Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman are regarded as one of American’s most significant nineteenth century poets. For their poems don’t take on the traditional roles of a prophet, redeemer, nor a teacher of the American world, as pervious writers did. Instead, Dickinson’s poems consisted mostly of short stanzas with short lines that would usually rhyme on the second and forth lines. In order to free it from the conventional restraints, by expressing it as a type of persona, known as first person. Whereas, Whitman was a master of exuberant phrases and images. Which can be seen, in his Song of Myself, where he says "the beautiful uncut hair of graves,” is an extraordinarily descriptive of the physical world. Just as, another depiction of the grass