INDEX.
- Abandonment, capacity for self-, 52.
- Abolition sentiment, Lincoln and, 182.
- See Slavery.
- Abolitionism, 81;
- and the South, 235.
- Abolitionist, W. an, 39.
- Abolitionists, 134;
- in Democratic party, 27.
- Actors, W. at home with, 191.
- Adam, W. as, 160-2.
- Adams, President John, 23, 24.
- Addison, W. advised to study, 328.
- Æschylus, W. reads, 57.
- Affirmations of modern thought, 62.
- Agnosticism and reason, 333.
- Agricultural interest in America, 308.
- Alboni, Marietta, her influence on W., 86, 131, 320.
- Alcott, A. Bronson, his relations with W., 112, 138, 282.
- Alexandria, Va., 195, 199.
- Ambition, W. a youth of, 33.
- America, romance of, xix-xxiii;
- Elizabethan character of, xxi;
- its development, xxvi;
- changes in, 79.
- America, and W., 87, 149, 180;
- W. an incarnation of, xxviii, 132, 335;
- an average American, 64;
- his passion for, 63;
- describes, 95;
- his symbol for, 122;
- symbolic character of, 124;
- call to citizenship, 125;
- need for comradeship in, 163;
- Emerson’s view of W.’s message to, 145-6;
- W.’s criticism of, 124, 236-42;
- W. the poet of, 249, 292 (see American poet);
- her need for the war, 206-8;
- A. and the soul, 255;
- and death, 266;
- and free-interchange, 306-7;
- and labour-problem, 307-13;
- W.’s ideal for, 312;
- “material foundations,” 331;
- A. and solidarity, 337.
- American art, xxiv.
- American Bible, W. wishes to write an, 55.
- American character, the, xxi;
- its idealism, xxi, xxiii, 80-1, 177;
- its power of assimilation, xxiv.
- American character of L. of G., 109.
- American cynicism, 264.
- American literature, W. and, 60.
- American opinion hostile to L. of G., 214, 333.
- American poet, the, Emerson’s dictum, 94;
- general expectancy of an, 94;
- W.’s prophecy of an, 95-6;
- W. as the, 133 n.
- American poets, W. and the, 104, 279;
- need for, 97.
- American Review, W. writes for, 37.
- Anger of W., sudden, 216, 236, 327.
- Animals, W.’s feeling of kinship with, 99.
- “Answerer, Song of the,” 103.
- Anthony, Susan B., 126.
- Antietam, battle of, 182-3.
- Anti-Nebraska men, 134.
- Anti-slavery party, 45.
- Appearance, W.’s, 276, 283, 289, 326.
- See Portraits.
- “Appearances, Of the terrible doubt of,” 164.
- Arabian Nights, W. reads, 19.
- Aristocrat, poem on an, 53.
- Armory Square Hospital, W. at the, 190, 194, 203.
- Arrangement of L. of G., 286-7.
- Art, its meaning first shown to W., 22;
- popular, 43;
- in N.Y., 84.
- “As a strong bird on pinions free”. See “Thou Mother,” etc.
- “As I ebb’d with the ocean of life,” 154-6.
- “As I ponder’d in silence,” 208.
- “As the time draws nigh,” 169.
- Asceticism, 71.
- Ashton, J. Hubley, describes a visit of W.’s, 192;
- and Harlan incident, 214.
- Ashton, Mrs., 234, 248.
- Athenæum, The, and W., 259.
- Attila, 336.
- Attorney-General’s Office, W. in the, 214.
- Aurelius, Marcus, 224, 262, 318.
- Aurora, The, W. edits, 37.
- Average American, W.’s life to be that of an, 64.
- Babylon, L. I., W. at, 28, 33;
- described, 28-9.
- Bacchus, W.’s engraving of, 111.
- “Backward Glance o’er travel’d roads, A,” 329-30.
- Baldwin, the engine, 271.
- “Barnburners,” Van Buren men, become Free-soil Democrats, 44, 134.
- Barnum, P. T., 85.
- Bathing, W.’s love of, 40.
- Bayne, Peter, 258.
- “Beat! Beat! Drums!” 207.
- Beauty, W. indifferent to formal and static, 59.
- Beecher, Ward, 112.
- Beethoven, 267, 293, 320.
- Beggars, W. and, 219.
- Bell, Governor, 172.
- Berenson, Mrs., her friendship with W., 302-4, 313, 318, 346.
- Bernard, St., 146.
- Bettini, 85, 320.
- Bhagavad-Gitá, L. of G. compared with, 115.
- Bible, W.’s wish to write an American, 55;
- W. studies the, 57, 224, 318.
- Biographies of W. See J. Burroughs, Dr. Bucke, and Preface.
- Birthday dinners, 317, 325, 331-2;
- last, 335-7.
- Blake, 124, 225, 263, 290, 341;
- his mystic sight, 66, 118;
- W. and, 59.
- “Blood-money,” 39, 46, 103.
- Body, W. and the, 99, 102, 159-62;
- “a spiritual body,” 152-3;
- “enamoured” body, 162;
- and soul, 125.
- “Body Electric, I sing the,” 102, 145, 160.
- Boehme, 121, 146.
- Bohemians of New York, W. and the, 138.
- Bolton group of Whitmanites, 337.
- Books, W.’s method of reading, 57;
- his favourite books, 58-9, 318.
- Booth, the elder, effect of his acting on W., 22.
- Boston, 81, 138;
- W.’s dislike of, 103, 279;
- W. at, 136, 142-7;
- second visit, 278-83.
- “Boston Ballad, A,” 103.
- Boston Common, 144, 147, 281.
- Boston Intelligencer, criticism of W., 108.
- Botticelli, 102, 226.
- Bowery Theatre, the (now the Thalia), 22, 329.
- Bowne, John, a L. I. Quaker, 4.
- Bragg, General, 187.
- Breckinridge, J. C., 172.
- Bremer, Frederika, and Emerson, 94.
- “Broad-axe, Song of the,” 122, 274.
- Broadway, W. and, 41, 83, 87, 138, 219, 266.
- Broadway Journal, W. writes for, 37.
- “Broadway Pageant, A,” 205.
- Brooklyn, 1-3, 10-11;
- W. in, 56-7, 86, 110, 203-4, 210, 219, 232;
- leaves, 183;
- secures Fort Greene to town, 43.
- Brooklyn, battle of, 5.
- Brooklyn Daily Eagle, W. edits, 42-4;
- a correspondent of, 196.
- Brooklyn Ferry, 11, 40, 85.
- “Brooklyn Ferry, Crossing,” 120.
- Brooklyn Times, W. and the, 109.
- Brown, John, different views of, and influence on America, 136, 159;
- O’Connor and, 190.
- Brown, Madox, 225.
- Browning, R., 62, 92, 291;
- and W., 293-5.
- Bruno, Giordano, 224.
- Brush, Major, 5;
- his niece, 5-6.
- Bryant, W. C., 40, 59, 172, 336;
- friendship for W., 42.
- Buchanan, President, 135, 175.
- Buchanan, Robert, his letter on W., 258-9.
- Bucke, Dr. R. M., 263, 305, 325-6, 334, 336, 341, 342;
- visits W., 269;
- account of, 269-70;
- his Cosmic Consciousness, 270;
- visited by W., 274-7;
- goes with W. to L. I., 280;
- his life of W., 304.
- Buddha, the, 121, 345.
- Bull Run, battle of, 182.
- Buonarotti, Michael Angelo, 102, 265.
- Burke, E., 290.
- Burns, Anthony, 81, 103.
- Burns, R., 289, 328, 337;
- W. and, 59;
- W. on, 329.
- Burnside, General, 182, 183.
- Burr, Aaron, W. and, xxv.
- Burroughs, J., in Washington, 191, 215;
- notes on W., 221, 304;
- walks with W., 233, 262;
- nurses W., 247-8;
- visits W., 251, 256, 258, 305, 342;
- W. visits, 231, 266, 270.
- Burroughs, Mrs., 234.
- “By Blue Ontario’s Shore,” 123, 209.
- Byron, 91, 320, 328;
- W. and, 59, 292-3.
- Calamus, meaning of the word, 162.
- Calamus (poems), 162-7, 253;
- most esoteric of W.’s poems, 162;
- political significance, 163;
- personal revelation in, 165;
- underlying philosophy of, 166-7;
- vindicated, 194;
- J. A. Symonds and, 224.
