Posts

In Cabin'd Ships at Sea

The next poem that caught my attention was Whitman’s “In Cabin’d Ships at Sea.” In plain English, he’s imagining his book of poems as a little ship sailing across the ocean to reach readers everywhere. The poem begins with ships at sea, surrounded by endless blue water, wind, waves, music, and the mystery of the ocean. Whitman is describing the feeling of being far from land, where sailors sense the vastness of life around them: motion, rhythm, danger, beauty, loneliness, and wonder. Then he shifts and speaks directly to his own book. He tells the book not to “falter,” but to fulfill its destiny. He compares the book to a small bark, which means a small boat. Even though it is little, it is full of faith and purpose. So the main idea is: Whitman wants his poetry to travel like a ship across the world, carrying his love, thoughts, and songs to sailors, strangers, and future readers. And that’s what makes this poem feel so personal to me. Whitman wrote these words so many years ago, send...

One's Self I Sing

I am reading Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, a book of many poems. The poem “One’s-Self I Sing” works almost like an opening statement for the whole book, for he is telling us what kind of poetry he is going to write and what kind of human being he wants to celebrate. Here’s the poem in plain English: Whitman starts by saying, “One’s-self I sing, a simple separate person.” He is saying, I am singing about the individual person — one unique human being. But then he immediately expands it: “Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.” So he is not only celebrating himself as an individual. He is also celebrating everyone together: democracy, the people, the crowd, humanity. So the first idea is: The individual matters, but the individual is also part of the larger human community. Then he says: “Of physiology from top to toe I sing,” This means he is celebrating the whole body, not just the soul, mind, or intellect. Whitman often treats the body as sacred, powerful, and worthy ...

July's theme: Family

This month’s theme is family . Your book does not have to be directly about family. The theme can show up in many ways: parents and children, siblings, marriage, motherhood, fatherhood, friendship that feels like family, inherited wounds, home, grief, loyalty, forgiveness, tradition, memory, or the people who shape us. As you read, consider: What does this book suggest about family? What kinds of love, duty, conflict, or healing appear? Are the family relationships healthy, broken, complicated, or changing? What does the book say about belonging? Did anything remind you of your own life, values, or relationships? Share a quote, reflection, question, or quick update whenever you want.