Walt Whitman and Song

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Notes from the EMI recording “To the Soul” by Thomas Hampson and Carla Maria Verdino-Süllwold

“I sing… the body electric, a song of myself, a song of joys, a song of occupations, a song of prudence, a song of the answerer, a song of the broad-axe, a song of the rolling earth, a song of the universal…”

Walt Whitman caroled throughout his verse. For the Bard of Democracy, as America came to call our great poet, music was a central metaphor in his life and work, both as a metaphysical mindset and as a practical reality. Whitman was blessed with an extraordinary ear for inner rhythms which he then articulated in the radically free, rolling, thrusting verses which revitalized the entire world of poetic language. That same ear led him to the appreciation of classical music. For the poet this was a largely self-taught quest in which he relied on both his innate musicality and his experience as a music journalist to formulate aesthetic principles that would carry over into his poetry.

In the Broadway Journal of November 29, 1845, Whitman wrote his now-famous essay, Art-Singing and Heart-Singing in which he denounced as decadent “the stale, second-hand foreign method with its flourishes, its ridiculous sentimentality, its anti-republican spirit and its sycophantic influence, tainting the young taste of the Republic.” The poet claimed he preferred untutored voices and folk groups like the Hutchinsons and the Cheney sisters to trained songbirds like Jenny Lind, whom he found “too showy.” His initial objections stemmed from the same wary reserve he applied to all imported forms of culture, insisting America needed to create its own new frontier voice, vigorous and free.

“I say no land or people or circumstances ever existed so needing a race of singers and poems differing from all others,” Whitman wrote in A Backward Glance o’er Travel’d Roads. Yet despite his Emersonian insistence on “ignoring the courtly Muses of Europe,” it was only by exposure to European opera and art song that Whitman began to discover the essentiality and universality of classical music’s language. That exposure came during the 1840′s and 1850′s when the poet served as a member of New York City’s working press, reviewing musical performances at Castle Garden, Palmo’s Opera House, the Astor Place Theatre, and the Academy of Music. After enjoying a year of press seats for the Brooklyn Eagle, Whitman admitted that foreign music was exercising an elevating influence on American taste. From the late 1840′s onward his critical posture gradually shifted from a stance of tolerance to one of sophisticated pleasure and finally to one of total passion for classical music, especially for opera.

Whitman’s conversion to Italian opera probably occurred in 1847 when he saw Don Francisco Marti’s Italian company from Havana at Castle Garden. Years later in Specimen Days the poet wrote: “I yet recall the splendid seasons… the fine cool breezes… the unsurpassed vocalism… No better playing or singing ever in New York.” Among his favorite artists were Guilia Grisi, Giovanni Mario, and baritone Cesare Baldiali, whom he called “the finest in the world.” He was also profoundly influenced by George Sand’s novel, Consuelo, with its emancipated contralto herione, and he imagined that the popular Marietta Albioni was a real-life incarnation of Sand’s heroine. He called Albioni the supreme singer of all time, recalling toward the end of his life the impact she made on his youthful soul: “I doubt if ever the senses and emotions of the future will be thrilled as were the auditors of a generation ago by the deep passion of Albioni’s contralto.”

Indeed, it was passion that became not only the key to Whitman’s appreciation of and response to singing but also became the hallmark of his emerging style as a journalist and ultimately as a poet. His vocabulary had an unabashed enthusiasm that is woefully absent from today’s criticism. For example, in describing tenor Geremia Bettini in La Favorita at Castle Garden on August 11, 1851, he rhapsodized:

His voice has often affected me to tears. Its clear, firm, wonderfully exalting notes, filling and expanding away; dwelling like a poised lark up in heaven; have made my very soul tremble.

Though he never learned (nor perhaps never cared to learn) a formal musical vocabulary – he referred to orchestras as “bands,” for example, throughout his writings – he replaced formula with freshness, as his language in describing music became increasingly metaphysical:

…a sublime orchestra of myriad orchestras – a colossal volume of harmony, in which the thunder might roll in its proper place; and above it the vast, pure Tenor – identity of the Creative Power itself – rising through the universe, until the boundless and unspeakable capacities of that mystery, the human soul, should be filled to the uttermost, and the problem of human cravingness be satisfied and destroyed? Of this sort are the promptings of good music upon me.

