Song of Myself

E146746

"Song of Myself" is a landmark free-verse poem by Walt Whitman that celebrates individual identity, the human body, and the interconnectedness of all life, and forms a central part of his collection "Leaves of Grass."

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Song of Myself canonical 7

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf free verse poem
poem
author Walt Whitman
canonicalStatus central text in American poetry canon
landmark of American literature
centralWorkOf Leaves of Grass
Walt Whitman’s poetic career
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
firstPublicationYear 1855
firstPublishedIn Leaves of Grass
surface form: Leaves of Grass (1855 edition)
form long poem
genre lyric poetry
transcendentalist poetry
hasSubject death and immortality
democratic ideals
the self as universal
unity of body and soul
influenced American poetry
free verse tradition
modernist poetry
influencedBy Ralph Waldo Emerson
language English
laterTitle Song of Myself self-link
literaryMovement American Romanticism
Transcendentalism
meter free verse
narrativeVoice first person
narrator a persona identified with Walt Whitman
notableLine For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
I am large, I contain multitudes.
I celebrate myself, and sing myself
numberOfSections 52
originalTitle Poem of Walt Whitman, an American
partOf Leaves of Grass
setting 19th-century United States
structure 52 numbered sections
style cataloging lists
colloquial diction
direct address to the reader
long rhythmic lines
theme American experience
democracy
equality
individualism
interconnectedness of all life
nature
self and identity
sexuality
spirituality
the human body

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (7)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Walt Whitman notableWork Song of Myself
Walt Whitman wrote Song of Myself
Song of Myself laterTitle Song of Myself self-link