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Walt Whitman

Walter Whitman Jr. (/ˈhwɪtmən/; May 31, 1819 – March 26, 1892) was an American poet, essayist and journalist. A 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 controversial in his time, particularly his 1855 poetry collection Leaves of Grass, which was described as obscene for its overt sensuality.

Walt Whitman
Whitman in 1887
BornWalter Whitman Jr.
(1819-05-31)May 31, 1819
West Hills, New York, U.S.
DiedMarch 26, 1892(1892-03-26) (aged 72)
Camden, New Jersey, U.S.
Resting placeCamden, New Jersey U.S.
Occupation
  • Poet
  • essayist
  • journalist
Signature

Born in Huntington on Long Island, Whitman resided in Brooklyn as a child and through much of his career. At the age of 11, he left formal schooling to go to work. Later, Whitman worked as a journalist, a teacher, and a government clerk. Whitman's major poetry collection, Leaves of Grass, was first published in 1855 with his own money and became well known. 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. During the American Civil War, he went to Washington, D.C. and worked in hospitals caring for the wounded. His poetry often focused on both loss and healing. On the death of Abraham Lincoln, whom Whitman greatly admired, he wrote his well known poems, "O Captain! My Captain!" and "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd", and gave a series of lectures. After a stroke towards the end of his life, Whitman moved to Camden, New Jersey, where his health further declined. When he died at the age of 72, his funeral was a public event.[2][3]

Whitman's influence on poetry remains strong. Mary Whitall Smith Costelloe argued: "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."[4] Modernist poet Ezra Pound called Whitman "America's poet ... He is America."[5]

Life and work

Early life

Walter Whitman was born on May 31, 1819, in West Hills, Town of Huntington, Long Island, to parents with interests in Quaker thought, Walter (1789–1855) and Louisa Van Velsor Whitman (1795–1873). The second of nine children,[6] he was immediately nicknamed "Walt" to distinguish him from his father.[7] Walter Whitman Sr. named three of his seven sons after American leaders: Andrew Jackson, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. The oldest was named Jesse. The couple's sixth son, the youngest, was named Edward.[7] At the age of four, Whitman moved with his family from West Hills to Brooklyn, living in a series of homes, in part due to bad investments.[8] Whitman looked back on his childhood as generally restless and unhappy, given his family's difficult economic status.[9] 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.[10]

At the age of 11 Whitman concluded formal schooling.[11] 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.[12] There, Whitman learned about the printing press and typesetting.[13] He may have written "sentimental bits" of filler material for occasional issues.[14] Clements aroused controversy when he and two friends attempted to dig up the corpse of the Quaker minister Elias Hicks to create a plaster mold of his head.[15] Clements left the Patriot shortly afterward, possibly as a result of the controversy.[16]

Early career

 
Whitman at the age of 28

The following summer Whitman worked for another printer, Erastus Worthington, in Brooklyn.[17] 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.[17] While at the Star, Whitman became a regular patron of the local library, joined a town debating society, began attending theater performances,[18] and anonymously published some of his earliest poetry in the New-York Mirror.[19] At the age of 16 in May 1835, Whitman left the Star and Brooklyn.[20] He moved to New York City to work as a compositor[21] though, in later years, Whitman could not remember where.[22] He attempted to find further work but had difficulty, in part due to a severe fire in the printing and publishing district,[22] and in part due to a general collapse in the economy leading up to the Panic of 1837.[23] In May 1836, he rejoined his family, now living in Hempstead, Long Island.[24] Whitman taught intermittently at various schools until the spring of 1838, though he was not satisfied as a teacher.[25]

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.[26] There are no known surviving copies of the Long-Islander published under Whitman.[27] 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.[26] He left shortly thereafter, and made another attempt at teaching from the winter of 1840 to the spring of 1841.[28] One story, possibly apocryphal, tells of Whitman's being chased away from a teaching job in Southold, New York, in 1840. After a local preacher called him a "Sodomite", Whitman was allegedly tarred and feathered. Biographer Justin Kaplan notes that the story is likely untrue, because Whitman regularly vacationed in the town thereafter.[29] Biographer Jerome Loving calls the incident a "myth".[30] During this time, Whitman 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.[31]

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.[32] 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.[33] While working for the latter institution, many of his publications were in the area of music criticism, and it is during this time that he became a devoted lover of Italian opera through reviewing performances of works by Bellini, Donizetti, and Verdi. This new interest had an impact on his writing in free verse. He later said, "But for the opera, I could never have written Leaves of Grass."[34]

Throughout the 1840s he contributed freelance fiction and poetry to various periodicals,[35] including Brother Jonathan magazine edited by John Neal.[36] 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.[37] Whitman was a delegate to the 1848 founding convention of the Free Soil Party, which was concerned about the threat slavery would pose to free white labor and northern businessmen moving into the newly colonised western territories. Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison derided the party philosophy as "white manism".[38]

In 1852, he serialized a novel titled Life and Adventures of Jack Engle in six installments of New York's The Sunday Dispatch.[39] In 1858, Whitman published a 47,000 word series called Manly Health and Training under the pen name Mose Velsor.[40][41] Apparently he drew the name Velsor from Van Velsor, his mother's family name.[42] This self-help guide recommends beards, nude sunbathing, comfortable shoes, bathing daily in cold water, eating meat almost exclusively, plenty of fresh air, and getting up early each morning. Present-day writers have called Manly Health and Training "quirky",[43] "so over the top",[44] "a pseudoscientific tract",[45] and "wacky".[40]

Leaves of Grass

Whitman claimed that after years of competing for "the usual rewards", he determined to become a poet.[46] He first experimented with a variety of popular literary genres that appealed to the cultural tastes of the period.[47] As early as 1850, he began writing what would become Leaves of Grass,[48] a collection of poetry that he would continue editing and revising until his death.[49] Whitman intended to write a distinctly American epic[50] and used free verse with a cadence based on the Bible.[51] 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".[52]

 
Walt Whitman, aged 35, from the frontispiece to Leaves of Grass, Fulton St., Brooklyn, N.Y., steel engraving by Samuel Hollyer from a lost daguerreotype by Gabriel Harrison

Whitman paid for the publication of the first edition of Leaves of Grass himself[52] and had it printed at a local print shop during their breaks from commercial jobs.[53] A total of 795 copies were printed.[54] No author is named; instead, facing the title page was an engraved portrait done by Samuel Hollyer,[55] but 500 lines into 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".[56] The inaugural volume of poetry was preceded by a prose preface of 827 lines. The succeeding untitled twelve poems totaled 2315 lines—1336 lines belonging to the first untitled poem, later called "Song of Myself". 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.[57] The first edition of Leaves of Grass was widely distributed and stirred up significant interest,[58] in part due to Emerson's praise,[59] but was occasionally criticized for the seemingly "obscene" nature of the poetry.[60] Geologist Peter Lesley wrote to Emerson, calling the book "trashy, profane & obscene" and the author "a pretentious ass".[61] Whitman embossed a quote from Emerson's letter, "I greet you at the beginning of a great career", in gold leaf on the spine of the second edition, effectively inventing the modern book blurb. Laura Dassow Walls, Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame, wrote: "In one stroke, Whitman had given birth to the modern cover blurb, quite without Emerson's permission."[62]

On July 11, 1855, a few days after Leaves of Grass was published, Whitman's father died at the age of 65.[63] 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.[64] In the end, the edition went to retail, with 20 additional poems,[65] in August 1856.[66] Leaves of Grass was revised and re-released in 1860,[67] 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 Amos Bronson Alcott and Henry David Thoreau.[68]

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.[69] As an editor, he oversaw the paper's contents, contributed book reviews, and wrote editorials.[70] He left the job in 1859, though it is unclear whether he was fired or chose to leave.[71] Whitman, who typically kept detailed notebooks and journals, left very little information about himself in the late 1850s.[72]

Civil War years

 
Whitman as photographed by Mathew Brady
 
Walt Whitman's handwritten manuscript for "Broadway, 1861"

As the American Civil War was beginning, Whitman published his poem "Beat! Beat! Drums!" as a patriotic rally call for the North.[73] Whitman's brother George had joined the Union army in the 51st New York Infantry Regiment and began sending Whitman several vividly detailed letters of the battle front.[74] 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.[75] He made his way south immediately to find him, though his wallet was stolen on the way.[76] "Walking all day and night, unable to ride, trying to get information, trying to get access to big people", Whitman later wrote,[77] he eventually found George alive, with only a superficial wound on his cheek.[75] 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.[76]

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.[78] He would write of this experience in "The Great Army of the Sick", published in a New York newspaper in 1863[79] and, 12 years later, in a book called Memoranda During the War.[80] He then contacted Emerson, this time to ask for help in obtaining a government post.[76] 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.[81]

The Whitman family had a difficult end to 1864. On September 30, 1864, Whitman's brother George was captured by Confederates in Virginia,[82] and another brother, Andrew Jackson, died of tuberculosis compounded by alcoholism on December 3.[83] That month, Whitman committed his brother Jesse to the Kings County Lunatic Asylum.[84] 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.[85] Whitman began the new appointment on January 24, 1865, with a yearly salary of $1,200.[86] A month later, on February 24, 1865, George was released from capture and granted a furlough because of his poor health.[85] By May 1, Whitman received a promotion to a slightly higher clerkship[86] and published Drum-Taps.[87]

Effective June 30, 1865, however, Whitman was fired from his job.[87] His dismissal came from the new Secretary of the Interior, former Iowa Senator James Harlan.[86] 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.[88] O'Connor protested until J. Hubley Ashton had Whitman transferred to the Attorney General's office on July 1.[89] O'Connor, though, was still upset and vindicated Whitman by publishing a biased and exaggerated biographical study, The Good Gray Poet, in January 1866.[90] The fifty-cent pamphlet defended Whitman as a wholesome patriot, established the poet's nickname and increased his popularity.[91] 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.[92]

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."[93] In August 1866, he took a month off to prepare a new edition of Leaves of Grass which would not be published until 1867 after difficulty in finding a publisher.[94] He hoped it would be its last edition.[95] In February 1868, Poems of Walt Whitman was published in England thanks to the influence of William Michael Rossetti,[96] with minor changes that Whitman reluctantly approved.[97] The edition became popular in England, especially with endorsements from the highly respected writer Anne Gilchrist.[98] 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.[99] As Whitman's international fame increased, he remained at the attorney general's office until January 1872.[100] He spent much of 1872 caring for his mother, who was now nearly eighty and struggling with arthritis.[101] He also traveled and was invited to Dartmouth College to give the commencement address on June 26, 1872.[102]

Health decline and death

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

After suffering a paralytic stroke in early 1873, Whitman was induced to move from Washington to the home of his brother—George Washington Whitman, an engineer—at 431 Stevens Street in Camden, New Jersey. His mother, having fallen ill, was also there and died that same year in May. Both events were difficult for Whitman and left him depressed. He remained at his brother's home until buying his own in 1884.[103] However, before purchasing his home, he spent the greatest period of his residence in Camden at his brother's home on Stevens Street. While in residence there he was very productive, publishing three versions of Leaves of Grass among other works. He was also last fully physically active in this house, receiving both Oscar Wilde and Thomas Eakins. His other brother, Edward, an "invalid" since birth, lived in the house.

