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When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd

"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" is a long poem written by American poet Walt Whitman (1819–1892) as an elegy to President Abraham Lincoln. It was written in the summer of 1865 during a period of profound national mourning in the aftermath of the president's assassination on 14 April of that year.

When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd
by Walt Whitman
The poem's first page in the 1865 edition of Sequel to Drum-Taps
Written1865 (1865)
First published inSequel to Drum-Taps (1865)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
FormPastoral elegy
MeterFree verse
PublisherGibson Brothers
(Washington, DC)
Publication date1865
Lines206
Full text
Leaves of Grass/Book XXII at Wikisource

The poem, written in free verse in 206 lines, uses many of the literary techniques associated with the pastoral elegy. Despite being an expression to the fallen president, Whitman neither mentions Lincoln by name nor discusses the circumstances of his death in the poem. Instead, he uses a series of rural and natural imagery including the symbols of the lilacs, a drooping star in the western sky (Venus), and the hermit thrush, and he employs the traditional progression of the pastoral elegy in moving from grief toward an acceptance and knowledge of death. The poem also addresses the pity of war through imagery vaguely referencing the American Civil War (1861–1865), which effectively ended only days before the assassination.

Written ten years after publishing the first edition of Leaves of Grass (1855), "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" reflects a maturing of Whitman's poetic vision from a drama of identity and romantic exuberance that has been tempered by his emotional experience of the American Civil War. Whitman included the poem as part of a quickly written sequel to a collection of poems addressing the war that was being printed at the time of Lincoln's death. These poems, collected under the titles Drum-Taps and Sequel to Drum-Taps, range in emotional context from "excitement to woe, from distant observation to engagement, from belief to resignation" and "more concerned with history than the self, more aware of the precariousness of America's present and future than of its expansive promise."[1] First published in autumn 1865, "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd"—along with 42 other poems from Drum-Taps and Sequel to Drum-Taps—was absorbed into Leaves of Grass beginning with the fourth edition, published in 1867.

The poem is one of several that Whitman wrote on Lincoln's death. Although Whitman did not consider the poem to be among his best, it has been compared in both effect and quality to several acclaimed works of English literature, including elegies such as John Milton's Lycidas (1637) and Percy Bysshe Shelley's Adonais (1821).[citation needed]

Writing history and background Edit

 
Common lilac (Syringa vulgaris)

In the late 1850s and early 1860s, Whitman established his reputation as a poet with the release of Leaves of Grass. Whitman intended to write a distinctly American epic and developed a free verse style inspired by the cadences of the King James Bible.[2][3] The small volume, first released in 1855, was considered controversial by some, with critics attacking Whitman's verse as "obscene."[4] However, it attracted praise from American Transcendentalist essayist, lecturer, and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, which contributed to fostering significant interest in Whitman's work.[5][6][7]

At the start of the American Civil War, Whitman moved from New York to Washington, D.C., where he obtained work in a series of government offices, first with the Army Paymaster's Office and later with the Bureau of Indian Affairs.[8][9] He volunteered in army hospitals as a "hospital missionary."[10] His wartime experiences informed his poetry, which matured into reflections on death and youth, the brutality of war, and patriotism, and offered stark images and vignettes of the war.[11] Whitman's brother, George Washington Whitman, had been taken prisoner in Virginia on 30 September 1864, and was held for five months in Libby Prison, a Confederate prisoner-of-war camp near Richmond, Virginia.[12] On 24 February 1865, George was granted a furlough to return home because of his poor health, and Walt Whitman travelled to his mother's home in New York to visit his brother.[13] While visiting Brooklyn, Whitman contracted to have his collection of Civil War poems, Drum-Taps, published.[14]

The Civil War had ended, and a few days later, on 14 April 1865, President Abraham Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth while attending the performance of a play at Ford's Theatre. Lincoln died the following morning. Whitman was at his mother's home when he heard the news of the president's death; in his grief he stepped outside the door to the yard, where the lilacs were blooming.[14] Many years later, Whitman recalled the weather and conditions on the day that Lincoln died in Specimen Days, where he wrote:

I remember where I was stopping at the time, the season being advanced, there were many lilacs in full bloom. By one of those caprices that enter and give tinge to events without being at all a part of them, I find myself always reminded of great tragedy of that day by the sight and odor of these blossoms. It never fails.[15]

Lincoln was the first American president to be assassinated, and his death had a long-lasting emotional impact in the United States. During the three weeks after his death, millions of Americans participated in a nationwide public pageant of grief, including a state funeral, and the 1,700-mile (2,700 km) westward journey of the funeral train from Washington, through New York, to Springfield, Illinois.[16][17]

Lincoln's public funeral in Washington was held on 19 April 1865.[18] Whitman biographer Jerome Loving believes that Whitman did not attend the public ceremonies for Lincoln in Washington, as he did not leave Brooklyn for the nation's capital until 21 April. Likewise, Whitman could not have attended ceremonies held in New York after the arrival of the funeral train, as they were observed on 24 April. Loving thus suggests that Whitman's descriptions of the funeral procession, public events, and the long train journey may have been "based on second-hand information." He does concede that Whitman in his journey from New York to Washington may have passed the Lincoln funeral train on its way to New York—possibly in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.[19]

Whitman may have recalled the imagery of lilacs from his earliest home, now the Walt Whitman Birthplace State Historic Site, which still boasts lilacs blooming in the farmhouse dooryard.[20]

Publication history Edit

 
Walt Whitman, as photographed by Mathew Brady (1823–1896)

On 1 April 1865, Whitman had signed a contract with Brooklyn printer Peter Eckler to publish Drum-Taps, a 72-page collection of 43 poems in which Whitman addressed the emotional experiences of the Civil War.[14] Drum-Taps was being printed at the time of Lincoln's assassination two weeks later. Upon learning of the president's death, Whitman delayed the printing to insert a quickly-written poem, "Hush'd Be the Camps To-Day", into the collection.[14][21] The poem's subtitle indicates it was written on 19 April 1865—four days after Lincoln's death.[22] Whitman was unsatisfied with the poem and resolved to write a fitting poem mourning Lincoln's death.[18][23]

Upon returning to Washington, Whitman contracted with Gibson Brothers to publish a pamphlet of eighteen poems that included two works directly addressing the assassination—"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" and "O Captain! My Captain!". He intended to include the pamphlet with copies of Drum-Taps.[14] The 24-page collection was titled Sequel to Drum-Taps and bore the subtitle When Lilacs Last in the Door-Yard Bloom'd and other poems.[14] The eponymous poem filled the first nine pages.[24] In October, after the pamphlet was printed, he returned to Brooklyn to have them integrated with Drum-Taps.[14]

Whitman added the poems from Drum-Taps and Sequel to Drum-Taps as a supplement to the fourth edition of Leaves of Grass printed in 1867 by William E. Chapin.[25][26][27] Whitman revised his collection Leaves of Grass throughout his life, and each additional edition included newer works, his previously published poems often with revisions or minor emendations, and reordering of the sequence of the poems. The first edition (1855) was a small pamphlet of twelve poems.[28] At his death four decades later, the collection included around 400 poems.[29] For the fourth edition (1867)—in which "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" had first been included—Leaves of Grass had been expanded to a collection of 236 poems.[30] University of Nebraska literature professor Kenneth Price and University of Iowa English professor Ed Folsom describe the 1867 edition as "the most carelessly printed and most chaotic of all the editions" citing errata and conflicts with typesetters.[31] Price and Folsom note that book had five different formats—some including the Drum-Taps poems; some without.[31]

"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" and his other three Lincoln Poems "O Captain! My Captain", "Hush'd be the Camps To-day", "This Dust Was Once the Man" (1871) were included in subsequent editions of Leaves of Grass, although in Whitman's 1871 and 1881 editions it was separated from Drum-Taps. In the 1871 edition, Whitman's four Lincoln poems were listed as a cluster titled "President Lincoln's Burial Hymn". In the 1881 edition, this cluster was renamed "Memories of President Lincoln".[32][33][34] The collection was not substantially revised after this edition—although later editions saw new poems added.[35] Leaves of Grass has never been out of print since its first publication in 1855, and "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" is among several poems from the collection that appear frequently in poetry anthologies.[36][37][38][39]

Analysis and interpretation Edit

 
Shown in the presidential booth of Ford's Theatre, from left to right, are assassin John Wilkes Booth, Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, Clara Harris, and Henry Rathbone

Structure Edit

"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" is a first-person monologue written in free verse. It is a long poem, 206 lines in length (207 according to some sources), that is cited as a prominent example of the elegy form and of narrative poetry.[40] In its final form, published in 1881 and republished to the present, the poem is divided into sixteen sections referred to as cantos or strophes that range in length from 5 or 6 lines to as many as 53 lines.[22] The poem does not possess a consistent metrical pattern, and the length of each line varies from seven syllables to as many as twenty syllables. Literary scholar Kathy Rugoff says that "the poem...has a broad scope and incorporates a strongly characterized speaker, a complex narrative action and an array of highly lyrical images."[41]

The first version of "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" that appeared in 1865 was arranged into 21 strophes.[42] It was included with this structure in the fourth edition of Leaves of Grass that was published in 1867.[25] By 1871, Whitman had combined the strophes numbered 19 and 20 into one, and the poem had 20 in total.[43] However, for the seventh edition (1881) of Leaves of Grass, the poem's final seven strophes of his original text were combined into the final three strophes of the 16-strophe poem that is familiar to readers today.[44] For the 1881 edition, the original strophes numbered 14, 15, and 16 were combined into the revised 14th strophe; strophes numbered 17 and 18 were combined into the revised 15th strophe. The material from the former strophes numbered 19, 20 and 21 in 1865 were combined for the revised 16th and final strophe in 1881.[42] According to literary critic and Harvard University professor Helen Vendler, the poem "builds up to its longest and most lyrical moment in canto 14, achieves its moral climax in canto 15, and ends with a coda of 'retrievements out of the night' in canto 16."[22]

Narrative Edit

While Whitman's "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" is an elegy to the fallen president, it does not mention him by name or the circumstances surrounding his death. This is not atypical; Whitman biographer Jerome Loving states that "traditionally elegies do not mention the name of the deceased in order to allow the lament to have universal application".[45] According to Rugoff, the poem's narrative is given by an unnamed speaker, adding:

The speaker expresses his sorrow over the death of 'him I love' and reveals his growing consciousness of his own sense of the meaning of death and the consolation he paradoxically finds in death itself. The narrative action depicts the journey of Lincoln's coffin without mentioning the president by name and portrays visions of 'the slain soldiers of war' without mentioning either the Civil War or its causes. The identifications are assumed to be superfluous, even tactless; no American could fail to understand what war was meant. Finally, in the 'carol of the bird,' the speaker recounts the song in which death is invoked, personified and celebrated.[46]

According to Vendler, the speaker's first act is to break off a sprig from the lilac bush (line 17) that he subsequently lays on Lincoln's coffin during the funeral procession (line 44–45):[22]

Here, coffin that slowly passes,
I give you my sprig of lilac.

