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  • Disciples 99
Search : journalism
Section : Disciples

99 results

Biography of Horace Traubel

  • Date: 1998
  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

were Richard Maurice Bucke and Thomas Harned); he founded, edited, and published The Conservator, a journal

typesetter, a skill he would employ throughout his life as he often set the type for his monthly journal

Conservator in 1899, and Gertrude, whom Horace and Anne educated at home, joined the staff of the journal

The Fight of a Book for the World

  • Date: 1926
  • Creator(s): William Sloane Kennedy
Text:

In pp. short, itwas a cheeky piece of journalism, inwhich (as M.

"The mention of his name in a public journal after the war made W.

See, e.g.the Journal du Soir,May 2,1909.

American Phrenological Journal, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1856. By W. W.

His friend ColonelForney's journal. Used in Specimen Days. Real Summer Openings.

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890-1891

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): J. Jonston, M.D. | J. W. Wallace
Text:

I said that I would send him a of Scott's copy Journal from home.

"The Tenedos Times" The Journal of the Mediterranean Destroyer Flotilla the of the War during early part

Reminiscences of Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1896
  • Creator(s): William Sloane Kennedy
Text:

ofthe slowly rising fame of Emerson, and thathe had not read notices and reviews of his books in the journals

published in 1848, and "Hiawatha" a few months after Leaves Grass while appeared only of ; in his journals

Le"o and Gabriel Antologia (Rome) Quesnel's Sarrazin's in Paris journals. " You Hottentot with clickingpalate

Longfellow's "Journals," published since his death, show that he had a great partialityfor the hexameter

While to his struggling bring " Cromwell " to the birth,he wrote in his journal (seeFroude's "Carlyle

Walt Whitman: A Study

  • Date: 1893
  • Creator(s): John Addington Symonds
Text:

LIFE Born in on Island— — 1819 Long His ancestry Life in boyhood at Brooklyn — Teaching school and journalism

In 1839-40 he edited a weekly journal called the Long at Then he settled down Islander, Huntingdon. in

New York to the work of a compositor, com- bining this with journalism and publicspeaking.

trifling panegyrics of himself,culled from the holes and corners of A STUDY OF WALT WHITMAN 4 American journalism

Anna Gilchrist: Her Life and Writings

  • Date: 1887
  • Creator(s): Herbert Harlakendend Gilchrist | Anna Gilchrist | William Michael Rossetti
Text:

These are the same moriuments about which there was a controversy in the public journals, June, 1884.

been at the pains to read it. . . . " Did you notice in the last volume a passage from Carlyle's Journal

Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1883
  • Creator(s): Richard Maurice Bucke
Text:

Higginson decorates " The Woman's Journal."

The very resist- the work, as when a foreign journal denounced "its rank republican ance to insolence

The London " Leader," one of the foremost of the British liter- ary journals, in a review which more

214 Appendix to Part II. " Frovi Apph-toit's Journal,'' April ist,1S76. {Extract.)

The "Journal " speaks of Walt Whitman as habitually wearing, while living in New York, a red flannel

Notes on Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1867
  • Creator(s): John Burroughs
Text:

publishing establishment on Broadway, whose proprietors advertised it, and sent specimen copies to the journals

The journals remained silent, and of the copies sent to the distinguished persons several were returned

The Good Gray Poet

  • Date: 1866 (republished 1883)
  • Creator(s): William Douglas O'Connor
Text:

It has been sounded long and strong by many of the literary journals of both continents.

The London "Leader," one of the foremost of the British literary journals, in a review which more nearly

When Tennyson published the "Idyls of the King," some of the journals in both America and England, and

Lately the "London Observer," one of the most eminent of the British journals, in a long and labored

Walt Whitman: Is He Persecuted?

  • Creator(s): William Douglass O'Connor
Text:

teeth, springing up widely, as your exchanges will show, in the foul and copious abuse and insults journals

need, to which manly hearts are everywhere responding, such an attitude ill becomes the foremost journal

However, a critic in Appletons' Journal , whose article contains less truth to the square than I thought

Sanborn, and valiant letters in three or four journals by Col. R. J. Hinton.

But it is not my fault if the last fortnight's journals reaching Mr.

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 2)

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

His tone toward you, in the Woman's Journal article (and the Nation was probably his,) shows extreme

Many years ago a reporter came to me about some comments anent me that appeared in Appleton's Journal

Whitman:Am glad to see by a morning journal that you are well enough to undertake a visit to New York

W. parody in the Presbyterian Journal. Laughed over it. "It's not at all bad."

I mentioned the fact that Appleton's Journal had called attention to the moral inconsistency of this

Wednesday, July 18, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

His tone toward you, in the Woman's Journal article (and the Nation was probably his,) shows extreme

Saturday, July 28, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Many years ago a reporter came to me about some comments anent me that appeared in Appleton's Journal

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 5)

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

From Appleton's Biographical Journal.

Wondered in what guise "he would appear in these extensive journals," if at all.

Said he had read Huneker's piece in the Home Journal. "It is very warm—very.

Brought him from Clifford "Amiel's Journal." He was much pleased.

