The meaning and texture of the seventh poetry of the seventh poem "Grass Leaf" of Grass Walter Whitman in his work shows the subtleness of the ability of the poet to manipulate the emotions of the reader. There is no special emotional image in this poem, but the overall image drawn by word selection and sound use is very profound. Like many other poems written by Walt Whitman, this poem is emotionally depressing, but not depressed. This is serious, but it will not get irritated. Whitman wrote about the general idea that everything is integrated and integrated.
The title of the anthology comes from the poem "Walt Whitman's note", which was first published in the 1860 edition "Grass Leaf" as one of the "message leaves" and then re-published under the name "To America" I will. This poem also has an exciting resistance to the majority of it, and is the title of the collection. This is an American who should carefully think - in this era it is one of the opposite opinion of Whitman to change the "party before the state" ideology to a dangerous situation. The form of "undoubted obedience" eventually leads to personal freedom and death of group freedom. Another Whitman's poorly known poem "Responder!" Is put together in a series of verbs and exclamation marks. , Anthology
After reading "Grass Leaf" it is clear that this is a collection of poems written according to Whitman's life. In the first part of the series we will explain Whitman's life and the physical aspects of human ideology. One of the fundamental ideas of Whitman is the doctrine of "identity", which seems to mean that he wants to unite two animals for regeneration. Whitman said: "The soul of the universe is masters and genius masters, also an energetic animal spirit, the materials of the body are women and mothers, waiting for fertility and life-free things. Grassroots ( 134 pages) Here you can see an example of Whitman talking about copying between men and women.This is clearly an example of a physical relationship that Whitman talks frequently in "grass leaves" It is natural that he likes to talk. Many of his poems cover his view of the relationship between nature and us.
Walt Whitman's blade covers many aspects of human love, including love for the body. There are many poems in Whitman's book trying to accept the beauty of the human body, not hiding it. Whitman explained the human form in detail with "grass leaves", but one of his poems is particularly brilliant. In the fourth book "The lawn of children of Adam", Whitman celebrates the human form for the reader. "I sing the power of the body" is a special poem that shows how Witman celebrates the human body through a description language of love and human form and promotes human form to more than just simulation.