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Search : 新视野大学英语读写教程1 pdf
Sub Section : Commentary / Selected Criticism

296 results

Transnational Modernity and the Italian Reinvention of Walt Whitman, 1870-1945

  • Date: 2021
  • Creator(s): Bernardini, Caterina
Text:

•Emanuel Carnevali Contents Acknowledgments . . . xi Introduction . . . 1 Chapter 1 . . . 19 Post-RisorgimentoEncounters

Chapter 1 1.

Chapter 6 1.

Chapter 8 1.

Chapter 10 1.

"The Disenthralled Hosts of Freedom": Party Prophecy in the Antebellum Editions of Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 2021
  • Creator(s): Grant, David
Text:

col.1.

col.1. 5.

Chapter4 1.

Ovid(NY)Bee,October25,1848, p.1,col.1). 24.

WaltWhitmanQuarterlyReview2,no.1(1984):1–11.

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

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

1.

(Traubel, 1906, Volume 1, 158-61) A few years earlier, in 1867, Carpenter, then 23, had been given an

good deal of time on the Common, these delicious days and nights - every mid-day from 11.30 to about 1

The Whitman Revolution: Sex, Poetry, and Politics

  • Date: 2020
  • Creator(s): Erkkila, Betsy
Text:

Chapter One 1.

Chapter Five 1.

Chapter Six 1.

, 1953], 1). 31.

WWC 1: 7. 10. Erkkila, Whitman Among the French, 169. Chapter Eight 1.

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

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

. | Identifiers: lCCn 2019002003 (print) | lCCn 2019011226 (ebook) | ISB n 978-1-60938-664-1 (ebook)

Drum-taPs anD The ChaoS of war 1.

Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 23, nos. 1 and 2 (Summer/Fall 2005): 1–25.

War, Literature, and the Arts 24, no. 1 (2012): 1–10. Grossman, Allen.

American Literature 75, no. 1 (March 2003): 1–30. ———.Victory of Law: The Fourteenth Amendment, the Civil

Whitman & Dickinson: A Colloquy

  • Date: 2017
  • Creator(s): Athenot, Éric | Miller, Cristanne
Text:

Identifiers: lccn 2017010803 | iSbn 978-1-60938-531-6 (paperback : acid-freepaper) | iSbn 978-1-60938

Mirth 1” (188, 190).

He Is Silent” 1.

Johnson, Hyperboles, 1, 8.

19; 1. 5.

Whitman’s Drift

  • Date: 2017
  • Creator(s): Cohen, Matt
Text:

The FIgure 1.

CO 1:46n3. Notes to Pages 27–32 . 217 Chapter 1. To Reach the Workmen Direct 1. WC 1:338. 2.

WC 1:92.

Conway, 1 November 1867, CO 1:347.

DB 1:239. 45.

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

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

Whitman, Corr., 1:81. 116. Whitman, Corr., 1:81. 117. Whitman, Corr., 1:81. 118.

Irwin, May 1, 1865 (Corr., 1:259). 181.

Chapter Three 1.

(1975): 1. 145.

Geographical Review 65, no. 1 (1975): 1–36. Lucas, Rose.

A Place for Humility: Whitman, Dickinson, and the Natural World

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Gerhardt, Christine
Text:

, 978-1-60938-291-9 (ebk) 1.

Part I 1.

1.

Chapter 2 1.

Part III 1.

Whitman among the Bohemians

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Levin, Joanna | Whitley, Edward
Text:

ISBn 978-1-60938-272-8 (pbk) ISBn 978-1-60938-293-3 (ebk) 1.

Reprinted as “Leaves of Grass,” SP, Dec. 1, 1860, 1.

For Whitman’s draft letters to Hugo Fritsch, see Corr. 1:123–24, 1:125–27, 1:158–60. 3.

Corr. 1:124. 37. LG60, 345. 38. Corr. 1:124. 39. Corr. 1:158. 40. Corr. 1:159. 41. Ibid. 42.

Corr. 1:84. 55. Corr. 1:159. 56. Corr. 1:123. 57. LG60, 355. 58.

