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Search : harry potter and the prisoner of azkaban book pdf

5923 results

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to J. D. Cox, 4 January 1870

  • Date: January 4, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. p 528 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file, as noted

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Thomas G. Durant, 29 January 1870

  • Date: January 29, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A.

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to W. M. Stewart, 4 February 1870

  • Date: February 4, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. p 528 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file, as noted

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to J. D. Cox, 8 February 1870

  • Date: February 8, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. pp 560 561 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file,

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to J. D. Cox, 10 February 1870

  • Date: February 10, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A, p. 528 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file, as

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to William W. Belknap, 8 February 1870

  • Date: February 8, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. pp. 531 550 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Hamilton Fish, 26 February 1870

  • Date: February 26, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A, p. 568. and I am unable to see how the United States Attorney could have efficiently performed

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Hamilton Fish, 5 March 1870

  • Date: March 5, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. pp. 104 267 581 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to George S. Boutwell, 19 March 1870

  • Date: March 19, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Contingent expenses - - - - - - - - 2000: Purchase of Law, & other necessary books - 1000: $5934:23 The

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Isaac Caldwell, 2 April 1870

  • Date: April 2, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

(see p 8 Index) (see p. 603 Ins Book A.)

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to George S. Boutwell, 4 April 1870

  • Date: April 4, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. p. 594 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file, as

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Isaac Caldwell, 11 April 1870

  • Date: April 11, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

(see Ins Book A.) p.214,-242,-224,468,-636.

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to William T. Sherman, 11 April 1870

  • Date: April 11, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. pp.93,-223,-453,-479,-484,-555. Ins. Book B. p. 22, 93. see p. 433 this book seq.

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Hamilton Fish, 14 April 1870

  • Date: April 14, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book B. p. 1 empowered for that purpose is authorized to employ.

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to John A. Bingham, 18 April 1870

  • Date: April 18, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Judge of that District, denying the power of a Commissioner to take bail for the appearance of a prisoner

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to John Angel James Creswell, 23 April 1870

  • Date: April 22, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book A. pp 571 583 also Let.

Book H. pp 219 225 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file,

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Hamilton Fish, 28 May 1870

  • Date: May 28, 1870
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Book B, p. 49 The following are responsible for particular readings or for changes to this file, as noted

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to George S. Boutwell, 2 June 1869

  • Date: June 2, 1869
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

received your letter of the 26th ult. with the accompanying papers, relating to the case of Nathaniel Harris

Harris proposes to pay nine thousand one hundred and eighty seven dollars, and fifty-three cents, as

Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar to Hamilton Fish, 19 June 1869

  • Date: June 19, 1869
  • Creator(s): Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar | Walt Whitman
Text:

Letter Book H.

Projecting Whitman: The Evolution and Remediation of The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

missing, yet to be discovered, that no doubt will turn up within days of publication, rendering the book

publications of Whitman's poems, but it ended up dealing only with the book publications, leaving the

With book technology, again, there was a hesitation to put the monumental editions to press for fear

Still, those books are the basis of what we know about Whitman, and they are embedded now in the last

So much of the labor of book-editions of were devoted to the process of turning materials—manuscripts

Database as Genre: The Epic Transformation of Archives

  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

He would have been in the big yellow book with Poetry on the cover. But therein lies the problem.

Emerson, in fact, seemed to struggle to name what Whitman's dizzying new book was: he called it a "piece

It was left to Whitman, with his second edition of the book in 1856, to assign the word poem to every

, his work resists the constraints of single book objects.

things—six books, three written before the Civil War and three after, each responding in key ways to

Reply

  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

Now, is the book's title, so most readers, editors, and critics apparently have assumed this repeated

University Press three-volume variorum edition ignores these titles, as do most reprintings of the book

endless amount of information in the feel of the pages, the stubs of the cut-out leaves, in the way the book

Press has generously agreed to let us put online the entire Iowa Whitman Series (currently fifteen books

Keeping a commonplace book edges toward database; keeping a journal, toward narrative.

Editing Whitman in the Digital Age

  • Creator(s): Kenneth M. Price | Ed Folsom
Text:

great battles) of the Secession war; and it is best they should not—the real war will never get in the books

stains—and what the aura of the original documents evoked: "I have perhaps forty such little note-books

shape of his experimental autobiography, Specimen Days , with its seemingly displaced center: the book

what most people would regard as Whitman’s great achievement in life—the writing of his breakthrough book

Notes on Whitman's Photographers

  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

Moran’s studio was at 626 Arch Street, matching where Whitman records that he and Harry Stafford had

Potter : A Washington, D.C. photographer.

