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  • Literary Manuscripts 201

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Search : harry potter and the prisoner of azkaban book pdf
Section : Literary Manuscripts

201 results

To change the book--go over the whole…

  • Date: undated
Text:

26tex.00047To change the book--go over the whole…[To change the]undatedpoetryprose1 leafhandwritten;

This note of approximately fifty words contains Whitman's exhortation to himself to make "the book,"

To change the book--go over the whole…

A Defence of the Christian Doctrines of the Society of Friends

  • Date: After 1838; 1825
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Anonymous
Text:

"The New Testament so called, which is usually bound up in the book called the Bible, comprehends no

The books from which we have made our extracts are easily accessible to all, and we respectfully recommend

the Light in myself–this is all-sufficient for my direction and government; I "have no need to go to books

from William Penn's "Guide Mistaken, and Temporizing Rebuked, or a brief reply to Jonathan Clapham's book

a schoolmaster

  • Date: Before or early in 1852
Text:

The cover of the notebook is labeled "Note Book Walt Whitman 82" in a hand that is not Whitman's. a schoolmaster

Walter Whitman, of Suffolk co.

  • Date: September 3, 1841
Text:

1841prosehandwrittennumber of leaves unknown; This manuscript consists of a note, handwritten by Whitman, in a visitor's book

Walter Whitman, of Suffolk co.

  • Date: September 3, 1841
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Sept 3d—1841 This note was written by Whitman in a visitors' book for Manhattan Public School #13.

Annotations Text:

This note was written by Whitman in a visitors' book for Manhattan Public School #13.

Jan 12. Walter Whitman

  • Date: January 12, 1842
Text:

1842prosehandwritten1 leaf; This manuscript consists of a note, handwritten by Whitman, in a visitor's book

Jan 12. Walter Whitman

  • Date: January 12, 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Arithmetic classes and found them quite proficient This note was written by Whitman in a visitors' book

Annotations Text:

This note was written by Whitman in a visitors' book for Manhattan Public School #13.

Early Roman History

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860; April 1846
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Anonymous
Text:

The satirical Raleigh 1552 + 1618 Of Raleigh—his History of the World—written while in prison—He saw

ruling class; a precedent for it, and an eloquent defence of the criminals, are to be found in the books

from which a vast majority of the world obtain their knowledge of Roman history,—books which cause our

of Etruria, the latter having endured more than four centuries at the time of the discovery of his books

The ' History of Literature,' by Frederick Schlegel, is one of the most captivating of books, and can

Robert Southey

  • Date: After 1847; February 1851; September 25, 1847
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Anonymous
Text:

Talfourd, who defended the rebels, and who was so irritated at the judge's undue leaning against the prisoners

He ran a short career of knavery, profligacy, and crimes, which led him into a prison, and there he died

'Tis a vile thing to be pestered in sleep with all the books in the day I have been reading jostled together

He was soon at his home at Keswick again, in the midst of his books, &c.

A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers

  • Date: After 1849; 1849
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Henry David Thoreau | Unknown
Text:

It is always singular, but encouraging, to meet with common x sense in very old books, as the Heetopades

This pledge of sanity cannot be spared in a book, that is sometimes pleasantly reflect upon itself.

The story and fabulous portion of this book winds loosely from sentence to sentence as so many oases

One of the most attractive of those ancient books that I have met with is the Laws of Menu.

The whole book by noble gestures and inclinations seems to render many words unnecessary.

The Whale-boat

  • Date: late 1850s
Text:

and held at Duke University (The Trent Collection of Walt Whitman Manuscripts, Duke University Rare Book

A City Walk

  • Date: About 1855
Text:

to this title was City of Walks and Joys, the name he originally assigned to Calamus 18 in his Blue Book

This title was changed in the Blue Book to City of orgies, walks and joys and finally became City of

Remember if you are dying

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860
Text:

Whitman mentioned the book in a conversation with Horace Traubel on December 9, 1889 (With Walt Whitman

Rule in all addresses

  • Date: Before 1856
Text:

wandering savage, / A farmer, mechanic, or artist . . . . a gentleman, sailor, lover or quaker, / A prisoner

