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Search : part 2 roblox story kate and jayla

6238 results

Walt Whitman and the Earth: A Study in Ecopoetics

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Killingsworth, M. Jimmie
Text:

Things of the Earth Chapter 2. The Fall of the Redwood Tree Chapter 3.

Perhaps every mite has once form'd part of a sick person—yet behold!

Words are signs of natural facts. 2.

The web of written words resonates with the stories the people tell.

She is sitting in her room thinking of a story now I'm telling you the story she is thinking. (1) In

Whitman: The Correspondence, Volume VII

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Genoways, Ted
Text:

L E T T E R 2 6 : J A N U A R Y 2 9 , 1 8 6 2 15 1862 26.

“No. 2” was part of a series of six articles entitled “How I Get Around at 60 and Take Notes.” 62 T H

L E T T E R 2 2 5 1 : J U L Y 2 , 1 8 9 0 103 1 2250.

Shively (2), 166. September 27. From Louisa Van Velsor June 18. From Kate Richardson, an Whitman.

August 2. From Kate A. Evans, a “rather October 24. From Harry Stafford. CT: gushing” admirer.

Catalog of the Walt Whitman Literary Manuscripts in the Walt Whitman Collection, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin

  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Text:

Works, 1846-1913, nd (2 boxes), II. Correspondence, 1863-1892, nd (1 box), III.

Catalog of the Walt Whitman Literary Manuscripts in the Trent Collection of Whitmaniana, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina

  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Text:

holdings that had belonged to Bucke, and many of the items listed in the catalogue of this sale were a part

Catalog of the Walt Whitman Poetry Manuscript in the Bolton-Stanwood Family Papers, American Antiquarian Society

  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Text:

This catalog was created, in part, from a photocopied image of the original manuscript obtained by the

Catalog of the Walt Whitman Literary Manuscripts in the George S. Hellman Collection, The Library of Congress

  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Text:

This catalog was created, in part, from digital images of the original manuscripts obtained by The Walt

Catalog of the Walt Whitman Literary Manuscripts in the Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

  • Creator(s): Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Text:

This electronic catalog was created, in part, from catalog records and digital images of the original

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

The working premise of the project was that scholars from different parts of the world working on the

Floyd Stovall, 2 vols. (New York: New York University Press, 1963–1964).

Walt Whitman is already part of the blended cultural landscape in China.

The redwood trees of California have been an important part of that conservationist debate.

Harold Bloom (New York: Chelsea House, 1985), 2. T. S.

The Pragmatic Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Mack, Stephen John
Text:

"To Learn from the Crises of Anguish": Tragedy, History, and the Meaning of Democratic Mourning Part

Floyd Stovall. 2 vols. New York: New York University Press, 1963. QC The Quest for Certainty .

First, I attempt to explicate the many parts of Whitman's democratic vision and describe how those parts

In chapter 2, I take up the issue of Whitman's democratic conception of selfhood.

Just as significant is the pivotal part played by emotion in the transaction.

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

(LGV 2:365) Just as the “Songs of Parting” cluster works on a reader’s emotions, so, too, does the “Calamus

(LGV 2:561) notes 1.

2.

as part two, and twenty-three poems as part three.

Ibid., chapter 2. 14. Tao Te Ching, chapter 2. 15. Chuang-tzu, chapter 32. 16.

Projecting Whitman: The Evolution and Remediation of The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Ed Folsom
Text:

I would like to begin by briefly telling a long story, an all too familiar one, a story of American literary

scholarship over the last half century, a story of how changing technologies have gradually altered

It's a story that—in the case of Walt Whitman and many others—begins in the late 1940s and early 1950s

So in the mid-1950s a relatively young group of twelve scholars joined together to devote a major part

The three-volume Variorum Edition of Leaves of Grass , part of the , was originally slated to record

"Each Part and Tag of Me is a Miracle": Reflections after Tagging the 1867 Leaves of Grass

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Brett Barney
Text:

good measure, behind all of these he included yet another thin sheaf of poems titled "Songs before Parting

the page break tags in "Drum Taps," a "b" to those in "Sequel," and a "c" to those in "Songs before Parting

Even assuming that the poem is part of the front matter, it remains unclear whether it is intended as

know of Whitman's concern for "look and feel" it is potentially useful to be able to isolate each part

"Each Part and Tag of Me is a Miracle": Reflections after Tagging the 1867 Leaves of Grass

Debating Manliness: Thomas Wentworth Higginson, William Sloane Kennedy, and the Question of Whitman

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Nelson, Robert K. | Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

He lied to me 2 or 3 times.

