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Search : part 2 roblox story kate and jayla

6238 results

Tyndale, Hector (1821–1880)

  • Creator(s): Kohn, Denise
Text:

model—to focus on the massiveness of his poetry without paying too much attention to the individual parts

The Two Worlds United

  • Date: 17 August 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

It seems to have been an enormous stretch of condescension of the part of "Victoria Regina" to communicate

Let a generous and large-hearted recognition be made on the part of the public to those who have persevered

to the end, amid doubt and danger, amid sneers and suspicions on the part of the conceited doubters

However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified

Two Visitors

  • Date: 13 September 1879
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Both are billed to take leading parts in the Kansas quarter centennial celebration at Lawrence next Monday

Every man I have met here is full of pride in this great part of Jefferson's Louisiana purchase.

The Two Systems

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

However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified

Two Rivulets, Author's Edition [1876]

  • Creator(s): Keuling-Stout, Frances E.
Text:

—are but parts of the Venture which my Poems entirely are. (11)  It is this type of indirection that

Two Minutes with Walt Whitman

  • Date: 12 February 1889
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

In the little frame house on Mickle street, Camden, confined to his second story front room, with a cheerless

Two American Sailors in a Spanish Dungeon

  • Date: 20 September 20, 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

Weeks is the plain story of a man who has been unjustly and barbarously treated by the Spanish government

However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified

Twenty Years.

  • Date: 1891–1892
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

bearded—the stout-strong frame, Dress'd in its russet suit of good Scotch cloth: (Then what the told-out story

Twentieth-Century Mass Media Appearances

  • Date: 2006
  • Creator(s): Jewell, Andrew | Price, Kenneth M.
Text:

stressed when the United States Postal Service unveiled first in Camden a Whitman postage stamp as part

Treatments of Whitman provide a way to gauge the type of stories popular culture was telling about US

"One Wicked Impulse" for his series "Favorite Story TV."

Covert to a major character, but in other respects the stories differ markedly from one another.

Like "Favorite Story TV," Fox's The Simpsons invoked Whitman primarily for the power of his name.

Tuesday, September 9, 1890

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

This reminds me—this revives the whole story!" But further, "I do not consider it a good version.

Tuesday, September 8, 1891

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

Had made no intimate friendships shipboard "which lessens the pain of parting."

W. seemed to part with it with some pain.

Is very quiet—apt to listen to discussions—to take no part except when asked a question.

s personality—story, all intimate facts, interspersed. Much humor—W.'

Tuesday, September 4th, 1888.

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

Then he went on: "I once read a story of Socrates—I can't tell where any more: I was young at the time—it

was in New York: a story, if I'm not mistaken, from Bacon, or credited to him.

As the story goes it was such a man in old Greece who happened into the Socratian circle—into one of

W. told this story with great gusto.

There's always a heap in such stories, but this, likely enough, this Socratian story, is fiction, as

Tuesday, September 3, 1889

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

I liked the first part of the translation much better than the last—there was a freshness about it.

W. asked, "What is the story you wish to tell—or don't you want to tell it now?"

explained his counsel from Murray (London)—on the question of habiliment—how much less was luxury a part

Tuesday, September 29, 1891

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

Yes, dead and buried, and here is the whole story of it,' which was said in a way to induce me to go

Tuesday, September 25th, 1888.

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

Read me part of Kennedy's letter.

The Herald, Boston,Aug. 2, 1887.My dear friend:I enclose for the cottage $285 in two checks of $50 and

Tuesday, September 23, 1890

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

I am much attracted by a story that comes to us from the Greek, either in its literature or by some tradition

it is a sublime, a profound story!

Tuesday, September 2, 1890

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

Tuesday, September 2, 18905:45 P.M. W.'

You remember in the Hebrew canticles—stories—records—histories—how they recite that something may have

Tuesday, September 2, 1890

Tuesday, September 16, 1890

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

In music, in the tunes I hear, I like melodies I have heard before—brief strains: the old story—the old

Tuesday, September 11th, 1888.

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

A wonderful story, if no more—but more, too." He asked me: "Did you send the Carlyle bit?"

—the space for each averaging only 3 1/2 pages.

Tuesday, September 10, 1889

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

And that is very profound: to me it has always seemed as if that enclosed the whole story—saying that

I told him a story I had heard of Eakins—of a girl model who had appeared before the class, nude, with

Morris told him a story he had from Hamilton Gibson—of a twig, or limb, from the pine-tree over-arching

W. then told the story of the Englishman whom a doctor had treated by a thermometer—the doctor having

I walked through the storm to the ferry with Morris, when we parted.

Tuesday, September 1, 1891

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

A story travelling about in the papers took W. capture when I narrated it: a poor Catholic, denied admission

Tuesday, October 8, 1889

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

Bucke's book in the statistical, geneological way—as far as that goes—reliable, confirmed: all the first part

Tuesday, October 7, 1890

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

"I am ready to be part of the show: well you know." Read him letter I had from Law.

it is an old story fitting a new instance!" Would have me take Lippincott's.

"I have just been reading Clark Russell's story there—'A Marriage at Sea.'

Tuesday, October 6, 1891

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

A story of Kipling's there, started with quite a quote from W.

Tuesday, October 30, 1888.

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

I for my part can see no reason why West should not have his say—why any man should not have his say:

I for my part am distrustful of any personal rules or public customs which interpose barriers between

W. took the thing smilingly: "That is a familiar story: I am not a saint—have never been guilty of setting

Tuesday, October 29, 1889

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

by part, like the several lays of the telescope."

