Walt Whitman is known for composing writing poems relating human action with nature. He uses myriads of personifications and similes to display this. He uses an interesting technique to pull his audience to the piece. He uses alliteration to bring a piece to life giving it more reasoning and depth. His clever style attracts a diversity of readers.
“What we call poems being merely pictures (Whitman line 5)”. This quote states that poems become for of real life. Using such words as “pictures” meaning vivid images of what you reading. This helps you become more in contact with the information you’re reading. In the process, this can help your comprehension grow founder.
“Men like me, are our lusty lurking masculine poems (Whitman line 10)”. This quote states that men are only intrigued with insensitive reading. Also, that they don’t enjoy reading of anything other. This supposedly is what a regular, ordinary man is supposed to portray. In the earlier times being as such as common.
“Love-thoughts, love-juice, love- odor, love-yielding, love-climbers, and climbing sap (Whitman line 11)”. The quote has a repetition of “love” which means that it is adorned. Also, this meaning that men do have thoughts of feminine nature. As a result of doing, so the men break the normal boundary line between male hood. This stepping-stone make males ands females grow together as one being and innermost thoughts.
“The hairy wild bee that murmurs…full grown lady-flower (Whitman line 16-20)”. The quote shows how Whitman tries to relate physical love with the love for nature. He does this by comparing a woman to a flower “lady-flower” with her grace and aroma. Also, it shows being one with nature in a sense being out and enjoying your time with embracing the calm place.
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