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manuscript left unpublished by Whitman, containing ideas potentially connected with the unpublished short story
duk.00027) is a poetry manuscript containing ideas possibly connected to Whitman's unpublished short story
The sentence that begins "The soul has that measureless pride..." also later became part of the poem
The first part of this prose fragment also may relate to the following line from the preface to the 1855
James's, 1776], p. 2).
James's, 1776], p. 2).
—[No. 2] For the Hempstead Inquirer. SUN-DOWN PAPERS.—[No. 2] FROM THE DESK OF A SCHOOLMASTER.
the fashion; both are tall men; both exhibit frock coats; both wear straps to their pantaloons; both part
In the water, he can swim like a fish; and on horseback, he sits as easily as if he were part of the
which, as they were somewhat new, he had spent some previous time in drilling those who were to take part
least alarmed, kept moving on, 'solitary and along,' until he had finished every jot and tittle of his part
The only known copy from the Hempstead Inquirer is missing part of paragraph two and all of paragraph
resplendent innocence and beauty—or when we look on a boy, shrouded in the cerements of death, his hair parted
can never, in the great drama of life, pronounce judgment upon the good or ill performance of his part
The phrase "life’s fitful fever" comes from Act 3, Scene 2 of Shakespeare’s Macbeth .
.; The phrase "life’s fitful fever" comes from Act 3, Scene 2 of Shakespeare’s Macbeth.
on account of a wondrous and important discovery, a treatise upon which would fill up the principal part
not strike my eye at all; but now, by dint of the most intent gazing, I could perceive its various parts
Matt Miller, "The Cover of the First Edition of Leaves of Grass ," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review , 24:2-
For my part, I have had serious thoughts of getting up a regular ticket for President and Congress and
Matt Miller, "The Cover of the First Edition of Leaves of Grass," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review, 24:2-
a very interesting account by the "head of the family" (families of fourteen or fifteen, in these parts
Down in these parts the people understand about as much of political economy as they do of the Choctaw
together our forces and the, bowls, baskets, and pudding-bags aforesaid, and returned home: for my part
best; and I am just at this time in one of the most stony, rough, desert, hilly, and heart-sickening parts
—Pork, cucumbers, and buckwheat bread, we must part, perhaps forever!
Brenton later reprinted Whitman's short story, "The Tomb-Blossoms," in an edited collection titled Voices
The first part of this manuscript resembles a line in the fifth poem of that edition, eventually titled