt Whitman. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1992. ISBN 0929587952
  • Kaplan, Justin. Walt Whitman: A Life. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1979. ISBN 0671225421
  • Loving, Jerome. Walt Whitman: The Song of Himself. University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0520226879
  • Miller, James E., Jr. Walt Whitman. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc. 1962
  • Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Vintage Books, 1995. ISBN 0679767096
  • Stacy, Jason. Walt Whitman's Multitudes: Labor Reform and Persona in Whitman's Journalism and the First Leaves of Grass, 1840-1855. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2008. ISBN 978-1-4331-0383-4

External links

Sites


Best of the Web: Walt Whitman
Top

Some good "Walt Whitman" pages on the web:


Study Guide
www.sparknotes.com
 
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Walt Whitman biography from Who2.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
US History Companion. The Reader's Companion to American History, Eric Foner and John A. Garraty, Editors, published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Answers Corporation Spotlight. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Walt Whitman" Read more