When his brother and sister-in-law were forced to move for business reasons, he bought his own house at 328 Mickle Street (now 330 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard).[104] First taken care of by tenants, he was completely bedridden for most of his time in Mickle Street. During this time, he began socializing with Mary Oakes Davis—the widow of a sea captain. She was a neighbor, boarding with a family in Bridge Avenue just a few blocks from Mickle Street.[105] 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.[106] During this time, Whitman produced further editions of Leaves of Grass in 1876, 1881, and 1889.

While in South Jersey, Whitman spent a good portion of his time in the then quite pastoral community of Laurel Springs, between 1876 and 1884, converting one of the Stafford Farm buildings to his summer home. The restored summer home has been preserved as a museum by the local historical society. Part of his Leaves of Grass was written here, and in his Specimen Days he wrote of the spring, creek and lake. To him, Laurel Lake was "the prettiest lake in: either America or Europe".[107]

As the end of 1891 approached, he prepared a final edition of Leaves of Grass, a version that 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."[108] Preparing for death, Whitman commissioned a granite mausoleum shaped like a house for $4,000[109] and visited it often during construction.[110] 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."[111]

Walt Whitman died on March 26, 1892,[112] at his home in Camden, New Jersey at the age of 72.[113] An autopsy revealed his lungs had diminished to one-eighth their normal breathing capacity, a result of bronchial pneumonia,[109] 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".[114] A public viewing of his body was held at his Camden home; more than 1,000 people visited in three hours.[2] Whitman's oak coffin was barely visible because of all the flowers and wreaths left for him.[114] Four days after his death, he was buried in his tomb at Harleigh Cemetery in Camden.[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.[115] Later, the remains of Whitman's parents and two of his brothers and their families were moved to the mausoleum.[116]

Writing

 
Portrait of Whitman by Thomas Eakins, 1887–88

Whitman's work broke the boundaries of poetic form and is generally prose-like.[1] Its signature style deviates from the course set by his predecessors and includes "idiosyncratic treatment of the body and the soul as well as of the self and the other."[117] It uses unusual images and symbols, including rotting leaves, tufts of straw, and debris.[118] Whitman openly wrote about death and sexuality, including prostitution.[95] He is often labeled 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.[119] He emphasized this connection especially in "Song of Myself" by using an all-powerful first-person narration.[120] An American epic, it deviated from the historic use of an elevated hero and instead assumed the identity of the common people.[121] Leaves of Grass also responded to the impact of recent urbanization in the United States on the masses.[122]

Lifestyle and beliefs

 
Walt Whitman

Alcohol

Whitman was a vocal proponent of temperance and in his youth rarely drank alcohol. He once stated he did not taste "strong liquor" until he was 30[123] and occasionally argued for prohibition.[124] His first novel, Franklin Evans, or The Inebriate, published November 23, 1842, is a temperance novel.[125] Whitman wrote the novel at the height of the popularity of the Washingtonian movement, a movement that was plagued with contradictions, as was Franklin Evans.[126] Years later Whitman claimed he was embarrassed by the book[127] and called it "damned rot".[128] He dismissed it by saying he wrote the novel in three days solely for money while under the influence of alcohol.[129] Even so, he wrote other pieces recommending temperance, including The Madman and a short story "Reuben's Last Wish".[130] Later in life he was more liberal with alcohol, enjoying local wines and champagne.[131]

Religion

Whitman was deeply influenced by deism. He denied any one faith was more important than another, and embraced all religions equally.[132] 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".[132] 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."[133] Whitman was a religious skeptic: though he accepted all churches, he believed in none.[132] God, to Whitman, was both immanent and transcendent and the human soul was immortal and in a state of progressive development.[134] American Philosophy: An Encyclopedia classes him as one of several figures who "took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world."[135]

Sexuality

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

Though biographers continue to debate Whitman's sexuality, he is usually described as either homosexual or bisexual in his feelings and attractions. Whitman's sexual orientation is generally assumed on the basis of his poetry, though this assumption has been disputed. His poetry depicts love and sexuality in a more earthy, individualistic way common in American culture before the medicalization of sexuality in the late 19th century.[136][137] 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".[138]

Whitman had intense friendships with many men and boys throughout his life. Some biographers have suggested that he did not actually engage in sexual relationships with males,[139] while others cite letters, journal entries, and other sources that they claim as proof of the sexual nature of some of his relationships.[140] English poet and critic John Addington Symonds spent 20 years in correspondence trying to pry the answer from him.[141] In 1890 he wrote to Whitman: "In your conception of Comradeship, do you contemplate the possible intrusion of those semi-sexual emotions and actions which no doubt do occur between men?" In reply, Whitman denied that his work had any such implication, asserting "[T]hat the calamus part has even allow'd the possibility of such construction as mention'd is terrible—I am fain to hope the pages themselves are not to be even mention'd for such gratuitous and quite at this time entirely undream'd & unreck'd possibility of morbid inferences—wh' are disavow'd by me and seem damnable", and insisting that he had fathered six illegitimate children. Some contemporary scholars are skeptical of the veracity of Whitman's denial or the existence of the children he claimed.[142][143][144][145]

Peter Doyle may be the most likely candidate for the love of Whitman's life.[146][147][148] 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."[149] In his notebooks, Whitman disguised Doyle's initials using the code "16.4" (P.D. being the 16th and 4th letters of the alphabet).[147] Oscar Wilde met Whitman in the United States in 1882 and told the homosexual-rights activist George Cecil Ives that Whitman's sexual orientation was beyond question—"I have the kiss of Walt Whitman still on my lips."[150] The only explicit description of Whitman's sexual activities is secondhand. In 1924, Edward Carpenter told Gavin Arthur of a sexual encounter in his youth with Whitman, the details of which Arthur recorded in his journal.[151][152][153] Late in his life, when Whitman was asked outright whether his "Calamus" poems were homosexual—John Addington Symonds inquired about "athletic friendship," "the love of man for man," or "the Love of Friends"[154]—he chose not to respond.[155][156] The manuscript of his love poem "Once I Pass'd Through A Populous City", written when Whitman was 29, indicates it was originally about a man.[157]

 
Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett

Another possible lover was Bill Duckett. As a teenager, he lived on the same street in Camden and moved in with Whitman, living with him a number of years and serving him in various roles. Duckett was 15 when Whitman bought his house at 328 Mickle Street. From at least 1880, Duckett and his grandmother, Lydia Watson, were boarders, subletting space from another family at 334 Mickle Street. Because of this proximity, Duckett and Whitman met as neighbors. 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.[158] Their photograph (left) 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.[159] Yet another intense relationship of Whitman with a young man was the one with Harry Stafford, with whose family Whitman stayed when at Timber Creek, and whom he first met when Stafford was 18, in 1876. Whitman gave Stafford a ring, which was returned and re-given over the course of a stormy relationship lasting several 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."[160]

There is also some evidence that Whitman had sexual relationships with women. He had a romantic friendship with a New York actress, Ellen Grey, in the spring of 1862, but it is not known whether it was also sexual. He still had a photograph of her decades later, when he moved to Camden, and he called her "an old sweetheart of mine".[161] In a letter, dated August 21, 1890, he claimed: "I have had six children—two are dead." This claim has never been corroborated.[162] 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".[163] As Whitman biographer Jerome Loving wrote, "the discussion of Whitman's sexual orientation will probably continue in spite of whatever evidence emerges."[139]

Sunbathing and swimming

Whitman reportedly enjoyed bathing and sunbathing naked.[164] In Manly Health and Training, using the pseudonym Mose Velsor, he advised men to swim naked.[165] In A Sun-bathed Nakedness, he wrote,

Never before did I get so close to Nature; never before did she come so close to me ... Nature was naked, and I was also ... Sweet, sane, still Nakedness in Nature! – ah if poor, sick, prurient humanity in cities might really know you once more! Is not nakedness indecent? No, not inherently. It is your thought, your sophistication, your fear, your respectability, that is indecent. There come moods when these clothes of ours are not only too irksome to wear, but are themselves indecent.

