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William Cullen Bryant (1794---1878)

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William Cullen Bryant (1794---1878) Thanatopsis To a Waterfowl William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878) William Cullen Bryant's estate in NY William Cullen Bryant's Homestead I. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: William Cullen Bryant (1794---1878)


1
William Cullen Bryant (1794---1878)
  • Thanatopsis
  • To a Waterfowl

2
William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878)
3
William Cullen Bryant's estate in NY
4
William Cullen Bryant's Homestead
5
I. A brief biography
  • William Cullen Bryant was an American Romantic
    poet and journalist. 1) Born in Cummington,
    Massachusetts
  • 2) Educated at Williams College, he went on to
    study law at Worthington and Bridgewater and was
    admitted to the bar in 1815. Bryant worked as a
    lawyer in Northampton, Plainfield, and Great
    Barrington until 1825 when he married and moved
    to New York City and worked for the New York
    Review and then the New York Evening Post.

6
I. A brief biography
  • At first an associate editor, he became editor in
    1829 and remained in that post until his death.
  • 3) As the driving force of this liberal and
    literate paper, he was strongly anti-slavery a
    founder of the Republican Party.
  • 4) In 1860, Bryant founded New York Medical
    College.
  • 5) In his later years, Bryant focused on
    translating and analyzing Ancient Greek and Latin
    works, such as The Iliad and The Odyssey of
    Homer.

7
II. Major works
  • Thanatopsis
  • To a Waterfowl
  • Translated works
  • The Iliad and The Odyssey of Homer

8
III. Thanatopsis
  • Thanatopsis, written by William Cullen Bryant at
    the age of 17, is considered to be a masterpiece
    of American poetry. The title is from the Greek
    thanatos ("death") and the suffix -opsis
    (literally, "sight") it has often been
    translated as "Meditation upon Death." Due to
    the unusual quality of the verse and Bryant's age
    when first published in 1890 by the North
    American Review, Richard Henry Dana, then
    associate editor at the Review, initially doubted
    its authenticity, saying to another editor, "No
    one, on this side of the Atlantic, is capable of
    writing such verses." Although the bulk of the
    poem was written at age 16, Bryant added the
    introductory and concluding lines 10 years later
    in 1821.

9
III. Thanatopsis
  • Bryant first wrote this poem when he was about
    17, after reading the British "graveyard poets"
    (e.g. Thomas Gray, "Elegy Written in a Country
    Churchyard" and Robert Blair, "The Grave") and
    William Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads. In
    particular, there are parallels to Wordsworths
    Lucy Poems, especially "A Slumber Did My Spirit
    Seal"

10
III. Thanatopsis
  • A slumber did my spirit sealI had no human
    fearsShe seemed a thing that could not feelThe
    touch of earthly years.
  • No motion has she now, no forceShe neither
    hears nor seesRolled round in earth's diurnal
    course,With rocks, and stones, and trees.

11
III. Thanatopsis
  • This poem offers a democratic reconciliation with
    death as the great equalizer and a recognition
    that the still voice of God is embodied in all
    processes of nature. During a busy life as a
    lawyer and editor of the New York Evening Post,
    Bryant wrote accomplished, elegant, and romantic
    descriptions of a nature suffused with spirit.
  • Thanatopsis remains one of the most widely
    referenced pieces of American verse, and is
    included in a collection called The 100 Best
    Poems of all Time edited by Leslie Pockell.

12
III. Thanatopsis
  • 2. Detailed analysis
  • The title Bryant chose for this poem is rather
    fitting, being that "thanatopsis" is the
    contemplation of death. He begins by telling the
    reader that if one is in communion with Nature,
    then she will give him a message. This message
    will tell him how to live his life, and it will
    be unique to everyone else who is in communion
    with Nature. By receiving this message, he is
    somewhat connected to everyone in the world who
    has also received a message.

13
III. Thanatopsis
  • Anyone who is in tune with Nature will be
    comforted (by Nature), and each one will be
    different from the last person. Later in the
    first stanza, the poet advises that if one is
    down and are fear-ridden, he should go out and
    enjoy Nature, who will cause him to realize
    happiness, because in the end, all will join
    Nature in its beauty through Death.

14
III. Thanatopsis
  • The second stanza speaks of the comfort one may
    hope for in death. It refers to death as a
    "couch" that is greater than any other, and it
    claims that one will not lie in death alone. The
    poem reminds the reader that through death all
    will be forever connected with the greatest men
    of all time around the world. It then describes
    how Nature is beautiful with "The hills/
    Rock-ribbed and ancient as the sun..." etc. Then
    it portrays even the duller parts of the world
    (Old Ocean's gray and melancholy waste") as
    decoration of man's final resting place. The end
    of the second stanza ensures the reader that the
    dead alone reign supreme in Nature.

15
III. Thanatopsis
  • The third and fourth stanzas are much shorter,
    but carry the overall messageThe third stanza
    warns the reader that if he does not live a full
    and happy life, no one will notice when he is
    gone. They will all live life as if nothing
    happened. But to avoid depicting death as a bad
    thing, Bryant then re-ensures his audience that
    even if one's death goes unnoticed, all who lived
    that did or did not notice the person's death,
    will soon join that person regardless, for all
    are joined in death.

