A Collection: Walt Whitman
#1
Audio & Info 



WALT WHITMAN 1819-1892
Biography

WALT WHITMAN was born in Westhills, Long Island, May 31, 1819, in a farm-house overlooking the sea. While yet a child his parents moved to Brooklyn, where he acquired his education. He learned type-setting at thirteen years of age. Two years later he taught a country school. He contributed to the "Democratic Review" before he was twenty-one years old. At thirty he traveled through the Western States, and spent one year in New Orleans editing a newspaper. Returning home he took up his father's occupation of carpenter and builder, which he followed for a while. During the War of the Rebellion he spent most of his time in the hospitals and camps, in the relief of the sick and disabled soldiers. For a time he was a department clerk in Washington.

In 1856 he published a volume entitled "Leaves of Grass." This volume shows unquestionable power, and great originality. His labors among the sick and wounded necessarily made great impressions; these took form in his mind and were published under the title of "Drum Taps."

His poems lack much of the standard of recognized poetic measure. He has a style peculiar to himself, and his writings are full of meaning, beauty and interest. Of his productions, Underwood says: "Pupils who are accustomed to associate the idea of poetry with regular classic measure in rhyme, or in ten-syllabled blank verse or elastic hexameters, will commence these short and simple prose sentences with surprise, and will wonder how any number of them can form a poem. But let them read aloud with a mind in sympathy with the picture as it is displayed, and they will find by nature's unmistakable responses, that the author was a poet, and possessed the poet's incommunicable power to touch the heart." He died in Camden, N. J., March 20, 1892.
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#2
That first poem sounds like it's being read by a robot. The other reader has that bored intellectual voice.
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#3
it's not as bad as ginserg singing Wink
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#4
Anybody can sing. That American Idol stuff where people have to be perfect singers, the winners are usually so boring.


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There's that one recording that's claimed to be Whitman himself reading. But it's just a fragment.
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#5
i agree about anyone can sing, anyone can write poetry, but there are big buts with both.
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#6
But singing's like dancing. It's just something people do. It doesn't have to be professional. I guess somebody paid Ginsberg to record those Blake songs. I don't know, I didn't buy it.
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#7
(02-04-2013, 11:18 AM)rowens Wrote:  But singing's like dancing. It's just something people do. It doesn't have to be professional. I guess somebody paid Ginsberg to record those Blake songs. I don't know, I didn't buy it.
so is poetry. you can do it for the sake of just wanting to do it and thats solid, it's fantastical but.....if you want to improve or to write better poetry than you (not you personally Wink write now) or sing better sons in a better voice, you need to practice, you need to edit, you need to learn your craft.
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#8
Not if you're Allen Ginsberg, apparently. Or the New York Dolls.
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#9
i'm with yer on the new york dolls. with ginsberg, he'd got his name up as a poet before he started the singing shit. and people forgave him i think. where as the new york dolts were feared enough that people felt forced to listen Big Grin
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#10
Well there are different ways of producing charms.
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#11
on a different tack Big Grin
i'll be putting leaves of grass up in a day or two.
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#12
The whole book? Does it have a good reader?
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#13
it's libravox but it's not too bad. i have another version which is okay but i can't put it in open forum because of copyright restrictions.
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