I assume you are speaking of Emily Dickinson's "Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church". I believe that she is saying that while some may choose to flock to church on the Sabbath day, in the midst of choirs and sermons, and such, she chooses to keep the Sabbath at home, in a simplistic way with just her family. She is conveying to us that she does not need a large church service to accomodate her keeping the Sabbath, but is content to worship the Lord in her home.
yes there is one particular one: "I hear America singing" by Walt Whitman this poem is about the American dream. when Walt Whitman says "varied carols" he is referring to the dfferent forms of the American dream
yes there is one particular one: "I hear America singing" by Walt Whitman this poem is about the American dream. when Walt Whitman says "varied carols" he is referring to the dfferent forms of the American dream
yes there is one particular one: "I hear America singing" by Walt Whitman this poem is about the American dream. when Walt Whitman says "varied carols" he is referring to the dfferent forms of the American dream
America, the varied carols I hear, everyone one is singing for i hear America singing, they plank or beam the mason singing his as he measures his work or leaves off work, Oh i hear America singing
Sonnet 43 uses the typical rhyme scheme of the English sonnet, with the rhyme going abab cdcd efef gg.
He uses alliteration with the words "mystical/moist," "time/time," and "silence/stars."
Some of Walt Whitman's poems are " Aboard the Ship's Helm"
"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomed"
"Leaves of Grass"
like a demon