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Search : harry potter and the prisoner of azkaban book pdf
Work title : To One Shortly To Die

11 results

Leaves of Grass (1881–1882)

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

WHEN I READ THE BOOK.

All the hapless silent lovers, All the prisoners in the prisons, all the righteous and the wicked, All

book-words! what are you?

The blind sleep, and the deaf and dumb sleep, The prisoner sleeps well in the prison, the runaway son

be put in prison—let those that were prisoners take the keys; Let them that distrust birth and death

Leaves of Grass (1891–1892)

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

WHEN I READ THE BOOK.

I see all the menials of the earth, laboring, I see all the prisoners in the prisons, I see the defective

All the hapless silent lovers, All the prisoners in the prisons, all the righteous and the wicked, All

The blind sleep, and the deaf and dumb sleep, The prisoner sleeps well in the prison, the runaway son

be put in prison—let those that were prisoners take the keys; Let them that distrust birth and death

Leaves of Grass (1860–1861)

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

Let the prison-keepers be put in prison! Let those that were prisoners take the keys! (Say!

Let books take the place of trees, animals, rivers, clouds!

or man that has been in prison, or is likely to be in prison? 4.

book, It is a man, flushed and full-blooded—it is I—So long!

The blind sleep, and the deaf and dumb sleep, The prisoner sleeps well in the prison—the run- away runaway

Leaves of Grass (1867)

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

WHEN I READ THE BOOK.

Let the prison-keepers be put in prison! Let those that were prisoners take the keys! (Say!

The blind sleep, and the deaf and dumb sleep, The prisoner sleeps well in the prison—the run-away son

book-words! what are you?

17 All the hapless silent lovers, All the prisoners in the prisons, all the righteous and the wicked,

Cluster: Messenger Leaves. (1860)

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

alarm and fre- quent frequent advance and retreat, The infidel triumphs—or supposes he triumphs, The prison

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

Remember if you are dying

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

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

Annotations Text:

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

Cluster: Whispers of Heavenly Death. (1891)

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

labor, suffering, I, tallying it, absorb in myself, Many times have I been rejected, taunted, put in prison

Cluster: Whispers of Heavenly Death. (1881)

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

labor, suffering, I, tallying it, absorb in myself, Many times have I been rejected, taunted, put in prison

Walt Whitman's Poems

  • Date: 17 April 1868
  • Creator(s): Kent, William Charles Mark
Text:

Opening this book has been to us a revelation. Reading it has yielded us exquisite pleasure.

Otherwise than in one fragmentary instance like the foregoing, the book is, as we have said, altogether

how unfaltering, how affectionate and faithful they were, Then I am pensive—I hastily put down the book

Turning the leaves of these poems, the reader may say before the book is closed as the Poet himself says

Queene (1590), "Dan Chaucer, well of English undefiled,/On Fame's eternal beadroll worthy to be filed" (book

Annotations Text:

Queene(1590), "Dan Chaucer, well of English undefiled,/On Fame's eternal beadroll worthy to be filed" (book

Poems by Walt Whitman

  • Date: 19 April 1868
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

cultivated Englishmen who have crossed the Atlantic, met the author, and learned to admire him and his books

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