Whitman Noir: Black America & the Good Gray Poet

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Wilson, Ivy G.
Text:

Printed on acid-free paper ISSN: 1556-5610 ISBN: 978-1-60938-236-0, 1-60938-236-6 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-60938

WILSoN PART 1 1. Erasing Race: The Lost Black Presence in Whitman’s Manuscripts 3 Ed FoLSom 2.

NotES 1.

Not ES 1.

(New York: New York University Press, 1963), 1:92. 30. Ibid., 1:94. 31. W. T.

Walt Whitman's Reconstruction: Poetry and Publishing between Memory and History

  • Date: 2011
  • Creator(s): Buinicki, Martin T.
Text:

IsBN-13: 978-1-60938-069-4; IsBN-10: 1-60938-069-X (pbk.)

IsBN-13: 978-1-60938-070-0; IsBN-10: 1-60938-070-3 (e-book) 1.

Walt Whitman’s Reconstruction 1.

, fragmentary book ever printed” (PW, 1:1).

Successful” (Corr, 1:253n).

Walt Whitman's Songs of Male Intimacy and Love: "Live Oak, with Moss" and "Calamus"

  • Date: 2011
  • Creator(s): Erkkila, Betsy
Text:

ISBn-13: 978-1-58729-958-2 (pbk.), ISBn-10: 1-58729-958-5 (pbk.)

ISB n-13: 978-1-58729-959-9 (ebk.), ISBn-10: 1-58729-959-3 (ebk.) 1. Homosexuality—Poetry.

Walt Whitman, “Proto-leaf” Contents  manly love in all Its moods: a Preface xi live oak, with moss 1

See, for example, Whitman’s notebook entries for october 31, 1863 [Saturday] and novem- ber 1, 1863 [

American Poetry 1 (fall 183): 4–26. Killingsworth, m. Jimmie.

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

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

See also nupm 1:62. 34. See also nupm 1:1349 35. See also nupm 1:287. 36.

See nupm 1:83. 40.

See nupm 1:351. 9.

Le Baron’ by his friends at Pfaff’s” (nupm 1:351). 10. See nupm 1:335.

Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 1 (March 1984): 1–11. Genoways, Ted.

Love, War, and Revision in Whitman’s Blue Book

  • Date: 2010
  • Creator(s): Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

Ihavebeenwronged....Iamoppressed....Ihatehimthatoppresses me,Iwilleitherdestroyhim,orheshallreleaseme. 1

andunconnectedwitheachother,theselinessharethesame fate:allwereexcisedfromLeavesofGrass.Itwouldbepossibletocreateanimpressive 1.

sPoetryoftheBody(ChapelHill,N.C.,1989), 144–49. love, war, and revision in the blue book 689 figure 1.

contemplated revising a key moment of self- definitionin“WaltWhitman”(later,“SongofMyself”),asshownabove(fig.1)

“A sprit of my own seminal wet”: Spermatoid Design in Walt Whitman’s 1860 Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 2010
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

makesitdifferinproportiontotheswimming“S”nexttoit,formingasmallerbottom halfoftheletter,asiftheletterisupsidedown(fig.1)

[NewYork,1961–77],1:347).

delightedthatthey“tookmetothestereotypefoundry,and[gave]orderstofollowmy directions”(Correspondence,1:

inplainterms,thefreshestandhandsomestpieceoftypographythathad everpassedthroughhismill”(Correspondence,1:

catejusthowdemandingWhitman’srequestsweretocreatewhathefinallydeemeda “quite‘odd’”physicalartifact(Correspondence,1:

Walt Whitman, Where the Future Becomes Present

  • Date: 2008
  • Creator(s): Blake, David Haven | Robertson, Michael
Text:

Printedonacid-freepaper issn:1556–5610 lccn:2007936977 isbn-13:978-1-58729–638-3(cloth) isbn-10:1-58729

–638-1(cloth) 08 09 10 11 12 c 5 4 3 2 1 Pastandpresentandfuturearenotdisjoinedbutjoined.

