Song of the Open Road
Walt Whitman
Whitman's declaration shifts the locus of fortune from external chance to internal resolve. The mid-19th century saw America grappling with manifest destiny, the Gold Rush, and the Civil War—moments when fortune often seemed tied to land, wealth, or fate. Whitman sidesteps this by claiming agency over his own destiny. His "Song of the Open Road" is less about the road itself and more about the traveler's power to shape his journey.