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Search : part 2 roblox story kate and jayla
Work title : Song Of Myself

105 results

The Second Annex to "Leaves of Grass"

  • Date: September 1891
  • Creator(s): Morse, Sidney
Text:

It is all a part of him.

and beauty of a spiritual or poetical vision; the glimpsing of that which, after all, for the most part

Leaves of Grass (1891–1892)

  • Date: 1891–1892
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

PAGE VIRGINIA—THE WEST . . . . . . . . 230 CITY OF SHIPS . . . . . . . . . . 230 THE CENTENARIAN'S STORY

2 Souls of men and women!

THE CENTENARIAN'S STORY.

2 Come forward O my soul, and let the rest retire, Listen, lose not, it is toward thee they tend, Parting

, To think that we are now here and bear our part. 2 Not a day passes, not a minute or second without

Song of Myself.

  • Date: 1891–1892
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

harbor for good or bad, I permit to speak at every hazard, Nature without check with original energy. 2

overseer views them from his saddle, The bugle calls in the ball-room, the gentlemen run for their part

Parting track'd by arriving, perpetual payment of perpetual loan, Rich showering rain, and recompense

I take part, I see and hear the whole, The cries, curses, roar, the plaudits for well-aim'd shots, The

, any thing is but a part.

"Leaves of Grass"

  • Date: September 1887
  • Creator(s): Lewin, Walter
Text:

Many persons have written down the story of their lives, so far as, in their old age, they could recollect

For his part, nothing being improper, nothing shall be suppressed. Mr.

Since then several editions have appeared with varying but for the most part small fortune.

Humane persons in different parts of the country sent him money and stores to carry on his work, and

Goethe, Gespräche mit Goethe , Leipzig, Band 1 und 2: 1836, Band 3: 1848, S. 743; Spinoza, Ethics, Part

Annotations Text:

.; Goethe, Gespräche mit Goethe, Leipzig, Band 1 und 2: 1836, Band 3: 1848, S. 743; Spinoza, Ethics,

Whitman for the Drawing Room

  • Date: April 1886
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

They say there is a time to be silent, and though no part or function of man if properly treated is disgraceful

It consists for the most part of hack writers to the press who think it no portion of their duty to know

Veiled obscenity in the shape of a joke, a spicy story, or the reports of criminal cases in the Pall

above all else zealous for the virtue of their womankind, just as if they had never laughed over the story

Gespräche mit Goethe , Leipzig, Band 1 und 2: 1836, Band 3: 1848, S. 743.

Annotations Text:

Gespräche mit Goethe, Leipzig, Band 1 und 2: 1836, Band 3: 1848, S. 743.; Ernest Rhys, "Introduction"

Suggestions and Advice to Mothers

  • Date: 11 November 1882
  • Creator(s): Elmina
Text:

I wish I had room to quote all of Chainey's lecture, but a part must suffice.

Whoever you are, how superb and how divine is your body or any part of it!

Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part and tag of me is a miracle.

"In his sight, no part or passion of the body is to be slighted or regarded as vulgar.

respect for women, and hold in low esteem their own manhood through learning to take delight in vulgar stories

Review of Leaves of Grass (1881–82)

  • Date: 24 September 1882
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

octillions of cubic leagues, do not hazard the span or make it im- patient impatient ; They are but parts

, any thing is but a part.

Whitman, Poet and Seer

  • Date: 22 January 1882
  • Creator(s): G. E. M.
Text:

Yet consider the forces that make the flower, the elements that are parts of it, the intricacy of its

eras, a few octillions of cubic leagues, do not hazard the span, or make it impatient, They are but parts

, anything is but a part.

The Poetry of the Future

  • Date: 19 January 1882
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

send it forth to the world with a complacent smirk required great courage—or brazen effrontery—on the part

Holmes sings, he yet may have succeeded in uttering but a small part of the music that is in him.

things, One swallow does not make a summer, nor do a few happy turns of phrase make a poet—for our part

is a common saying among publishers that next to very warm praise of a book downright abuse on the part

Osgood & Co. 1881. $2. Simon-pure, short for "the real Simon Pure," means real or genuine.