Style and techniques Edit

 
Lincoln's funeral procession on Pennsylvania Avenue on 19 April 1865

Whitman's biographers explain that Whitman's verse is influenced by the aesthetics, musicality and cadences of phrasing and passages in the King James Bible.[47][5] Whitman employs several techniques of parallelism—a device common to Biblical poetry.[48][49] While Whitman does not use end rhyme, he employs internal rhyme in passages throughout the poem. Although Whitman's free verse does not use a consistent pattern of meter or rhyme, the disciplined use of other poetic techniques and patterns create a sense of structure. His poetry achieves a sense of cohesive structure and beauty through the internal patterns of sound, diction, specific word choice, and effect of association.[50]

The poem uses many of the literary techniques associated with the pastoral elegy, a meditative lyric genre derived from the poetic tradition of Greek and Roman antiquity.[51][52][53][54][55] Literary scholar Harold Bloom writes that "Elegies often have been used for political purposes, as a means of healing the nation."[56] A pastoral elegy uses rural imagery to address the poet's grief—a "poetic response to death" that seeks "to transmute the fact of death into an imaginatively acceptable form, to reaffirm what death has called into question—the integrity of the pastoral image of contentment." An elegy seeks, also, to "attempt to preserve the meaning of an individual's life as something of positive value when that life itself has ceased."[57][58] A typical pastoral elegy contains several features, including "a procession of mourners, the decoration of a hearse or grave, a list of flowers, the changing of the seasons, and the association of the dead person with a star or other permanent natural object."[59][60] This includes a discussion of the death, expressions of mourning, grief, anger, and consolation, and the poet's simultaneous acceptance of death's inevitability and hope for immortality.[61]

According to literary scholar James Perrin Warren, Whitman's long, musical lines rely on three important techniques—syntactic parallelism, repetition, and cataloguing.[62] Repetition is a device used by an orator or poet to lend persuasive emphasis to the sentiment, and "create a driving rhythm by the recurrence of the same sound, it can also intensify the emotion of the poem".[63] It is described as a form of parallelism that resembles a litany.[63] To achieve these techniques, Whitman employs many literary and rhetorical devices common to classical poetry and to the pastoral elegy to frame his emotional response. According to Warren, Whitman "uses anaphora, the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of lines; epistrophe, the repetition of the same words or phrase at the end of lines, and symploce (the combined use of anaphora and epistrophe), the repetition of both initial and terminal words.[64]

According to Raja Sharma, Whitman's use of anaphora forces the reader "to inhale several bits of text without pausing for breath, and this breathlessness contributes to the incantatory quality".[65] This sense of incantation in the poem and for the framework for the expansive lyricism that scholars have called "cataloguing".[66][67][68] Whitman's poetry features many examples of cataloguing where he both employs parallelism and repetition to build rhythm.[64] Scholar Betty Erkkila calls Whitman's cataloguing the "overarching figure of Leaves of Grass, and wrote:

His catalogues work by juxtaposition, image association, and by metonymy to suggest the interrelationship and identity of all things. By basing his verse in the single, end-stopped line at the same time that he fuses this line—through various linking devices—with the larger structure of the whole, Whitman weaves an overall pattern of unity in diversity.[69]

According to Daniel Hoffman, Whitman "is a poet whose hallmark is anaphora".[70] Hoffman describes the use of the anaphoric verse as "a poetry of beginnings" and that Whitman's use of its repetition and similarity at the inception of each line is "so necessary as the norm against which all variations and departures are measured...what follows is varied, the parallels and the ensuing words, phrases, and clauses lending the verse its delicacy, its charm, its power".[70] Further, the device allows Whitman "to vary the tempo or feeling, to build up climaxes or drop off in innuendoes"[70] Scholar Stanley Coffman analyzed Whitman's catalogue technique through the application of Ralph Waldo Emerson's comment that such lists are suggestive of the metamorphosis of "an imaginative and excited mind". According to Coffman, Emerson adds that because "the universe is the externalization of the soul, and its objects symbols, manifestations of the one reality behind them, Words which name objects also carry with them the whole sense of nature and are themselves to be understood as symbols. Thus a list of words (objects) will be effective in giving to the mind, under certain conditions, a heightened sense not only of reality but of the variety and abundance of its manifestations."[71]

Themes and symbolism Edit

A trinity of symbols: "Lilac and star and bird twined" Edit

Whitman's poem features three prominent motifs or images, referred to as a "trinity" of symbols, which biographer David S. Reynolds describes as autobiographical:[72][73]

  1. the lilacs represent the poet's perennial love for Lincoln;
  2. the fallen star (Venus) is Lincoln; and
  3. the hermit thrush represents death, or its chant.

"Lilac blooming perennial" Edit

 
Lilac flowers and heart-shaped leaves

According to Price and Folsom, Whitman's encounter with the lilacs in bloom in his mother's yard caused the flowers to become "viscerally bound to the memory of Lincoln's death."[14]

According to Gregory Eiselein:

Lilacs represent love, spring, life, the earthly realm, rebirth, cyclical time, a Christ figure (and thus consolation, redemption, and spiritual rebirth), a father figure, the cause of grief, and an instrument of sensual consolation. The lilacs can represent all of these meanings or none of them. They could just be lilacs.[74]

"Great star early droop'd in the western sky" Edit

 
Venus, Whitman's "western falling star", reflected in the Pacific Ocean

In the weeks before Lincoln's assassination, Whitman observed the planet Venus shining brightly in the evening sky. He later wrote of the observation, "Nor earth nor sky ever knew spectacles of superber beauty than some of the nights lately here. The western star, Venus, in the earlier hours of evening, has never been so large, so clear; it seems as if it told something, as if it held rapport indulgent with humanity, with us Americans"[75][76] In the poem, Whitman describes the disappearance of the star:

O powerful, western, fallen star!
O shades of night! O moody, tearful night!
O great star disappear'd! O the black murk that hides the star! (lines 7–9)

Literary scholar Patricia Lee Yongue identifies Lincoln as the falling star.[77] Further, she contrasts the dialectic of the "powerful western falling star" with a "nascent spring" and describes it as a metaphor for Lincoln's death meant to "evoke powerful, conflicting emotions in the poet which transport him back to that first and continuously remembered rebellion signaling the death of his own innocence."[77] Biographer Betsy Erkkila writes that Whitman's star is "the fallen star of America itself", and characterizes Whitman's association as "politicopoetic myth to counter Booth's cry on the night of the assassination—Sic Semper Tyrannis—and the increasingly popular image of Lincoln as a dictatorial leader bent on abrogating rather than preserving basic American liberties."[78] The star, seemingly immortal, is associated with Lincoln's vision for America—a vision of reconciliation and a national unity or identity that could only survive the president's death if Americans resolved to continue pursuing it.[79][80] However, Vendler says that the poem dismisses the idea of a personal immortality through the symbol of the star, saying: "the star sinks, and it is gone forever."[22]

"A shy and hidden bird" Edit

 
The hermit thrush (Catharus guttatus) is considered Whitman's alter ego in the poem.

In the summer of 1865, Whitman's friend, John Burroughs (1837–1921), an aspiring nature writer, had returned to Washington to his position at the Treasury department after a long vacation in the woods. Burroughs recalled that Whitman had been "deeply interested in what I tell him of the hermit thrush, and he says he largely used the information I have given him in one of his principal poems".[75] Burroughs described the song as "the finest sound in nature...perhaps more of an evening than a morning hymn...a voice of that calm, sweet solemnity one attains to in his best moments." Whitman took copious notes of his conversations with Burroughs on the subject, writing of the hermit thrush that it "sings oftener after sundown...is very secluded...likes shaded, dark places...His song is a hymn...in swamps—is very shy...never sings near the farm houses—never in the settlement—is the bird of the solemn primal woods & of Nature pure & holy."[81][82] Burroughs published an essay in May 1865 in which he described the hermit thrush as "quite a rare bird, of very shy and secluded habits" found "only in the deepest and most remote forests, usually in damp and swampy localities".[83] Loving notes that the hermit thrush was "a common bird on Whitman's native Long Island".[84] Biographer Justin Kaplan draws a connection between Whitman's notes and the lines in the poem:[82]

In the swamp in secluded recesses,
A shy and hidden bird is warbling a song.

Solitary the thrush
The hermit withdrawn to himself, avoiding the settlements,
Sings by himself a song. (lines 18–22)

According to Reynolds, Whitman's first-person narrator describes himself as "me powerless-O helpless soul of me" and identifies with the hermit thrush a "'shy and hidden bird' singing of death with a "bleeding throat'".[85] The hermit thrush is seen as an intentional alter ego for Whitman,[86] and its song as the "source of the poet's insight."[87] Miller writes that "The hermit thrush is an American bird, and Whitman made it his own in his Lincoln elegy. We might even take the 'dry grass singing' as an oblique allusion to Leaves of Grass."[88]

Scholar James Edwin Miller states that "Whitman's hermit thrush becomes the source of his reconciliation to Lincoln's death, to all death, as the "strong deliveress"[89] Killingsworth writes that "the poet retreats to the swamp to mourn the death of the beloved president to the strains of the solitary hermit thrush singing in the dark pines...the sacred places resonate with the mood of the poet, they offer renewal and revived inspiration, they return him to the rhythms of the earth with tides" and replaces the sense of time.[90]

Legacy Edit

Influence on Eliot's The Waste Land Edit

 
T. S. Eliot in 1920, in a photo taken by Lady Ottoline Morrell

Scholars believe that T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) drew from Whitman's elegy in fashioning his poem The Waste Land (1922).[91][92][93] In the poem, Eliot prominently mentions lilacs and April in its opening lines, and later passages about "dry grass singing" and "where the hermit-thrush sings in the pine trees."[94] Eliot told author Ford Madox Ford that Whitman and his own lines adorned by lilacs and the hermit thrush were the poems' only "good lines".[95] Cleo McNelly Kearns writes that "Whitman's poem gives us not only motifs and images of The Waste Land...but its very tone and pace, the steady andante which makes of both poems a walking meditation."[96]

While Eliot acknowledged that the passage in The Waste Land beginning "Who is the third who walks always beside you" was a reference to an early Antarctic expedition of explorer Ernest Shackleton,[97][98][99] scholars have seen connections to the appearance of Jesus to two of his disciples walking on the Road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13–35).[100][101][102] However, Alan Shucard indicates a possible link to Whitman, and a passage in the fourteenth strophe "with the knowledge of death as walking one side of me, / And the thought of death close-walking the other side of me, / And I in the middle with companions" (lines 121–123).[103]

Beginning in the 1950s, scholars and critics starting with John Peter began to question whether Eliot's poem were an elegy to "a male friend."[104] English poet and Eliot biographer Stephen Spender, whom Eliot published for Faber & Faber in the 1920s, speculated it was an elegy,[105] perhaps to Jean Jules Verdenal (1890–1915), a French medical student with literary inclinations who died in 1915 during the Gallipoli Campaign, according to Miller. Eliot spent considerable amounts of time with Verdenal in exploring Paris and the surrounding area in 1910 and 1911, and the two corresponded for several years after their parting.[106] According to Miller, Eliot remembered Verdenal as "coming across the Luxembourg Garden in the late afternoon, waving a branch of lilacs,"[107] during a journey in April 1911 the two took to a garden on the outskirts of Paris. Both Eliot and Verdenal repeated the journey alone later in their lives during periods of melancholy—Verdenal in April 1912, Eliot in December 1920.[108]

