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scalpelonseveredcarotid currentofmillionsofveins capillariessonoroustributariesofthe GREAT FUTURE RIVER
Bettertobeabeggar,avagabond.”[...]ThatsummerIspentanhour or two at the river every morning. [. . .]
WheneverIspentthenoonsweatingintheboat, then the restofthedaymybloodwouldstayfresh,invigoratedbymy plunge into the river
Lee Masters’s Spoon River Anthology has been extremely popular in Italy since 1943, whenthefirsttranslation
process that inheres alsowithintheoriginalJacksoniantrope:“Asthebreezef’mthemountain sweeps over the river
ready to spend the rest of the day alone with his interesting visitor, and proposes a trip across the river
And yet, deep down like in Wagner's Rheingold , we keep hearing the dark, incessant running of the river
, that in our case will be the "spinal river," as Whitman called the Mississippi, America's backbone.
The letter is written in the simple language familiar to Pete, who was an omnibus driver: "The river
At either tide, flood or ebb, the water is always rushing along as if in haste, & the river is often
A young man stands at the Delaware River’s edge, with the Walt Whitman Bridge in the background, and
burning, aching, “resistless,” emphatically physical yearning for young men (see “From Pent-Up Aching Rivers
“I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers of America, and along the shores of the
Commune and “From the Genius of Liberty,” 215 Leaves of Grass (1870–71), 145–60; “From Pent- Up A ching Rivers
even take one in my hand, without the actual army sights and hot emotions of the time rushing like a river
Evok- ing the chaotic scene of the night battle on the river as the “shock of ships”colliding amid the
,The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade, and contrasted with his youthful journey back up the Ohio River
“Our rival Roses warred for Sway— / For Sway, but named the name of Right” in “The Battle of Stone River
Soldiers become an “Abrahamic river” in “The Muster,” the flashes of bayonets are northern lights in
See, your own shape and countenance, persons, substances, beasts, the trees, the running rivers, the
Phenomenological Approaches to Human Contact soulstakeshapeinandthroughworldlyengagementswiththetrees,rivers
anyefforttocontactthatchildwillnecessarilyinvolvetheobjectsthrough which he creates himself, the “substances, beasts, the trees, the running rivers
too,includingThoreau’s“Walking” (1862) and his more wide-ranging AWeek on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
thatDickinsontellsuscansendabraincareeningfromitsnormal “Groove” into uncharted territories as unstoppably as a river
literati, and preachers famousandobscure,asteadystreamofvisitorsfromallovertohissmallhouse across the river
John Newton married young, and moved across the river to a 160-acre plantation.
, and re- turned to a war-torn county whose seat, Guntersville, had been burned to the ground in a river
He died young, drowned in the Oktahutche River (about which he had written many a poetic verse), some
name as “meeting place by the rapid water.” http://www.tourismsarnialambton.com/communities/st-clair-river
Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
As the medical historian Howard Markel observes, “the river of human pathology at Bellevue had no end
their tiny leaves . . . without the actual army sights and hot emotions of the time rushing like a river
in the woods or by the road-side (hundreds, thousands, obliterated)— the corpses floated down the rivers
the diaspora of “the strayed dead” whose unburied bodies littered battlefields and became lost to rivers
and sea, the animals fishes and birds, the sky of heaven and the orbs, the forests mountains and rivers
When New England was covered with extensive systems of river-powered textile mills, and even Emerson’
Considering midcentury environmental discussions, Whitman’s con- cluding call “Flow on, river!
Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
Rivers of Empire: Water, Aridity and the Growth of the American West.
He would have met another Brooklynite who managed the leap over the East River and found success in the
duringWhitman’s tenure; both sites were located nearWil- liamsburg’s two ferry landings on the East River
Let us hope that he will indulge us with a hymn to the aresnicated Undin of the rejuvenating river.”
And, as Phillips illuminates in his essay, the function of the East River as thelocusclassicusinWhitman
(Whitman writes, “Just as you are refresh’d by the gladness of the river, and the bright flow, I was
probes the menacing history of bondage evoked by the river’s continuity with times past: “But there’
But Komunyakaa’s river carries haunting, unsolicited memories his speaker would rather not remember:
The East River, a locus classicus of Whitman’s work, is recon- textualized in order to circumscribe a
3/ of a pound, so there must have been the blood of 1000 men coloring the waters of our beautiful river
marked by considerable con- fusion and casualties from friendly fire in woods south of the Rapidan River
Croly and George Wakeman, Miscegenation (1864; Upper Saddle River, NJ: Literature House, 1970), 18–19
Miscegenation.1864; Upper Saddle River, NJ: Literature House, 1970. Cushman, Stephen.
A Conscious Stillness: Two Naturalists on Thoreau’s Rivers.
