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Search : William White

3753 results

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 12 July 1888

  • Date: July 12, 1888
  • Creator(s): William D. O'Connor
Text:

See notes 1888 Aug 21 William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 12 July 1888

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 12 July 1883

  • Date: July 12, 1883
  • Creator(s): William D. O'Connor
Text:

Grant White had a dastardly mass of lies and perversions in the Atlantic in April anent of Mrs.

White's hide off, and "hang the calf-skin on his recreant limbs."

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 12 July 1883

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 10 March 1883

  • Date: March 10, 1883
  • Creator(s): William D. O'Connor
Text:

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 10 March 1883

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 10 December 1886

  • Date: December 10, 1886
  • Creator(s): William D. O'Connor
Text:

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 10 December 1886

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 1 November 1888

  • Date: November 1, 1888
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | William D. O'Connor
Text:

O'C William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 1 November 1888

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 1 April 1883

  • Date: April 1, 1883
  • Creator(s): William D. O'Connor
Text:

no notion whatever of the author, we should fare better in understanding the work than we do with William

William D. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 1 April 1883

William Cook to Louisa Van Velsor Whitman, 19 February 1865

  • Date: February 19, 1865
  • Creator(s): William Cook
Text:

I am, very respectfully, William Cook Capt 9th U[nited].S[tates].

William Cook to Louisa Van Velsor Whitman, 19 February 1865

William Carey to Walt Whitman, 8 December 1891

  • Date: December 8, 1891
  • Creator(s): William Carey
Text:

I hope you will live to great many new years Yours sincerely William Carey 8 December 1891 William Carey

William Carey to Walt Whitman, 5 December 1891

  • Date: December 5, 1891
  • Creator(s): William Carey
Text:

Yours sincerely William Carey 5 December 1891 William Carey to Walt Whitman, 5 December 1891

William Carey to Walt Whitman, 25 July 1888

  • Date: July 25, 1888
  • Creator(s): William Carey
Text:

Yours sincerely William Carey Wm Carey William Carey to Walt Whitman, 25 July 1888

William Carey to Walt Whitman, 18 June 1889

  • Date: June 18, 1889
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | William Carey
Text:

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

William C. Church to Walt Whitman, 25 March 1868

  • Date: March 25, 1868
  • Creator(s): William C. Church
Text:

William C. Church to Walt Whitman, 25 March 1868

William C. Bryant to Walt Whitman, [16 October 1884]

  • Date: October 16, 1884
  • Creator(s): William C. Bryant | William C. Bryant/author>
Text:

Bryant In the deepest William C. Bryant to Walt Whitman, [16 October 1884]

[William C. Angus] to Walt Whitman, 27 January 1891

  • Date: January 27, 1891
  • Creator(s): William C. Angus
Text:

In Glasgow the Exhibition would be largely [William C. Angus] to Walt Whitman, 27 January 1891

William C. Angus to Walt Whitman, 26 October 1888

  • Date: October 26, 1888
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | William C. Angus | Horace Traubel
Text:

Angus William C. Angus to Walt Whitman, 26 October 1888

[William Brough?] to Walt Whitman, 29 October 1880

  • Date: October 29, 1880
  • Creator(s): William Brough
Text:

[William Brough?] to Walt Whitman, 29 October 1880

William A. Hawley to Walt Whitman, 10 August 1869

  • Date: August 10, 1869
  • Creator(s): William A. Hawley | Horace Traubel
Text:

Yours with a brother's love William A. Hawley William A. Hawley to Walt Whitman, 10 August 1869

Will Williams to Walt Whitman, 31 May 1875

  • Date: May 31, 1875
  • Creator(s): Will Williams
Text:

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

Will W. Wallace to Walt Whitman, 7 May 1863

  • Date: May 7, 1863
  • Creator(s): Will W. Wallace
Text:

a fine house across the way from Hospt No 3, where the Surgn Steward and women stop it has a large white

Will Carleton to Walt Whitman, 10 April 1891

  • Date: April 10, 1891
  • Creator(s): Will Carleton
Text:

William Smith, of Yorkshire, England. Author of "Old Yorkshire," and other interesting works.

Wilde and Whitman

  • Date: 19 January 1882
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Orwitz, of Baltimore, Professor Gross's daughter, William Henry Rawle, F.

