Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Date
1819-1892
Label
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892
Name
Whitman, Walt
Source
fast
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of32
- Children of grass, a portrait of American poetry, B.A. Van Sise ; foreword by Mary-Louise Parker
- 14 songs on American poetry, voice and piano, Ned Rorem
- In search of Walt Whitman, written, produced and directed by Andrew D. Kaplan
- War scenes, for medium-low voice and piano, Ned Rorem ; text by Walt Whitman, from "Specimen Days."
- Leaves of grass and other writings, authoritative texts, other poetry and prose, criticism, Walt Whitman ; edited by Michael Moon
- Every hour, every atom, a collection of Walt Whitman's early notebooks and fragments, edited by Zachary Turpin and Matt Miller
- Black American poets between worlds, 1940-1960, edited by R. Baxter Miller
- Studies in classic American literature, D.H. Lawrence
- Three Calamus poems, for medium voice and piano, Ned Rorem ; texts by Walt Whitman
- The portable Walt Whitman, selected and with notes by Mark Van Doren
- The better angel, Walt Whitman in the Civil War, Roy Morris, Jr
- Live oak, with moss, Walt Whitman ; art by Brian Selznick ; afterword by Karen Karbiener
- Now the drum of war, Walt Whitman and his brothers in the Civil War, Robert Roper
- Prelude and Idyll, for soprano and baritone with orchestra, Frederick Delius ; [words adapted from Walt Whitman by Robert Nichols ; German translation by Jelka Delius]
- Walt Whitman's America, a cultural biography, David S. Reynolds
- What is the grass, Walt Whitman in my life, Mark Doty
- Five poems of Walt Whitman, for voice and piano, Ned Rorem
- Lincoln and Whitman, parallel lives in Civil War Washington, Daniel Mark Epstein
- Four Walt Whitman songs, for voice and piano, Kurt Weill
- Rebel Souls, Walt Whitman and America's First Bohemians, Justin Martin
- A free song, secular cantata no. 2 for full chorus of mixed voices, with accompaniment of orchestra or two pianos, music by William Schuman ; text adapted from poems by Walt Whitman ; [piano reduction of orchestral score by Paul Weissleder]
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1