Emily Dickenson
By: Janna • Essay • 457 Words • May 17, 2010 • 1,232 Views
Emily Dickenson
Emily Dickinson and Uncle Walt Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman are two of literature’s greatest innovators, they each changed the face of American literature. they are also considered one of literature’s greatest pair of opposites. Dickinson is a timid wreck loose. While Whitman was very open and sociable, Whitman shares the ideas of William Cullen Bryant, everyone and everything is somehow linked by a higher bond. Both Whitman and Dickinson were decades ahead of their time, sharing only the universality of their works. Whitman’s works always express his feelings of equality towards all mankind “For every atom belonging to me as good to you”(Whitman 347). Whitman exemplifies the American values of equal opportunity. Uncle Walt always sympathized with the common man because that is who he is, a common man. Whitman’s works often express his love for himself “I celebrate myself, and I sing myself, and what I assume you shall assume”(Whitman 347). Whitman’s bold statements are one of many reasons that Uncle Walt has become so popular and so very universal. Walt Whitman has the fortitude to say what every person has on his or her mind. Whitman often writes about his feelings in a list or catalog, then he would constantly revise his it. Whitman would never use rhyme scheme or meter he expressed his feelings, “the spotted hawk swoops by accusing me, he complains of my gab and my loitering. I too am untranslatable, I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world.”(Whitman 359) Emily Dickinson on the other hand did not have the fortitude to directly address her problems. She always addressed herself through