Potter 1220 Cherry st. Phil."

same Potter, since he clearly moved his studios there by that time.

Potter & Co. was located at 52 North 8th Street in Philadelphia. Dr. William Reeder : Dr.

"This heart's geography's map"

  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

Toward the end of his life, he and his friends began thinking about publishing a book or album containing

In 1889 Whitman told Horace Traubel, "If I could get a book to suit me, into which I could put the pictures

about and "had often thought to collect them," so he suggested the idea of "a Whitman gallery — a book

Johnston planned a book of portraits of the poet and his friends.

Biography of Horace Traubel

  • Date: 1998
  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

then not yet fifteen years old, but he soon became Whitman's companion; they took walks and discussed books

His own books can be read as socialist refigurings of Whitman's work, each of his titles subtly adjusting

Edmund Clarence Stedman to Walt Whitman, 8 June 1875

  • Date: June 8, 1875
  • Creator(s): Edmund Clarence Stedman
Text:

When I was a boy I read extracts from your first book, in a "Putnam's Mag." review—the "little Captain

Edmund Clarence Stedman to Walt Whitman, 25 October 1888

  • Date: October 25, 1888
  • Creator(s): Edmund Clarence Stedman
Text:

Your book, a gift always to be handed down & treasured by my clan, reached me on my 55 th birthday, and

Annotations Text:

For more information on the book, see James E.

Edmund Clarence Stedman to Walt Whitman, 27 March 1889

  • Date: March 27, 1889
  • Creator(s): Edmund Clarence Stedman
Text:

A book-lover, 3.

There is no book just like this, & there never will be. The personal note is everywhere.

Moreover, as a book merely, the most famous bibliophile—with the famous binders & printers, & a mine

It is the diary, the year-book, the Century-book, of her progress from Colonialism to Nationality.

Annotations Text:

Whitman's Complete Poems & Prose (1888), a volume Whitman often referred to as the "big book," was published

Frederick Oldach bound the book, which included a profile photo of the poet on the title page.

For more information on the book, see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog

Edmund Clarence Stedman to Walt Whitman, 21 May 1890

  • Date: May 21, 1890
  • Creator(s): Edmund Clarence Stedman
Text:

However, you have not been off my perturbed mind for many months; nor has the treasured book of "Camden's

Annotations Text:

The book was published in 1889 by Philadelphia publisher David McKay.

On April 4, 1890, Whitman sent copies of the book to John Addington Symonds, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Gabriel

Rossetti (Whitman's Commonplace Book, Charles E.

Edmund Gosse to Walt Whitman, 12 December 1873

  • Date: December 12, 1873
  • Creator(s): Edmund Gosse
Text:

last, I asked him, during one of our conversations about you, whether I might venture to send you the book

Diary of Edmund Gosse: Sat. Jan. 3

  • Date: 1966
  • Creator(s): Edmund Gosse
Text:

Bought a book. He read me a new poem, intoning it, not very distinctly.

Edmund J. Baillie to Walt Whitman, 19 January 1891

  • Date: January 19, 1891
  • Creator(s): Edmund J. Baillie
Text:

I notice you are about to issue a new Book—so some of my Literary Papers here say.

Edward Bertz to Walt Whitman, 20–22 July 1889

  • Date: July 20–22, 1889
  • Creator(s): Edward Bertz
Text:

alone would have been a great treasure; but to receive, out of your own kind hands, that glorious book

However, everything considered, it is a careful and diligent book Messrs.

The author of this book, the English novelist George Gissing, is one of my very best friends.

In 1884 I wrote an English book, entitled "The French Prisoners",—the story of a friendship between a

Bucke's book arrived, as well as, from Mr. Knortz of New York, his German lecture about you.

Annotations Text:

For more information on the book, see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog

He was the author of many books and articles on German-American affairs and was superintendent of German

Rolleston on the first book-length translation of Whitman's poetry, published as Grashalme in 1889.

He wrote to Whitman frequently, beginning in 1880, and later produced with Karl Knortz the first book-length

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 11 December 1890

  • Date: December 11, 1890
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Too bad my not acknowledging your books—they arrived all right sometime in Sept r and I forwarded one

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 19 December 1891

  • Date: December 19, 1891
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Muirhead 174 Bath Row, Birmingham and two copies of your pocket book edition of Leaves of Grass printed

Leaves of G. in England—because I have no doubt it w go off pretty well, and many people do not get the book

Annotations Text:

Whitman often referred to Complete Poems & Prose (1888) as his "big book."

For more information on the book, see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog

Whitman had a limited and pocket-book edition of Leaves of Grass printed in honor of his 70th birthday

For more information on the book see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 20 November 1891

  • Date: November 20, 1891
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

That will about finish the book, and there will not be much added to it I believe afterwards.

