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It ends with the 'Songs of Parting,' under which the last is 'So Long,' a title that a foreigner and
He has gained a vigorousness of support on the part of his admirers that probably more than outbalances
His rhythm, so much burlesqued, is all of a part with the man and his ideas.
But these are parts of him.
has been already said, and must serve as a great reason why of this whole book—first, that the main part
The reader will always have his or her part to do, just as much as I have had mine.
—tangled and many- veined many-veined and hard has been thy part, To admiration has it been enacted?
Duly the needed discord parts offsetting, blending, Weaving from you, from Sleep, Night, Death itself
May-be I am non-literary and non-decorous (let me at least be human and pay part of my debt) in this
May 1846 [2] per.00603 Walt Whitman Visit to Plumbe's Gallery Brooklyn Daily Eagle 2 July 1846 [2] per
4 August 1846 [2] per.00608 Walt Whitman Literary Notices Brooklyn Daily Eagle 10 August 1846 [2] per
1846 [2] per.00614 Walt Whitman Notices of New Books Brooklyn Daily Eagle 16 November 1846 [2] per.00615
Eagle 18 October 1847 [2] per.00612 Walt Whitman Local Intelligence: &c.
8 November 1847 [2] per.00621 Walt Whitman Local Intelligence: &c.
Part of this story will be told The Good Gray Market . 75 in the next chapter, widening the frame to
WC 2:55. 2.
WC 2:421. 57.
2 (July 1868): 371.
Walt Whitman to John and Ursula Burroughs, 2 March 1875, CO 2:325. 64.
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
—Walt Whitman sat in the dining room of his modest two-story frame cottage in Camden to-day and looked
the poet and his father in the 1840s but was also reflected in Whitman's fiction from that period; stories
For his part, undoubtedly with pride in Jeff's accomplishments in mind, Walt praised the great achievements
(Prose Works 2:693). BibliographyAllen, Gay Wilson.
Floyd Stovall. 2 Vols. New York: New York UP, 1963-1964. Whitman, Thomas Jefferson [1833–1890]
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.
The unified guide project, a part of the online Walt Whitman Archive begun in 1995, is funded with a
Moreover, some prose passages are part of the gestation process of poetry.
(WJ, 2: 62; ellipsis mine).
(WJ, 2: 319).
(PW, 2: 373).
and one part national revival.
Crowell, 1976), 575. 2.
counterpoint to the narrative of Whitman as the roving bard, wandering the city to draw inspiration; in part
Figure 2.
The first page of a letter from author and historian Henry Onderdonk, Jr., to Whitman, dated July 2,
The Goodrich volume forms part of Whitman's cultural geography scrapbook, held in the Bayley/Whitman
and passing on, / And another generation playing its part and passing on in its turn."
Yet consider the forces that make the flower, the elements that are parts of it, the intricacy of its
eras, a few octillions of cubic leagues, do not hazard the span, or make it impatient, They are but parts
, anything is but a part.
A dingy two-story frame cottage, it nestles modestly between its more modern brick neighbors.
dishabille, by the window of the second room of the two humble apartments where he passes the greater part
He was still suffering slightly from his recent prostration by the heat and when the wanton breeze parted
for all time, I think their absorption into the future as elements and standards will be the best part
—tangled and many- vein'd and hard has been thy part, To admiration has it been enacted!
WILSoN PART 1 1. Erasing Race: The Lost Black Presence in Whitman’s Manuscripts 3 Ed FoLSom 2.
Transforming the Kosmos: Yusef Komunyakaa Musing on Walt Whitman 124 JACoB WILkENFELd PART 2 7.
June Jordan’s 1980 essay is the lead piece in part 2, which fea- tures reflections on Whitman by contemporary
Ibid., 2:572.
