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Search : part 2 roblox story kate and jayla

6238 results

Brooklyniana, No. 35.—Continued.

  • Date: 6 September 1862
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

and intelligence here, and the necessities of their occupations did not prevent them from devoting a part

in The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1921), 2:

The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman, 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1921. pp. 304-306.

Annotations Text:

in The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1921), 2:

The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman, 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1921. pp. 304-306.

John Newton Johnson to Walt Whitman, [27 August?] 1875

  • Date: [August 27?], 1875
  • Creator(s): John Newton Johnson
Text:

The good old man tho, bject ur part of the performan g, upon asking, that he saw no imp the uni ver se

I got about 3 weeks ago the two John Burroughs' picture—sent a reply 2 weeks ago.

Getting on well, having sell my 2 big cotton bales for t year's must sustain considerable loss from th

Number III

  • Date: 28 October 1849
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

The burying part may be well enough, but the living is much such living as a tree in the farmer's door-yard

Here about the eastern parts, in particular, I find whole villages, or rather scattered hamlets, whose

Through a gate, some five or six rods, was a large two-story double house, and the barns and outbuilding

His farms he put out on shares: all his part of the product was sold over to the stores, and he purchased

New York city has eight or ten times that number—does any one suppose that any fair average eighth part

Edition, Project, Database, Archive, Thematic Research Collection: What's in a Name?

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

In addition, I will use the final term, , to discuss yet-to-be-developed parts of the Whitman Archive

Our gradually shifting views have been shaped in part by discussions with publishers.

I have recently begun work on a digital undertaking that may or may not become part of the .

To ignore such interpretations is to ignore an enormous part of Whitman's reception in the world.

Beckett's short story was first published in French as Sans .

The Last of the Sacred Army

  • Date: March 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This tale is the fourth of nine short stories by Whitman that were published for the first time in The

It is also the only one of Whitman's stories to have been printed twice in the The Democratic Review

Our storied names are those of the Soldiers of Liberty; hardy souls, incased in hardy bodies—untainted

Nor was the story new to me—as may it never be to any son of America.

Annotations Text:

This tale is the fourth of nine short stories by Whitman that were published for the first time in The

It is also the only one of Whitman's stories to have been printed twice in the The Democratic Review;

Walt Whitman to John T. Trowbridge, 24 September [1870]

  • Date: September 24, 1870
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Annotations Text:

John Townsend Trowbridge (1827-1916) was a novelist, poet, author of juvenile stories, and antislavery

Ferry Boy and the Financier (Boston: Walker and Wise, 1864); he described their meetings in My Own Story

John T. Trowbridge to Walt Whitman, 6 January 1865

  • Date: January 6, 1865
  • Creator(s): John T. Trowbridge
Annotations Text:

John Townsend Trowbridge was a novelist, poet, author of juvenile stories, and antislavery reformer.

Ferry Boy and the Financier (Boston: Walker and Wise, 1864); he described their meetings in My Own Story

Feudalism

  • Creator(s): McBride, Phyllis
Text:

Whitman, therefore, found feudalism to be at odds with the democratic ideal, in part, at least, because

back and monarchize, or to look forward and democratize," but instead "how, and in what degree and part

He considered American poets, for the most part, to be imitative of their feudal predecessors.

Vol. 2. New York: New York UP, 1964. Feudalism

Song of the Answerer.

  • Date: 1891–1892
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

his own and bestows it upon men, and any man translates, and any man translates himself also, One part

does not counteract another part, he is the joiner, he sees how they join.

strangely transmutes them, They are not vile any more, they hardly know themselves they are so grown. 2

Perfect sanity shows the master among philosophs, Time, always without break, indicates itself in parts

Song of the Answerer.

  • Date: 1881–1882
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

his own and bestows it upon men, and any man translates, and any man translates himself also, One part

does not counteract another part, he is the joiner, he sees how they join.

strangely transmutes them, They are not vile any more, they hardly know themselves they are so grown. 2

Perfect sanity shows the master among philosophs, Time, always without break, indicates itself in parts

Brooklyniana, No. 17.

  • Date: 5 April 1862
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

But we must not forget the old one-story house on the east upper corner of Nassau street, with the tough

The old Log Cabin, famous in the days of '40, The old Log Cabin to which Whitman refers was likely part

Merceins, Stantons, Suydams, Baches, Tredwells, Carters, Hickses, Schencks, Schoonmakers, Smiths, Storys

in The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1921), 2:

The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman, 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1921. pp. 292–296.

Annotations Text:

in The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1921), 2:

The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman, 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1921. pp. 292–296.