“I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers of america, and along the shores of the
57.SeealsoWhitman’sdeletionofthereferenceto“theperfect girl” in “enfans” 2 (“from Pent-Up aching rivers
Oulipo, and numerous occasional practitioners such as John Ashbery, whose catalog poem of the world’s rivers
of local news, and frequently did his own legwork on news stories in Brooklyn and across the East River
In “Sun-Down Poem” he stresses the shared material of water in the river and, more problematically, the
odditwasforareviewtocontainsuchdetailsaboutitssubjectas“six feet high, a good feeder, never once using medicine, drinking water only—a swimmer inthe river
breakfast table and listened from the rooftop to a thirty-gun salute as it resounded across the East River
Thus Dimock sees “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” as being situated si- multaneously on the East River and the
Harkening back to that river, the pouring-in of the flood-tide and the falling-back of the ebb-tide now
Grows like a bit of debris lodged in the river—the currents flow on—add to it—fasten it—till in time it
Maurice Kilwein Guevara, Poems of the River Spirit (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press,1996),
spirit responds to his country’s spirit . . . . he incarnates its geography and natural life and rivers
The coon-seekers go now through the regions of the Red United States and States United : 75 river, or
gone down the American river!
Rivers, Walt Whitman’s Anomaly (London: George Allen, 1913), 9.
Gere, an East River ferry captain, recalled that Whitman would regale pas- sengers with Shakespearean
asks its subject, 36 : the american 1848 Seek’st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river
are overlaid with foreign ones: “[h]ills became mountains and dales valleys, streams were called rivers
” by “men of truly proper style” like Duy- ckinck.88 For Whitman to flee the perfumed salon for the river
Composed at his biogra- pher’s Manhattan apartment window, which looked out on the East River just southoftheBrooklynBridge
to the life before me: And, Walt, there’s no end to your life: You’d say: “Tell me about the East River
Walt loved living close to the East River, where as a child he rode the ferries back and forth to New
as far ahead of “the fat gentleman in striped trousers,” as a Baltimore clipper does beyond a North River
wereneverpublishedinnewspapersormagazines;however,they appear in Specimen Days from sections “Swallows on the River
Who knows but that element, like the course of some subterranean river, dipping invisibly for a hundred
often–Mrs O’C (I fear by accounts) is left with very little financially–spent an hour down by the Delaware river
sells his own books to purchasers, and gets outdoors in good weather, propelled down to the Delaware River
Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
posed a problem for the plans of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) to dam the Little Tennessee River
The sense that something valuable had been lost in the Tellico Valley with its little river and fertile
Unlike a boat or even a bridge, the dam interferes with the very "riverness" of the Rhine.
Like the undammed river, the soul flows and may flood unexpectedly.
.—— I My eyes are bloodshot, they look down the river, A steamboat carries off paddles away my woman
Hopple and ball at ancles, and tight cuffs at the wrists does must not detain me will go down the river
gloss on the poem by placing just before it "Enfans d'Adam 2" (later titled "From Pent-up Aching Rivers
At the end of "From Pent-up Aching Rivers," possession itself is reversed by desire for the body, and
A series of efforts—"Literature" (drafted c. 1914), The Custom of the Country (1913), Hudson River Bracketed
Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
“I will plant companionship thick as trees all along the rivers of America . . .
Hence the poem’s great concluding benediction on time’s pro- cess: “Flow on, river!
My mighty Yangtse River in the south! Good morning! My icy Yellow River in the north!
Rivers.
As we drove across the river from Philadelphia into Camden, we were shocked by the slums that seemed
Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!
Big Rivers My own favorite loafing places have always been the rivers, the wharves, the boats—I like sailors
I have never lived away from a big river.
and of achieving a view of the Delaware River below.
And I know best of all the rivers—the grand, sweeping, curving, gently un- dulating rivers. Oh!
there, but a river that does.
chapter on Philadelphia, another city with a large Irish population and located just across the Delaware River
The Irishman took the Germans to the boat and saw them safely across the river, where, with no common
The text of I855 is a river of lava.
How good they look as they tramp down to the river, sweaty, with their guns on their shoulders!
See Thoreau, "Slavery in Massachusetts," in Works (River side ed., I894), Vol. X. 107.
Insert natural things, indestructibles, idioms, charac teristics, rivers, states, persons, etc.
Rivers 22 studied Whitman's case scientifically and dispassionately.
, their return is via the Mississippi to the Great Lakes, finally on the Hudson River.
Lawrence River.
Whitman enjoys a sight on the Delaware River of what seems to him a perfect combination of nature and
Whitman and William Duckett drive four miles to "Billy" Thompson's on the Delaware River at Glouces ter
A Delaware River ferryman visits Walt, bringing news of scenes and people Whitman has been incapable
parts: first by rail to Aquia Creek Landing, Virginia, and then by government steamer up the Potomac River
Rivers, the author of a pamphlet en- HOMOSEXUALITY 193 titledWalt Whitman's Anomaly, 22Bertz wrote in
Rivers,Walt Whitman's Anomaly (London: GeorgeAllen, 1913), pp. 4f.