- Calhoun, J. C., 24, 79, 175.
- California, 43, 63-4.
- Californian redwood tree, 255.
- Calvin, 121.
- Camden described, 246;
- W. in, xxvii, 248, 278, 315;
- loneliness there, 250;
- at 322, Stevens St., his life there, 250-1;
- removes to 431, Stevens St., 256;
- friends there, 257, 325;
- literary work, 257.
- See Mickle St.
- Canada, 311;
- W. plans to lecture in, 129;
- goes to, 274-7;
- interest in, 276-7.
- Canary, W.’s, 319.
- Capital punishment, W. opposes, 33, 42.
- Capitol, W. often at the, 201-2.
- “Captain! my Captain!” 337.
- Carlyle, Thos., 35, 84, 91, 92, 121, 263, 291, 294, 296, 306, 318, 328, 339;
- death of, 301;
- and L. of G., 171;
- his Shooting Niagara, 234, 236;
- W. and, 41, 59, 293.
- Carnegie, Andrew, 317.
- Carpenter, The, by O’Connor, 191, 227-9.
- Carpenter, Edward, 263;
- visits W., 266-9;
- account of, 266-7;
- his Towards Democracy, 267;
- his account of W., 267-9;
- second visit to W., 305-7;
- his Art of Creation, qu., 167;
- on W.’s children, 349-50.
- Carpenter, Tamosin, 347.
- Carpentering, W. takes up, 57;
- helpful to him, 85;
- gives up, 87.
- Carpenters, 122.
- Cass, Lewis, 44.
- Catalogues in L. of G., 84, 160, 222.
- Caution, highly developed in W., 68, 163.
- Cenci, 336.
- Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, 265.
- Champagne, W.’s taste for, 315.
- “Champion of America,” 131-2.
- Chancellorsville, battle of, 184.
- “Chanting the Square Deific,” 212.
- See Satan.
- “Chants Democratic,” 150.
- Charity, W. and, 312-3.
- Chattanooga, battle of, 187.
- Chestnut St. Opera House, Philadelphia, 317.
- Chicago, W. visits, 54.
- Child, in W.’s nature, the, 78, 344;
- dreams of a, 55.
- Children of Adam, 126, 144-7, 159-62, 284-6;
- difficulty of discussing, 160-1;
- Mrs. Gilchrist and, 225, 264.
- Children, W.’s, 51, 186, 230-1, 252, 349-50;
- W. and, 234, 273, 318, 320.
- China, W. talks of, 265.
- Chinese proverb, xxiii.
- Christ, 313, 345.
- See Jesus.
- “Christ-portrait” of W., 67.
- Christianity, W. and, 75-7, 168, 297, 339.
- Chronicle, The, W. M. Rossetti writes on W. in, 222.
- Church, W. in a Brooklyn, 68.
- Churches, W. and the, 42, 75-6, 142, 241, 280, 323.
- Cincinnati Society, 38.
- Citizenship and the soul, 208;
- for all, 240.
- City-life, attraction for W., 114;
- modern, xxviii.
- City-populations, 307.
- Clare, Ada, 139.
- Class-feeling, W.’s dislike of, 323.
- Classical allusions avoided in L. of G., 109.
- Clay, Henry, 23, 40, 42, 79, 134.
- Cleanthes, Hymn of, 224.
- Clements, Mr., W. apprenticed to, 19-20.
- Cleveland, President, 314, 320.
- Clothes, W.’s, 83, 110, 140, 304, 331.
- Cole, Mary, 234.
- Coleridge, S. T., 91, 119, 290.
- Colonna, Vittoria, 265.
- Columbian Magazine, W. writes for, 37.
- Columbus, xx-xxi, 243.
- See Prayer of C.
- “Columbus, A thought of,” 340.
- Common people, W.’s love of the, 114.
- Companions, the Great, 168.
- Complete Prose, qu., 47-8.
- See Footnotes.
- “Compost, This,” 122.
- Comrade, W. as a, 67;
- God the perfect, 244.
- Comrades, a society of, 312.
- Comradeship, Calamus poems of, 162;
- political significance of, 163;
- W. institutes a rite of, 165;
- philosophy of, 167;
- W. creates a, 179;
- L. of G. brings to Symonds, 224;
- universal possibility of, 299-300;
- W.’s, 133, 149, 168, 196, 228, 232-3, 253, 275, 297.
- Comte, A., 62, 263.
- Concord, W. at, 281-2.
- Concrete, W.’s love for the, 60;
- quality, W.’s, 198.
- Coney Island Beach, W. goes to, 40, 57, 154.
- Confederacy of Southern States adopts a constitution, 175.
- Consciousness, the unfolding of, 69;
- the double nature of, 73-4;
- superhuman elements in, 228;
- W.’s, 316.
- See also “Cosmic consciousness”.
- Conservator (Philadelphia), The, 300 n.
- Conservative quality of W., 64.
- Constitution of U.S., xxiii, xxv, 23.
- Contemporary Club, the, 332.
- Contemporary Review and W., 258.
- Conversion, W.’s experience compared with, 70, 72.
- Conway, Moncure, 93, 110-2, 344.
- Coolness, W.’s, 66.
- Cooper, Fenimore, 42, 59;
- W.’s love for the novels of, 19.
- “Copperheads,” 185.
- “Cosmic consciousness,” W.’s, 52, 117, 119, 168, 224, 333;
- W.’s experience of, 72-3;
- influence on style, 150-1, 153-4;
- Dr. Bucke on, 270.
- Cotton in the South, 24, 25.
- Cowper, W., 290.
- Crescent, The, New Orleans, 46.
- Criterion, The, criticism of W., 108.
- Critic, The, criticism of W., 108.
- Criticisms of Whitman, 171, 222, 224-5, 327-8, 329 n., 334-5;
- by W. 109, 329.
- Cromwell, O., 121.
- Croton Water-works, N.Y., 42.
- “Crucified, To him that was,” 167-8, 227.
- Culpepper, Va., W. visits, 202.
- Cuba annexation desired, 135.
- Cuvier, 122.
- Daily News and W., 258.
- Dana, C. A., 127.
- Dancing, W. approves, 43.
- Dannville, 209.
- Dante, 57, 109, 164, 226, 318.
- Dartmouth College, N.H., W. visits, 245.
- Darwin, C., 62.
- Davis, Jefferson, 79, 188.
- Davis, Mary, 305, 318-21, 336.
- Death, W. and the idea of, 9, 12, 101, 102, 158, 168-9, 242-3, 249, 266, 281, 287, 340-1;
- immortality and, 152-3, 155;
- welcome to, 152;
- W. learns lesson of, 249, 343;
- in shadow of, 253-4;
- W.’s, 344;
- reported, 247.
- “Death’s Valley,” 340-1.
- Declamation, L. of G. written for, 98.
- Declaration of Independence, xxiii, 23.
- Deliberate way of W. in hospitals, 196;
- character of W., 204.
- Democracy in New York, 83.
- Democracy, W. as, 335.
- Democracy, dangers of. See Dem. Vistas.
- Democrat, W. edits, 37.
- Democratic party, 13, 23, 40, 79, 82, 136, 172.
- Democratic Review, W. writes for, 33.
- Democratic Vistas, W. at work on, 234;
- America’s need for national literature, 236;
- reasons for his criticism, 237;
- vast task of America, ib.;
- fears for her, 238, 238-9 n.;
- her need for religion, 238,
- and for great men, 239;
- too much “culture,” 241;
- need of personality, of religion and of literature, 242, 245, 248.
- Denver, 272, 320.
- Depression, W.’s, during illness, 249.
- “Devil, If I felt like the,” 338.
- See Satan.
- Dickens in America, 35, 42.
- Dix, Dorothea, 195.
- Dixon, Thomas, and L. of G., 171, 223.
- Dog, W.’s, 257.
- Don Quixote, W. reads, 58.
- Doubt, W. and, 100, 155, 164.
- “Dough-faces,” 27, 39.
- “Dough-face Song, A,” 39.
- Douglas, S. A., 44, 80, 134, 135, 172, 174, 176.
- Dramatic gift, W. has not the, 73.
- Dreams, W. on, 102.
- Doyle, Peter G., 210, 215, 258, 301, 305, 336, 344-5;
- account of, 230;
- and W., 231-4;
- nurses W., 247-8;
- letters to, 250, etc.;
- baggage-master, 257.
