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Let others ignore what they may, I make the poem of evil also—I commemorate that part also, I am myself
upon and received with wonder, pity, love or dread, that object he became, And that object became part
of him for the day, or a certain part of the day, or for many years, or stretching cycles of years.
The early lilacs became part of this child; And grass, and white and red morning-glories, and white and
, The horizon's edge, the flying sea-crow, the fragrance of salt-marsh and shore-mud— These became part
However the Capitol has been swept and garnished, re-painted in part, revarnished, and it is ready now
When the Democratic party triumphs, if ever, it cannot be that Pagan part of it, which is to succeed,
exalted a lineage, and having a tolerably decent respect for an adventurer if he rides boldly and shows parts
But first let me explain part of my head-line.
On such occasions he contributes his part to the general fun.
There was a crowded house, the report in the local paper saying: "Probably the best part of the audience
Clifford, in a London lecture on "the Relation between Science and Modern Poetry," assigned a main part
P HILADELPHIA , November 2.— White with the snows and storms of winter, bent, bowed, and scarred with
.— About the most significant part of the Poe re-burial reburial ceremonies yesterday—which only a crowded
He is about as handsome an old man as I have seen, his white locks parting over a serene and most noble
It was in the nicely-furnished parlor of a comfortable three-story brick house that he was seated, and
The story of Tithonus is still a parable of the poet,—he is immortal in his love, but loses with years
This part of his philosophy—for such it is—must not be confounded with the erotic paroxysms of Swinburne
"You can see that I had first to deal with the physical, the corporeal, the amative business—that part
It is that part of my endeavor which caused most of the harshest criticism, and prevented candid examination
Whitman leaves this week for Philadelphia, where he spends a part of his time with some English friends
biography of William Blake was completed by his wife, who wrote a preface, which is said to be the best part
his hat, smilingly said, in response to calls for a speech, that he "must decline to take any other part
believes thoroughly not only in the future world, but the present, and especially in our American part
Both are billed to take leading parts in the Kansas quarter centennial celebration at Lawrence next Monday
Every man I have met here is full of pride in this great part of Jefferson's Louisiana purchase.
although he is gifted with frosty locks, has not yet come to sixty years, has been heard to tell this story
SOMETHING ANENT THE CURIOUS STORY OF HIS OWN LIFE.
Bucke the greater part of the summer, and possibly he may deliver a lecture in the course of his stay
"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.
also down to the house where, in 1819, Walt was born (the farm now of Henry Jarvis), and the adjacent parts
after part, perhaps at quite wide intervals.
Seven different times have parts of the edifice been constructed, sometimes in Brooklyn, sometimes in
The book has been printed partially in every part of the United States.
They had no reason to know that it was part of a very complete and elaborate design, and for a great
But during the twenty years that had passed since the first part appeared, the other portions of the
forbearance should be observed toward President Arthur, who has in some respects, the most perplexing part
The obloquy and disappointments which his works have all along brought upon him are a part of the pleasant
twenty-five years in building, and he adds that the whole affair is like an old architectural structure, the parts
Prof Morris in his initial volume, to be published early in the spring of 1882, will cover in part the
While answering freely, Walt wound up this part of the conversation by saying that those were problems
Not the least part of his visit, it may be noted, is the intertwining, which is becoming closer and closer
But as for Tennyson, he has not allowed himself to be a part of the living world, and of the great currents
This royalty was fixed at twenty-five cents for every $2 copy sold.
But the author, feeling that he could not remove a part of the work of his life without endangering its
This accounts in part for the fear the people had in trusting him with a four-years' lease of power.
employment of seven years or more in Washington after the war (1865-72) I regularly saved a great part
shipped to Philadelphia and from them David McKay, publisher of the latter city, issued in the latter part
I have heard him say he believes a perfectly legitimate part of any new poet, artist or reformer, is
him "beyond compare the greatest of American poets, and indeed one of the greatest now living in any part
bank of the Delaware river opposite Philadelphia, and for purposes of classification may be called a part
The only part of New Jersey that seems to be in accord with the spirit of the times are those sections
It is about the most unattractive city in this part of the country so far as external surroundings are
The dwellings on it are unpretentious and for the most part old.
echoed the old man, with a smile, "why Lord bless you, any one in these parts could do that; only 'taint
The corner groceryman pointed out a low two-story frame house, which looked like a cube with faces eighteen
A large part of "Leaves of Grass" consists of war poems and a variety of subjects, occurences on the
The corner groceryman pointed out a low two-story frame house.
