Humans have a powerful
relationship with each other that cannot be destroyed by neither time nor
distance. No matter what time period or location humans are in, humans are
always interconnected because of their ability to have the same feelings and
behaviors. In Walt Whitman’s poem, “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry,”
Whitman discusses his belief of how similar human beings are by describing his
experience when crossing the Brooklyn Ferry. In the third section of his poem,
there are various lines where he claims others are feeling and seeing what he
sees when crossing the Brooklyn Ferry. He says, “I am with you, you men and
women of a generation, or ever so many generations hence, /just as you feel
when you look on the river and sky, so I felt” (22-23). In this line, Whitman
is clearly expressing how he does not feel any different from other humans even
if they are in a different generation. In addition, he confidently affirms that
the sight of crossing the Brooklyn ferry provokes the same feelings to every
individual.
Throughout
the third section of his poem, Whitman also emphasizes his relations with
others and what he sees by repeating the first or first few words of almost
each line. He repeats “Just as any of you” constantly in the first stanza and in the second stanza, “Saw”, “Look’d,” and “The.” Although
in the first stanza, Whitman focuses in describing how he is just like others
when crossing the ferry, in the second stanza Whitman focuses on the sense of
sight. According to Whitman, the sense of sight makes humans have more in
common with one another because it permits us to share the same views and
experiences of life. Whitman says, “I too many and many a time cross’d the
river of old, Watched the twelfth-month sea-gulls, saw them high in the air
floating with motionless wings, oscillating their bodies” (28-29). In other words, Whitman is saying that just
like others who have crossed the ferry, he witnessed what they witnessed. He
describes what he sees by using vivid verbs such as, “shimmering,” “glistening,”
and “oscillating” to create vivid imagery for the reader. In addition, he uses personification
to describe the river when he says, “Just as you are refresh’d by the gladness
of the river and the bright flow, I was refresh’d” (24) Furthermore, Whitman
uses a contemplative tone throughout his poem, when he questions the
differences among humanity. In fact, the event of crossing the Brooklyn Ferry in
the poem could be symbolic of how every human go through the same situations in
life. Whitman later on reveals this idea in section five of his poem when he
questions the reader directly, “What is it then between us? /What is the count
of the scores or hundreds of years between us” (57-58). Meaning what makes each
one us so different from one another?
1 comment:
I do agree with your statement about how Walt Whitman uses the crossing of the ferry as a way to demonstrate that human beings can have similar situations in life to other peoples. He also emphasizes that time and places cannot separate or put a wall on individuals. This idea helps to support your statement that humans have a species relationship with one another and how this relationship is very difficult to detach from one another.
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