- Dred Scott decision, 135.
- Dress. See Clothes.
- Driving, W.’s love of, 303, 314.
- Drum-taps, published, 205;
- recalled, 212.
- See L. of G.
- Dutch, on Long Island, 3;
- realism, W.’s, 85.
- Dying, W.’s long, 330.
- Early tales, W.’s, 33-5, 286;
- early verses, W.’s, 39, 47-8, 290.
- Earth, W.’s conception of the, 117-9, 330;
- and evil, 122.
- Editor, W. as an, 37.
- Education, W.’s, 28.
- Edward VII. See Prince of Wales.
- Egoism, a divine, 90;
- of L. of G., 91.
- Egoist, W. not an, 53.
- Eldridge, C. (see also Thayer and Eldridge), 191, 247-8, 251.
- Election, methods of presidential, 174.
- Elizabeth, Queen, xx-xxi.
- Elliott, E., W. and, 327.
- Emancipation, Proclamation of, 183.
- Emerson, R. W., xxiii, 59, 62, 81, 108, 110, 129, 136, 151, 176, 258, 263, 291, 293, 303, 318, 328, 336;
- position in American letters, 91-3;
- and free rhythm, 92-3;
- Emerson and Whitman, 59, 91-4, 106-7, 112, 114-5, 137, 143-7, 148, 159, 163, 171, 322;
- his letter to W., 92-3, 127-8;
- W.’s letter to E., 127, 179;
- discussion between, 145-7, 159, 223;
- helps W. to get funds for hospitals, 198;
- W. revisits, 281-2;
- their friendship, 146, 163, 282-3;
- contrast of his and W.’s temperaments, 294;
- death of, 301.
- Emotional, atmosphere of poetry, 290-1;
- character of W.’s mysticism, 70-1.
- Enfans d’Adam. See Children of Adam.
- English, demand for L. of G., 257;
- fame of W., 223, 245;
- friends help W., 258-9, see Friends;
- habit of compromise, 208;
- language, W. and the, 97;
- readers of L. of G., 171;
- Reviews, W. reads, 57;
- W.’s appreciation of the, 338.
- England and America compared, xxii;
- dispute between, 43;
- W.’s idea of a home in, 338.
- Enjoyment, W.’s power of, 314-5.
- En-masse, frequent use by W. of, 216-7.
- “Ensemble,” W.’s use of, 255.
- Epictetus, 318, 342-3.
- Equality, doctrine of, accepted in the South, 25;
- W.’s doctrine of, 102, 297.
- Erie Canal opened, 11.
- Euripides, 58.
- “Europe, the 72nd and 73rd year of these States,” 103.
- Europe, its lack of sanity, 339.
- Evangelical, W. an, 77.
- Evening Mail (New York), 245.
- Evil, W. and the problem of, 122, 124, 157, 212, 294-5, 340;
- evil in W.’s nature, 336.
- Evolution, W.’s doctrine of, 99, 100.
- Evolutionists, the, 224.
- Exhibition, International, 1853, 83-4.
- “Exposition, Song of the,” 245, 248.
- Expression, need for, 89-90.
- Expurgation, W. agrees to, 285.
- “Faces,” 102.
- “Facing West from California’s shores,” 162.
- Facts, W.’s love for, 60, 63.
- Fairfax Seminary Hospital, 194, 198.
- Faith, W.’s, 99, 100, 155, 244, 254-5.
- Falmouth, Va., 183-4.
- Farragut, Admiral, 182.
- Federal sentiment aided by steam-transit, 27.
- Federalists, 23.
- Fellowes, Col., 38.
- Fellowship, as an answer to doubt, 164;
- Morris’s gospel of, 296;
- philosophy of, 166-7.
- Fellowship, W.’s, its character, 114, 299-300;
- with nature, 261-2;
- W.’s ideal of, 142.
- Fellowship, the Walt Whitman, 300 n.
- “Felons on trial in courts, You,” 156.
- Ferries, W. and, 250-1, 266.
- See Brooklyn Ferry.
- Ferry-boat, W. steers a N.Y., 137.
- Fire-Island Beach, L. I., 29.
- “First, O songs, for a prelude,” 206.
- “For you, O Democracy,” 163.
- Forrest, Edwin, 21.
- Fortnightly Review, M. Conway’s article on W. in, 110.
- Fourier, 309.
- Fourierists, W. and the, 323.
- Fowler, Mr., 67.
- Fowler & Wells, 87, 109, 129.
- Fox, George, 121, 173;
- his mystical experience, 72-3;
- in L. I., 4;
- and W., 298-300;
- W.’s essay on, 329.
- France, L. of G. in, 245;
- W. and the people of, 280.
- Francis of Assisi, 74, 152, 164, 169, 227.
- Franklin Evans, 46 n., 52;
- described, 35-7.
- Fredericksburg, battle of, 183.
- Freeman, The, W. founds, 56, 63.
- Frémont, J. C., 63, 134.
- Free-soil Democrats, 40, 44-5, 56, 134;
- W. and the, 40, 310.
- Free-trade, 177;
- W. and, 306-7, 323, 337.
- See also Tariffs.
- Friends, W.’s older men, 28;
- and women, 31;
- in N.Y., 137-9;
- in Washington, 190-2;
- circle of, 245;
- in Camden, 256-7, 325, 341, 342;
- English, assist W., 258-9, 316-7;
- dissimilarity among, 233;
- his need of, 165, 250-1;
- a city of, 165.
- Friends, Society of. See Quakers.
- Friends, Fox’s, 298-9.
- Fritzinger, Harry, 319.
- Fritzinger, Warren, 319, 342, 343, 344.
- Fritzinger, W. W., 342.
- Fugitive Slave Bill, 79.
- “Full of life now,” 166.
- Fuller (Ossoli), Margaret, 126.
- Funeral, W.’s, 344-6.
- Future, poet justified by, 97.
- Future, W.’s attitude towards the, 206.
- Games, W.’s love of, 30, 32.
- Garfield, President, 301.
- Garibaldi visits America, 173.
- Garrison, W. L., 81.
- Gentleman, Thoreau thinks W. a, 113.
- Georgian farmer, a, 321-2.
- German immigrants, 82.
- Germany, L. of G. in, 245.
- Germ, The, 97, 221-2.
- Gettysburg, battle of, 184, 187;
- Lincoln’s speech at, 184.
- Gilchrist, Anne (Mrs. Alexander), 265, 267, 268, 301, 336;
- reads L. of G., 225;
- views of C. of Adam, 225-7, 284;
- letters published, 225;
- goes to Philadelphia, 263;
- account of, 263-6;
- W. visits, 266;
- death of, 303, 320.
- Gilchrist, Grace, quoted, 268, etc.
- Gilchrist, Herbert H., 320.
- Girls, attitude toward, 30.
- Glendale, W. at, 280, 286.
- Godiva, Lady, 264.
- God, W.’s idea of, 75, 76, 101, 243-4, 253-4.
- God latent in humanity, 100.
- Goethe, 58, 62, 121, 222, 224, 289, 292.
- Good-bye, my Fancy, described, 338-40;
- title explained, 340.
- Good Gray Poet, The, by O’Connor, 191, 214, 227, 333.
- Government, purpose of all, 240.
- Grant, Gen., 182;
- takes Vicksburg, 185;
- at Chattanooga, 187;
- faith of North in Grant, 188;
- ends war, ib.;
- President, 235;
- and the West, 272;
- W.’s belief in, 203;
- W. appeals to, 209.
- “Great are the Myths,” 104.
- Great Eastern Steamship, 173.
- Great men, W. values, 239.
- Greek, W. a, 279.
- Greeley, Horace, 39.
- Guyot, 263.
- Hafiz, 318.
- “Halcyon Days,” 330.
- Hale, E. E., 108.
- Halleck, Fitz-Green, 42.
- Hamilton, Alex., xxv, 23.
- “Hand-Mirror, A,” 124.
- Happiness, the purpose of things, 101;
- of old age, 330.
- Harlan, James, 219, 223, 227;
- dismisses W., 213-4.
- Harleigh Cemetery, 345.
- Harned, T. B., relations with W., 325, 349.
- Harper’s Ferry, 136.
- Harrington, by W. D. O’Connor, 190.
- Harrison, President, 38.
- Hartmann, S., 319-20.
- Hawthorne, N., 34, 301.