Miller observes that if "we follow out all the implications of Eliot's evocation of Whitman's "Lilacs" at this critical moment in The Waste Land we might assume it has its origins, too, in a death, in a death deeply felt, the death of a beloved friend"..."But unlike the Whitman poem, Eliot's Waste Land has no retreat on the 'shores of the water,' no hermit thrush to sing its joyful carol of death."[89] He further adds that "It seems unlikely that Eliot's long poem, in the form in which it was first conceived and written, would have been possible without the precedence of Whitman's own experiments in similar forms."[89]

Musical settings Edit

Whitman's poetry has been set by a variety of composers in Europe and the United States although critics have ranged from calling his writings "unmusical" to noting that his expansive, lyrical style and repetition mimics "the process of musical composition".[109] Jack Sullivan writes that Whitman "had an early, intuitive appreciation of vocal music, one that, as he himself acknowledged, helped shape Leaves of Grass"[110] Sullivan claims that one of the first compositions setting Whitman's poem, Charles Villiers Stanford's Elegiac Ode, Op. 21 (1884), a four-movement work scored for baritone and soprano soloists, chorus and orchestra,[111] likely had reached a wider audience during Whitman's lifetime than his poems.[112]

Holst Edit

After World War I, Gustav Holst turned to the last section of Whitman's elegy to mourn friends killed in the war in composing his Ode to Death (1919) for chorus and orchestra. Holst saw Whitman "as a New World prophet of tolerance and internationalism as well as a new breed of mystic whose transcendentalism offered an antidote to encrusted Victorianism."[113] According to Sullivan, "Holst invests Whitman's vision of "lovely and soothing death" with luminous open chords that suggest a sense of infinite space.... Holst is interested here in indeterminacy, a feeling of the infinite, not in predictability and closure."[114]

Hartmann Edit

In 1936, German composer Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905–1963) began setting a German translation of an excerpt from Whitman's poem for an intended cantata scored for an alto soloist and orchestra that was given various titles including Lamento, Kantate (trans. 'Cantata'), Symphonisches Fragment ('Symphonic Fragment'), and Unser Leben ('Our Life').[115] The cantata contained passages from Whitman's elegy, and from three other poems.[116] Hartmann stated in correspondence that he freely adapted the poem, which he thought embraced his "generally difficult, hopeless life, although no idea will be choked with death"[117][118][119] Hartmann later incorporated his setting of the poem as the second movement titled Frühling ('Spring') of a work that he designated as his First Symphony Versuch eines Requiem ('Attempt at a Requiem'). Hartmann withdrew his compositions from musical performance in Germany during the Nazi era and the work was not performed until May 1948, when it was premiered in Frankfurt am Main.[120] His first symphony is seen as a protest of the Nazi regime. Hartmann's setting is compared to the intentions of Igor Stravinsky's ballet The Rite of Spring where it was not "a representation of the natural phenomenon of the season, but an expression of ritualistic violence cast in sharp relief against the fleeting tenderness and beauty of the season."[121]

Hindemith Edit

American conductor Robert Shaw and his choral ensemble, the Robert Shaw Chorale, commissioned German composer Paul Hindemith to set Whitman's text to music to mourn the death of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on 12 April 1945. Hindemith had lived in the United States during World War II. The work was titled When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd: A Requiem for those we love. Hindemith set the poem in 11 sections, scored for mezzo-soprano and baritone soloists, mixed choir (SATB), and full orchestra. It premiered on 20 April 1946, conducted by Shaw. The composition is regarded by musicologist David Neumeyer as Hindemith's "only profoundly American work."[122] and Paul Hume described it as "a work of genius and the presence of the genius presiding over its performance brought us splendor and profound and moving glory."[123] It is noted that Hindemith incorporated a Jewish melody, Gaza, in his composition.[124]

Weill, Hughes, and Rice Edit

Whitman's poem appears in the opera Street Scene (1946), which was the collaboration of composer Kurt Weill, poet and lyricist Langston Hughes, and playwright Elmer Rice. Rice adapted his 1929 Pulitzer prize-winning play of the same name for the opera. In the opera, which premiered in New York City in January 1947, the poem's third stanza is recited in song as part of the duet "Remember that I Care" at the end of the first act. The poem is referenced again towards the end of the opera in the duet "Don't Forget the Lilac Bush". Weill received the first Tony Award for Best Original Score for this work[125][126]

1990s onward Edit

African-American composer George T. Walker, Jr. (1922–2018) set Whitman's poem in his composition Lilacs for voice and orchestra which was awarded the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for Music.[127][128][129] The work, described as "passionate, and very American," with "a beautiful and evocative lyrical quality" using Whitman's words, was premiered by the Boston Symphony Orchestra on 1 February 1996.[127][128][130] Composer George Crumb (born 1929) set the Death Carol in his 1979 work Apparition (1979), an eight-part song cycle for soprano and amplified piano.[131]

The University of California at Berkeley commissioned American neoclassical composer Roger Sessions (1896–1985) to set the poem as a cantata to commemorate their centennial anniversary in 1964. Sessions did not finish composing the work until the 1970s, dedicating it to the memories of Civil Rights movement leader Martin Luther King Jr. and political figure Robert F. Kennedy, who were assassinated within weeks of each other in 1968.[132][133] Sessions first became acquainted with Leaves of Grass in 1921 and began setting the poem as a reaction to the death of his friend, George Bartlett, although none of the sketches from that early attempt survive. He returned to the text almost fifty years later, composing a work scored for soprano, contralto, and baritone soloists, mixed chorus and orchestra. The music is described as responding "wonderfully both to the Biblical majesty and musical fluidity of Whitman's poetry, and here to, in the evocation of the gray-brown bird singing from the swamp and of the over-mastering scent of the lilacs, he gives us one of the century's great love letters to Nature."[134]

In 2004, working on a commission from the Brooklyn Philharmonic, the American composer Jennifer Higdon adapted the poem to music for solo baritone and orchestra titled Dooryard Bloom. The piece was first performed on 16 April 2005 by the baritone Nmon Ford and the Brooklyn Philharmonic under the conductor Michael Christie.[135][136]

Steve Dobrogosz also set the poem to music; a CD of it was released in 2006.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Gutman 1998.
  2. ^ Miller 1962, p. 155.
  3. ^ Kaplan 1980, p. 187.
  4. ^ Loving 1999, p. 414.
  5. ^ a b Kaplan 1980.
  6. ^ Callow 1992, p. 232.
  7. ^ Reynolds 1995, p. 340.
  8. ^ Loving 1999, p. 283.
  9. ^ Callow 1992, p. 293.
  10. ^ Peck 2015, p. 64.
  11. ^ Whitman 1961, p. 1:68–70.
  12. ^ Loving 1975.
  13. ^ Loving 1999, p. 281–283.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Price & Folsom 2005, p. 91.
  15. ^ Whitman 1882, p. 310.
  16. ^ Swanson 2006, p. 213.
  17. ^ Sandburg 1936, p. 394.
  18. ^ a b Genoways 2006, p. 534.
  19. ^ Loving 1999, p. 289.
  20. ^ Schmidt & Rendon 2008, p. 47.
  21. ^ Whitman & Eckler 1865, p. 69.
  22. ^ a b c d e Vendler 2006, p. 191–206.
  23. ^ Allen 1997, p. 197–198.
  24. ^ Whitman 1865, p. 3–11.
  25. ^ a b Whitman 1867.
  26. ^ Eiselein, Gregory. ""Drum-Taps (1865)" (Criticism)". The Walt Whitman Archive. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  27. ^ Mancuso, Luke. ""Leaves of Grass, 1867 edition" (Criticism)". The Walt Whitman Archive. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  28. ^ Gailey 2006, p. 409–410.
  29. ^ "Walt Whitman and Leaves of Grass: Revising Himself – Leaves of Grass | Exhibitions – Library of Congress". loc.gov. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  30. ^ Seery 2011, p. 127.
  31. ^ a b Price & Folsom 2005, p. 98.
  32. ^ Whitman 1980, p. lxii,lxvii.
  33. ^ Whitman 1871–1872, p. 32–40.
  34. ^ Whitman 1881.
  35. ^ Renner, Dennis K. ""Leaves of Grass, 1881–82 edition" (Criticism)". The Walt Whitman Archive. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  36. ^ Harvard.
  37. ^ Norton.
  38. ^ Parini 2006, p. 187–194.
  39. ^ Parini 1995, p. 217–224.
  40. ^ Greene 2012, p. 398,911.
  41. ^ Rowe 1997, p. 134–135.
  42. ^ a b Rowe 1997, p. 149,n.7.
  43. ^ Whitman 1871–1872.
  44. ^ Whitman 1881, p. 255–262.
  45. ^ Loving 1999, p. 100.
  46. ^ Rugoff 2000, p. 134–135.
  47. ^ Miller 1962.
  48. ^ Drum 1911.
  49. ^ Casanowicz 1901–1906.
  50. ^ Boulton 1953.
  51. ^ Parini 2006, p. 129–130.
  52. ^ Hinz 1972, p. 35–54.
  53. ^ Chase 1955, p. 140-145.
  54. ^ Adams 1957, p. 479-487.
  55. ^ Ramazani 1994.
  56. ^ Bloom 1999, p. 91.
  57. ^ Shore 1985, p. 86–87.
  58. ^ Hamilton 1990, p. 618.
  59. ^ Zeiger 2006, p. 243.
  60. ^ Cuddon 2012.
  61. ^ Zeiger 2006.
  62. ^ Warren 2009, p. 377–392, at 383.
  63. ^ a b Anaphora.
  64. ^ a b Warren 2009, p. 377–392.
  65. ^ Sharma.
  66. ^ Sharma, p. 40–41.
  67. ^ Magnus 1989, p. 137ff.
  68. ^ Hollander 2006, p. 183.
  69. ^ Erkkila 1989, p. 88.
  70. ^ a b c Hoffmann 1994, p. 11-12.
  71. ^ Coffman 1954, p. 225–232.
  72. ^ Reynolds 1995.
  73. ^ Loving 1999, p. 288.
  74. ^ Eiselein 1996, p. 70.
  75. ^ a b Reynolds 1995, p. 445.
  76. ^ Whitman 1882–1883, p. 65–66.
  77. ^ a b Yongue 1984, p. 12–20.
  78. ^ Erkkila 1989, p. 228–229.
  79. ^ Rowe 1997, p. 159.
  80. ^ Mack 2002, p. 125.
  81. ^ Whitman, p. 766, Votebook vol. 2.
  82. ^ a b Kaplan 1980, p. 307–310.
  83. ^ Burroughs 1895, p. 223, vol. 1.
  84. ^ Loving 1999, p. 289,n.85.
  85. ^ Reynolds 1995, p. 444.
  86. ^ Aspiz 1985, p. 216–233,227.
  87. ^ Rugoff 1985, p. 257–271.
  88. ^ Miller 2005, p. 418.
  89. ^ a b c Miller 2005, p. 419.
  90. ^ Killingsworth 2006, pp. 311–325, 322.
  91. ^ Oser 1998, p. 150.
  92. ^ Bloom 2007, p. 104.
  93. ^ Lehman 2016, p. 94.
  94. ^ Eliot 1922, p. 355,357.
  95. ^ Eliot 1971, p. 129.
  96. ^ Kearns 1986, p. 150.
  97. ^ Eliot 1922, lines 360–366.
  98. ^ Ackerley 1984, p. 514.
  99. ^ Rainey 2005, p. 117–118.
  100. ^ Eliot 1974, p. 147–148.
  101. ^ Miller 1977, p. 113.
  102. ^ Bentley 1990, p. 179,183.
  103. ^ Shucard 1998, p. 203.
  104. ^ Peter 1952, p. 242–66.
  105. ^ Miller 2005, p. 135.
  106. ^ Miller 2005, p. 130–135.
  107. ^ Miller 2005, p. 133.
  108. ^ Miller 2005, p. 7–8,133.
  109. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 95ff.
  110. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 97.
  111. ^ Town 2003, p. 73–102, at 78.
  112. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 98.
  113. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 116.
  114. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 118.
  115. ^ Chapman 2006.
  116. ^ Chapman 2006, p. 47.
  117. ^ Chapman 2006, p. 36–37.
  118. ^ McCredie 1982, p. 57.
  119. ^ Kater 2000, p. 90.
  120. ^ Chapman 2006, p. 45.
  121. ^ Chapman 2006, p. 3.
  122. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 122.
  123. ^ Noss 1989, p. 188.
  124. ^ Chapman 2006, p. 40,fn.10.
  125. ^ Sullivan 1999, p. 119–122.
  126. ^ Hinton 2012, p. 381–385.
  127. ^ a b Fischer & Fischer 2001, p. xlvi.
  128. ^ a b Fischer 1988, p. 278.
  129. ^ Walker 2009, p. 228.
  130. ^ Brennan & Clarage 1999, p. 451.
  131. ^ Clifton 2008, p. 40.
  132. ^ Steinberg 2005, pp. 252–255.
  133. ^ Rugoff 1985, pp. 257–271, at 270.
  134. ^ Steinberg 2005, pp. 346–347.
  135. ^ Higdon, Jennifer (15 January 2006). "Jennifer Higdon's 'Dooryard Bloom'". NPR. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  136. ^ Kozinn, Allan (18 April 2005). "A Celebration of Brooklyn, via Whitman". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 August 2015.

