Simply enter the word you wish to find and the search engine will search for every instance of the word in the journals. For example: Fight. All instances of the use of the word fight will show up on the results page.
Using an asterisk (*) will increase the odds of finding the results you are seeking. For example: Fight*. The search results will display every instance of fight, fights, fighting, etc. More than one wildcard may be used. For example: *ricar*. This search will return most references to the Aricara tribe, including Ricara, Ricares, Aricaris, Ricaries, Ricaree, Ricareis, and Ricarra. Using a question mark (?) instead of an asterisk (*) will allow you to search for a single character. For example, r?n will find all instances of ran and run, but will not find rain or ruin.
Searches are not case sensitive. For example: george will come up with the same results as George.
Searching for a specific phrase may help narrow down the results. Rather long phrases are no problem. For example: "This white pudding we all esteem".
Because of the creative spellings used by the journalists, it may be necessary to try your search multiple times. For example: P?ro*. This search brings up numerous variant spellings of the French word pirogue, "a large dugout canoe or open boat." Searching for P?*r*og?* will bring up other variant spellings. Searching for canoe or boat also may be helpful.
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publishing establishment on Broadway, whose proprietors advertised it, and sent specimen copies to the journals
The journals remained silent, and of the copies sent to the distinguished persons several were returned
poor show among the exhibitors, and this was a subject for the taunts and sneers of the English journals
See also Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, 1836, vol. vi. p. 361. VOL.
By WILLIAM AINSWORTH, Esq., in the Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, vol. xi. pp. 1-21.
We have already given an account of his preliminary visits to Mosul,—of his inspection of the * Journal
—Wisconsin Journal. ITS CAPITAL.
Traubel’s“liberaltendencies”wereimpressivelydemonstratedinthe pages of the Conservator, a monthly journal
The journals are many of them inveterately spiteful.
to be put in gaol any more than Robert Ingersoll or Walt Whitman or the editor of the great daily journal
Intimate with Walt 230 The Snarling Press “It seems to me that in the whole range of journals pretending
Traubel responds with the view that “letters, journals, should be free: float along word by word, as it
(One of Whit man's favorite passages culled from his journal reading was "The mountains, rivers, forests
Gregory Woods : 139 ported this transatlantic tendency and published these poets in its own house journal
that recalls how agitated he could become when he was in love, as in the following entry from his journal
How can we capture between journal covers a major literary figure who pretends literature doesn't exist
He was deeply involved in the Body Politic,Can ada's leading gay and lesbian journal, and in the AIDS
In his journal, Bronson Alcott will describe the Thoreau-Whitman encounter: "Each seemed planted fast
The function of journalism is to sift the wheat, but not to burn what it conceives to be chaff with unquenchable
—T "In France, as in Germany, such a misrepresentation as even the foremost journals have given of Mr
"— Court Journal "A book of remarkable construction, and at the present moment, peculiarly useful—very
—See Reviews in the Religious Journals New Book by the "English Gustave Doré."
The Art Journal says, in a long article, that it thoroughly explains who these old giants were, the position
Mark Twain, in the political an.d social comments, and sometimes flat in the style of contemporary journalism
, and suggest something to m e-so I now make fuller notes, or a sort of jour nal, (not a mere dry journal
The journals are often inveterately spiteful.
Have been dipping in the new French book Amiel's Journal Intime trans lated by Mrs: Humphrey Ward.
Stafford's granddaughter, Susan Browning. 55· In his journal Burroughs wrote: "He presses my hand long
eventful campaign, and gives glimpses of many things untold in any official reports or books or journals
The journals publish a regular directory of them—a long list.
Clifford sends me this: (From London Quarterly Journal, April '91.)
Bok writes this story to the Boston Journal about W.
I read his contest in Appleton's Journal with Burroughs on Hugo. Brilliant.
Tarr wanted it for one of the engineering journals—wanted me to write something to go with it.
But I had already written for another journal all I wished to say publicly.
He was editor and owner or part owner of "the Broadway Journal."
The journals publish a regular directory of them—a long list.