- Health, a fine art, 241;
- spiritual basis of, 204, 339;
- open-air and, 340.
- Health, W. proud of his, 68-9;
- W. to irradiate, 101, 338;
- W.’s, 28;
- and mystical experience, 69;
- W.’s in Washington, 193;
- hurts his hand, 194;
- careful of his, 196;
- effect of heat upon, 200;
- first illness, 202-4;
- h. seems to be good again, 216;
- feels extremes of climate, 218;
- Rossetti thinks health affects W.’s philosophy, 222;
- partial paralysis, 232;
- illness, 246;
- details recounted, 247;
- relapse, 248;
- depression accompanies illness, 249;
- consideration of causes, 252-3;
- illness, poems in, 253-4;
- convalescence, 258;
- help derived from Nature, 260-2;
- h. improved, 270;
- ill in St. Louis, 273;
- in Canada, 275-6;
- better in Boston, 283;
- has a sunstroke, 314;
- increasing uncertainty, 317;
- paralysis, 326.
- Hegel, 62, 289, 309;
- limit of W.’s agreement with, 296-8.
- Heine, 339.
- Heretic, W. a, 143.
- Hero-worship, W.’s, 293.
- Heyde, Hannah (Whitman), 12, 86, 88, 342;
- W. visits, 246.
- Hicks, Elias, 4, 5, 6, 121, 142;
- account of, 14-5;
- preaches at Brooklyn, 15-7;
- his death, 17;
- effect on W., 16-9;
- W.’s essay on, 329.
- “Historian, To a,” 153.
- Hodgson, Robert, an English Quaker, 4.
- Home-life, W.’s happy, 65-6.
- Homer, 57, 318.
- Hooker, General, 182, 184.
- Hospitals, W. at the old New York H., 137-8;
- W. commences to visit Washington, 184;
- service in them, 186;
- W. at the Armory Square H., 190;
- W. at the Washington, 192, 198, 318, 324;
- he needs money for work there, 192;
- there daily, 194;
- extent of hospitals, ib.;
- nursing in, 195;
- need for affection in, ib.;
- W.’s efficient service in, 196-8;
- effect on W., 199-200;
- conditions grow worse, 202-3;
- visits hospitals at Brooklyn and N.Y., 209;
- Sundays at Washington hospitals, 215;
- influence on W., 217;
- causes illness, 252-3, 339;
- pension proposed for service in, 316.
- Houghton, Lord, 112.
- House-building, 85.
- Householder, W. a, 315.
- See Mickle St.
- Houston, the filibuster, 43.
- Howells, W., and W., 138-9.
- Hugo, Victor, 138, 293.
- Humanity, W.’s love for, well founded, 41-2.
- Humility, W. and, 76, 154.
- Humour, W.’s, 303, 336-9.
- “Hunkers,” 44.
- Hunt, Leigh, 109.
- Huntington, L. I., described, 2-3;
- W. at, 31;
- W. visits, 86.
- See West Hills.
- “Hush’d be the Camps to-day,” 212.
- “Husky-haughty lips, With,” 330.
- Idealism. See Mysticism.
- Idealism of America. See “American character”.
- Identity, W.’s sense of, 74.
- Idiots, W. and, 274.
- “I dream’d in a dream,” 165.
- Iliad, Pope’s translation, 58.
- Illness, W.’s, see Health;
- originates in hospital-work, 339;
- features of last, 338, 341-4.
- Illumination, W.’s mystical, 69-78.
- Immanence, idea of, central in modern thought, 62.
- Immigration and N.Y., 81-2.
- Immigration and the labour problem, 310.
- Immortality, 152-3, 255, 332-3.
- See Death.
- Impersonal quality in W., 73, 293.
- Inconsistency, W.’s, 237.
- India used symbolically, 243-4.
- See “Passage to I.”
- Indian Bureau, W. a clerk in, 210;
- Indians on L. I., 1-2;
- W.’s relations with Indians, 210.
- Industrial revolution, the, 307.
- Ingersoll, R. G., and W., 274;
- lectures on Whitman, 317;
- tribute to W., 332;
- W.’s view of I., ib.;
- his agnosticism, 333;
- lecture on W., 333-5;
- visits W., 342;
- at the funeral, 346.
- “Inner Light,” doctrine of, 16, 17.
- Institutions, W. and, 165, 323.
- “Ireland, Old,” 205.
- Irish immigration, 82.
- Irving, Washington, 93.
- Israel, prophets of, 238, 241, 291.
- Italy and America, xx;
- rise of a new, 205-6.
- “I was looking a long while,” 153.
- Jackson, President, 13, 23, 27, 38, 174.
- Jamaica Academy, L. I., W. at, 33.
- Japan, W. talks of, 268.
- Japanese Embassy, first, 172, 205.
- Jayne’s Hill, 2.
- Jefferson, President, 13, 23, 25, 26, 38, 136.
- Jesus, 74;
- W.’s relation to, 76, 227-9;
- W.’s poem to, 167-8;
- and Humanity, 229.
- See Christ.
- Jingoism in America, 43-4.
- Job, 318.
- Johnson, President, 189, 235.
- Johnston, Col., 257.
- Johnston, Gen., 182.
- Johnston, Mrs. Alma C., 280, 282.
- Johnston, J., 336.
- Johnston, J. H., 342;
- W. visits, 266, 270, 280.
- Journalist, W. as a, 33-45.
- Journeys, W.’s, extent of, xxvii.
- See South, West, Canada.
- Joy, the note of L. of G., 90-1.
- Judiciary Square Hospital, 194.
- Kansas, 80, 134-5.
- Keats, J., 59, 91.
- Kennedy, W. S., 317;
- W.’s letter to, 282;
- his reminiscences, 301.
- “Knowledge alone, Long I thought that,” 132-3.
- “Know-nothing” party, 134-5.
- Kossabones, W.’s ancestors, 31.
- Labour agitator’s disappointment with W., a, 322.
- Labour problem, W. and the, 306-13, 322-3;
- in America, 308;
- in Europe, 308-9;
- in Long Island and N.Y., 309;
- in America after the war, 310;
- problem of immigration, ib.;
- laissez-faire, 310-1;
- the socialists, 311;
- W. and Trade-Unionism, 312;
- W. and Toynbee Hall, 313.
- Lafayette, Gen., revisits America, 11.
- Laissez-faire, 310-1.
- Laurel Springs, 260.
- Lamarck, 62.
- Laws, W. and the, 292.
- “Laws for Creations,” 153.
- Laziness, W.’s, 30-1.
- Leaves of Grass, title explained, 72;
- character of various sections, 286-7;
- unity as a whole, 287-8;
- style of, 84, 92, 98, 104-7, 150-1, 244, 273, 289-91, 328;
- genesis and evolution, 329;
- W. and, 330, 335;
- O’Connor and, 191;
- Ingersoll and, 332-5;
- Bucke and, 336;
- the war and, 339;
- conception, 55;
- gestation, 85-7.
- First edition, 87-8;
- attitude of family to, 88;
- own view, an expression of himself, 89-90;
- the keynote, joy, 90-1;
- Emerson’s appreciation, 91-2;
- book described, 95-104;
- religious emotion in, 105-6;
- compared with Emerson’s writings, 106-7;
- reception of, in America and England, 108-9;
- writes notices of, 109;
- its American character emphasised, ib.;
- occupies W.’s time, 111;
- Emerson’s dictum on, 115;
- spirit of revolt in this edition, 296-7;
- see also 148, 217.
- Second edition (1856), 116-129, 148;
- open letter to Emerson in appendix, 127-8;
- rapid sale, 128-9.
- Third edition, xxvi-xxvii, 132-3, 141-2, 218, 284-6;
- described, 148-170;
- personal note dominant in, 148-9;
- importance of this edition, 149-50;
- unity of volume, its optimism and mysticism, 151-2;
- welcome to death characteristic of, 152-3;
- his work a beginning, 154;
- Children of Adam, 159-62;
- Calamus group, 162-7;
- poem to Jesus, 167-8;
- poems of death, 169-70;
- its circulation, 171;
- in England, 172;
- and the war, 180.
- Drum-taps, 205-9;
- “When lilacs last,” 211;
- is read by students, 217;
- written under strong emotion, 220.
- Fourth edition (1867), 219, 221;
- W.’s views of, ib.;
- Rossetti’s selections, 221-2;
- the book in England, 223;
- Mrs. Gilchrist and, 225-7, 264.