“But for opera I would never have written Leaves of Grass,” Whitman acknowledged in his waning years. Indeed, the poet’s experience as a music journalist was a significant prelude to discovering and shaping the themes and style that were to become his mature voice when the first edition of his life’s work appeared in 1855.

Whitman’s verse is crowded with allusions to song and the singer. The singer is poet, prophet, bard, mystic celebrator of the self – of the poet in everyman, in the worker, in the individual, in America en masse. Whitman’s references to music are all-pervading and eclectic; in his various poetic songs he chants hymns to a range of people and experiences from “the plantation chorus of Negroes to the strong baritone of the big longshoremen of Mannahatta.” While he, ironically, disliked the piano (calling it a parlour instrument), he loved the wide range of orchestral instruments & used them as images to people his poems. Drums became the march of nations; birdsong the freedom of flight; bugles were calls to valor or funeral taps; trumpets suggested celebrations of joy and fanfares for ethereal bliss; the cello recalled a young man’s heart complaint. Whitman’s poems are, in fact, orchestrated with as full a range of color as any musical score – with voices which rise and fall in dialogue. Of these always emerges clearest and truest that of the poet. For Whitman the human voice was the most poignant and powerful of all instruments. To sing was to articulate both the soul and the Self.

Given the musicality of the poetry itself, it is a small wonder that over 1200 settings of Whitman’s texts exist; (in preparation for this recording Thomas Hampson unearthed over 400 settings for voice and piano alone!) As Ned Rorem asserts, “Whitman is content… A poet’s content in a musician’s form.” The earliest settings appeared in the last decade of the poet’s life, though the first major surge of compositional activity coincided with the 1919 centennial of Whitman’s birth. The range of styles, nationalities, and languages represented by these settings is as far-reaching as was Whitman’s influence on world literature. While there are songs to be found in German, Italian, French, Dutch, Norwegian, Danish, and Russian translations of his poems, the focus of this recording is on the American and English repertoire.

In England, where Whitman already had a strong coterie of literary supporters (among them William Rossetti, Anne Gilchrist, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, and John Addington Symonds), composer Charles Villiers Stanford, whose influence over several generations of famous pupils, made Whitman the poet of choice for the likes of Ralph Vaughan Williams, Rutland Boughton, Frank Bridge, Cecil Dougherty, Gustav Holst, & Charles Wood. Stanford’s 1884 Elegiac Ode inspired Mrs. Gilchrist to write the poet “Your words will be sent home to hundreds of thousands who have not before seen them. How lovely the words read as themes for great music!”

Among American composers of art songs, many were born while Whitman was still alive; most were nursed on his verse as one of the shaping forces of American thought; and all who moved in the small communal circles of American music, inspired each other in choice of texts and style of setting. To cite but two examples of the interconnected chain of inspiration: William Neidlinger worked in choral societies where David Bispham sang, while Whitman was a familiar presence in Bispham’s Philadelphia boyhood; Charles Naginski, Charles Ives, and Leonard Bernstein all studied and worked at Tanglewood, while contemporary composers like Gerald Busby and Michael Tilson Thomas, and Craig Urquhart have been moved by Bernstein to create their own Whitman settings.

The early Whitman settings tended to fall into the big, Romantic genre of the late 19th century: songs whose musical idiom derived from European art song – Schumann, Brahms. They are songs which rely heavily on either the piano as a parlour instrument or on the piano as organ (for many of the composers had church affiliations). This vein continued into the 20th century with songs such as Stanford’s To the Soul, Vaughan Williams’ Joy, Shipmate, Joy! and A Clear Midnight, Bridge’s The Last Invocation, Neidlinger’s Memories of Lincoln, Dalmas’ I Saw the Ploughman Ploughing, and Remick Warren’s We Two.

Other composers, like Ives, Burleigh, Strassburg (and again Vaughan Williams), were attracted to the folk idiom of Whitman’s verse – the vox popoli with all its individuality and universality. Burleigh’s ability to capture the voices of the downcast African-American in Ethiopia Saluting the Colors, Ives’ skill in replicating the poet’s plain-spokenness in Walt Whitman, and Strassburg’s cantorial rhythms and melodies in Prayer of Columbus are but three examples of this genre.

