Comparing Song Of Myself And I Heard A Fly Buzz-When I Died

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Everything is about choices. Every morning, every person gets to decide how they want to live their lives. They decide between being positive and having a good day and being negative about everything and having a bad day. This is clearly exemplified in both Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself” and Emily Dickinson’s “I heard a fly buzz- when I died.” Whitman’s “Song of Myself” is a poem written to give people hope about death. He wants people to know that even after they die they will come back to life in one way or another. On the other hand, in Emily Dickinson’s “I heard a fly buzz- when I died” she talks negatively about death and refers to it as something inevitable. Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson have very different perspectives on death and life in general and it is clearly exemplified in their poems “Song of Myself” and “I heard a fly buzz- when I died.” …show more content…

From the beginning he starts his poem on an uplifting note, he talks about celebrating himself and others. He is very joyous when he talks about people and life. He doesn’t care to discriminate because he believes everything that is living and was once living is equal because they all come from the same place, the soil. Unlike the majority of people, when it comes to dying, he thinks on a positive note rather than thinking depressingly. This is shown when he writes “and now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves.” (Whitman 687) He states that when people die, they still live on in one way or another. They become grass and live on. He thinks about death with a positive mindset and wants people to know that they should live their lives how they want to because everyone is going to die and it’s better they die doing something they loved rather than something they didn’t. However, people like Emily Dickinson think of it as

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