Walter "Walt" Whitman (May 31, 1819 – March 26, 1892) is widely considered to be the greatest and most influential poet the United States has ever produced.
Translated into more than 30 languages, Whitman is said to have invented contemporary American literature as a genre. He abandons the rigid rhythmic and metrical structures of European poetry for an expansionist free verse style, which appropriately delivers his philosophical view that America was destined to reinvent the world as emancipator and liberator of the human spirit.
Whitman, American poet, essayist, journalist, and humanist was born in West Hills, Huntington on Long Island in New York. His most famous work is Leaves of Grass, which he would continue to edit and revise until his death. A group of civil war poems included within Leaves of Grass is often published as an independent collection under the name of Drum-Taps.
The first few versions of Leaves of Grass were self-published and poorly received. Several poems featured graphic depictions of the human body, endlessly enumerated in Whitman's innovative "cataloguing" style, which contrasted with the reserved Puritan ethic of the times. Despite its revolutionary content and structure, subsequent editions of the book would continue to evoke critical indifference in the US literary establishment. But abroad the book was a world-wide sensation, especially in France, where Whitman's intense humanism would help to provoke the naturalist revolution in French letters.
By 1864, Walt Whitman was already a world celebrity and Leaves of Grass had finally found a publishing house in the US. Though still considered an iconoclast and a literary outsider, at last, the poet's status began to grow at home. During his final years, Whitman had become a respected literary vanguard visited by young artists from around the world. During his later years, several photographs and paintings of the great bard would cultivate a certain "Christ-figure" mystique. Though Whitman did not invent American transcendentalism, he had become its most famous exponent and his name was not only synonomous with poetry, but the blossoming of American mysticism, as well.
Still, it wasn't until the 20th century that the true scope of Whitman's immense shadow would begin to emerge. Young writers such as Hart Crane, William Carlos Williams, Allan Ginsberg, and Jack Kerouac rediscovered the quintessential American bard and reinterpreted his literary manifesto for younger audiences. At last, the magnitude of Whitman's accomplishment would come to true light and take its rightful place in the North American canon. From that point on, Whitman's ubiquitous influence in American — and world — literature has never been doubted.
Born into a family of nine children in Long Island and brought up in Brooklyn, Walt Whitman began his career as a journalist and editor. He was for a time editor of The Long Islander which was his own newspaper stand that he ran himself, but unfortunately that only lasted for one year (1838–1839). During his early years, Whitman inherited his liberal, intellectual and political attitudes largely from his father, who exposed him to socialists Frances Wright and Robert Dale Owen, Quaker Elias Hicks, and Count Volney.
At age 17 he became a teacher which helped start his career as a writer. He made his first trip to New Orleans with his brother Jeff in 1848, and remained there for several months as an editor of the New Orleans Crescent, but, after falling out with his bosses, returned to Brooklyn http://www.bartleby.com/65/wh/WhitmnW.html where he became the editor of The Brooklyn Times *. On his return trip, he passed through several American 'frontier' cities that would later play so heavily into his work including St. Louis and Chicago.
After returning for Brooklyn, Whitman continued to work as a journalist and editor for various newspapers. In particular, his work for the New York Aurora and the Democratic Review exposed him to the literary culture of which he later became a part. Whitman himself cited his assignment from the Aurora to cover a series of lectures given by Ralph Waldo Emerson as a turning point in his thinking.
After losing his job as editor of the Daily Eagle because of his abolitionist sentiment and his support of the free-soil movement, Whitman self-published an early edition of Leaves of Grass in 1855 with Rome Brothers.
Except for his own anonymous reviews, the early edition of the book received little attention. One exception was Ralph Waldo Emerson, the philosopher and essayist. A few prominent intellectuals such as Oliver Wendell Holmes were outwardly opposed to Whitman and found his sensuality obscene and utterly homosexual.
It was not until 1864 that Leaves of Grass found a publisher other than Whitman. That 1860 re-issue was greatly enlarged, containing two new sections, "Children of Adam" and "Calamus". * This revising of Leaves of Grass would continue for the rest of his life, and by 1892, Leaves of Grass had been reissued in more than seven different versions.