I have been thinking, in the House Journal—that they would give us their columns.

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 1)

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

I first wrote them a notice of his Journal just published, which they were pleased to say was too good

"That is Hicks' Journal: it is a rare and precious book now."

Tuesday, May 22, 1888.W. handed me a copy of The Journal of Speculative Philosophy.

W. gave me an envelope containing a clipping from Bell's Weekly Messenger and Farmers' Journal treating

Did I hear you say that things you saw in Emerson's journal were very favorable to the French?

Friday, March 1, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Still, the effect is rather tremendous, and although the chief journals denounce and lampoon it with

Friday, March 29, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

I took him a slip cut from the Home Journal of a letter Rhys had written the Transcript (Boston) about

I said: "You have a mysterious friend on the Home Journal." He thought so too.

Saturday, March 30, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

I showed W. this, which I had taken from the Home Journal:"The English relatives of Walt Whitman are,

Wednesday, April 3, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

so-called organs of public opinion: an illustration par excellence of the evil possibilities of journalism

Friday, April 5, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

s big edition of Ladies' Home Journal—over half a million copies per month.

W.: "That shows how little a fellow knows of the affairs of the world: the Ladies Home Journal, new,

Sunday, April 7, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

We are permitted to extract from his journal or loose memorandum book for the past year."'

Friday, December 7, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

article on the poets before it goes into the magazine.There are two articles in the August Appleton's Journal

Tuesday, December 18, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Watson's Art Journal with notice &c—I am anxious to see the picture.

Sunday, December 23, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Said also: "I read all the notices in the literary journals—every word of them.

Sunday, December 30, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

consider it a special favor if you would forward me from time to time any of the English magazines or journals

Tuesday, September 4th, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

savagely in the Introductory) a round talking-to on your account, apropos of his article in The Woman's Journal

Friday, September 14th, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

W. parody in the Presbyterian Journal. Laughed over it. "It's not at all bad."

Saturday, September 15th, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

I mentioned the fact that Appleton's Journal had called attention to the moral inconsistency of this

Monday, September 24th, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

with the L. of G.You should send copies at once to Vanity Fair, Momus, The Albion, The Day Book, The Journal

Friday, September 28th, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

The Home Journal, N.Y., reviewing Olive Schreiner's book, says: "The Story of an African Farm contains

Sunday, January 20, 1889.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

—all the news: but along with what's excellent in journalism it illustrates—illustrates better than any

Sunday, October 28, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

I read this to W. from the New York Home Journal:"Walt Whitman's new volume of poems, November Boughs

Monday, April 8, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Instanced the difficulties with Curtis at the start with The Ladies Home Journal of which Ferguson is

"It seems to me that in the whole range of journals pretending to anything, the Press is the greatest

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 6)

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Repeatedly speaks of this as "the Moncure-Conwayism of journalism."

Gave me a copy of the journal called Society with its big flaring initial letter, and said, "I don't

Gave me also a copy of the Photographic Journal containing a piece on the Gutekunst portrait—a picture

W. said again as to the dinner: "The journal—paper—there: Society, is it?

He has gone with Curtis, there, with the Home Journal."

Tuesday, April 30, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

"Are they to publish his Journals? I have heard somewhere there were volumes of them."

Alcott had "always had the idea of a mission," and part of his mission was "to keep these Journals."

Wondered in what guise "he would appear in these extensive journals," if at all.

Thursday, May 2, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Left him with copy of the Home Journal, with a column extracted from Myers and headed "The Ecstacy of

Monday, May 6, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

But then we must remember the Herald has several vices in common with the journals everywhere—among them

Sunday, May 12, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

The notes there, for instance—the extracts from Emerson's Journals—and here and there little incidents—appeal

Saturday, May 25, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Emerson's Journal for 1852 After W. had gone over it, he said: "How wonderfully that rings in one's sense

Monday, May 27, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Curtis, of the Ladies' Home Journal, had said in Harned's presence at the committee meeting this afternoon

Emerson ever changed in his feelings towards you there can be no written record of it—not even in his journal—else

Friday, May 31, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Enclosed were clips from the Chicago Journal, discussing Whitman, Dowden, and O'Connor as espousing Whitman

Saturday, June 1, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Home Journal—one with minor references to him, another with a three-column piece by James Huneker.

Tuesday, June 4, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Said he had read Huneker's piece in the Home Journal. "It is very warm—very.

Thursday, June 6, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

After leaving I found the copies of Home Journal I had left with him, letter from Julius Chambers, Bucke's

Monday, September 23, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Repeatedly speaks of this as "the Moncure-Conwayism of journalism."

Friday, October 4, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Gave me a copy of the journal called Society with its big flaring initial letter, and said, "I don't

Saturday, July 6, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

The Critic, all our literary journals, are wanting in power and warmth—to use Herbert's great and powerful

Sunday, July 7, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Brought him from Clifford "Amiel's Journal." He was much pleased.

Tuesday, April 16, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Discussion of policy of American journalism: that it will sacrifice truth for interest.

Tuesday, April 23, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

be Will Carleton, who read here in one of the churches last night, and Curtis of the Ladies' Home Journal

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