Walt Whitman's Notebooks and Poetry: the Sweep of the Universe"small in theme yet has it the sweep of the universe" IntroductionWalt Whitman sought to create a new and distinctly American form of poetry. As he declared in Democratic Vistas, "America has yet morally and artistically originated nothing. She seems singularly unaware that the models of persons, books, manners, etc., appropriate for former conditions and for European lands, are but exiles and exotics here…." Whitman wanted his poetry to explore important ideas with "the sweep of the universe" (as the Europeans did), but in authentic American situations and settings using specific details with direct appeal to the individual experience and feeling ("small in theme"). As is suggested by the second quotation above, Whitman's ideas and example had a profound influence on subsequent generations of American writers. But to what extent does Whitman's own poetry fulfill his stated goal of combining universal themes with the closely rendered details of personal experience and feeling? In this lesson, students will attempt to answer that question by working with his words in a variety of media. To help them appreciate his artistic practice, students will also have an opportunity to compose poetry modeled on the poet's characteristic method of using the notebooks as a source of the personal experience and universal themes explored in his poems. Note: This lesson may be taught either as a stand-alone lesson or as a companion to the complementary EDSITEment lesson Walt Whitman to Langston Hughes: Poems for a Democracy. To make this lesson plan more compelling and fascinating for students, teachers should screen the brilliant Whitman episode from the NEH-funded series Visions and Voices (scroll down to "12. Walt Whitman") at the EDSITEment-reviewed site Learner.org. There is a log-in process required to access the actual movie, but the registration is free and provides entree to a wealth of educator resources. Additionally, PBS's "American Experience" has created a special on Walt Whitman from which additional resources can be drawn. Guiding Questions:How does Whitman's poetry reflect his attempt to combine universal themes with the individual experiences and feelings? How did Whitman use his experiences of the Civil War in his poetry? Learning Objectives After completing the lessons in this
unit, students will be able to: Preparing to Teach this Lesson
1. "Small in Theme…Universal in Sweep" 1. "Small in Theme…Universal in Sweep" Amid mundane notes including addresses and information about people he had met, Page 19 of Walt Whitman's Notebook LOC #94, available on the EDSITEment resource American Memory, includes this tantalizing fragment: "small in theme yet has it the sweep of the universe." No explanation accompanies the statement, but it could be interpreted to represent one idea Whitman had about his poetry—the desire to explore universal themes using specific, sensory details from his own experience. "A Noiseless, Patient Spider" is an example of one attempt to do so. After observing a spider constructing a web, Whitman becomes aware of his "soul… Ceaselessly musing, venturing,… Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere." Read aloud to the students Whitman's A Noiseless, Patient Spider, available via a link from the EDSITEment-reviewed website American Studies at the University of Virginia. Which details in the poem describe what the spider is doing? In what ways does the poet see similarities between his soul and the spider? Share with the class Whitman's statement from Page 19 of Walt Whitman's Notebook LOC #94: "small in theme yet has it the sweep of the universe." (If students have an interest in seeing the original in Whitman's hand, share the page image on the computer or by downloading and copying it.) Would it be accurate to say that "The Noiseless Patient Spider" is "small in theme"? Does it also have the "sweep of the universe" in it? Now share with the class William Carlos Williams' poem To a Poor Old Woman, available on the EDSITEment-reviewed website of The Academy of American Poets. To use Whitman's term, is this poem also "small in theme"? What about it is universal? Share the following quote about Williams' work from The Academy of American Poets' essay The Modernist Revolution: Make It New!: William Carlos Williams wrote in "plain American which cats and dogs can read," to use a phrase of Marianne Moore. "No ideas but in things, " he proclaimed. In succinct, often witty poems he presents common objects or events-a red wheelbarrow, a woman eating plums-with freshness and immediacy, enlarging our understanding of what a poem's subject matter can be. What did Williams mean when he said, "No ideas but in things"? If desired, share Williams' famous—and controversial—poem The Red Wheelbarrow, available on the EDSITEment resource The Academy of American Poets. It obviously features a "thing," and it is certainly small in theme. Is it also universal? In what sense does so much depend upon a red wheelbarrow? Williams wanted the poem to be simple yet explore an idea. Did he succeed? In this section of the lesson, students will work with Walt Whitman's words in three different formats—notebooks, prose, poetry—to deepen their understanding of them and of Whitman's process. Using Whitman's writing as well as Civil War photographs and poems created from Whitman notebook entries, student groups are challenged to create a presentation for the class that demonstrates the connections between the materials they have analyzed. If desired, begin by sharing some information about Whitman and the Civil War, such as the following excerpt from the Biography of Walt Whitman available on the EDSITEment-reviewed website of The Academy of American Poets: [Whitman] traveled to Washington, D.C., in December 1862 to care for his brother who had been wounded in the war. Overcome by the suffering of the many wounded in Washington, Whitman decided to stay and work in the hospitals. Whitman stayed in the city for 11 years. He took a job as a clerk for the Department of the Interior, which ended when the Secretary of the Interior, James Harlan, discovered that Whitman was the author of Leaves of Grass, which Harlan found offensive. Harlan fired the poet. Establish an anticipatory set by sharing with the class a recruiting poster for New York's 51st Volunteers (from the Selected Civil War Photographs Collection on the EDSITEment resource American Memory), the subject of many of the Whitman notebook pages assigned below. What impression about Civil War service do you get from this poster? (The poster does not emphasize idealistic reasons for signing up.) Next, divide the class into groups limited in size, as follows (note: There can be fewer students per group and fewer groups than those noted below, if desired or necessary.):
