Discusses a previously unknown non-parodic Whitman imitation that pre-dates Adah Isaac Menken\u27s Infelicia (1868). Titled "The Indications," this poem appeared in the June 3, 1857, issue of Life Illustrated magazine (New York: Fowler and Wells)
Describes the short-lived 1865 New York City humor magazine called Mrs. Grundy and presents a hither...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Identifies and prints an essay about Whitman for children, written by Charlotte French, and a poetic...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Tracks over twenty references to Whitman, many of them previously unrecorded, appearing in Vanity Fa...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Discovers two variants of line 1118 of the 1855 poem eventually entitled "Song of Myself," indicatin...
Tracks over twenty references to Whitman, many of them previously unrecorded, appearing in Vanity Fa...
Introduces and presents what had been a lost essay by Whitman, first published in Life Illustrated o...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Shows that the unidentified source Whitman refers to in his essay The Poetry of the Future is an u...
Lists and quotes relevant parts of "eight items in nineteenth-century magazines and newspapers that ...
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Offers a close examination of the floriated font on the cover of the 1855 Leaves of Grass, compares ...
Describes the short-lived 1865 New York City humor magazine called Mrs. Grundy and presents a hither...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Identifies and prints an essay about Whitman for children, written by Charlotte French, and a poetic...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Tracks over twenty references to Whitman, many of them previously unrecorded, appearing in Vanity Fa...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Discovers two variants of line 1118 of the 1855 poem eventually entitled "Song of Myself," indicatin...
Tracks over twenty references to Whitman, many of them previously unrecorded, appearing in Vanity Fa...
Introduces and presents what had been a lost essay by Whitman, first published in Life Illustrated o...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Shows that the unidentified source Whitman refers to in his essay The Poetry of the Future is an u...
Lists and quotes relevant parts of "eight items in nineteenth-century magazines and newspapers that ...
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Offers a close examination of the floriated font on the cover of the 1855 Leaves of Grass, compares ...
Describes the short-lived 1865 New York City humor magazine called Mrs. Grundy and presents a hither...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Identifies and prints an essay about Whitman for children, written by Charlotte French, and a poetic...