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Walt WhitmanA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Whispers of Heavenly Death” by Walt Whitman (1868)
Written hard on the heels of Whitman’s own ghastly experiences as a nurse in Washington during the Civil War, this cycle of poems first featured “A Noiseless Patient Spider.” The poems detail Whitman’s grand vision of how death cannot be the terror small minds allow it to be. He gently coaxes his reader to follow him into a radical new interpretation of death as a transcription into a soothing spiritual reality beyond the confirmation of the senses.
“Resignation” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1850)
The heartbreaking contemplation of a father struggling to understand the implications of the death of his child, Longfellow’s poem can be contrasted with Whitman’s thumping affirmation of a transcendent cosmos that renders such individual deaths irrelevant and a distraction from the business of engaging the now. This message—valorizing humility, patience, and suffering—is exactly what Whitman rejects. Longfellow convinces himself death is a transition and that he must be patient for the reunion promised by Christianity in the glory of heaven.
“Footnote to Howl” by Allen Ginsberg (1956)
Ginsberg, one of Whitman’s most ardent admirers, drew much of his Beat gospel of dazzling and uncompromising optimism in every element of the physical universe from Whitman.
By Walt Whitman