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  • Commentary 151

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Search : River
Section : Commentary

151 results

“This Mighty Convlusion”: Whitman and Melville Write the Civil War

  • Date: 2019
  • Creator(s): Sten, Christopher | Hoffman, Tyler
Text:

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

The Afterlives of Specimens: Science, Mourning, and Whitman’s Civil War

  • Date: 2017
  • Creator(s): Tuggle, Lindsay
Text:

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

All About Walt Whitman

  • Date: 4 November 1882
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

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.

American Poets Part 2

  • Date: July 1874
  • Creator(s): Earle, John Charles
Text:

accordance with this view, James Russell Lowell has declined from the higher walks of poetry—from rivers

American Primer, An (1904)

  • Creator(s): Dressman, Michael R.
Text:

He disapproves of borrowed, European names for American cities, states, rivers, or mountains, and he

Biographies

  • Creator(s): Loving, Jerome
Text:

before Asselineau and Allen were written by a renowned man of American letters and the author of Spoon River

Brooklyn Daily Eagle

  • Creator(s): Renner, Dennis K.
Text:

in Kings County, which gave Whitman responsibility for leadership in political communication only a river

Brooklyn, New York

  • Creator(s): Gill, Jonathan
Text:

and Fulton streets.In the early 1830s Whitman began spending more of his free time across the East River

Whitman celebrated Brooklyn's growth, especially as opposed to what he called the "Gomorra" across the river

Bucke, Richard Maurice

  • Creator(s): Nelson, Howard
Text:

In Philadelphia on professional business, Bucke crossed the river to Camden and looked the poet up.

Lawrence River, and the following year, in preparation for the biography, they visited places important

Camden, New Jersey

  • Creator(s): Sill, Geoffrey M.
Text:

Between 1681 and 1700, they settled on the eastern shore of the Delaware River across from Philadelphia

Several ferry companies provided transit across the river, William Cooper's giving the town its early

Many of these essays, such as "Scenes on Ferry and River—Last Winter's Nights," eloquently express the

in downtown Camden, finished in 1925, was named for Whitman, and a new bridge across the Delaware River

Canada, Whitman's Reception in

  • Creator(s): Cederstrom, Lorelei
Text:

Lawrence, heading north on the Saguenay River to Chicoutimi, Quebec.Although Whitman kept a diary of

Whitman described the Saguenay as less appealing, referring to the "dark-water'd river" and its environs

'Children of Adam' [1860]

  • Creator(s): Miller, James E., Jr.
Text:

"From Pent-up Aching Rivers," second in the cluster, has the tone of a defiant proclamation ("what I

The rhythmic urgency of the poem, beginning with the "pent-up aching rivers" seemingly at flood-tide,

In brief, Whitman's poem portrays the sex drive as a "pent-up aching river" or a "hungry gnaw" present

It dominates the "Children of Adam" cluster by its sheer length and, like "From Pent-up Aching Rivers

As the poet drains his "pent-up rivers" into the "woman who waits" for him, "warm-blooded and sufficient

Collage of Myself: Walt Whitman and the Making of Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 2010
  • Creator(s): Miller, Matt
Text:

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

Conserving Walt Whitman’s Fame: Selections from Horace Traubel’s Conservator, 1890-1919

  • Date: 2006
  • Creator(s): Schmidgall, Gary
Text:

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

Constructing the German Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1995
  • Creator(s): Grünzweig, Walter
Text:

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.

The Continuing Presence of Walt Whitman: The Life after the Life

  • Date: 1992
  • Creator(s): Martin, Robert K.
Text:

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

Contradiction

  • Creator(s): Zapata-Whelan, Carol M.
Text:

Malcolm Cowley saw the poet's ideas as pell-mell driftwood in a flooding river. D.H.

'Crossing Brooklyn Ferry' [1856]

  • Creator(s): Nelson, Howard
Text:

in this mode.Late in life Whitman commented, "My own favorite loafing places have always been the rivers

I have never lived away from a big river" (Traubel 71).

In his younger adult years and again in old age, his river experiences were especially connected with

Crossing" says nothing about the poet's reason for crossing the river; the focus is not on a purpose

The river, the ebb and flow of tides, the boat, the shuttling from one shore to the other—some of the

Doyle, Peter (1843–1907)

  • Creator(s): Murray, Martin G.
Text:

Evenings were reserved for moonlit walks along the Potomac River that had Whitman reciting Shakespeare's

Drum Taps.—Walt Whitman

  • Date: 4 November 1865
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

We primeval forests felling, We the rivers stemming, vexing we, and piercing deep the mines within; We

The Evolution of Walt Whitman: An Expanded Edition

  • Date: 1999
  • Creator(s): Asselineau, Roger
Text:

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.