(Note: All the notebook entries listed above are from Notebook LOC #94 on Poet at Work: Recovered Notebooks from the Thomas Biggs Harned Walt Whitman Collection, available on the EDSITEment resource American Memory. The photos are from the Selected Civil War Photographs Collection on American Memory. Click on any image for additional, larger images. The prose pieces are from the Complete Prose Works from the Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library, a link from the EDSITEment-reviewed website American Studies at the University of Virginia. The poems (unless otherwise noted) are from Leaves of Grass (1891), available via a link from the EDSITEment resource American Studies at the University of Virginia.) Student groups will analyze the assigned photographs, prose pieces, and poems using the "Media Comparison Chart: Cubing Exercise" on page 1 of the PDF file (see Preparing to Teach This Lesson, above, for download instructions). The analysis is intended to help students prepare for presenting these materials to the class and to encourage them to make connections between the sights Whitman saw during the Civil War, the prose pieces he wrote, and his poems. When creating a script for their presentation, students should find useful material in their answers to the cubing exercise. If you are unfamiliar with cubing, the "Media Comparison Chart" contains basic instructions. In addition, the "Sample Cubing Exercise Answers" on pages 2-3 of the PDF file (see Preparing to Teach This Lesson, above, for download instructions) offer one set of sample answers for the "Hundred Day March" media. After the cubing exercise has been completed, students have one more task before working on their presentations-creating a poem from a Whitman notebook page to be read aloud as part of the presentation. The poem to be created could be considered a "found poem" because students can choose to use Whitman's words exactly as they find them or add and delete as desired, as long as they change the form to poetry, that is, by working with the length of lines and the places where the lines break. (Note: In Part 3, below, students will create poems from their own notebook entry; novice poetry writers should gain confidence when they discover they can "find" an original poem in their own notebook entry using the same process.) Model the process for creating poems from Whitman's notebook by sharing an image of Page 107 from Whitman's Notebook LOC #94, available on the EDSITEment-reviewed website American Memory. Give students the chance to read parts of the entry aloud. Can they discern every word? Probably not. That's okay. In fact, unavoidable misreadings of a few words and guesses about illegible items can become fortunate accidents in the poem and reading to be created. Once all of page 107 has been read, share with students the sample poem "The Sixth Battle, September 17th 1862" on page 4 of the PDF file (see Preparing to Teach This Lesson, above, for download instructions). In what way is this poem "small in theme"? In what way is it "universal in sweep"? What choices has the poet made in turning the notebook page into a poem? Especially note the shortened poetry lines, the addition of punctuation, the lack of major changes. This poet has chosen to use only words from the original. Each group member will tackle one page from Whitman's notebook from which he/she will create a poem using Whitman's words. The reading of these brief poems will be part of each group's presentation to the class. The group is responsible for exactly as many notebook entries as there are group members. After the groups have completed their analysis of the assigned media, and individual students have completed their poems, each group should prepare to present its materials to the class in a way that incorporates reading of the student-created poems while touching on the assigned photos, prose pieces and Whitman poems to communicate the connections between them and the impact conveyed by the combined images and texts. Presentations can be as simple as a brief description of each item assigned to the group followed by a reading of the student poems, or they can be more elaborate, with students, for example, writing a narration or brief skit that allows the presentation of the materials to be part of a dramatic framework. If desired, the readings could be multimedia (live or online) with the addition of appropriate music and display of photographs. Groups are encouraged to use other Civil War photographs from the Selected Civil War Photographs Collection and/or audio clips from the collection Band Music of the Civil War Era, both exhibits of the EDSITEment-reviewed website American Memory. Now the students are ready to compose their own poems with small themes (and, perhaps, universal sweep). Remind students of the spider in Whitman's poem and the old woman eating plums in Williams's. At home or in class, have students select a mundane object or event and then write about it freely, quickly, concretely, and in detail-the facts, just the facts. It would be best if students could write while (or right after) viewing the object or event. Students should fill a page or more. The next day in class, students can use their own or someone else's notes from which to create a "found poem" as they did with Whitman's notebook page. Extending the Lesson
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Other InformationStandards Alignment
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