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                <title level="m" type="main">About "Little Jane"</title>
                <author>Stephanie Blalock</author>
                <editor role="general">Kenneth M. Price</editor>
                <editor role="general">Ed Folsom</editor>
                <editor role="contributing">Stephanie Blalock</editor>
                <editor role="contributing">Nicole Gray</editor>
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                <sponsor>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities, University of Nebraska-Lincoln</sponsor>
                <sponsor>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</sponsor>
                <sponsor>University of Iowa</sponsor>
                <funder>The National Endowment for the Humanities</funder>
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                    <addrLine>319 Love Library</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</addrLine>
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                    <p>The text encoding and text of this introduction were created and/or prepared by the <title level="m">Walt Whitman Archive</title> and Stephanie Blalock, and are licensed under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License</ref> (CC BY 4.0). Any reuse of these materials should credit the <title level="m">Walt Whitman Archive</title> and Stephanie Blalock.</p>
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                    <title level="a">About "Little Jane"</title>
                    <note type="project">Written for the <hi rend="italic">Walt Whitman Archive</hi>. First published on the <hi rend="italic">Archive</hi> in 2017.</note></bibl>
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<div1 type="section"><p>First printed as "<ref target="per.00329">The Reformed</ref>" in 1842, "<ref target="per.00343">Little Jane</ref>" was the title Whitman gave to his short story when he reprinted it in the December 7, 1846, issue of <hi rend="italic">The Brooklyn Daily Eagle</hi>, 
while he was serving as the editor of that paper. "The Reformed" had first been published as a stand-alone piece on November 17, 1842, in the <hi rend="italic">New York Sun</hi>; the following week it appeared as an embedded tale in the 
novel <ref target="per.00267"><hi rend="italic">Franklin Evans; or, the Inebriate. A Tale of the Times</hi></ref>, which was printed in an extra edition of <hi rend="italic">The New World</hi> newspaper.<note xml:id="n1" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">For a detailed publication history of "The Reformed," see "<ref target="anc.02090.html">About 'The Reformed</ref>.'"</note> Whitman printed the story with few additional 
changes (from the novel version) as "Little Jane" for the first time in the <hi rend="italic">Brooklyn Daily Eagle</hi>.<note xml:id="n2" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">Several revisions to the language of the earliest known printing 
of the <hi rend="italic">Sun</hi> version of the story (1842) for publication in the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi> (1846) are recorded in our footnotes to "<ref target="per.00329">The Reformed</ref>." For a reprint of the version of the story that was published in <hi rend="italic">Franklin Evans</hi> and a complete list of revisions to the language of that version made or authorized by Whitman for publication in the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi>, see Thomas L. Brasher, ed., <hi rend="italic">The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Early Poems and the Fiction</hi> (New York: New York University Press, 1963), 196–200. Hereafter, <hi rend="italic">EPF</hi>.</note> 
</p>  
    
<p>In the story, a young Mike Marchion is drinking in the barroom with his friends
when his brother comes to inform him that his younger sister, Little Jane, is very ill and near death. Mike eventually arrives home just in time for Little Jane to give him a copy of
a religious story for children, which had been given to her by their mother. It is this generous gift—Little Jane's last act—that inspires Marchion's turn to temperance after his sister's death.<note xml:id="n3" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">The major plot events of Whitman's "The Reformed" were not altered for the later printing as "Little Jane."
For a detailed summary of the plot of the story, see Patrick McGuire, "<ref target="http://www.whitmanarchive.org/criticism/current/encyclopedia/entry_145.html">Little Jane (1842)</ref>," in <hi rend="italic">Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia</hi>, ed. J. R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings 
(New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1998), 399.</note></p>
                