Just as his literary descendants were drawn to the groundbreaking aspects of Whitman’s language and his thematic innovations, mid-20th century composers enjoyed experimenting with musical forms in their settings of the poet. Naginski and Rorem both effect a haunting impressionism in their respective renderings of Look Down Fair Moon; in Dirge for Two Veterans; Weill recapped his political/humanitarian message in a New World idiom; and Bacon (One Thought Ever at the Fore) and Hindemith, (Sing on There in the Swamp), also transplanted Europeans, looked to Whitman’s verse to infuse their musical language with the energetic essence of their adoptive country.

Contemporary composers continue to return to the great Bard, finding relevant chords in both his thought and his form. Rorem (As Adam Early in the Morning, That Shadow My Likeness, Sometimes with One I Love) Urquhart (Among the Multitude), Busby (Behold This Swarthy Face), Tilson Thomas (We Two Boys Together Clinging) and Bernstein have all immersed themselves in the poet’s liberated thought and in his passionate intellectual and emotional message. One of the most moving examples of this is found in To What You Said, Bernstein’s setting of an unpublished Whitman fragment – what may have been a private musing or an unsent letter to his friend Anne Gilchrist. With its combination of delicacy and militantism the song is at once an assertion of freedom and responsibility – a statement that the love of comrades is the highest human good and that that love may express itself in any infinite number of couplings – man to man, wife to husband – friend to friend, individual to society, and poet to democracy. To What You Said, appealed to Bernstein, we are told, because he read it as a “repressed poem on a repressed subject.” With his own psychological contraries, his unabashed Romanticism, his political activism and deep humanitarianism, as well as with his quest for an unique native idiom that blended American jazz and European melody, Bernstein found Whitman a kindred spirit. In that special fusion of thought, word, and music, composer and poet invite the listener to embark on a psychological, spiritual, and ultimately universal voyage in which matter is transformed into fleshy spirit, experience into art, and stasis into flux.

For Whitman, poetry, itself, was a journey and song the signposts along its path. “If you want me again, look for me under your boot soles,” writes Whitman at the end of Song of Myself. “Failing to fetch me at first keep encouraged/Missing me one place search another/I stop somewhere waiting for you.”

And so the Bard beckons. In the last one hundred years artists and writers, composers and singers have responded in such generous measure that Walt Whitman would, no doubt, be pleased at the tenaciousness of his roots and the prolific offshoots of his imagination. With that inimitable voice of ego and humility, with the lèse-majesté of the democratic poet, Whitman paid his own tribute to the music in his head and his heart and ultimately his pen:

Composers! Mighty maestros!
And you, sweet singers of old lands, soprani, tenori, bassi!
To you a new bard is caroling in the West,
Obeisant sends his love.

July 25th, 2005   |  Permalink  |  Filed under: Whitman & Song

To The Soul
Thomas Hampson Sings the Poetry of Walt Whitman

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EMI Classics
# 55 028
Release: 1997
1 CD

Thomas Hampson’s enthusiasm for the Great American Bard has manifested itself in a recording of songs on texts by Walt Whitman. Click on a song title to read the respective lyrics, get more info about the recording in the discography section of the site, or listen to the album in the music room.

List of Songs:

1. ONE’S SELF I SING      0:43
    (spoken)

2. As Adam Early in the Morning      1:40
    (Ned Rorem)

3. The Last Invocation      3:04
    (Frank Bridge)

4. To the Soul      4:02
    (Charles Villiers Stanford)

5. A Clear Midnight      1:51
    (Ralph Vaughan Williams)

6. Joy, Shipmate, Joy!      1:22
    (Ralph Vaughan Williams)

7. THE MYSTIC TRUMPETER      1:20
    (spoken)

8. Prayer of Columbus      6:38
    (Robert Strassburg)

9. One Thought Ever at the Fore      1:30
    (Ernst Bacon)

10. As I Watch’d the Ploughman Ploughing      2:04
     (Philip Dalmas)

11. Sing on There in the Swamp      2:11
     (Paul Hindemith)

12. Look Down Fair Moon      2:47
     (Charles Naginski)

13. Memories of Lincoln      7:36
     (William H. Neidlinger)

14. Look Down Fair Moon      1:21
     (Ned Rorem)

15. Ethiopia Saluting the Colors      6:32
     (Henry Thacker Burleigh)

16. Dirge for Two Veterans      4:53
     (Kurt Weill)

17. I HEAR IT WAS CHARGED AGAINST ME      0:38
     (spoken)

18. Walt Whitman      0:51
     (Charles Ives)

19. Behold This Swarthy Face      1:36
     (Gerald Busby)

20. We Two      2:40
     (Elinor Remick Warren)

21. Among the Multitude      2:14
     (Craig Urquhart)

22. Sometimes with One I Love      1:30
     (Ned Rorem)

23. We Two Boys Together Clinging      6:03
     (Michael Tilson Thomas)

24. That Shadow, My Likeness      1:57
     (Ned Rorem)

25. To What You Said      5:35
     (Leonard Bernstein)

26. SONG OF MYSELF      2:00
     (spoken)

February 16th, 2005   |  Permalink  |  Filed under: Whitman The recording

Walt Whitman – Timeline

1819
Walt Whitman born May 31, West Hills Township, Huntington, LI.; Théodore Géricault shocks Paris Salon with the Raft of Medusa,- Keats begins his major Odes
1821
Napoleon dies May 5
1822
Shelley drowns near Livorno
1823
Whitman family moves to Brooklyn; Monroe Doctrine
1824
John Quincy Adams elected U.S. President;
Lord Byron dies at Missilonghi in fight for Greek independence
1825
Lafayette, on triumphal U.S. tour, [...]

1819
Walt Whitman born May 31, West Hills Township, Huntington, LI.; Théodore Géricault shocks Paris Salon with the Raft of Medusa,- Keats begins his major Odes

1821
Napoleon dies May 5

1822
Shelley drowns near Livorno

1823
Whitman family moves to Brooklyn; Monroe Doctrine

1824
John Quincy Adams elected U.S. President;
Lord Byron dies at Missilonghi in fight for Greek independence

1825
Lafayette, on triumphal U.S. tour, sits 6-year-old Whitman on his knee and kisses him in Brooklyn visit;
Thomas Cole & Asher B. Durand found Hudson River School of nature painters; Hazlitt writes The Spirit of the Age; Erie Canal completed

1826
Emerson publishes Nature

1827
Heine publishes Das Buch der Lieder; Beethoven dies March 21; Schubert composes Winterreise

1828
Andrew Jackson elected U.S. President

1829
Rossini premieres Guillaume Tell

1830
July Revolution in Paris; unrest throughout Europe; Delacroix paints Liberty on the Barricades

1831
Meyerbeer premieres Robert le diable; Stendhal publishes Le Rouge et le noir; William Lloyd Garrison founds the Liberator

1832
Chopin debuts as a pianist in Paris; Goethe dies March 22

1833
Carlyle publishes Sartor resartus; American Anti-Slavery Society founded in Philadelphia

1834
Berlioz composes Les Nuits dété; Schumann founds Neue Zeitschrift für Musik

1835
Whitman works as a printer; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph

1836
Whitman begins 5-year stint as a teacher in rural Long Island; Communist League founded

1837
Victoria crowned Queen of England

1840
Rodin born November 12

1842
Whitman edits such New York papers as The Aurora, The Tattler; Brooklyn Daily Eagle, writing editorials, hard news, music, theatre, and arts criticism, political pieces, and fiction

1844
Verdi composes Ernani

1846
Howe invents the sewing machine

1848
Whitman goes to new Orleans with brother Jeff to work for New Orleans Crescent; stays only three months; Mexican War breaks out; Communist Manifesto published; Balzac writes La Comedic humaine; uprisings throughout Europe

1849
Tennyson completes In Memoriam

1850
Hawthorne completes The Scarlet Letter

1851
Longfellow publishes The Golden Legend

1853
Stowe publishes Uncle Tom’s Cabin to stir Abolitionist cause; Melville completes Bartleby the Scrivener

1854
Dickens publishes Hard Times; Thoreau publishes Walden

1855
Whitman self-publishes first limited edition (12 poems) of Leaves of Crass on 4 July: no author cited; frontispiece shows WW in workman’s clothes; small copyright notice lists Walter Whitman; poems are untitled; Whitman meets Thoreau