Rivers mentions Bertz's works favorably.
Like Bertz, Rivers attempted to provide "scientific" evidence. 23.
Bertz to Rivers, 12March 1913, 4:16. 24. Bertz to Rivers, 29 March 1913, 4:20. 25.
He is Behemoth, wallowing in primitive jungles, bathing at fountain-heads of mighty rivers, crushing
"Flood-tide ofthe river, flow on!
": "From pent-up aching rivers, I From that ofmyselfwithout which I were nothing" (LG, 91).
Thus he is called by the wind, the birds, and the currents ofthe great rivers ofhis people.
These boundless rivers! You are measureless and boundless like them!"
wrote to Abby Price as Meade was unable to slow the Confeder at~ advance across Virginia's Rapidan River
picturesqueness, and oceanic amplitude and rush ofthese great cities, the unsurpass'd situation, rivers
A young man stands at the Delaware River's edge, with the Walt Whitman Bridge in the background, and
I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers ofAmerica, and along the shores ofthe
JA M E S E .M IL L E R , JR . 197 Earth ofshine and dark mottling the tide ofthe river!
This river port city on the Potomac is a few miles south of Washington, D.C.
for railroads that included the Baltimore & Ohio, Pennsylvania Railroad, Manassas Gap, and Hudson River
These battles were fought along the Chickahominy River, just outside the Confederate capital.
Surrounded by the Potomac River, the Eastern Branch (now called the Anacostia) River, and the City Canal
the Maryland side of the river, and take the ferry across to Virginia.
of their bodies and left the rest in strong shadow. (27-29) The endless procession across the East River
The loss of Whitman's dream of America "may be read . . . all the way from river to river and from the
": I've known rivers ancient as the world and old as the flow of human blood in human veins.
My soul has grown deep like the rivers. I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young.
By granting the river, clouds, and foundries permission, as it were, to be what they are, he is also
At all times he was keenly inquisitive in matters that belonged to the river or boat.
There had been a good deal of rain, the river was high, and the falls finer than usual.
Lawrence River, which he had seen during the past summer.
We were cross ing a bridge over the Concord river, about a mile from Mr.
I have tried them by stars, rivers.
far ahead of "the fat gentle man in striped trousers," as a Baltimore clipper does beyond a North River
The river & bay of New York & Brooklyn are always a great attraction to me. It is a lively scene.
I was out early taking a short walk by the river-only two squares from where I live.
H .-28th & 29th slowly up the White River valley, a captivat ing wild region, by Vermont Central R.
The river steamer Wawassett caught on fire on August 8 on the Potomac River with a frightful loss of
toward dusk near the cottonwood or pekantrees, The coon-seekers go now through the regions of the Red river
Earth of shine and dark mottlin6 the tide of the river!
streets and public halls .... coming naked to me at night, Crying by day Ahoy from the rocks of the river
make their living in some way as longshoremen, while some ... are pretty well known by the police as river
Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Literature House, 1970.
The first, 1848-49: To Louisiana, the “great river,” New Orleans and the “magnet south” and on the way
equated to “From Pent-up Aching Rivers.”
"I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers of America, and along the shores of the
In the specific case of art, we have also seen how he loves to compare his songs to a plant, a river,
and Nights” (117), “Hudson River Sights,” “Departing of the Big Steamers” (p. 125), and “Only a New
gives the following picture:— In the upper of a little wooden house of two stories near the Delaware river
Already there is a shimmer of frozen rivers in the distance, a ripple of soft reverberations from vanished
Whitman passing his last years across the river from the great Quaker City, always using the quaint Quaker
I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers of America, and along the shores of the
comrades, With the life-long love of comrades, 'I will plant companionship thick as trees along all the rivers
picturesqueness, and oceanic amplitude and rush of these great cities, the unsurpassed situation, rivers
Always, and more and more, as I cross the east and north rivers, the ferries, or with the pilots in their
tells us that Grant's life "transcends Plutarch," that "it was a happy thought to build the Hudson River
recluse and rural spot along Timber Creek, twelve or thirteen miles from where it enters the Delaware river
The whole river is now spread with it—some immense cakes.
Winds blow south, or winds blow north, Day come white or night come black, Home, or rivers and mountains
spent portions of several seasons at a secluded haunt in New Jersey—Timber Creek, its stream (almost a river
River, a little after eight, full of ice, mostly broken, but some large cakes making our strong-timber'd
Then was the time when it was his passion to sail the East River to and fro in the ferry boats, "often
Or again (p. 132): It was a happy thought to build the Hudson river railroad right along the shore.
spent in the open air down in the country in the woods and fields, and by a secluded little New Jersey river
Starr'd Nights…Mulleins…A Sun-Bath—Nakedness…Human and Heroic New York…Hours for the Soul…Delaware River—Days