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but have a little business matter to attend to so shall not get around to your house untill until say 1
ed'n of L of G is progressing fairly—Wm Ingram has just call'd—he is well—stays mostly at his farm—the 1
breakfast—dull heavy head—yr letters rec'd & welcomed—sit here in den as usual Dec 13 —got out yesterday 1½
(A Reminiscence of 1864.) 1 WHO are you, dusky woman, so ancient, hardly human, With your woolly-white
Y this afternoon—returning Monday— —Scribner's has rejected & return'd to me my offered poems —the 1
Drank 1 oz. cold milk.12 p.m. Wishes to be left without change for a little while.
Drank 1 oz.1 Has slept a little. Taken a sip of milk a number of times.
McKay. por. 8º, $1. "Walt Whitman still lives.
breach of the 6th Section of the Neutrality Act of 1818, which you will find in Brightley's Digest, Vol. 1,
Groff, the following list of spring flowers with their scientific names: 1.
good points: is bright—very bright" (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Friday, February 1,
1855 Leaves (Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:
would be glad george George is good to me but he aint ain't home much of his time you must come on the 1
I think as I am likely to come quite a good deal, I would like in future to pay Sister Lou $1 a day for
a fellow teacher of mine, and great admirer of yours, and I come to see you some day between April 1.
June 1876 Dear friend, I have, yesterday, transmitted to you through the Post Office an order for £1.
Han recd your note, with 1 dollar was too weakly to read it, just then.
Did he mean Sea Shore Memories No 1 —?
Affectionately yours R M Bucke see notes | Nov 1 '89 Richard Maurice Bucke to Walt Whitman, 30 October
linen—making if successful a handsome plain, pocketable booklet—want it to be retail 1.25 or better still $1—
Camden Sunday noon April 8 '88 It is very pleasant & sunny to-day & I am going out in the rig abt 1 o'clock
Vol. 1 of Prose Works 1892. Ed. Floyd Stovall. New York: New York UP, 1963.
Brisbane to Walt Whitman, 1 February 1887
SUGGESTIONS. 1 THAT whatever tastes sweet to the most perfect person —That is finally right. 2 That the
Baer, (who represents himself as one of Gilson's sureties,) dated at Paris, France, September 1, 1867
seem, by any Judge or Justice of the United States, under the 33d Sec. of the Act of Sept. 24, 1789. (1
language at the beginning of this story also appears in the draft poem "I am that half-grown angry boy." 1
late 1840s (Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:
assembled at Providence, November, 1841 [Providence, RI: Knowles and Vose, printers] Article 2 Sections 1–
see: Chilton Williamson, "Rhode Island Suffrage since the Dorr War," The New England Quarterly 28, no.1
admiration, and justifying, in some degree, the exultant boast of some of the Put's that he is No. 1
Young, 3d base, 4 2 Gillespie, 3d base 4 3 Leggett, Catcher 2 3 Jackson, field. 4 2 Ethridge, field, 4 1
12 Feb. 1868 Wensday Wednesday 1 oclock o'clock O Walt i have just got your letter i thought it was a
first she seemed quite homesick the next she is quite contented they have got a house at last from the 1
Wallace Wednesday evg July 1 st Lippincott (July) does not contain item expected.
Wallace to Walt Whitman, 30 June–1 July 1891
Wallace Mg. 1.
Wallace to Walt Whitman, 31 July–1 August 1891
No. 1, and Victory Co.
No. 1, were escorted to the house of Neptune Hose Co.
Christian New Age Quarterly July-Sept. 1989: 1, 6, 12.Lozynsky, Artem. "Dr.
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 1 (1984): 55–70. Cosmic Consciousness
Whitman's all-inclusive, prosaic language, but she praises his "primitive elemental force" (The World 1:
North Andover, Mass.: Merrimack College, 1974. 1–19. Stouck, David. Willa Cather's Imagination.
the circumstances—While I unhesitatingly accept such kind offerings as Chas Charles W Reynell's (No 1.
Of the cheque (No 1) or any other, or any thing of the kind sent by you or through you or any of my friends
speaker in "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking" (1859), hears the tree's voice in his "soul" (section 1)
This implied divine promise will be the culmination of humankind in an "empire new" (section 1), which
Black, dated May 19, 1858 - Executive Document of the Senate No. 48, 3d Sess. 40th Congress, parts 1,
Edward Grier, Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts (New York: New York University Press, 1984), 1:
the 1850s (Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:
1/8 Out from Behind this Mask. small type (On an engraved head, a Portrait 'looking at you.')
(Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:168).
earlier" (Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:
Fragments (see Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:
New York, Nov 30 189 1 Dear Walt: Last Saturday night I was at the Dinner given by the Lotus Club to
London, Ont. 1 889 What money I have I expected it to put me through the last term, & run me up untill
PRICE $1 50. A Liberal Discount to Booksellers and the Trade.
This morning came your letter of 1 June giving me just what I particularly wanted a glimpse of the great
please find a draft for twenty ($20.) dollars for which please send me 3 copies of "Leaves of Grass" and 1
Am alone at present—is abt 1½ p.m.—quiet & sort o' warm—pleasant—rain last night. Sunday evening .
Wednesday, April 1, 18915:25 P.M. Quite the most vigorous talk with W. had for long time.
Ass. meeting) April 28 to May 1—then put in May at the seaside & in neighborhood of Phila. and go home
1 June.
Wednesday, April 1, 1891
evening, and the frequent extras of that period, and pass'd them silently to each other" (Prose Works 1:
commented in an 1863 letter; "few know the rocks & quicksands he has to steer through" (Correspondence 1:
(Prose Works 1:92).
if it told something, as if it held rapport indulgent with humanity, with us Americans" (Prose Works 1: