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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I
>
Whitman
> Early Writings
Teacher; Editor; Stump Speaker
New Orleans
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVI. Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I.
I.
Whitman
.
§ 5. Early Writings.
Whitmans early pieces written in New York reflect the wave of sentimentality which was, in the forties, sweeping over the country, and display, along with their humanitarian feeling, a fondness for melodramatic extravagance which caused him later to wish them all quietly droppd in oblivion. He was a reformer pleading for the abolition of intemperance (including the use of tobacco, tea, and coffee), of capital punishment, and of slavery; and urging, as the constructive side of his reform, the need of a native American drama, opera, and literature. His interest in the theatre and the opera was a vital one, the constant satisfaction of which was made possible by his having a pressmans pass. Here he received many hints for his declamatory and rhythmical style of verse. Altogether more than a score of tales, sketches, essays, and poems have been found which belong to this period. To these must be added a crude and hasty dime novelette,
Franklin Evans,
6
addressed, in the cause of temperance, not to the critics but to
THE PEOPLE,
and evidently written to order. In this period Whitman was connected with some of the best city magazines and newspapers as contributor, compositor, or editor. The most important position that he held was that of editor of
The Daily
[and
Weekly
]
Brooklyn Eagle,
a connection which extended from February, 1846, to January, 1848, when a row with the boss, on account of Whitmans unreliability, and with the party, on account of his progressive Barnburner politics, made it necessary for him to shift for a new position. This was readily found on
The Daily Crescent,
a paper about to be launched in New Orleans.
6
Note 6
. This was republished, in compressed form, under the caption
Fortunes of a Country Boy,
by J. R. S. in
The Brooklyn Eagle
(November, 1846) as an original novel.
Death in the School Room, The Childs Champion, Little Jane, The Death of Wind-Foot,
and a few poems were similarly twice published by Whitman, in the lax fashion of the day. See Bibliography.
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CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Teacher; Editor; Stump Speaker
New Orleans
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