<p> Whitman's editorship of <hi rend="italic">The Brooklyn Daily Eagle</hi> began in March 1846, and it ended in January 1848. <hi rend="italic">The Eagle</hi> was, 
during that time, the organ of the Democratic Party for Kings County. Whitman wrote editorials and articles for the paper during this two-year period. He also removed the advertisements on the paper's front page and replaced them with items about literature. He published more than one hundred items on fiction alone during his editorship.<note xml:id="n4" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">Dennis Renner, "<ref target="http://www.whitmanarchive.org/criticism/current/encyclopedia/entry_142.html">Brooklyn <hi rend="italic">Daily Eagle</hi></ref>," in <hi rend="italic">Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia</hi>, ed. J. R. LeMaster and 
Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998), 79–80.</note> At the same time, he showed renewed interest in the fiction he had written just a few years earlier. He revised and reprinted <hi rend="italic">Franklin Evans</hi> and thirteen of his own short fiction pieces—including "Little Jane"—in the paper.
    As editor of the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi>, Whitman also revised and reprinted "Wild Frank's Return" (May 8, 1846), "<ref target="per.00354">The Half-Breed; A Tale of the Western Frontier</ref>" (June 1–6 and 8–9, 1846; formerly "<ref target="per.00336">Arrow-Tip</ref>"), "A Legend of Life and Love" (June 11, 1846), "Dumb Kate—<hi rend="italic">An early death</hi>" (July 13, 1846), "The Love of Eris.—<hi rend="italic">A Spirit Record</hi>" (August 18, 1846; formerly "<ref target="per.00331">Eris; A Spirit Record</ref>"), "One Wicked Impulse! (A tale of a Murderer escaped.)" (September 7–9, 1846; formerly "<ref target="per.00340">Revenge and Requital; A Tale of a Murderer Escaped</ref>"), "<ref target="../franklinevans/per.00268.html">Fortunes of a Country-Boy</ref>" (November 16–30, 1846; a significantly revised version
    of <ref target="per.00267"><hi rend="italic">Franklin Evans</hi></ref>),
    three of the five parts of "<ref target="per.00341">Some Fact-Romances</ref>" (the second Fact-Romance as "The Old Black Widow" on November 12, 1846, the first Fact-Romance as "A Fact-Romance of Long Island" on December 16, 1846, and the fifth Fact-Romance as "An Incident on Long Island Forty Years Ago" on December 24, 1846), "The Child and the Profligate" (January 27–29, 1847; previously printed with the same title in the <ref target="per.00344"><hi rend="italic">Columbian Magazine</hi></ref>), "Death in the school room" (December 24, 1847; formerly "<ref target="per.00317">Death in the School-Room. A Fact</ref>"), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with 
    the same title in <ref target="per.00345"><hi rend="italic">The American Review</hi></ref>). Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi> before
he became the paper's editor in March 1846. Whitman's "The Death of Wind Foot" was reprinted as a work of serial fiction (August 29–30, 1845) about two months after the story appeared in <ref target="per.00328"><hi rend="italic">The American Review</hi></ref> in June 1845. "Shirval—A Tale of Jerusalem" was reprinted on January 22, 1846, ten months after it was first published in <ref target="per.00337"><hi rend="italic">The Aristidean</hi></ref> in March 1845.<note xml:id="n5" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">For additional information on <hi rend="italic">The Brooklyn Daily Eagle</hi> reprints, as well as other 
reprints of Whitman's short fiction, see <ref target="http://www.whitmanarchive.org/published/fiction/bibliography/index.html"> Whitman's Fiction: A Bibliography</ref> and Brasher, <hi rend="italic">EPF</hi>, 335–339.</note></p>
              
    <p>When Whitman revised "The Reformed" for publication in <hi rend="italic">The Eagle</hi>, he removed the narrative frame that presented the tale as Mike Marchion's personal experience.<note xml:id="n6" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">See Whitman's "<ref target="per.00343">Little Jane</ref>."</note> The new title, "Little Jane," immediately draws the reader's attention to Mr. Marchion's sister, her illness, and her last wish: to see her older brother reformed. 
In fact, the title highlights the sentimentality and the moral lesson that readers should take from the death of the child, a common event and recognized cause for reform in temperance fiction.<note xml:id="n7" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">Karen Sánchez-Eppler, "Temperance in the Bed of a Child," in <hi rend="italic">Dependent States: The Child's Part in Nineteenth-Century American Culture</hi> 
(Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2005), 71.</note> Whitman wrote several other short stories with temperance themes, including "<ref target="per.00318">Wild Frank's Return</ref>," "<ref target="per.00319">The Child's Champion</ref>," "<ref target="per.00339">The Love of the Four Students</ref>," "<ref target="per.00324">Reuben's Last Wish</ref>" and "<ref target="per.00334">Dumb Kate.—An Early Death</ref>."</p>
                