Enter into the thoughts of

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
Text:

native of Sumatra," and Andrew Lawson has noted that Whitman apparently picked up the reference from a book

Health does not tell any

  • Date: Before or early in 1856
Text:

1856poetryprose1 leafhandwritten; This prose manuscript includes the line "Which is the poem or any book

Books, as now produced

  • Date: Undated
Text:

Books, as now produced

human feet, awaits us

  • Date: Before or early in 1855
Text:

content of this manuscript, in which Whitman writes that true knowledge and experience do not come from books

Poem among the Siamese

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860; unknown; 1850
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Unknown
Text:

S.," a book very full of knowledge both useful and entertaining, we extract some queer exemplifications

Imagination and Fact

  • Date: 1852 or later; January 1852; Unknown
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | ["W.D."] | Anonymous
Text:

And Sir Walter Raleigh, looking from the window of his prison in the Tower, and witnessing a quarrel

love Fall, crumbling, at a breath; And sick at last with that great sorrow's shock, As some poor prisoner

a schoolmaster

  • Date: Before or early in 1852; 12 March 1852
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | unknown author
Text:

commits homicide—(the victim is Jack's father)—He is arrested the shock is too much for him—while in prison

The cover of the notebook is labeled "Note Book Walt Whitman 82" in a hand that is not Whitman's.

Annotations Text:

The cover of the notebook is labeled "Note Book Walt Whitman 82" in a hand that is not Whitman's.; Transcribed

The regular old followers

  • Date: Between 1853 and 1855
Text:

The cover of the notebook is labeled "Note Book Walt Whitman" in a hand that is not Whitman's.

med Cophósis

  • Date: Between 1852 and 1854
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

—But in each one the book was not opened.

following lines: "Through me many long dumb voices, / Voices of the interminable generations of prisoners

Poem or other work —A manly unpretensive philosopher—without any of the old insignia, such as age, books

Can a man be wise without he get wisdom from the books?

Talbot Wilson

  • Date: Between 1847 and 1854
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

And I cannot put my toe anywhe anywhere to the ground, But it must touch numberless and curious books

Again I tread the streets after two thousand years. 105 The discussion of churches and books in this

Inscription

  • Date: between 1855 and 1867
Text:

create an italicized Inscription that he placed before Starting from Paumanok at the beginning of the book

One's-Self I Sing, was printed as the first of several poems in the Inscriptions cluster that opened the book

[Why should I be afraid]

  • Date: 1855-1892
Text:

Glance O'er Travel'd Roads first appeared in Lippincott's Magazine (January 1887), under the title My Book

Reprinted in Democratic Vistas, and Other Papers (1888), My Book and I was also combined with How I Made

a Book, Philadelphia Press (11 July 1889) and A Backward Glance on My Own Road, Critic (5 January 1884

The th Presidency

  • Date: 1855 or 1856
Text:

The manuscript is collected in a bound book under the general title Walt Whitman: A Series of Six Pieces

[Who shall write]

  • Date: probably between 1855 and 1870
Text:

approximately forty words, in which the poet writes that if he "were younger & well" he would write a book

The singer in the prison

  • Date: about 1869
Text:

prisonThe Singer in the Prisonabout 1869poetry4 leaveshandwritten; This is draft of The Singer in the Prison

The singer in the prison

In metaphysical points

  • Date: Before or early in 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Annotations Text:

A single glance of it mocks all the investigations of man and all the instruments and books of the earth

The regular old followers

  • Date: Between 1853 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

—The more of these he has, the more books to keep, the more he must stay s indoors, the more he demeans

The cover of the notebook is labeled "Note Book Walt Whitman" in a hand that is not Whitman's.

Annotations Text:

The cover of the notebook is labeled "Note Book Walt Whitman" in a hand that is not Whitman's.

Poem incarnating the mind

  • Date: Before 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

A single glance of it mocks all the investigations of man and all the instruments and books of the earth

Vernon, / What sobers the Brooklyn boy as he looks down the shores of the Wallabout and remembers the prison

On the cover of the notebook is a note in an unknown hand that reads: "Note Book Walt Whitman E85."

