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23 pages 46 minutes read

Walt Whitman

I Sit and Look Out

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1860

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Literary Devices

Form and Meter

While Robert Frost claimed that “writing free verse is like playing tennis with the net down,” implying that free verse was not poetry because it lacked meter, Whitman’s free verse imposes poetic structures to create a rhythmic unity on his long lines in a variety of ways. In “I Sit and Look Out,” most of the 10 lines range between 20-31 syllables, except for the last line which abruptly ends at six syllables. The long lines each have caesuras or pauses in the middle of the line. If one were to break the line at the caesura, some of the lines would look remarkably like the 10 syllable conventional poems that readers were used to in the 19th century. Take the line, “I see the wife misused by her husband—I see the treacherous seducer of young men” (Line 4). If that line were broken at the caesura, it would look like this:

I see the wife misused by her husband—
I see the treacherous seducer of young women (Line 4).

Much of these lines follow iambic rhythms:

i SEE/ the WIFE/ mis USED/ by her HUS/ band.
i SEE/ the TREA/ che rous se DUC/ er OF/ young WOM/ en (Line 4)

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