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see notes July 29 1888 | also Aug 1 NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW. (EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT.)
We got our baby just as the heat began, July 1 st , & we have had our hands full.
I have a talk over the death of Balestier & the prospects of a continuance of negotiating wrote F. 1/
Have on taxes yet 10 dollars, 1 years interest, 15 dollars. Charlie Charles L.
I got Home safely met Ed at 1 O clock I got the money had no trouble at the Bank I will send you a chicken
All well and all quiet here, annual Ball getting pretty near now, a week from thursday—i.e. 1 st —soon
Love to you a thousand times R M Bucke See notes 1/14/90 Richard Maurice Bucke to Walt Whitman, 12 January
Camden Saturday 1 P M Dec: 7 '89 Bright sunny perfect day—have just been out an hour or two, a drive
Camden 1½ P M June 5 '90 Am feeling fairly (almost plus as I write)—hot weather here now the second day—the
Camden Noon April 11 '90 Bad night ag'n—heavy tussel strangling spell (phlegm &c) bet. 12 and 1—& more
Superintendent's Office Asylum for the Insane Ontario London, Ont., 6 March 18 90 I have yours 28 Feb. and 1
other sons seem to think money is nessessary necessary for me to have george and loo is coming the 1
botheration or another I had short allowance of sleep so last night I went to bed early and slept 9 1/
his huge canvas cover'd wagon (& fat slow horses) rumbling along—the loud long whistle or gong for 1
Suppose you rec'd the pp: proof birth day acc't : sent by H., also the fac simile letter to Dr J June 1,
Vol. 1 of Prose Works 1892. Ed. Floyd Stovall. New York: New York UP, 1963. 13. Winwar, Frances.
DIRGE FOR TWO VETERANS. 1 THE last sunbeam Lightly falls from the finish'd Sabbath, On the pavement here—and
Camden NJ — Sept: 16 1 P M '91 Perfect weather continued—am feeling fairly—oysters for my breakfast—am
IN CABIN'D SHIPS AT SEA. 1 IN cabin'd ships, at sea, The boundless blue on every side expanding, With
April 21st, Monday, 1 o'clock afternoon.
Dirge for Two Veterans DIRGE FOR TWO VETERANS. 1 THE last sunbeam Lightly falls from the finish'd Sabbath
SONG FOR ALL SEAS, ALL SHIPS. 1 TO-DAY a rude brief recitative, Of ships sailing the seas, each with
Courts, the latter being a species of power incident to the Legislative power of the United States. 1
Canter , 1 Peters, 542.
Hepburn Winter, 1 Wheaton, 91.
A Chronicle of New-York," The Hudson River Chronicle , December 19, 1843, [1]; "The Love of the Four
A Chronicle of New-York," Boon's Lick Times , January 27, 1844, [1].
reprinted "Wild Frank's Return" (May 8, 1846), " The Half-Breed; A Tale of the Western Frontier " (June 1–
payment by the company of One million dollars, five hundred thousand payable in ten years from June 1,
Can you not get along with a certified copy, under the Act of 1849, 9 Stat. 397. 1 Bright.
manuscript (Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [New York: New York University Press, 1984], 1:
solely upon upon her hereditary constitution that I was greatly surprised and overcome—She recieved the 1
winter but i have not had any word as yet) Mrs Oconor O'Connor was here yesterday tuesday Tuesday 2 1
Entire passage from 14th line, ending with the line "And you Stalwart loins" on page 81. 84. 1-7 inclusive
to me friday Friday 17th but i get it till monday Monday 20th saying he would not be home till the 1
In a couple of weeks my grapes will be all off (only 1/2 crop this year) & I shall take another holiday
SPOFFORD, Proprietor, WASHINGTON, D.C. 1. 6th. , 18 90 Walt.
Yes, you are living on your ancestry at present, if that had not been A.1, W.W. would have been under
Did you get the "Galaxy" of Dec 1—? William Swinton is here in Washington, temporarily.
American Notes & Queries: A Journal for the Curious 1 (1941): 101–102.
but as a harmoniously ordered system, as "one great whole animated by the breath of life" (Humboldt 1:
Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 1.3 (1983): 1–21. Perlman, Jim, Ed Folsom, and Dan Campion, eds.
Joseph P.HammondStevens, Oliver (b. 1825)Stevens, Oliver (b. 1825) In a letter dated 1 March 1882 Boston
Walt Whitman Birthplace Bulletin 1 (1957): 17–19. "Denison, Mrs. Flora MacDonald."
take the plesure of fulfilling my promace a writing to you hoping those few lines will find you well 1
I ought to reach N.Y. 1 st or 2 & see you 2 or 3 —4 th , I think, at latest.
I beg to forward this amount in the within form—being 1. 3 Post-Office orders which will be made good
For details see especially volumes 1, 2, and 4 of The Correspondence, edited by Edwin Haviland Miller
The "you" and "I" of line 1 thus become interchangeable, with "you" as reader/patron or poet.BibliographyAllen
VOCALISM. 1 VOCALISM, measure, concentration, determination, and the divine power to speak words; Are
VOCALISM. 1 VOCALISM, measure, concentration, determination, and the divine power to speak words; Are
American Poets [Part 1] W E have many examples in history of a national literature built up in a dialect
American Poets Part 1
Friday, November 1, 18897.30 P.M. W. reading The Century when I came.
Friday, November 1, 1889
Monday, February 1, 1892Seeing W. in forenoon but seeing him sleeping, I was not moved to arouse him.
Monday, February 1, 1892