With an Introduction and
Bibliography by David Rogers, Kingston University.
Walt Whitman's verse gave the poetry of America a distinctive national
voice. It reflects the unique vitality of the new nation, the vastness
of the land and the emergence of a sometimes troubled consciousness,
communicated in language and idiom regarded by many at the time as
shocking. Whitman's poems are organic and free flowing, fit into no
previously defined genre and skilfully combine autobiographical, sociological
and religious themes with lyrical sensuality. His verse is a fitting
celebration of a new breed of American and includes Song of Myself,
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, the celebratory Passage to India, and his
fine elegy for the assassinated President Lincoln, When Lilacs Last
in the Dooryard Bloom'd.