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Yours sincerely William Carey 5 December 1891 William Carey to Walt Whitman, 5 December 1891
I was sorry not to be able to grasp your hand on your birthday Yours very truly, William Carey see notes
June 19 1889 I wrote to W.C. 6/20/89 William Carey to Walt Whitman, 18 June 1889
I hope you will live to great many new years Yours sincerely William Carey 8 December 1891 William Carey
Yours sincerely William Carey Wm Carey William Carey to Walt Whitman, 25 July 1888
William C. Church to Walt Whitman, 25 March 1868
Bryant In the deepest William C. Bryant to Walt Whitman, [16 October 1884]
In Glasgow the Exhibition would be largely [William C. Angus] to Walt Whitman, 27 January 1891
Angus William C. Angus to Walt Whitman, 26 October 1888
[William Brough?] to Walt Whitman, 29 October 1880
Yours with a brother's love William A. Hawley William A. Hawley to Walt Whitman, 10 August 1869
Very faithfully yours, Will Williams. P.S.
magazine in question will contain contributions by well-known English and American authors. from Will Williams
Will Williams to Walt Whitman, 31 May 1875
a fine house across the way from Hospt No 3, where the Surgn Steward and women stop it has a large white
William Smith, of Yorkshire, England. Author of "Old Yorkshire," and other interesting works.
William Rossetti's attempt to Bowdlerize and expurgate his song.
New York: New York UP, 1925.Trimble, William.
TedWidmerLeggett, William L. (1801–1839)Leggett, William L. (1801–1839) William Leggett, poet and journalist
"William Leggett." United States Magazine and Democratic Review 6 (1839): 17–28. Leggett, William.
A Collection of the Political Writings of William Leggett. Ed. Theodore Sedgwick, Jr.
White. Indianapolis: Liberty, 1984. Meyers, Marvin.
Leggett, William L. (1801–1839)
Founded in 1636 by Roger Williams, who wished to acknowledge divine assistance in his forced relocation
& smart, but too constrained & bookish for a free old hawk like me" (61).BibliographyMcLoughlin, William
New York: New York, 1961.Woodward, William, and Edward F. Sanderson.
Its first editor was William Coleman, who served until 1829, when the reins were passed to William Cullen
express surprise that his collection of reviews included even a particularly harsh moral attack by William
I smell the white roses sweet-scented and growing.
Day come white, or night come black, Home, or rivers and mountains from home, Singing all time, minding
tree itself; everybody knows that the cedar is a healthy, cheap, democratic wood, streaked red and white—an
his vulgar and profane hoofs among the delicate flowers which bloom there, and soiling the spotless white
Die Gattin des Majors und Mutter Louisas war Naomi Williams.
Sie war ein Kind des großen wallisischen Geschlechts der Williams, das seit alters der Seefahrt verschworen
Ihr Vater, Kapitän John Williams, fand seinen Tod in der See. Ebenso sein einziger Sohn.
Inbrünstiger sicherlich auch als die von alters landsässigen Whitmans hatten diese Williams sich dem
Einsamkeiten des Weltmeers zu einem um so innigeren Besitz geworden sein, wenngleich der Kapitän John Williams
The correspondence includes two longer runs, one to William O' Connor and the other to his wife, Ellen
William O'Connor, author of The Good Gray Poet (1866), was one of Whitman's closest friends until an
Bucke and Milton Hindus; and William Douglas O'Connor.
These letters shed particular light on Whitman's relationship with William Michael Rossetti, the Gilchrist
The collection also includes correspondence with her children and Whitman's 1869 letter to Michael William
Literary correspondents include John Burroughs, William Sloane Kennedy, Bernard O'Dowd, Richard Maurice
Bucke, Thomas Biggs Harned, Horace Traubel, Henry Bryan Binns, Mary Mapes Dodge, William Dean Howells
, William Douglass O'Connor, and John Addington Symonds.
The Liverpool Central Library; William Brown St.; Liverpool, L38EW; England
Other correspondents include Anne Burrows Gilchrist, Thomas Biggs Harned, William Sloane Kennedy, James
Johnston, William Douglas O'Connor, and Horace and Anne Montgomerie Traubel.; This catalog includes item-level
He first read Whitman's poetry in William M.
shirt-collar flat and broad, countenance of swarthy transparent red, beard short and well mottled with white
He does not separate the learned from the unlearned, the Northerner from the Southerner, the white from
William Inglis Morse Washington, February 19, 1868. Messrs. Routledge, Publishers Broadway .