Wicked Architecture

  • Date: 19 July 1856
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

being, nobly planned, To warn, to comfort, to command," Whitman quotes, albeit with some alteration, William

See George Searle Phillips, Memoirs of William Wordsworth (London: Partridge and Oakey, 1852), 197–8.

Whitman's pre-Leaves of Grass Marginalia on British Writers

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

William White (New York: New York University Press, 1978), 3:754.

Whitman's "November Boughs"

  • Date: 15 November 1888
  • Creator(s): Garland, Hamlin
Text:

In calculating the decision of the world upon his book, he says William O'Connor and Dr.

Whitman's November

  • Date: 27 August 1888
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

empty, and the frame of which has lacked the picturesque, kindly face, with its background of flowing white

Whitman's New Book

  • Date: 15 October 1882
  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, and Sylvester Baxter
Text:

tree itself; everybody knows that the cedar is a healthy, cheap, democratic wood, streaked red and white—an

Whitman's Natal Day

  • Date: 1 June 1889
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Francis Howard Williams, of this city, in words of eloquence, treated "The Past and Present."

Throughout the speech-making Poet Whitman reclined in his easy chair sniffing at a big white rose, and

Whitman's Complete Works

  • Date: 3 January 1889
  • Creator(s): Baxter, Sylvester
Text:

cover is a plain one, with marbled sides and back of dark olive, with the title pasted on in plain white

says one white-haired old fellow remonstratingly to another in a budget of letters I read last night.

Whitman’s Drift

  • Date: 2017
  • Creator(s): Cohen, Matt
Text:

For help with chapter 1, I am indebted to William L.

DB William White, ed., Walt Whitman: Daybooks and Notebooks. 3 vols.

William G.

William H.

, William Allen, 57 “Verses Written at the Grave of white settlement myth, 184, 251n116 McIntosh” (Posey

Whitman’s “Live Oak with Moss”

  • Date: 1992
  • Creator(s): Helms, Alan
Text:

To take only one example, shortly after Whitman was fired, William D.

hurry in and out, Not the air, delicious and dry, the air of the ripe summer, bears lightly along white

Whitman, Walter, Sr. [1789–1855]

  • Creator(s): Rietz, John
Text:

William White. 3 vols. New York: New York UP, 1978.____.

Whitman: The Correspondence, Volume VII

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Genoways, Ted
Text:

Facsimile: WWR 24 (1978), [134], 133, ed. by William White. 1.

Facsimile: WWR 25 (1979), [182], ed. by William White. 1.

Facsimile: WWR 26 (1980), [40], with notes by William White. 1.

Facsimile: WWR 28 (1982), 108, ed. by William White; and Miller, 33.

White, WW’s February 28. From William H. Millis, Jr. landlady. Berg.

Whitman Speaks to a New Generation

  • Creator(s): Institute of Museum and Library Service
Text:

then again in the 1876 and 1881-1882 (and following) editions, as well as—in a cropped version—in William

William Reeder, Philadelphia. Courtesy Library of Congress.

The Whitman Revolution: Sex, Poetry, and Politics

  • Date: 2020
  • Creator(s): Erkkila, Betsy
Text:

William White, 3 vols. (New York: New York University Press, 1978).

MWJ Herman Melville, White-Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War, ed.

Let the white person tread the black person under his heel! (Say!

William L. Andrews (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 129. 10.

William White. 3 vols. New York: New York University Press, 1978. Bibliography 255 ———.

Whitman Reads New York

  • Creator(s): Kevin McMullen
Text:

rebel against their owners, setting fire to a building near Broadway, and threatening to kill any whites

Three beads of black and six of white were equivalent, among the English, to a penny, and among the Dutch

Here the aboriginal money circulated,—small polished shells, some white, some black, strung on the sinews

Three beads of this black money, and six of white, were equivalent to an English penny, or a Dutch stuyver

Walter, William T. "Long Island." In , edited by Joanna Levin and Edward Whitley, 3–14.

Whitman, Poet and Seer

  • Date: 22 January 1882
  • Creator(s): G. E. M.
Text:

Sidgwick and William Clifford were both members of "The Apostles," the famous elite literary society

Whitman on Grant

  • Date: 26 July 1885
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Reclining in his easy chair, arrayed in loose-fitting trousers of some plain gray goods and a spotless white

The poet's sleeves were rolled above the elbows, exposing a pair of arms white as a woman's, but symmetrical

Whitman Noir: Black America & the Good Gray Poet

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

readers: a white fireman would have taken the white faces for granted and not have specified their color

The white that is—to whites—normally transparent becomes instead opaque, worth mentioning, there.

to a white speaker the whiteness of white faces is invisible or transparent.

to black and black to white.

