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Walt Whitman & the Persian Poets - A Study in Literature & Religion (Hardcover)
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Walt Whitman & the Persian Poets - A Study in Literature & Religion (Hardcover)
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Where did Walt Whitman get his religious ideas? This book follows
in detail the similarities of the religious beliefs of the American
writer/humanist and two major classical Persian poets, Hafez and
Rumi. Other books have tried to explain Whitman's religion, but
none so far has done justice to the topic. Some critics have
labelled Whitman a pantheist and let it go at that. Others have
dismissed the topic of religion in Whitman's poems as posturing to
gain a readership. This work contends that Whitman took religion
very seriously. His poems are full of religious references. He knew
the Bible well. He also had read Emerson on the poets of the East
as well as some of the same poets in translation. This book
postulates that the counterparts of Whitman's ideas about religion
are best found in the Orient and that his ideas on religion have
much in common with those of the Sufis. The book focuses on the
works of the three poets. Lines from Whitman are quoted and
compared with lines from Rumi and Hafez to illustrate that the
three poets conveyed their message through very human actions and
emotions. Their message, which is mystical, is conveyed through a
secular language, and their symbolism is unconventional. They
attract the reader through their humanness and in doing so attempt
to lead the reader to recognition of the divine existing both
inside and outside of themselves. Like Whitman, Rumi and Hafez
realise that God is both transcendent and immanent and as a result
encourage their readers to seek the Divine everywhere, especially
within themselves. Man's "true home", they contend, is his Divine
origin. Man is infinitely bound up with God, is never separate from
God. Whitman's long poem titled "Song of Myself" has created much
controversy over the years, and Whitman has often been labelled an
extreme egotist. Walt Whitman and the Persian Poets illustrates
that all three poets see their egotism as a result of their
complete faith in God's omnipresence and their ability to recognise
Him in every aspect of creation. As did Emerson, all three hold a
belief in the simultaneous transcendence and immanence of God. In
short, they see themselves as God-intoxicated, as reflections of
God in the phenomenal world. Therefore, as do the Sufi poets,
Whitman sees man and God as one.
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