Shakespeare authorship

Whitman was an adherent of the Shakespeare authorship question, refusing to believe in the historical 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 in 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.[166]

Slavery

Like many in the Free Soil Party who were concerned about the threat slavery would pose to free white labor and northern businessmen exploiting the newly colonized western territories,[167] Whitman opposed the extension of slavery in the United States and supported the Wilmot Proviso.[168] 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".[169] 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.[168] 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[170] and was concerned at the increasing number of African-Americans in the legislature; as David Reynolds notes, Whitman wrote in prejudiced terms of these new voters and politicians, calling them "blacks, with about as much intellect and calibre (in the mass) as so many baboons."[171] George Hutchinson and David Drews have written that "what little is known about the early development of Whitman's racial awareness suggests that he imbibed the prevailing white prejudices of his time and place, thinking of black people as servile, shiftless, ignorant, and given to stealing," but that despite his views remaining largely unchanged, "readers of the twentieth century, including black ones, imagined him as a fervent antiracist."[172]

Nationalism

Whitman is often described as America's national poet, creating an image of the United States for itself. "Although he is often considered a champion of democracy and equality, Whitman constructs a hierarchy with himself at the head, America below, and the rest of the world in a subordinate position."[173] In his study "The Pragmatic Whitman: Reimagining American Democracy", Stephen John Mack suggests that critics, who tend to ignore it, should look again at Whitman's nationalism: "Whitman's seemingly mawkish celebrations of the United States ... [are] one of those problematic features of his works that teachers and critics read past or explain away" (xv–xvi). Nathanael O'Reilly in an essay on "Walt Whitman's Nationalism in the First Edition of Leaves of Grass" claims that "Whitman's imagined America is arrogant, expansionist, hierarchical, racist and exclusive; such an America is unacceptable to Native Americans, African-Americans, immigrants, the disabled, the infertile, and all those who value equal rights."[173] Whitman's nationalism avoided issues concerning the treatment of Native Americans. As George Hutchinson and David Drews further suggest in an essay "Racial attitudes": "Clearly, Whitman could not consistently reconcile the ingrained, even foundational, racist character of the United States with its egalitarian ideals. He could not even reconcile such contradictions in his own psyche." The authors concluded their essay with:[172]

Because of the radically democratic and egalitarian aspects of his poetry, readers generally expect, and desire for, Whitman to be among the literary heroes that transcended the racist pressures that abounded in all spheres of public discourse during the nineteenth century. He did not, at least not consistently; nonetheless his poetry has been a model for democratic poets of all nations and races, right up to our own day. How Whitman could have been so prejudiced, and yet so effective in conveying an egalitarian and antiracist sensibility in his poetry, is a puzzle yet to be adequately addressed.

In reference to the Mexican-American War, Whitman wrote in 1864 that Mexico was "the only [country] to whom we have ever really done wrong."[174] In 1883, celebrating the 333rd anniversary of Santa Fe, Whitman argued that the indigenous and Spanish-Indian elements would supply leading traits in the "composite American identity of the future."[175]

As to our aboriginal or Indian population — the Aztec in the South, and many a tribe in the North and West — I know it seems to be agreed that they must gradually dwindle as time rolls on, and in a few generations more leave only a reminiscence, a blank. But I am not at all clear about that. As America, from its many far-back sources and current supplies, develops, adapts, entwines, faithfully identifies its own — are we to see it cheerfully accepting and using all the contributions of foreign lands from the whole outside globe — and then rejecting the only ones distinctively its own — the autochthonic ones? As to the Spanish stock of our Southwest, it is certain to me that we do not begin to appreciate the splendor and sterling value of its race element. Who knows but that element, like the course of some subterranean river, dipping invisibly for a hundred or two years, is now to emerge in broadest flow and permanent action?[176]

Legacy and influence

 
Whitman was honored on a 'Famous Americans Series' Postal issue, in 1940.

Walt Whitman has been claimed as the first "poet of democracy" in the United States, a title meant to reflect his ability to write in a singularly American character. An American-British friend of Whitman, Mary Whitall Smith 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."[4] Andrew Carnegie called him "the great poet of America so far".[177] Whitman considered himself a messiah-like figure in poetry.[178] 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".[179]

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.[180]

In his own time, Whitman attracted an influential coterie of disciples and admirers. Other admirers included the Eagle Street College, an informal group established in 1885 at the home of James William Wallace in Eagle Street, Bolton, to read and discuss the poetry of Whitman. The group subsequently became known as the Bolton Whitman Fellowship or Whitmanites. Its members held an annual "Whitman Day" celebration around the poet's birthday.[181]

American poets

Whitman is one of the most influential American poets. Modernist poet Ezra Pound called Whitman "America's poet ... He is America."[5] To poet Langston Hughes, who wrote "I, too, sing America", Whitman was a literary hero.[182] 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 such as Adrienne Rich, Alicia Ostriker, and Gary Snyder.[183] Lawrence Ferlinghetti numbered himself among Whitman's "wild children", and the title of Ferlinghetti's 1961 collection Starting from San Francisco is a deliberate reference to Whitman's Starting from Paumanok.[184] June Jordan published a pivotal essay entitled "For the Sake of People's Poetry: Walt Whitman and the Rest of Us", praising Whitman as a democratic poet whose works speak to people of color from all backgrounds.[185] United States poet laureate Joy Harjo, who is a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, counts Whitman among her influences.[186]

Latin American poets

Whitman's poetry influenced Latin American and Caribbean poets in the 19th and 20th centuries, starting with Cuban poet, philosopher, and nationalist leader José Martí, who published essays in Spanish on Whitman's writings in 1887.[187][188][189] Álvaro Armando Vasseur's 1912 translations further raised Whitman's profile in Latin America.[190] Peruvian vanguardist César Vallejo, Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, and Argentine Jorge Luis Borges acknowledged Walt Whitman's influence.[190]

European authors

Some, like Oscar Wilde and Edward Carpenter, viewed Whitman both as a prophet of a utopian future and of same-sex desire – the passion of comrades. This aligned with their own desires for a future of brotherly socialism.[191] Whitman also influenced Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, and was a 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.[192]

Film and television

Whitman's life and verse have been referenced in a substantial number of works of film and video. In the movie Beautiful Dreamers (Hemdale Films, 1992) Whitman was portrayed by Rip Torn. Whitman visits an insane asylum in London, Ontario, where some of his ideas are adopted as part of an occupational therapy program.[193]

In Dead Poets Society (1989) by Peter Weir, teacher John Keating inspires his students with the works of Whitman, Shakespeare and John Keats.[193][194]

Whitman's poem "Yonnondio" influenced both a book (Yonnondio: From the Thirties, 1974) by Tillie Olsen and a sixteen-minute film, Yonnondio (1994) by Ali Mohamed Selim.[193]

Whitman's poem "I Sing the Body Electric" (1855) was used by Ray Bradbury as the title of a short story and a short story collection. Bradbury's story was adapted for the Twilight Zone episode of May 18, 1962, in which a bereaved family buys a made-to-order robot grandmother to forever love and serve the family.[195] "I Sing the Body Electric" inspired the showcase finale in the movie Fame (1980), a diverse fusion of gospel, rock, and orchestra.[193][196]

Music and audio recordings

Whitman's poetry has been set to music by more than 500 composers; indeed it has been suggested that his poetry has been set to music more than that of any other American poet except for Emily Dickinson and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.[197][198] Those who have set his poems to music include John Adams; Ernst Bacon; Leonard Bernstein; Benjamin Britten; Rhoda Coghill; David Conte; Ronald Corp; George Crumb; Frederick Delius; Howard Hanson; Karl Amadeus Hartmann; Hans Werner Henze; Bernard Herrmann;[199]Jennifer Higdon;[200] Paul Hindemith;[201] Ned Rorem;[202] Howard Skempton; Eva Ruth Spalding; Williametta Spencer; Charles Villiers Stanford; Robert Strassburg;[203] Ivana Marburger Themmen;[204] Rossini Vrionides;[205] Ralph Vaughan Williams;[206] Kurt Weill;[207] Helen L. Weiss;[208] Charles Wood; and Roger Sessions.[209] Crossing, an opera composed by Matthew Aucoin and inspired by Whitman's Civil War diaries, premiered in 2015.[210]

In 2014, German publisher Hörbuch Hamburg [de] issued the bilingual double-CD audio book of the Kinder Adams/Children of Adam cycle, based on translations by Kai Grehn [de] in the 2005 Children of Adam from Leaves of Grass (Galerie Vevais), accompanying a collection of nude photography by Paul Cava. The audio release included a complete reading by Iggy Pop, as well as readings by Marianne Sägebrecht; Martin Wuttke; Birgit Minichmayr; Alexander Fehling; Lars Rudolph; Volker Bruch; Paula Beer; Josef Osterndorf; Ronald Lippok; Jule Böwe; and Robert Gwisdek.[211][212] In 2014 composer John Zorn released On Leaves of Grass, an album inspired by and dedicated to Whitman.[213]

Namesake recognition

 
Walt Whitman statue at the Walt Whitman Bridge Entrance, 3100 S Broad St, Philadelphia PA

The Walt Whitman Bridge, which crosses the Delaware River near his home in Camden, was opened on May 16, 1957.[214] In 1997, the Walt Whitman Community School in Dallas opened, becoming the first private high school catering to LGBT youth.[215] His other namesakes include Walt Whitman High School (Bethesda, Maryland), Walt Whitman High School (Huntington Station, New York), the Walt Whitman Shops (formerly called "Walt Whitman Mall") in Huntington Station, Long Island, New York, near his birthplace,[216] and Walt Whitman Road located in Huntington Station and Melville, New York.

Whitman was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame in 2009,[217] and, in 2013, he was inducted into the Legacy Walk, an outdoor public display that celebrates LGBT history and people.[218]

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.

A coed summer camp founded in 1948 in Piermont, New Hampshire, is named after Whitman.[219][220]

A crater on Mercury is also named for him.[221]

A service area on the New Jersey Turnpike in Cherry Hill is named for him.

Works

See also

References

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  211. ^ Pop, Iggy; Beer, Paula; Böwe, Jule; Bruch, Volker; Fehling, Alexander; Gwisdek, Robert; Minichmayr, Birgit; Ostendorf, Josef [in German]; Rudolph, Lars; Sägebrecht, Marianne; Wuttke, Martin (August 25, 2019) [2014]. Grehn, Kai [in German] (ed.). "Iggy Pop spricht Walt Whitman - Kinder Adams – Children of Adam: Von Kai Grehn nach einem Text von Walt Whitman" (in German). RB/Deutschlandradio Kultur/SWR. from the original on January 11, 2023. Retrieved January 11, 2022. [52:29]
  212. ^ Schöberlein, Stefan (2016). . Walt Whitman Quarterly Review. 33 (3): 311–312. doi:10.13008/0737-0679.2210. ISSN 0737-0679. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 4, 2016.
  213. ^ "Welcome to Tzadik". www.tzadik.com. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  214. ^ . Delaware River Port Authority of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. 2013. Archived from the original on November 12, 2017. Retrieved December 2, 2017.
  215. ^ Company, Johnson Publishing (September 22, 1997). Jet. Johnson Publishing Company.
  216. ^ Reserved, Simon Property Group, L. P. and/or Its Affiliates (NYSE: SPG), © Copyright 1999-2022 All Rights. "Walt Whitman Shops®". www.simon.com. Retrieved January 9, 2022.
  217. ^ New Jersey to Bon Jovi: You Give Us a Good Name Yahoo News, February 2, 2009.
  218. ^ . Chicago Phoenix. Archived from the original on March 13, 2016.
  219. ^ Camp Walt Whitman April 28, 2017, at the Wayback Machine July 1, 2016.
  220. ^ Domius, Susan (August 14, 2008). "A Place and an Era in Which Time Could Stand Still". The New York Times. Retrieved November 20, 2018.
  221. ^ "Mercury". We Name the Stars. Retrieved October 11, 2020.
  222. ^ "Walt Whitman’s Newly Discovered 'Manly Health and Training'", Walt Whitman Quarterly Review, Volume 33, Issue 3/4, 2016.
  223. ^ Wineapple, Brenda, "'I Have Let Whitman Alone’: Horace Traubel's monumental chronicle of Whitman’s reflections, ruminations, analyses, and affirmations", The New York Review of Books, April 18, 2019.

