Simply enter the word you wish to find and the search engine will search for every instance of the word in the journals. For example: Fight. All instances of the use of the word fight will show up on the results page.
Using an asterisk (*) will increase the odds of finding the results you are seeking. For example: Fight*. The search results will display every instance of fight, fights, fighting, etc. More than one wildcard may be used. For example: *ricar*. This search will return most references to the Aricara tribe, including Ricara, Ricares, Aricaris, Ricaries, Ricaree, Ricareis, and Ricarra. Using a question mark (?) instead of an asterisk (*) will allow you to search for a single character. For example, r?n will find all instances of ran and run, but will not find rain or ruin.
Searches are not case sensitive. For example: george will come up with the same results as George.
Searching for a specific phrase may help narrow down the results. Rather long phrases are no problem. For example: "This white pudding we all esteem".
Because of the creative spellings used by the journalists, it may be necessary to try your search multiple times. For example: P?ro*. This search brings up numerous variant spellings of the French word pirogue, "a large dugout canoe or open boat." Searching for P?*r*og?* will bring up other variant spellings. Searching for canoe or boat also may be helpful.
| 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-# |
I have made, The words of my book nothing, the drift of it every thing, A book separate, not link’d
or lot of books.
The study of a book’s drift is a study of a book’s distribution but also a study of a book’s (and an
The book came—the books—and I was taxed for duties. Yes, three dollars and a half.
“I am selling quite a good many of my books now,” Whitman wrote to Harry Stafford in October 1880, “gives
Harris (?)
From Harry Stafford. CT: November 7. From Harry Stafford. CT: Shively (1), 154.
From Harry Stafford. enclosing payment for books. Manchester. November 2. From John Burroughs.
Mattie Maxim, ordering Company, ordering a book. a book. LC. September 29. From R.
William Lloyd, book. acknowledging receipt of a book. November 16. From Dr. L. M. Bingham.
Courtesy of the Library of Congress Rare Book and Special Collections Division.
“Suppose,”hesaysinanessay on “Emerson’s Books,” these books becoming absorb’d, the permanent chyle of
The Evolution of Walt Whitman: The Creation of a Book.
New York Review of Books (December 3, 1987): 43–44. Emerson, Ralph Waldo.
Whitman Making Books, Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and Com- mentary.
www.uiowapress.org Printed in the United States of America Design by Richard Hendel No part of this book
Glicksberg, Walt Whitman and the Civil War, 122; Whitman, Note- books, 2:668.
David Bartholomae and Anthony Petrosky (Bos- ton: Bedford Books, 1993), 444. 18.
Reprinted by permission of Basic Civitas Books, a member of the Perseus Books Group.
His most recent book, coauthored with Kenneth Price, is Re-scriptingWalt Whitman.
Detail of page 27 of the Blue Book.
For discussion of Harry T.
Snyder, Harry T.
We cannot be certain when Whitman began work on the Blue Book.⁷¹ What is known is that the Blue Book
; Walt Whitman’s Blue Book, ed.
In the room where I found Whitman, a few books were to be seen in a book-case, and two remarkable paintings
NEWHALL seated, absorbed in a book.
The likeness in the book is fair.
Harris, Jr.)
Bucke's book at his request some reminiscences of Walt Whitman, which I showed to him before the book
’ family members using the stoop to communi- cate with prisoners gathered at the prison windows.
Yet he is the prisoner who draws a window on the prison wall, who can see, as it were, through the walls
Author of books on Melville and Whitman, essays on Emerson, a National Book winner, professor at Smith
The author of several books on Welsh writers and many essays on Whitman in journals and books, including
,” 72 Day,” 112, 131 “Singer in Prison, The,” 53 “When I Read the Book,” 114 “Sleepers, The,” 115, 121
, that he is well but a prisoner.
Harry and Whitman quarrel frequently, and on this date some sort of "scene" with Harry takes place at
Writing to Harry Stafford about a Robert Ingersoll book that has brought unfavorable comment from Harry's
Whitman writes to Harry Stafford that, with the publication ofthe two books containing all his (cho sen
Harry Stafford visits.
in exchange for advertising dol- lars from the books’ publishers.
“The Japanese Book System,” SP, Feb. 12, 1859. 47.
than the book owners themselves.
I have her book, which is really remarkable.
She is completing a book titled Walt Whitman and NewYork.
It proved a fascinating but puzzling book to me.
All his urgency and strenu- ousness he reserved for his book.
Some of the wounded are rebel officers,prisoners.
It aims, not to be a book, but to be a man.
Forth from thewar emerging,a book I havemade, The words of my book nothing,the drifof iteverything, A
All reasonable steps have been taken to contact copyright holders of material used in this book.
The book has usually been ignored in Whitman criticism.
Why, yes, it is a revelation to me, also—a new book to me. . . .
such a book would have been!”
The characters’ words often echo that book of the NewTestament.
www.uiowapress.org Printed in the United States of america design by richard Hendel no part of this book
was published in 1860, Whitman dated it “1860–61” so that his book could commemorate the eighty-fifth
Gavin arthur,The Circle of Sex (new Hyde Park, ny: Uni- versity Books, 1966), 135. 71.
