Search Helium

Home > Arts & Humanities > Literature > Poets & Poetry

An overview of the most famous 19th Century American poets

by Moe Zilla

Created on: March 09, 2009   Last Updated: May 27, 2010

America's poets changed the world of literature, but each one had their own unique style. I once had an English professor who insisted America had only one great romantic poet: Edgar Allen Poe. America's other most famous poets, he said with a fond smile, had written after the Romantic period , and instead celebrated realism and the wild beauty of nature. There's a connection between the folksy wisdom of Mark Twain and the raw joy of a poet like Walt Whitman. And even in the poems of Emily Dickinson, you'll find a quiet regard for the glories of the natural world.

EDGAR ALLAN POE

The romance of Poe is evident in his poems and in his life. His wife died two years after their marriage in 1835, and his most famous poems are about mourning a lost love. In "The Raven" he describes a man "grieving for the lost Lenore," who's suddenly haunted by a black raven that won't leave, seeming to taunt him by repeating the word "nevermore." "Ulalume" describes a man wandering in the night, only to realize he's absent-mindedly walked to a tomb on the anniversary of his wife's death. And in "The Bells" he lists out the ceremonies that are celebrated by ringing bells - including a wedding, and then a funeral.

But Poe's poems also show off his perfect technique. Within rhyming lines are repeating sounds giving an extra energy in the words, and he knew when to repeat entire phrases. For example, in his most famous poem - "The Raven" - there's triple alliterations, like when Poe writes that he "nodded, nearly napping." And instead of using a different word for rhymes, he sadly repeats the name "Lenore" at the end of consecutive lines. In some poems, he even hid the name of other poets (including Sarah Anna Lewis and Frances Sargent Osgood), using one letter of their name in each line of the poem.

WALT WHITMAN

Walt Whitman's rhythm was exactly the opposite of Poe's - irregular and wild. He wrote long soaring lines about the joys of his country - the wilderness, locomotives, and his fellow Americans. When Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, Whitman wrote several poems of tribute, including "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd." But through all of his works ran a great love that he'd say was as big as America
itself.

"Song of Myself" sprawls through 52 stanzas, in which Whitman actually sees in himself Americans - the old and the young, the soldiers, the hunters, and the Indians. "In the faces of men and women, I see God," Whitman says, and his poem presents his an exhilarating passion

128686

Featured Partner

Text and Academic Authors Association

The Text and Academic Authors Association (TAA) is the only authoring association devoted exclusively to serving textbook and academic authors. TAA was established in 1987 for those interested in developing and publishing educational...more


CONNECT WITH US

Read
our blog
Helum for writers

Write and get published
Share with other writers
Polish your freelancing skills

Join our active writing community
Helium Content Source for Publishers

Quality articles from proven freelancers
Exclusive rights, fast turnaround
Brand engagement, business blogging -- our writers do it all

Get custom content today!

INFORMATION


Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA
#