Sources

External links

Archives

  • Walt Whitman papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
  • Walt Whitman documents at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
  • Walt Whitman, "The Bible as Poetry". Manuscript 1883 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center.
  • Walt Whitman collection 1884–1892 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center.
  • Walt Whitman collection. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
  • Walt Whitman collection, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania.
  • Walt Whitman collection at L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Brigham Young University.
  • "The Untimeliness of the Walt Whitman Exhibition at the New York Public Library: An Open Letter to Trustees," by Charles F. Heartman, at the John J. Wilcox, Jr. LGBT Archives, William Way LGBT Community Center.
  • Horace Traubel collection of Walt Whitman papers at Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Museums and Press.
  • Susan Jaffe Tane collection of Walt Whitman, 1842-2012, held by the Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature, New York Public Library.

Exhibitions

  • Walt Whitman in His Time and Ours at Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Museums and Press, February 12 to June 14, 2019
  • Revising Himself: Walt Whitman and Leaves of Grass at the Library of Congress, "Exhibition Celebrates 150 Years of Walt Whitman's 'Leaves of Grass'", May 16 to December 3, 2005
  • Whitman Vignettes: Camden and Philadelphia at Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania, May 28 to August 23, 2019
  • Walt Whitman Bard of Democracy at the Morgan Library and Museum, June 7 to September 15, 2019
  • Walt Whitman: America’s Poet at the New York Public Library, March 29 to August 30, 2019
  • Poet of the Body: New York’s Walt Whitman at the Grolier Club, May 15 to July 27, 2019
External video
  Booknotes interview with Reynolds on Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography, April 28, 1996, C-SPAN

Historic sites

  • Walt Whitman Birthplace State Historic Site
  • Walt Whitman Camden Home Historic Site

Other external links

  • Walt Whitman at Curlie
  • Walt Whitman: Online Resources at the Library of Congress.
  • The Walt Whitman Archive includes all editions of Leaves of Grass in page-images and transcription, as well as manuscripts, criticism, and biography.
  • Walt Whitman: Profile, Poems, Essays at Poets.org.
  • Brooklyn Daily Eagle Online. Brooklyn Public Library.
  • Works by Walt Whitman at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Walt Whitman at Internet Archive
  • Works by Walt Whitman at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Walt Whitman at Find a Grave
  • Johnson, John A., and Lloyd D. Worley. "Criminals' Responses to Religious Themes in Whitman's Poetry" (). In J. M. Day and W. S. Laufer (eds), Crime, Values, and Religion, Norwood, NJ: Ablex, 1987, 133–51.

