Poems By Walt Whitman by Walt Whitman
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page 25 of 313 (07%)
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none of these.
The only division of his poems into sections, made by Whitman himself, has been noted above: _Leaves of Grass_, _Songs before Parting_, supplementary to the preceding, and _Drum Taps_, with their _Sequel_. The peculiar title, _Leaves of Grass_, has become almost inseparable from the name of Whitman; it seems to express with some aptness the simplicity, universality, and spontaneity of the poems to which it is applied. _Songs before Parting_ may indicate that these compositions close Whitman's poetic roll. _Drum Taps_ are, of course, songs of the Civil War, and their _Sequel_ is mainly on the same theme: the chief poem in this last section being the one on the death of Lincoln. These titles all apply to fully arranged series of compositions. The present volume is not in the same sense a fully arranged series, but a selection: and the relation of the poems _inter se_ appears to me to depend on altered conditions, which, however narrowed they are, it may be as well frankly to recognise in practice. I have therefore redistributed the poems (a latitude of action which I trust the author may not object to), bringing together those whose subject-matter seems to warrant it, however far separated they may possibly be in the original volume. At the same time, I have retained some characteristic terms used by Whitman himself, and have named my sections respectively-- 1. Chants Democratic (poems of democracy). 2. Drum Taps (war songs). 3. Walt Whitman (personal poems). 4. Leaves of Grass (unclassified poems). 5. Songs of Parting (missives). The first three designations explain themselves. The fourth, _Leaves of Grass_, is not so specially applicable to the particular poems of that |
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