Several of his friends know the story in part (from his own lips).

This is the whole story.

Appleton, 1908), 2:19–20.

(2:16).

Intimate with Walt: Selections from Whitman’s Conversations with Horace Traubel 1888-1892

  • Date: 2001
  • Creator(s): Schmidgall, Gary
Text:

Introduction xxxii Part One Whitman’s two-story house on Mickle Street, Camden, in 1890 The Whitman house

2:244 The instant you 2:351 W. rarely gives 2:261 Walt do I come 2:375 I want to be 4:88 Well—you are

I made that 2:98 Tell her 5:63 About that 7:370 roared when I 8:116 Yes, it was 1:390 It is part 7:294

86 Said again 2:146 W. said to me 2:316 You’ll hear that 2:306 that big story 2:415 Walt, are you 2:511

115 It is hard 2:235 I have belly aches 2:356 Bad day today 2:376 Osler made light 2:383 I am getting

An Online Guide to Walt Whitman's Dispersed Manuscripts

  • Creator(s): Brett Barney
Text:

The enhanced finding aids and the accompanying digital images developed as part of this project help

As part of the project, we request digital images of poetry manuscripts from the holding repositories

We have identified the poetic lines written on the verso as part of an extremely important Whitman poem

For a more detailed illustration of the stylesheet, see figure 2, to see how the component EAD files

He is part of the very fabric of American life, its past, present, and no doubt future as well.

Walt Whitman & the Irish

  • Date: 2000
  • Creator(s): Krieg, Joann P.
Text:

Historical Background Chapter 2. Time Line Chapter 3. New York City Chapter 4.

As for Carleton, Yeats so admired his writing that he edited the anthology Stories from Carleton (1889

Whitman created no Irish characters in his early works of fiction but did include the Irish as part of

of this "Irishness" swirled about Whitman as he trod the streets of his "Mannahatta," and it became part

The defeat at the Boyne would echo through the streets of New York City every July for a good part of

From Georgetown University's American Studies Crossroads Project

  • Creator(s): Elizabeth Lorang
Text:

Whitman also experimented with radically different ways of dividing "Song of Myself" into parts: for

This part of the will be a special boon for those interested in reception history.

This hypertext edition of "Song of Myself," then, will constitute the most important part of a large,

us this good advice: we should concentrate, he said, on doing a small core sample of the , a living part

Our long-range plan is to assign parts of the project to field editors once we have fully developed the

The Evolution of Walt Whitman: An Expanded Edition

  • Date: 1999
  • Creator(s): Asselineau, Roger
Text:

In 1868, HAPPY BUREAUCRAT, TORMENTED POET 2 I I in a story entitled The Carpenter, he presented Christ

Thus he belatedly took cognizance 2 2 2 THE EVOLUTION OF WALT WHITMAN in I876 of the transformation which

Then, on April 2 2 O'Connor in his turn came into the lists, 2 2 6 THE EVOLUTION OF WALT WHITMAN striking

See Imprints, p. 2. 2.

"Letter to Harry Stafford, January 2, I884, Berg Collection. 2.

Biography of Richard Maurice Bucke

  • Date: 1998
  • Creator(s): Howard Nelson
Text:

Shoshone Indians and a trek through the Rocky Mountains in winter that cost him one of his feet and part

Though their visit was outwardly unremarkable, after parting Bucke found himself in a state of "mental

A Whitman Chronology

  • Date: 1998
  • Creator(s): Krieg, Joann P.
Text:

:2 1 -2 2 ). 2 4 APRIL.

:2 4 2 ).

(Myerson, Time, 2 8 2 ) 2 JUNE.

:2 2 2 , 223). 26 JUNE.

