Introduces and presents what had been a lost essay by Whitman, first published in Life Illustrated on November 8, 1856, celebrating the present and past excitement and pageantry of "Manhattan\u27s oldest street, originally an Indian trail.
Lists and quotes relevant parts of "eight items in nineteenth-century magazines and newspapers that ...
Examines the three versions of Huneker\u27s essay on his visit to Whitman, noting errors and signifi...
Examines Whitman\u27s journalism, focusing on his stories and editorials like "A Lazy Day" that pres...
Introduces and presents a previously lost 1875 essay by Whitman on the Scottish poet Robert Burns
Provides an account of the author\u27s involvement in Whitman scholarship, including an account of t...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Identifies and prints an essay about Whitman for children, written by Charlotte French, and a poetic...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Shows that the unidentified source Whitman refers to in his essay The Poetry of the Future is an u...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Presents a newly discovered Whitman poem, "A Sketch," and offers a bibliographic and textual analysi...
Introduces and presents twelve letters from Hamlin Garland to Whitman, five of which had been previo...
Tracks over twenty references to Whitman, many of them previously unrecorded, appearing in Vanity Fa...
Uses a letter written from Charles Dudley Warner to the editors of Houghton Mifflin to answer the qu...
Lists and quotes relevant parts of "eight items in nineteenth-century magazines and newspapers that ...
Examines the three versions of Huneker\u27s essay on his visit to Whitman, noting errors and signifi...
Examines Whitman\u27s journalism, focusing on his stories and editorials like "A Lazy Day" that pres...
Introduces and presents a previously lost 1875 essay by Whitman on the Scottish poet Robert Burns
Provides an account of the author\u27s involvement in Whitman scholarship, including an account of t...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Identifies and prints an essay about Whitman for children, written by Charlotte French, and a poetic...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Shows that the unidentified source Whitman refers to in his essay The Poetry of the Future is an u...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Presents a newly discovered Whitman poem, "A Sketch," and offers a bibliographic and textual analysi...
Introduces and presents twelve letters from Hamlin Garland to Whitman, five of which had been previo...
Tracks over twenty references to Whitman, many of them previously unrecorded, appearing in Vanity Fa...
Uses a letter written from Charles Dudley Warner to the editors of Houghton Mifflin to answer the qu...
Lists and quotes relevant parts of "eight items in nineteenth-century magazines and newspapers that ...
Examines the three versions of Huneker\u27s essay on his visit to Whitman, noting errors and signifi...
Examines Whitman\u27s journalism, focusing on his stories and editorials like "A Lazy Day" that pres...