Ferries and Omnibuses

  • Creator(s): Dougherty, James
Text:

Scheduled ferries traveled from Manhattan to the west bank of the Hudson and to the cities across the East River

"From Pent-up Aching Rivers" (1860)

  • Creator(s): Mullins, Maire
Text:

MaireMullins"From Pent-up Aching Rivers" (1860)"From Pent-up Aching Rivers" (1860)This poem was initially

"From Pent-up Aching Rivers" (1860)

Fuller, Margaret (1810–1850)

  • Creator(s): Mason, Julian
Text:

" "frankness and expansion," and "abundant opportunity to develope a genius, wide and full as our rivers

The Furtive Hen and the Cat Whose Tail Was Too Long: On Whitman's Traces

  • Date: 2020
  • Creator(s): Corona, Mario
Text:

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

The Genius of Walt Whitman

  • Date: 20 March 1880
  • Creator(s): White, W. Hale
Text:

the pale green leaves of the trees prolific, In the distance the flowing glaze, the breast of the river

Hudson River

  • Creator(s): Faries, Nathan C.
Text:

Nathan C.FariesHudson RiverHudson RiverDespite its modest 315-mile length, the Hudson River is famous

In 1848 he traveled to and from a short-lived newspaper job in New Orleans via the Hudson River, the

In these the river is listed alongside the Mississippi, Paumanok Sound, and the alien Thames.

The Hudson River and Its Painters. New York: Viking, 1972.Whitman, Walt.

Hudson River

'I Sing the Body Electric' [1855]

  • Creator(s): Gutman, Huck
Text:

mysteries of identity in "Song of Myself," of childhood in "There Was a Child Went Forth," of the rivers

Individualism

  • Creator(s): Duggar, Margaret H.
Text:

through regenerative participation in the comradeship of the twenty-eight young men afloat in the rivers

Internet, Whitman on the

  • Creator(s): Kummings, Donald D.
Text:

Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1997.Fineberg, Gail.

Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1997. Internet, Whitman on the

Interpretation of the Poetry of Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1930
  • Creator(s): Pavese, Cesare
Text:

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

Intimate with Walt: Selections from Whitman’s Conversations with Horace Traubel 1888-1892

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Schmidgall, Gary
Text:

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.

Johnston, John H. (1837–1919) and Alma Calder

  • Creator(s): Roberson, Susan L.
Text:

During August 1881, Whitman stayed with the Johnstons at their summer home at Mott Haven on the Harlem River

Journalism, Whitman's

  • Creator(s): Killingsworth, M. Jimmie
Text:

man writing for a party paper, defending the Democrats against the powerful Whig papers across the river

Joyce, James (1882–1941)

  • Creator(s): Moore, Andy J.
Text:

borrowed from Whitman's line in "Song of Myself," "Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 15 March 1856
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

full-blooded, six feet high, a good feeder, never once using medicine, drinking water only—a swimmer in the river

"Leaves of Grass"

  • Date: 10 May 1856
  • Creator(s): Fern, Fanny
Text:

Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 13 November 1856
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Earth of shine and dark, mottling the tide of the river!

Leaves Of Grass

  • Date: 7 July 1860
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

weeper, worker, idler, citizen, countryman, Saunterer of woods, stander upon hills, summer swimmer in rivers

Earth of shine and dark, mottling the tide of the river!

Leaves Of Grass

  • Date: 14 July 1860
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

worker, idler, citizen, countryman, Saunterer of the woods, stander upon hills, summer swimmer in rivers

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 30 October 1881
  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, and Sylvester Baxter
Text:

Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!

Day come white, or night come black, Home, or rivers and mountains from home, Singing all time, minding

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 1882–1883
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Earth of shine and dark mottling the tide of the river!

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 1860
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

, manfully, and appositely expressed—and a filibuster-like daring running, like a strong, vigorous river

Leaves of Grass: The Sesquicentennial Essays

  • Date: 2007
  • Creator(s): Belasco, Susan | Folsom, Ed | Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

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

'Leaves of Grass'—An Extraordinary Book

  • Date: 15 September 1855
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

"His spirit responds to his country's spirit; he incarnates its geography and natural life, and rivers

London, Ontario, Canada

  • Creator(s): Cederstrom, Lorelei
Text:

their trips to Sarnia, Toronto, and the Thousand Islands in Ontario, and to Montreal and the Saguenay River

of my friend for perhaps an hour, and when I found him again he was sitting in a quiet nook by the river

Masters, Edgar Lee (1868?-1950)

  • Creator(s): Britton, Wesley A.
Text:

midwestern lawyer who took on literature as an avocation, Masters gained fast fame for his popular Spoon River

Beyond Spoon River: The Legacy of Edgar Lee Masters. Austin: U of Texas P, 1981.

Across Spoon River: An Autobiography. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1936. ———. Whitman.

Media Interpretations of Whitman's Life and Works

  • Creator(s): Britton, Wesley A.
Text:

Burleigh used the words from "Ethiopia Saluting the Colors" on his collection of spirituals entitled Deep River

Mississippi River

  • Creator(s): Field, Jack
Text:

In Specimen Days he calls the river "the most important stream on the globe" (Complete 865).In 1848,

During their stay, from 25 February until 27 May, Whitman made daily visits to the river to observe the

While there he visited the river as frequently as his health would allow, "every night lately" (Complete

Mississippi River

Music, Whitman's Influence on

  • Creator(s): Leathers, Lyman L.
Text:

instance, in "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" Whitman's images of the gulls, the waves, and the flow of the river—contrasted

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