Leaves of Grass

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

The poet's allusions to death are among the finest passages in his works, and his songs of parting are

In reference to the position which a part of the public has taken towards the book we are reminded of

New Poetry of the Rossettis and Others

  • Date: January 1882
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

into account the imagination often informing some one of these rhapsodies as a whole, even when its parts

"Leaves of Grass"

  • Date: 26 November 1881
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Transcribed in part from an electronic copy, The Walt Whitman Archive Transcribed in part by Todd Stabley

Walt Whitman and the Poetry of the Future

  • Date: 19 November 1881
  • Creator(s): Mitchell, Edward P.
Text:

that if the new edition is a triumph for the poet, it has been achieved without any concession on his part

The additional verses are not so important in themselves as in the relation of parts to a completed whole

The poet has compared his work to one of those ambitious old architectural edifices, built part by part

A considerable part of his contemporaries hold him to be beneath criticism; a small circle of ardent

It is not from any lack of conscientious intention that the poet fails in part of his purpose, and instead

"Leaves of Grass"

  • Date: 13 November 1881
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Here we have in epitome the true story of The Creation of Man.

octillions of cubic leagues, do not hazard the space or make it im- patient impatient They are but parts

, anything is but a part.

As for its sensuality—and it may be less so than it seems—I do not so much wish those parts unwritten

Whitman's "Leaves of Grass"

  • Date: 5 November 1881
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

It ends with the 'Songs of Parting,' under which the last is 'So Long,' a title that a foreigner and

He has gained a vigorousness of support on the part of his admirers that probably more than outbalances

His rhythm, so much burlesqued, is all of a part with the man and his ideas.

But these are parts of him.

Leaves of Grass

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

Do not these fragments, picked from different parts of the country, at random, give an idea of what the

The foregoing lines are but a part of the bird song.

Stedman had failed to grasp the wholeness of the work, though no finer characterization of the parts

Song of Myself.

  • Date: 1881–1882
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

harbor for good or bad, I permit to speak at every hazard, Nature without check with original energy. 2

overseer views them from his saddle, The bugle calls in the ball-room, the gentlemen run for their part

Parting track'd by arriving, perpetual payment of perpetual loan, Rich showering rain, and recompense

I take part, I see and hear the whole, The cries, curses, roar, the plaudits for well-aim'd shots, The

, any thing is but a part.

Leaves of Grass (1881–1882)

  • Date: 1881–1882
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

image (203) but that page image is now there. fixed italics for section titles in "The Centenarian's Story

2 Souls of men and women!

THE CENTENARIAN'S STORY.

2 Come forward O my soul, and let the rest retire, Listen, lose not, it is toward thee they tend, Parting

, To think that we are now here and bear our part. 2 Not a day passes, not a minute or second without

Walt Whitman's Poems

  • Date: December 1875
  • Creator(s): Bayne, Peter
Text:

If I worship one thing more than another it shall be the spread of my own body or any part of it."

Parting track'd by arriving—perpetual payment of perpetual loan, Rich, showering rain, and recompense

Here is part of a birds-eye view with which he favours us of sailors and their doings throughout the

more truly human not to speak of, than to speak of (such speech producing self-consciousness, whereas part

Had Whitman ventured upon the hundredth part of his grossness in the camp of the Greeks, he would have

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 10 October 1874
  • Creator(s): Saintsbury, George
Text:

These changes are for the most part, as it appears to us, decided improvements, and the whole work posses

But there is another poem almost equally beautiful, which forms part of "President Lincoln's Burial Hymn

The Poetry of Democracy: Walt Whitman

  • Date: July 1871
  • Creator(s): Dowden, Edward
Text:

Leaves of Grass Washington, D.C. 1871. 2. Passage to India Washington , D.C. 1871. 3.

His critics have, for the most part, confined their attention to the personality of the man; they have

studied him, for the most part, as a phenomenon isolated from the surrounding society, the environment

If a human being is to be honoured as such, then every part of a human being is to be honoured.

His pupil must part from him as soon as possible, and go upon his own way.

Walt Whitman.

  • Date: 1871
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

the wood, and become undis- guised undisguised and naked; I am mad for it to be in contact with me. 2

If I worship one thing more than another, it shall be the spread of my own body, or any part of it.

I take part—I see and hear the whole; The cries, curses, roar—the plaudits for well-aimed shots; The

List to the story as my grandmother's father, the sailor, told it to me.

is but a part.

Leaves of Grass (1871)

  • Date: 1871
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269 The Centenarian's Story

List to the story as my grandmother's father, the sailor, told it to me.

is but a part.

THE CENTENARIAN'S STORY. VOLUNTEER OF 1861-2.

