Walt Whitman Critics Flashcards
Eldrid Herrington; interpretation of poem “Beat! Beat! Drums!”.
BBD “is often read simply as a rallying cry for war, but it is THEMATICALLY MORE COMPLEX.”
Kathy Rugoff; the ferocity of the music of war.
(Poem: “Beat! Beat! Drums!”)
“While the first line is reinforced through similar sounds & the military music advances, the poet does not describe soldiers preparing for battle or in battle; instead, THE FEROCITY OF THE MUSIC OF WAR IS PORTRAYED AS OMNIPRESENT & OMNIPOTENT .”
Kathy Rugoff; sounds of war on the poem structure.
(Poem: “Beat! Beat! Drums!”)
“War takes on a life of its own & overwhelms its creators. To describe its music creates a tension in syntax, sound and semantics. Whitman suggests the language of music & the characteristics of war break the bounds of order.”
Ezra Greenspan; significance of “masks”
(Poem: “How Solemn as One by One”)
“Whitman overtly meant to indicate that it is always the indwelling spirit that constitutes essential identity, & not external features & manners.”
Robert Sabuda; what the poem celebrates.
(Poem: “I Hear America Singing”)
“a lyrical celebration of the American spirit as it gives voice to the many faces of this land.”
Gregory Eiselein; what the poem represents.
(Poem: “O Captain! My Captain!”)
“A revealing representation of the rhetorics of despair & celebration that followed the war…”
Robyn Lowrie; structure & rhythm.
(Poem: “O Captain! My Captain!”)
“Whitman’s lines are unrhymed & indented in succession as a visual impression in typography signifying a falling mood as Lincoln lies dying. He uses iambic meter combined in tetrameter to signify this heavy tone.”
M. Wynn Thomas; how Whitman tried to portray suffering.
(Poem: “The Wound-Dresser”)
“[Whitman] tried whenever possible to set potentially demeaning & humanly devastating suffering in a redeeming context, emphasizing the transfiguring courage of the sufferer, the love & care that attended him.”
M. Jimmie Killingsworth; reality of war.
(Poem: “The Wound-Dresser”)
“war becomes a matter not of struggle & glory on the field of battle […] but rather the struggle of the body to live & adjust to injuries, illness & death itself.”
Byrne Fone; themes.
(Poem: “I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing)
“Byrne Fone has shown that the need for affection and the impossibility of solitude which “Louisiana Live-Oak” ultimately assert are pervasive themes.”
Michael Moon; how the oak reflects Whitman’s poetic practice.
(Poem: “I Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing)
“Whitman recognizes in the live-oak’s ability to “utter joyous leaves” while “standing alone” a reflected image of his own poetic practice.”
R. W. French; the speaker’s emotional development.
(Poem: “As I Ebb’d with the Ocean of Life)
“the poet, having at the start of the poem given up all claims to authority by recognizing that he had never known himself or understood anything, at the end of the poem is prepared to re-assert his claims on a reader.”
M. Jimmie Killingsworth; what the poem is about.
(Poem: “As I Ebb’d with the Ocean of Life)
Whitman’s great poem of “spiritual autobiography, and the melancholy”
Eldrid Herrington; poem’s structure.
(Poem: “A Noiseless Patient Spider”)
“The poem is composed of 2 sets of 5 lines, each a sentence; the pause between them perfectly enacts the difficult poise between ostensive & internal identity.”
M. Jimmie Killingsworth; what the poem is about.
(Poem: “A Noiseless Patient Spider”)
“Whitman might have gone the conventional route of offering a reflection on human striving.”