This kind of erasure would continue to dominate Civil War memory, as monuments to only part of the story
mother, he wrote, were "the two best and sweetest women I have ever seen or known" (Correspondence 2:
When the newly married couple moved into the Whitman household, Mattie became an integral part of the
the most important texts in American literature has, remarkably, never been examined in detail, in part
The poet answered, "Whack away at everything pertaining to literary life—mechanical part as well as the
understanding of literature, with words rooted in nature, with language as abundant as grass (fig. 2)
Great primer ornamented . . . 2 line pica ornamented No. 7 . . .
Enfans d'Adam . . . 2 line Saxon ornate shade . . . 2 lines English scribe text."
manchild or womanchild was born it should be suggested that a human being could be born" (Uncollected 2:
Vol. 2. 1908. New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 1961.Whitman, Louisa Van Velsor.
Vols. 1–2. New York: New York UP, 1961.____. The Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman. Ed.
Emory Holloway. 2 vols. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page, 1921.
fellow of my size, the friendly presence & magnetism needed, somehow, is not here)" (Correspondence 2:
Vols. 2–3. New York: New York UP, 1961–1964. Whitman, Louisa Orr Haslam (Mrs. George) (1842–1892)
Whitman directly, but he certainly heard of him through family stories, particularly the stories of his
and homestead in West Hills amounted to nearly five hundred acres of land and became an important part
Whitman, Jesse (brother) (1818–1870) The oldest of Whitman's eight siblings, Jesse Whitman was born on 2
Jeff and Walt (who for part of the time was living in Washington and keeping abreast of the situation
To varying degrees, he seems to have suppressed (or even repressed) the stories of the family's darker
, more troubled members—Jesse, Andrew, Edward, their father—perhaps fearing that part of his own psychic
Certainly Jesse's story is the darkest and most thoroughly suppressed, and it helped to form the fearful
LG (1871–72) Leaves of Grass (Washington, DC, 1871–2).
New York: Barnes, 1963), 187 n.21. ³⁰ NUPM, 2:635. ³¹ NUPM, 4:1346. ³² Prose Works 1892, 2:587–89. 16
See also NUPM, 2: 602. 32 Figure 2.5.
Arthur Golden, 2 vols.
152 and sexuality 2, 105, 131–2, 133–6, 141–3 “Farm Picture, A” 66 and slavery 3, 69, 73, 83, 86–7,
Appleton, 1908), 2: 431–832.
This however is part of America, a part of the earth, a part of mankind, a part of the All.
Translation from New Eclectic Magazine 2 (July 1868): 325–329; translator unknown. 2.
There, in the open countryside, in unspoilt nature, he spent the larger part of his youth.
Obviously it was not a poem but rather a local news story with visions.
Lawrence [London: Heinemann, 1967], 2: 633).
Manuscript in British Museum. 2.
3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 "or a hańd kerchief. . . . desígn edly drópped" —and there
Now you can of course say that he meant pure verse and the foot is a paeon 1 2 3 1 2
The night, the tempest, the seashore are part of the solitude and the despair they cover, part of the
Whitman's democracy shows itself in great part not as a political manifestation, but, rather, as a form
, and a strong part, of that future which is swiftly coming toward us, which is, indeed, already being
Chukovsky, "Turgenev i Whitman," Literatura Rossiya 2 (July 28, 1967): 17; I.
Christova, "Turgenev i Whitman," Russkaya literatura 2 (1966): 196–199.
Translated by Stephen Stepanchev. 2. D. S.
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
Daniel Halévy in Pages Libre 2 (1901): 75–80; and Henry Davray in La Plume (April 1901) and 2 (December
and a living part.
Viélé and three short stories by G. W. Cable.
Translated by Roger Asselineau. 2.
Uncollected Poetry and Prose of Walt Whitman , vol. 2, p. 95.