1856
Whitman publishes second edition (over 400 pp.) of Leaves of Crass: author now listed as Walt Whitman; organized with table of contents and with Emerson’s letter of endorsement; Heine and Schumann die

1857
Whitman edits Brooklyn Times; frequents Pfaff’s, a bohemian literary hangout; haunts the docks, ferries, and baths of lower Manhattan and Brooklyn; Baudelaire publishes Les Fleurs du Mal

1858
Puccini born December 23; Lincoln-Douglas Presidential debates; African-American Painter Henry Ossawa Tanner born August 19

1859
Darwin publishes The Origin of the Species; Washington Irving dies; John Brown hanged after attempt to free slaves fails

1860
Whitman goes to Boston to oversee Thayer & Eldridgre’s third edition (5000 copies) of Leaves of Crass; he refuses to omit Children of Adam poems; Frederic E. Church paints Twilight in the Wilderness; Garibaldi proclaims unified Italy under Victor Emmanuel

1861
American Civil War breaks out; Seward’s Folly, Alaska, purchased from Russia; Frederic Remington born

1862
Whitman goes to front to find his wounded brother George; nurses war casualties in military hospitals

1863
Whitman stays in Washington working in Army Paymaster’s Office and nursing soldiers until war ends; Emancipation Proclamation, January 1; Battle of Gettysburg, July 1-3, followed by Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, November 19; William H. Neidlinger born in Brooklyn

1865
Walt Whitman works as a clerk in the Bureau of Indian Affairs until he is discharged by James Harlan for being author of “indecent” Leaves of Grass; hired by Attorney general’s Office; resumes self-publication with Drum Taps; meets and forms close relationship with Peter Doyle; Lincoln assassinated April 15; Wagner premieres Tristan and Isolde

1866
John Greenleaf Whittier writes Snowbound

1867
Whitman publishes fourth edition of Leaves of Grass: includes Drum Taps and Lincoln poems

1868
William Rossetti publishes first British edition, Poem by Wait Whitman; Rossini dies November 13

1869
U.S. Transcontinental Railroad completed; Suez Canal opened

1870
English author, friend of Rossetti’s and widow of Blake’s biographer, Anne Gilchrist publishes A Woman’s Estimate of Walt Whitman, a feminist defense, in Boston Radical; Mussorgsky completes Boris Godunov

1871
Whitman publishes fifth edition of Leaves of Grass; Democratic Vistas and Passage to India issued separately; Anne Gilchrist writes her first love letter

1872
Vaughan Williams born; Nietzsche publishes Birth of Tragedy

1873
Whitman suffers a paralytic stroke in January; his mother dies to May; goes to live with brother George in Camden, NJ

1874
Ives born

1875
Eakins paints The Gross Clinic; Bizet premieres Carmen and dies 3 months later

1876
Whitman publishes sixth (so-called “Centennial” edition-a reprint of 1871) of Leaves of Grass;: begins last of relationships with young men with Harry Stafford; meets his amanuensis, Horace Traubel; Anne Gilchrist comes to Philadelphia to be near Whitman; Edison invents the phonograph; Wagner’s Ring inaugurates the first Bayreuth Festival

1878
William Cullen Bryant dies

1879
Whitman, in better health, takes off on a year’s lecture tour; Stalin born

1881
Whitman publishes seventh edition of Leaves of Grass: first attempt with commercial publisher Osgood stopped by Boston censor’s threats; WW regains plates and has Rees Welsh & Co. (later David McKay) of Philadelphia issue edition and publish diary, Sped men Dirts, separately; Joyce born February 2, Emerson dies April 27

1884
Whitman buys his first home on Mickle Street in Camden; Twain publishes Huckleberry Finn

1885
Anne Gilchrist dies in England

1886
Liszt dies July 31; Henry Thacker Burleigh born December 2

1888
Whitman publishes Complete Poems and Prose of Walt Whitman; suffers another paralytic stroke that leaves him bedridden

1889
Whitman publishes eighth edition of Leaves of Grass

1892
Whitman publishes ninth edition of Leaves of Grass, called the “Deathbed Edition”; he dies March 26 and is buried in Camden’s Harleigh Cemetery in an elaborate tomb he designed and bought with gifts from English friends

January 16th, 2005   |  Permalink  |  Filed under: Whitman Timeline

Walt Whitman – Biography

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Walt Whitman (Walter Whitman), 1819-92, American poet, b. West Hills, N.Y. Considered by many to be the greatest of all American poets, Whitman celebrated the freedom and dignity of the individual and sang the praises of democracy and the brotherhood of man. His “Leaves of Grass”, unconventional in both content and technique, is probably the most influential volume of poems in the history of American literature.