William Michael Rossetti, “Adah Isaacs Menken,” in American Poems, ed.
Fowler,William Chauncey. “Charles William Chauncey of New York.”
Howells,William Dean.
Edited by William White. New York: New York University Press, 1978. ———.
, 114– 15 O’Connor,William, 5 Mullen, Edward F.
the publication of the 1860 through his Civil War hospital work, during Reconstruction when first William
Amy Williams was descended from a sea-faring family: Louisa's maternal grandfather John Williams and
Like Walt, she may have "internalized typical white racial attitudes of his time, place, and class,"
She weighed the merits of William D.
Selected and Edited by William Michael Rossetti (London: Hotten, 1868).
from the empty bosom of the grove I hear a sob, as one forlorn might pine— The white-limbed beauty of
Where round their fingers winding the white slips That crown his forehead, on the grandsire's knees,
hieroglyphic,And it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones,Growing among black folks as among white
William Diggs. Wm. J. Cunningham. Fletcher W. Dickerman. Ezra M. Frost. Harry Coburn.
By the time he became acquainted with Whitman's poetry through William Rossetti's British edition of
It was facilitated by Whitman's friends, probably under the aegis of William D.
The translators were an unlikely team—Thomas William Rolleston (1857–1920) was an Irish nationalist and
He is also a prominent translator of American dramatists (among them Williams, Miller, and Wilder).
And four voices under the high white hats reply: "Et c'est bon!" . . .
educator, scholar, and philologist Karl Knortz (1841–1918) and the politicized man of letters Thomas William
this—Shall probably go out for a drive of an hour or two after supper— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
And it means, Sprouting alike in broad zones and narrow zones, Growing among black folks as among white
Or white-domed capitol with majestic figure surmounted, or all the old high-spired cathedrals, That little
again, this soil'd world; For my enemy is dead, a man divine as myself is dead, I look where he lies white-faced
and still in the coffin—I draw near, Bend down and touch lightly with my lips the white face in the
The White House by Moonlight — . 24.—A spell of fine soft weather.
—everything so white, so marbly pure and dazzling, yet soft—the White House of future poems, and of dreams
There are fires in large stoves, and the prevailing white of the walls is reliev'd by some ornaments,
Williams, age 21, 3d Va. Cavalry.
Father, John Williams, Millensport, Ohio. 9–10.
My old pilot friends, the Balsirs, Johnny Cole, Ira Smith, William White, and my young ferry friend,
—everything so white, so marbly pure and dazzling, yet soft—the White House of future poems, and of dreams
One Delaware soldier, William H.
Williams, aged 21, 3d Virginia cavalry.
White, however, is the prevailing color.
in toward land; The great steady wind from west and west-by-south, Floating so buoyant, with milk-white
, I was refresh'd by the storm; I watch'd with joy the threatening maws of the waves; I mark'd the white
Then to the third—a face nor child, nor old, very calm, as of beautiful yellow-white ivory: Young man
NOT alone our camps of white, O soldiers, When, as order'd forward, after a long march, Footsore and
WORLD, take good notice, silver stars fading, Milky hue ript, weft of white detaching, Coals thirty-six
in toward land; The great steady wind from west and west-by-south, Floating so buoyant, with milk-white
, I was refresh'd by the storm; I watch'd with joy the threatening maws of the waves; I mark'd the white
Then to the third—a face nor child, nor old, very calm, as of beautiful yellow-white ivory: Young man
NOT alone our camps of white, O soldiers, When, as order'd forward, after a long march, Footsore and
WORLD, take good notice, silver stars fading, Milky hue ript, weft of white detaching, Coals thirty-six
public reception room, a large, tall, strongly-built man, with a tanned and scarlet face, plenteous white
the suggestion of the President, and sitting near a window draught, he unhesitatingly put on his old white
How it made my heart double-beat to see my piece on the pretty white paper, in nice type.
It was far more primitive and ancient then my Camden friend William Kurtz's place up on Federal street
Carlos II, emigraram em massa para os Estados Unidos, onde, em 1681, criaram, sob a liderança de William
A indignação de seus amigos se fez sentir nos meios políticos: William Douglas O’Connor publicou o combativo
SELECTED AND EDITED WILLIAM MICHAEL ROSSETTI.
TO WILLIAM BELL SCOTT.
with my lips the white face in the coffin.
Written by William Shakespeare, 1600.
By the late William Makepeace Thackeray.