, a story—poem—used in the readers—at least, used when I was a boy, the Peterkin story.

But he jocularly turned the matter off by a story. "Did I never tell you the Long Island story?

Then the story goes on—oh!

Saying further: "I thought it a happy illustration—that story.

Tuesday, October 28, 1890

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

s counterpart intellectually, but a man nevertheless of parts and of hopeful demeanor—one of the cleanest

Tuesday, October 27, 1891

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

Wallace rather quiet, yet now and then freely taking part. Likes her ways—her voice, etc.

Tuesday, October 23, 1888.

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

Then: "You've heard the story of the valet who was packing up for his master?

the dramas, the plays, the poems: least accessible, yet greatest of all—greater than the novels, stories

W. laughed most heartily: then, as if to satisfy himself, went over the story half in soliloquy, with

And the Bishops are not all dead yet: they still crop up to remind us of the faithfulness of the old story

Tuesday, October 22, 1889

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

He probably never told us the whole story.

Tuesday, October 21, 1890

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

The New York party were expected over at 2:55 or thereabouts.

Lafayette till 11:40—sat at table (Ingersoll by and by coming downstairs from his people)—debated, told stories

Tuesday, October 20, 1891

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

I often think to take up pencil and tell it—or hint, suggest it—my own, William's, part in it.

Tuesday, October 16, 1888.

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

Garrison always spoke like a man who had a story to tell and was determined to tell it: he never seemed

Tuesday, October 15, 1889

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

"No—I very rarely read continued stories." Talking, though, quite fully, of Ebers.

Tuesday, November 6, 1888.

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

I put no faith in the stories of his political crookedness: his literary enemies make a lot of it: consider

stream: there is a spirit abroad in our age which is bent upon the destruction of falsely cherished stories

that Cæsar was not thus and so, but thus and so: that there was no William Tell—that the William Tell story

the last days of Socrates: it is wonderfully cute, keen, undeniable: he complained that the usual stories

Grote had a peculiar way of putting his stories into shape: I might express his Socrates version in such

Tuesday, November 4, 1890

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

And on the money matter again, "It reminds me of a story I used to hear and tell with a great deal of

Tuesday, November 3, 1891

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

But he could tell a good story, I insisted.

Tuesday, November 27, 1888

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

He said: "No—not really read it: yet I looked it honestly over—looked through the whole story."

The story "had no attraction" for him.

men who take the large view that includes all—Jesus, Buddha, Zoroaster, Confucius: know they are all part

"It seems to me you may find some use for it: it belongs to the English end of our story: read it anyway

Tuesday, November 26, 1889

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

It is the Spartan story over again—the youth who stole the fox, of which, though it gnawed at his vitals

Entered into details of the story: "It was a principle with the Spartans that there was, for instance

Tuesday, November 25, 1890

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

none—that perhaps to call it by the name of one of the unprinted pieces, 'The Brazen Android and Other Stories

It is the story of all incomes (nearly) say, from three thousand a year to ten.

I sent the seven stories, six printed, and the Brazen Android with Walt's preface, to Houghton & Mifflin

I may yet accept, at any rate, a part of it.

Tuesday, November 20, 1888.

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

He thought Burr "justly should be regarded as above the ordinary estimate of him"—"the school book stories

intellectualist: cold dispassionate, calculating: yet he was truly a patriot—performed no inconsiderable part

How good the stories he told! how well reflecting things as they must have been!"

Still the Paine story needed to be told.

whether one approves him or not—and to call him a Frenchman, or anything save an Italian, is meaningless).2.

Tuesday, November 17, 1891

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

Baker related some stories of Ingersoll's absolute nature—of their travels West—of long talks about Burns

Tuesday, November 13, 1888.

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

I repeated to him a Gartenlaube story told by a German who went to call on Hugo one early morning and

you remember that I said to you at the time that if the name was changed it would pass as a Whitman story

instead of a Millet story?"

W. had read the story. I asked: "Did n'tDidn't the resemblance strike you?" "Never."

Tuesday, November 12, 1889

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

Doctor would see it naturally falls into its place, a part of the sequence of affairs—would see it as

Last night I had him here telling me sailor-storiesstories of the big steamers.

Tuesday, November 11, 1890

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

two or three sentences—as on the printed slip, but the event itself partly frustrated me, but only part

It is part of the man!"

Tuesday, November 10, 1891

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

it is all stupid—hardly a choice between parts.

I want you somehow to take a hand in the contradiction of these stories, Horace.

"But I should like to know who furnished the thread of the story: if you can get that from Talcott without

I can see that he is annoyed by the Press story more and more.

Tuesday, May 8, 1888.

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

I spent a good part of the day over Two Rivulets, the Preface, and the Memoranda of the War, and was

The non-moral parts of it, such parts as simply are the "tally" of nature, are taken up into other portions

of L. of G.Leaves of Grass and are spiritualized, and each part belongs to the other.

Tuesday, May 7, 1889

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

I had been out in Germantown the main part of the day, working with Clifford over Johnson's Parker manuscript

Luburg's 145 North 8th Street"The above just as he punctuated it—and down in the corner his address, part

written and part printed.

And to Tom's further urgings: "Well—you must remember the story of the French physician who took a quart

I suggested the appointment of certain hours—say, 2 to 4 or 5 in the afternoon—a reception season, so

Tuesday, May 6, 1890

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

W. then: "That is literally my latest work—it was written within the past 2 or 3 months—sent to the Century—paid

Tuesday, May 29, 1888.

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

It's too long a story to begin on just as you are about to go home." Tuesday, May 29, 1888.

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