A Visit to Walt Whitman

  • Date: 11 July 1886
  • Creator(s): F. B. S.
Text:

street after an inquiry or two, and finally arrived at number 328, which designates a modest, two story

By 2 o'clock I was all through with my part of the work and adjourned.

"I helped set part of the type myself.

politely invite everybody who happened to be sitting in the cave he had under the sidewalk to some other part

A Clear Midnight

  • Date: about 1880
Text:

Williams" dated December 2, 1880. The poem was first published in 1881. A Clear Midnight

Ellen M. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 14 December 1890

  • Date: December 14, 1890
  • Creator(s): Ellen M. O'Connor
Annotations Text:

O'Connor's stories with a preface by Whitman were published in Three Tales: The Ghost, The Brazen Android

Chats with Walt Whitman

  • Date: February 1898
  • Creator(s): Grace Gilchrist
Text:

For my part when I meet anyone of erudition I want to get away, it terrifies me.

"I think," said Walt, "I shall have to leave these parts.

We want pretty verbiage, part of a poem or a picture, without reference to the whole."

Then the fine vista of buildings, some four and five stories high.

It has marred that story-telling faculty—the memory.

Saturday, August 9, 1890

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

It is the same old story—the old, old story: every doxy but mine is the seed of harm!

Thursday, November 5, 1891

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

And it is in this respect Harrison has been lately playing a constant part—a devilish, picayune part—worthy

I had a volume of short stories. "I should like to see—read it."

Poem incarnating the mind

  • Date: Before 1855
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

See particularly the following lines (from the 1891–2 edition): "O the old manhood of me, my noblest

For more about the revisions of this passage, see Ed Folsom, "Walt Whitman's 'The Sleepers,'" part of

....any thing is but a part." (1855, p. 51).

starve his body.— What minutes of damnation What heightless dread, falls in the click of a moment story

can never tell , for there is something that underlies and overtops me, of whom I am an effusion a part

Saturday, October 20, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

.: "Walt, are you in earnest in saying you have a big story to tell me some day?"

undertake it tonight: it involves so much—feeling, reminiscence, almost tragedy: it's a long, long story

: and I don't want you to know only a part of it—I want you to know it all: when I start I want to finish

The Slavonians and Eastern Europe

  • Date: August 1849 or later; August 1849
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman | Anonymous
Text:

By the Author of "Revelations of Russia," &c. 2 Vols. London, 1846. 2.

G ARDNER W ILKINSON , F.R.S. 2 vols. London, 1848 4. Panslavism and Germanism .

been small; 2.

Part I. London, 1848. Pp. 224. 7. Report of the Commisioners of Railways , 1848. Part II.

At one point, this manuscript likely formed part of Whitman's cultural geography scrapbook.

Richard Maurice Bucke to Walt Whitman, 16 April 1891

  • Date: April 16, 1891
  • Creator(s): Richard Maurice Bucke
Text:

Do not especially mind the confinement—worst part of it is continuous sitting —I can sympathize more

Annotations Text:

The novel continues the story of Odysseus, hero of Homer's ancient Greek epic poem The Odyssey, by detailing

Walt Whitman to John Camden Hotten, 24 April 1868

  • Date: April 24, 1868
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

shoulders & bust as the photograph does—make only the neck, the collar with the immediately neighboring part

The eyes part, and all around the eyes, try to re-produce fully & faithfully, exactly as in the photograph

Annotations Text:

Art, and Science (16 [March 21, 1868], 288–289), on June 6, 1868, from the Saturday Review (25 [May 2,

Thursday, November 20, 1890

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Warren was amused by it, "They said, it was part felt and part wool; if it was all felt or all wool,

part felt and part wool. As if they knew that better than any other of us!"

Then I feared it might in part conflict with my other piece now nearly done.

We can't be too careful about such a thing—it is so much a part of duty and honesty."

You should have told him the story of our army colonel.

"The Disenthralled Hosts of Freedom": Party Prophecy in the Antebellum Editions of Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 2021
  • Creator(s): Grant, David
Text:

col.2. 32.

Argus,October31,1840, p.2,col.2. 56.

col.2. 67.

,p.2,col.2;and“TheOldandtheNew,”Chicago(IL)Democrat, May17,1856,p.2,cols.1–2. 21.SeeRobertJ.Cook,BaptismofFire

.2. 62.

Thursday, December 27, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Then he said with vim: "That is the story in substance.

The story was familar to me but his way of retelling it was inimitable—his enjoyment of it immense.

We quoted a number of Socrates stories.

I asked him: "You speak of well told stories: don't you think most of the stories in books are too well

I said the best criticisms, the best stories, are heard in parlors, in crowds, informally.