<p>Perhaps noting the title's focus on the character of Little Jane and the tale's potential for moral impact, <hi rend="italic">The Universalist Union</hi> (New York, NY) reprinted it on December 19, 1846, in the "Youth's Department" section of the journal with the following note 
for a preface: "The following touching little sketch is from the pen of Walter Whitman, the present accomplished editor of the Brooklyn Eagle, though it had met the public eye before, through other channels. But such articles never grow old. They speak to the heart at 
all times and seasons. And we never suffer injury by familiarity with them. Let our little folks read it attentively and draw a lesson of kindness therefrom."<note xml:id="n8" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">See Walter Whitman, "Little Jane," <hi rend="italic">The Universalist Union</hi> 12 (December 12, 1846): 95. For full citations and further information about reprints 
of "Little Jane" and the original version titled "<ref target="per.00329">The Reformed</ref>," see <ref target="http://www.whitmanarchive.org/published/fiction/bibliography/index.html">Whitman's Fiction: A Bibliography</ref>. See also Stephanie M. Blalock, "Bibliography of Walt Whitman's Short Fiction in Periodicals," <hi rend="italic">Walt Whitman Quarterly Review</hi> 30 (2013): 223–226.</note>
"Little Jane," therefore, is one of at least two tales (the other is "<ref target="per.00321">The Tomb-Blossoms</ref>") that were reprinted explicitly for youth, presumably because of the lessons of temperance and "kindness" that they can learn from them.</p>
                
    <p><hi rend="italic">The Brooklyn Daily Eagle</hi> version of the story of "Little Jane" also appeared in the weekly <hi rend="italic">Rhineback Gazette and Dutchess Family Visitor</hi> (Rhineback, NY) in 1847.<!--<note xml:id="n9" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">For more information about where Whitman's fiction was reprinted, see the <ref target="http://whitmanarchive.org/published/fiction/sandbox/fiction_mapping.html">map of the publications and reprints</ref> of the fiction. A single location on the map may include multiple markers. To view these, click the marker on that location, and it will spiral out so you can view all publications associated with that location. To remove the spiral, click another marker or refresh the page.</note>-->
Whitman revised the tale before reprinting it again in the "Pieces in Early Youth" section of <hi rend="italic">Specimen Days and Collect</hi> (1882), a volume in which he reprinted a selection of his short stories.<note xml:id="n10" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">See Walt Whitman, "Little Jane," in <hi rend="italic">Specimen Days &amp; Collect</hi> (Philadelphia: Rees Welsh &amp; Co., 1882), 369–370. "Pieces in Early Youth"
was also reprinted in Whitman's <hi rend="italic">Complete Prose Works</hi> (1892): see "<ref target="http://www.whitmanarchive.org/published/other/CompleteProse.html#leaf188r1">Little Jane</ref>."</note> Several revisions to the langauge of the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi> version of "Little Jane" for publication
in <hi rend="italic">Collect</hi> are recorded in our footnotes to the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi> version of "<ref target="per.00343">Little Jane</ref>." For a reprint of the version of the story that was published earlier as part of <hi rend="italic">Franklin Evans</hi> and a complete list of revisions to the language
of that version  made or authorized by Whitman for publication in both the <hi rend="italic">Eagle</hi> (1846) and <hi rend="italic">Collect</hi> (1882), see Thomas Brasher's <hi rend="italic">The Early Poems and the Fiction</hi>.<note xml:id="n11" type="editorial" resp="#wwa">See Brasher, <hi rend="italic">EPF</hi>, 196–200.</note></p>
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                            <author>Walter Whitman</author>
                            <title level="a">Little Jane</title>
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                                <date cert="high" when="1846-12-07">December 7, 1846</date>
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