In spite of various readings or misreadings of , what is certain is that Whitman was part of the general
by Lincoln not to believe that there are moments in which the opposite is true: humanity—or a great part
The Orient will, in all certainty, eventually absorb a large part of that Americanism; and at the same
She impressed the young Walt with her stories of the family's patriotism during the Revolutionary War
They say there is a time to be silent, and though no part or function of man if properly treated is disgraceful
It consists for the most part of hack writers to the press who think it no portion of their duty to know
Veiled obscenity in the shape of a joke, a spicy story, or the reports of criminal cases in the Pall
above all else zealous for the virtue of their womankind, just as if they had never laughed over the story
Gespräche mit Goethe , Leipzig, Band 1 und 2: 1836, Band 3: 1848, S. 743.
Gespräche mit Goethe, Leipzig, Band 1 und 2: 1836, Band 3: 1848, S. 743.; Ernest Rhys, "Introduction"
Vol. 2. New York: Appleton, 1908. Waldron, Randall.
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.
(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.
: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
throughout his creative life, has prompted many readers and scholars to read Whitman's poetry, or part
Figure 2.
For example, the following manuscript, which likely used to be part of the scrapbook, reads: "Egypt,
"The most immense part of Ancient History is altogether unknown," Whitman writes here.
that had been, that pushed Whitman to write more, embrace more, project more, the most immense part
Anderson, “‘Be Up and Doing,’” 2. 50.
guise of mourning the demise of this gender-bending, part Amazonian, part Gorgonian beast whose pen had
“Thoughts and Things,” SP, June 2, 1860. 34.
“Thoughts and Things,” SP, Jan. 14, 1860, 2. 44. Pw 2:693–94; Ackerman, Portable Theater, 42.
Katz, Love Stories, 134. 35. “Frances Gray,” 1–2.
\-L~2.
Whitman s absolute faith in himself was a part of his faith in creation.
of the public, and ofhesitancy and inade quacy on the part of the poet.
Only through intellectualsympathy is 230 WHITMAN he a part of what he surveys.
They arebut parts anything isbut a part, See ever so far,here islimitlesspace outsideof that, Count everso
Mary Elizabeth appears in several of Walt Whitman's stories, and she often seems to be the subject of
She is an unnamed fourteen-year-old in his story "My Boys and Girls" (1844) and is presented as the sweet
Sister Mary in his children's story "The Half-Breed: A Tale of the Western Frontier" (1845).
Hannah Whitman appears in Whitman's story "My Boys and Girls" (1844) as a fair and delicate youth.
has been part of all the editions of Leaves of Grass.
The story is not unlike the story Whitman tells in his 1859 elegy “A 162 Radical Imaginaries WordOutoftheSea
Bryan Rennie (London: Equinox, 2006), 17–22; 20. 2.
Floyd Stovall, 2 vols. (NewYork: NewYork University Press, 1964), 1:288.
(Fr 391). 2. Walt Whitman, Daybooks and Notebooks, ed.
However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified
However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified
effectually; the instrument, the old-fashioned birchen rod, or as that can not be procured in all parts
However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified
His first known published short story, "Death in the School-Room.
A Fact" tells the story of a teacher prone to beating his students as a form of punishment.
His first known published short story, "Death in the School-Room.
A Fact" tells the story of a teacher prone to beating his students as a form of punishment.
First published as part of Poem of Salutation in Leaves of Grass (1856), then as part of Salut au Monde
However, this editorial is part of a series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified
By one of those caprices that enter and give tinge to events without being at all a part of them, I find
It never fails" (Prose Works 2:503).
in the nature of complex symbols, still, it is generally agreed that the star introduced in section 2
The cloud appears early, in section 2, as an image of oppression ("O harsh surrounding cloud that will
refrained from invoking the view taken in section 6 of "Song of Myself," that death is no more than part
to me you bring; Lilac blooming perennial, and drooping star in the west, And thought of him I love. 2
to me you bring, Lilac blooming perennial and drooping star in the west, And thought of him I love. 2
to me you bring, Lilac blooming perennial and drooping star in the west, And thought of him I love. 2