(var- ious publishers 1906–96), 1: 108.

ElsewhereRosenfeldassociatedMarin’spigment { angela miller } 109 1.

Poland, Whaler of Nantucket (1952–1953), steel, 34 1/2″ x 45 1/2″ approximately 525 pounds, Edward E.

Leaves of Grass: The Sesquicentennial Essays

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

Notes 1.

Notes 1.

Notes 1.

Notes 1.

Brooklyn Daily Eagle 18 (1 June 1931): 1–2.

Walt Whitman & the Class Struggle

  • Date: 2006
  • Creator(s): Lawson, Andrew
Text:

vii Abbreviations ix Introduction: The Whitman Myth xi 1 Sex, Class, and Commerce 1 2 The American 1848

new history” (fig. 1).

See Bliss Perry, WaltWhitman, 276n1. 108 : notes to pages xxii–xxiv 1. sex, class, and commerce 1.

Vol. 1. London: Chapman, 1893. 1–25. ———. OnHeroes,Hero-Worship,andtheHeroicinHistory. 3rd ed.

WaltWhitman QuarterlyReview 1 (1983): 1–7. ———. WaltWhitman’sLanguageExperiment.

Twentieth-Century Mass Media Appearances

  • Date: 2006
  • Creator(s): Jewell, Andrew | Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

episode of NBC's situation comedy Friends entitled "The One at the Fertility Clinic" (first aired May 1,

Washington: Library of Congress, pp.1–12. Folsom, Ed, and Price, Kenneth M. (1995—).

Polydor Incorporated, LP839 604-1. My Robot Friend (2004). Walt Whitman.

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

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

1).

Traubel promised in his edito- rial “Greeting” for volume 1, number 1 (signed “H. L.

Suchajournalasyoucontemplatemusthelptopromotethistoleration;there- fore I wish it all success” (1:1).

Wallace (2), Frank Sanborn (2), John Clifford (1), and Sidney Morse (1).

(By Blue Ontario’s Shore 1) Such a book as {W. E. H.}

Re-Scripting Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2005
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed | Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

Contents Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1.

Facsimile of the First Edition (San Francisco: Chandler, 1968 LG 1860 (Boston: Thayer and Eldridge, 1860-1

One's-Self I sing, a simple separate person, / Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse" ( , 1)

1758 at age 120 and who could remember New York "when there were but three houses in it" ( Journ ., 1:

Only the result of this evolution has reached us" (Asselineau 1960, 1962, 1:45).

Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman

  • Date: 2005
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

manuscript sheet on which Whitman indicates he left five pages of his book manuscript with Andrew Rome (fig. 1)

Transatlantic Connections

  • Date: 2005
  • Creator(s): Thomas, M. Wynn
Text:

▯Xh[Wj^[Z▯\hep[▯c[1▯%▯7▯ j^_Ya▯]beec▯\[bb▯j^hek]^▯j^[▯ikdi^_d[▯WdZ▯ZWha[d½Z▯c[1▯$▯$▯$»▯▯**(▯$ 8kj▯Wi▯

▯b_l_d]▯bWXeh▯e\▯jhk[▯c[d▯WdZ▯mec[d"▯YechWZ[i»▯▯*)▯1▯_ji▯lWbe# h_pWj_ed▯e\▯ºBel[½i▯8eZo»▯▯+.,▯1▯_ji▯X

'▯1▯H[]_dWbZ▯>ehi# cWd"▯ºIY_[dj_ÅY▯HWY_ic▯WdZ▯j^[▯7c[h_YWd▯?

$▯;haa_bW"▯(-*▯¸▯(-,1▯7bWd▯JhWY^j[dX[h]"▯J^[▯?

j^WYW"▯DO0▯9ehd[bb▯Kd_l[hi_jo▯Fh[ii"▯'/)*1▯h[fh_dj"▯D[m▯Oeha"▯Hkii[bb▯ WdZ▯Hkii[bb"▯'/-)▯1▯:ek]bWi▯=hWdj

Whitman: The Correspondence, Volume VII

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Genoways, Ted
Text:

6 4 . 1 . 1 : A U G U S T 1 5 , 1 8 6 5 25 room–Iwillsendoneinmynext.

