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WALT WHITMAN (1819-1892) , See also: American poet, was See also: born at West Hills, on Long See also: Island, New See also: York, on the 31st of May 1819
.
His ancestry was mingled See also: English and See also: Holland Dutch, and had flourished upon Long Island more than 15o years—long enough to have taken deep
See also: root in the See also: soil and to have See also: developed, in its farmers and seafaring men, many strong See also: family traits
.
His See also: father, Walter Whitman, was a See also: farmer and See also: carpenter; his See also: mother, Louisa See also: Van Velsor, was the granddaughter of a See also: sea captain
.
There do not appear to be any men in his See also: line of descent given to scholarly or intellectual pursuits till we get back to the 17th century, when we come to Abijah Whitman, a clergyman, settled in See also: Connecticut
.
Later this Abijah moved to Long Island, and from him all the Whitmans on the island descended
.
Walt was the second of a family of nine See also: children
.
The parents early moved to See also: Brooklyn, where Whitman spent his youth
.
His career was a chequered one, like that of so many other self-made American men
.
First he was an errand boy in a lawyer's office; then he was employed in a printing office; next he became a country school teacher; he founded (1836) and till 1839 edited the Long Islander at Huntington, and later edited a daily paper in Brooklyn (the Eagle, 1846-1847); then he was found in New See also: Orleans, on the editorial staff of the
See also: Crescent (1848-1849) ; afterwards he passed his See also: time carpentering, See also: building and selling small houses in Brooklyn (1851-1854), in the meanwhile writing for the magazines and reviews and turning out several novels, and finally revolving in his mind the scheme of his Leaves of Grass
.
This scheme was probably gestating in his mind during the years 1853, 1854 and 1855
.
He frequently stopped his carpentering to See also: work at his poems
.
He See also: left voluminous See also: manuscript notes, showing the preparatory studies and reflections that preceded the Leaves; many of them, under the title of Notes and Fragments, were privately printed by his See also: literary executor, Dr See also: Richard See also: Maurice Bucke, in 1899
.
Finally, in the summer of 1855 the first edition of Leaves of Grass appeared—a small See also: quarto of ninety-four pages
.
The See also: book did not attract the See also: attention of the critics and the See also: reading public till a letter from Emerson to the poet, in which the See also: volume was characterized as " the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom that See also: America has yet contributed," was published in the New York Tribune
.
This created a demand for the book, and started it upon a career that has probably had more vicissitudes and called forth more adverse as well as more eulogistic See also: criticism than any other contemporary literary work
.
In 1856 a second and much enlarged edition of Leaves of Grass appeared
.
In 186o a third edition, with much new See also: matter, was published in See also: Boston
.
In 1862 Whitman went to See also: Washington to look after his See also: brother, See also: Lieutenant-Colonel See also: George W
.
Whitman, who was wounded at the See also: battle of Fredericksburg
.
Henceforth, for more than ten years he remained in and about Washington, acting as a volunteer nurse in the army hospitals as long as the war lasted, and longer, and then finding employment as a clerk in the See also: government departments, in the meantime adding to and revising his Leaves and See also: publishing two or three See also: editions of them, himself his own publisher and bookseller
.
Out of his war experiences came in 1866 his Drum Taps, subsequently incorporated into the See also: main volume
.
Early in 1873 he suffered a paralytic stroke which partially disabled him
.
He then went to See also: Camden, New See also: Jersey, to live and continued to reside in that city till his See also: death on the 27th of See also: March 1892
.
In 1871 appeared his
See also: prose volume called Democratic Vistas
.
In 1876 he published a thin volume, called Two Rivulets, made up of prose and verse . Specimen Days and Collect, also prose, appeared in 1882 . New editions of his Leaves continued to appear at intervals as long as he lived . A final andSee also: complete edition of his See also: works, including both prose and verse, was published in See also: Philadelphia in 1889
.