Cocks, Harry. “Calamus in Bolton: Spiritualityand Homosexual desire in latevictorian england.”
Cabirion and Gay Books Bulletin 12 (Spring/Summer 1985): 14–16. Grossman, Jay.
www.uiowapress.org Printed in the United States of America Design by Richard Hendel No part of this book
IsBN-13: 978-1-60938-070-0; IsBN-10: 1-60938-070-3 (e-book) 1.
WMB Ed Folsom.Whitman Making Books / Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and Commentary.
Quoted in Ed Folsom,Whitman Making Books / Books Making Whitman: A CatalogandCommentary(IowaCity,IA:ObermannCenterforAdvancedStudies
New York: Garland, 1998. 170 Bibliography ———.Whitman Making Books / Books MakingWhitman: A Catalog and
The pun upon leaves of grass and the leaves of a book has often been noted.
This profundity appears in a book discussing American humor.
Ransom. 58 Myers also cites 7: 124 in support of his argument. 59 Harry B.
The Evolution ofWalt W hitman-The Creation ofa Book. Cambridge: Har vard, 1962.
New York: Basic Books, 1984. Zitter, Emmy Stark.
KirstenSilvaGruesz WaltWhitman,LatinoPoet,151 Contributors,177 Index,179 { acknowledgments } This book
These Egyptian books and reports were by no means casually glanced at.
Page from Walt Whitman’s Blue Book.
Page from Walt Whitman’s Blue Book.
to the book’s prophetic closing poem.
LIST OF BOOKS. 1.
Whitman, expecting touse it in another form than inthis book.
He read very few books. I asked him why. He replied, ?
" Sometimes poets sent Mm copies oftheir books.
uoWhen the book came back tome, the had been taken out.
Hollis's comments appear on the book jacket.
If Whitman's book is his life, then analytical or descriptive bibliography, the study of books, is also
Theauthorshouldsellhis books direct to the consumer.
for Whitman: books he did not read because they were mere fiction in particular, books he read cursorily
Harry Williams, Richard N.
have been developed by the Text Creation Partnership (TCP) from microfilm images of Early English Books
The Whitman Archive doesn’t have even a basic 'guest book' feature where users can enter comments."
In his own time Whitman had what he called several “official buffetings”: his book was censored, literally
nabirdphenologyprogram/ 5http://eprints.rclis.org/16385/1/Crowdsourcing%20State%20of%20Play%20Jun e%202011.pdf
Some years elapsed before the form which this he determined upon book should assume.
LIFE OF WALT WHITMAN xxiii at the printing of the book.
There are two or three inthe book which are to pieces disagreeable, say the least; simply sensual."
James Harlan, discharged "because he was the author ofan indecent him, book." Mr.
The book brought in next to nothing.
Books ofcrit icism are just as scarce.
Out ofthis spirit, he has called his first book ofpoetry Leaves ofGrass (1855) and into this book, his
The result, finally, is that this book, which is not a book but the touch ofa human being, remains just
He sawTHE future opened like a book.
Many will be like him when they break out of their one-man prisons, the prisons of individualism and
Parts of the book have appeared previously.
The book was of an unusual, quarto size and bound in dark green pebbled cloth.
In his book reviews, Whitman is highly appreciative of the aesthetic appeal of books, confessing to the
—When the book was first issued we were clerks in the establishment we now own.
Harry Levin. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1972. 167–84. “The Portico, Number Five.”
But a book, with itslong fore- ground of premeditation, — especially a book with such a subject,such
Har- lan said,was thathe had written the book of poetry entitled Grass. Leaves of This book Mr.
He opens the great book of Genesis.
What book isspared ?
But not such is this book. .
In one of the books he frequently had sent me I saw an advertisement of a pocket- book edition of " Leaves
We don't want go away, go * ' books, we write books ourselves.' Books ! he said.
Bucke's pictures you " book and in the pocket-book edition? W. W. " No. Did " " you? J. W.
s used to stand, books, room.
book).
After graduation, I was able to continue working on this book while being a postdoctoral researcher,
While this book focuses primarily on the Italian literary scene, the history of the reception that I
in her book on Whitman and British 24 socialism.
Sig- nificantly, Campana entitled his 1914 book Orphic Songs.
Rancière,Jacques.Aisthesis:ScenesfromtheAestheticRegimeofArt.London:Verso Books,2013.
(union)-was a long while a prisoner in secesh prisons in Georgia, & in Richmond-three times the devils
Harry, I wish when you see Ben.
He wrote less frequently and more quietly to Harry, and sent long gossipy letters to Harry's mother,
Henry (Harry) L.
Harry Fritzinger, Warren's brother.
He has a huge book of addresses of Whitmanites and book customers (probably several hundred names), but
I know an old book-stand man who of him as Socrates.
books half a dozen for Mr.
*He has written a book, hasn't he? ' 'Not as ever I hearn on.'
At the Tombs we went the and the prison among prisoners, confidence and volubilitywith which they ran
,” and, toward the end of the book, “What is man but amassofthawingclay?”
Whitman Making Books, Books Making Whitman: A Catalogue and Commen - tary.
Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books, 1985. Hubert, Denise Dawn. “Where’s Walt?
San Diego: Avant Books, 1985. 256–70. Nash, Roderick Frazier.
“Reciting Alice: What Is the Use of a Book without Poems?”
The Blue Book illuminates Whitman’s poetic practice, particularly as it changedduring(andinresponseto
cw/tei/loc.00885.html. 22.Golden,WaltWhitman’sBlueBook,2:xxxvi. love, war, and revision in the blue book
The Blue Book bears numerous traces of beingawartimedocument,andthiscontextilluminatesmanyofWhitman’srevisions
In the Blue Book, Whitman contemplated revising a key moment of self- definitionin“WaltWhitman”(later
Love, War, and Revision in Whitman’s Blue Book
“This book,” James E.
The Romes certainly were not publishing law books until that little fire insurance book in 1859.
“I sometimes find myself more interested in book making than in book writing,” he said.
Yes: I would write a book! And who shall say that it might not be a very pretty book?
books for the people: they are books for collectors.
Counts in the book.”
“If that is so then I must read the book: it must be one of our books. . . .
The book—the book: that was always the thing.
The Taint of Books The best man in the world is the man who has absorbed books—great books—made the most
Now I am at bay—the last mile is driven: but the book—the book is safe!’”
He did not in fact create a book qualitatively different from “European” books.
He did not create a book that was not a book, but like every “European” poet worthy of the name he created
Without too much forcing, this book, especially its Book IV, could be the novel of W.
The ecstatic moment of the prisoners in “The Singer in the Prison” (Vol.
Fight of a Book for the World.
isthe great book on Whitman.
s J. note-books.]
Bazalgette's book on W.
Brown's Book of R. L.
In 1871,however, they ; 258 FIGHT OF A BOOK FOR THE WORLD appear in the body of the book.
its various forms—manuscripts, notebooks, corrected page proofs, and printings in periodicals and books
Unique items no longer need to be locked away behind the doors of rare book rooms and special collections
Yes: I would write a book! And who shall say that it might not be a very pretty book?
He modeled himself on his book and his book in its turn reflected him.
His book appeared at the end of June.
Upon rereading his book, he declared himself well pleased: Ere closing the book, what pride!
This curious book presents a problem.
He wrote lettersfor the prisoners,&c.
All at once he presses of writes the greatest book of a great cen- tury.
the book closed, and hasty flight and dispersion of the meeting.
Kennedy, p. 76 of his book.)
The book isboth theoreticaland practical.
This is not a book intended to look backward as much as forward; it is a book intended above all to understand
Whitman's words "no book," which is not only Leaves of Grass but any book or text that by design negates
that "this is no book, IWho touches this touches a man," Ginsberg's speaker responds, "I touch your book
I am thinking of book 1,part 3 ("Statement"), and the more obviously parodic section of book 2 called
One year later, in 1866, he read a book that was to lead to trouble in his marriage. The book?
Schlafadded his own unmistakable touch to the book.
Itis one ofthe most beautiful books that appeared on the German book market in the depression of the
I no longer need books.
His legacy is his book Leaves ofGrass.
I have ordered the book and I will receive it soon.
NowIamatbay—thelastmileisdriven: but the book—the book is safe!”
In this book Dr.
They get a book but not the book.
Perry’s book.
It’s not hard to write books. Anybody who can write can write books. But to write a book.
I accept and consider the book as a study.
topic of the book. 55.
Folsom, Whitman Making Books, 19. 27.
, it is not in this book (lg 77, 213) 30.
: of 1855 index book-making process (cont.)
During these latter,ave revised and printed over all my books — bro't out " November Boughs" — and at
The person Walt Whitman is greater than his book, or any book.
He is made of that heroic stuffwhich creates such books.
All men's Book! . . .
This latteristhe type of inind of which all " world- books '' are formed.
good reading ; very good book, my dear."
This lasted for clever books tillmiddle life.
'Hard work the reading a book now.
Whitman's forthcoming book The Two Rivulets ?
But not such isthis book.
Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and Commentary, available on The Walt
Quoted in Folsom, Whitman Making Books. 70. Folsom, Whitman Making Books.
Folsom, Whitman Making Books. 72. Folsom, Whitman Making Books. 73.
Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and Commentary.
Works Cited 237 Harris, W. C.
book-words! what are you?
sought to “rewrite” book 10.
Miller, Harry S.
Fornieri.Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books, 2005.
New York: Vintage Books, 2008. Feldman, Mark B.
drawingsorthoseofWagner.See,forexample,JohannMüller,ElementsofPhysiology(London:Taylor 590 ed folsom books
Correspondence,3:270. 15.LeavesofGrass(Boston:JamesOsgood,1881). spermatoid design 595 16 was: he shuts the book
TheOriginofSpermatazoa.” foundthathisnewpublishersforthe1860edition,ThayerandEldridge,distributeda book
. spermatoid design 597 edgeofcivilwar,whenbrotherswouldfightbrothers;fathers,sons.Whitmandateshis book
), editor of the Whitman Series at the University of Iowa Press, and author and editor of numerous books