William Sloane Kennedy to Walt Whitman, 27 February 1889

  • Date: February 27, 1889
  • Creator(s): William Sloane Kennedy
Annotations Text:

It is postmarked: Belmont | Mar | 2 | Mass.; Camde | Mar | 3 | 10 AM | Rec'd.

with the third page of this letter, he added the equivalent of another letter sometime before March 2,

February 27, 1889, but, beginning with this page, he wrote an additional letter sometime before March 2,

Edward Everett Hale (1822–1909) was a Unitarian minister and fiction writer, best-known for the short-story

Thursday, December 5, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

After him nobody can play that part." Mrs. Bowers had been in yesterday's cast.

Emilia is not a great part. I think anyhow, if Shakespeare had any weakness, it was in his women.

and gave three lectures in one week, 2 hours long each.

Reuben Farwell to Walt Whitman, 8 June 1864

  • Date: June 8, 1864
  • Creator(s): Reuben Farwell
Text:

Dear Friend I once promised to write you & as often as convient So far I have fullfulled my part.

Annotations Text:

Farwell's other correspondence with Whitman see April 30, 1864, May 5, 1864, June 16, 1864, October 2,

Autobiographical Data

  • Date: Between 1848 and 1856
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Autobiographical Data From the middle to the latter part of Oct. 1844 I was in New Mirror — We lived

About the latter part of February '46, commenced editing the Brooklyn Eagle —continued till last of January

titled "Song of Myself": "I hear the sound of the human voice . . . . a sound I love," (1855, p. 31). 2

stages, first one, and then th another, I come not here to flatter Why confine the matter to that part

In Jamaica first time in the latter part of the summer of 1839.

Annotations Text:

the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The 'Talbot Wilson' Notebook," Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 20:2

from Emory Holloway, Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1921), 2:

Monday, March 11, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

.: "That interminable dreary story!"

You remember the Lessing story? It always seemed to me very deep: very, very.

I told W. a story. Ingersoll was lecturing in Philadelphia.

W. still elaborated his story. "What a mistake!

what a host of enthusiastic boys would have been afoot taking part—arguing, contending, unfalteringly

Saturday, February 9, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Oldach told me "the story of" his "life" today in brief.

followed by conception; maintaining that the fact of conception was conclusive evidence of consent on the part

"Yes, certainly: it goes with the story." I folded it and put it away in my pocket.

I just half remember some Spanish story—was it in Don Quixote?—that involved the same problem."

Anyway, what ever his intention may have been, I take the story for what it seems to mean.

Molinoff, Katherine

  • Creator(s): Erkkila, Betsy
Text:

But while biographers have generally treated the Southold story as apocryphal, Molinoff's pamphlet suggests

1840–1841, in the period immediately preceding Whitman's publication of such homoerotically nuanced stories

[scene in the woods on]

  • Date: 1863–1864
Text:

Whitman used many of the scences from Roberts's story in the poem, A March in the Ranks Hard-Prest, and

Louisa Van Velsor Whitman to Walt Whitman, 7 April [1868]

  • Date: April 7, 1868
  • Creator(s): Louisa Van Velsor Whitman
Text:

day i tell him i should pray for rainey rainy days if i was him he is the inspector of the cementing part

there has been much trouble about that part of the work the pipes have leaked and made much trouble

Annotations Text:

with Bucke's date (Walt Whitman, The Correspondence [New York: New York University Press, 1961–77], 2:

Edwin Haviland Miller dated the two missing Walt Whitman letters April 2 and April 6, 1868 (Walt Whitman

, The Correspondence [New York: New York University Press, 1961–77], 2:360).

Introduction to Whitman's Annotations and Marginalia

  • Creator(s): Matt Cohen
Text:

Indeed, Whitman's very compositional technique derived in part from his annotational habits.

French writer that shed light on Whitman's relation to continental literature and philosophy (fig. 2)

Figure 2. Whitman's notes on Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Trent Collection of Whitmaniana, David M.

Vol 12, parts 1-6. Dimock, Wai Chee.

The Walt Whitman Archive. 2 vols. New York: Garland, 1993. Price, Kenneth M.

Friday, November 27, 1891

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

When I think of this story, Horace, and many like it, and think of the filthy, vile, low, vulgar rot

W. had dictated the main part of that to a reporter here. Some points exaggerated afterwards.

Among letters he gives me is "a simple complimentary one" from a woman named Webling: 2 Camden GardensShepherds

Thursday, December 10, 1891

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

O'Connor's story. But W. is alive to it. "I hope Tom will seize and clench her."