L E T T E R 3 9 6 . 1 : J U L Y 1 4 , 1 8 7 1 31 1871 1 396.1 To Charles Hine 7.14. [1871] ADDRESS :

See also DBN 1: 209. L E T T E R 1 0 2 1 . 5 : A P R I L 9 , 1 8 8 1 61 1881 1 1020.9 To G.W.

L E T T E R 1 1 8 1 . 5 : D E C E M B E R 1 5 , 1 8 8 2 67 3.

L E T T E R 2 4 2 1 : J A N U A R Y 1 3 , 1 8 9 1 111 1.

Walt Whitman and the Earth: A Study in Ecopoetics

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Killingsworth, M. Jimmie
Text:

Chapter 1. Things of the Earth Chapter 2. The Fall of the Redwood Tree Chapter 3.

I take as my point of departure in chapter 1 a poem from the second (1856) edition of —"This Compost"

that has stopped working in this first movement of the poem, which encompasses the entirety of Section 1,

Emerson transmits the Romantic-transcendentalist party line on language theory in three key claims: 1.

She is sitting in her room thinking of a story now I'm telling you the story she is thinking. (1) In

To Walt Whitman, America

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1. Whitman in Blackface Chapter 2.

Whitman at the Movies Notes Figures 1.

For permission to reprint, in Chapter 1, a single paragraph from my coauthored essay published in American

CHAPTER 1 WHITMAN IN BLACKFACE I come back to Walt Whitman. What in the hell happened to him.

CHAPTER 2 EDITH WHARTON AND THE PROBLEM OF WHITMANIAN COMRADESHIP As Chapter 1 noted, "Walt Whitman"

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Ken- 1 neth M.

Matthiessen’s 1 American Renaissance.

(LGV 2:561) notes 1.

you proud, friendly, free Manhattanese” (LGV 1:224).

(“Nirvana of the Phoenixes,” Wenji 1:41) 4.

The Pragmatic Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Mack, Stephen John
Text:

The Metaphysics of Democracy: Leaves of Grass , 1855 and 1856 Chapter 1.

The elaboration of Whitman's metaphysics in part I begins in chapter 1 with a discussion of how Whitman

—Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Fate" CHAPTER 1 "My Voice Goes after What My Eyes Cannot Reach": Pragmatic Language

I loaf and invite my soul, I lean and loafe at my ease....observing a spear of summer grass. ( 1) Clearly

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Notes David Kuebrich, "Whitman in China," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 1 (fall 1983), 33–35.

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

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

people 1:152 I am not 9:128 I am not much 1:137 I never was 1:316 There’s one thing 7:65 If there’s

1:39 Of all portraits 1:131 Eakins!

a dubious 1:340–41 I don’t think he 3:500 A party may 1:341 The spirit of 1:99 I am for 1:149 We are

The true nurse 7:400 not irrational 1:294 A long day 1:299 Was I a little daffy 1:309 W.’s mind 1:347

no minister should 1:305 hung fire between 1:310 a heavenly father 1:342 grip is gone 1:354 It’s funny

Debating Manliness: Thomas Wentworth Higginson, William Sloane Kennedy, and the Question of Whitman

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Nelson, Robert K. | Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

1895, offering five reasons why Whitman "never seemed to me a thoroughly wholesome or manly man": (1)

Osgood on 1 March 1882: "We are of the opinion that this book is such a book as brings it within the

H[igginson], "Unmanly Manhood," Woman's Journal, 4 February 1882, 1.

"Walt Whitman: His Death on Saturday Evening—His Life and His Literary Place," , 28 March 1892, 11: 1

Parton," 4 (December 1940): 1–8. Ward, "James Parton," 631.