It is well—a lesson like that, always comes good; I must copy the story, and send it eastward and west

The Poetry of the Period

  • Date: October 1869
  • Creator(s): Austin, Alfred
Text:

Let us then come to that; for, after all, that is the most wonderful as it is the most important part

His fundamental notions of poetry are, we must confess, for the most part correct.

I become a part of that, whatever it is!

A story is told of a countryman of Mr. Walt Whitman, who, after reading Mr.

how superb and how divine is your body, or any part of it!" With him this is a rooted conviction.

Walt Whitman

  • Date: November 1867
  • Creator(s): Buchanan, Robert
Text:

T HE grossest abuse on the part of the majority, and the wildest panegyric on the part of a minority,

He believes hugely in himself, and in the part he is destined to take in American affairs.

properly so called; and that this grossness, offensive in itself, is highly significant—an essential part

The second part of the volume, "Drum-Taps," is a series of poetic soliloquies on the war.

Walt Whitman

  • Date: 8 June 1867
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

with the addition of a work containing much that has not been before printed, entitled "Songs before Parting

show :— "I believe in the flesh and the appetites; Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part

his antecedents here being a race of farmers and mechanics, silent, good-natured, playing no high part

On his trip to and from that city he made it a point penetrate various parts of the West and South-west

Walt Whitman's Works

  • Date: 3 March 1867
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

works which aim at satirising the manners and customs of every-day life are necessarily the first parts

To deal with these seriatim , in the first Whitman takes part in a natural and easily comprehensible

Leaves of Grass (1867)

  • Date: 1867
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

List to the story as my grandmother's father, the sailor, told it to me.

is but a part.

2. TEARS! tears! tears!

2.

THE CENTENARIAN'S STORY.

Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1867
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

the wood, and become undis- guised undisguised and naked; I am mad for it to be in contact with me. 2

mer summer morning; How you settled your head athwart my hips, and gently turn'd over upon me, And parted

If I worship one thing more than another, it shall be the spread of my own body, or any part of it.

List to the story as my grandmother's father, the sailor, told it to me.

is but a part.

A Wild Poet of the Woods

  • Date: February 1861
  • Creator(s): Hollingshead, John
Text:

When Walt Whitman, as the story goes, drove an omnibus along Broadway to oblige the regular driver, who

9th av.

  • Date: Between 1854 and 1860
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

without one single exception, in any part of any of These States!

resemblance to a passage in the poem "Proto-Leaf," published in the 1860–1861 edition of which reads, in part

Draper's Physiology (Harper last 2 no's Harper) Brownlow's Map of the Stars 184 Cherry st. A.

It is of course possible, however, that parts of the notebook were inscribed before and/or after the

I know a rich capitalist

  • Date: Between about 1854 and 1860
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

The poem was later published in as part of the "Autumn Rivulets" cluster (1881, p. 310).

Whitman's reference to the sinking of the San Francisco indicates that this notebook, "or at least part

women

  • Date: Between about 1854 and 1860
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

—the vocal performer to make far more of his song, or solo part, by by-play, attitudes, expressions,

simple—Always one leading idea—as Friendship, Courage, Gratitude, Love,—always a distinct meaning— The story

and libretto as now are generally of no account.— In the American Opera the story and libretto must

I am an old artillerist I tell of some On South Fifth st (Monroe place) 2 doors above the river from

At some point Whitman clipped out portions of two pages in this notebook (leaves 2 and 3 as represented

Annotations Text:

.; At some point Whitman clipped out portions of two pages in this notebook (leaves 2 and 3 as represented

The most perfect wonders of

  • Date: 1850s
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

At some point, this manuscript formed part of Whitman's cultural geography scrapbook.

Remember if you are dying

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

book in a conversation with Horace Traubel on December 9, 1889 (With Walt Whitman in Camden, 6:180–2)

Annotations Text:

book in a conversation with Horace Traubel on December 9, 1889 (With Walt Whitman in Camden, 6:180–2)

Verse—and Worse

  • Date: 13 October 1860
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

The old woman's tale of there being but eight wonders in the world has long been an idle story; a brick

It would be impossible to transcribe from any part of the book without offending common sense, and it

Some time ago, so the story goes, he made the unpoetic acquaintance of a New York omnibus driver.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Song of Hiawatha (1855) told the story of the legendary chief credited as

Annotations Text:

.; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Song of Hiawatha (1855) told the story of the legendary chief credited

Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 15 September 1860
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

page: "I believe in the flesh, and the appetites, Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part

As an instance, we quote a part of a death-bed scene, which is as beautifully drawn as it is truthful

The publishers have done their part well.

