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  • Literary Manuscripts 46

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Search : journalism
Section : Literary Manuscripts

46 results

The Slavonians and Eastern Europe

  • Date: August 1849 or later; August 1849
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Anonymous
Text:

pitched battles; beat them in bravery and in strategy; beat them at the very time when the Austrian journals

The Vanity and the Glory of Literature

  • Date: After April 1, 1849; April 1849; Date unknown
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Henry Rogers
Text:

her right raised, as if ready to harangue. 1854 10,000 new books were published in Germany —2025 journals

Not the least instructive of the essays of Lord Jeffrey, reprinted from this journal, is that suggested

any man of mark or likelihood die, than in addition to his life, whole volumes of his letters and journals

Rousseau's Confessions

  • Date: After 1850
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Julia Kavanaugh | unknown author
Text:

month of each other. finishing stroke George Steers's lead ☞ Remember in those days there were no journals—no

Whitman's pre-Leaves of Grass Marginalia on British Writers

  • Creator(s): Kenneth M. Price
Text:

[Walt Whitman], "An English and an American Poet," American Phrenological Journal , 90-91.

Introduction to Whitman's Annotations and Marginalia

  • Creator(s): Matt Cohen
Text:

classical rhetoric to the poetry of Tennyson, from Persian mysticism to nineteenth-century phrenological journals

used Whitman's marginalia to argue, for example, that the poet's shift in reading from American journals

in 1845-47 to British journals in 1848-49 tells us that Whitman was educating himself to become a poet

Henry 8th

  • Date: Undated
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Unknown
Text:

three‑quarters of a century that preceded it—the affair of Leisler (1691) printer of the "Weekly Journal

Cultural Geography Scrapbook

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860; Date unknown; 1847; 1855; 20 June 1857; 15 August 1857; unknown; 01 October 1857; 13 October 1857; 14 October 1858; 10 October 1858; 15 October 1858; 1849; 09 January 1858; 19 July 1856; 14 March 1857; 06 October 1856; 13 July 1859; 17 February 1860; 12 December 1856; 21 March 1857; 1848; 08 December 1855; 17 August 1857; 05 April 1857; 1857; 26 December 1857; 06 December 1857; 31 January 1857; 28 January 1858; 14 November 1856; 25 May 1857; 07 April 1857; 10 May 1856; 1856; 18 April 1857; 20 May 1857; 25 April 1857; 08 December 1857; 27 December 1856; 12 June 1857; 28 March 1857; 29 March 1857; 25 January 1857; July 1847; 28 November 1858; 21 February 1858; January 9, 1858; December 11, 1857; October 2, 1857; September 12, 1857; 20 December 1856; 05 December 1857; December 26, 1857; January 1, 1858; July 26, 1858; October 26, 1856; October 11, 1857; 30 August 1857; November 2, 1858; January 6, 1858; August 26, 1856; September 16, 1857; 29 December 1857; 07 November 1858; 15 July 1857; 18 December 1857; 20 August 1858; 17 December 1857; 27 January 1858; 20 March 1857; July, August, September, 1849; 26 April 1857; 08 August 1857; November 8, 1858; 26 September 1857; 24 October 1857; 27 July 1857; 26 July 1857; 19 July 1857; 10 August 1857; 25 October 1857; 06 April 1857; 13 June 1857; 11 May 1857; 27 September 1858; 1852; 08 February 1857; 16 March 1859; 28 August 1856; 23 September 1858; 19 November 1858; 29 January 1859; 3 January 1856; 29 August 1856; 31 December 1858; 24 October 1860; 19 April 1858; 4 December 1858; 27 December 1857; 6 December 1857; 17 January 1858; 24 April 1858; 27 December 1858; 25 August 1856; 26 August 1856; 17 January 1857; 11 April 1848; 18 April 1848
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

poor show among the exhibitors, and this was a subject for the taunts and sneers of the English journals

See also Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, 1836, vol. vi. p. 361. VOL.

By WILLIAM AINSWORTH, Esq., in the Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, vol. xi. pp. 1-21.

We have already given an account of his preliminary visits to Mosul,—of his inspection of the * Journal

—Wisconsin Journal. ITS CAPITAL.

Wants

  • Date: Between 1841 and 1862
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

other, of which this is one specimen, puts to the This manuscript appears to be a draft piece of journalism

Prophecy that soon the Atlantic

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860; 24 June 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

The present state of our mercantile marine is thus described in the Journal of Commerce on Wednesday:

The wild gander leads his

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

Leaves of Grass" ("The Greatest Whitman Collector and the Greatest Whitman Collection," The Quarterly Journal

the most definitely

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

Whitman published the essay anonymously in the American Phrenological Journal in October 1855, and he

After the Supper and Talk

  • Date: Between 1884 and 1888
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This manuscript draft, however, may well have been intended for neither journal because of the reference

Free cider

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

.— This manuscript consists of prose notes about Long Island, potentially related to a piece of journalism

Walter Whitman, of Suffolk co.