- Fifth edition (1871), 242;
- Passage to India, 243;
- style of, 244;
- read in Europe, 245;
- poems of illness and death, 253-5.
- Centennial edition (1876), 259, 265, 286;
- sells well, 266;
- preface to, 267;
- and the Rocky Mountains, 273.
- Second Boston edition, 283-4, 286-8, 301;
- attacked by District Attorney, 284-5;
- sales, 305;
- diminution of, 316;
- re-published by McKay, 285;
- Worthington and, 286.
- Sands at Seventy, 329-30;
- latest poems, 338-41.
- Tenth edition, 342.
- Leaves of Grass, a section of third edition, 150.
- Lectures, W.’s, 129, 193, 270;
- to supplement L. of G., 129-30;
- a course on Democracy undelivered, 132.
- See Lincoln lecture, and Oratory.
- Lee, General, 182, 184, 187, 188, 324.
- Leibnitz, 62.
- Liberty, immortal, 103.
- Liberty party, 79.
- Libraries, 153.
- Life and Death, 104.
- Lilacs, 305.
- “Lilacs last in the Door-yard bloom’d, When,” 211-2.
- Lincoln, President, xxiii, 5, 80, 121, 132;
- described, 134;
- protests against Dred Scott decision, 135;
- senatorial contest with Douglas, ib.;
- attitude toward slavery, 136-7, 181-2;
- in N.Y., 172;
- election of (1860), 172, 174;
- interregnum before inauguration, 175;
- passes through N.Y., 175-6;
- his inaugural address, 176;
- and the war, 177, 179;
- call for troops, 178;
- his first tasks, 181-2;
- proclamation of emancipation, 183;
- speech at Gettysburg, 184;
- and abolition, 181-2, 187;
- enters Richmond, 188;
- re-election and assassination, 189, 210, 264-5;
- nature of his relation to America, 189;
- is denounced by W. Phillips, 191;
- American suspicion of his policy, 211;
- effect of his death, 211-2;
- and the South, 189, 324;
- and the West, 271;
- W. and, 234, 278;
- W. often meets, 201;
- W.’s faith in, 203;
- at last levee, 210;
- L.’s dictum on W., ib.;
- W. and L.’s death, 278.
- “Lincoln’s burial hymn, President.” See Lilacs last.
- Lincoln lecture, W.’s, 270, 278, 317, 332.
- Lind, Jenny, 85, 86.
- Linton, W. J., 257.
- Lionising, W. and, 332.
- Literary circle, W.’s dislike of, 144.
- Literature necessary for national life, 236-242.
- “Live-oak growing, I saw in Louisiana a,” 163, 250.
- Loafing of W., 141.
- Locomotive first enters N.Y., 42.
- “Locomotive in Winter, To a,” 271.
- London, Ont., W. at, 270.
- Longfellow, H. W., 59, 88, 94, 138, 301, 336;
- and W., 278-9.
- “Long I thought that Knowledge alone,” 132-3;
- Symonds and, 224.
- Long Island described, 1-3, 28-9;
- W. and, 31, 85, 89, 280.
- Long Island Patriot, W. and the, 20.
- Long Island Star, W. and the, 20.
- Long Islander, The, 56;
- W. founds the, 31-2.
- Love, the divine, 119;
- “the kelson” of the Universe, 72, 98;
- the one essential, 125;
- the passion of, 127;
- W. recognises power of, 35;
- W.’s religion one of, 77;
- love of Nature, W.’s, 260-1.
- Lowell, J. R., 59, 94, 317.
- Luther, 146.
- Lynching, W. denounces, 42.
- Lyrical ballads, 290.
- Lytton, Lord, 35, 247.
- Madison Sq. Theatre, N.Y., W. at, 317.
- “Magnet South,” 235.
- Man, L. of G., not a book but a, 158.
- “Man-o’-War Bird, The,” 259.
- Mannahatta, early name for N.Y., 20.
- See N.Y.
- Manual work, its value to W., 85.
- Maretzek, 85.
- Marriage, W. and, 50-3, 323, 336-7.
- “Mary, Aunt,” 321.
- Mary and Martha, 164.
- Marx, Karl, 309.
- Mazzini, 62, 173;
- and W., 293-4.
- McClellan, Gen., 182, 189, 211.
- McKay, David, 285, 305.
- McKnight, Mrs., 234.
- Meade, Gen., 184-5.
- Mendelssohn, 320.
- Menken, Adah Isaacs, 49.
- Meredith, G., 60, 225, 291.
- Messenger Leaves (section of L. of G.), 167-9.
- Meteors in 1860, 173.
- Methodist vote, Mr. Harlan and the, 213.
- Mexican War, W.’s attitude towards, 43.
- Mickle Street, house in, described, 305, 317-9, 320.
- Mill, J. S., W. and, 308.
- Miller, “Joaquin,” 64, 270.
- Millet, J. F., W. and, 84, 279-80, 293.
- Milton, 58, 121.
- Millwell. See West Hills.
- Mississippi, W. descends the, 47;
- ascends, 53;
- W. and the, 54, 270-1, 273.
- Missouri Compromise, 26, 134;
- River, 54;
- State, 271.
- Modesty, W.’s, 329.
- Money, W.’s indifference to, 65, 87;
- need for, 193, 198;
- income, 218-9;
- difficulties, 257-9, 316-7;
- see also 285, 341.
- Montauk Point, 1.
- Montgomery, Ala., 175.
- Moralist versus mystic, 152;
- W. as a, 237, 292.
- Morris, W., 293, 331;
- W. compared with, 296.
- Morse, Sidney, makes a bust of W., 265, 320;
- discussions with “Aunt Mary,” 321;
- with W., 322-3.
- Mount Vernon, W. visits, 215.
- “Mugwumps,” 314.
- Murray and Byron, Mr., 285.
- “Music always round me, That,” 164-5.
- Music, Mrs. Gilchrist and Carpenter’s attitude towards, 267;
- W. and, 85-6, 320.
- Myers, F. W., 224.
- Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn, W. at, 56.
- Mysticism and materialism, xxiii;
- various forms of, 70, 121;
- Whitman’s, 69-78, 117-121, 149, 152-67, 254, 298-300;
- and nature, 261-2, 339-40;
- and oratory, 130-1;
- and Quakerism, 180;
- and sex, 226;
- and war, 180-1, 207-8;
- philosophy of, 166-7.
- Myths, reverence for, 104.
- See Great are the M.
- Name, the power of the, 158.
- Napoleon, 289.
- “Native Moments,” 161.
- Natural history, W.’s ignorance of, 230, 260-2.
- Nature and soul-life, 340;
- W.’s love of, 260-2.
- Negroes, W. doubts if they are worth cost of war, 186-7;
- W. and negro citizenship, 187;
- O’Connor and W. disagree about, 191;
- W. and negro problem, 235-6.
- New Amsterdam. See New York.
- New England, W. visits, in 1868, 234.
- New Orleans of ’48 described, 48-50;
- W. goes to, 44, 46-53, 349-50;
- reminiscences of, 329.
- New World, The (N.Y.), W. and, 33-7.
- New York described, 11, 20-22, 80-86, 139-40;
- art collections of, 279;
- sympathy with South, 24, 178;
- attitude towards Lincoln, 175-6;
- during war, 185, 206;
- W. and, xxvi-viii, 41-2, 64, 111, 245, 266, 270, 280;
- W. criticises, 236;
- he leaves, 183.
- New York Evening Post, W. writes for, 42.
- New York Herald, The, 115, 316.
- New York Saturday Press, W. and the, 138-9.
- New York Sun, W. writes for, 37, 127.
- New York Times, 184, 209.
- New York Tribune, the, 39, 40, 87, 108, 259, 285;
- W.’s poems in, 46.
- Newspapers, W. and, 62-3.
- Niagara, W. at, 54, 274.
- Nibelungenlied, 58, 337.
- Nietzsche and Whitman, 213, 293, 296-8.
- Nonconformity, W.’s, 99.
- North, its interests antagonistic to the South, 24-5;
- becomes identified with Federalism, 26;
- not united, 176;
- idealism of, 177;
- and protection, ib.
- North American Review, 108.
- November Boughs, 329-30, 339.
- “Now Finalé to the Shore,” 243.
- Nurse, W.’s, 326.
- “Occupations, Song for,” 101.
- O’Connor, W. D., W. visits and boards with, 190, 201, 215, 225;
- described, 190-1;
- and Harlan, 214;
- his The Carpenter, 227-9;
- W.’s quarrel with, 236, 248, 250, 258;
- and Messrs. Osgood, 285;
- dies, 326-7, 336.
- See also Good Gray Poet.
- O’Connor, Mrs., 234, 248.
- See also W. D.O’C.
- Officials, W.’s dislike of, 306.
- Old-age, W.’s view of, 330.
- “Old Jim Crow,” W. fond of, 303.
- Omar Khayyam, 159, 318.
- “On the Beach at Night alone,” 120.
- “Once I passed through a populous City,” 51.
- Open-air, cure, W. tries, 260;
- W.’s love for, 199;
- W. writes in the, 101.
- See Nature.
- “Open Road, Song of the,” 116, 119-20.
- Opera, W. at, 88, 178.
- Optimism, W.’s, 41-2, 91, 151, 200;
- false popular, 237-8.
- Oratory, W.’s love for, 33;
- his conception of, 129-31, 135, 143.
- See also Lectures.
- Oregon, dispute over boundary of, 43.
- Oriental writers, W.’s interest in, 115.
- Orsini, 136.
- Osgood & Co., 280, 285, 301.
- Ossian, 58, 289, 318.
- “Our old Feuillage,” 150.
- “Out of the Cradle,” 12, 158, 211, 281.
- “Outlines for a Tomb,” 313.
- “Overmen,” doctrine of, 297, 299.
- Owen, Robert, 308-9.
- Paine, Thomas, xxv, 5, 16, 25, 38.
- Painting, W.’s appreciation of, 84, 279-80.
- Paley, 62.
- Pall Mall Gazette fund, 316.
- Pan, W. compared with, 112.
- Paralysis, W. begins to suffer from, 232.
- See Health.
- Parker, T., 143.
- Parodi, 85.
- Parties, W. outside political, 312.
- Passage to India (booklet), 242-244;
- poem, 243-4, 249, 266, 287.
- Passion, W. and, 161-2, 206.
- Passionate element in W., 13, 68.
- Past, the, still present, 153, 256.
- Patent Office, Washington, used as hospital, 194;
- ball, 210.
- Paternity, redemption of, 127, 241.
- Patriotism, W.’s, aroused, 54-5.
- Paumànackers, 3.
- “Paumanok,” nom-de-plume of W., 39.
- Peabody, George, 313.
- Peace, efforts towards, 185, 188;
- need for heroic idea of, 206-9.
- Penn, William, 5.
- Pension, proposed, 316.
- Personal note in L. of G., 158.
- Personality, Carpenter’s account of W.’s, 268, 306;
- the source of power, 169;
- W.’s doctrine of, 239-40;
- W. retains sense of own, 74;
- W.’s, influence of, 30.
- Pessimism, Tolstoi’s, 295-6;
- Morris and Ruskin’s, 296.
- Pfaff’s Restaurant, N.Y., 138-40.
- Philadelphia, W. in, 251, 331-5.
- See Camden.
- Phillips, Wendell, on Lincoln, 191.
- Philosophy, W.’s interest in, 60-62.
- Phrenological estimate of W.’s character, 67-8.
- Pierce, President, 80, 103, 135.
- “Pioneers! O Pioneers!” 205.
- Pittsburg, W. at, 271.
- Plato, 58, 121, 126, 239, 240, 282;
- and W., 224, 291-2.
- Plotinus, 121.
- Poe, E. A., 37, 59, 258, 320;
- W. meets, 42.
- Poet, W. describes his ideal, 95-7, 103, 117-8, 123-4;
- need of the poet for expression, 89-90;
- alone realises unity of all, 243;
- W. as a, 328-9.
- Poets, two orders of, 328-9.
- “Poets to Come,” 154.
- Poetry, W.’s view of, 59-61, 109;
- W. reads by the sea, 60;
- changes in modern English, 289-290.
- Polk, President, 40, 43.
- Poor, a menace to Democracy, the very, 240, 310-1.
- Pope, A., W. compared with, 151, 289.
- Population of America, xxv, 176, 308.
- Portraits of W. in 36th year, 66-7;
- L. of G. portrait, 110;
- “gentle shepherd,” 218;
- others, 140-1, 148, 230, 257, 331, 338.
- See list of illustrations.
- Pose, W.’s, 338.
- Potter, Dr. J., on W., 229-30.
- Prairies, W. and the, 271.
- Praise, W.’s love of, 303, 335.
- Prayer, W. and, 76.
- “Prayer of Columbus,” 253;
- described, 254-5.
- Pre-existence, W.’s doctrine of, 101.
- Preface of 1855 used for poems, 116;
- omitted, 129;
- in selections, 223.
- Preface to 1871 ed., 243.
- Preface to 2nd Annex, 339.
- Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, 97.
- Price, Mrs. Abby, 139, 219-20.
- Price, Miss, qu., 219-20.
- Pride, W.’s, 156, 317.
- Printer, W. as a, 19-20, 56.
- Prisons of the South, 187;
- W. visits prisons, 111-2.
- Property, W. and private, 240;
- rights of, 311.
- Prosecution of W. proposed in 1856, 127;
- in 1882, 284-5.
- “Prostitute, To a Common,” 168.
- Proudhon, 309.
- Publisher, W. as his own, 219, 258, 259, 285, 305.
- Punishment, method of, 30.
- “Pupil, To a,” 169.
- Puritanism, W. free from, 19.
- Putnam’s Monthly, 108.
- Quaker traits in W., 112;
- W.’s story of a, 334-5.
- Quakeresses in hospitals, 195.
- Quakers, 121;
- on L. I., 4-5;
- a crisis among American, 14, 15;
- attitude to war, W. and the, 206;
- doctrine of Inner Light, 16, 17;
- doctrine of revelation, 55;
- essential character of their faith, 18;
- W.’s relation to, 75-6, 180, 206, 298-9, 301-2;
- Williams family and the, 347-8.
- Quebec, W. at, 276.
- Radical, The (Boston), publishes Mrs. Gilchrist’s letters, 225.
- “Rain, The voice of the,” 330.
- Ramsay, A., 290.
- Rand and Avery, 283.
- Realisation, W.’s power of, 99.
- Reality, evil necessary to, 212.
- Recitations, W.’s in hospitals, 197.
- Redpath, James, 198.
- “Redwood Tree, Song of the,” 253;
- described, 255-6.
- Refinement, W. disclaims, 113.
- Reformer, The, 349.
- Rejected passages, 286.
- Religion, W.’s, 18-19, 70-8, 149, 241-4, 254, 299;
- and poetry, 61;
- new, 339;
- importance of, for America, 238, 241.
- See Mysticism.
- Religious emotion in L. of G., 105-6.
- Renaissance in America, xxiv.
- “Renfrew, Baron,” 173.
- Republic, W.’s idea of, 292.
- See America.
- Republican becomes Democratic party, 13;
- new party formed, 132, 134;
- and the South, 189, 235;
- and corruption, 314.
- Respectable, W. seems to be growing, 216, 218.
- “Respondez,” 124.
- “Return of the Heroes, The,” 209.
- Reviews himself, W., 109, 323-4.
- Revolt, W.’s, against bondage, 296-7.
- Rhythm, changes in rhythm of poetry, 290-1;
- various emotional values of, 291;
- W.’s feeling for sea, 60;
- free, Emerson studies, 93;
- W.’s view of, 96-8.
- Rich, W. in danger of becoming, 57.
- “Rich Givers, To,” 169.
- Richmond, the Confederate capital, 182;
- surrenders, 188.
- “Rise, O Days, from your fathomless Deeps,” 206.
- Robespierre, 289.
- Rock Creek, W. at, 201.
- Rocky Mountains, W. in the, 272-3.
- Rodin, A., 130.
- Rolleston, T. W., his Epictetus, 318.
- “Rolling Earth, Song of the,” 117-9.
- Romance of America, the, xix-xxiii.
- Rome, Andrew, printer, 88.
- Romney, 264.
- Roosa, D. B. St. J., qu., 137-8.
- “Roots and leaves themselves alone,” 165.
- Rossetti, W. M., 97, 171, 259, 263-4;
- his selections from L. of G., 221-3, 227, 245;
- criticism of L. of G., 222;
- relations with W., 223, 259;
- and Mrs. Gilchrist’s letters, 225.
