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wh' I will lend you—I suppose you rec'd the Dr B trans: of S I sent — Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 14 February 1889
is a good notice in London Pall-Mall Jan: 25 —Sunny & very cold here— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
last Vol. 4th American Supplement to Enc: Brit: page 772 has a notice &c of me— W W Walt Whitman to William
Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 8 May 1889
you see him (& to all inquiring friends)—I keep up pretty good heart— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
but I believe have gone to press —& I will send you one soon as ready— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
y'r new "Transatlantic Magazine" Boston send me—Sunshiny here to day— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 4 October 1888
W W Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 29 April [1887]
The paper included "The Good Gray Poet Is White Now," an account of Whitman's lecture entitled "The Death
Price Elizabeth Lorang Zachary King Eric Conrad Walt Whitman to William Livingston Alden, 27 August 1868
He appeared in his usual eccentric garb, and with a part of his brawny breast bared and his long, white
Dear William, Mr.
Walt Whitman to William D. O'Connor, 10 January [1867?]
about what I was wanting— Herb, I hope you will lay on while your hand is in & finish the black & white
Camden March 18 5 p m Dear Herby I have just come up this afternoon from White Horse —Friday & Saturday
William White [New York: New York University Press, 1978], 1:235).
—I was down at White Horse Monday & Tuesday last—expect to go down again Sunday—Just as I left your letter
Attorney General's Office , Washington 186 Dearest mother, William O'Connor has returned, & has brought
I think Mrs Stafford is only middling—(I havn't haven't been at White Horse now for a fortnight) —My
attack—it still keeps its hold—my knees, & indeed whole joint & muscular power are affected—Was down at White
Camden Sunday afternoon May 19 My dear friend I came up last night from a three days visit to White Horse
the 7th from Brooklyn—& the 16th from Northampton —please give him the enclosed postal, I found at White
Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William Michael Rossetti, 30 May 1886
elaborately wrought balustrades, columns, & steps—all of the most beautiful marbles I ever saw, some white
A friend of mine, William D.
Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William E. Chapin & Company, 24 September 1866
men here—the scene is a curious one—the ward is perhaps 120 or 30 feet long—the cots each have their white
Walt Whitman to William S. Davis, 1 October 1863
have any thing but a cup of tea & some bread or crackers, (first rate tea though with milk & good white
not felt first rate myself— I am going to write to George to-day, as I see there is a daily mail to White
field near Richmond much better than we did from the Wilderness & Fredericksburgh—We get them now from White
House, they are put on boats there, & come all the way here, about 160 or 70 miles—White House is only
likely, is that our base of the army is to be changed to Harrison's Landing on James river instead of White
brother, it would deeply oblige me—address — Walt Whitman Washington D C Walt Whitman to Captain William
times—head, gastric & bladder bad —wet & dark to-day—nights middling fair Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 20–21 January 1891
—write often as convenient God bless you & Frau & my Boston friends— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
William White [New York: New York University Press, 1977], 2:585.
evn'g (welcome)—Stanley's companion & secretary (Hamilton Aide ) has been over to see me—Talcott Williams
Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 23 November 1890
Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William Sloane Kennedy, 23 December 1890
A grand looking old man—long white beard, aquiline features, keen eyes—spare, sinewy frame, full of restrained
Again last night I was asked to go to a society's meeting where a paper on L. of G. would be read, by William
do any thing appropriate to assist at the Lecture, Thursday evening Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
(if yet to be done) trim them, especially No: 1 and No: 4, leaving a little more white paper at bottom
the Press establishment, (counting-room or writing staff,) that could serve for my young friend, William
gilt edged—good job—bound in crepe—thick paper (like my Passage to India, robin-blue-egg color with white
good roads—one young lady I fell in with near where I was living had a team of her own, two handsome white
William Rossetti is far from well & is away at Ventnor recruiting.
Please send me word soon as they reach you & are delivered to Mr R— Walt Whitman Walt Whitman to William
William White [New York: New York University Press, 1978]).
James William Wallace and John Johnston to Walt Whitman, 18 May 1887
See William White's article in The American Book Collector, XI (May, 1961), 30–31, where Wood's second
Hale White, 25 May 1877
William Hale White (1831–1913) was a British writer and civil servant who sometimes published under the
In 1880, White wrote a review of Whitman's Two Rivulets titled "The Genius of Walt Whitman."
See the letter from White to Whitman of March 21, 1880.
Hale White, 6 November 1882
This letter is addressed: W Hale White | Park Hill | Carshalton Surrey | England.
White (1831–1913) published under a pseudonym The Autobiography of Mark Rutherford (1881) and Mark Rutherford's
See White's letter to Whitman of October 23, 1882.
According to Kennedy, in The Fight of a Book for the World (1926), 41, White wrote about Whitman in the