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“No parish money, no loaf, No pauper badges for me, A son of the soil, by right of toil Entitled to my
No alms I ask, give me my task Here are the arm, the leg, The strength, the sinews of a man, To work
Also included in this manuscript is a draft of That Shadow My Likeness, first published in New-York Saturday
This poem later appeared as Calamus No. 40, Leaves of Grass (1860); as That Shadow My Likeness, Leaves
far, he succeeds in presenting very much such a picture of the grave and courteous young Provincial Captain
In my opinion, they would fare a great deal better than they do now.
One night, as I was sitting alone with my mother and writing, I felt a sudden dizziness overcome me immediately
after a draught of tea stronger than any I had taken yet, and requested my mother to get me a glass
My mother was standing before me with the sherry. I asked her how long I had been insensible.
It is extremely obnoxious to my digestion, sir! So let me have no more salutations from you, sir!”
Candidly let me tell you, my friends stay at home. There is no antidote to your dread disease here.
“That very night,” says he, “the eyes of my inner man were opened, and I was able to look into heaven
I saw those who were dead here, but they were living there; I saw many persons of my acquaintance, some
Bayard Taylor says of the masses of China people, "Their touch is pollution—it is my deliberate opinion
— —"I have only enriched my garden With the black mire from the street."
so turbulent that it is even said that his amiable partner used to chase the author of “Pelham” and “My
The ship Greenland also arrived yesterday from Havana, the former Captain (Bates of Augusta, Me) having
Captain Varnum, formerly first mate of the bark Ocean Home, brought the ship to New York, and was yesterday
The principals were stripped and eager for the fray, when the unstrategic approach of Captain Shaurman
“A plea for the Principalities,” “My First and Last novel,” “The Great Imposture,” “Mr.
"My poor Rebecca, my dear sister, I am going to see thee! I am indeed happy!"
"'Behold, Lord. the agony of Thy handmaid: pity her sufferings; shorten her pains, my God, and let those
A bit of pathos:—"Many a tear of remembrance will have been shed in this city to Captain Hudson, who
name forever hence immortal, and has welcomed with becoming honor and rejoicing her own gallant son, CAPTAIN
I give my hand and my heart to this work.”
friend and hear him say with tearful eyes, “You inspired me with hope when all was dark—you removed my
Lansdowne, when the debate arose in the House of Lords in 1788 on the Regency question, said— The people, my
It would be impardonable not to notice the very beautiful mezzotint of Captain Nathan Hale, the Hero
see also a letter Whitman writes to his niece, Jessie Louisa Whitman, on March 6, 1887: "Well I had my
see also a letter Whitman writes to his niece, Jessie Louisa Whitman, on March 6, 1887: "Well I had my
Lines written by the deceased, months previous to his death: “Weep not for me, my Charlotte dear, for
I am better off; For I am sure you knew my sufferings here, and what a dreadful cough; But God has taken
have the Constitution always on its side, by the simple application of Swift's axiom—"Orthodoxy is my
They hail from Bushwick, and consist of 62 muskets, Walter Jimmerson, Captain.
—it is—it is indeed my long-long che-ild!"
he wrote: "O I must not close without telling you the highly important intelligence that I have cut my
hair & beard—since the event, Rosecrans, Charleston, &c &c have among my acquaintances been hardly mentioned
Similarly, he wrote to Hugo Fritsch: "I have cut my beard short, & hair ditto: (all my acquaintances
In general, attire became more formal and tended toward dark, somber colors (see Reynolds, "'My Book
(See Ted Genoways, "'Scented herbage of my breast': Whitman's Chest Hair and the Frontispiece to the
February 15, 1889]), and claimed "it is me, me, unformed, undeveloped—hits off phases not common in my
The tones still linger in my ear, and I can scarecely persuade myself that it is eight days since I heard
To the Editor of the Times— My attention has just been called to an article in your Saturday's issue,
My object in addressing you this note, is not to enter into an argument with him upon the propriety of
the costumes worn on the occasion alluded to; as that would be entirely out of my line, but merely to
Although it is not my province to notice his personal allusion, I cannot but think that sympathy might
Give it space enough, and the vox populi my be relied upon to the fullest extent.
Williamsburghers, that he who runs may read, and that all may recognize the subjects depicted, without my
My effort shall be to describe the lineaments of each so faithfully, that all who have seen the men shall
The subject of my next sketch is middle sized, with a good humored face, and an utterance so rapid as
One sketch more, and my chapter is done.