Bibliography Edit

Books Edit

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  • Bloom, Harold, ed. (2007). T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7910-9307-8.
  • Boulton, Marjories (1953). Anatomy of Poetry. London: Routledge & Kegan. ISBN 9780710060914.
  • Brennan, Elizabeth A.; Clarage, Elizabeth C. (1999). Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners. ISBN 978-1-57356-111-2.
  • Burroughs, John (1895). "The Return of the Birds" in The Writings of John Burroughs. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Callow, Philip (1992). From Noon to Starry Night: A Life of Walt Whitman. Chikago: Ivan R. Dee.
  • Casanowicz, I.M. (1901–1906). "Parallelism in Hebrew Poetry" in The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk and Wagnalls.
  • Chapman, David Allen (2006). "Ich Sitze und Schaue" from Genesis, Evolution, and Interpretation of K. A. Hartmann's First Symphony (PDF). Athens, GA: University of Georgia (thesis).
  • Chase, Richard (1955). Walt Whitman Reconsidered. New York: William Sloan.
  • Clifton, Keith E. (2008). Recent American Art Song: A Guide. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810862104.
  • Coffman, Stanley K. (1954). "'Crossing Brooklyn Ferry': A Note on the Catalogue Technique in Whitman's Poetry", Modern Philology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Cuddon, J. A. (2012). Kastan, David Scott (ed.). "Elegy" in Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. Chichester, West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons.
  • Drum, Walter (1911). "Parallelism" in The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton.
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  • —— (1974). Eliot, Valerie (ed.). The Waste Land: A Facsimile and Transcript of the Original Drafts, Including the Annotations of Ezra Pound. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
  • Erkkila, Betty (1989). Whitman the Political Poet. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Fischer, Heinz Dietrich (1988). The Pulitzer Prize archive. ISBN 978-3-598-30170-4.
  • Fischer, Heinz Dietrich; Fischer, Erika J. (2001). Musical Composition Awards 1943-1999. ISBN 978-3-598-30185-8.
  • Gailey, Amanda (2006). "The Publishing History of Leaves of Grass". In Kummings, Donald D. (ed.). A Companion to Walt Whitman. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 409–438. ISBN 978-1-4051-2093-7.
  • Genoways, Ted (2006). "Civil War Poems in "Drum-Taps" and "Memories of President Lincoln"". In Kummings, Donald D. (ed.). A Companion to Walt Whitman. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 522–537. ISBN 978-1-4051-2093-7.
  • Greene, Roland, ed. (2012). "Elegy" and "Narrative Poetry" in The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics (4 ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Gutman, Huck (1998). LeMaster, J. R.; Kummings, Donald D. (eds.). Commentary – Selected Criticism: "Drum-Taps" (1865) on Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland Publishing.
  • Hamilton, A. C. (1990). The Spencer Encyclopedia. Toronto/Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
  • Hinton, Stephen (2012). Weill's Musical Theater: Stages of Reform. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Hoffmann, Daniel (1994). Sill, Geoffrey M. (ed.). "Hankering, Gross, Mystical, Nude": Whitman's "Self" and the American Tradition" in Walt Whitman of Mickle Street: A Centennial Collection. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
  • Hollander, John (2006). Bloom, Harold (ed.). "Whitman's Difficult Availability" in Bloom's Modern Critical Views: Walt Whitman. New York: Chelsea House.
  • Kaplan, Justin (1980). Walt Whitman: A Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9780671225421.
  • Kater, Michael H. (2000). Composers of the Nazi Era: Eight Portraits. New York: Oxford University. ISBN 978-0-19-509924-9.
  • Kearns, Cleo McNelly (1986). Bloom, Harold (ed.). Realism, Politics, and Literary Persona in The Waste Land. New York: Chelsea House.
  • Killingsworth, M. Jimmie (2006). "Nature". In Kummings, Donald D. (ed.). A Companion to Walt Whitman. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 311–325. ISBN 978-1-4051-2093-7.
  • Lehman, Robert S. (2016). Impossible Modernism: T. S. Eliot, Walter Benjamin, and the Critique of Historical Reason. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1-5036-0014-0.
  • Loving, Jerome M. (1975). Civil War Letters of George Washington Whitman. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • —— (1999). Walt Whitman: The Song of Himself. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520214279.
  • Mack, Stephen John (2002). The Pragmatic Whitman: Reimagining American Democracy. Iowa City: Iowa: University of Iowa Press. ISBN 9781587294242.
  • Magnus, Laury (1989). The Track of the Repetend: Syntactic and Lexical Repetition in Modern Poetry. Brooklyn: AMS Press.
  • McCredie, Andres (1982). Karl Amadeus Hartmann: Thematic Catalogue of His Works. New York: C.F. Peters.
  • Miller, James E. (1962). Walt Whitman. New York: Twayne Publishers.
  • —— (1977). T. S. Eliot's Personal Waste Land: Exorcism of the Demons. State College, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press.
  • —— (2005). T.S. Eliot: The Making of an American poet, 1888–1922. State College, Pennsylvania: Penn State Press.
  • Noss, Luther (1989). Paul Hindemith in the United States. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
  • Olmstead, Andrew (2008). Roger Sessions: A Biography. New York: Routledge.
  • Oser, Lee (1998). T.S. Eliot and American Poetry. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1181-1.
  • Parini, Jay, ed. (1995). The Columbia Anthology of American Poetry. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231081221.
  • ——, ed. (2006). The Wadsworth Anthology of Poetry. Boston: Thompson Wadsworth. ISBN 1413004733.
  • Peck, Garrett (2015). Walt Whitman in Washington, D.C.: The Civil War and America's Great Poet. Charleston, SC: The History Press. ISBN 9781626199736.
  • Price, Kenneth; Folsom, Ed, eds. (2005). Re-Scripting Walt Whitman: An Introduction to His Life and Work. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Rainey, Lawrence S., ed. (2005). The Annotated Waste Land with Eliot's Contemporary Prose. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Ramazani, Jahan (1994). Poetry of Mourning: The Modern Elegy from Hardy to Heaney. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Reynolds, David S. (1995). Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Vintage Books.
  • Rowe, John Carlos (1997). At Emerson's Tomb: The Politics of Classic American Literature. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Rugoff, Kathy (1985). "Opera and Other Kinds of Music". In LeMaster, J. R.; Kummings, Donald D. (eds.). Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge.
  • —— (2000). Kramer, Lawrence (ed.). "Three American Requiems: Contemplating 'When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd'" in Walt Whitman and Modern Music: War, Desire and the Trials of Nationhood. Vol. 1. New York: Garland Press.
  • Sandburg, Carl (1936). Abraham Lincoln: The War Years IV. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.
  • Schmidt, Shannon McKenna; Rendon, Joni (2008). Novel Destinations: Literary Landmarks from Jane Austen's Bath to Ernest Heminway's Key West. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic. ISBN 978-1-4262-0277-3.
  • Seery, John (2011). A Political Companion to Walt Whitman. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-2655-5.
  • Sharma, Raja. Walt Whitman's Poetry-An Analytical Approach.
  • Shore, David R. (1985). Spenser and the Poetics of Pastoral: A Study of the World of Colin Clout. Montreal: McGill University Press.
  • Shucard, Alan (1998). "Eliot, T.S. (1888–1965)". In LeMaster, J. R.; Kummings, Donald D. (eds.). Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge.
  • Steinberg, Michael (2005). Choral Masterworks: A Listener's Guide. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Sullivan, Jack (1999). Manhunt: New World Symphonies: How American Culture Changed European Music. ISBN 978-0-300-07231-0.
  • Swanson, James (2006). Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. New York: HarperCollins.
  • Town, Stephen (2003). Adams, Byron; Wells, Robin (eds.). "Full of fresh thoughts: Vaughan Williams, Whitman, and the Genesis of A Sea Symphony", in Adams, Byron, and Wells, Robin (editors), Vaughan Williams Essays. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing.
  • Vendler, Helen (2006). "Poetry and the Meditation of Value: Whitman on Lincoln", in Bloom, Harold. Bloom's Modern Critical Views: Walt Whitman. New York: Chelsea House.
  • Walker, George (2009). Reminiscences of an American Composer and Pianist. ISBN 978-0-8108-6940-0.
  • Warren, James Perrin (2009). Kummings, Donald D. (ed.). "Style" in A Companion to Walt Whitman. Chichester, West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons.
  • Zeiger, Melissa (2006). Kastan, David Scott (ed.). "Elegy" in The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • "821. When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd". English Poetry III: From Tennyson to Whitman. The Harvard Classics 3. Bartleby. 2001 [1909–1914].
  • English Poetry from Tennyson to Whitman. The Norton Anthology of American Literature. New York: W. W. Norton & Co.

