The final line of the poem asks Whitman about the America he experienced one hundred years ago. What meaning does Ginsberg convey by ending the poem this way?
By ending the poem with a question to Whitman about the America of a century ago, Ginsberg suggests that the "America of love" Whitman once envisioned no longer exists. He conveys a deep sense of loss, implying that Whitman would not recognize the consumerist and conformist society of the 1950s. The final imagery of the afterlife suggests that this idealized version of America is dead and that the speaker feels isolated in a modern world that lacks the spirit Whitman championed.
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