16
III. Thanatopsis
  • The fourth stanza is intended to end the poem on
    a hopeful note, and its purpose is also to drive
    home the strongest point in the poem If one
    lives life to its fullest, he may embrace death
    with comfort and pleasure. He may die
    peacefully.This poem had three main points it
    wished to make, the final one being the most
    important1) Live life fully in order to die
    well and comfortably.2) In death, all are joined
    with Nature and with each other for eternity.3)
    This comfort and togetherness in death may only
    be obtained through death.

17
III. Thanatopsis
  • 3. Questions for discussion
  • After reading the poem, consider the following
    questions.
  • What Greek words were combined to make the title?
    How do the meanings of these words contribute to
    the meaning of the poem?
  • ---Thanatos (death) Opsis (seeing).The title
    presents the poem as a way of seeing death.
  • Define the following words consider the context
    of the poem shroud, pall, narrow house, and
    sepulcher. How do these words and their meanings
    impact the meaning of the poem?

18
III. Thanatopsis
  • ---All of these words are associated with death
    and burial. This furthers the idea of the poem
    presenting a way of looking at death.
  • Is this a poem about life or is this a poem about
    death? Explain your answer. Answers will vary
    and should be supported from text.
  • The tone of this poem shifts. What is the tone
    in the first part of the poem? When does the
    tone shift? What is the tone after the shift?
  • ---The tone in the first part of the poem is
    forbidding, stern, final and then shifts to one
    of comfort.

19
III. Thanatopsis
  • Thanatopsis is an elegy. What is an elegy? What
    are the conventions of an elegy? What elements of
    Thanatopsis meet those conventions?
  • ---An elegy must move from grief to comfort, must
    shift from melancholy and mournful to soothing
    and comforting. The poem says we will not be
    alone when we die, etc

20
III. Thanatopsis
  • This poem was written early in the nineteenth
    century. The type of landscape art during this
    time period favored sweeping panoramas, wild
    vistas, untamed landscapes, and views of the sky.
    Look at Thanatopsis as a visual description of a
    painting. What elements of the poem are like a
    painting? What images are created in the poem?
    What landscape is created? Look at all of the
    descriptions of nature, etc.

21
III. Thanatopsis
  • Thanatopsis is a poem that can be interpreted in
    several ways.
  • How is this poem an example of a historical
    piece?
  • ---It represents part of the view of the time
    period.
  • How is this a Romantic poem?
  • ---The speaker hears the voice of nature, turns
    to nature for comfort. It presents a William
    Wordsworths nature. The recurring theme of death
    seems to be quite constant throughout the genre
    of Romanticism. Bryant attempts to make death a
    comfortable feeling, referring to the word couch
    as something you can simply curl up and feel good
    in.

22
III. Thanatopsis
  • How is this a Calvinist poem?
  • ---Look at the poem as religious counsel. Many
    elements of Calvinistic beliefs are present.

23
IV. To a Waterfowl
  • To a Waterfowl is a poem by William Cullen Bryant
    that was first published in 1821. Matthew Arnold,
    the eminent English critic and poet, called it
    the most perfect poem in the language.The
    reason that Bryant chooses a waterfowl of all
    animals to write about is because of a special
    encounter he had on the way from Cummington to
    Plainfield,Massachusetts, in December 1815.

24
IV. To a Waterfowl
  • It seems that Bryant was walking along and
    noticed that the waterfowl was flying around
    overhead and that he too seemed to be on a
    journey alone then Bryant began to think that he
    himself was not alone. He realized that the
    waterfowl seemed alone also, but he too was being
    guided by some higher being and they both would
    find their way.

25
IV. To a Waterfowl
  • Bryant's poem begins with a waterfowl in flight
    and a hunter below. The bird's instinct allows it
    to fly to safety. In spite of the danger,
    hardships and temptations on the way, the bird
    continues its flight to its destination. As the
    speaker watches the bird, he ponders the
    mysteries of migration. Bryant parallels the
    bird's instinct to a "Power." Even though humans
    have no real instinct to guide them to safety,
    there is a "Power" or God that will guide them to
    safety.

26
IV. To a Waterfowl
  • In the last paragraph of the poem Bryant seems to
    be comparing our life with God to that of a
    waterfowl. He says "He who from zone to zone,
    Guides through the boundless sky thy certain
    flight, In the long way that I must tread alone,
    Will lead my steps aright." He is saying that
    throughout our life wherever we go God is going
    to be with us guiding us down the right path. And
    in times when we think we must go alone, he too
    will be with us then. He never leaves us long
    enough for us to fall, just long enough for us to
    learn from what we do.

27
IV. To a Waterfowl
  • Questions for discussion
  • 1) Can we interpret the poem in any other way?
    For example, can the Power of care and the He
    in the poem mean anything else?
  • 2) What can we learn from the waterfowls flight?

28

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