- Rossetti, D. G., 222, 223, 263-4, 328.
- Rossi, 284.
- “Roughs,” W. “one of the,” 114.
- “Rounded Catalogue, The,” 340.
- Rousseau, J. J., 23, 58, 97, 108, 263, 289, 292.
- Royce, Josiah, his World and the Individual, 166.
- Rumford, Count (Colonel Thompson), 2.
- Ruskin, J., 62, 171, 263, 296.
- Rynders, Isaiah, 82.
- Saadi, 318.
- Saint, W. no, 76, 337.
- St. Lawrence River, W.’s view of the, 276.
- St. Louis, W. visits, 53, 271, 273, 286.
- St. Simon, 309.
- Saguenay, W. on the, 276.
- “Salut au Monde,” 116, 158.
- Sanborn, F. B., W. visits, 281-2.
- San Francisco, 63.
- Sand, George, 293, 318.
- Sanity, W.’s, 297.
- Santayana, George, his criticism of W., 329 n.
- Satan, 212, 298, 297, 321.
- “Scented herbage of my breast,” 167.
- Science, W. and, 60-2, 96, 242;
- Mrs. Gilchrist and Carpenter’s attitude toward, 267.
- Scott, Sir Walter, 57, 91, 318, 320;
- W. reads, 19.
- Scott, W. Bell, 171, 223.
- Sea, W. and the, 9, 31, 58, 60, 154-5.
- Secession, South Carolina proposes, 24;
- proclaims, 175;
- not desired by America, 176;
- soldiers, W. nurses, 199;
- talk in New England, 27.
- Self, the, 74, 166;
- and the Other, 61;
- the electric, 154.
- Self-assertion, W.’s doctrine of, 76, 297.
- Self-consciousness of W., 128.
- Self-realisation, gospel of, 148, 253.
- Self-revelation of W., 264.
- Semele, 275.
- Seward, W. H., 79, 172, 175.
- Sex, W. and, 144-7, 159-62, 167;
- W.’s expanded conception of, 226;
- Thoreau puzzled by W.’s view, 115;
- W.’s experience of, 71;
- and religion, 70-1;
- basic in life, 126-7.
- Shakespeare, xxi, 57, 318.
- Shelley, P. B., W. indifferent to, 59;
- compared with, 107-8;
- also 91, 97, 290, 295.
- Sherman, Gen., 187;
- his march to the sea, 188.
- Ships, W.’s love of, 60, 335-6, 343-4;
- Yankee clipper, 64.
- Sin, W.’s attitude toward, 18, 124-5, 151, 156, 161, 255.
- Skin, rich texture of W.’s, 316.
- Slavery, 79-81, 135-7;
- divides North from South, 25;
- W. and, 103;
- and Democratic party, 82, see Abolitionism, etc.;
- S. party and election of 1860, 173-4;
- and the war, 177;
- in N.Y., 310-1.
- Slave-trade, 140.
- Sleep, W. on, 102.
- “Sleepers, The,” 102, 274.
- Sleepy Hollow, 301.
- Smith, Adam, 308.
- Smith, Mary Whitall. See Mrs. Berenson.
- Smith, R. Pearsall, 297;
- relations with W., 301-4;
- leaves Philadelphia, 325.
- Smoking, 32.
- See Tobacco.
- Social functions, W.’s interest in, 40.
- Social problem in N.Y., 139-40.
- Socialism, W. and, 239, 312.
- Socialist, ideal, the, 308-9, 312;
- party in America, 311;
- Socialists, early, 308.
- Solidarity, of the nation, felt in war-time, 207;
- of the peoples, 205-6;
- W.’s feeling for, 239-40, 242-3, 306-7, 337, 343.
- Solitude, W.’s, 233, 331, 342;
- compared with Thoreau and Emerson’s, 113-4.
- “So Long,” 169.
- “Sometimes with one I love,” 164.
- “Song of Myself,” 122, 243, 286;
- analysed, 98-101;
- qu., 72 n.;
- called “Walt Whitman,” 150.
- Sophocles, 57.
- Soul, the flesh and the, in modern religion, 61;
- and Science, 96, 242;
- in Nature, 102, 340;
- W.’s view of the, 98, 120, 149.
- South, its interests antagonistic to those of the North and West, 24-5;
- similarity of interest with N.Y., 25;
- policy, 26, 43;
- and the war, 82-3, 176-7, 187, 235;
- slavery and the, 25, 80-1;
- pride of the, 187, 324;
- Lincoln and, 189;
- and the Union, 180, 314;
- W. and the, 46-55, 180, 235, 237, 349-50.
- South Carolina, and Federal tariff, 24, 27.
- Southey, R., 327.
- “Sovereign States,” doctrine of, 26.
- Specimen Days, 262, 266.
- Specimen Days and Collect, 286.
- Spectacles, W. begins to wear, 245.
- Speech, W.’s manner of, 98;
- W.’s style and, 291.
- Spencer, Herbert, 62, 263.
- Spirits, W. and, 149.
- Spiritualistic woman and W., 234.
- “Spontaneous Me,” 127.
- Spooner, Alden J., 20, 22, 30-1.
- Springfield (Mass.) Republican, 259.
- Square Deific. See “Chanting the S. D.”
- “Squatter Sovereignty,” 44, 79, 80, 134.
- Stafford family, 260;
- George, 260-2, 266, 280, 343.
- Stage-driver, W. as a, 137;
- stage-drivers of N.Y., 138.
- See Broadway.
- Stanton, Mrs. E. C., 126.
- Stars and Stripes, the, xx, 335.
- “Starting from Paumanok,” 148.
- Staten Island, N.Y., 140.
- Statesman, The, W. edits, 37.
- Stay-at-home, W. a, 64.
- Steam-transit and Federal sentiment, 27.
- Stedman, E. C., 191, 317-8.
- Stockton, Commodore, 63.
- “Stranger, To a,” 165.
- Strength, W.’s great physical, 68.
- Stubborn quality in W., 251.
- Style of L. of G., 84, 92, 104-5, 150-1, 244, 289-91.
- See under L. of G.
- Subjective character of W.’s genius, 105.
- Suggestiveness of L. of G., 269.
- Sumter, Fort, 178.
- “Sunset Breeze, To the,” 339, 340.
- “Sunset, Song at,” 152.
- Sunstroke, an early, 200-1;
- another, 314.
- Superhuman quality in W., 228;
- noted by M. Conway, 111;
- by Thoreau, 115.
- Swayne, bookseller, 87.
- Swinburne, A. C., 60, 223-5, 245, 327-9.
- Swinton, John, 138.
- Symbolism, W.’s, 117-8, 120;
- example of the broad-axe, 122.
- See Mysticism.
- Symonds, J. A., W.’s letter to, 51, 349-50;
- and L. of G., 172, 224-5;
- account of, 223-4, 245, 267, 291, 336, 343.
- Sympathy, W.’s yearning for, 267.
- Tammany Hall, 38, 82, 178.
- Taney, R. B., 135.
- Tariffs, 24.
- See Free-trade.
- Tattler, W. edits, 37.
- Taylor, Father, as described by W., 142-3;
- death, 283.
- Taylor, President, 45, 50.
- Teacher, W. as a, 28-33, 233;
- method of punishment, 30.
- Teetotalism, W.’s support of, 33, 35-7.
- See Temperance.
- Temperance, W.’s, 122, 159-60, 315.
- Tennyson, A., Lord, 35, 92, 109, 223, 245, 283, 290, 318, 336;
- W. enjoys, 59;
- W. reads aloud, 275;
- regards W. as “a great big something,” 115;
- and W., 339.
- Texas admitted to Union, 43.
- Thayer & Eldridge, publishers, 141-2, 171, 190.
- Theatres of N.Y., W. goes to, 85-6, 19, 41, 270, 284.
- Theory, W. no adept in, 75.
- “There was a child went forth,” 103.
- “These I singing in spring,” 163.
- “Think of the soul,” 125.
- Thoreau, H. D., 129, 171, 282-3, 301, 303, 335;
- visits W., 112-6;
- and J. Brown, 136,159;
- W. solitary as, 233.
- “Thou Mother with thy equal brood,” 245.
- Timber Creek, W. visits, 259-61, 268, 281;
- descriptions of, 260-1;
- W. to have a cottage at, 317.