English composers of the early 20th century, notably Gustav Holst, Frederick Delius, and Ralph Vaughan Williams, felt a strong affinity for Whitman's poetry. Williams' Symphony #1, "A Sea Symphony", uses Whitman's poems superbly, as does his "Dona Nobis Pacem".
Whitman's political views generally reflected the 19th-century classical liberalism. On free trade he stated: "The spirit of the tariff is malevolent. It flies in the face of all American ideals. I hate it root and branch. It helps a few rich men to get rich, it helps the great mass of poor men to get poorer. I am for free trade because I am for anything that will break down the barriers between peoples. I want to see the countries all wide open." A little discussed aspect of Walt Whitman's political views, Walt Whitman wrote in the Brooklyn Eagle as a staunch supporter of the Mexican American War (see Walt Whitman quotes).
In 1862, Whitman first came face-to-face with the tragedy of the American Civil War when he traveled to Virginia to visit his brother George who had been wounded in battle. Whitman was so moved by the scene in the Virginia hospital that he traveled to Washington D.C. and remained there as an unofficial nurse in the army hospital *.
He remained at the hospital and used money he earned from his writings or from donations by various fans to buy more equipment for the hospital until his health declined in 1873.
After his stroke, his fame grew substantially both at home and abroad. Mostly it was stimulated by several prominent British writers criticizing the American academy for not recognizing Whitman's talents. These included William Rossetti and Anne Gilchrist. At this time in his life, Whitman also had a prominent group of national and international disciples, including Canadian writer and physician Richard Bucke. *
During his later years, Whitman ventured out on only two significant journeys: to Colorado in 1879 and to Boston to visit Emerson in 1881. Whitman died on March 26, 1892, and was buried in Camden's Harleigh Cemetery. *
Although Whitman left Long Island at age 22, he is still much revered there and especially in his native Huntington where a large shopping mall, high school and major road are all named in his honor.
An extensive collection of Walt Whitman's manuscripts is maintained in the Library of Congress largely thanks to the efforts of Russian immigrant Charles Feinberg. Feinberg preserved Whitman's manuscripts and promoted his poetry so intensely through a period when Whitman's fame largely declined that University of Paris-Sorbonne Professor Steven Asselineau claimed "for nearly half a century Feinberg was in a way Whitman's representative on earth" .
Walt Whitman's influence on contemporary North American poetry is so enormous that it has been said that American poetry divides into two camps: that which naturally flows from Whitman and that which consciously strives to reject it. Whitman's great talents presented a complex paradox for the modernist poets T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, who recognized Whitman's value, but feared the implications of his influence.
During the height of modernism, Whitman continued to present "a problem" until he was rescued by such influential poets as William Carlos Williams and Hart Crane. Later, Allan Ginsberg and the beat poets would become the most vociferous champions of Whitman's expansive, abundant, humanistic America. Ginsberg begins his famous poem "Supermarket in California" with a reference to Walt Whitman. The hand of Whitman can be seen working in such diverse contemporary poets as John Berryman, Galway Kinnell, Langston Hughes, Philip Levine, Kenneth Koch, James Wright, Joy Harjo, William Carlos Williams, Mary Oliver, and June Jordan, to name only a few.
Whitman is also reverenced by international poets ranging from Pablo Neruda to Rimbaud to Federico García Lorca.
Yale professor and literary critic Harold Bloom considers Walt Whitman to be among the five most important U.S. poets of all time (along with Emily Dickinson, Wallace Stevens, Hart Crane, and Robert Frost).
Whitman was also a huge influence on the English novelist and poet, D.H. Lawrence.
1819 births | 1892 deaths | People from Long Island | American Civil War people | American poets | Autodidacts | Bisexual writers | Pederasts | Dutch Americans | English Americans | Gay writers | Western mystics | American nurses | Quakers | Unitarian Universalists
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