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Search : part 2 roblox story kate and jayla

6238 results

Amos T. Akerman to Charles Prossner, 9 November 1871

  • Date: November 9, 1871
  • Creator(s): Amos T. Akerman | Walt Whitman
Text:

aid them, in the premises, beyond that of requiring all the officers of the United States in those parts

Amos T. Akerman to D. L. Eaton, 13 November 1871

  • Date: November 13, 1871
  • Creator(s): Amos T. Akerman | Walt Whitman
Text:

I only hold that, as it was part of the contract that you should have the rooms in readiness, and they

Amos T. Akerman to Benjamin Conley, 2 December 1871

  • Date: December 2, 1871
  • Creator(s): Amos T. Akerman | Walt Whitman
Text:

Dec. 2, 1871. To his Excellency Benjamin Conley, Governor of Georgia, Atlanta, Geo.

Akerman to Benjamin Conley, 2 December 1871

Amos T. Akerman to Robert McPhail Smith, 4 December 1871

  • Date: December 4, 1871
  • Creator(s): Amos T. Akerman | Walt Whitman
Text:

He rewrote that part of the bill and unintentionally omitted the words "then and there."

Amos T. Akerman to Thomas Ewing, 2 December 1871

  • Date: December 2, 1871
  • Creator(s): Amos T. Akerman | Walt Whitman
Text:

Dec. 2, 1871. Thomas Ewing, Esq. Lancaster, Ohio.

Akerman to Thomas Ewing, 2 December 1871

Andrew J. Davis to Walt Whitman, 27 April 1876

  • Date: April 27, 1876
  • Creator(s): Andrew J. Davis
Text:

New York 27 Apl 187 6 Brother Walt Whitman Please send us by Express (address as above) 2 sets your books

"Noiseless Patient Spider, A" (1868)

  • Creator(s): Andriano, Joseph
Text:

"Spider" was finally incorporated into Leaves of Grass in 1881, still a part of "Whispers," which contained

By 1862 or 1863, in another notebook entry (Notebooks 2:522–523; 700), the worm had become a spider,

Stoddard, Charles Warren (1843–1909)

  • Creator(s): Andriano, Joseph
Text:

His letter of 2 April 1870 opens, "In the name of CALAMUS listen to me!"

Vol. 2. New York: New York UP, 1961. Stoddard, Charles Warren (1843–1909)

Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [1984]

  • Creator(s): Andriano, Joseph
Text:

JosephAndrianoNotebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [1984]Notebooks and Unpublished Prose Manuscripts [1984]Part

chronological order: Family Notes and Autobiography, Brooklyn and New York (volume 1); Washington (volume 2)

posterity: for example, in "Epictetus," exhorting himself to "avoid seeing her, or meeting her" (Notebooks 2:

whom he felt he loved too much—to the point of "feverish disproportionate adhesiveness" (Notebooks 2:

Carpenter, George Rice (1863–1909)

  • Creator(s): Andriano, Joseph
Text:

Wadsworth Longfellow (1901) and John Greenleaf Whittier (1903); and his biography of Walt Whitman (1909), part

Parodies

  • Creator(s): Andriano, Joseph
Text:

mock the pseudo-elitist exclusivity of the Classics Club: "And I will not read a book nor the least part

Chesterton also wrote a Whitman parody, as part of a parodic cluster of "Variations . . . on Old King

"To a Locomotive in Winter" (1876)

  • Creator(s): Andriano, Joseph
Text:

Locomotive in Winter" (1876)Having first appeared 19 February 1876, in the New York Daily Tribune, as part

Anna Gilchrist: Her Life and Writings

  • Date: 1887
  • Creator(s): Herbert Harlakendend Gilchrist | Anna Gilchrist | William Michael Rossetti
Text:

Nay, that is the most interesting part to your friend.

Oh, had we never met and never parted, Never parted.

Carlyle to hang fire; the story not to progress.

We give that part of the letter from W. D.

'No, itis part of the fun.'

Anna Hatch to Walt Whitman, 4 November 1891

  • Date: November 4, 1891
  • Creator(s): Anna Hatch
Text:

First—for being born just when you were , 2 nd for having the courage and manhood to write and "cast

Anna M. Wilkinson to Walt Whitman, 21 July 1884

  • Date: July 21, 1884
  • Creator(s): Anna M. Wilkinson
Annotations Text:

William White, 2:337).

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 18 May 1875

  • Date: May 18, 1875
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

That is the end of my long story.

trust & joy & hope which bind me to you bedded deep, grown to be, during these long years, a very part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 4–6 July 1874

  • Date: July 4–6, 1874
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

—Not more spontaneously & wholly without effort or volition on my part, does the sunlight flow into my

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 9 December 1874

  • Date: December 9, 1874
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Annotations Text:

Rossetti and Francis Hueffer edited a posthumous collection of Brown's stories including "The Dwale Bluth

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 4 September 1873

  • Date: September 4, 1873
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

the disease could not withstand the influences, but healthful life begin to flow again through every part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 9 March 1874

  • Date: March 9, 1874
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Annotations Text:

Having successfully submitted "Song of the Redwood-Tree" to Harper's New Monthly Magazine on November 2,

