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purchased the original negative after Taylor's death.The image itself, which Whitman described as a "2/
It appears courtesy of the owner, Jeffery Kraus, and is part of the Jeffrey Kraus Collection.
little too fond maybe of his beer, now and then, and of the women: maybe, maybe: but for the most part
There have been claims that this image was originally photographed as part of a stereoview, but the one
Harry wrote Whitman: "You know when you put it on there was but one thing to part it from me and that
called him "Uncle Walt," and he found them "model children lively & free & children" who "form a great part
Rose Robinson, “Laurence Hutton and a Newly Recovered Photograph of Walt Whitman,” WWQR, vol. 36, nos. 2/
Morse later wrote: "One part of the preliminary business was the visit to a photographer.
over in a carriage to Gutekunst's, Philadelphia & had photo: sittings" (Daybooks and Notebooks, vol. 2,
Gutekunst was "on the top of the heap" (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Tuesday, July 2,
Gutekunst was "on the top of the heap" (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Tuesday, July 2,
Gutekunst was "on the top of the heap" (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Tuesday, July 2,
, May 9, 1890), he nevertheless regarded Gutekunst as being "on the top of the heap" (Tuesday, July 2,
Still, Whitman regarded Gutekunst as being "on the top of the heap" (Tuesday, July 2, 1889) as far as
The image appears courtesy of the owner, Jeffrey Kraus, and is part of the Jeffrey Kraus Collection.For
Notes on the back of the photograph indicate it was originally part of the Frank J. and Harriet Sprague
Reynolds has pointed out that Whitman was part of a movement toward standardized men’s clothing during
Walt Whitman by Thomas Eakins, ca. early to mid-1880s This photo group is part of Eakins's "naked series
and the Greatest Whitman Collection," The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress, vol. 27, no. 2,
and the Greatest Whitman Collection," The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress, vol. 27, no. 2,
Still, Whitman believed the picture was "like a total—like a whole story," and he was proud that Tennyson—to
as the basis for the engraving of Whitman that appeared with its review of Leaves of Grass on June 2,