A large part of "Leaves of Grass" consists of war poems on a variety of subjects, fierce tussels tussles
A dingy two-story frame cottage, it nestles modestly between its more modern brick neighbors.
dishabille, by the window of the second room of the two humble apartments where he passes the greater part
He was still suffering slightly from his recent prostration by the heat and when the wanton breeze parted
for all time, I think their absorption into the future as elements and standards will be the best part
—tangled and many- vein'd and hard has been thy part, To admiration has it been enacted!
that I was getting more feeble, and he wrote to a number of friends and admirers of mine in different parts
countenance, and so warm and captivating and magnetic were the glimpses we now and then caught of the inner part
There may be parts of Walt Whitman's poetry so incomprehensibly common, so deeply obscure, as to suggest
Over his lower parts a huge skin of an unfortunate polar bear is always present, which is strangely in
Back of that, in still earlier and lower forms of life, sensation or consciousness played its part in
"Some may condemn them as Godless, but for my own part, and I speak for the great advanced culture of
street after an inquiry or two, and finally arrived at number 328, which designates a modest, two story
By 2 o'clock I was all through with my part of the work and adjourned.
"I helped set part of the type myself.
politely invite everybody who happened to be sitting in the cave he had under the sidewalk to some other part
being in want of the necessaries of life, I will state that I make it a rule never to affirm or deny stories
The owner wouldn't part with it at any price, and I bid as high as $20.
We re-tell retell the story, as it illustrates the Sabbatarianism that existed in Boston a few years
I always think of supercilious people as acting a part.'
'No, it is part of the fun.'
The story is melancholy. 'Ah, when the Greeks treated of tragedy, how differently it was done.
"Well, honour honor is the subject of my story," —was the commencement of a favourite speech with him
His story bore the appropriate title "As It Was Written."
Stockton, who is just now in the zenith of his popularity as a story writer.
African, his slender figure clad in evening dress, a low cut collar encircling his neck, and his hair parted
Bishop doesn't look a day older than 25, but he has written several successful stories, one of which
William White (New York: New York University Press, 1978), 2:417–421;.
William White (New York: New York University Press, 1978), 2:417–421;.
I found the poet living in a two-story frame house, suggesting outwardly the comforts without the pretensions
lightened by a mild gray eye, but made forbidding, with a suit of pure white hair which fringed every part
is respected, wearing a gray or white flannel shirt with Byronic collar, cut low, exposing a goodly part
—Walt Whitman sat in the dining room of his modest two-story frame cottage in Camden to-day and looked
We found the house, a humble two-story, paint-faded wooden one: "W. Whitman" on the door plate.
I would like to quote part of "When Lilacs last in the Dooryard Bloomed"; but not to quote it all, if
in the morning sunlight, which streamed upon a carpet of waste paper—letters, journals, pamphlets, story
Whack away at everything pertaining to literary life—mechanical part as well as the rest.
Alone with his housekeeper he reigns undisturbed in the two-story frame house, editing his random verses
Every Day Talk: Walt Whitman's Story of the Purpose of His Writings—Odds and Ends EVERY DAY TALK.
Walt Whitman's Story of the Purpose of His Writings—Odds and Ends.
"I had to deal with the physical, corporeal and amative—that part which is developed between the ages
It is that part of my endeavor which has caused the harshest criticism and prevented candid examination
A large part of 'Leaves of Grass' consists of war poems on a variety of themes, all jotted down at the
However, after much fruitless search, I succeeded in finding the abode in which the poet dwells—a two-storied
For my part, I said, I thought Mr.
It was with regret that I parted from him—his talk was so eloquent, so free, and so flowing, and there
In the little frame house on Mickle street, Camden, confined to his second story front room, with a cheerless
Walt Whitman's cottage is a very plain, rather dingy, two-storied and attic-roofed frame dwelling, such
wide, rolling collar, open well at the front, leaving bare the strong, columnar neck and the upper part
The lower part of the face set well forward. The whole shape, a large and distinct oval.
To write the life of a human being takes many a book, and after all the story is not told.
Walt Whitman, the old poet, was sitting in what he calls his "den," the north room, second story, of
magazines covering the floor, the accumulation of the ten years he has had his "den" in the second story
to be a line or two in the "Light of Asia" especially that was available for use in a variety of stories
The heads at the windows were drawn in and the group of little ones parted and went their way.
Whitman enjoyed it no less on his part. In the afternoon he was faint after the excitement.