I had some good talks with Bucke when he was over, and he told me a bit about you, and about his book

I got your Goodbye book —and like the poem from wh. it takes its name about the best of any in it.

Give my love to Harry Stafford if you ever write or see him.

Annotations Text:

Whitman's book Good-Bye My Fancy (1891) was his last miscellany, and it included both poetry and short

Thirty-one poems from the book were later printed as "Good-Bye my Fancy" in Leaves of Grass (1891–1892

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 20 May 1891

  • Date: May 20, 1891
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Affte Affectionate rememberances to him & Harry Stafford when you see them.

Annotations Text:

Leaves of Grass and Specimen Days to William Thompson in Nottingham, England (Whitman's Commonplace Book

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 1 July 1881

  • Date: July 1, 1881
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Is it for the book?

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 19 December 1877

  • Date: December 19, 1877
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

I hear from Vines that your books have arrived.

Annotations Text:

Carpenter—a socialist philosopher who in his book Civilisation, Its Cause and Cure posited civilization

On November 13, Carpenter sent Whitman—in a letter now lost—Vines's request for books.

On November 27, 1877, Whitman sent the books (Leaves of Grass and Two Rivulets) and a post card to Vines

Whitman also sent a letter to Carpenter on November 27, noting, "have to-day mailed Mr Vines' books."

Vines from the author," was among the books offered for sale in the Spring 2001 catalog of Bertram Rota

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 13 January [1889]

  • Date: January 13, [1889]
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Annotations Text:

For more information on the book, see James E.

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 27 December 1888

  • Date: December 27, 1888
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

I like the book ever so much, both outside & in.

I like the color & shape of the book—good strong sewing too. Title is a good one.

The whole book is full of yourself Walt, and the great invisible wind sweeping thro' through the boughs—has

The Rain is beating upon the windows—& he is reading Bucke's book about you.

Annotations Text:

For more information on the book, see James E.

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 17 May 1890

  • Date: May 17, 1890
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Have you seen Havelock Ellis' new book on The New Spirit. There is a fine essay on W.

W. and the book is interesting all thro'—but no doubt he has sent it you.

Annotations Text:

Leaves of Grass and Specimen Days to William Thompson in Nottingham, England (Whitman's Commonplace Book

Rossetti (Whitman's Commonplace Book).

Isabella Ford's novel, Miss Blake of Monshalton, was published in book form later in 1890.

His book The New Spirit, with a chapter on Whitman, appeared in 1890.

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 3 June 1876

  • Date: June 3, 1876
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Annotations Text:

Whitman began planning the book in 1863; see his letter to publisher James Redpath of October 21, 1863

, in which he describes his intended book.

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 8 April 1876

  • Date: April 8, 1876
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Edwd Carpenter sent books April 25 by mail one set of books sent, & rec'd Two sets sent Leeds. 8.

Of one thing I am sure—from internal evidence so to speak—namely that your books have never been a source

Annotations Text:

Two Rivulets was published as a companion volume to the book.

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 13 May 1878

  • Date: May 13, 1878
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Thank Harry Stafford for me please for his letter.

Annotations Text:

Carpenter—a socialist philosopher who in his book Civilisation, Its Cause and Cure posited civilization

Cotterill was the author of various books about Ancient Greece, Medieval Italy, and Italian literature

In 1888, Whitman observed to Traubel: "Dowden is a book-man: but he is also and more particularly a man-man

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 1 March 1877

  • Date: March 1, 1877
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Annotations Text:

Carpenter—a socialist philosopher who in his book Civilisation, Its Cause and Cure posited civilization

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 17 September 1877

  • Date: September 17, 1877
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

Some of my friends want your books and are forwarding the money through me.

You had better, I think, send the books direct to the following: Both vols (Leaves of Grass & Two Rivulets

Harris Teall University Extension Lecturer Nottingham The rest you had better send to me.

delight of a small nephew, who understands everything at once —in the most alarming way— Remember me to Harry

Annotations Text:

Carpenter—a socialist philosopher who in his book Civilisation, Its Cause and Cure posited civilization

Augusta Webster (1837–1894) was a British poet, essayist, and translator, who published her first book

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 27 January 1889

  • Date: January 27, 1889
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Annotations Text:

Whitman explained the error at length (with many interpolations) in The Commonplace-Book: "A very bad

they spoke of the paid original draft, & I gave the Camden bank my cheque $174:37" (The Commonplace-Book

Whitman often referred to Complete Poems & Prose (1888) as his "big book."

For more information on the book, see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog

Days with Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1906
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

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.

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