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  1. Only showing results from whitmanarchive.org

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  2. whitmanarchive.org

    This work, a collection of five numbered short tales and an introduction, first appeared in The Aristidean, December 1845.Several of the tales were later published separately: the first as "A Fact-Romance of Long Island," the second as "The Old Black Widow," and the fifth as "An Incident on Long Island Forty Years Ago."
  3. whitmanarchive.org

    Whitman published many pieces of short fiction before the first publication of Leaves of Grass in 1855, and these were widely reprinted. For a complete list of reprints and citations, see the bibliography of publications and reprints of Whitman's fiction.. The following images and transcriptions are, unless otherwise noted, based on the first periodical publication.
  4. whitmanarchive.org

    Source: The Aristidean, December 1845: 444-449. Transcribed from digital images of a microfilm reproduction of an original issue. ... and they enjoyed the jaunt gloriously. They bathed in the surf, danced, told stories, ate and drank, amused themselves with music, plays, games, and so on ... This is the only one of Whitman's works of short ...
  5. whitmanarchive.org

    It was the first of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the eight others ... Whitman's "The Death of Wind Foot" was reprinted as a work of serial fiction (August 29-30, 1845) about two months after the story was reprinted in The American Review in June 1845. "Shirval—A Tale of Jerusalem ...
  6. whitmanarchive.org

    This short story appeared in The Aristidean, March 1845.Whitman revised the story for Specimen Days & Collect (1882), though he did not use it. For publication details and revisions see Brasher's edition of The Early Poems and the Fiction.. In "Shirval" Whitman retells a story from the New Testament, Luke 7: 11-18.
  7. whitmanarchive.org

    The sentence which the exuberant child was about to utter was cut short suddenly, by a loud shout from seven or eight of his companions. "Boddo! ... "And now you have all of my story—and I must go, for it is time Peter Brown received his answer." ... This novelette was originally published in The Aristidean in March 1845 under the title of ...
  8. whitmanarchive.org

    The short stories Whitman contributed to The Aristidean are some of the last known fiction pieces that he published; ... The story appeared in the February 1845 issue of The Evening Star with The Aristidean listed as the source, even though "Shirval" did not appear until the March 1845 issue of that paper. In this and other cases with the short ...
  9. whitmanarchive.org

    However, The Rover did reprint "The Death of Wind-Foot" from The American Review in the June 21, 1845, issue of the magazine. "My Boys and Girls" was published in the same year that Whitman's "The Child and the Profligate" (revised from ... (1882), in which he reprinted a selection of his short stories. "My Boys and Girls"
  10. whitmanarchive.org

    Title: "Half-Breed, The" (1845) Creator(s): McGuire, Patrick Print Source: The contents of this file are based on a pre-print electronic copy of Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. Donald D. Cummings and J.R. LeMaster (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998), reproduced with permission.Some of the entries have been silently updated to reflect recent discoveries or to correct errors.
  11. whitmanarchive.org

    Notes. 1. Whitman significantly revised the opening to this story before reprinting it as "The Boy-Lover" in the May 1845 issue of the American Review.The later version of the tale opens with a narrator's recollection intended to provide a lesson for youth rather than presenting the story as it is introduced here: with a lengthy meditation on love.

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