Loag had just told me a good story of Ingersoll, whom he knows well, and on whom he often calls when

W. seemed to think this a great story.

Ellen M. O'Connor to Walt Whitman, 14 November 1891

  • Date: November 14, 1891
  • Creator(s): Ellen M. O'Connor
Text:

These stories would bear it, I think & feel . If you have a sentiment about it, tell me, please.

Annotations Text:

Company published a collection that included three of her late husband William Douglas O'Connor's stories

Thomas W. H. Rolleston to Walt Whitman, 27 September 1883

  • Date: September 27, 1883
  • Creator(s): Thomas W. H. Rolleston
Text:

"He is wanting in two indispensable requisites for a great writer. (1) Knowledge—(2) Form."

for all time (giving permanent expression to facts of great interest & importance, but the theoretic part

Literary Gossip

  • Date: 21 September 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

And for this bold generalization he alleges, as a basis, 1, the name of Senator Rusk; 2, the head of

However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified

Louisa Van Velsor Whitman to Walt Whitman, 3 June [1865]

  • Date: June 3, 1865
  • Creator(s): Louisa Van Velsor Whitman
Text:

basement for the occation occasion well Walt how are you getting along in the money matters for my part

compared with the American patriot as they call the great Jefferson davis) the printer Walt brought 2

Annotations Text:

—Cases of Brooklyn Men" (Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 19, 1863, 2).

"When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer" (1865)

  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Drum-Taps was appended to the main body of Leaves; in 1871, Whitman moved the poem to his "Songs of Parting

in abeyance" (section 1) and leaves the "Houses and rooms" to "go to the bank by the wood" (section 2)

Wilmot Proviso (1846)

  • Creator(s): Klammer, Martin
Text:

States acquiring territory from Mexico, "neither slavery nor involuntary servitude" could exist in any part

Cleveland Rodgers and John Black. 2 vols. New York: Putnam, 1920. Wilmot Proviso (1846)

Thursday, January 3, 1889.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

W. had me repeat the story.

He "had often told a story": here again: "A negro woman, speaking to her second of her first husband,

be sure—bad enough even in its echoes: but we have to some extent worn the enemy out—have in some part

I have, of course, treated the subject in my own way,—certain parts strong and earnest,—but there is

will be best to not delay too long as the interest in the thing is now up, something like a serial story

Saturday, February 16, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

plays—that the play's not the thing—not the thing alone: that something more was intended than the story

Then: "I'm afraid what you say of Harry is part true: he does not resist enough: he permits himself to

"As William's letters all have more or less to contribute to the story of the ups and downs of the Leaves

It reminds me of a story Henry Peterson told me.

"Certainly: that's a part of his game." "What game?" Harned said: "I guess you know."

Walt Whitman to Richard Maurice Bucke, 4 June 1890

  • Date: June 4, 1890
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Annotations Text:

The Philadelphia Inquirer carried the story on the front page on the following day.

The Camden Daily Post article "Ingersoll's Speech" of June 2, 1890, was written by Whitman himself and

Floyd Stovall, 2 vols. [New York: New York University Press: 1963–1964], 686–687).

Walt Whitman to Richard Maurice Bucke, 3 July 1889

  • Date: July 3, 1889
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Annotations Text:

1889 Eduard Bertz (1853–1931) sent Whitman an article he had published in the Deutsche Presse of June 2

On July 2 Whitman sent Bertz Complete Poems & Prose, and on July 7 a copy of Bucke's book (Whitman's

those of Rolleston and Knortz, and called attention to his own book The French Prisoners (1884), "the story

Thomas W. H. Rolleston to Walt Whitman, 7 August 1884

  • Date: August 7, 1884
  • Creator(s): Thomas W. H. Rolleston
Text:

The German colleague I alluded to is not a partner in the strict sense & takes no part in the publication

let his name be known—it would have serious consequences for him if he were known to have taken any part

Annotations Text:

A translation of the article appeared in the New Eclectic Magazine, 2 (July 1868), 325–329; see also

Monday, February 16, 1891

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

I reminded him that he had read the book—or a part of it—in the spring when Bucke was here.

not have it with me, but quoted in full postal from Kennedy: Thurs EveDear HoraceSh'd be glad of 1/2

s part in it.

Sarrazin of course 2.

If we could have (at least a part of) Rudolph Schmidt's piece—Danish—it would be well 6.

Sunday, May 18, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

"I think I should report upon such an expression by telling a story—the story of the old man who was

He went into paroxysms of laughter over a story I told him of a late car the other night on which a young

And to me: "That's a good story to keep. The young fellow must have been a drunkard!"

W. told a story of Jim Scovel: "He would quote somebody who said 'money'? Oh! watch the money!

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