My heart bleeds for him—he feels terribly his situation; and to save such a man as—,is worth more than
Do you know, whether the ice is broken or not, into my bath I go every day of my life?’
I am rather gratified to find that my first sketches were generally recognized, and their fidelity admitted
My subject is wealthy, and a bachelor—and I need hardly add, therefore, that he likes fun, amusement,
—My subject never runs for office, seldom or never attends a public meeting; and, we verily believe never
But I ought not to call my subject “a little man,” after all—for is he not a great man?
I hear that some of my former portraits have not been high colored and flattering enough to suit the
My subject is a tall sedate man, whose grey hair and invariable spectacles make him seem older at first
The impression which his speeches always leave on my mind is—"This was not a first class speech, but
I almost fear that my present subject is one of the former description—yet as my series of sketches would
And there is no more hard-working man in the city than my subject, who labors unceasingly for the good
I commence my fourth series by PORTRAIT No. 10.
I approach the next picture in my gallery of portraits with no little anxiety.
For my own part, I am not blind to the fact that my subject is a better friend to himself than to anybody
man is richer than you, and from this, no doubt, a good deal of envy and enmity has been excited by my
PORTRAIT No. 11 A certain antagonism between the men leads my ideas from the above to my present subject
My subject is in prosperous circumstances, and is one of the few men of that class who have become prominent
So far the good qualities of my subject in public life.
My subject is sometimes too fast. His energy sometimes goes ahead of his prudence.
In truth there is too much progression about him to always suit my conservative ideas.
Some time ago my subject was inducted into a post of considerable political importance in another part
My school boy reminiscences are not of the brightest—in fact I look on the guides of the rising generation
enlarge, as orators often do, on the dignity and responsibility of the educational vocation; but for my
part I would prefer to see my subject in a wider and more public sphere of usefulness than that afforded
have to picture a man for whom I entertain a sincere respect, though I am not blind to his faults, as my
In order to place his personality before my readers without mistake, I will apply to him an epithet by
To drop the simile, however, I may describe my subject as a tall, muscular, robust man, with a voice
, so that I cannot, in justice to the district, omit adding so honorable and excellent a citizen to my
I may say, without fear of contradiction, that though my subject has not long resided in the 19th ward
My subject has filled other prominent positions before his present one.
With some of his kinsmen, my subject is engaged just now in developing the resources and augmenting the
But this is not the case with my present subject.
—My subject deserves a very favorable notice.
The further development of these ideas, as soon to be tested, will no doubt confer on my subject the
My subject is a jovial, good humored man (who indeed ever knew a big stout man that wasn’t?
The real aristocrat is not you, but my subject.
.— The New York Times pretends that there is yellow fever in this city, because the Captain of the Brig
The facts seem to be that, on last Wednesday it was reported to Health officer Boyd, that the captain
Some of my readers doubtless imagine that my series of sketches had come to an end, as they have not
from the city, and a multiplicity of other engagements, have hitherto prevented me from continuing my
Tall, portly, good-humored in feature as in fact, my subject is known, admired, and respected by all
In a word, he is my model of what an intelligent citizen’s conduct should be, in matters political.
Perrin never equaled my subject as a manager and facilitator of legislative business.
'Courage, my boy!' wrote Lord Chatham to his son, 'only the Encyclopædia to learn!'
he screams to a gaping universe: "I, Walt Whitman, an American, one of the roughs, a Cosmos; I shout my
voice high and clear over the waves; I send my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world."
From those beginning notes of sickness and love, there in the mist, From the thousand responses in my
O what is my destination? O I fear it is henceforth chaos!"
.— When my little friend Tom Thumb, travelled with the circus he stood behind the stand, in a Missouri
of the lines only to reintroduce them in Sands at Seventy (1888), under the title Small the Theme of My
Both One's-self I Sing and Small the Theme of My Chant appeared in the 1891-92 edition of Leaves of Grass
of the lines only to reintroduce them in Sands at Seventy (1888), under the title Small the Theme of My
Both One's-self I Sing and Small the Theme of My Chant appeared in the 1892 edition of Leaves of Grass
of the lines only to reintroduce them in Sands at Seventy (1888), under the title Small the Theme of My
Both One's-self I Sing and Small the Theme of My Chant appeared in the 1892 edition of Leaves of Grass
verses in this notebook were published posthumously as [I Stand and Look], Ship of Libertad, and Of My