Review of Leaves of Grass (1860–61)

  • Date: 2 September 1860
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

page: "I believe in the flesh, and the appetites, Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part

As an instance, we quote a part of a death-bed scene, which is as beautifully drawn as it is truthful

The publishers have done their part well.

Review of Leaves of Grass (1860–61)

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

E VERY ONE RECOLLECTS THE STORY of the Scotch dramatic author who, when Garrick assured him his genius

Walt Whitman is to give his readers from time to time inventories of the various component parts of some

Thus (in pages 300-2) we might for a brief moment fancy ourselves poring over a manual of surgery.

Sense, grammar, and metre are but very minor parts in the composition of poetry; but nevertheless, pace

Leaves Of Grass

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

Since all things are divine, Walt Whitman's body, with each several part and function of it, is divine

sending itself ahead of any sane comprehension this side of Jordan. 2.

sun swings itself and its system of planets around us, Its sun, and its again, all swing around us. 2.

Have I forgotten any part? Come to me, whoever and whatever, till I give you recognition. 4.

Has Mine forgotten to grab any part?

Review of Leaves of Grass (1860–61)

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

It was to be the second part of an ultimately never completed three-part poem entitled The Recluse .

Samuel Butler (1612-1680) published a three-part satirical poem on Puritanism entitled Hudibras (1663

Leaves Of Grass

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

A very large part of his poetry is taken up with assertions that he is everything else, and everything

remark that all these things are equally godlike, or are equally dear to the poet, or are equally part

of him, or have an equal claim on him as a part of themselves.

rarely the case) to be neither befouled with filth nor defaced by vulgarity, they are, for the most part

Walt Whitman

  • Date: 19 May 1860
  • Creator(s): Clapp, Henry
Text:

with reference to a day, but with reference to all days, And I will not make a poem, nor the least part

Let others ignore what they may, I make the poem of evil also—I commemorate that part also, I am myself

believe in the flesh and the appetites, Seeing, hearing, and feeling are miracles, and each tag and part

He was a good fellow, free-mouthed, quick-tempered, not bad-looking, able to take his own part, witty

Leaves of Grass (1860–1861)

  • Date: 1860–1861
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

updated work associations for "Chants Democratic-6" ("You just maturing youth")," "Leaves of Grass-2"

2* Lands where the northwest Columbia winds, and where the southwest Colorado winds!

is but a part.

vouchsafe to me what has yet been vouchsafed to none—Tell me the whole story, Tell me what you would

I SAY whatever tastes sweet to the most perfect per- son person , that is finally right. 2.

Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1860–1861
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

I believe in the flesh and the appetites, Seeing, hearing, feeling, are miracles, and each part and tag

The sentries desert every other part of me, They have left me helpless to a red marauder, They all come

Parting, tracked by arriving—perpetual payment of perpetual loan, Rich showering rain, and recompense

I take part—I see and hear the whole, The cries, curses, roar—the plaudits for well-aimed shots, The

is but a part.

Brutish human beings

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

To reinforce the truthfulness of Pierson's stories about the "koboo," Whitman mentions the fact that

(Of the great poet)

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

Maurice Bucke printed a transcription of this manuscript, he added the following words to the end of leaf 2,

Annotations Text:

Maurice Bucke printed a transcription of this manuscript, he added the following words to the end of leaf 2,

Autobiographical Data

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

Autobiographical Data From the middle to the latter part of Oct. 1844 I was in New Mirror — We lived

titled "Song of Myself": "I hear the sound of the human voice . . . . a sound I love," (1855, p. 31). 2

In Jamaica first time in the latter part of the summer of 1839.

the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The 'Talbot Wilson' Notebook," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 20:2

from Emory Holloway, Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1921), 2:

Annotations Text:

the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The 'Talbot Wilson' Notebook," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 20:2

from Emory Holloway, Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1921), 2:

Leaves of Grass

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

Then returning to the fore-part of the book, we found proof slips of certain review articles about the

Review of Leaves of Grass (1855)

  • Date: November 1856
  • Creator(s): D. W.
Text:

Bothwell: A Poem in six parts By W. Edmonstoune Aytoun, D. C.

"Great is life…and real and mystical…wherever and whoever, Great is death…sure as life holds all parts

together, death holds all parts together; Sure as the stars return again after they merge in the light

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