walt, whitman, other, uses, disambiguation, walter, whitman, 1819, march, 1892, american, poet, essayist, journalist, humanist, part, transition, between, transcendentalism, realism, incorporating, both, views, works, whitman, among, most, influential, poets, . For other uses see Walt Whitman disambiguation Walter Whitman Jr ˈ hw ɪ t m e n May 31 1819 March 26 1892 was an American poet essayist and journalist A 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 controversial in his time particularly his 1855 poetry collection Leaves of Grass which was described as obscene for its overt sensuality Walt WhitmanWhitman in 1887BornWalter Whitman Jr 1819 05 31 May 31 1819West Hills New York U S DiedMarch 26 1892 1892 03 26 aged 72 Camden New Jersey U S Resting placeCamden New Jersey U S OccupationPoetessayistjournalistSignatureBorn in Huntington on Long Island Whitman resided in Brooklyn as a child and through much of his career At the age of 11 he left formal schooling to go to work Later Whitman worked as a journalist a teacher and a government clerk Whitman s major poetry collection Leaves of Grass was first published in 1855 with his own money and became well known 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 During the American Civil War he went to Washington D C and worked in hospitals caring for the wounded His poetry often focused on both loss and healing On the death of Abraham Lincoln whom Whitman greatly admired he wrote his well known poems O Captain My Captain and When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d and gave a series of lectures After a stroke towards the end of his life Whitman moved to Camden New Jersey where his health further declined When he died at the age of 72 his funeral was a public event 2 3 Whitman s influence on poetry remains strong Mary Whitall Smith Costelloe argued 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 4 Modernist poet Ezra Pound called Whitman America s poet He is America 5 Contents 1 Life and work 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early career 1 3 Leaves of Grass 1 4 Civil War years 1 5 Health decline and death 2 Writing 2 1 Poetic theory 3 Lifestyle and beliefs 3 1 Alcohol 3 2 Religion 3 3 Sexuality 3 4 Sunbathing and swimming 3 5 Shakespeare authorship 3 6 Slavery 3 7 Nationalism 4 Legacy and influence 4 1 American poets 4 2 Latin American poets 4 3 European authors 4 4 Film and television 4 5 Music and audio recordings 4 6 Namesake recognition 5 Works 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External links 9 1 Archives 9 2 Exhibitions 9 3 Historic sites 9 4 Other external linksLife and work EditEarly life Edit Walter Whitman was born on May 31 1819 in West Hills Town of Huntington Long Island to parents with interests in Quaker thought Walter 1789 1855 and Louisa Van Velsor Whitman 1795 1873 The second of nine children 6 he was immediately nicknamed Walt to distinguish him from his father 7 Walter Whitman Sr named three of his seven sons after American leaders Andrew Jackson George Washington and Thomas Jefferson The oldest was named Jesse The couple s sixth son the youngest was named Edward 7 At the age of four Whitman moved with his family from West Hills to Brooklyn living in a series of homes in part due to bad investments 8 Whitman looked back on his childhood as generally restless and unhappy given his family s difficult economic status 9 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 10 At the age of 11 Whitman concluded formal schooling 11 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 12 There Whitman learned about the printing press and typesetting 13 He may have written sentimental bits of filler material for occasional issues 14 Clements aroused controversy when he and two friends attempted to dig up the corpse of the Quaker minister Elias Hicks to create a plaster mold of his head 15 Clements left the Patriot shortly afterward possibly as a result of the controversy 16 Early career Edit Whitman at the age of 28 The following summer Whitman worked for another printer Erastus Worthington in Brooklyn 17 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 17 While at the Star Whitman became a regular patron of the local library joined a town debating society began attending theater performances 18 and anonymously published some of his earliest poetry in the New York Mirror 19 At the age of 16 in May 1835 Whitman left the Star and Brooklyn 20 He moved to New York City to work as a compositor 21 though in later years Whitman could not remember where 22 He attempted to find further work but had difficulty in part due to a severe fire in the printing and publishing district 22 and in part due to a general collapse in the economy leading up to the Panic of 1837 23 In May 1836 he rejoined his family now living in Hempstead Long Island 24 Whitman taught intermittently at various schools until the spring of 1838 though he was not satisfied as a teacher 25 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 26 There are no known surviving copies of the Long Islander published under Whitman 27 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 26 He left shortly thereafter and made another attempt at teaching from the winter of 1840 to the spring of 1841 28 One story possibly apocryphal tells of Whitman s being chased away from a teaching job in Southold New York in 1840 After a local preacher called him a Sodomite Whitman was allegedly tarred and feathered Biographer Justin Kaplan notes that the story is likely untrue because Whitman regularly vacationed in the town thereafter 29 Biographer Jerome Loving calls the incident a myth 30 During this time Whitman 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 31 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 32 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 33 While working for the latter institution many of his publications were in the area of music criticism and it is during this time that he became a devoted lover of Italian opera through reviewing performances of works by Bellini Donizetti and Verdi This new interest had an impact on his writing in free verse He later said But for the opera I could never have written Leaves of Grass 34 Throughout the 1840s he contributed freelance fiction and poetry to various periodicals 35 including Brother Jonathan magazine edited by John Neal 36 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 37 Whitman was a delegate to the 1848 founding convention of the Free Soil Party which was concerned about the threat slavery would pose to free white labor and northern businessmen moving into the newly colonised western territories Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison derided the party philosophy as white manism 38 In 1852 he serialized a novel titled Life and Adventures of Jack Engle in six installments of New York s The Sunday Dispatch 39 In 1858 Whitman published a 47 000 word series called Manly Health and Training under the pen name Mose Velsor 40 41 Apparently he drew the name Velsor from Van Velsor his mother s family name 42 This self help guide recommends beards nude sunbathing comfortable shoes bathing daily in cold water eating meat almost exclusively plenty of fresh air and getting up early each morning Present day writers have called Manly Health and Training quirky 43 so over the top 44 a pseudoscientific tract 45 and wacky 40 Leaves of Grass Edit Main article Leaves of Grass Whitman claimed that after years of competing for the usual rewards he determined to become a poet 46 He first experimented with a variety of popular literary genres that appealed to the cultural tastes of the period 47 As early as 1850 he began writing what would become Leaves of Grass 48 a collection of poetry that he would continue editing and revising until his death 49 Whitman intended to write a distinctly American epic 50 and used free verse with a cadence based on the Bible 51 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 52 Walt Whitman aged 35 from the frontispiece to Leaves of Grass Fulton St Brooklyn N Y steel engraving by Samuel Hollyer from a lost daguerreotype by Gabriel Harrison Whitman paid for the publication of the first edition of Leaves of Grass himself 52 and had it printed at a local print shop during their breaks from commercial jobs 53 A total of 795 copies were printed 54 No author is named instead facing the title page was an engraved portrait done by Samuel Hollyer 55 but 500 lines into 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 56 The inaugural volume of poetry was preceded by a prose preface of 827 lines The succeeding untitled twelve poems totaled 2315 lines 1336 lines belonging to the first untitled poem later called Song of Myself 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 57 The first edition of Leaves of Grass was widely distributed and stirred up significant interest 58 in part due to Emerson s praise 59 but was occasionally criticized for the seemingly obscene nature of the poetry 60 Geologist Peter Lesley wrote to Emerson calling the book trashy profane amp obscene and the author a pretentious ass 61 Whitman embossed a quote from Emerson s letter I greet you at the beginning of a great career in gold leaf on the spine of the second edition effectively inventing the modern book blurb Laura Dassow Walls Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame wrote In one stroke Whitman had given birth to the modern cover blurb quite without Emerson s permission 62 On July 11 1855 a few days after Leaves of Grass was published Whitman s father died at the age of 65 63 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 64 In the end the edition went to retail with 20 additional poems 65 in August 1856 66 Leaves of Grass was revised and re released in 1860 67 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 Amos Bronson Alcott and Henry David Thoreau 68 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 69 As an editor he oversaw the paper s contents contributed book reviews and wrote editorials 70 He left the job in 1859 though it is unclear whether he was fired or chose to leave 71 Whitman who typically kept detailed notebooks and journals left very little information about himself in the late 1850s 72 Civil War years Edit Whitman as photographed by Mathew Brady Walt Whitman s handwritten manuscript for Broadway 1861 As the American Civil War was beginning Whitman published his poem Beat Beat Drums as a patriotic rally call for the North 73 Whitman s brother George had joined the Union army in the 51st New York Infantry Regiment and began sending Whitman several vividly detailed letters of the battle front 74 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 75 He made his way south immediately to find him though his wallet was stolen on the way 76 Walking all day and night unable to ride trying to get information trying to get access to big people Whitman later wrote 77 he eventually found George alive with only a superficial wound on his cheek 75 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 76 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 78 He would write of this experience in The Great Army of the Sick published in a New York newspaper in 1863 79 and 12 years later in a book called Memoranda During the War 80 He then contacted Emerson this time to ask for help in obtaining a government post 76 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 81 The Whitman family had a difficult end to 1864 On September 30 1864 Whitman s brother George was captured by Confederates in Virginia 82 and another brother Andrew Jackson died of tuberculosis compounded by alcoholism on December 3 83 That month Whitman committed his brother Jesse to the Kings County Lunatic Asylum 84 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 85 Whitman began the new appointment on January 24 1865 with a yearly salary of 1 200 86 A month later on February 24 1865 George was released from capture and granted a furlough because of his poor health 85 By May 1 Whitman received a promotion to a slightly higher clerkship 86 and published Drum Taps 87 Effective June 30 1865 however Whitman was fired from his job 87 His dismissal came from the new Secretary of the Interior former Iowa Senator James Harlan 86 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 88 O Connor protested until J Hubley Ashton had Whitman transferred to the Attorney General s office on July 1 89 O Connor though was still upset and vindicated Whitman by publishing a biased and exaggerated biographical study The Good Gray Poet in January 1866 90 The fifty cent pamphlet defended Whitman as a wholesome patriot established the poet s nickname and increased his popularity 91 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 92 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 93 In August 1866 he took a month off to prepare a new edition of Leaves of Grass which would not be published until 1867 after difficulty in finding a publisher 94 He hoped it would be its last edition 95 In February 1868 Poems of Walt Whitman was published in England thanks to the influence of William Michael Rossetti 96 with minor changes that Whitman reluctantly approved 97 The edition became popular in England especially with endorsements from the highly respected writer Anne Gilchrist 98 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 99 As Whitman s international fame increased he remained at the attorney general s office until January 1872 100 He spent much of 1872 caring for his mother who was now nearly eighty and struggling with arthritis 101 He also traveled and was invited to Dartmouth College to give the commencement address on June 26 1872 102 Health decline and death Edit Whitman spent his last years at his home in Camden New Jersey Today it is open