:2 9 8 ). 1 7 - 2 8 OCTOBER.Whitman is ill of a liver disorder, and a newspaper story puts him at death's

Commentary

  • Date: 1997
  • Creator(s): Helms, Alan | Parker, Hershel
Text:

Whitman's 'Gay Manifesto,"' which appeared in the September 1996 issue of Nineteenth-Century Literature (51:2)

notebook a sequence of twelve poems ("Live Oak with Moss" or "Live Oak, with Moss") that narrate the story

The Real "Live Oak, with Moss": Straight Talk about Whitman's "Gay Manifesto"

  • Date: 1996
  • Creator(s): Parker, Hershel
Text:

poet who previously had seen himself as the singer of songs for "The States" (l. 43), like Whitman in parts

The five-line fourth poem ("This moment as I sit alone") announces the poet's thought (part hope, part

(l. 46) and answers that it is the parting of two men on a pier: "The one to remain hung on the other's

of a love affair with a man, along with a story of a coming out that affects Whitman's other poetry

Nina Baym, et al., 2 vols. (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1994), I, 2,097–2,101.

Traveling with the Wounded: Walt Whitman and Washington's Civil War Hospitals

  • Date: 1996
  • Creator(s): Murray, Martin G. | Price, Kenneth M., Folsom, Ed
Text:

The journey from Falmouth to Washington was made in two parts: first by rail to Aquia Creek Landing,

After the war, the poet rented a room in the 3-story brick building shown directly next to the Corcoran

He died on August 2, 1863.

Press, 1981), 2.

Floyd Stovall (New York: New York University Press, 1964), 2: 625.

Dollars and Sense in Collaborative Digital Scholarship: The Example of the Walt Whitman Hypertext Archive

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

We are attempting this in part because Whitman's writings defy the constraints of the book.

Part of the grant money is explicitly earmarked to support and document experimentation with various

Walt Whitman & the World

  • Date: 1995
  • Creator(s): Allen, Gay Wilson | Folsom, Ed
Text:

3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 "or a hand kerchief.... designedly dropped" - a n d there is a break down, a designed

Nowyou can ofcourse saythat he meant pure verse and that the foot is a paeon 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 "or

(London: Walter Scott,1894),xx-xxi, xxii. 2 2 .

Appleton, 1908), 2:431-432. 2.

This I however is a part ofAmerica, a part ofthe earth, a part of mankind, a part of the All.

Constructing the German Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1995
  • Creator(s): Grünzweig, Walter
Text:

M A X H A Y E K ( 1 8 8 2 - ?

Inspired bythe Irish nationalist movement, NOTES TO PAGES 2 0 -2 3 213 this group was part ofthe British

10.See Griinzweig, '"Teach Me Your Rhythm,'" pp. 2 2 6 -2 2 8 . n.

Grunzweig, 16 December1987. 2.

2 0 3 finde ihn doch nicht.

World Literature: Exclusive Interview with Ken Price and Caterina Bernardini, Scholars of the Works of Whitman, the King of the Poets of Democracy

  • Creator(s): Ken Price
Text:

Etemad [Tehran, Iran] (July 2, 2013). 1) In some anthologies we read about the “Whitmanic” elements.

His poetry celebrates democracy and encompasses a diverse range of people. 2) If we use a stylistic approach

fact believed that a great poet would be embraced by readers, but this was a miscalculation, on his part

Pete the Great: A Biography of Peter Doyle

  • Date: 1994
  • Creator(s): Murray, Martin G.
Text:

BUT PURSUE HER NO MORE." ( , 2: 887).

"Let Riker go to hell," Walt advised Pete ( ., 2:106).

Peter's Catholic Church ( ., 2: 113).

Cloud, on the corner of 9th and F Streets, NW ( ., 2: 116).

Whites ( ., 2: 308).

Walt Whitman: The Centennial Essays

  • Date: 1994
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Galway Kinnell, however, hears another part ofthe story when he observes that in "Lilacs" "the griefis

Vistas(Pw, 2:426-433).

"(Pw, 2:363-364).

SeePW, 2:361-362n.

5I7;NUP, 6: 2,I71.

