The Wound-Dresser is one of Walt Whitman's most popular poem, published
in 1865 in his collection Drum Taps. It is a personal, graphic, and
absolutely moving poem that centres on the theme of nursing the sick and
dying and gives a realistic view of war and the unexciting side of what
happens to the men who go to the fight it. This poem is extraordinary
for its lack of extreme portrayals of pain and suffering. The poem
features Whitman's experiences during the Civil War as a volunteer in
Washington's hospitals. The Wound Dresser is then, a poem of the Civil
War, a poem of our country's history, a poem of the poet's 'specimen
interior', a poem based in Washington D.C., and a poem that reviews 'the
narrow of the tragedy' that is war. It is a poem of remembering, of
memory, of memory reviewed through dream. This is a remarkable
collection of articles and letters about Walt Whitman's skills
volunteering as a nurse in the Civil War. In the book, there is three
articles. The articles tell about his time in the Civil War and many of
his experiences with injured soldiers he met.