Piece image

RN Documentary: Whitman - The Good Gray Poet

Series: RN Focus on Poetry
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide
Length: 00:29:25

Explores the later life of Walt Whitman, considered by many to be the Father of Modern Poetry. Read the full description.

Oldwhitman_small Part of the Series "RN Focus on Poetry" A “poetic divo” burst onto the literary stage in 1855 and changed the course of poetic expression. Walt Whitman’s epic “Leaves of Grass” is considered the beginning of modern poetry, and contains some of the most glorious use of language since Shakespeare. This two-part program explores the life and work of America’s greatest poet with biographer Gary Schmidgall, and Margaret O’Neill, curator of the Walt Whitman House in Camden, New Jersey, among others. NOTE to PD’s: Though the two programs were designed to be played in two successive weeks, either one can stand alone. There is enough music at the end of Part One to fade out before the narrator says, “Next Week…” and Part Two makes no direct reference to the first part. Part Two: The Good Gray Poet – explores the latter half of Whitman’s life. Just as the Civil War divided the country, it also wrought great change in the poet, whose work takes on a more mature and somber tone. But his reputation was spreading to Europe and diverse writers such as Oscar Wilde, Garcia Lorca and Bram Stoker paid homage to him.

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

More from Radio Netherlands Worldwide

Piece image

RN Documentary: Whitman - Songs of the Poet (00:29:28)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

Explores the early life of Walt Whitman, considered by many to be the Father of Modern Poetry.
Piece image

RN Documentary: Will the Real Will Shakespeare Please Stand Up? (00:29:30)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

Harvard professor Stephen Greenblatt and Amsterdam writer Rodney Bolt face off in a discussion on the authorship of Shakespeare’s plays moderated by Mark Twain.
Piece image

Hear the World 2012, program 10 (00:58:01)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

Damily / Najat Aatabou / DWMD: Fernando Lameirinhas / Charanga Habanera
Piece image

The State We're In 2012, Story of the Week, part 21 (00:05:00)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

The lives of two men cross during the Iran-Iraq war
Piece image

Hear the World 2012, program 9 (00:58:01)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

Nainako / Tshala Muana / DWMD: Di Gojim / Khaled
Piece image

The State We're In 2012, Story of the Week, part 20 (00:05:00)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

AUSTRALIAN ANGEL REMEMBERED: For almost 50 years, Don Ritchie lived close to Australia’s most notorious suicide spot, known locally in Sydney as “The Gap”.
Piece image

Hear the World 2012, program 8 (00:58:01)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

Rango / Te Vaka / DWMD: Nynke Laverman / Zehava Ben
Piece image

The State We're In 2012, Story of the Week, part 19 (00:05:00)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

DESCRIPTION: THE HUMAN GOOGLE: Give Brad Williams a date – any date – from the past 53 years and he’ll know instantly where he was, and what was happening in the news that day ...
Piece image

The State We're In 2012, Story of the Week, part 18 (00:04:59)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

THE WORLD’S MOST BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE: Dutch photographer Michel Szulc Krysanowski put an ad in 10 newspapers,
Piece image

The State We're In 2012, Story of the Week, part 17 (00:05:00)
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide

“Mohamed” (not his real name) is a blogger and journalist in Benghazi, Libya.

Piece Description

Part of the Series "RN Focus on Poetry" A “poetic divo” burst onto the literary stage in 1855 and changed the course of poetic expression. Walt Whitman’s epic “Leaves of Grass” is considered the beginning of modern poetry, and contains some of the most glorious use of language since Shakespeare. This two-part program explores the life and work of America’s greatest poet with biographer Gary Schmidgall, and Margaret O’Neill, curator of the Walt Whitman House in Camden, New Jersey, among others. NOTE to PD’s: Though the two programs were designed to be played in two successive weeks, either one can stand alone. There is enough music at the end of Part One to fade out before the narrator says, “Next Week…” and Part Two makes no direct reference to the first part. Part Two: The Good Gray Poet – explores the latter half of Whitman’s life. Just as the Civil War divided the country, it also wrought great change in the poet, whose work takes on a more mature and somber tone. But his reputation was spreading to Europe and diverse writers such as Oscar Wilde, Garcia Lorca and Bram Stoker paid homage to him.

1 Comment Atom Feed

User image

reading

Great reading on 26:09
The reading of poetry is the most important moment: either to spoil it or-- to give a second birth to a written poem.

Transcript

AURAL TAPESTRY
“Walt Whitman: Father of Modern Poetry”
PART II: “The Good Gray Poet”

MUSIC: “String Quartet No. 1” - Charles Ives

ID TAPE - “Weaving…an Aural Tapestry” (9”)
DAVID: In December of 1862, Walt Whitman left New York and traveled to Virginia to search for his brother George who had been wounded in the bloody conflict between North and South called the Secession War. A doctor, describing the carnage, wrote of soldiers “wounded in every conceivable way, men with mutilated bodies, with shattered limbs and broken heads, men enduring their injuries with stoic patience, and men giving way to violent grief…” For the next two years, the poet no longer sang “songs of himself” but reached out to his fellow Camerados, tending the wounded and dying.
TAPE IN AT 00.52
TAPE - FW: “With the coming of civil…
LW: …America’s p...
Read the full transcript

Musical Works

“Dirge for two Veterens” To the Soul EMI CDC2435.55028.2 T. Hampton K. Weill 1’00”
“The Storm” Dracula Soundtrack Nonesuch 7559.79584.2 Kronos Quartet P.Glass 1’00”
“Rocky Hill” Art of the Banjo Sonoton SCD248 Jerry Burnham Anon. 1’45”

Related Website

http://www.rnw.nl