Primary sources Edit

  • Whitman, Walt (1865). "Hush'd Be the Camps To-Day" in Drum-Taps. Brooklyn: Peter Eckler.
  • —— (1865). Sequel to Drum-Taps. When Lilacs Last in the Door-Yard Bloom'd and other poems. Washington: Gibson Brothers.
  • —— (1867). Price, Kenneth; Folsom, Ed (eds.). "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" in Leaves of Grass. New York: William E. Chapin.
  • —— (1871–1872). "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" in Leaves of Grass. New York: J.S. Redfield.
  • —— (1881). "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd". Leaves of Grass (7th ed.). Boston: James R. Osgood.
  • —— (1882–1883). "The Weather.—Does it sympathize with these times?" from Specimen Days and Collect.
  • —— (1882). Death of Abraham Lincoln. Lecture deliver'd in New York, April 14, 1879—in Philadelphia, '80—in Boston, '81 in Specimen Days & Collect. Philadelphia: Rees Welsh & Company.
  • —— (1891–1892). Leaves of Grass. Philadelphia: David McKay.
  • —— (1961). Miller, Edwin Haviland (ed.). The Correspondence. Vol. 1. New York: New York University Press.
  • —— (1980). Bradley; Scully (eds.). Leaves of Grass: A Textual Variorum of the Printed Poems. Vol. 1. New York: New York University Press.

Journals Edit

  • Ackerley, C. J. (1984). "Eliot's The Waste Land and Shackleton's South". Notes & Queries. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Adams, Richard P. (1957). "Whitman's 'Lilacs' and the Tradition of Pastoral Elegy". Bucknell Review. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Hinz, Evelyn J. (1972). "Whitman's 'Lilacs': The Power of Elegy". Bucknell Review. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Peter, John (1952). "A New Interpretation of The Waste Land". Essays in Criticism. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Yongue, Patricia Lee (1984). "Violence in Whitman's 'When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd'". Walt Whitman Quarterly Review. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Online sources Edit

  • "Poetic Technique: Anaphora". American Academy of Poets.

Further reading Edit

  • Cavitch, Max. 2007. American Elegy: The Poetry of Mourning from the Puritans to Whitman. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-4893-X

External links Edit

  • The Walt Whitman Archive
  • "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" at the Poetry Foundation website
  • "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" from The Harvard Classics via Bartleby.com

