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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. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Although often lambasted by establishment critics and more prominent poets of his era as an uncouth, uneducated “barbarian,” Whitman was no fool. He knew firsthand the onerous obligations of work. It is an axiom of a consumer capitalist society now and in Whitman’s era: If anyone actually liked to work, they wouldn’t have to be paid to do it. Here, however, workers go about their routine, backbreaking and tedious, nevertheless joyously singing. This whole whistle-while-you-work argument is, granted, idealistic. It is not how work is but how work might be, could be, maybe even should be. Like every work by every Transcendentalist (and Fireside Poet, and for that matter, every Christian theologian back to Augustine) Whitman’s argument here is set against, even despite, reality not because of it.
Everything in Whitman’s own background would render ironic the happy argument that celebrates work as deeply, unapologetically rewarding. Surely Whitman must be mocking the idea of rewarding work. After all, Whitman as a child had watched his father lose what little savings the family had by pursuing a pipe dream, a tantalizing longshot real estate speculation scheme that was designed to rescue him from the thankless drudgery of crafting an endless procession of tables and chairs for the homes of the wealthy people in nearby Manhattan.
By Walt Whitman
A Glimpse
Walt Whitman
America
Walt Whitman
A Noiseless Patient Spider
Walt Whitman
Are you the new person drawn toward me?
Walt Whitman
As I Walk These Broad Majestic Days
Walt Whitman
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
Walt Whitman
For You O Democracy
Walt Whitman
Hours Continuing Long
Walt Whitman
I Sing the Body Electric
Walt Whitman
I Sit and Look Out
Walt Whitman
Leaves of Grass
Walt Whitman
O Captain! My Captain!
Walt Whitman
Song of Myself
Walt Whitman
Vigil Strange I Kept on the Field One Night
Walt Whitman
When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer
Walt Whitman
When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd
Walt Whitman
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