WHITMAN, WALT (originally WALTER) (1819-92). An American poet, born at West hills. L. 1., and educated in the public schools of Brooklyn and New York. He learned his father's trade, carpentry, and also printing, forming in the composition room associations with printers and journalists that continued through life. At the age of seventeen he was teaching in Long Isl and and writing occasionally for newspapers and magazines. Two years later (1839) he was editor and publisher of a weekly at Hunting ton. L. 1. This enterprise failing, he spent sonic years in various printing offices, contributing to periodicals, making long pedestrian tours, gen erally following the lines of the great Western rivers, and extending his journeys to Canada. That he wrote fiction we know only by the preservation of a title, Frank E ranS, a temper ance tale. For a year he edited the Brooklyn Eayfr. This varied life him in contact with all sorts and conditions of men, and lie seems to have fraternized gladly with what he calls 'powerful uneducated persons' of every kind, being by instinct a democrat, and mitering hearti ly into the life and feelings of the people. It. is said that he drove all omnibus for a time, though more from charity Om liking,, and he achieved some local success as a political stump speaker. In 1850. returning from wanderings that had carried him to New Orleans, he started in Brooklyn The Freeman. a very short-lived organ of the Free-Soil l'arty. Then for three years he tried carpentry. 'alibiing and selling working men's houses. and gradually accumulated the ma terials that made up the first collection of Leaves of Grass (1855). This was a modest little book of 94 pages, and, so far as it all raeled attention, seems to have provoked mirth, until Emerson made it the °pension of glowing praise and elml• lenged for it the attention of the thoughtful pub lie, which it has since held increasingly through out the English-speaking world, in editions that grew to several times the bun: of its humble be ginning. The remainder of Whitman's unevent ful life was given to the elaboration of this book. The incidents and date-marks of the remaining thirty-seven years of the poet's life are these: During the second year of the Civil War the wounding of his brother in the battle of Fred ericksburg led him to volunteer as an army nurse, in which capacity he served until the close of the war, in Washington and Virginia.
The immediate literary result of this experiment is Dram Taps (1803), hest described in his own words, as "a little book containing life's darkness and blood-dripping wounds and psalms of the dead," This is now incorporated in the Leaves of Grass. in 1867 he published Urn/ore:Ida During the War, made up chiefly of letters written at the time to the New York Times, from which he drew his chief support. his letters to his mother during, the war were posthumously printed as The Wound Dresser (1897). llis labors in the field brought on a serious illness in 1864, from which it is believed he never recovered com pletely. In recognition of his services, he was given a elerkship in the Treasury Department (1865-73), after having been dismissed by the Interior Department, on account of his Leaves of Grass. His Washington life was terminated by a slight paralytic stroke (1873). He moved to Camden, N. J., the residence of his brother George, and remained there until his death. in honorable poverty and serene cheerfulness, much sought by literary pilgrims, especially Europeans who discerned in him a distinctively American quality. lie was never married. The works of this period, many of them incorporated in suc cessive editions of the Leaves, were: Passage to India (1870) ; Democratic Vistas (1870), prose; After All Not to Create Only'(1871) ; As Strong as a Bird on Pinions Free (1872) ; Two Rivulets (1873) ; Specimen Days and Collect (1883), prose; Norcinber Boughs, (1888) Sands at Seventy (1888); and Goodby My Fancy (1891). William Rossetti published in England a selec tion of his poems in 1868, which began his in fluence there, the work being continued by Dow den. Syinoirds, Stevenson, and others. The final editions of the prose works and of the Leaves of Grass were issued in 1S92 in two volumes. Ten years after Whitman's death an elaborate, com plete edition was published.