Wednesday, January 8, 2020

Whitmans Leaves of Grass and Song of Myself, and...

This semester I have learned valuable tools and techniques when it comes to writing and analyzing different types of literature. I will thoroughly explore what Whitman, Columbus and Smith meant in specific passages of a few of their literature works. Whitman’s free verse poems, â€Å"Leaves of Grass† and â€Å"Song of Myself†, seemed to be most appealing. I also found Christopher Columbus’s â€Å"Letter to Lluis de Santangel† and â€Å"Letter to Ferdinand and Isabella† to be quite intriguing about life back then. Even John Smith’s writings such as â€Å"The General Historie of Virginia† and â€Å"A Description of New England† enlightened me to what it was they saw when venturing out in the new world. Walt Whitman was an American poet whose free verse brought a new style and uniqueness to American poetry. â€Å"Free verse is poetry organized according to the cadences of speech and image patterns rather than according to a regular metrical scheme. The meter is irregular and its rhythms are based on patterned elements such as sounds, words, phrases, sentences, and paragraphs, rather than on the traditional units of metrical feet† (â€Å"Free Verse Encyclopedia† 1). You can see his free verse style through his literary works such as â€Å"Leaves of Grass† and â€Å"Song of Myself†. Whitman wrote broad stanzas and focused on the whole of America as his inspiration. His lines covered a wide range of topics and generated multiple points of view for the reader. He called his life’s work â€Å"Leaves of Grass†; stressing the

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