Brief Questions in Walt Whitman poems
Brief Question in Walt Whitman's poems
- What is “Song of Myself”?
- What is the theme of “Song of Myself”?
- How does the poem begin?
- What does the “spear of grass” symbolize?
- How can true knowledge be acquired, according to Whitman?
- What is Whitman’s attitude to sex?
- What does sexual union symbolize?
- Why is the poet proud of his body?
- How does Whitman show equality of body and soul?
- How does Whitman become a believer in democracy?
- How does the poet realize the immortality of the soul?
- What does the young woman of twenty-eight stand for?
- What does the young woman watch from her window?
- What is the meaning of “unscrew the locks from the doors”?
- What does Whitman believe as a democrat?
- Whose voice would Whitman become?
- What is Whitman’s idea of eternity?
- How can a man be a hero, according to Whitman?
- Why is the poet not afraid of death?
- Where does the poet invite his readers to go?
- What does the “spotted hawk” symbolize?
- What is the basic symbol in the poem?
- What is Whitman’s idea of the immortality of the soul?
- Where and when does Whitman behold God?
- What does Whitman mean by “en masse”?
- How many sections are there in “Song of Myself”?
- How does grass symbolize democracy?
- What is “the handkerchief of the Lord”?
- Where does Whitman behold God?
- How many sections are there in the poem?
- How does the poet’s self gain a cosmic dimension?
- How does the poet ensure his immortality?