when, lilacs, last, dooryard, bloom, this, article, about, poem, walt, whitman, composition, paul, hindemith, hindemith, long, poem, written, american, poet, walt, whitman, 1819, 1892, elegy, president, abraham, lincoln, written, summer, 1865, during, period, . This article is about the poem by Walt Whitman For the composition by Paul Hindemith see When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d Hindemith When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d is a long poem written by American poet Walt Whitman 1819 1892 as an elegy to President Abraham Lincoln It was written in the summer of 1865 during a period of profound national mourning in the aftermath of the president s assassination on 14 April of that year When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom dby Walt WhitmanThe poem s first page in the 1865 edition of Sequel to Drum TapsWritten1865 1865 First published inSequel to Drum Taps 1865 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishFormPastoral elegyMeterFree versePublisherGibson Brothers Washington DC Publication date1865Lines206Full textLeaves of Grass Book XXII at WikisourceThe poem written in free verse in 206 lines uses many of the literary techniques associated with the pastoral elegy Despite being an expression to the fallen president Whitman neither mentions Lincoln by name nor discusses the circumstances of his death in the poem Instead he uses a series of rural and natural imagery including the symbols of the lilacs a drooping star in the western sky Venus and the hermit thrush and he employs the traditional progression of the pastoral elegy in moving from grief toward an acceptance and knowledge of death The poem also addresses the pity of war through imagery vaguely referencing the American Civil War 1861 1865 which effectively ended only days before the assassination Written ten years after publishing the first edition of Leaves of Grass 1855 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d reflects a maturing of Whitman s poetic vision from a drama of identity and romantic exuberance that has been tempered by his emotional experience of the American Civil War Whitman included the poem as part of a quickly written sequel to a collection of poems addressing the war that was being printed at the time of Lincoln s death These poems collected under the titles Drum Taps and Sequel to Drum Taps range in emotional context from excitement to woe from distant observation to engagement from belief to resignation and more concerned with history than the self more aware of the precariousness of America s present and future than of its expansive promise 1 First published in autumn 1865 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d along with 42 other poems from Drum Taps and Sequel to Drum Taps was absorbed into Leaves of Grass beginning with the fourth edition published in 1867 The poem is one of several that Whitman wrote on Lincoln s death Although Whitman did not consider the poem to be among his best it has been compared in both effect and quality to several acclaimed works of English literature including elegies such as John Milton s Lycidas 1637 and Percy Bysshe Shelley s Adonais 1821 citation needed Contents 1 Writing history and background 2 Publication history 3 Analysis and interpretation 3 1 Structure 3 2 Narrative 3 3 Style and techniques 4 Themes and symbolism 4 1 A trinity of symbols Lilac and star and bird twined 4 1 1 Lilac blooming perennial 4 1 2 Great star early droop d in the western sky 4 1 3 A shy and hidden bird 5 Legacy 5 1 Influence on Eliot s The Waste Land 5 2 Musical settings 5 2 1 Holst 5 2 2 Hartmann 5 2 3 Hindemith 5 2 4 Weill Hughes and Rice 5 2 5 1990s onward 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Books 8 1 1 Primary sources 8 2 Journals 8 3 Online sources 8 4 Further reading 9 External linksWriting history and background Edit nbsp Common lilac Syringa vulgaris In the late 1850s and early 1860s Whitman established his reputation as a poet with the release of Leaves of Grass Whitman intended to write a distinctly American epic and developed a free verse style inspired by the cadences of the King James Bible 2 3 The small volume first released in 1855 was considered controversial by some with critics attacking Whitman s verse as obscene 4 However it attracted praise from American Transcendentalist essayist lecturer and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson which contributed to fostering significant interest in Whitman s work 5 6 7 At the start of the American Civil War Whitman moved from New York to Washington D C where he obtained work in a series of government offices first with the Army Paymaster s Office and later with the Bureau of Indian Affairs 8 9 He volunteered in army hospitals as a hospital missionary 10 His wartime experiences informed his poetry which matured into reflections on death and youth the brutality of war and patriotism and offered stark images and vignettes of the war 11 Whitman s brother George Washington Whitman had been taken prisoner in Virginia on 30 September 1864 and was held for five months in Libby Prison a Confederate prisoner of war camp near Richmond Virginia 12 On 24 February 1865 George was granted a furlough to return home because of his poor health and Walt Whitman travelled to his mother s home in New York to visit his brother 13 While visiting Brooklyn Whitman contracted to have his collection of Civil War poems Drum Taps published 14 The Civil War had ended and a few days later on 14 April 1865 President Abraham Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth while attending the performance of a play at Ford s Theatre Lincoln died the following morning Whitman was at his mother s home when he heard the news of the president s death in his grief he stepped outside the door to the yard where the lilacs were blooming 14 Many years later Whitman recalled the weather and conditions on the day that Lincoln died in Specimen Days where he wrote I remember where I was stopping at the time the season being advanced there were many lilacs in full bloom By one of those caprices that enter and give tinge to events without being at all a part of them I find myself always reminded of great tragedy of that day by the sight and odor of these blossoms It never fails 15 Lincoln was the first American president to be assassinated and his death had a long lasting emotional impact in the United States During the three weeks after his death millions of Americans participated in a nationwide public pageant of grief including a state funeral and the 1 700 mile 2 700 km westward journey of the funeral train from Washington through New York to Springfield Illinois 16 17 Lincoln s public funeral in Washington was held on 19 April 1865 18 Whitman biographer Jerome Loving believes that Whitman did not attend the public ceremonies for Lincoln in Washington as he did not leave Brooklyn for the nation s capital until 21 April Likewise Whitman could not have attended ceremonies held in New York after the arrival of the funeral train as they were observed on 24 April Loving thus suggests that Whitman s descriptions of the funeral procession public events and the long train journey may have been based on second hand information He does concede that Whitman in his journey from New York to Washington may have passed the Lincoln funeral train on its way to New York possibly in Harrisburg Pennsylvania 19 Whitman may have recalled the imagery of lilacs from his earliest home now the Walt Whitman Birthplace State Historic Site which still boasts lilacs blooming in the farmhouse dooryard 20 Publication history Edit nbsp Walt Whitman as photographed by Mathew Brady 1823 1896 See also Drum Taps Leaves of Grass and Walt Whitman and Abraham Lincoln On 1 April 1865 Whitman had signed a contract with Brooklyn printer Peter Eckler to publish Drum Taps a 72 page collection of 43 poems in which Whitman addressed the emotional experiences of the Civil War 14 Drum Taps was being printed at the time of Lincoln s assassination two weeks later Upon learning of the president s death Whitman delayed the printing to insert a quickly written poem Hush d Be the Camps To Day into the collection 14 21 The poem s subtitle indicates it was written on 19 April 1865 four days after Lincoln s death 22 Whitman was unsatisfied with the poem and resolved to write a fitting poem mourning Lincoln s death 18 23 Upon returning to Washington Whitman contracted with Gibson Brothers to publish a pamphlet of eighteen poems that included two works directly addressing the assassination When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d and O Captain My Captain He intended to include the pamphlet with copies of Drum Taps 14 The 24 page collection was titled Sequel to Drum Taps and bore the subtitle When Lilacs Last in the Door Yard Bloom d and other poems 14 The eponymous poem filled the first nine pages 24 In October after the pamphlet was printed he returned to Brooklyn to have them integrated with Drum Taps 14 Whitman added the poems from Drum Taps and Sequel to Drum Taps as a supplement to the fourth edition of Leaves of Grass printed in 1867 by William E Chapin 25 26 27 Whitman revised his collection Leaves of Grass throughout his life and each additional edition included newer works his previously published poems often with revisions or minor emendations and reordering of the sequence of the poems The first edition 1855 was a small pamphlet of twelve poems 28 At his death four decades later the collection included around 400 poems 29 For the fourth edition 1867 in which When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d had first been included Leaves of Grass had been expanded to a collection of 236 poems 30 University of Nebraska literature professor Kenneth Price and University of Iowa English professor Ed Folsom describe the 1867 edition as the most carelessly printed and most chaotic of all the editions citing errata and conflicts with typesetters 31 Price and Folsom note that book had five different formats some including the Drum Taps poems some without 31 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d and his other three Lincoln Poems O Captain My Captain Hush d be the Camps To day This Dust Was Once the Man 1871 were included in subsequent editions of Leaves of Grass although in Whitman s 1871 and 1881 editions it was separated from Drum Taps In the 1871 edition Whitman s four Lincoln poems were listed as a cluster titled President Lincoln s Burial Hymn In the 1881 edition this cluster was renamed Memories of President Lincoln 32 33 34 The collection was not substantially revised after this edition although later editions saw new poems added 35 Leaves of Grass has never been out of print since its first publication in 1855 and When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d is among several poems from the collection that appear frequently in poetry anthologies 36 37 38 39 Analysis and interpretation Edit nbsp Shown in the presidential booth of Ford s Theatre from left to right are assassin John Wilkes Booth Abraham Lincoln Mary Todd Lincoln Clara Harris and Henry RathboneStructure Edit When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d is a first person monologue written in free verse It is a long poem 206 lines in length 207 according to some sources that is cited as a prominent example of the elegy form and of narrative poetry 40 In its final form published in 1881 and republished to the present the poem is divided into sixteen sections referred to as cantos or strophes that range in length from 5 or 6 lines to as many as 53 lines 22 The poem does not possess a consistent metrical pattern and the length of each line varies from seven syllables to as many as twenty syllables Literary scholar Kathy Rugoff says that the poem has a broad scope and incorporates a strongly characterized speaker a complex narrative action and an array of highly lyrical images 41 The first version of When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d that appeared in 1865 was arranged into 21 strophes 42 It was included with this structure in the fourth edition of Leaves of Grass that was published in 1867 25 By 1871 Whitman had combined the strophes numbered 19 and 20 into one and the poem had 20 in total 43 However for the seventh edition 1881 of Leaves of Grass the poem s final seven strophes of his original text were combined into the final three strophes of the 16 strophe poem that is familiar to readers today 44 For the 1881 edition the original strophes numbered 14 15 and 16 were combined into the revised 14th strophe strophes numbered 17 and 18 were combined into the revised 15th strophe The material from the former strophes numbered 19 20 and 21 in 1865 were combined for the revised 16th and final strophe in 1881 42 According to literary critic and Harvard University professor Helen Vendler the poem builds up to its longest and most lyrical moment in canto 14 achieves its moral climax in canto 15 and ends with a coda of retrievements out of the night in canto 16 22 Narrative Edit While Whitman s When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d is an elegy to the fallen president it does not mention him by name or the circumstances surrounding his death This is not atypical Whitman biographer Jerome Loving states that traditionally elegies do not mention the name of the deceased in order to allow the lament to have universal application 45 According to Rugoff the poem s narrative is given by an unnamed speaker adding The speaker expresses his sorrow over the death of him I love and reveals his growing consciousness of his own sense of the meaning of death and the consolation he paradoxically finds in death itself The narrative action depicts the journey of Lincoln s coffin without mentioning the president by name and portrays visions of the slain soldiers of war without mentioning either the Civil War or its causes The identifications are assumed to be superfluous even tactless no American could fail to understand what war was meant Finally in the carol of the bird the speaker recounts the song in which death is invoked personified and celebrated 46 According to Vendler the speaker s first act is to break off a sprig from the lilac bush line 17 that he subsequently lays on Lincoln s coffin during the funeral procession line 44 45 22 Here coffin that slowly passes I give you my sprig of lilac Style and techniques Edit nbsp Lincoln s funeral procession on Pennsylvania Avenue on 19 April 1865Whitman s biographers explain that Whitman s verse is influenced by the aesthetics musicality and cadences of phrasing and passages in the King James Bible 47 5 Whitman employs several techniques of parallelism a device common to Biblical poetry 48 49 While Whitman does not use end rhyme he employs internal rhyme in passages throughout the poem Although Whitman s free verse does not use a consistent pattern of meter or rhyme the disciplined use of other poetic techniques and patterns create a sense of structure His poetry achieves a sense of cohesive structure and beauty through the internal patterns of sound diction specific word choice and effect of association 50 The poem uses many of the literary techniques associated with the pastoral elegy a meditative lyric genre derived from the poetic tradition of Greek and Roman antiquity 51 52 53 54 55 Literary scholar Harold Bloom writes that Elegies often have been used for political purposes as a means of healing the nation 56 A pastoral elegy uses rural imagery to address the poet s grief a poetic response to death that seeks to transmute the fact of death into an imaginatively acceptable form to reaffirm what death has called into question the integrity of the pastoral image of contentment An elegy seeks also to attempt to preserve the meaning of an individual s life as something of positive value when that life itself has ceased 57 58 A typical pastoral elegy contains several features including a procession of mourners the decoration of a hearse or grave a list of flowers the changing of the seasons and the association of the dead person with a star or other permanent natural object 59 60 This includes a discussion of the death expressions of mourning grief anger and consolation and the poet s simultaneous acceptance of death s