Carol Singley Another Looking for Whitman weblog 2009-10-28T21:47:25Z http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/feed/atom/ WordPress Carol Singley http://lookingforwhitman.org/members/singley/ <![CDATA[Edith Wharton’s Notes for an Essay on Walt Whitman]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=109 2009-10-28T21:47:25Z 2009-10-28T21:47:25Z American novelist and short story writer Edith Wharton greatly admired Whitman and planned to write an essay about him. Her notes for the unfinished essay are archived with her papers at the Bieneche Library, Yale University.

Whitman Notes Presentation

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Carol Singley http://lookingforwhitman.org/members/singley/ <![CDATA[New York Times Coverage of Whitman’s Funeral]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=102 2009-10-28T21:37:18Z 2009-10-28T21:37:18Z My graduate students  visited Whitman’s grave site in Harleigh Cemetery and read the following account of his burial.

Whitman Funeral Article

]]> 0 Carol Singley http://lookingforwhitman.org/members/singley/ <![CDATA[Whitman and Edith Wharton]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=67 2009-08-20T19:11:32Z 2009-08-01T16:38:54Z

Edith Wharton greatly admired Whitman. Her parents forbade her to read him when she was a child, considering him (and Poe) dissolute Bohemians. Wharton writes in her memoir, “A Further Glance,” that Leaves of Grass was “kept under lock and key, & brought out, like tobacco, only in the absence of the ‘the ladies'” (21). Wharton’s love of Whitman is evident in her published writings, especially her novel Summer, letter, and notes. She planned to write an essay about him and made notes, which are included in Wharton Archive at the Beinecke Library, Yale University. The record may be viewed through the following link.

http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/saxon/SaxonServlet?style=http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/saxon/EAD/yul.ead2002.xhtml.xsl&source=http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/fedora/get/beinecke:wharton/EAD&big=y&view=c01_1#SI

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cellatreis <![CDATA[Whitman and California]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=34 2009-08-20T19:15:54Z 2009-07-05T05:47:24Z Inspired by Pacific coastal scenes on a trip West, I post Whitman’s homage to California:

Leaves of Grass
(1881-82)
A PROMISE TO CALIFORNIA.

A PROMISE to California,
Or inland to the great pastoral Plains, and on to Puget sound and
Oregon;
Sojourning east a while longer, soon I travel toward you, to remain,
to teach robust American love,

For I know very well that I and robust love belong among you,
inland, and along the Western sea;

For these States tend inland and toward the Western sea, and I
will also.

450px-bigsur081

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cellatreis <![CDATA[Whitman and the West]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=22 2009-07-07T01:31:22Z 2009-06-29T16:36:25Z As I prepare for a trip West, I’m curious about Whitman’s views of this region. Here are his no-so-favorable impressions of Kansas women.

Walt Whitman (1819-1892).  Prose Works. 1892.
I. Specimen Days
199. The Women of the West
Kansas City.-I AM not so well satisfied with what I see of the women of the prairie cities. I am writing this where I sit leisurely in a store in Main street, Kansas city, a streaming crowd on the sidewalks flowing by. The ladies (and the same in Denver) are all fashionably drest, and have the look of “gentility” in face, manner and action, but they do not have, either in physique or the mentality appropriate to them, any high native originality of spirit or body, (as the men certainly have, appropriate to them.) They are “intellectual” and fashionable, but dyspeptic-looking and generally doll-like; their ambition evidently is to copy their eastern sisters. Something far different and in advance must appear, to tally and complete the superb masculinity of the West, and maintain and continue it.

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cellatreis <![CDATA[Test Post]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=8 2009-08-20T19:05:54Z 2009-06-17T18:13:27Z I search with google

Thomas Eakins’ portrait of Whitman


Download Title

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Carol Singley http://lookingforwhitman.org/members/singley/ <![CDATA[Whitman House Camden]]> http://singley.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=3 2009-03-07T17:06:08Z 2009-03-07T17:06:08Z Whitman lived for the last years of his life on Mickle Street in Camden.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Image credit:  “Walt Whitman’s House” by bart

Download “Dirge”

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