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  • 1890 19
Search : PETER MAILLAND PLAY
Year : 1890

19 results

Walt Whitman by Dr. John Johnston, 1890

  • Date: 1890
  • Creator(s): Dr. John Johnston
Text:

for a full hour, facing the golden sunset, in the cool evening breeze, with the summer lightning playing

Walt Whitman and Warren Fritzinger by Dr. John Johnston, 1890

  • Date: 1890
  • Creator(s): Dr. John Johnston
Text:

for a full hour, facing the golden sunset, in the cool evening breeze, with the summer lightning playing

Walt Whitman and Warren Fritzinger by Dr. John Johnston, 1890

  • Date: 1890
  • Creator(s): Dr. John Johnston
Text:

for a full hour, facing the golden sunset, in the cool evening breeze, with the summer lightning playing

Ada H. Spaulding to Walt Whitman, 4 January 1890

  • Date: January 4, 1890
  • Creator(s): Ada H. Spaulding
Text:

Please have something that you want—and play that I sent it, instead of this unbeautiful Money Order.

Walt Whitman to Ernest Rhys, 22 January 1890

  • Date: January 22, 1890
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Annotations Text:

theatre as an actor and director (she directed and acted in the production of one of Ernest Rhys's plays

Mary Whitall Smith Costelloe to Walt Whitman, 3 February 1890

  • Date: February 3, 1890
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Mary Whitall Smith Costelloe
Text:

Karin is babbling on the floor, playing with blocks, & both nurses are adding a not insignificant share

Walt Whitman's Home

  • Date: 29 April 1890
  • Creator(s): Anonymous | Fred C. Dayton
Text:

Outside the sun shone, the birds sang, and the boys played.

John Burroughs to Walt Whitman, 4 May 1890

  • Date: May 4, 1890
  • Creator(s): John Burroughs
Annotations Text:

for his notions of Atlantis as an antediluvian civilization and for his belief that Shakespeare's plays

Bacon, an idea he argued in his book The Great Cryptogram: Francis Bacon's Cipher in Shakespeare's Plays

Emory S. Foster to Walt Whitman, 30 May 1890

  • Date: May 30, 1890
  • Creator(s): Emory S. Foster
Annotations Text:

Foster's poem quotes, echoes, and plays upon Whitman's epigraph poem for the 1876 and 1891–92 editions

William Sloane Kennedy to Walt Whitman, 19 June 1890

  • Date: June 19, 1890
  • Creator(s): William Sloane Kennedy
Text:

We are going tonight to a children's play (dramatic opera) down at town hall—tickets given me by our

dramatic critic on Transcript=Jenks —I'll say a word abt the play.

Robert M. Sillard to Walt Whitman, 9 September 1890

  • Date: September 9, 1890
  • Creator(s): Robert M. Sillard
Text:

I should very much wish to know from you what stage play and what actor and actress you you remember

Which of Shakesperes Shakespeare's great plays do you find the most entertaing entertaining reading?

Annotations Text:

He was the author of numerous plays, sonnets, and narrative poems.

Richard Maurice Bucke to Walt Whitman, 18 September 1890

  • Date: September 18, 1890
  • Creator(s): Richard Maurice Bucke
Annotations Text:

Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy (1828–1910) was a Russian realist writer of novels, plays, short stories and

Dr. John Johnston to Walt Whitman, 21 October 1890

  • Date: October 21, 1890
  • Creator(s): Dr. John Johnston
Annotations Text:

He was the author of numerous plays, sonnets, and narrative poems.

be one of the founders of the German Romantic Movement, and his translations of sixteen Shakespeare plays

Beloved Walt Whitman: An Ambrosial Night with his Devoted Friends and Admirers

  • Date: 26 October 1890
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Ingersoll's facial play here was superb.

The Unexpress'd

  • Date: About 1889 or 1890
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

After the cycles, poems, singers, plays, Vaunted Ionia's, India's—Homer, Shakspere Shakespeare — all

Walt Whitman to Richard Maurice Bucke, 8 November 1890

  • Date: November 8, 1890
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

to me once in N Y, anent old French Revo)—A bad head and belly ache as I end this—the children are playing

Sophia Williams to Walt Whitman, 24 November 1890

  • Date: November 24, 1890
  • Creator(s): Sophia Williams
Annotations Text:

He played numerous parts during his career, including taking on a number of Shakespearean roles, sometimes

November 1890, Booth and Barrett, as part of their acclaimed 1889–1890 tour, performed in several plays

there; the plays included Francesca da Rimini, George Henry Boker's 1855 tragedy based on Dante, as

well as Edward Bulwer-Lytton's 1839 historical play Richelieu, along with Shakespeare's Hamlet, Othello

Walt Whitman to Richard Maurice Bucke, 27 December 1890

  • Date: December 27, 1890
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

heavy-headed, congested—good fire—no mail for me to-day—Warren has gone out sleighing—I hear the boys playing

Walt Whitman: A Dialogue

  • Date: 1890
  • Creator(s): Santayana, George
Text:

Ah, but Whitman is nothing if not a spectator, a cosmic poet to whom the whole world is a play.

Except play his harp and wear his crown.

We can't play at life without getting some knocks and bruises, and without running some chance of defeat

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