William White (New York: New York University Press, 1978), 3:748. 22.

Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman

  • Date: 2005
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

typesetting at the young age of twelve as an apprentice on the Long Island Patriot under the tutelage of William

By the end of August he had engaged the New York printer William E.

Hotten, meanwhile, advertised the book by associating Whitman with Swinburne and William Blake (whose

Redfield, like William E.

This printing was bound in half cream leather with red, green, black and white marbled paper; the spine

Whitman, Jesse W. (grandfather) (1749–1803)

  • Creator(s): Miller, David G.
Text:

Jesse Whitman was the son of Nehemiah and Phoebe (Sarah White) Whitman; he inherited the family farm

Whitman in the German-Speaking Countries

  • Creator(s): Walter Grünzweig
Text:

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!" . . .

Whitman in the British Isles

  • Creator(s): M. Wynn Thomas
Text:

See, for instance, Swinburne's discussion of Whitman in William Blake: A Critical Essay (London: John

Hyder, "Swinburne's 'Changes of Aspect' and Short Notes," PLMA 58 (March 1943): 241; William J.

(Edinburgh: William Brown, 1884); originally published in the Round Table Series 4. 13.

This is what William Carlos Williams learned from Whitman, the natural cadence, the flow of breath as

William Carlos Williams once praised a poem by Marianne Moore as an anthology of transit, presumably

Whitman in Russia

  • Creator(s): Stephen Stepanchev
Text:

William Parry reports that in Baku poems by Whitman were distributed as morale builders to oil workers

"I am both white and black, and belong to every caste—mine is every faith—I am a farmer, gentleman, mechanic

Traubel was fifteen years old when he began to chat occasionally with the white-bearded old poet on the

Whitman in His Own Time

  • Date: 1991
  • Creator(s): Myerson, Joel
Text:

Gilder], The Lounger 66 William H.

Gertrude Traubel and William White; Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1982), 7July 1890

Garrison William H.

William T.

His hair was perfectly white.

Whitman in France and Belgium

  • Creator(s): Asselineau, Roger
Text:

See Roger Asselineau and William White, eds., Walt Whitman in Europe Today (Detroit: Wayne State University

William White, ed., The Bicentennial Walt Whitman (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1976), 14.

Asselineau and White, , 19.

The early lilacs became part of this child, And grass and white and red morning-glories, and white and

Roger Asselineau and William White, eds., (Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1972).

Whitman in Brazil

  • Creator(s): Maria Clara Bonetti Paro
Text:

that swing and bloom; in your dining room, close to the tiled stove that smells of pine resin and white

America] most nearly recognizes its image is good gray Whitman in his open-collared shirt, in his white

class or of his own intellectual caste, of his own region or territorial area, or of his own race of white-skinned

Perhaps his long white hair made him seem paternal or maternal in the eyes of fatally wounded young men

Whitman, Hannah Brush (1753–1834)

  • Creator(s): Kohn, Denise
Text:

She told Walt about his unconventional great-grandmother, Sarah White Whitman, who chewed tobacco and

Whitman futur, ou l'avenir à venir: "Poets to Come" in French Translation

  • Creator(s): Éric Athenot | Blake Bronson-Bartlett
Text:

.: "one does not wear white shoes after labor day") in English.

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Here are Whitman’s words as transcribed by Williams: The Chinese don’t progress.

Blodgett, Arthur Golden, and William White, 3 vols. (New York: New York University Press, 1980).

Carlos Williams, Allen Ginsberg, Charles Olson, D.

William Cookson (New York: New Directions, 1973), 145. 6.

Williams, William Carlos, 9 in tension with his chauvinism, Wills, Garry, 141n 163–166; and Japan, 161

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Here are Whitman's words as transcribed by Williams: The Chinese don't progress.

Blodgett, Arthur Golden, and William White, 3 vols. (New York: New York University Press, 1980).

Carlos Williams, Allen Ginsberg, Charles Olson, D.

William Cookson (New York: New Directions, 1973), 145.

After observing that "the lush white flowers" on the ground beneath a wild azalea "have not begun to

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