Skip to main content

Search Results

Filter by:

Date


Dates in both fields not required
Entering in only one field Searches
Year, Month, & Day Single day
Year & Month Whole month
Year Whole year
Month & Day 1600-#-# to 2100-#-#
Month 1600-#-1 to 2100-#-31
Day 1600-01-# to 2100-12-#

Year

  • 2014 16
Search : part 2 roblox story kate and jayla
Year : 2014

16 results

The Walt Whitman Archive and the Prospects for Social Editing

  • Creator(s): Kenneth M. Price
Text:

provide a more detailed consideration of how greater audience involvement might enhance the Walt Whitman 2

implies, ordinary members of the public (as was the case in Transcribe Bentham), or, for the most part

In a print environment, the work of translators was rarely part of a scholarly edition.

We include translations, however, as part of the expansive research environment of our digital archive

Other stories had 11 international visibility.

Whitman among the Bohemians

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Levin, Joanna | Whitley, Edward
Text:

Anderson, “‘Be Up and Doing,’” 2. 50.

guise of mourning the demise of this gender-bending, part Amazonian, part Gorgonian beast whose pen had

“Thoughts and Things,” SP, June 2, 1860. 34.

“Thoughts and Things,” SP, Jan. 14, 1860, 2. 44. Pw 2:693–94; Ackerman, Portable Theater, 42.

Katz, Love Stories, 134. 35. “Frances Gray,” 1–2.

Whitman Noir: Black America & the Good Gray Poet

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Wilson, Ivy G.
Text:

WILSoN PART 1 1. Erasing Race: The Lost Black Presence in Whitman’s Manuscripts 3 Ed FoLSom 2.

Transforming the Kosmos: Yusef Komunyakaa Musing on Walt Whitman 124 JACoB WILkENFELd PART 2 7.

June Jordan’s 1980 essay is the lead piece in part 2, which fea- tures reflections on Whitman by contemporary

Ibid., 2:572.

This kind of erasure would continue to dominate Civil War memory, as monuments to only part of the story

A Place for Humility: Whitman, Dickinson, and the Natural World

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Gerhardt, Christine
Text:

Part 2, “Describing Local Lands,” explores how Dickinson and Whit- man treat nearby natural places as

As al lother ele- c h a p t e r   2•  79 ments become “part of” the child, they mainly serve the constitution

It is part of the poem’s achievement that it invokes conflicting stories of how to relate to the land

Part of what makes this scene ideal and common at the same time are its stories of agricultural balance

Part I 1.

The New-York Saturday Press

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Susan Belasco
Annotations Text:

.; The three poems printed under the title of "Leaves" were numbered "1," "2," and "3" but not otherwise

Always Round Me," Leaves of Grass (1867) and in "Whispers of Heavenly Death," Leaves of Grass (1871-72). 2)

New York Commercial Advertiser

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Susan Belasco
Annotations Text:

.; This poem was published on the same day in the Brooklyn Standard and New York Evening Post, p. 2.

Tarrytown Sunnyside Press

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Susan Belasco
Annotations Text:

Reprinted in Forney’s Progress (Philadelphia) 2 (17 April 1880): 508; Leaves of Grass (1881–1882).

My Boys and Girls

  • Date: March or April 1844
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

ProQuest's American Periodical Series database indicates a publication date of March 27, 1844 for Whitman's story

This story may be, in part, autobiographical.

For more information on the autobiographical aspects of the story and its publication, see " About 'My

Annotations Text:

ProQuest's American Periodical Series database indicates a publication date of March 27, 1844 for Whitman's story

27 and April 20, 1844—as the likely date of publication of "My Boys and Girls" in The Rover.; This story

For more information on the autobiographical aspects of the story and its publication, see "About 'My

Fortunes of a Country-Boy; Incidents in Town—and His Adventure at the South. [Composite Version]

  • Date: November 16–30, 1846
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

of a two story house in Broome street.

The office was in an upper part of the same street.

I never asked the child—but I knew the principal part of his story from his actions.

The latter part of the story was an addition of the busy tongue of common report.

I shall give his story in my own words.

Annotations Text:

Franklin Evans; In his revision to the story of Franklin Evans, Whitman omitted the temperance frame

He also revised the title to reflect the story's shift to a more general piece of sensational fiction

the rapid growth associated with urban areas include "The Tomb-Blossoms," "The Boy-Lover," and "Dumb Kate

for inflation, this would be today's equivalent of about $19,500.; This scam, juxtaposed with the story

Walt Whitman's Fiction: A Bibliography

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Stephanie Blalock
Text:

Bervance: Or Father and Son (2-part serial) Daily Troy Budget Troy, NY December 8 & 10, 1841 [2] Walter

of the Last Loyalist (2-part serial) Daily Troy Budget Troy, NY May 10–11, 1842 [2] per.00324 Walter

Whitman The Death of Wind Foot (2-part serial) Daily Saratoga Republican Saratoga Springs, NY August

Whitman The Death of Wind Foot (2-part serial) The Brooklyn Daily Eagle and Kings County Democrat Brooklyn

, NY August 29–30, 1845 [2]; [1–2] W.

Revenge and Requital; A Tale of a Murderer Escaped

  • Date: July and August 1845
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This tale is the eighth of nine short stories by Whitman that were published for the first time in The

When he republished this story in installments in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle on September 7–9, 1846, while

A tale of a Murderer escaped.) " He kept that title but dropped the subtitle when he published the story

Whitman did not include the number before the first section of this story when he published it in the

Toward the latter part of the same afternoon, Mr.

Annotations Text:

This tale is the eighth of nine short stories by Whitman that were published for the first time in The

When he republished this story in installments in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle on September 7–9, 1846, while

He kept that title but dropped the subtitle when he published the story again in the "Pieces in Early

For the publication history of the story under its earliest known title and under its later title, see

'"; Whitman did not include the number before the first section of this story when he published it in

Walt Whitman's Poetry in Periodicals

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Susan Belasco
Annotations Text:

, December 28, 1859, 2; rpt. in The Walt Whitman Archive.; "All about a Mocking-Bird," 3.; Like many

You and Me and To-Day," New-York Saturday Press 14 January 1860, 2.

Poemet [Of him I love day and night]," New-York Saturday Press 28 January 1860, 2.

Poemet [That shadow, my likeness]," New-York Saturday Press 4 February 1860, 2.

Leaves," New-York Saturday Press 11 February 1860, 2. 1.

Editing Whitman's Poetry in Periodicals

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Elizabeth Lorang
Annotations Text:

.; The text of Whitman's poem appeared in print for the first time in the July 2, 1892 issue of Once

Walt Whitman's Poems in Periodicals: A Bibliography

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): The Walt Whitman Archive
Annotations Text:

.; The three poems printed under the title of "Leaves" were numbered "1," "2," and "3" but not otherwise

Leaves of Grass (1881–82).; This poem was published on the same day in the New York Evening Post, p. 2.

Life Illustrated

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Jason Stacy
Text:

Architecture Life Illustrated 19 July 1856 93 per.00270 Walt Whitman The Slave Trade Life Illustrated 2

New York Evening Post

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Jason Stacy
Text:

The New York Evening Post also published Whitman's poem "Song for Certain Congressmen" on March 2, 1850

Back to top