to the public as the Walt Whitman House After suffering a paralytic stroke in early 1873 Whitman was induced to move from Washington to the home of his brother George Washington Whitman an engineer at 431 Stevens Street in Camden New Jersey His mother having fallen ill was also there and died that same year in May Both events were difficult for Whitman and left him depressed He remained at his brother s home until buying his own in 1884 103 However before purchasing his home he spent the greatest period of his residence in Camden at his brother s home on Stevens Street While in residence there he was very productive publishing three versions of Leaves of Grass among other works He was also last fully physically active in this house receiving both Oscar Wilde and Thomas Eakins His other brother Edward an invalid since birth lived in the house When his brother and sister in law were forced to move for business reasons he bought his own house at 328 Mickle Street now 330 Dr Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard 104 First taken care of by tenants he was completely bedridden for most of his time in Mickle Street During this time he began socializing with Mary Oakes Davis the widow of a sea captain She was a neighbor boarding with a family in Bridge Avenue just a few blocks from Mickle Street 105 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 106 During this time Whitman produced further editions of Leaves of Grass in 1876 1881 and 1889 While in South Jersey Whitman spent a good portion of his time in the then quite pastoral community of Laurel Springs between 1876 and 1884 converting one of the Stafford Farm buildings to his summer home The restored summer home has been preserved as a museum by the local historical society Part of his Leaves of Grass was written here and in his Specimen Days he wrote of the spring creek and lake To him Laurel Lake was the prettiest lake in either America or Europe 107 As the end of 1891 approached he prepared a final edition of Leaves of Grass a version that has been nicknamed the Deathbed Edition He wrote L of G at last complete after 33 y rs of hackling at it all times amp moods of my life fair weather amp foul all parts of the land and peace amp war young amp old 108 Preparing for death Whitman commissioned a granite mausoleum shaped like a house for 4 000 109 and visited it often during construction 110 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 111 America source source An 1890 recording thought to be Walt Whitman reading the opening four lines of his poem America Problems playing this file See media help Walt Whitman died on March 26 1892 112 at his home in Camden New Jersey at the age of 72 113 An autopsy revealed his lungs had diminished to one eighth their normal breathing capacity a result of bronchial pneumonia 109 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 114 A public viewing of his body was held at his Camden home more than 1 000 people visited in three hours 2 Whitman s oak coffin was barely visible because of all the flowers and wreaths left for him 114 Four days after his death he was buried in his tomb at Harleigh Cemetery in Camden 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 115 Later the remains of Whitman s parents and two of his brothers and their families were moved to the mausoleum 116 Writing Edit Portrait of Whitman by Thomas Eakins 1887 88 Whitman s work broke the boundaries of poetic form and is generally prose like 1 Its signature style deviates from the course set by his predecessors and includes idiosyncratic treatment of the body and the soul as well as of the self and the other 117 It uses unusual images and symbols including rotting leaves tufts of straw and debris 118 Whitman openly wrote about death and sexuality including prostitution 95 He is often labeled the father of free verse though he did not invent it 1 Poetic theory Edit 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 119 He emphasized this connection especially in Song of Myself by using an all powerful first person narration 120 An American epic it deviated from the historic use of an elevated hero and instead assumed the identity of the common people 121 Leaves of Grass also responded to the impact of recent urbanization in the United States on the masses 122 Lifestyle and beliefs Edit Walt Whitman Alcohol Edit Whitman was a vocal proponent of temperance and in his youth rarely drank alcohol He once stated he did not taste strong liquor until he was 30 123 and occasionally argued for prohibition 124 His first novel Franklin Evans or The Inebriate published November 23 1842 is a temperance novel 125 Whitman wrote the novel at the height of the popularity of the Washingtonian movement a movement that was plagued with contradictions as was Franklin Evans 126 Years later Whitman claimed he was embarrassed by the book 127 and called it damned rot 128 He dismissed it by saying he wrote the novel in three days solely for money while under the influence of alcohol 129 Even so he wrote other pieces recommending temperance including The Madman and a short story Reuben s Last Wish 130 Later in life he was more liberal with alcohol enjoying local wines and champagne 131 Religion Edit Whitman was deeply influenced by deism He denied any one faith was more important than another and embraced all religions equally 132 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 132 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 133 Whitman was a religious skeptic though he accepted all churches he believed in none 132 God to Whitman was both immanent and transcendent and the human soul was immortal and in a state of progressive development 134 American Philosophy An Encyclopedia classes him as one of several figures who took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world 135 Sexuality Edit Whitman and Peter Doyle one of the men with whom Whitman was believed to have had an intimate relationship Though biographers continue to debate Whitman s sexuality he is usually described as either homosexual or bisexual in his feelings and attractions Whitman s sexual orientation is generally assumed on the basis of his poetry though this assumption has been disputed His poetry depicts love and sexuality in a more earthy individualistic way common in American culture before the medicalization of sexuality in the late 19th century 136 137 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 138 Whitman had intense friendships with many men and boys throughout his life Some biographers have suggested that he did not actually engage in sexual relationships with males 139 while others cite letters journal entries and other sources that they claim as proof of the sexual nature of some of his relationships 140 English poet and critic John Addington Symonds spent 20 years in correspondence trying to pry the answer from him 141 In 1890 he wrote to Whitman In your conception of Comradeship do you contemplate the possible intrusion of those semi sexual emotions and actions which no doubt do occur between men In reply Whitman denied that his work had any such implication asserting T hat the calamus part has even allow d the possibility of such construction as mention d is terrible I am fain to hope the pages themselves are not to be even mention d for such gratuitous and quite at this time entirely undream d amp unreck d possibility of morbid inferences wh are disavow d by me and seem damnable and insisting that he had fathered six illegitimate children Some contemporary scholars are skeptical of the veracity of Whitman s denial or the existence of the children he claimed 142 143 144 145 Peter Doyle may be the most likely candidate for the love of Whitman s life 146 147 148 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 149 In his notebooks Whitman disguised Doyle s initials using the code 16 4 P D being the 16th and 4th letters of the alphabet 147 Oscar Wilde met Whitman in the United States in 1882 and told the homosexual rights activist George Cecil Ives that Whitman s sexual orientation was beyond question I have the kiss of Walt Whitman still on my lips 150 The only explicit description of Whitman s sexual activities is secondhand In 1924 Edward Carpenter told Gavin Arthur of a sexual encounter in his youth with Whitman the details of which Arthur recorded in his journal 151 152 153 Late in his life when Whitman was asked outright whether his Calamus poems were homosexual John Addington Symonds inquired about athletic friendship the love of man for man or the Love of Friends 154 he chose not to respond 155 156 The manuscript of his love poem Once I Pass d Through A Populous City written when Whitman was 29 indicates it was originally about a man 157 Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett Another possible lover was Bill Duckett As a teenager he lived on the same street in Camden and moved in with Whitman living with him a number of years and serving him in various roles Duckett was 15 when Whitman bought his house at 328 Mickle Street From at least 1880 Duckett and his grandmother Lydia Watson were boarders subletting space from another family at 334 Mickle Street Because of this proximity Duckett and Whitman met as neighbors 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 158 Their photograph left 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 159 Yet another intense relationship of Whitman with a young man was the one with Harry Stafford with whose family Whitman stayed when at Timber Creek and whom he first met when Stafford was 18 in 1876 Whitman gave Stafford a ring which was returned and re given over the course of a stormy relationship lasting several 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 160 There is also some evidence that Whitman had sexual relationships with women He had a romantic friendship with a New York actress Ellen Grey in the spring of 1862 but it is not known whether it was also sexual He still had a photograph of her decades later when he moved to Camden and he called her an old sweetheart of mine 161 In a letter dated August 21 1890 he claimed I have had six children two are dead This claim has never been corroborated 162 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 163 As Whitman biographer Jerome Loving wrote the discussion of Whitman s sexual orientation will probably continue in spite of whatever evidence emerges 139 Sunbathing and swimming Edit Whitman reportedly enjoyed bathing and sunbathing naked 164 In Manly Health and Training using the pseudonym Mose Velsor he advised men to swim naked 165 In A Sun bathed Nakedness he wrote Never before did I get so close to Nature never before did she come so close to me Nature was naked and I was also Sweet sane still Nakedness in Nature ah if poor sick prurient humanity in cities might really know you once more Is not nakedness indecent No not inherently It is your thought your sophistication your fear your respectability that is indecent There come moods when these clothes of ours are not only too irksome to wear but are themselves indecent Shakespeare authorship Edit Whitman was an adherent of the Shakespeare authorship question refusing to believe in the historical 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 in 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 166 Slavery Edit Like many in the Free Soil Party who were concerned about the threat slavery would pose to free white labor and northern businessmen exploiting the newly colonized western territories 167 Whitman opposed the extension of slavery in the United States and supported the Wilmot Proviso 168 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 169 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 168 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 170 and was concerned at the increasing number of African Americans in the legislature as David Reynolds notes Whitman wrote in prejudiced terms of these new voters and politicians calling them blacks with about as much intellect and calibre in the mass as so many baboons 171 George Hutchinson and David Drews have written that what little is known about the early development of Whitman s racial awareness suggests that he imbibed the prevailing white prejudices of his time and place thinking of black people as servile shiftless ignorant and given to stealing but that despite his views remaining largely unchanged readers of the twentieth century including black ones imagined him as a fervent antiracist 172 Nationalism Edit Whitman is often described as America s national poet creating an image of the United States for itself Although he is often considered a champion of democracy and equality Whitman constructs a hierarchy with himself at the head America below and the rest of the world in a subordinate position 173 In his study The Pragmatic Whitman Reimagining American Democracy Stephen John Mack suggests that critics who tend to ignore it should look again at Whitman s nationalism Whitman s seemingly mawkish celebrations of the United States are one of those problematic features of his works that teachers and critics read past or explain away xv xvi Nathanael O Reilly in an essay on Walt Whitman s Nationalism in the First Edition of Leaves of Grass claims that Whitman s imagined America is arrogant expansionist hierarchical racist and exclusive such an America is unacceptable to Native Americans African Americans immigrants the disabled the infertile and all those who value equal rights 173 Whitman s nationalism avoided issues concerning the treatment of Native Americans As George Hutchinson and David Drews further suggest in an essay Racial attitudes Clearly Whitman could not consistently reconcile the ingrained even foundational racist character of the United States with its egalitarian