The next pages show illustrations. The first one looks like he is drawing himself, the next one also looks like him but looks more robust, and the last one looks like a mix between Walt Whitman and Abraham Lincoln. His very last picture looks like a drawing a high school student would draw on their paper during a boring lecture. I think it's really interesting to see that Whitman involves drawings in his journal... perhaps he's trying to illustrate what he just wrote or maybe he just likes doodles, either way the illustrations make me wonder. It is especially interesting to learn that these pictures were not drawn by Whitman himself. Maybe it aids in his ideas of democracy and people working together (or maybe the curtains are just blue).
With people stating Whitman's writings revolutionized poetry, etc, etc. It's easy to forget that he is still human. It's nice to see that even the greatest of poets and writers have a process. From his scattered thoughts, to crossing out words, to seemingly random illustrations, Whitman shows us that it took more than just pen to paper to write Leaves of Grass. His journal shows me that he carefully thought through what he wrote before he published writings. It also shows that he is not only reflecting what America was going through before and during the Civil War, but also what he was going through at this time. During the Civil War, people stopped buying books which made it hard for Whitman. Whitman's journal shows the thoughts of Whitman, the thoughts that, unlike his poems, were not published for the world to see. Yet, he still projects similar statements as his published writings. He shows that his talent was not just a talent, but his lifestyle.

Like that you thought about a writer's process, not just what was in the notebook-- the HOW rather than just the WHY
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