![]() Ball (1898) 160 “Walt Whitman: A Character Study,” Oscar Lovell Triggs (1898) 166 “Whitman’s Example in American Society,” Frank B. “Whitman’s Self-Reliance,” John Burroughs (1894) 108 “Whitman and Tolstoi,” Edward Payson Jackson (1895) 114 “Was Whitman Mad?” Richard Maurice Bucke (1895) 121 “What Walt Whitman Means to the Negro,” Kelly Miller (1895) 127 “Whitman’s Relation to Morals,” John Burroughs (1896) 136 “Whitman’s Relation to Culture,” John Burroughs (1896) 143 “The American Idea in Whitman,” Charlotte Porter (1896) 148 “Whitman’s Lack of Humor,” Oscar Lovell Triggs (1896) 154 “Whitman’s Comradeship,” Laurens Maynard (1897) 156 “Whitman and Socialism,” M. Rankin (1916) 95 “Whitman, Democrat,” Albert Mordell (1917) 97 “Walt Whitman and Elbert Hubbard,” Laurens Maynard (1917) 99 “Walt Whitman’s Personality,” Thomas B. Thayer (1914) 92 “Lincoln and Leaves of Grass,” Henry B. Bartlett (1912) 91 “Notes from an Autobiography,” William W. Coyne (1908) 85 “A Visit with Walt Whitman,” William Hawley Smith (1909) 89 “Incidents of Walt Whitman,” Truman H. Brinton on Walt Whitman,” Lucius Daniel Morse (1899) 71 “Walt Whitman,” Leon Mead (1900) 76 “Walt at the Daily Aurora: A Memoir of the Mid-1840s,” William Cauldwell (1901) 80 “William O’Connor and Walt Whitman,” Ellen O’Connor Calder (1906) 82 “Pete Doyle,” Percival Wiksell (1907) 83 “Richard Maurice Bucke,” James H. “Another Recovered Chapter in the History of Leaves of Grass,” William Douglas O’Connor (1896) 58 “Reminiscent of Whitman,” Frank B. Trowbridge (1896) 43 “‘A Woman Waits for Me’: The Personal Relations of Emerson and Whitman,” Charles Wesley Eldridge (1896) 46 “A Few Impressions of Walt Whitman,” David Edward Cronin (1896) 49 “Walt Whitman and the Younger Writers: An Interview with John Burroughs,” Walter Blackburn Harte (1896) 53 Brinton (1894) 40 “Whitman Inspired and Uninspired: And His Eroticism,” J. Memoirs of Walt, Leaves of Grass, and the Whitman Circle 36 Elliott, Walt Whitman as Man, Poet, and Friend (1916) 23 “Walt Whitman’s America” (1917) 25 “Why Men Write” (1917) 29 Review of David Fulton Karsner, Horace Traubel (1918) 33 2. “The Ethical Reasons for Social Reform” (1892) 2 “Rhodes Triumphant” (1892) 6 Review of Oscar Wilde, Intentions (1904) 8 Review of The Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche (1908) 9 Review of Joseph Fort Newton, Lincoln and Herndon (1911) 11 Review of Caro Lloyd, Henry Demarest Lloyd (1912) 14 Review of Mildred Bain, Horace Traubel (1913) 17 Review of Van Wyck Brooks, John Addington Symonds (1914) 19 Review of Henry Bryan Binns, Walt Whitman and His Poetry (1915) 21 Review of Charles N. ![]() Horace Traubel’s Editorial Style, Credos, and Worldview 1 Note on the Text xi Acknowledgments xiii Tonic Emanation: Walt Whitman in the Conservator xvii 1. ![]() cm.-(The Iowa Whitman series) Includes bibliographical references and index. Printed on acid-free paper Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Conserving Walt Whitman’s fame: selections from Horace Traubel’s Conservator, 1890–1919 / edited by Gary Schmidgall. The University of Iowa Press is a member of Green Press Initiative and is committed to preserving natural resources. The publisher would be pleased to make suitable arrangements with any whom it has not been possible to reach. All reasonable steps have been taken to contact copyright holders of material used in this book. University of Iowa Press, Iowa City 52242 Copyright © 2006 by the University of Iowa Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Design by Richard Hendel No part of this book may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the publisher. Selections from horace traubel’s conservator, 1890–1919Įdited by Gary Schmidgall University of Iowa Press, Iowa City ![]() Conserving Walt Whitman’s Fame SELECTIONS FROM H O R AC E T R AU B E L’ S “ C O N S E RVAT O R ,” 18 9 0 - 1919 EDITED BY GA RY S C H M I D GA L L
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