ideals He could not even reconcile such contradictions in his own psyche The authors concluded their essay with 172 Because of the radically democratic and egalitarian aspects of his poetry readers generally expect and desire for Whitman to be among the literary heroes that transcended the racist pressures that abounded in all spheres of public discourse during the nineteenth century He did not at least not consistently nonetheless his poetry has been a model for democratic poets of all nations and races right up to our own day How Whitman could have been so prejudiced and yet so effective in conveying an egalitarian and antiracist sensibility in his poetry is a puzzle yet to be adequately addressed In reference to the Mexican American War Whitman wrote in 1864 that Mexico was the only country to whom we have ever really done wrong 174 In 1883 celebrating the 333rd anniversary of Santa Fe Whitman argued that the indigenous and Spanish Indian elements would supply leading traits in the composite American identity of the future 175 As to our aboriginal or Indian population the Aztec in the South and many a tribe in the North and West I know it seems to be agreed that they must gradually dwindle as time rolls on and in a few generations more leave only a reminiscence a blank But I am not at all clear about that As America from its many far back sources and current supplies develops adapts entwines faithfully identifies its own are we to see it cheerfully accepting and using all the contributions of foreign lands from the whole outside globe and then rejecting the only ones distinctively its own the autochthonic ones As to the Spanish stock of our Southwest it is certain to me that we do not begin to appreciate the splendor and sterling value of its race element Who knows but that element like the course of some subterranean river dipping invisibly for a hundred or two years is now to emerge in broadest flow and permanent action 176 Legacy and influence Edit Whitman was honored on a Famous Americans Series Postal issue in 1940 Walt Whitman has been claimed as the first poet of democracy in the United States a title meant to reflect his ability to write in a singularly American character An American British friend of Whitman Mary Whitall Smith 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 4 Andrew Carnegie called him the great poet of America so far 177 Whitman considered himself a messiah like figure in poetry 178 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 179 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 180 In his own time Whitman attracted an influential coterie of disciples and admirers Other admirers included the Eagle Street College an informal group established in 1885 at the home of James William Wallace in Eagle Street Bolton to read and discuss the poetry of Whitman The group subsequently became known as the Bolton Whitman Fellowship or Whitmanites Its members held an annual Whitman Day celebration around the poet s birthday 181 American poets Edit Whitman is one of the most influential American poets Modernist poet Ezra Pound called Whitman America s poet He is America 5 To poet Langston Hughes who wrote I too sing America Whitman was a literary hero 182 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 such as Adrienne Rich Alicia Ostriker and Gary Snyder 183 Lawrence Ferlinghetti numbered himself among Whitman s wild children and the title of Ferlinghetti s 1961 collection Starting from San Francisco is a deliberate reference to Whitman s Starting from Paumanok 184 June Jordan published a pivotal essay entitled For the Sake of People s Poetry Walt Whitman and the Rest of Us praising Whitman as a democratic poet whose works speak to people of color from all backgrounds 185 United States poet laureate Joy Harjo who is a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets counts Whitman among her influences 186 Latin American poets Edit Whitman s poetry influenced Latin American and Caribbean poets in the 19th and 20th centuries starting with Cuban poet philosopher and nationalist leader Jose Marti who published essays in Spanish on Whitman s writings in 1887 187 188 189 Alvaro Armando Vasseur s 1912 translations further raised Whitman s profile in Latin America 190 Peruvian vanguardist Cesar Vallejo Chilean poet Pablo Neruda and Argentine Jorge Luis Borges acknowledged Walt Whitman s influence 190 European authors Edit Some like Oscar Wilde and Edward Carpenter viewed Whitman both as a prophet of a utopian future and of same sex desire the passion of comrades This aligned with their own desires for a future of brotherly socialism 191 Whitman also influenced Bram Stoker author of Dracula and was a 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 192 Film and television Edit Whitman s life and verse have been referenced in a substantial number of works of film and video In the movie Beautiful Dreamers Hemdale Films 1992 Whitman was portrayed by Rip Torn Whitman visits an insane asylum in London Ontario where some of his ideas are adopted as part of an occupational therapy program 193 In Dead Poets Society 1989 by Peter Weir teacher John Keating inspires his students with the works of Whitman Shakespeare and John Keats 193 194 Whitman s poem Yonnondio influenced both a book Yonnondio From the Thirties 1974 by Tillie Olsen and a sixteen minute film Yonnondio 1994 by Ali Mohamed Selim 193 Whitman s poem I Sing the Body Electric 1855 was used by Ray Bradbury as the title of a short story and a short story collection Bradbury s story was adapted for the Twilight Zone episode of May 18 1962 in which a bereaved family buys a made to order robot grandmother to forever love and serve the family 195 I Sing the Body Electric inspired the showcase finale in the movie Fame 1980 a diverse fusion of gospel rock and orchestra 193 196 Music and audio recordings Edit Whitman s poetry has been set to music by more than 500 composers indeed it has been suggested that his poetry has been set to music more than that of any other American poet except for Emily Dickinson and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 197 198 Those who have set his poems to music include John Adams Ernst Bacon Leonard Bernstein Benjamin Britten Rhoda Coghill David Conte Ronald Corp George Crumb Frederick Delius Howard Hanson Karl Amadeus Hartmann Hans Werner Henze Bernard Herrmann 199 Jennifer Higdon 200 Paul Hindemith 201 Ned Rorem 202 Howard Skempton Eva Ruth Spalding Williametta Spencer Charles Villiers Stanford Robert Strassburg 203 Ivana Marburger Themmen 204 Rossini Vrionides 205 Ralph Vaughan Williams 206 Kurt Weill 207 Helen L Weiss 208 Charles Wood and Roger Sessions 209 Crossing an opera composed by Matthew Aucoin and inspired by Whitman s Civil War diaries premiered in 2015 210 In 2014 German publisher Horbuch Hamburg de issued the bilingual double CD audio book of the Kinder Adams Children of Adam cycle based on translations by Kai Grehn de in the 2005 Children of Adam from Leaves of Grass Galerie Vevais accompanying a collection of nude photography by Paul Cava The audio release included a complete reading by Iggy Pop as well as readings by Marianne Sagebrecht Martin Wuttke Birgit Minichmayr Alexander Fehling Lars Rudolph Volker Bruch Paula Beer Josef Osterndorf Ronald Lippok Jule Bowe and Robert Gwisdek 211 212 In 2014 composer John Zorn released On Leaves of Grass an album inspired by and dedicated to Whitman 213 Namesake recognition Edit Walt Whitman statue at the Walt Whitman Bridge Entrance 3100 S Broad St Philadelphia PA The Walt Whitman Bridge which crosses the Delaware River near his home in Camden was opened on May 16 1957 214 In 1997 the Walt Whitman Community School in Dallas opened becoming the first private high school catering to LGBT youth 215 His other namesakes include Walt Whitman High School Bethesda Maryland Walt Whitman High School Huntington Station New York the Walt Whitman Shops formerly called Walt Whitman Mall in Huntington Station Long Island New York near his birthplace 216 and Walt Whitman Road located in Huntington Station and Melville New York Whitman was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame in 2009 217 and in 2013 he was inducted into the Legacy Walk an outdoor public display that celebrates LGBT history and people 218 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 A coed summer camp founded in 1948 in Piermont New Hampshire is named after Whitman 219 220 A crater on Mercury is also named for him 221 A service area on the New Jersey Turnpike in Cherry Hill is named for him Works EditFranklin Evans or The Inebriate A Tale of the Times 1842 The Half Breed A Tale of the Western Frontier 1846 Life and Adventures of Jack Engle serialized in 1852 39 Leaves of Grass 1855 the first of seven editions through 1891 Manly Health and Training 1858 222 Drum Taps 1865 Democratic Vistas 1871 Memoranda During the War 1876 Specimen Days 1882 The Wound Dresser Letters written to his mother from the hospitals in Washington during the Civil War edited by Richard M Bucke 1898 Walt Whitman Speaks His Final Thoughts on Life Writing Spirituality and the Promise of Americaas told toHorace Traubel edited by Brenda Wineapple 2019 223 See also EditLGBT history in New York 19th century Walt Whitman and Abraham Lincoln Walt Whitman s lectures on Abraham LincolnReferences Edit a b c Reynolds 314 a b c Loving 480 a b Reynolds 589 a b Reynolds 4 a b Pound Ezra Walt Whitman Whitman Roy Harvey Pearce ed Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Inc 1962 8 Miller 17 a b Loving 29 Loving 30 Reynolds 24 Reynolds 33 34 Loving 32 Reynolds 44 Kaplan 74 Callow 30 Callow 29 Loving 34 a b Reynolds 45 Callow 32 Kaplan 79 Kaplan 77 Callow 35 a b Kaplan 81 Loving 36 Callow 36 Loving 37 a b Reynolds 60 Loving 38 Kaplan 93 94 Kaplan 87 Loving 514 Stacy 25 Callow 56 Stacy 6 Brasher Thomas L 2008 Judith Tick Paul E Beaudoin ed Walt Whitman s Conversion To Opera Music in the USA A Documentary Companion Oxford University Press 207 Reynolds 83 84 Merlob Maya 2012 Chapter 5 Celebrated Rubbish John Neal and the Commercialization of Early American Romanticism In Watts Edward Carlson David J eds John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture Lewisburg Pennsylvania Bucknell University Press p 119 n18 ISBN 978 1 61148 420 5 Stacy 87 91 Alcott L M Elbert S 1997 Louisa May Alcott on Race Sex and Slavery Northeastern University Press ISBN 9781555533076 a b Schuessler Jennifer February 20 2017 In a Walt Whitman Novel Lost for 165 Years Clues to Leaves of Grass The New York Times a b Schuessler Jennifer April 29 2016 Found Walt Whitman s Guide to Manly Health The New York Times Retrieved May 1 2016 Now Whitman s self help guide meets democratic manifesto is being published online in its entirety by a scholarly journal in what some experts are calling the biggest new Whitman discovery in decades Special Double Issue Walt Whitman s Newly Discovered Manly Health and Training Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 33 3 Winter Spring 2016 ISSN 0737 0679 Retrieved May 1 2016 Whitman Walt 1882 Genealogy Van Velsor and Whitman Bartleby com excerpt from Specimen Days Retrieved May 2 2016 THE LATER years of the last century found the Van Velsor family my mother s side living on their own farm at Cold Spring Long Island New York State Onion Rebecca May 2 2016 Finding the Poetry in Walt Whitman s Newly Rediscovered Health Advice Slate com Retrieved May 2 2016 a quirky document full of prescriptions that seem curiously modern Cueto Emma May 2 2016 Walt Whitman s Advice Book For Men Has Just Been Discovered And Its Contents Are Surprising Bustle Retrieved May 2 2016 And there are lots of other tidbits that with a little modern rewording would be right at home in the pages of a modern men s magazine or even satirizing modern ideas about manliness because they re so over the top Turpin Zachary Winter Spring 2016 Introduction to Walt Whitman s Manly Health and Training Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 33 3 149 doi 10 13008 0737 0679 2205 ISSN 0737 0679 Archived from the original PDF on May 3 2016 Retrieved May 3 2016 a pseudoscientific tract Kaplan 185 Reynolds 85 Loving 154 Miller 55 Miller 155 Kaplan 187 a b Callow 226 Loving 178 Kaplan 198 Callow 227 Review of Leaves of Grass 1855 The Walt Whitman Archive Kaplan 203 Reynolds 340 Callow 232 Loving 414 Kaplan 211 Walls Laura Dassow Henry David Thoreau A Life 394 Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press 2017 ISBN 978 0 226 59937 3 Kaplan 229 Reynolds 348 Callow 238 Kaplan 207 Loving 238 Reynolds 363 Callow 225 Reynolds 368 Loving 228 Reynolds 375 Callow 283 Reynolds 410 a b Kaplan 268 a b c Reynolds 411 Callow 286 Callow 293 Kaplan 273 Callow 297 Callow 295 Loving 281 Kaplan 293 294 Reynolds 454 a b Loving 283 a b c Reynolds 455 a b Loving 290 Loving 291 Kaplan 304 O Connor William Douglas 1866 The Good Gray Poet New York Bunce and Huntington The Walt Whitman Archive Reynolds 456 457 Kaplan 309 Loving 293 Kaplan 318 319 a b Loving 314 Callow 326 Kaplan 324 Callow 329 Loving 331 Reynolds 464 Kaplan 340 Loving 341 Miller 33 Haas Irvin Historic Homes of American Authors Washington D C The Preservation Press 1991 141 ISBN 0 89133 180 8 Loving 432 Reynolds 548 1976 Bicentennial publication produced for the Borough of Laurel Springs Laurel Springs History WestfieldNJ com Retrieved April 30 2013 Reynolds 586 a b Loving 479 Kaplan 49 Reynolds 587 Callow 363 Griffiths Rhys March 2017 Death of Walt Whitman History Today volume 67 issue 3 a b Reynolds 588 Theroux Phyllis 1977 The Book of Eulogies New York Simon amp Schuster p 30 Kaplan 50 Kirmizi Busra and Martin Kopacik The Affinity between the Body The Self and Nature in Whitman s Song of Myself in Academic research of SSaH 2016 p 101 ISBN 978 80 906231 8 7 