Quick Facts
Fact | Details |
---|---|
Full Name | Walter Whitman Jr. |
Date of Birth | May 31, 1819 |
Place of Birth | Huntington, New York, U.S. |
Date of Death | March 26, 1892 |
Place of Death | Camden, New Jersey, U.S. |
Occupation | Poet, essayist, journalist |
Notable Works | – Leaves of Grass (1855) – “O Captain! My Captain!” – “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d” |
Literary Contributions | Considered one of the most influential poets in American literature; often called the father of free verse; incorporated transcendentalism and realism in his writings |
Controversy | His poetry collection Leaves of Grass (1855) was controversial in his time for its overt sensuality, described by some as obscene |
Childhood and Career | – Born in Huntington, lived in Brooklyn – Left formal schooling at 11 to work – Worked as a journalist, teacher, and government clerk |
Leaves of Grass | His major poetry collection, first published in 1855; financed with his own money; continued expanding and revising until his death |
Civil War Involvement | Went to Washington, D.C., and worked in hospitals caring for the wounded; wrote poems on loss and healing; authored poems on Abraham Lincoln’s assassination |
Later Life and Death | Suffered a stroke towards the end of his life; and moved to Camden, New Jersey, where his health declined further; the funeral was a public event |
Influence | Strong influence on poetry; considered essential to understanding America and its civilization |
Walt Whitman Books
Book Title | Year |
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Leaves of Grass | 1855 |
Song of Myself | 1855 |
Poems of Walt Whitman | |
O Captain! My Captain! | 1865 |
I Hear America Singing | 1860 |
Poèmes de Walt Whitman | 1868 |
I Sing the Body Electric | 1855 |
Passage to India | 1871 |
Song of the Open Road | 1856 |
A Noiseless Patient Spider | 1868 |
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry | 1856 |
Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking | |
Calamus | |
Beat! Beat! Drums! | |
Pioneers! O Pioneers! | 1865 |
Short Poems of Walt Whitman | |
Drum-Taps | 1865 |
The Wound Dresser | 1865 |
When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d | 1865 |
Walt Whitman and the Civil War | 1933 |
Walt Whitman, Best Poems | |
Liście Traw | 1855 |
Prose-Specimen Days and Collect | 1882 |
One’s Self I Sing | 1867 |
Walt Whitmans Werk | |
Whitman and Dickinson | |
There Was a Child Went Forth | 1855 |
Democratic Vistas | 1871 |
The Open Road | |
The Complete Poems | |
Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking | 1860 |
Live Oak, with Moss | 1860 |
The Works of Walt Whitman | |
The World Below the Brine | |
Life and Adventures of Jack Engle | 1852 |
Memoranda during the War | 1875 |
I Take to the Open Road | |
Franklin Evans | 1842 |
Prayer of Columbus | |
Leaves of Grass (v. 1-3) | |
Saudação a Walt Whitman | |
Poems about America | |
Complete Works | 1881 |
Sea Drift: For Baritone Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orch | |
One Hour to Madness and Joy | |
Manly Health and Training: To Teach the Science of | |
Patrolling Barnegat | |
Selected Poems | 1904 |
Whispers of Heavenly Death (Unabridged) | |
Dirge For Two Veterans | 1901 |
Song of Myself, Section 51 (Unabridged) |