Song of Myself
Walt Whitman
Whitman sees life as an unending cycle, where even the smallest sprout signifies continuity rather than cessation. In 1855, the United States was rapidly expanding westward, and many Americans viewed nature as something to conquer. Whitman, however, found in it a testament to life's resilience and renewal. His vision defies the era's industrial mindset, which often overlooked the natural world's quiet persistence.