Walt Whitman & the Irish

  • Date: 2000
  • Creator(s): Krieg, Joann P.
Text:

Contents Introduction Chapter 1. Historical Background Chapter 2. Time Line Chapter 3.

characteristics, a topic of great interest to nineteenth-century Americans, which is discussed in chapter 1

The contradiction, if real, needs explanation and is addressed in chapter 1.

hope that the reader will not be disconcerted by the interweaving of fact and supposition in chapter 1.

writing of this book, in what proved to be the final summer of his life, will always be remembered. 1.

The Evolution of Walt Whitman: An Expanded Edition

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

THE WOUND DRESSER 1 4 1 Nevertheless, in spite of the inappropriateness of these arti cles, Whitman was

I,pp. xxxiii-xxxiv, n. 1. 32.

Io9. 47· www, p. 1 1 0 . 48. www, pp. II2-II3. 49• WWW, pp. I I I-I I2. 50. Inc. Ed., p. 236.

, p. 5, §4 (1 1-12), Inc.

I.1 1 . 63. "Twilight,''NB, p. 35,Inc.

A Whitman Chronology

  • Date: 1998
  • Creator(s): Krieg, Joann P.
Text:

u5). 1 AUGUST.

8 g -g 1 ).

3 -1 8 ).

4 8 -1 4 9 ). 1 JANUARY.

:1 6 5 -1 7 2 ). 25 JUNE.

Commentary

  • Date: 1997
  • Creator(s): Helms, Alan | Parker, Hershel
Text:

In 1996 1 sympathized: "'What a sad journey the sequence takes us on' (p. 191), he lamented after exposing

Traveling with the Wounded: Walt Whitman and Washington's Civil War Hospitals

  • Date: 1996
  • Creator(s): Murray, Martin G. | Price, Kenneth M., Folsom, Ed
Text:

Edwin Haviland Miller (New York: New York University Press, 1961), 1:11-12.

Whitman, Correspondence , 1:68–70.

Harper, 1896), 169; Stearns, The Lady Nurse , 246; Whitman, , 1: 329. David S.

Knopf, 1977), 219. , 1: 175–82; Stearns, , 73–74. Stearns, , 56–57.

Haskell, Company K, 141st New York Infantry," , 1: 127–30. , 57, 59, 60.

The Real "Live Oak, with Moss": Straight Talk about Whitman's "Gay Manifesto"

  • Date: 1996
  • Creator(s): Parker, Hershel
Text:

Bowers (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1955), p. 1.

Constructing the German Walt Whitman

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

, xi Introduction, 1 T R A N S L A T I O N S 1.Ferdinand Freiligrath, AdolfStrodtmann, and Ernst Otto

T H O M A S W IL L IA M R O L L E ST O N ( 1 8 5 7 - 1 9 2 0 ) T. W.

M A X H A Y E K ( 1 8 8 2 - ?

1 (Summer 1986), 4-6.

WHITMAN ON THE RIGHT 1.E. L.

Walt Whitman & the World

  • Date: 1995
  • Creator(s): Allen, Gay Wilson | Folsom, Ed
Text:

I I • I I • I I .. • I -t• • I 1 '1 I I I I • I . It. . . . . 'I I .......

I+ "•-4 -.:1 1 • • I I I 1 ill I I Jt " .. • .. I . . . . - . . . I • - I . r I - - I • I I • • .

NOTES 1.

Nowyou can ofcourse saythat he meant pure verse and that the foot is a paeon 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 "or

NOTES 1."

Walt Whitman: The Centennial Essays

  • Date: 1994
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Ibid., ix. 3· Ibid., 31. 4· LG6o, 1-22.

(1V, 1:262).

I My long scythe whispered and 1 left the hay tomake."

D E R Z 1 M M E R G E S A N D E R D E M O K R A T 1 E Ich singe den Gesang meines Zimmers.

Aspekte der Kulturvernichtung (Reinbek: Rowohlt, 1976), 136. 0 E 1 N S E L B S TK A N N 1 C H N 1 C H

Pete the Great: A Biography of Peter Doyle

  • Date: 1994
  • Creator(s): Murray, Martin G.
Text:

fought at Gaines' Mill on June 27; Frayser's Farm or Glendale on June 30; and Malvern Hill on July 1

Born in Limerick, Ireland on May 1, 1805, Michael Nash came to this country about 1818.

