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Search : journalism

1424 results

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 3)

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

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

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 4)

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

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?

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 5)

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

From Appleton's Biographical Journal.

Wondered in what guise "he would appear in these extensive journals," if at all.

Said he had read Huneker's piece in the Home Journal. "It is very warm—very.

Brought him from Clifford "Amiel's Journal." He was much pleased.

I have been thinking, in the House Journal—that they would give us their columns.

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 6)

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

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."

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 7)

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

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.

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 8)

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

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.

With Walt Whitman in Camden (vol. 9)

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

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

Woman in the Pulpit—Sermon by Mrs. Lydia Jenkins, Last Night

  • Date: 6 September 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Woman’s Wrongs

  • Date: 3 July 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Woman's Rights Movement and Whitman, The

  • Creator(s): Ceniza, Sherry
Text:

focus on phrenology and numerous other reform-related issues, Whitman also wrote for one of its journals

force in the woman's rights movement until her death in 1876 and the publisher/editor of the woman's journal

Women’s Rights in the New Library

  • Date: 8 May 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Women’s Rights—Free Love with A Vengeance

  • Date: 14 May 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

A Word to the Ladies

  • Date: 28 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Worth Trying

  • Date: 12 September 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Wright, Frances (Fanny) (1795–1852)

  • Creator(s): Hynes, Jennifer A.
Text:

The journal also supported a variety of programs aimed at helping the workingman, or mechanic, intending

Yellow Fever

  • Date: 27 April 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Yellow Fever

  • Date: 8 July 1859
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

The Yellow Fever At Quarantine

  • Date: 7 July 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Yesterday

  • Date: 27 November 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

[Yesterday was dull]

  • Date: 19 April 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

human nature and human life (London: Longman, 1825), 2: 62; and The Medico-chirurgical Review and Journal

For further reading on laudanum, see: Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science, American Journal

this editorial was written, and Herbert Bergman identified him as its author in Walt Whitman, The Journalism

Yesterday’s Great News—What It Suggests

  • Date: 27 August 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

The Journal of Commerce has an article to nearly the same effect.

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Yesterday's Visit Over the Water Works

  • Date: 14 May 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Young Men’s Unions

  • Date: 14 May 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Untitled

Text:

during his undergraduate days that "Waldo" (as he was called after his junior year) began keeping a journal

Three days later he recorded in his journal a resolution to purify and "spiritualize" his body, to drink

He had written about ferries in his journalism.

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