Abraham Lincoln is not just a vampire hunter. He's a standard and well-recognized hero for many Americans. In “O Captain! My Captain!,” the speaker has an intense amount of admiration for his captain, a stand-in for President Lincoln. Back on land, the people share in the speaker’s admiration and cheer the ship into the harbor. What the captain has done specifically to win everyone's admiration is never really made clear in the poem, but we do get the end results of his admirable actions: he's steered through rough seas and sacrificed his life to ensure the safety of the ship.
Questions About Admiration
- What does the sailor admire in the captain?
- Do the people on shore really admire the captain, or is the speaker just trying to say a bunch of positive things as the captain dies?
- How does the admiration of the speaker differ from that of the masses on the shore?
- What do you find admirable about the speaker as a reader of the poem?
Chew on This
The sailor seems to admire the captain as though the captain was an ideal, masculine father, kind of an anti-Homer Simpson. He implies that the captain was stern but fair and emphasized hard work and success.
The speaker’s admiration for the captain is different from that of the people on shore. The speaker has witnessed the captain’s actions first-hand and has seen the captain overcome difficulties and errors that those landlubbers on land did not see.