Whitman never married, never left America, never laid up, or aimed to See also: lay up, riches: he gave his time and his substance freely to others, belonged to no See also: club nor coterie, associated habitually with the See also: common people—mechanics, coach-drivers, working men of all kinds—was always cheerful and optimistic
.
He was large and picturesque of figure, slow of See also: movement, tolerant, receptive, democratic and full of charity and See also: goodwill towards all
.
His See also: life was a poet's life from first to last`—free, unworldly, unhurried, unconventional, unselfish, and was contentedly and joyously lived
.
He left many notes that throw See also: light upon his aims and methods in composing Leaves of Grass
.
" Make no quotations," he charged himself, " and no reference to any other writers
.
See also: Lumber the writing with nothing—let it go as lightly as the See also: bird flies in the air or a See also: fish swims in the sea
.
Avoid all poetical similes; be faithful to the perfect likelihoods of nature—healthy, exact, See also: simple, disdaining ornaments
.
Do not go into criticisms or arguments at all; make full-blooded, See also: rich, flush, natural works
.
Insert natural things, indestructibles, idioms, characteristics, See also: rivers, states, persons, &c
.
Be full of strong sensual germs
.
.
.
. Poet! beware lest your poems are made in the spirit that comes from the study of pictures of things —and not from the spirit that comes from the contact with real things themselves." The mother-idea of his poems, he says, is democracy, and democracy " carried far beyond politics into the region of taste, the See also: standards of See also: manners and beauty, and even into philosophy and See also: theology," His Leaves certainly radiates democracy as no other rnodern literary work does, and brings the reader into intimate and enlarged relations with fundamental human qualities—with sex, manly love, charity, faith, self-esteem, candour, purity of See also: body, sanity of mind
.
He was democratic because he was not in any way separated nor detached from the common See also: people by his quality, his culture, or his aspirations
.
He was See also: bone of their bone and flesh of their flesh
.
Tried by current standards his poems lack See also: form and structure, but they undoubtedly have in full measure the qualities and merits that the poet sought to give them
.
(J
.
Bu.)
See his Complete Writings (lo vols., New York, 1902), with See also: bibliographical and critical matter by O
.
L
.
Triggs
.
His Poems (1902) has a See also: biographical introduction by See also: John Burroughs, whose Whitman: A Study (Boston, 1896) forms the tenth volume of the " New
See also: River-See also: side " edition of the poet's works
.
See also Walt Whitman's See also: Diary in See also: Canada, with Extracts from other of his Diaries and Literary Notebook'
(Boston, 1904) edited by W
.
S
.
See also: Kennedy; In re Walt Whitman (Philadelphia,1893) edited by his literary executors, H
.
L
.
Traubel, R
.
M
.
Bucke, T
.
B
.
1larned; Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden (Boston, 10077, a record of talks in 1888, full of material; See also: Bliss See also: Perry, Walt Whitman: His Life and Work (Boston, 1907), with new material and unpublished letters; Calamus, a series of letters (1868-1880) written by Whitman to a " See also: young friend " (See also: Peter See also: Doyle), edited by R
.
M
.
Bucke (1897), who also wrote an authorized biography—Walt Whitman (Philadelphia, 1883)—which contains contemporary criticisms of Whitman and W D
.
O'Connor's "See also: Good See also: Gray Poet " (1866) ; Walt Whitman (
See also: London, 1893), a study by J
.
Addington See also: Symonds; Reminiscences of Walt Whitman with Extracts from his Letters (London, 1896) by W
.
S
.
Kennedy; H
.
B
.
Binns, Life of Walt Whitman (New York, 1906); and critical estimates in R
.
L
.
See also: Stevenson's See also: Familiar Studies of Men and Books (1882) ; E
.
See also: Dowden's Studies in Literature (1892), and in E
.
C
.
See also: Stedman's Poets of America, &c
.
A bibliography of writings on Whitman is appended to Selections (Boston, 1898), edited by O
.
L
.
Triggs . |
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