| Walt Whitman is a writer who loses his heart to seas and does well in writingseas. His works in which four forms of seas are expressed. They include the sea ofnature, the sea of love, the sea of life’s journey as well as the sea of mystery.Firstly, the sea of nature refers to Whitman observes the sea from a regularvisitor perspective, including the vast, boundless, halcyon, ups and downs and othernatural characteristics of it. But he is still a poet, because he consciously orunconsciously spills richer ecological and ethics value than regular visitors in thenatural characteristics of the sea, so as to awaken the reader’s Marine ecologicalconsciousness.Secondly, the sea of love points that the sea is a metaphor for love by Whitman.In his works, the sea symbolizes the shy feeling of love between heterosexual and seximagery. More surprisingly, it contains Gayness, what’s more, this kind of love from aside reflects democratic thought of the poet.Thirdly, Whitman likes to take life as voyage, on one hand, a symbol of the seaof life’s journey is closely linked to his life experiences. The poet compares Lincoln tothe pilot, who drives the ship named American wheel to start a new life journey. Onthe other hand, because the poet has rich sea journey experience, he endows the sea oflife’s journey with rich philosophy of life.In the universe, life is without end, for deathis seen as the succession of birth, and there is the never-ending cycle of life.Finally, the mystery of sea, for one thing, contains the sacredness of death.From death in the sea, people strongly feel the poet’s subjective emotional andspiritual inclinations.In the eyes of the poet, death is like a sleep state. For another, thesea casts a color of pantheism, with the soul of radiation effects. Both the poet and hissoul are involved in the sea to explore its mystery.Through such description, Whitman paints a vivid picture of rich and colorfulseas. Moreover, he ascends the sea from nature, love, life journey to mystery. Hence,Whitman becomes a unique Marine poet in the history of American literature. |