The former date was when Whitman returned to DC from his six-month hiatus in Brooklyn ( ., 1: 248), and

the latter date was when Whitman left Washington again to visit his family in New York ( ., 1: 255–256

It was held in Philadelphia's Association Hall ( , 1: 178).

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

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

NOTES 1.

N O TES 1.

(Obra em Prosa, 1 0 7 -1 1 0 , my translation) An even better illustration of Campos's intimate link

"I am not to speak to you-1 am to think of you . . .

I Or in front, and I following her just the same" ("To the Garden the World," 1 0 - 1 1 ) .

Whitman in His Own Time

  • Date: 1991
  • Creator(s): Myerson, Joel
Text:

ISBN 0-87745-728-X (pbk.) 1.Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892. 2.

From Reminiscences of Walt Whitman (London: Alexander Gardner, 1896), pp. 1-9. 1. Mr.

"Lazy d---1!"

Seven Arts,2 (September 1917): 627-637. 1.

(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1925), 1:107-110. 1.

Selected Letters of Whitman

  • Date: 1990
  • Creator(s): Miller, Edwin Haviland
Text:

T E X T Henkels Catalogue,June 1 4 -1 5 ,1 9 0 1 To the editors of Harper)s Magazine Brooklyn, January

8 6 1 - 1 8 6 5 reg't is on the Heights-back of Arlington House, a fine camp ground-0, Matty, I have

Frank, as far as I saw, had everything requisite in surgical treatment, nursing, &c. 1 1 2 Selected Letters

Collection o/the editor " G O O D -B Y E MY F A N C Y " ( 1 8 9 1 ) W H IT M A N S A ID , IS "mostly

1 told you Mrs.

Walt Whitman's “Song Of Myself”

  • Date: 1989
  • Creator(s): Miller, Edwin Haviland
Text:

1085 36 SONG OF MYSELF 4 2 :1 0 8 6 -4 3 :1 1 1 6 Tho well-taken photographs . . . . but your lvifc or

1 1 7 -4 4 :1 1 4 4 37 The past is the push of you and me and all precisely the same, And the day and

38 SONG OF M YSELF 4 4 :1 1 4 5 -4 5 :1 1 7 5 1145 1 am sorry for you .... they arc not murderous or

Jones's letter appears in Old 156 N O TES TO PA G ES 1 1 5 -1 3 1 South Leaflets (Boston, n.d.), 7:36

N O TES TO PA G ES 1 3 3 -1 3 8 1 57 127 E. H.

Interpretation of the Poetry of Walt Whitman

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

Ibid., 27. 10Pavese to Pinelli, Turin, August 1, 1926, Letters Vol. 1, 29. 11Pavese to Pinelli, Reaglie

1, 40-41.

These are sections 1- 8 and 25-32.

W., 1-193, etc.) from which I have taken all these quotes.

II, pp. 1-5) and “With Antecedents” (Vol I, pp. 292-94).

Alcott, Amos Bronson (1799–1888)

  • Creator(s): Mason, Julian
Text:

In 1888, after Alcott's death, Whitman said, "Alcott was always my friend" (With Walt Whitman 1:333)

Vol. 1. New York: Small, Maynard, 1906; Vol. 3. New York: Mitchell Kennerley, 1914.

Boston, Massachusetts

  • Creator(s): Round, Phillip H.
Text:

sheet of letter paper . . . throw it down, stamp it flat, and that is a map of old Boston" (Prose Works 1:

(Correspondence 1:50).

New England Quarterly 1 (1928): 353–370.  Kaplan, Justin. Walt Whitman: A Life.

"City Dead-House, The" (1867)

  • Creator(s): Graham, Rosemary
Text:

that such economic injustice "is an evil... that... sows a public crop of other evils" (Uncollected 1:

(Gathering 1:150–151).As a poet, however, Whitman often presented himself as one who has the unique capacity

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