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

from 1839 to early 1841, Whitman had moved to Manhattan in May 1841 and was writing and working in journalism

A talent for conversation

  • Date: Between 1840 and 1870
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

conclusively, but Edward Grier suggests that "this sort of moralizing . . . belongs to [Whitman's] journalizing

Locust whirring they come in July

  • Date: About the 1850s or 1860s
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

& are loud in August"—is similar to a description of Washington, D.C., in a piece of Civil War journalism

Whether this manuscript directly contributed to this piece of journalism or not, it seems likely that

armies & navies pass on the surface

  • Date: About the 1850s or 1860s
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Locust," and the other headed "Sunflower," which may have contributed to a piece of Civil War-era journalism

[A tip-top caricature of Walt Whitman]

  • Date: 1871-1872
Text:

According to Emory Holloway, the caricature that it describes was printed in the Fifth Avenue Journal

[It has been good fun]

  • Date: 1872
Text:

Murray, Walt Whitman Laughs: An Uncollected Piece of Prose Journalism, Walt Whitman Quarterly Review

Washington as a Central Winter Residence

  • Date: 1871–1872
Text:

For more details regarding how this manuscript contributed to these two pieces of journalism, see Martin

Murray, Two Pieces of Uncollected Whitman Journalism: 'Washington as a Central Winter Residence' and

Sail forth O mystic yacht of me

  • Date: about 1890
Text:

On part of the page is prose that appears to be a journal entry.

And I say the stars

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
Text:

On the verso (loc.07869) is a draft of a piece of journalism published on October 20, 1854.; loc.07869

[Here the aboriginal money circulated]

  • Date: about 1861
Text:

For more on how this manuscript may have contributed to this piece of journalism, see Kimberly Winschel

Hist Brooklyn

  • Date: about 1862
Text:

direct textual links between the two, it is likely that these notes contributed to this piece of journalism

[Many consider the expressions]

  • Date: 1884–1888
Text:

Democratic Vistas, and Other Papers (1888) before parts of it were combined with two other pieces of journalism

Free cider

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860
Text:

leafhandwritten; This manuscript contains prose notes about Long Island, potentially related to a piece of journalism

[The Trapper's Bride]

  • Date: 1856 or later
Text:

laterpoetryprintedhandwritten1 leaf; A clipping of an article entitled "The Indian in American Art" from The Crayon: A Journal

[Draw a picture of a model]

  • Date: about 1868
Text:

description of "a model American young man" inscribed on this manuscript likely contributed to Whitman's journalism

1854 Alexander Smith's Poems

  • Date: 1854-1855
Text:

quoted this passage in his An English and an American Poet published in the American Phrenological Journal

A talent for conversation

  • Date: Between 1840 and 1870
Text:

conclusively, but Edward Grier suggests that "this sort of moralizing . . . belongs to [Whitman's] journalizing

New York State furnished

  • Date: 1863–1868
Text:

This manuscript seems to be composed of selections from a Civil War journal that Whitman compiled in

armies & navies pass on the surface

  • Date: About the 1850s or 1860s
Text:

Locust," and the other headed "Sunflower," which may have contributed to a piece of Civil War-era journalism

Locust whirring they come in July

  • Date: About the 1850s or 1860s
Text:

& are loud in August"—is similar to a description of Washington, D.C., in a piece of Civil War journalism

Whether this manuscript directly contributed to this piece of journalism or not, it seems likely that

[Feb 11—The first chirping]

  • Date: 1877
Text:

chirping]1877prose1 leafhandwritten; Notes dated February 10–11, 1877, which read like a series of journal

[Established poems have the very great]

  • Date: about 1884
Text:

1884prose1 leafhandwrittenprinted; A manuscript fragment composed on the verso of a page of a program or journal

How I Still Get Around and Take Notes (No. 5)

  • Date: 1881
Text:

(No. 5)," a piece of journalism that appeared in The Critic (Vol. I, no. 24) on December 3, 1881.

Walt Whitman [The late Dartmouth College utterance]

  • Date: 1872
Text:

Dartmouth College utterance]1872prose4 leaveshandwritten; A seemingly complete draft of a piece of journalism

Italian singers in America

  • Date: 1858-1859
Text:

1859prose3 leaveshandwritten; A manuscript containing a fairly neat draft of what is likely a piece of journalism

Wants

  • Date: Between 1841 and 1862
Text:

Between 1841 and 1862prosehandwritten7 leaves; This manuscript appears to be a draft of a piece of journalism

the most definitely

  • Date: 1855
Text:

Whitman published the essay anonymously in the American Phrenological Journal in October 1855, and he

Go into the subject

  • Date: Between 1867 and 1885
Text:

1885poetryprose5 leaveshandwritten; The rectos of these several leaves form what seems to be a piece of journalism

his poem of the

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1860
Text:

On the reverse side is a manuscript (loc.05620) containing a draft of an unpublished piece of journalism

Notebook Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1857-1861
Text:

transcription and images of the article, see http://www.whitmanarchive.org/published/periodical/journalism

The wild gander leads his

  • Date: Between 1850 and 1855
Text:

Leaves of Grass" (The Greatest Whitman Collector and the Greatest Whitman Collection, The Quarterly Journal

After the Supper and Talk

  • Date: between 1884 and 1888
Text:

This manuscript draft, however, may well have been intended for neither journal because of the reference

Walt Whitman's Reading: A Bibliographical Handlist

  • Date: 1921; 1906–1996; 1959
Text:

classical rhetoric to the poetry of Tennyson, from Persian mysticism to nineteenth-century phrenological journals

Journal of Civilization.

Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Poets and Poetry of Europe The American Review: A Whig Journal

Lippincott & co. 1885 Hicks, Elias Journal of the Life and Religious Labours of Elias Hicks Isaac T.

on Astronomy Osgood, Francis Sargent A Birth-Day Bijou Pardoe Louis the Fourteenth Parker, Samuel Journal

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