Clears up a confusion regarding the author\u27s article, "The Earliest French Review of Walt Whitman" in WWQR (6/3) by establishing that "the French translation of Leaves of Grass announced by the New York Saturday Press in 1860 was a literary hoax" and proposes that Henry Clapp may have been the hoax\u27s perpetrator; see also Roger Asselineau\u27s note in the same issue of WWQR
Few scholars have attempted to conduct a close examination of Whitman\u27s relationship to his publi...
Describes a seventy-page French pamphlet by a hitherto unknown French writer and journalist known as...
Demonstrates the importance of an early page of Whitman\u27s handwritten notes (currently in the Uni...
Clears up a confusion regarding the author\u27s article, The Earliest French Review of Walt Whitman...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Describes Henry Clapp, Jr.\u27s reprinting of an unknown article from a French periodical announcin...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Describes Henry Clapp, Jr.\u27s reprinting of an unknown article from a French periodical "announcin...
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Describes a seventy-page French pamphlet by a hitherto unknown French writer and journalist known as...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Examines the relation between Whitman and Baudelaire and contends that there is very little doubt t...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Explores why a number of early reviewers compared Whitman to his best-selling British contemporary M...
Few scholars have attempted to conduct a close examination of Whitman\u27s relationship to his publi...
Describes a seventy-page French pamphlet by a hitherto unknown French writer and journalist known as...
Demonstrates the importance of an early page of Whitman\u27s handwritten notes (currently in the Uni...
Clears up a confusion regarding the author\u27s article, The Earliest French Review of Walt Whitman...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Contributes to the discourse surrounding the mystery of the nonexistent French translation of Leaves...
Describes Henry Clapp, Jr.\u27s reprinting of an unknown article from a French periodical announcin...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Describes Henry Clapp, Jr.\u27s reprinting of an unknown article from a French periodical "announcin...
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Describes a seventy-page French pamphlet by a hitherto unknown French writer and journalist known as...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Examines the relation between Whitman and Baudelaire and contends that there is very little doubt t...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Explores why a number of early reviewers compared Whitman to his best-selling British contemporary M...
Few scholars have attempted to conduct a close examination of Whitman\u27s relationship to his publi...
Describes a seventy-page French pamphlet by a hitherto unknown French writer and journalist known as...
Demonstrates the importance of an early page of Whitman\u27s handwritten notes (currently in the Uni...