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Who was Walt Whitman?

Reprinted from Brittanica Kids

(1819–92). When they first appeared, Walt Whitman’s poems were considered formless, crude, and often immoral. Today many consider Whitman to be the greatest American poet.

Walter Whitman was born in West Hills, Long Island, N.Y., on May 31, 1819, the second of six children. His father was a carpenter. Young Whitman tried many jobs. He was an office boy, printer, schoolteacher, reporter, and for a time the editor of the Brooklyn Eagle and other newspapers. At 30 he took a trip to New Orleans. He saw the vastness of his country for the first time, and he began to set down in poetry his impressions of the nation and its people.

No publisher or author’s name was on the first edition of ‘Leaves of Grass’ in 1855. Whitman printed it himself, and throughout his life he continued to publish expansions and revisions of the work. He sent copies of the first edition to well-known literary men. Some condemned the book, but Ralph Waldo Emerson saw its merit. In the 1856 edition Whitman printed Emerson’s letter of praise, which called the book “the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom yet contributed to American literature.”

Early in the American Civil War Whitman learned that his brother George was wounded and in a hospital in Washington, D.C. He found George nearly recovered but saw other soldiers badly in need of care. He stayed in Washington as a government clerk and also served as a hospital volunteer. Inspired by the suffering he saw, he wrote the volume of poetry called ‘Drum-Taps’, published in 1865.

After the war Whitman’s books began to sell well, and he contributed several articles to magazines. In 1873 he fell ill, suffering the first of several paralytic attacks. He remained an invalid for the rest of his life. Choosing Camden, N.J., as his last home, he lived modestly, enjoying the visits of those who came to honor him. He died on March 26, 1892.

Among Whitman’s other books of poems were ‘Calamus’, ‘November Boughs’, ‘Sands at Seventy’, and ‘Good-Bye My Fancy’. His prose works include ‘Democratic Vistas’, ‘Specimen Days and Collect’, ‘The Wound Dresser’ (wartime letters to his mother), ‘A Backward Glance O’er Travel’d Roads’, and ‘Diary in Canada’. (See also American Literature.)

Dedicated funding for the Sounds of Learning Dress Rehearsal Program has been provided by The William Penn Foundation, Hamilton Family Charitable Trust, Eugene Garfield Foundation, Wells Fargo, Universal Health Services, Hirsig Family Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation, The McLean Contributionship, and Mr. William A. Loeb

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