Answer:
Whitman’s words express the value of doing less in life. For example, he writes about the experience of gazing lazily at clouds and wonders if life can get any better: “What is happiness, anyhow? Is this one of its hours, or the like of it?—so impalpable, a mere breath, an evanescent tinge? I am not sure—so let me give myself the benefit of the doubt.”tone: suspence mood: mysteryWhitman wrote these words in his journal on October 20, 1876. They are comforting proof that mental breaks can work wonders long after summer has passed. The only trick, as another summer ends, is to make time for them.tone: informatory mood: intrestingThe American poet Walt Whitman was also suspected of being a slacker. When he was fired from the Aurora, a New York newspaper, the management publicly accused him of laziness. During his days as a newspaperman, Whitman was fond of taking long walks in the middle of the day. Whitman’s mental and physical wanderings may not have seemed productive to others. Yet they nurtured the imagination of a man still widely hailed as one of America’s best poets.tone: informatory mood: intresting
Explanation:
the bunch of text is this image just not really sorted