Whitman’s “Live Oak with Moss”

  • Date: 1992
  • Creator(s): Helms, Alan
Text:

twelve of the poems had originally formed a sequence entitled "Live Oak with Moss," which tells the story

Only in "Live Oak" do we get a clear story of a love affair with a man, along with a story of a coming

Poem 2 gives the sequence part of its title: "I saw in Louisiana a live-oak growing."

But he knows he can't—except of course in "parting," which by this point in Whitman's career has become

He's extremely ambivalent about the act of writing poetry: in poem 2 he needs a lover to "utter leaves

The Continuing Presence of Walt Whitman: The Life after the Life

  • Date: 1992
  • Creator(s): Martin, Robert K.
Text:

, while another part of herself (her body?)

But then everything is also part of everything else, in a sort of mystic relation of parts to wholes.

I am thinking of book 1,part 3 ("Statement"), and the more obviously parodic section of book 2 called

Only in "Live Oak" do we get a clear story of a love affair with a man, along with a story of a coming

Poem 2 gives the sequence part of its title: "I saw in Louisiana a live-oak growing."

Whitman in His Own Time

  • Date: 1991
  • Creator(s): Myerson, Joel
Text:

For my part, I said, I thought Mr.

Late number, 328 Mickle Street 2.

"That is only a part and not the most impor tant part of it,'' said Dr. Furness, in substance.

It's all part of the whole; and I can no more honestly cut out that part than any other.''

I caught some part of the writer's faith in American manhood and the part America was going to play in

Selected Letters of Whitman

  • Date: 1990
  • Creator(s): Miller, Edwin Haviland
Text:

ofthe original story, consisting very much ofprolix 2 2 Selected Letters of Walt Whitman details of

historical events, gives it thatme-but that part of the story I have contracted into a few paragraphs-and

J.2& shall probably go there & spend a few days, latter part of October. . . .

Traubel, 2: 39· 2.

6 2 - 2 8 0 64.

Walt Whitman's “Song Of Myself”

  • Date: 1989
  • Creator(s): Miller, Edwin Haviland
Text:

SONG OF MYSELF 2 :2 2 -3 :5 1 Have you reckoned a thousand acres much ?

SONG OF M YSELF 2 1 :4 3 2 -2 2 :4 6 7 1 5 Have you olitstript the rest ?

SONG OF M YSELF 2 5 :5 6 4 -2 6 :5 9 2 19 We also ascend dazzling and tremendous as the sun, We found

SONG OF M YSELF 4 9 :1 2 9 6 -5 2 :1 3 2 4 43 t ascend from the moon . . . .

AmericanPoetry, 2, no. 2 (Winter 1985): 2-16. Adicks, Richard R.

Lystia travy

  • Date: 1969
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

2 Любов до тіла мужчини чи жіночого тіла не потребує виправдань — адже тіло саму не потребує виправдань

Diary of Edmund Gosse: Sat. Jan. 3

  • Date: 1966
  • Creator(s): Edmund Gosse
Text:

Stayed till 2. Back to hotel with Barrett. He very tired with 9 performances.

Interpretation of the Poetry of Walt Whitman

  • Date: 1930
  • Creator(s): Pavese, Cesare
Text:

it is not art in parts d, e, f.’

Section 38 initiates a second part.

In the 2 chapter, “W. W.'

Michaud, Littérature Amèricanie, ed.cit., 41-2. 15 Sherwood Anderson, A Storyteller’s Story (Garden City

Trent, op.cit., 494. 2 J.

Antolohia amerykanskoi poezii 1855–1925

  • Date: 1928
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

ПІСНЯ ПРО ТЕСЛЯРСЬКУ СОКИРУ 2 Вітайте нам, всі країни, землі, кожна за своє, Вітайте нам, країни сосни

The Fight of a Book for the World

  • Date: 1926
  • Creator(s): William Sloane Kennedy
Text:

I Story of the Reception of ''Leaves of Grass" by the World 3 PART II (Reader'sVade-Mecum of Aids) I

PART I STORY OF THE RECEPTION OF LEAVES OFGRASS BY THE WORLD J PART I Story of the Reception of Leaves

In 1876, shortly after the issue of Whitman's personal 2 -volume Centennial edition, and STORY OF ITS

W. 2.

Centenarian's Story, 177. Bryant, William Cullen, 287, Chadwick, John, 2, 139. note.