Annotations Text:

On the cover of the notebook is a note in an unknown hand that reads: "Note Book Walt Whitman E85."

In his presence

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

—The learnedest professors, and the makers authors of the best most renowned books, are becom baffled

"Summer Duck"

  • Date: Between 1852 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

knife in his hands,"—such was the warning sung out at night more than once below in the Old Jersey prison

—The prisoners were allowed no light at night.— No physicians were allowed provided.— Sophocles, Eschylus

[Fa]bles, traditions

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

fee lawyers for his brother and sit by him while he was tried for forgery Fa bles, traditions, and books

How gladly we leave the

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

gladly we leave the best of what is called learned and refined society, or the company of lawyers and book-factors

Lofty sirs

  • Date: Between 1840 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

.—) Ay dost th You You are proud of your books, your style, your bland speech and possessed ease in society

Priests

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

apples and hen's eggs, restrain pull let down your eyebrows a little, ¶ Until your Bibles and prayer-books

human feet, awaits us

  • Date: Before or early in 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

.— Noble as books and the writers of books are— the leaven of the true bread of the world life , the

a shore, the freighted ciphers supply ship of the past—there is something better than any and all books

stuff whereof they are the artificial transcript.— and portraiture.— There are plenty who do not own books

posess es possess the in fee simple the vast curbless and bottomless mine itself, of which whence books

content of this manuscript, in which Whitman writes that true knowledge and experience do not come from books

Annotations Text:

content of this manuscript, in which Whitman writes that true knowledge and experience do not come from books

Enter into the thoughts of

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

native of Sumatra," and Andrew Lawson has noted that Whitman apparently picked up the reference from a book

Annotations Text:

native of Sumatra," and Andrew Lawson has noted that Whitman apparently picked up the reference from a book

In the present state of

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

In the review, titled "Walt Whitman, A Brooklyn Boy," Whitman describes the book's author as "one in

Annotations Text:

In the review, titled "Walt Whitman, A Brooklyn Boy," Whitman describes the book's author as "one in

In the review, entitled "Walt Whitman, a Brooklyn Boy," Whitman describes the book's author as "one in

Will you have the walls

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Annotations Text:

fifth poem of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass, eventually titled "I Sing the Body Electric": "Books

I am a Student

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

of all vast limitless Library ; it is they are —it is limitless and eternally open to me; It is The books

always perfect, and alive; Those He They are do not own the librar y ies who have bought the buy the books

Autobiographical Data

  • Date: Between 1848 and 1856
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

of which we know—amid the never enough praised spread of common education and common newspapers and books—amid

—Since the deposition of the king, the prisons had been filled, with suspected persons; on the 2nd of

Caractacus sought to free his country, was taken prisoner and carried to Rome.—"Alas!

Health does not tell any

  • Date: Before or early in 1856
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

—Which is the poem, or any book, that is not diseased?

—(If perfect health appear in a poem, or any book, it surely propogates propagates itself while many

you are welcome to all the rest.— This prose manuscript includes the line "Which is the poem or any book

Annotations Text:

This prose manuscript includes the line "Which is the poem or any book that is not diseased?"

written before or early in 1856.; This prose manuscript includes the line "Which is the poem or any book

which appeared in a slightly altered form in "Poem of Many in One" in 1856: "Which is the theory or book

Rule in all addresses

  • Date: Before 1856
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

wandering savage, / A farmer, mechanic, or artist . . . . a gentleman, sailor, lover or quaker, / A prisoner

There are many great painters—they paint scenes from the books, and illustrate from what the romancer

[Long I thought that knowledge]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

further appearances of this poem during the poet's lifetime, Whitman having canceled it in his Blue Book

43—Leaf

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

the first and last appearance of the poem during Whitman's lifetime: he rejected it from his Blue Book

Thought [Of these years I sing]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

leavesleaf 1 21.5 x 13 cm, leaf 2 18.5 x 12.5 cm; Whitman inscribed and circled the note "2d/ piece/ in Book

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