Walt Whitman
Whitman, Walt (1819-1892), American poet, whose work boldly asserts the
worth of
the individual and the oneness of all humanity. Whitman's defiant
break with
traditional poetic concerns and style exerted a major influence on
American
thought and literature. Born near Huntington, New York, Whitman was
the second
of a family of nine children. His father was a carpenter. The poet
had a
particularly close relationship with his mother. When Whitman was four
years
old, his family moved to Brooklyn, New York, where he attended public
school for
six years before being apprenticed to a printer. Two years later
he went to New
York City to work in printing shops. He returned to Long
Island in 1835 and
taught in country schools. In 1838 and 1839 Whitman edited
a newspaper, the
Long-Islander, in Huntington. When he became bored with
the job, he went back to
New York City to work as a printer and
journalist. There he enjoyed the theater,
the opera, and-always an omnivorous
reader- the libraries. Whitman wrote poems
and stories for popular magazines
and made political speeches, for which Tammany
Hall Democrats rewarded
him with the editorship of various short-lived
newspapers (see Tammany
Society). For two years Whitman edited the influential
Brooklyn Eagle,
but he lost his position for supporting the Free-Soil party.
After a
brief sojourn in New Orleans, Louisiana, he returned to Brooklyn, where
he
tried to start a Free-Soil newspaper. After several years spent at
various
jobs, including building houses, Whitman began writing a new kind of
poetry and
thereafter neglected business.
Bibliography
Gibaldi,
Joseph. MLA Handbook for writers of Research papers. 4th ed. New
York:
MLA, 1995