
This volume gathers the vibrant, sprawling verses of one of America’s most daring poets, offering a window into a mind that celebrates both the individual and the collective. From bustling city streets to quiet prairie expanses, the poems pulse with an exuberant love of life, nature, and the human body, inviting listeners to feel the rhythm of the nation itself. Whitman's free‑verse style, unbounded by strict meter or rhyme, creates a conversational intimacy that feels like a friend speaking directly to you.
The collection also confronts the turbulence of its era—war, loss, and the yearning for unity—while affirming a hopeful belief in democracy’s promise. Through striking images of drums, banners, and everyday labor, the poet weaves personal grief with a larger, inclusive vision of humanity. Listeners will be drawn into a chorus that both honors the past and reaches toward an ever‑expanding future.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (380K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1819–1892
A bold, restless voice in American poetry, this writer transformed everyday life, democracy, the body, and the soul into something expansive and new. Best known for Leaves of Grass, he helped reshape what poetry in the United States could sound like.
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