inevitability and hope for immortality 61 According to literary scholar James Perrin Warren Whitman s long musical lines rely on three important techniques syntactic parallelism repetition and cataloguing 62 Repetition is a device used by an orator or poet to lend persuasive emphasis to the sentiment and create a driving rhythm by the recurrence of the same sound it can also intensify the emotion of the poem 63 It is described as a form of parallelism that resembles a litany 63 To achieve these techniques Whitman employs many literary and rhetorical devices common to classical poetry and to the pastoral elegy to frame his emotional response According to Warren Whitman uses anaphora the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of lines epistrophe the repetition of the same words or phrase at the end of lines and symploce the combined use of anaphora and epistrophe the repetition of both initial and terminal words 64 According to Raja Sharma Whitman s use of anaphora forces the reader to inhale several bits of text without pausing for breath and this breathlessness contributes to the incantatory quality 65 This sense of incantation in the poem and for the framework for the expansive lyricism that scholars have called cataloguing 66 67 68 Whitman s poetry features many examples of cataloguing where he both employs parallelism and repetition to build rhythm 64 Scholar Betty Erkkila calls Whitman s cataloguing the overarching figure of Leaves of Grass and wrote His catalogues work by juxtaposition image association and by metonymy to suggest the interrelationship and identity of all things By basing his verse in the single end stopped line at the same time that he fuses this line through various linking devices with the larger structure of the whole Whitman weaves an overall pattern of unity in diversity 69 According to Daniel Hoffman Whitman is a poet whose hallmark is anaphora 70 Hoffman describes the use of the anaphoric verse as a poetry of beginnings and that Whitman s use of its repetition and similarity at the inception of each line is so necessary as the norm against which all variations and departures are measured what follows is varied the parallels and the ensuing words phrases and clauses lending the verse its delicacy its charm its power 70 Further the device allows Whitman to vary the tempo or feeling to build up climaxes or drop off in innuendoes 70 Scholar Stanley Coffman analyzed Whitman s catalogue technique through the application of Ralph Waldo Emerson s comment that such lists are suggestive of the metamorphosis of an imaginative and excited mind According to Coffman Emerson adds that because the universe is the externalization of the soul and its objects symbols manifestations of the one reality behind them Words which name objects also carry with them the whole sense of nature and are themselves to be understood as symbols Thus a list of words objects will be effective in giving to the mind under certain conditions a heightened sense not only of reality but of the variety and abundance of its manifestations 71 Themes and symbolism EditA trinity of symbols Lilac and star and bird twined Edit Whitman s poem features three prominent motifs or images referred to as a trinity of symbols which biographer David S Reynolds describes as autobiographical 72 73 the lilacs represent the poet s perennial love for Lincoln the fallen star Venus is Lincoln and the hermit thrush represents death or its chant Lilac blooming perennial Edit nbsp Lilac flowers and heart shaped leavesAccording to Price and Folsom Whitman s encounter with the lilacs in bloom in his mother s yard caused the flowers to become viscerally bound to the memory of Lincoln s death 14 According to Gregory Eiselein Lilacs represent love spring life the earthly realm rebirth cyclical time a Christ figure and thus consolation redemption and spiritual rebirth a father figure the cause of grief and an instrument of sensual consolation The lilacs can represent all of these meanings or none of them They could just be lilacs 74 Great star early droop d in the western sky Edit nbsp Venus Whitman s western falling star reflected in the Pacific OceanIn the weeks before Lincoln s assassination Whitman observed the planet Venus shining brightly in the evening sky He later wrote of the observation Nor earth nor sky ever knew spectacles of superber beauty than some of the nights lately here The western star Venus in the earlier hours of evening has never been so large so clear it seems as if it told something as if it held rapport indulgent with humanity with us Americans 75 76 In the poem Whitman describes the disappearance of the star O powerful western fallen star O shades of night O moody tearful night O great star disappear d O the black murk that hides the star lines 7 9 Literary scholar Patricia Lee Yongue identifies Lincoln as the falling star 77 Further she contrasts the dialectic of the powerful western falling star with a nascent spring and describes it as a metaphor for Lincoln s death meant to evoke powerful conflicting emotions in the poet which transport him back to that first and continuously remembered rebellion signaling the death of his own innocence 77 Biographer Betsy Erkkila writes that Whitman s star is the fallen star of America itself and characterizes Whitman s association as politicopoetic myth to counter Booth s cry on the night of the assassination Sic Semper Tyrannis and the increasingly popular image of Lincoln as a dictatorial leader bent on abrogating rather than preserving basic American liberties 78 The star seemingly immortal is associated with Lincoln s vision for America a vision of reconciliation and a national unity or identity that could only survive the president s death if Americans resolved to continue pursuing it 79 80 However Vendler says that the poem dismisses the idea of a personal immortality through the symbol of the star saying the star sinks and it is gone forever 22 A shy and hidden bird Edit nbsp The hermit thrush Catharus guttatus is considered Whitman s alter ego in the poem In the summer of 1865 Whitman s friend John Burroughs 1837 1921 an aspiring nature writer had returned to Washington to his position at the Treasury department after a long vacation in the woods Burroughs recalled that Whitman had been deeply interested in what I tell him of the hermit thrush and he says he largely used the information I have given him in one of his principal poems 75 Burroughs described the song as the finest sound in nature perhaps more of an evening than a morning hymn a voice of that calm sweet solemnity one attains to in his best moments Whitman took copious notes of his conversations with Burroughs on the subject writing of the hermit thrush that it sings oftener after sundown is very secluded likes shaded dark places His song is a hymn in swamps is very shy never sings near the farm houses never in the settlement is the bird of the solemn primal woods amp of Nature pure amp holy 81 82 Burroughs published an essay in May 1865 in which he described the hermit thrush as quite a rare bird of very shy and secluded habits found only in the deepest and most remote forests usually in damp and swampy localities 83 Loving notes that the hermit thrush was a common bird on Whitman s native Long Island 84 Biographer Justin Kaplan draws a connection between Whitman s notes and the lines in the poem 82 In the swamp in secluded recesses A shy and hidden bird is warbling a song Solitary the thrush The hermit withdrawn to himself avoiding the settlements Sings by himself a song lines 18 22 According to Reynolds Whitman s first person narrator describes himself as me powerless O helpless soul of me and identifies with the hermit thrush a shy and hidden bird singing of death with a bleeding throat 85 The hermit thrush is seen as an intentional alter ego for Whitman 86 and its song as the source of the poet s insight 87 Miller writes that The hermit thrush is an American bird and Whitman made it his own in his Lincoln elegy We might even take the dry grass singing as an oblique allusion to Leaves of Grass 88 Scholar James Edwin Miller states that Whitman s hermit thrush becomes the source of his reconciliation to Lincoln s death to all death as the strong deliveress 89 Killingsworth writes that the poet retreats to the swamp to mourn the death of the beloved president to the strains of the solitary hermit thrush singing in the dark pines the sacred places resonate with the mood of the poet they offer renewal and revived inspiration they return him to the rhythms of the earth with tides and replaces the sense of time 90 Legacy EditInfluence on Eliot s The Waste Land Edit nbsp T S Eliot in 1920 in a photo taken by Lady Ottoline MorrellSee also T S Eliot and The Waste Land Scholars believe that T S Eliot 1888 1965 drew from Whitman s elegy in fashioning his poem The Waste Land 1922 91 92 93 In the poem Eliot prominently mentions lilacs and April in its opening lines and later passages about dry grass singing and where the hermit thrush sings in the pine trees 94 Eliot told author Ford Madox Ford that Whitman and his own lines adorned by lilacs and the hermit thrush were the poems only good lines 95 Cleo McNelly Kearns writes that Whitman s poem gives us not only motifs and images of The Waste Land but its very tone and pace the steady andante which makes of both poems a walking meditation 96 While Eliot acknowledged that the passage in The Waste Land beginning Who is the third who walks always beside you was a reference to an early Antarctic expedition of explorer Ernest Shackleton 97 98 99 scholars have seen connections to the appearance of Jesus to two of his disciples walking on the Road to Emmaus Luke 24 13 35 100 101 102 However Alan Shucard indicates a possible link to Whitman and a passage in the fourteenth strophe with the knowledge of death as walking one side of me And the thought of death close walking the other side of me And I in the middle with companions lines 121 123 103 Beginning in the 1950s scholars and critics starting with John Peter began to question whether Eliot s poem were an elegy to a male friend 104 English poet and Eliot biographer Stephen Spender whom Eliot published for Faber amp Faber in the 1920s speculated it was an elegy 105 perhaps to Jean Jules Verdenal 1890 1915 a French medical student with literary inclinations who died in 1915 during the Gallipoli Campaign according to Miller Eliot spent considerable amounts of time with Verdenal in exploring Paris and the surrounding area in 1910 and 1911 and the two corresponded for several years after their parting 106 According to Miller Eliot remembered Verdenal as coming across the Luxembourg Garden in the late afternoon waving a branch of lilacs 107 during a journey in April 1911 the two took to a garden on the outskirts of Paris Both Eliot and Verdenal repeated the journey alone later in their lives during periods of melancholy Verdenal in April 1912 Eliot in December 1920 108 Miller observes that if we follow out all the implications of Eliot s evocation of Whitman s Lilacs at this critical moment in The Waste Land we might assume it has its origins too in a death in a death deeply felt the death of a beloved friend But unlike the Whitman poem Eliot s Waste Land has no retreat on the shores of the water no hermit thrush to sing its joyful carol of death 89 He further adds that It seems unlikely that Eliot s long poem in the form in which it was first conceived and written would have been possible without the precedence of Whitman s own experiments in similar forms 89 Musical settings Edit Whitman s poetry has been set by a variety of composers in Europe and the United States although critics have ranged from calling his writings unmusical to noting that his expansive lyrical style and repetition mimics the process of musical composition 109 Jack Sullivan writes that Whitman had an early intuitive appreciation of vocal music one that as he himself acknowledged helped shape Leaves of Grass 110 Sullivan claims that one of the first compositions setting Whitman s poem Charles Villiers Stanford s Elegiac Ode Op 21 1884 a four movement work scored for baritone and soprano soloists chorus and orchestra 111 likely had reached a wider audience during Whitman s lifetime than his poems 112 Holst Edit After World War I Gustav Holst turned to the last section of Whitman s elegy to mourn friends killed in the war in composing his Ode to Death 1919 for chorus and orchestra Holst saw Whitman as a New World prophet of tolerance and internationalism as well as a new breed of mystic whose transcendentalism offered an antidote to encrusted Victorianism 113 According to Sullivan Holst invests Whitman s vision of lovely and soothing death with luminous open chords that suggest a sense of infinite space Holst is interested here in indeterminacy a feeling of the infinite not in predictability and closure 114 Hartmann Edit In 1936 German composer Karl Amadeus Hartmann 1905 1963 began setting a German translation of an excerpt from Whitman s poem for an intended cantata scored for an alto soloist and orchestra that was given various titles including Lamento Kantate trans Cantata Symphonisches Fragment Symphonic Fragment and Unser Leben Our Life 115 The cantata contained passages from Whitman s elegy and from three other poems 116 Hartmann stated in correspondence that he freely adapted the poem which he thought embraced his generally difficult hopeless life although no idea will be choked with death 117 118 119 Hartmann later incorporated his setting of the poem as the second movement titled Fruhling Spring of a work that he designated as his First Symphony Versuch eines Requiem Attempt at a Requiem Hartmann withdrew his compositions from musical performance in Germany during the Nazi era and the work was not performed until May 1948 when it was premiered in Frankfurt am Main 120 His first symphony is seen as a protest of the Nazi regime Hartmann s setting is compared to the intentions of Igor Stravinsky s ballet The Rite of Spring where it was not a representation of the natural phenomenon of the season but an expression of ritualistic violence cast in sharp relief against the fleeting tenderness and beauty of the season 121 Hindemith Edit American conductor Robert Shaw and his choral ensemble the Robert Shaw Chorale commissioned German composer Paul Hindemith to set Whitman s text to music to mourn the death of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on 12 April 1945 Hindemith had lived in the United States during World War II The work was titled When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d A Requiem for those we love Hindemith set the poem in 11 sections scored for mezzo soprano and baritone soloists mixed choir SATB and full orchestra It premiered on 20 April 1946 conducted by Shaw The composition is regarded by musicologist David Neumeyer as Hindemith s only profoundly American work 122 and Paul Hume described it as a work of genius and the presence of the genius presiding over its performance brought us splendor and profound and moving glory 123 It is noted that Hindemith incorporated a Jewish melody Gaza in his composition 124 Weill Hughes and Rice Edit Whitman s poem appears in the opera Street Scene 1946 which was the collaboration of composer Kurt Weill poet and lyricist Langston Hughes and playwright Elmer Rice Rice adapted his 1929 Pulitzer prize winning play of the same name for the opera In the opera which premiered in New York City in January 1947 the poem s third stanza is recited in song as part of the duet Remember that I Care at the end of the first act The poem is referenced again towards the end of the opera in the duet Don t Forget the Lilac Bush Weill received the first Tony Award for Best Original Score for this work 125 126 1990s onward Edit African American composer George T Walker Jr 1922 2018 set Whitman s poem in his composition Lilacs for voice and orchestra which was awarded the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for Music 127 128 129 The work described as passionate and very American with a beautiful and evocative lyrical quality using Whitman s words was premiered by the Boston Symphony Orchestra on 1 February 1996 127 128 130 Composer George Crumb born 1929 set the Death Carol in his 1979 work Apparition 