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 20 May 1873

  • Date: May 20, 1873
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

What can I tell you but the same old story of a heart fast anchored—of a soul to whom your soul is as

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 14 July 1872

  • Date: July 14, 1872
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Annotations Text:

The New York Herald reported on July 2, 1872, that Livingstone—almost certainly Gilchrist's "large-hearted

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 23 October 1871

  • Date: October 23, 1871
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

so live, so grow, so learn, so love that when I die you will say—"This woman has grown to be a very part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 24 January 1872

  • Date: January 24, 1872
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

And I chose this part because there is a capital day school for them handy.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 16–30 November 1875

  • Date: November 16–30, 1875
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

But the leaving him so happy with his young wife will make it easier for us to part—Nov. 26—Beatrice

And the account he gives of you is so cheerful—so vivid—it seems to part assunder a gloomy cloud that

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 21 April 1876

  • Date: April 21, 1876
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

They cannot get admission to any Hospital for the clinical part of the course—So that she is exceedingly

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 20 June 1879

  • Date: June 20, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

American friend coming over to try this line–we had a fine ship–fine officers & crew–& the latter part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 5 December 1879

  • Date: December 5, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

which I read your last note and traced on the little map —a most precious possession which I would not part

magnificent theatre, the free, unfettered conditions whereon humanity will enact a new drama, with the parts

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 25 January 1880

  • Date: January 25, 1880
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

That dear little grandson stayed with me two months till I really didn't know how to part with him, &

Annotations Text:

On August 2, 1879, Anne Gilchrist described her grandson and the Durham Cathedral (The Letters of Anne

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 2 August 1879

  • Date: August 2, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 2 August 1879

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 5 January 1879

  • Date: January 5, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Kate Hillard read an amusing paper on Swinburne at a meeting of the Woman's Club in Brooklyn—& we had

Annotations Text:

For the story of Swinburne's veneration of Whitman and his later recantation, see two essays by Terry

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 27 January 1879

  • Date: January 27, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Had some friendly chats with Kate Hillard last week, & went with her to call on Mrs.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 26 March 1879

  • Date: March 26, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Kate Hillard we often see & have lively chats with.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 18 March 1879

  • Date: March 18, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Kate Hillard often goes with us, & she is always good company.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 22 August 1880

  • Date: August 22, 1880
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

got her at home for a few weeks to help us through with the move in, and a sad pinch it will be to part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 3 September 1878

  • Date: September 3, 1878
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

I am never tired of hearing his stories (nor he of telling them) of hairbreadth escapes for him & his

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 25 October 1878

  • Date: October 25, 1878
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

She is in a delightful family who make her quite one with them—live in the best part of New York, and

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 13–21 October 1883

  • Date: October 13–21, 1883
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

it—a fine open sea—a delicious "briny odour"—and inland much that is curious and interesting—for this part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 27 January–13 February 1883

  • Date: January 27–February 13, 1883
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

I wonder if you will like a true story of Lady Dilke that I heard the other day—I do: It was before her

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 30 July 1883

  • Date: July 30, 1883
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

We have had pleasant glimpses of several American friends this summer—of Kate Hillard for instance, who

overturned them & it—but when they crawled out no worse harm was done than a few cuts from the glass—& Kate

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 5 April 1884

  • Date: April 5, 1884
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Annotations Text:

"A Backward Glance on My Own Road," The Critic, 4 (5 January 1884), 1–2.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 2 May 1884

  • Date: May 2, 1884
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Hampstead May 2, '84.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 2 May 1884

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 17 December 1884

  • Date: December 17, 1884
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

in his blouse, criticising her work with much animation & gesture; the background of the group, a part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 3–6 September [1871]

  • Date: September 3–6, 1871
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist | Walt Whitman
Text:

I will struggle to tell you my story. It seems to me a death struggle.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 3 November 1873

  • Date: November 3, 1873
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

perhaps that, & also even from before the war time with its tremendous strain emotional & physical & is part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 18 June 1882

  • Date: June 18, 1882
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

belief in this truth since it burst upon me a veritable sunrise in reading your poems in 1869—each part

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 6–12 October 1879

  • Date: October 6–12, 1879
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

that one resents that mere accident of slight bodily infirmity being thrust forward as if it were a part

They kissed one another heartily at parting.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 28 March 1880

  • Date: March 28, 1880
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

My love to all My thoughts travel daily to America—it has become a part of my life in a very real sense

A Woman's Estimate of Walt Whitman

  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist [unsigned in original]
Text:

In the series headed "Calamus," for instance, in some of the "Songs of Parting," the "Voice out of the

It is true that instinct of silence I spoke of is a beautiful, imperishable part of nature too.

"These are not parts and poems of the body only, but of the soul. "O, I say now these are soul."

"Sure as Life holds all parts together, Death holds all parts together."

"The body parts away at last for the journeys of the soul."

Annie Nathan Meyer to Walt Whitman, 12 January 1891

  • Date: January 12, 1891
  • Creator(s): Annie Nathan Meyer
Annotations Text:

Brander Matthews (1852–1929) was a prolific American writer and critic who wrote novels, plays, short stories

volumes of poems and was an indefatigable compiler of anthologies, among which were Poets of America, 2

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