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Year : 1857

34 results

The Police Imbroglio

  • Date: 27 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Yesterday forenoon Deputy Superintendent Folk requested each of the Captains under his command to report

At the hour appointed, however, each of the Captains were presented with a copy of Mr.

It was understood that if Captain Powers did not call the roll of the 11th ward, the Assistant Captain

Captain Powers however called the names as usual, and everything passed off smoothly.

The 14th ward men still hold out against the new regime, but obey the Captain's orders.

The Police Difficulty—The Returns Again Converted into Waste Paper

  • Date: 1 June 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

The returns of the Captains who have submitted to the new law were first sent in, and as they were addressed

I will make my returns in this manner as long as the Mayor says so.

Deputy —The Mayor is not my boss, nor yours. Capt. P. —Well, the Mayor's my boss.

—I'm going to put my returns there as usual, if you throw me out as well as them.

Captains Powers and King afterwards went to the Mayor as on Saturday, and detailed to him the result

Surrender of King Fernando and All His Men

  • Date: 3 July 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Mayor Wood, of New York, this forenoon issued an order to his various Police Captains, the "Municipals

The Station Houses are to remain under charge of the Captains, till further action of the Common Council

Brutish human beings

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

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

Captain Walter M.

What It Will Effect

  • Date: 24 August 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

the safe prosecution of their task up to the evening of the 10th; and the still later news from the Captain

The First of June

  • Date: 30 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

expected to comprise a thousand or fifteen hundred individuals, and will be under the command of Captain

Free Bathing—Accidents

  • Date: 28 July 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Policemen should be directed by the Mayor, Deputy Superintendent, Captains, or whoever it is that they

[Earth]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

brown-black ink, with revisions in lighter ink (including the deletion, undone in 1860, of the phrase "My

My Likeness! [Earth]

To the Future

  • Date: about 1860
Text:

Although the poem was unpublished in its entirety, the seventh line was used in the poem To My Soul,

[That shadow]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

This was revised to become section 40 of Calamus in 1860; in 1867 it was retitled That Shadow, My Likeness

[You bards of ages hence]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

the first page correspond to verses 1-3 of the 1860 version, and those on the second page ("Publish my

name and hang up/ my picture...") to lines 4-11.

Nearing Departure

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

Whitman retitled the poem To My Soul when it was first published, in the 1860 edition of Leaves of Grass

[I do not know whether]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

Section 2 of the Calamus group was permanently retitled Scented Herbage of my Breast in 1867.

[Was it I who walked the]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

50-51uva.00246xxx.00072[Was it I who walked the]Scented Herbage of My Breast1857-1859poetryhandwritten1

who walked the / earth..." were not used in Calamus, but the five lines beginning "Scented herbage of my

[Here the frailest leaves of me]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

In 1860 the first set, with the addition of a new first line ("Here my last words, and the most baffling

To a new personal admirer

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

lines 2-3 of the 1860 version, and the lines on the second page ("Do you suppose you can easily/ be my

[What think you I have]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

poem was revised to form section 32 of Calamus in 1860, and in 1867 was retitled What Think You I Take My

Walt Whitman to Sarah Tyndale, 20 June 1857

  • Date: June 20, 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

—I think profoundly of my friends—though I cannot write to them by the post office.

—I write to them more to my satisfaction, through my poems.— Tell Hector I thank him heartily for his

—I am so non–polite—so habitually wanting in my responses and ceremonies.

—I not only assured him of my retaining faith in that sect, but that I had perfect faith in all sects

—They retard my book very much.—It is worse than ever.

Sarah Tyndale to Walt Whitman, 24 June 1857

  • Date: June 24, 1857
  • Creator(s): Sarah Tyndale
Text:

Germantown 6 mo 24.57 My Dear Friend Being a professed Associationist I am allowed the liberty of following

my attractions, when they are, what all the world will say, harmless, even in despite of common etiquette

case however I must say that I think your judgment of yourself is rather severe, I have not changed my

for any other solution, I only ask to use in refference reference to each, the terms that will convey my

You have made my heart rejoice by telling me of the breadth of the Revd Mr Porter, is it?

City of my walks and joys

  • Date: late 1850s
Text:

50-51uva.00023xxx.00085City of my walks and joyslate 1850spoetryhandwritten1 leaf8.5 x 10 cm pasted to

City of my walks and joys

Sarah Tyndale to Walt Whitman, 1 July 1857

  • Date: July 1, 1857
  • Creator(s): Sarah Tyndale
Text:

Germantown 7 mo 1—57 My Dear Friend I received yours of the 29th last evening and hasten to comply with

enough light to find the true way, one thing has never failed me, that is to do this moment whatever my

Whitman is about to publish another edition of Leaves of Grass, leaving out all the objectionable parts, my

He that receives the inspiration knows the best, but I with all my ultra radicalism would be delighted

Thought [Of closing up my songs by these]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

50-51uva.00190xxx.00413xxx.00047Thought [Of closing up my songs by these]1857-1859poetryhandwritten2

Thought [Of closing up my songs by these]

[Long I thought that knowledge]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

notice, you Kanuck woods") became verses 6-10; and the lines on the half-page ("I am indifferent to my

[When I heard at the close of]

  • Date: 1857-1859
Text:

correspond to verses 1-5 of the 1860 version, and those on the second page ("And when I thought how/ my

How Sun-Stroke Affects Men

  • Date: 22 July 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

boiling lobster, and wrote as follows to one of his daughters: "The sun-stroke is a staggerer; yet my

Were it not for others, would that my horn had been sounded—so easy, so delightful I may say, was the

"The melancholy days are come"

  • Date: 21 October 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

“No parish money, no loaf, No pauper badges for me, A son of the soil, by right of toil Entitled to my

No alms I ask, give me my task Here are the arm, the leg, The strength, the sinews of a man, To work

The New Police Bill

  • Date: 4 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

following language of the new law, repealling the provisions of the old law inconsistent therewith, that my

question shall have been judicially pronounce invalid, or at least without some judicial sanction for my

The Sunday Car Question

  • Date: 12 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

President —That is my last name.

The Doctors Persist But The Patient Dies

  • Date: 5 June 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

condition of the city, I do not think proper to separate myself from you, but shall remain and give my

[It is wicked to swear]

  • Date: 12 March 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

"It is wicked," says she, "to run the cars on Sunday, and I don't want anybody in my class that will

All Work

  • Date: 18 August 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

celebrated physician remark, in speaking of the decay of health in metropolitan life,—“I should despair of my

The Civil War in New York

  • Date: 17 June 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

The man whose motto is, "my party can do no wrong;" and whose practice is to unreflectingly array himself

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:

Layard, " was the extent of my discoveries at Koyunjik.

No matter what length of time I spent in proving my case, I generally found my eloquence was expended

I had but time to throw up my right arm, when the avalanche descended.

I await my turn. In due time it comes.

My warriors fell around me. It began to look dismal. I saw my evil day at hand.

New Publications

  • Date: 10 September 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

usually very sudden, and it is not impossible that Bulwer may have reached his, in the “Caxtons” and “My

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