1979 an eight part song cycle for soprano and amplified piano 131 The University of California at Berkeley commissioned American neoclassical composer Roger Sessions 1896 1985 to set the poem as a cantata to commemorate their centennial anniversary in 1964 Sessions did not finish composing the work until the 1970s dedicating it to the memories of Civil Rights movement leader Martin Luther King Jr and political figure Robert F Kennedy who were assassinated within weeks of each other in 1968 132 133 Sessions first became acquainted with Leaves of Grass in 1921 and began setting the poem as a reaction to the death of his friend George Bartlett although none of the sketches from that early attempt survive He returned to the text almost fifty years later composing a work scored for soprano contralto and baritone soloists mixed chorus and orchestra The music is described as responding wonderfully both to the Biblical majesty and musical fluidity of Whitman s poetry and here to in the evocation of the gray brown bird singing from the swamp and of the over mastering scent of the lilacs he gives us one of the century s great love letters to Nature 134 In 2004 working on a commission from the Brooklyn Philharmonic the American composer Jennifer Higdon adapted the poem to music for solo baritone and orchestra titled Dooryard Bloom The piece was first performed on 16 April 2005 by the baritone Nmon Ford and the Brooklyn Philharmonic under the conductor Michael Christie 135 136 Steve Dobrogosz also set the poem to music a CD of it was released in 2006 See also Edit nbsp Poetry portal1865 in literature 1865 in poetry Poetry of the United StatesReferences Edit Gutman 1998 Miller 1962 p 155 Kaplan 1980 p 187 Loving 1999 p 414 a b Kaplan 1980 Callow 1992 p 232 Reynolds 1995 p 340 Loving 1999 p 283 Callow 1992 p 293 Peck 2015 p 64 Whitman 1961 p 1 68 70 Loving 1975 Loving 1999 p 281 283 a b c d e f g h Price amp Folsom 2005 p 91 Whitman 1882 p 310 Swanson 2006 p 213 Sandburg 1936 p 394 a b Genoways 2006 p 534 Loving 1999 p 289 Schmidt amp Rendon 2008 p 47 Whitman amp Eckler 1865 p 69 a b c d e Vendler 2006 p 191 206 Allen 1997 p 197 198 Whitman 1865 p 3 11 a b Whitman 1867 Eiselein Gregory Drum Taps 1865 Criticism The Walt Whitman Archive Retrieved 1 February 2021 Mancuso Luke Leaves of Grass 1867 edition Criticism The Walt Whitman Archive Retrieved 1 February 2021 Gailey 2006 p 409 410 Walt Whitman and Leaves of Grass Revising Himself Leaves of Grass Exhibitions Library of Congress loc gov Retrieved 1 February 2021 Seery 2011 p 127 a b Price amp Folsom 2005 p 98 Whitman 1980 p lxii lxvii Whitman 1871 1872 p 32 40 Whitman 1881 Renner Dennis K Leaves of Grass 1881 82 edition Criticism The Walt Whitman Archive Retrieved 1 February 2021 Harvard Norton Parini 2006 p 187 194 Parini 1995 p 217 224 Greene 2012 p 398 911 Rowe 1997 p 134 135 a b Rowe 1997 p 149 n 7 Whitman 1871 1872 Whitman 1881 p 255 262 Loving 1999 p 100 Rugoff 2000 p 134 135 Miller 1962 Drum 1911 Casanowicz 1901 1906 Boulton 1953 Parini 2006 p 129 130 Hinz 1972 p 35 54 Chase 1955 p 140 145 Adams 1957 p 479 487 Ramazani 1994 Bloom 1999 p 91 Shore 1985 p 86 87 Hamilton 1990 p 618 Zeiger 2006 p 243 Cuddon 2012 Zeiger 2006 Warren 2009 p 377 392 at 383 a b Anaphora a b Warren 2009 p 377 392 Sharma Sharma p 40 41 Magnus 1989 p 137ff Hollander 2006 p 183 Erkkila 1989 p 88 a b c Hoffmann 1994 p 11 12 Coffman 1954 p 225 232 Reynolds 1995 Loving 1999 p 288 Eiselein 1996 p 70 a b Reynolds 1995 p 445 Whitman 1882 1883 p 65 66 a b Yongue 1984 p 12 20 Erkkila 1989 p 228 229 Rowe 1997 p 159 Mack 2002 p 125 Whitman p 766 Votebook vol 2 sfn error no target CITEREFWhitman help a b Kaplan 1980 p 307 310 Burroughs 1895 p 223 vol 1 Loving 1999 p 289 n 85 Reynolds 1995 p 444 Aspiz 1985 p 216 233 227 Rugoff 1985 p 257 271 Miller 2005 p 418 a b c Miller 2005 p 419 Killingsworth 2006 pp 311 325 322 Oser 1998 p 150 Bloom 2007 p 104 Lehman 2016 p 94 Eliot 1922 p 355 357 Eliot 1971 p 129 Kearns 1986 p 150 Eliot 1922 lines 360 366 Ackerley 1984 p 514 Rainey 2005 p 117 118 Eliot 1974 p 147 148 Miller 1977 p 113 Bentley 1990 p 179 183 Shucard 1998 p 203 Peter 1952 p 242 66 Miller 2005 p 135 Miller 2005 p 130 135 Miller 2005 p 133 Miller 2005 p 7 8 133 Sullivan 1999 p 95ff Sullivan 1999 p 97 Town 2003 p 73 102 at 78 Sullivan 1999 p 98 Sullivan 1999 p 116 Sullivan 1999 p 118 Chapman 2006 Chapman 2006 p 47 Chapman 2006 p 36 37 McCredie 1982 p 57 Kater 2000 p 90 Chapman 2006 p 45 Chapman 2006 p 3 Sullivan 1999 p 122 Noss 1989 p 188 Chapman 2006 p 40 fn 10 Sullivan 1999 p 119 122 Hinton 2012 p 381 385 a b Fischer amp Fischer 2001 p xlvi a b Fischer 1988 p 278 Walker 2009 p 228 Brennan amp Clarage 1999 p 451 Clifton 2008 p 40 Steinberg 2005 pp 252 255 Rugoff 1985 pp 257 271 at 270 Steinberg 2005 pp 346 347 Higdon Jennifer 15 January 2006 Jennifer Higdon s Dooryard Bloom NPR Retrieved 14 August 2015 Kozinn Allan 18 April 2005 A Celebration of Brooklyn via Whitman The New York Times Retrieved 14 August 2015 Bibliography EditBooks Edit Allen Gay Wilson 1997 A Reader s Guide to Walt Whitman Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 0488 4 Aspiz Harold 1985 Science and Pseudoscience In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Routledge Bentley Joseph 1990 Reading The Waste Land Modernism and the Limits of Interpretation Amherst University of Massachusetts Press Bloom Harold ed 1999 Walt Whitman Broomall PA Chelsea House Publishers Bloom Harold ed 2007 T S Eliot s The Waste Land Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 7910 9307 8 Boulton Marjories 1953 Anatomy of Poetry London Routledge amp Kegan ISBN 9780710060914 Brennan Elizabeth A Clarage Elizabeth C 1999 Who s Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners ISBN 978 1 57356 111 2 Burroughs John 1895 The Return of the Birds inThe Writings of John Burroughs Boston Houghton Mifflin Callow Philip 1992 From Noon to Starry Night A Life of Walt Whitman Chikago Ivan R Dee Casanowicz I M 1901 1906 Parallelism in Hebrew Poetry inThe Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk and Wagnalls Chapman David Allen 2006 Ich Sitze und Schaue fromGenesis Evolution and Interpretation of K A Hartmann s First Symphony PDF Athens GA University of Georgia thesis Chase Richard 1955 Walt Whitman Reconsidered New York William Sloan Clifton Keith E 2008 Recent American Art Song A Guide Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810862104 Coffman Stanley K 1954 Crossing Brooklyn Ferry A Note on the Catalogue Technique in Whitman s Poetry Modern Philology Oxford Oxford University Press Cuddon J A 2012 Kastan David Scott ed Elegy inDictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory Chichester West Sussex UK John Wiley amp Sons Drum Walter 1911 Parallelism inThe Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Eiselein Gregory 1996 Literature and Humanitarian Reform in the Civil War Era Eliot T homas S tearns 1922 The Waste Land New York Horace Liveright 1971 Eliot Valerie ed The Waste Land A Facsimile and Transcript of the Original Drafts New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich 1974 Eliot Valerie ed The Waste Land A Facsimile and Transcript of the Original Drafts Including the Annotations of Ezra Pound New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Erkkila Betty 1989 Whitman the Political Poet Oxford New York Oxford University Press Fischer Heinz Dietrich 1988 The Pulitzer Prize archive ISBN 978 3 598 30170 4 Fischer Heinz Dietrich Fischer Erika J 2001 Musical Composition Awards 1943 1999 ISBN 978 3 598 30185 8 Gailey Amanda 2006 The Publishing History of Leaves of Grass In Kummings Donald D ed A Companion to Walt Whitman Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons pp 409 438 ISBN 978 1 4051 2093 7 Genoways Ted 2006 Civil War Poems in Drum Taps and Memories of President Lincoln In Kummings Donald D ed A Companion to Walt Whitman Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons pp 522 537 ISBN 978 1 4051 2093 7 Greene Roland ed 2012 Elegy and Narrative Poetry inThe Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics 4 ed Princeton Princeton University Press Gutman Huck 1998 LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Commentary Selected Criticism Drum Taps 1865 onWalt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing Hamilton A C 1990 The Spencer Encyclopedia Toronto Buffalo University of Toronto Press Hinton Stephen 2012 Weill s Musical Theater Stages of Reform Berkeley University of California Press Hoffmann Daniel 1994 Sill Geoffrey M ed Hankering Gross Mystical Nude Whitman s Self and the American Tradition inWalt Whitman of Mickle Street A Centennial Collection Knoxville University of Tennessee Press Hollander John 2006 Bloom Harold ed Whitman s Difficult Availability inBloom s Modern Critical Views Walt Whitman New York Chelsea House Kaplan Justin 1980 Walt Whitman A Life New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 9780671225421 Kater Michael H 2000 Composers of the Nazi Era Eight Portraits New York Oxford University ISBN 978 0 19 509924 9 Kearns Cleo McNelly 1986 Bloom Harold ed Realism Politics and Literary Persona inThe Waste Land New York Chelsea House Killingsworth M Jimmie 2006 Nature In Kummings Donald D ed A Companion to Walt Whitman Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons pp 311 325 ISBN 978 1 4051 2093 7 Lehman Robert S 2016 Impossible Modernism T S Eliot Walter Benjamin and the Critique of Historical Reason Stanford University Press ISBN 978 1 5036 0014 0 Loving Jerome M 1975 Civil War Letters of George Washington Whitman Durham NC Duke University Press 1999 Walt Whitman The Song of Himself Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520214279 Mack Stephen John 2002 The Pragmatic Whitman Reimagining American Democracy Iowa City Iowa University of Iowa Press ISBN 9781587294242 Magnus Laury 1989 The Track of the Repetend Syntactic and Lexical Repetition in Modern Poetry Brooklyn AMS Press McCredie Andres 1982 Karl Amadeus Hartmann Thematic Catalogue of His Works New York C F Peters Miller James E 1962 Walt Whitman New York Twayne Publishers 1977 T S Eliot s Personal Waste Land Exorcism of the Demons State College Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press 2005 T S Eliot The Making of an American poet 1888 1922 State College Pennsylvania Penn State Press Noss Luther 1989 Paul Hindemith in the United States Chicago University of Illinois Press Olmstead Andrew 2008 Roger Sessions A Biography New York Routledge Oser Lee 1998 T S Eliot and American Poetry University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1181 1 Parini Jay ed 1995 The Columbia Anthology of American Poetry New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231081221 ed 2006 The Wadsworth Anthology of Poetry Boston Thompson Wadsworth ISBN 1413004733 Peck Garrett 2015 Walt Whitman in Washington D C The Civil War and America s Great Poet Charleston SC The History Press ISBN 9781626199736 Price Kenneth Folsom Ed eds 2005 Re Scripting Walt Whitman An Introduction to His Life and Work Malden MA Blackwell Publishing Rainey Lawrence S ed 2005 The Annotated Waste Land with Eliot s Contemporary Prose New Haven Yale University Press Ramazani Jahan 1994 Poetry of Mourning The Modern Elegy from Hardy to Heaney Chicago University of Chicago Press Reynolds David S 1995 Walt Whitman s America A Cultural Biography New York Vintage Books Rowe John Carlos 1997 At Emerson s Tomb The Politics of Classic American Literature New York Columbia University Press Rugoff Kathy 1985 Opera and Other Kinds of Music In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Routledge 2000 Kramer Lawrence ed Three American Requiems Contemplating When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d inWalt Whitman and Modern Music War Desire and the Trials of Nationhood Vol 1 New York Garland Press Sandburg Carl 1936 Abraham Lincoln The War Years IV New York Harcourt Brace amp World Schmidt Shannon McKenna Rendon Joni 2008 Novel Destinations Literary Landmarks from Jane Austen s Bath to Ernest Heminway s Key West Washington D C National Geographic ISBN 978 1 4262 0277 3 Seery John 2011 A Political Companion to Walt Whitman University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 2655 5 Sharma Raja Walt Whitman s Poetry An Analytical Approach Shore David R 1985 Spenser and the Poetics of Pastoral A Study of the World of Colin Clout Montreal McGill University Press Shucard Alan 1998 Eliot T S 1888 1965 In LeMaster J R Kummings Donald D eds Walt Whitman An Encyclopedia New York Routledge Steinberg Michael 2005 Choral Masterworks A Listener s Guide Oxford New York Oxford University Press Sullivan Jack 1999 Manhunt New World Symphonies How American Culture Changed European Music ISBN 978 0 300 07231 0 Swanson James 2006 Manhunt The 12 Day Chase for Lincoln s Killer New York HarperCollins Town Stephen 2003 Adams Byron Wells Robin eds Full of fresh thoughts Vaughan Williams Whitman and the Genesis ofA Sea Symphony in Adams Byron and Wells Robin editors Vaughan Williams Essays Aldershot Ashgate Publishing Vendler Helen 2006 Poetry and the Meditation of Value Whitman on Lincoln in Bloom Harold Bloom s Modern Critical Views Walt Whitman New York Chelsea House Walker George 2009 Reminiscences of an American Composer and Pianist ISBN 978 0 8108 6940 0 Warren James Perrin 2009 Kummings Donald D ed Style inA Companion to Walt Whitman Chichester West Sussex UK John Wiley amp Sons Zeiger Melissa 2006 Kastan David Scott ed Elegy inThe Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature Oxford Oxford University Press 821 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d English Poetry III From Tennyson to Whitman The Harvard Classics 3 Bartleby 2001 1909 1914 English Poetry from Tennyson to Whitman The Norton Anthology of American Literature New York W W Norton amp Co Primary sources Edit Whitman Walt 1865 Hush d Be the Camps To Day inDrum Taps Brooklyn Peter Eckler 1865 Sequel to Drum Taps When Lilacs Last in the Door Yard Bloom d and other poems Washington Gibson Brothers 1867 Price Kenneth Folsom Ed eds When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d inLeaves of Grass New York William E Chapin 1871 1872 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d inLeaves of Grass New York J S Redfield 1881 When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d Leaves of Grass 7th ed Boston James R Osgood 1882 1883 The Weather Does it sympathize with these times fromSpecimen Days and Collect 1882 Death of Abraham Lincoln Lecture deliver d in New York April 14 1879 in Philadelphia 80 in Boston 81inSpecimen Days amp Collect Philadelphia Rees Welsh amp Company 1891 1892 Leaves of Grass Philadelphia David McKay 1961 Miller Edwin Haviland ed The Correspondence Vol 1 New York New York University Press 1980 Bradley Scully eds Leaves of Grass A Textual Variorum of the Printed Poems Vol 1 New York New York University Press Journals Edit Ackerley C J 1984 Eliot s The Waste Land and Shackleton s South Notes amp Queries a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Adams Richard P 1957 Whitman s Lilacs and the Tradition of Pastoral Elegy Bucknell Review a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hinz Evelyn J 1972 Whitman s Lilacs The Power of Elegy Bucknell Review a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Peter John 1952 A New Interpretation of The Waste Land Essays in Criticism a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Yongue Patricia Lee 1984 Violence in Whitman s When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d Walt Whitman Quarterly Review a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Online sources Edit Poetic Technique Anaphora American Academy of Poets Further reading Edit Cavitch Max 2007 American Elegy The Poetry of Mourning from the Puritans to Whitman University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 4893 XExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d The Walt Whitman Archive When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d at the Poetry Foundation website When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom d from The Harvard Classics via Bartleby com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom 27d amp oldid 1177474985, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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