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  2. Walt Whitman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walt_Whitman

    A statue of Whitman by Jo Davidson is located at the entrance to the Walt Whitman Bridge and another casting resides in the Bear Mountain State Park. The controversy that surrounded the naming of the Walt Whitman bridge has been documented in a series of letters from members of the public, which are held in the University of Pennsylvania ...

  3. Walt Whitman and Abraham Lincoln - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walt_Whitman_and_Abraham...

    Walt Whitman established his reputation as a poet following the release of his poetry collection Leaves of Grass (1855); the volume came to wider public attention following a positive review by American transcendentalist lecturer and essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson.

  4. Song of Myself - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Song_of_Myself

    In the second (1856) edition, Whitman used the title "Poem of Walt Whitman, an American," which was shortened to "Walt Whitman" for the third (1860) edition. [ 1 ] The poem was divided into fifty-two numbered sections for the fourth (1867) edition and finally took on the title "Song of Myself" in the last edition (1891–2). [ 1 ]

  5. O Captain! My Captain! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O_Captain!_My_Captain!

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 26 October 2024. Poem by Walt Whitman on the death of Abraham Lincoln "Oh Captain, My Captain" redirects here. For the Grimm episode, see Oh Captain, My Captain (Grimm). For the Shameless episode, see O Captain, My Captain (Shameless). O Captain! My Captain! by Walt Whitman Printed copy of "O Captain! My ...

  6. Leaves of Grass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaves_of_Grass

    Whitman's work has been claimed in the name of racial equality. In a preface to the 1946 anthology I Hear the People Singing: Selected Poems of Walt Whitman, Langston Hughes wrote that Whitman's "all-embracing words lock arms with workers and farmers, Negroes and whites, Asiatics and Europeans, serfs, and free men, beaming democracy to all." [57]

  7. Walt Whitman's lectures on Abraham Lincoln - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walt_Whitman's_lectures_on...

    Walt Whitman established his reputation as a poet in the late 1850s to early 1860s after the 1855 release of Leaves of Grass. [3] [4] The brief volume was controversial, [5] with critics particularly objecting to Whitman's blunt depictions of sexuality and what the University of Virginia Libraries has described as its "obvious homoerotic overtones". [6]

  8. When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_Lilacs_Last_in_the...

    According to literary scholar James Perrin Warren, Whitman's long, musical lines rely on three important techniques—syntactic parallelism, repetition, and cataloguing. [62] Repetition is a device used by an orator or poet to lend persuasive emphasis to the sentiment, and "create a driving rhythm by the recurrence of the same sound, it can ...

  9. Drum-Taps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum-Taps

    Drum-Taps is a collection of poetry composed by American poet Walt Whitman during the American Civil War. The collection was published in May 1865. [1] The first 500 copies of the collection were printed in April 1865, [2] the same month President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.