Early Life
Whitman left school in 1830, worked as a printer’s devil and later as a compositor. In 1838-39 he taught school on Long Island and edited the Long Islander newspaper. By 1841 he had become a full-time journalist, editing successively several papers and writing prose and verse for New York and Brooklyn journals. His active interest in politics during this period led to the editorship of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, a Democratic party paper; he lost this job, however, because of his vehement advocacy of abolition and the “free-soil” movement. After a brief trip to New Orleans in 1848, Whitman returned to Brooklyn, continued as a journalist, and later worked as a carpenter.

Leaves of Grass
In 1855 Whitman published at his own expense a volume of 12 poems, Leaves of Grass, which he had begun working on probably as early as 1847. Prefaced by a statement of his theories of poetry, the volume included the poem later known as “Song of Myself,” in which the author proclaims himself the symbolic representative of common people. Although the book was a commercial failure, critical reviewers recognized the appearance of a bold new voice in poetry. Two larger editions appeared in 1856 and 1860, and they had equally little public success. Leaves of Grass was criticized because of Whitman’s exaltation of the body and sexual love and also because of its innovation in verse form-that it, the use of free verse in long rhythmical lines with a natural, “organic” structure. Emerson was one of the few intellectuals to praise Whitman’s work, writing him a famous congratulatory letter. Whitman continued to enlarge and revise further editions of Leaves of Grass ; the last edition prepared under his supervision appeared in 1892.

Later Life and Works
From 1862 to 1865 Whitman worked as a volunteer hospital nurse in Washington. His poetry of the Civil War, Drum-Taps (1865), reissued with Sequel to Drum Taps (1865-66), included his two poems about Abraham Lincoln, “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d,” considered one of the finest elegies in the English language, and the much-recited “O Captain! My Captain!” For a while Whitman served as a clerk in the Dept. of the Interior, but he was discharged because Leaves of Grass was considered an immoral book.

In 1873 Whitman suffered a paralytic stroke and afterward lived in a semi-invalid state. His prose collection Democratic Vistas had appeared in 1871, and his last long poem, “Passage to India,” was published in the 1871 edition of Leaves of Grass. From 1884 until his death he lived in Camden, N.J., where he continued to write and to revise his earlier work. His last book, November Boughs, appeared in 1888.

Assessment
Whitman was a complex person. He saw himself as the full-blooded, rough-and-ready spokesman for a young democracy, and he cultivated a bearded, shaggy appearance. Indeed, Whitman’s early biographers John Burroughs and R. M. Bucke were so affected by the robust “I” of Whitman’s poems and by the poet himself that they depicted him as a rowdy, sensual man, a great lover of women, and the father of several illegitimate children. Most of this was false. In reality Whitman was a quiet, gentle, circumspect man, robust in youth but sickly in middle age, who sired no children and is generally acknowledged to have been homosexual. Whitman had an incalculable effect on later poets, inspiring them to experiment in prosody as well as in subject matter.

Bibliography
See T. L. Brasher, ed., Early Poems and Fiction (1963) and H. W. Blodgett and S. Bradley, ed., Leaves of Grass (1965); his published prose, ed. by F. Stovall (2 vol., 1963-64); his uncollected prose, ed. by E. F. Grier et al. (6 vol., 1984); his daybooks and notebooks, ed. by W. White (3 vol., 1978); Collected Poetry and Prose (1982); his correspondence, ed. by E. H. Miller (6 vol., 1961-77); G. W. Allen, New Walt Whitman Handbook (1986); biographies by G. W. Allen (1955, rev. ed. 1969), J. Kaplan (1986), and J. Loving (1999); P. Zweig, Walt Whitman: The Making of a Poet (1984); D. S. Reynolds, Walt Whitman’s America (1995)

Reference: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2001

January 3rd, 2005   |  Permalink  |  Filed under: Whitman Biography

Thomas Hampson