Kaplan 233 Reynolds 5 Reynolds 324 Miller 78 Reynolds 332 Loving 71 Callow 75 Loving 74 Reynolds 95 Reynolds 91 Loving 75 Reynolds 97 Loving 72 Binns Henry Bryan 1905 A life of Walt Whitman London Methuen amp Co p 315 Retrieved October 10 2020 a b c Reynolds 237 Loving 353 Kuebrich David July 7 2009 Religion and the poet prophet In Kummings Donald D ed A Companion to Walt Whitman John Wiley and Sons pp 211 ISBN 978 1 4051 9551 5 Retrieved August 13 2010 Lachs John Talisse Robert eds 2007 American Philosophy An Encyclopedia p 310 ISBN 978 0415939263 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 Fone Byrne R S 1992 Masculine Landscapes Walt Whitman and the Homoerotic Text Carbondale IL Southern Illinois University Press Loving 184 185 a b Loving 19 Walt Whitman Prophet of Gay Liberation rictornorton co uk Retrieved January 9 2022 Robinson Michael Worshipping Walt Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 2010 142 143 ISBN 0691146314 Higgins Andrew C 1998 Symonds John Addington 1840 1893 In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Retrieved October 10 2020 Miller James E Jr 1998 Sex and Sexuality In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Retrieved October 10 2020 Tayson Richard 2005 The Casualties of Walt Whitman VQR A National Journal of Literature and Discussion Spring Retrieved October 11 2020 Rothenberg Gritz Jennie September 7 2012 But Were They Gay The Mystery of Same Sex Love in the 19th Century The Atlantic Retrieved October 11 2020 Kaplan Justin 2003 Walt Whitman A Life New York Harper Perennial Modern Classics p 287 a b Shively Charley 1987 Calamus Lovers Walt Whitman s Working Class Camerados San Francisco Gay Sunshine Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 917342 18 9 Reynolds 487 Kaplan 311 312 Stokes John Oscar Wilde Myths Miracles and Imitations Cambridge University Press 1996 p 194 n 7 Gay Sunshine www leylandpublications com Retrieved January 9 2022 Kantrowitz Arnie 1998 Carpenter Edward 1844 1929 In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Retrieved October 10 2020 Arthur Gavin The Circle of Sex University Books New York 1966 John Addington Symonds to Walt Whitman 7 February 1872 Correspondence The Walt Whitman Archive whitmanarchive org Retrieved April 24 2021 Reynolds 527 Reynolds David S 1996 Walt Whitman s America A Cultural Biography Vintage Books pp 198 396 577 ISBN 978 0 679 76709 1 Norton Rictor November 1974 The Homophobic Imagination An Editorial College English 274 Adams Henry 2005 Eakins Revealed The Secret Life of an American Artist Oxford Oxford University Press p 289 ISBN 9780190288877 Bohan Ruth L April 26 2006 Looking into Walt Whitman American Art 1850 1920 1st ed University Park PA Penn State University Press p 136 Folsom Ed April 1 1986 An Unknown Photograph of Whitman and Harry Stafford Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 3 4 51 52 doi 10 13008 2153 3695 1125 Archived from the original PDF on August 8 2010 Retrieved October 10 2020 Callow 278 Loving 123 Reynolds 490 Folsom Ed 1996 Whitman s Calamus Photographs In Betsy Erkkila Jay Grossman eds Breaking Bounds Whitman and American Cultural Studies Oxford University Press p 213 ISBN 978 0 19 976228 6 Velsor Mose 2016 Manly Health and Training With Off Hand Hints Toward Their Conditions PDF Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 33 3 184 310 doi 10 13008 0737 0679 2206 ISSN 0737 0679 Nelson Paul A Walt Whitman on Shakespeare Archived 2007 03 24 at the Wayback Machine Reprinted from The Shakespeare Oxford Society Newsletter Fall 1992 Volume 28 4A Klammer Martin 1998 Free Soil Party In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Retrieved October 10 2020 a b Reynolds 117 Loving 110 Reynolds 473 Reynolds 470 a b Hutchinson George Drews David 1998 Racial Attitudes In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Retrieved October 10 2020 a b O Reilly Nathanael 2009 Imagined America Walt Whitman s Nationalism in the First Edition of Leaves of Grass Irish Journal of American Studies 1 1 9 Retrieved October 11 2020 Kummings Donald D LeMaster J R 1998 Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia Garland p 427 Levin Joanna 2018 Walt Whitman in Context Cambridge University Press p 314 Folsom Ed 1997 Walt Whitman s Native Representations Cambridge University Press pp 95 96 Kaplan 22 Callow 83 Loving 475 Bloom Harold Introduction to Leaves of Grass Penguin Classics 2005 C F Sixsmith Walt Whitman Collection Archives Hub retrieved August 13 2010 Ward David C September 22 2016 What Langston Hughes Powerful Poem I Too Tells Us About America s Past and Present Smithsonian Retrieved July 31 2019 Loving 181 Foley Jack 2008 A Second Coming Contemporary Poetry Review Retrieved February 18 2010 Foundation Poetry November 7 2020 For the Sake of People s Poetry by June Jordan Poetry Foundation Retrieved November 7 2020 Poets Academy of American April 1 2019 An Interview with Joy Harjo U S Poet Laureate poets org Retrieved November 7 2020 Meyer Mary Edgar 1952 Walt Whitman s Popularity among Latin American Poets The Americas 9 1 3 15 doi 10 2307 977855 ISSN 0003 1615 JSTOR 977855 S2CID 147381491 Modernism it has been said spread the name of Whitman in Hispanic America Credit however is given to Jose Marti Santi Enrico Mario 2005 This Land of Prophets Walt Whitman in Latin America Ciphers of History New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 66 83 doi 10 1007 978 1 137 12245 2 3 ISBN 978 1 4039 7046 6 retrieved November 7 2020 Molloy S January 1 1996 His America Our America Jose Marti Reads Whitman Modern Language Quarterly 57 2 369 379 doi 10 1215 00267929 57 2 369 ISSN 0026 7929 a b Cohen Matt Price Rachel Walt Whitman in Latin America and Spain Walt Whitman Archive Translations whitmanarchive org The Walt Whitman Archive Retrieved November 7 2020 Only with Vasseur s subsequent 1912 translation did Whitman become available and important to generations of Latin American poets from the residual modernistas to the region s major twentieth century figures Robinson Michael Worshipping Walt Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 2010 143 145 ISBN 0691146314 Nuzum Eric The Dead Travel Fast Stalking Vampires from Nosferatu to Count Chocula Thomas Dunne Books 2007 141 147 ISBN 0 312 37111 X a b c d Britton Wesley A 1998 Media Interpretations of Whitman s Life and Works In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Retrieved October 10 2020 Wilmington Michael June 2 1989 MOVIE REVIEW Poets Society A Moving Elegy From Peter Weir Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 10 2020 Jewell Andrew Price Kenneth M July 7 2009 Twentieth Century Mass Media Appearances In Kummings Donald D ed A Companion to Walt Whitman John Wiley and Sons pp 211 ISBN 978 1 4051 9551 5 Retrieved August 13 2010 Stevens Daniel B 2013 Singing the Body Electric Using ePortfolios to IntegrateTeaching Learning and Assessment PDF Journal of Performing Arts Leadership in Higher Education IV Fall 22 48 Retrieved October 10 2020 American Composers Orchestra May 15 1999 Walt Whitman amp Music Sommerfeld Paul May 8 2019 Celebrating Walt Whitman s 200th Birthday In the Muse Performing Arts Blog Library of Congress Music to accompany Whitman a radio play by Norman Corwin Dooryard Bloom When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d Hindemith Five Poems of Walt Whitman Folsom Ed 2004 In Memoriam Robert Strassburg 1915 2003 Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 21 3 189 191 doi 10 13008 2153 3695 1733 Archived from the original PDF on September 3 2021 Cohen Aaron I 1987 International encyclopedia of women composers Second edition revised and enlarged ed New York ISBN 0 9617485 2 4 OCLC 16714846 Neilson Kenneth P 1963 The World of Walt Whitman Music A Bibliographical Study Kenneth P Neilson A Sea Symphony Four Walt Whitman Songs For voice and piano Texts by Walt Whitman Kurt Weill Foundation for Music Frank Weise collection of Helen Weiss papers circa 1940 1948 1966 dla library upenn edu Retrieved June 9 2021 Sessions Roger When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d DRAM Tommasini Anthony May 31 2015 Review Matthew Aucoin s Crossing Is a Taut Inspired Opera The New York Times Pop Iggy Beer Paula Bowe Jule Bruch Volker Fehling Alexander Gwisdek Robert Minichmayr Birgit Ostendorf Josef in German Rudolph Lars Sagebrecht Marianne Wuttke Martin August 25 2019 2014 Grehn Kai in German ed Iggy Pop spricht Walt Whitman Kinder Adams Children of Adam Von Kai Grehn nach einem Text von Walt Whitman in German RB Deutschlandradio Kultur SWR Archived from the original on January 11 2023 Retrieved January 11 2022 1 52 29 Schoberlein Stefan 2016 Whitman Walt Kinder Adams Children of Adam Iggy Pop Alva Noto and Tarwater Leaves of Grass review Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 33 3 311 312 doi 10 13008 0737 0679 2210 ISSN 0737 0679 Archived from the original PDF on May 4 2016 Welcome to Tzadik www tzadik com Retrieved January 9 2022 Walt Whitman Bridge Delaware River Port Authority of Pennsylvania and New Jersey 2013 Archived from the original on November 12 2017 Retrieved December 2 2017 Company Johnson Publishing September 22 1997 Jet Johnson Publishing Company Reserved Simon Property Group L P and or Its Affiliates NYSE SPG c Copyright 1999 2022 All Rights Walt Whitman Shops www simon com Retrieved January 9 2022 New Jersey to Bon Jovi You Give Us a Good Name Yahoo News February 2 2009 Boystown unveils new Legacy Walk LGBT history plaques Chicago Phoenix Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Camp Walt Whitman Archived April 28 2017 at the Wayback Machine July 1 2016 Domius Susan August 14 2008 A Place and an Era in Which Time Could Stand Still The New York Times Retrieved November 20 2018 Mercury We Name the Stars Retrieved October 11 2020 Walt Whitman s Newly Discovered Manly Health and Training Walt Whitman Quarterly Review Volume 33 Issue 3 4 2016 Wineapple Brenda I Have Let Whitman Alone Horace Traubel s monumental chronicle of Whitman s reflections ruminations analyses and affirmations The New York Review of Books April 18 2019 Sources EditCallow Philip From Noon to Starry Night A Life of Walt Whitman Chicago Ivan R Dee 1992 ISBN 0 929587 95 2 Kaplan Justin Walt Whitman A Life New York Simon and Schuster 1979 ISBN 0 671 22542 1 Loving Jerome Walt Whitman The Song of Himself University of California Press 1999 ISBN 0 520 22687 9 Miller James E Walt Whitman New York Twayne Publishers Inc 1962 Reynolds David S Walt Whitman s America A Cultural Biography New York Vintage Books 1995 ISBN 0 679 76709 6 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 4External links EditWalt Whitman at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Archives Edit Walt Whitman papers at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Walt Whitman documents at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Walt Whitman The Bible as Poetry Manuscript 1883 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Walt Whitman collection 1884 1892 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Walt Whitman collection Yale Collection of American Literature Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Walt Whitman collection Kislak Center for Special Collections Rare Books and Manuscripts University of Pennsylvania Walt Whitman collection at L Tom Perry Special Collections Brigham Young University The Untimeliness of the Walt Whitman Exhibition at the New York Public Library An Open Letter to Trustees by Charles F Heartman at the John J Wilcox Jr LGBT Archives William Way LGBT Community Center Horace Traubel collection of Walt Whitman papers at Special Collections University of Delaware Library Museums and Press Susan Jaffe Tane collection of Walt Whitman 1842 2012 held by the Henry W and Albert A Berg Collection of English and American Literature New York Public Library Exhibitions Edit Walt Whitman in His Time and Ours at Special Collections University of Delaware Library Museums and Press February 12 to June 14 2019 Revising Himself Walt Whitman and Leaves of Grass at the Library of Congress Exhibition Celebrates 150 Years of Walt Whitman s Leaves of Grass May 16 to December 3 2005 Whitman Vignettes Camden and Philadelphia at Kislak Center for Special Collections Rare Books and Manuscripts University of Pennsylvania May 28 to August 23 2019 Walt Whitman Bard of Democracy at the Morgan Library and Museum June 7 to September 15 2019 Walt Whitman America s Poet at the New York Public Library March 29 to August 30 2019 Poet of the Body New York s Walt Whitman at the Grolier Club May 15 to July 27 2019External video Booknotes interview with Reynolds on Walt Whitman s America A Cultural Biography April 28 1996 C SPANHistoric sites Edit Walt Whitman Birthplace State Historic Site Walt Whitman Camden Home Historic SiteOther external links Edit Walt Whitman at Curlie Walt Whitman Online Resources at the Library of Congress The Walt Whitman Archive includes all editions of Leaves of Grass in page images and transcription as well as manuscripts criticism and biography Walt Whitman Profile Poems Essays at Poets org Brooklyn Daily Eagle Online Brooklyn Public Library Works by Walt Whitman at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Walt Whitman at Internet Archive Works by Walt Whitman at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Walt Whitman at Find a Grave Johnson John A and Lloyd D Worley Criminals Responses to Religious Themes in Whitman s Poetry Archive In J M Day and W S Laufer eds Crime Values and Religion Norwood NJ Ablex 1987 133 51 Portals Biography Poetry New Jersey New York state Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walt Whitman amp oldid 1133368835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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