Personal Recollections of Walt Whitman

  • Date: June 1919
  • Creator(s): William Roscoe Thayer
Text:

"That is only a part and not the most important part of it," said Dr. Furness, in substance.

U NION L EAGUE , P HILADELPHIA , August 2, 1885.

The house, or rather, cottage, is only two stories high and less than fie paces wide.

What you call evil is all part of it. If you have a hill, you've got to have a hollow.

It's all part of the whole; and I can no more honestly cut out that part than any other."

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890-1891

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): J. Jonston, M.D. | J. W. Wallace
Text:

-parts against The young man informed me that "Mr.

(See Leaves of Grass," p. 56.) 2.

Wednesday, October 2%th.~-1 called atW.'

' Jan. 2<)th. No change.

One Vol.$2 438pp.,GreeCover.Singlcopiesent.

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: In Camden, October 27th to November 2nd

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): John Johnston | James William Wallace
Text:

November 2nd VISITS TO WALT WHITMAN AND HIS FRIENDS, E TC ., IN 1891 IN CAMDEN O CTOBER 27 TH TO N OVEMBER 2

—once told a story of a man he had in his studio at Boston.

He spoke of the heroine of the second story: a girl taken in childhood by Indians and brought up by them

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: General Impressions of Whitman's Personality

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): John Johnston | James William Wallace
Text:

slight intrinsic importance, but which, I trust, will add to the completeness and verisimilitude of the story

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: In Camden

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): John Johnston
Text:

The houses are, for the most part, timbered structures, painted different, low-toned colours, and of

Number 328—which, by the way, is duplicated next door—is an unpretentious, two-storied building, with

card, and was shown into a room on the left side of the lobby—a sort of parlour—with the blinds three-parts

To which I replied, and he continued, "You find it very warm in these parts, don't you?

(See "Leaves of Grass," p. 56.) 2.

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: First Visit to Camden, September 8th and 9th

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): J. W. Wallace
Text:

brotherly and always silently planning for my benefit; simple, spontaneous, and natural; easily taking his part

One item of the talk (in connection with the packing of our belongings) was a little story of Whitman's

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: In Camden, October 15th to 24th

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): John Johnston | J. W. Wallace
Text:

But I let the greater part of my letter go without answering them. I can't ."

This is, in part, the influence I wish 'Leaves of Grass' to have.

Well, I'll not go back on my promise, thought it seems almost too precious to part with.

I ought not to take the money from you, but I have spent part of it to-day for another purpose."

Horace told W. a story—but I don't remember in what connection—about an American lady, Mrs.

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: Walt Whitman's Friends in Lancashire

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): J. W. Wallace
Text:

together should not be spent solely in the discussion of current topics and events, but that some part

It resulted in part from our very diversity and from the curious way in which our several personalities

For the part which Whitman himself took in our correspondence, however, we were entirely unprepared.

Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891: Visit to West Hills

  • Date: 1917
  • Creator(s): John Johnston
Text:

Leaves of Grass,' because I could not afford to buy it; but I've heard tell that some folks say some parts

Walt Whitman: The Last Phase

  • Date: June 1909
  • Creator(s): Elizabeth Leavitt Keller
Text:

The owner was but a few inches above his worldly possessions; he seemed a part of them, and the picture

Whitman in conversation, for in this he seldom took the leading part; and as it was wished above all

We hoped that it might be a permanent improvement, but it was the same old story: extra exertion and

He could always take his own part, and fortunately was capable of doing so still; had it been otherwise

Personal Recollections of Walt Whitman

  • Date: June 1907
  • Creator(s): Ellen M. Calder
Text:

there was a vacant hall bedroom on the floor where we were keeping house—in two rooms of the upper story

for him; the Capitol, too, was a never-ending source of please; and with him I explored the older part

Evans, him of the "meteor beard," go past to his office, it was suggested that O'Connor write a story

Some fresh cold water must be brought in, in a little kettle,—for a very important part of the proceeding

This was in the early part of the conflict, as early perhaps as the spring of 1863.

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