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The Better Angel: Walt Whitman in the Civil War (Repost)

Posted By: yousufhunk
The Better Angel: Walt Whitman in the Civil War (Repost)

The Better Angel: Walt Whitman in the Civil War
Oxford University Press | July 27, 2000 | ISBN-10: 0195124820 | 288 pages | PDF | 1.6 MB

On May 26, 1863, Walt Whitman wrote to his mother: "O the sad, sad things I see–the noble young men with legs and arms taken off–the deaths–the sick weakness, sicker than death, that some endure, after amputations…just flickering alive, and O so deathly weak and sick." For nearly three years, Whitman immersed himself in the devastation of the Civil War, tending to thousands of wounded soldiers and recording his experience with an immediacy and compassion unequaled in wartime literature anywhere in the world. In The Better Angel, acclaimed biographer Roy Morris, Jr. gives us the fullest accounting of Whitman's profoundly transformative Civil War Years and an historically invaluable examination of the Union's treatment of its sick and wounded. Whitman was mired in depression as the war began, subsisting on journalistic hackwork, wasting his nights in New York's seedy bohemian underground, his "great career" as a poet apparently stalled. But when news came that his brother George had been wounded at Fredericksburg, Whitman rushed south to find him. Though his brother's injury was slight, Whitman was deeply affected by his first view of the war's casualties. He began visiting the camp's wounded and, almost by accident, found his calling for the duration of the war. Three years later, he emerged as the war's "most unlikely hero," a living symbol of American democratic ideals of sharing and brotherhood.