In the department of science, and the specialty of journalism, there appear, in these States, promises
Everybody reads, and truly nearly everybody writes, either books, or for the magazines or journals.
Compared with the past, our modern science soars, and our journals serve—but ideal and even ordinary
Then further, "Hartmann appears to be journalizing in New York.
The Morning Journal (N.Y.) wrote him this morning for a piece, which he sent off.
Morning Journal paper here today.
Nearby a couple of copies of the Journal of Speculative Philosophy.
I picked up Philadelphia Home Journal from floor.
Repeatedly speaks of this as "the Moncure-Conwayism of journalism."
Gave me a copy of the journal called Society with its big flaring initial letter, and said, "I don't
Gave me also a copy of the Photographic Journal containing a piece on the Gutekunst portrait—a picture
W. said again as to the dinner: "The journal—paper—there: Society, is it?
He has gone with Curtis, there, with the Home Journal."
His tone toward you, in the Woman's Journal article (and the Nation was probably his,) shows extreme
Many years ago a reporter came to me about some comments anent me that appeared in Appleton's Journal
Whitman:Am glad to see by a morning journal that you are well enough to undertake a visit to New York
W. parody in the Presbyterian Journal. Laughed over it. "It's not at all bad."
I mentioned the fact that Appleton's Journal had called attention to the moral inconsistency of this
The Boston Journal will surely respond to it, and Tobey will rue the day. Old orthodox rascal!
The journals are many of them inveterately spiteful.
Hall, Newman, &c., of whose displeasure great journals even, like the Tribune, are afraid, and whose
Do you remember the Appleton's Journal piece there at the end?
Reference also to Appleton's Journal criticism. W. at once:"Well—does it not satisfy you?
Canadian psychiatrist Richard Maurice Bucke); he founded, edited, and published The Conservator, a journal
But his journal, The Conservator, which he began two years before Whitman's death and continued until
The journal frequently contained one of his Optimos poems, and in virtually every issue there would be
Conservator in 1899, and Gertrude, whom Horace and Anne educated at home, joined the staff of the journal
I argued, however, "Letters, journals, should be free: float along, word by word, as it comes, like the
I first wrote them a notice of his Journal just published, which they were pleased to say was too good
"That is Hicks' Journal: it is a rare and precious book now."
Tuesday, May 22, 1888.W. handed me a copy of The Journal of Speculative Philosophy.
W. gave me an envelope containing a clipping from Bell's Weekly Messenger and Farmers' Journal treating
Did I hear you say that things you saw in Emerson's journal were very favorable to the French?
lustre.”SeeD.W.,[reviewofW.EdmondstouneAytoun,Bothwell:APoeminSixPartsandLeavesof Grass], Canadian Journal
This professor quotes racialist and racist passages from Whitman’s journalism and concludesthat“togetatruepictureofWhitmanonehastoreadhiswritingsthat
favorable to the Temperance Reform; In the months before the publication of Franklin Evans , Whitman's journalism
On the Feuds Between Handel and Bononcini," by John Byrom, probably first published in The London Journal
story papers, various, full of strong-flavored romances, widely circulated—the onecent and two-cent journals—the
From the American Phrenological Journal. AN ENGLISH AND AN AMERICAN POET. LEAVES OF GRASS.
I said that I would send him a of Scott's copy Journal from home.
"The Tenedos Times" The Journal of the Mediterranean Destroyer Flotilla the of the War during early part
article on the poets before it goes into the magazine.There are two articles in the August Appleton's Journal
Watson's Art Journal with notice &c—I am anxious to see the picture.
Said also: "I read all the notices in the literary journals—every word of them.
consider it a special favor if you would forward me from time to time any of the English magazines or journals
These are the same moriuments about which there was a controversy in the public journals, June, 1884.
been at the pains to read it. . . . " Did you notice in the last volume a passage from Carlyle's Journal
In one, along a suite of noble rooms, 'Mid plenteous books and journals, paintings on the walls, fine
In one, along a suite of noble rooms, 'Mid plenteous books and journals, paintings on the walls, fine