Problem: Consider how William C. Bryant, Henry W Longfellow, and John G Whitter romantically describes nature or slavery in one of his poems. Think of "romantic" in this sense as "ideal" or "representative," not having anything to do with two people in a relationship. Discuss how one of these poets presents an ideal or representative vision of reality through a poem. How does one of these poets display almost a "fuzzy" vision of experience through a poem? Recall Philip Freneau's "The Wild Honeysuckle." Freneau compares the human life cycle to the flower's life cycle, and in this artistic manner, provides a poetic vision of mortality, what it means to die. How does Bryant, Longfellow, or Whittier do something similar?