Walt Whitman's ten-line free verse poem, "A Noiseless Patient Spider" combines metaphor and metaphysics to convey a sense of meaning and wonderment. Whitman draws parallels between the mysterious arachnid and the equally nebulous human soul. The action of spinning and weaving webs becomes a workable metaphor for Whitman's spiritual conception of the human desire to understand the cosmos and our place within it. The spider builds webs that link disparate places; so does the soul. The soul forges bridges that connect people, time, space, and ideas. The spider itself is unaware of the splendor and beauty it creates, for its web serves simply as a way to catch food. It does not realize that its lure provides a visual representation of the mystical nature of the soul. Whitman inspires healthy self-awareness with his deep observations of the spider and its web. He witnesses in the miraculous creature his own soul and asks us to see our individual reflections therein. One could meditate for hours on the spider metaphor, for this musing...
However, in only two verses, Walt Whitman evokes a sense of wonder that transcends the language he employs. By carefully crafting his lines to bridge the gap between the concrete subject of the "noiseless, patient" spider and the abstract soul, Whitman eases the reader into his musings. The first stanza stands alone as a meditation on observation: the poet seems to revel in the simple appreciation of the spider's wondrous existence. That this creature can create silk from within its body is as stunning as childbirth or any act of creation. Repeating the word "filament" three times in line 4, and combining that with the powerful verb "launch," Whitman does clarify the significance of the biological spider, removed from its metaphorical meaning.Rabindranath Tagore When we consider the career of Rabindranath Tagore as a "nationalist leader," it is slightly hard to find comparable figures elsewhere in world-history. Outside of India, Tagore is most famous as a poet: he won the 1913 Nobel Prize for Literature for his Bengali poetry collection Gitanjali. Perhaps the closest contemporary analogue to Tagore would be the Irish poet and "nationalist leader" W.B. Yeats, who would win the Nobel
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now