Walt Whitman
1819 - 1892
Walt Whitman stands as the singular innovator who broke the shackles of traditional meter and rhyme, effectively inventing modern American free verse. His role was that of a literary democrat, intentionally utilizing a sprawling, catalog-style poetic structure to reflect the vastness and diversity of a burgeoning nation. By abandoning classical constraints, he crafted a voice that sounded like the untethered spirit of the common person. His magnum opus, Leaves of Grass, served as a living, evolving project that he revised throughout his life to capture the shifting reality of the United States. His work remains the essential foundation for nearly all subsequent American poetry that prioritizes raw, authentic expression over rigid form.
Poems
- The Calming Thought of All
- Thanks in Old Age
- Life and Death
- The Voice of the Rain
- Soon Shall the Winter's Foil Be Here
- While Not the Past Forgetting
- The Dying Veteran
- Shot gold, maroon and violet, dazzling silver, emerald, fawn...
- Twenty Years
- Orange Buds by Mail from Florida
- You lingering sparse leaves of me on winter-nearing boughs...
- Not Meagre, Latent Boughs Alone