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Boston, Dec 2 d 1880.
Williams to Walt Whitman, 2 December 1880
That dear little grandson stayed with me two months till I really didn't know how to part with him, &
On August 2, 1879, Anne Gilchrist described her grandson and the Durham Cathedral (The Letters of Anne
got her at home for a few weeks to help us through with the move in, and a sad pinch it will be to part
My love to all My thoughts travel daily to America—it has become a part of my life in a very real sense
Bucke the greater part of the summer, and possibly he may deliver a lecture in the course of his stay
although he is gifted with frosty locks, has not yet come to sixty years, has been heard to tell this story
The very day the Journal —containing your letters—arrived, part of the letter was quoted in the S.F.
Did you set the type—or any part of it?
rereading this letter I feel that I am asking much—too much—but have not the heart to suppress any part
Walt Whitman by Thomas Eakins, ca. early to mid-1880s This photo group is part of Eakins's "naked series
Below my window here there is a wooded bank running down to some water, and beyond again about 2 miles
he was the one who rescued your Leaves of Grass for me, and brought it from England Did you get the story
" and I felt a sort of thankfulness to know that it was my sorrow not his— I hope that you recd my story
Did you get the story I wrote you about your "Leaves of Grass"?
down last night, it had all of his wheat in & all Burned together Misses Shin had A Horse & 3 Cows, & 2
Dear Sir: Enc d Enclosed pls please find $10. 00 to cvr cover amt amount due for the 2 Vols Volumes of
in an article of mine which I send you by this post— Will you Kindly send five copies of your last 2
Oakenholt Hall nr near Flint: England 2 nd July 1880 Dear Walt Whitman I am very grateful for your kindness
Bathgate to Walt Whitman, 2 July 1880
SOMETHING ANENT THE CURIOUS STORY OF HIS OWN LIFE.
"Yes, you have the historical part of it all right.
"Yes; I look upon that as the best part of my life, those four or five years that I spent in the war,
He only told about one-tenth of the story. In conclusion it may be said that Mr.
I feel how weak and pitiful physically and mentally I must look to the better, the stronger part of me—my
Crandall remarked that Bensel's "life is the pathetic and too familiar story of suffering and unfulfilled
writes in the preface, I should think it very possible that it was a 'labour labor of love' on his part
Love from us all John Burroughs John Burroughs to Walt Whitman, 2 November 1880
If you thought well of the idea you might like to take a part payment in sheets, or bound copies, from
I have just published a new vindication "Memoir of Poe" in 2 vols. and am always desirous of gathering
were appointed to the task of exploring the country, and endeavouring to ascertain the truth of the story
$586,800,000 in 1876, and this with an almost standstill of the trade with the interior during a large part
Steamers 2 33 Propellers 15 4,912 Steam canal-boats 27 2,491 Tugs 62 1,863 Barks 13 4,486 Brigs 3 1,016
Did you see the account of the large fire in the southern part of Phila Philadelphia , a Planing mill
cousin that comes here a good deal, Walt I think you have heard me speak of the child that sister Kate
Wheeler Whitman crossed this letter out, cut it into pieces, and pasted part of it back together with
On the back he drafted part of one of his lectures on the death of Abraham Lincoln. M. C.[?]
I have O'Connor's "Good Gray Poet" parts of which are beautifull beautiful —I have Mrs.
." & 2 of "T.
Stafford one of the books which Ingersoll sent (see the letter from Whitman to Harry Stafford of January 2,
Whitman responded to Ingersoll on April 2, 1880.
beautifully written as it is, rather reminds me of that proverbial representation of Hamlet, with the part
It parades before us a weak despair, an insistence on the irreconcileable in nature, the parting of friends
"My hands, my limbs, grow nerveless; My brain feels rack'd, bewilder'd; Let the old timbers part, I will
not part; I will cling fast to thee, O God, though the waves buffet me— Thee, thee, at least, I know
The 2 vol. Centennial Edition of your works.
Photographs of Whitman, 1840s–1890s," 20, and "Notes on Photographs," 51, Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 4:2/
failed, and these plates were stored away and nothing further done;—till about a year ago (latter part
Mr Eldridge, (of the Boston firm alluded to) is accessible in Washington D C—will corroborate first parts
plates—subscription to purchase" (Whitman's Commonplace Book).In a letter to the editor of The Critic on June 2,
North American Review, "The Poetry of the Future" (see Whitman's letter to Harry Stafford of January 2,
along all right—Sunday morning went to breakfast at Mr and Mrs Scovel's — —I am sitting up here 3d story—warm
mostly by water,—and spent several days in "the Lakes of the Thousand Islands"—that is what they call a part
an acre or two covered with cedars—but the water every where I travel in this country is the best part
431 Stevens Street Camden New Jersey April 2 Thanks, dear Colonel, for your kind letter & for your books
Ingersoll, 2 April [1880]
quietly & plainly here, board with my brother & sister-in-law—have a nice little room up in the third story
Burroughs on November 2, 1880, informed Whitman of Stedman's difficulties in getting his article printed
Around at 60, and Take Notes," was printed during the following eighteen months: January 29, 1881 (2–
my head-quarters & P O address for the next two months—(making short leisurely visits to different parts
2 | 80 | Canada.
convinced it came to Haddonfield— 2.40 afternoon I have just had my dinner & am up here in my third story
Friday afternoon Nov: November 12 Dear Hank I am staying here yet—yesterday Deb came over here about 2
Mother & I) to the old place —went down to the pond & all around—I thought the pond, & creek, the big part
It parades before us a weak despair, an insistence on the irreconcileable in nature, the parting of friends
"My hands, my limbs, grow nerveless; My brain feels rack'd, bewilder'd; Let the old timbers part I will
not part I will cling fast to , O God, though the waves buffet me— Thee, , at least, I know.
Cherson, also known as Chersonesus, was a Greek colony in 6th century BC, located in the southwestern part
volumes of poems and was an indefatigable compiler of anthologies, among which were Poets of America, 2
These trial verses became part of A Twilight Song—subtitled, "for unknown buried soldiers, North and
suppose one can say]1880-1883prose1 leafhandwritten; This manuscript is an early draft of the first part
1885poetry1 leafhandwritten; This manuscript is an early draft of the poem Had I the Choice, published as part