- Tippecanoe, fight at, 38.
- Tobacco, W. distributes in hospitals, 197.
- Tolstoi, L., 293;
- W. compared with, 295-6.
- Tomb, W.’s, 341.
- “To one shortly to die,” 168.
- “To soar in Freedom,” 328.
- “To think of Time,” 102.
- Towards Democracy, E. Carpenter’s, 267, 305.
- Toynbee Hall, W. and, 313.
- Trade-Unionism, W. and, 312.
- Tragedy, W.’s predilection for, in earlier writings, 34-5.
- Tramp, W. envies the, 326.
- Traubel, Horace, relations with W., 325, 326, 329, 331, 332, 342, 343, 344;
- quoted, 349-50;
- sec. of W. Fellowship, 300 n.
- Treasury Building, W. at, 190, 215, 233, 247.
- Tribune, New York. See N. Y. T.
- “Trickle Drops,” 165.
- Tri-Insula, a republic, 178.
- Trowbridge, J. T., 142.
- Tuft’s College, Mass., 255.
- Tupper, M. F., W. compared with, 327.
- “Twain, Mark,” 317.
- “Two Rivulets” described, 266.
- Tyler, President, 38.
- Ulysses’ return, 276.
- Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 81, 187.
- Unitarianism, W.’s relation to, 76.
- Union, W. and the idea of the American, 55.
- Unity, W.’s doctrine of the universal, 120;
- of L. of G., 221.
- “Universal, Song of the,” 253;
- described, 255.
- Untidiness, W.’s, 318.
- Van Buren, 44;
- W. supports, 33, 38.
- Van Velsor, Major C., 4, 10;
- family, 347.
- — Louisa. See L. Whitman.
- — Naomi. See Williams.
- Verdi, 320.
- Verse, W. writes, 47.
- Vice, Society for the Suppression of, 284, 285.
- Victoria, Queen, W. and, 339.
- Vicksburg taken by Grant, 185.
- Virgil, 318.
- Virginia, xx, 26, 188.
- “Vocalism,” 157.
- Voice, W.’s, described, 98;
- W. and the, 154, 157.
- Vow, Whitman’s (1861), 181, 204, 216.
- Wagner, R., 293, 320.
- Wales, Prince of, and W., 173.
- Walks at Washington, W.’s, 215, 233.
- Wallace, A. R., 62.
- Wallace, J. W., visits W., 338.
- “Walt,” W. calls himself, 141.
- Walt Whitman Club, 325;
- fellowship, 300 n.
- War, W.’s attitude towards, 43, 202-3, 205-9;
- and “a divine war,” 206;
- his mysticism of, 207-8;
- must be followed by nobler peace, 208-9.
- War of 1812, 10.
- War of 1861-65, 182-203;
- causes of, 82, 208;
- inevitableness, 177;
- not for abolition, 187;
- W. and the, xxvi, 178-209;
- ready to share in, 202.
- Washington, President, xxv, 5, 10, 38, 289;
- W. compares himself with, 131.
- Washington, condition of, during war, 194-8, 216.
- Washington, W. in, xxvii, 184-248, 301, 306;
- its influence on W., 150, 245;
- W. visits hospitals, see H.;
- W.’s manner of life in, 190, 193, 215;
- W. fond of, 201-2;
- why he remains, 218-9;
- walks at, 233;
- W. and negro problem in, 235;
- hopes to return, 252;
- discharged from post, 257;
- visit to, 258.
- Wealth of America becoming concentrated, 310.
- Webster, Daniel, 42, 79.
- Wesley, J., 290.
- West, the, its interests, 24;
- its settlement threatens the South, 26;
- problem of, 79;
- W. and the, xxvii;
- first sees, 54;
- contemplates settlement in, 183;
- journey, 271-4.
- West Hills, the Whitman homestead, 5, 103, 260, 320;
- described, 7-9;
- holidays at, 12;
- W. visits, 280.
- “What am I after all,” 158.
- Whigs, the American, 23, 24, 44.
- Whitehorse, the hamlet of, W. stays at, 259-60.
- See Timber Creek.
- Whitman, Abijah, 5.
- — Andrew, 13, 86, 193, 256.
- — Edward, 86, 256, 341.
- — George, 13, 86, 182, 185, 246, 248, 250, 256, 257, 266, 342;
- view of L. of G., 88;
- volunteers, 178-9;
- wounded, 183;
- anxiety about, 203;
- a prisoner, 209-10;
- in Brooklyn, 218;
- in Camden, 246;
- W. leaves his house, 305.
- Whitman, Hannah. See Heyde.
- — Iredwell, 280.
- — Jefferson, 13, 50, 53, 86, 88, 185, 193, 251, 256, 273;
- goes to St. Louis, 218;
- W. visits there, 265-5;
- death of, 342.
- — Jesse (W.’s grandfather), xxv, 5, 6, 8.
- — Jesse (W.’s brother), 11, 65, 86, 256.
- — Jessie, 342.
- — Joseph, 5.
- — Lieutenant, 5.
- — Louisa (van Velsor), 4, 65, 103, 112;
- described, 6-7;
- and W., 12-3;
- illness, 19-20;
- and L. of G., 88;
- letters of W. to, 202, 233, 247, etc.;
- age and failing health, 210;
- a link with W.’s youth, 233;
- goes to Camden, 246;
- death, 248;
- effect on W., 249, 250, 252, 258;
- her tomb, 341.
- — Louisa (Mrs. George W.), 250, 269.
- — Mahala, 280.
- — Martha, 248.
- — Mary, 11, 86.
- — Walt, Dutch element in, 3;
- born, 6;
- at West Hills, 7-9;
- at Brooklyn, 10-3;
- hears Hicks, 15-8;
- amusements and education, 19;
- as a lad, 19-20;
- sees Booth, 22;
- and politics, 22, 33;
- at seventeen, 28;
- as a teacher, 28-33;
- games, 30;
- his idleness, 20, 30-1;
- and Long Islander, 31-2;
- wholesomeness, 32;
- a journalist, 33-7;
- Franklin Evans, 35;
- an editor, 37;
- political views, 39, 40, 44;
- love of society, 40;
- and of New York, 20, 41-2;
- the Eagle, 42-4;
- public work, 43;
- goes to New Orleans, 46, 49-53;
- returns via St. Louis, 54;
- his idea of America, 55;
- becomes a carpenter, 56;
- his reading, 57-61;
- attitude to American writers, 59-60;
- and to science, etc., 60-2;
- passion for America, 63;
- inner development, 65, 69-78;
- W. at 35, 66-8, 83;
- in N.Y., 82-6;
- hears Alboni, 86;
- indifference to money, 87;
- begins L. of G., 87;
- publishes it, 88;
- daily habits, 65, 88;
- holidays, 86, 89;
- power of joy, 91;
- compared with Emerson, 94;
- view of the poet, 95-7;
- describes his childhood, 103-4;
- religious quality of W., 105-6;
- relation to Emerson, Rousseau, Shelley, 106-8;
- reviews L. of G., 109;
- visit from Conway, 110-2;
- appearance in ’55, 111;
- visit from Alcott and Thoreau, 112-5;
- love of city-life, 114;
- publishes second edition L. of G., 116;
- symbolism of W., 117-22;
- W. as the American poet, 123;
- W. and evil, 124-5;
- and women, 126-7;
- in danger of prosecution, 127;
- publishes Emerson’s letter, 127-8;
- his letter to E., 128;
- idea of lecturing, 129-31;
- and of political life, 131-2;
- need for comrades, 132-3;
- becomes a Republican, 134;
- W. and J. Brown, 136;
- W.’s N.Y. friends, 137;
- in N.Y., 138-40;
- appearance in 1860, 140;
- rarely laughs, 142;
- at Boston, 142-3;
- with Emerson, 143-7;
- his optimism, 151;
- humility, 154;
- mystic experience, 155;
- pride, 156;
- evil qualities, 156;
- attitude toward sex, 159-62;
- his temperance, 160;
- as Adam, 162;
- on comradeship, 163;
- W. and Jesus, 167-8;
- and death, 169;
- W. in N.Y., 172;
- and P. of Wales, 173;
- sees Lincoln, 175-6;
- W. and the outbreak of war, 178-81;
- goes to front, 183-4;
- home-troubles, 185-6, 193;
- life in Washington, 190, 193, 201;
- friends there, 190-2;
- appearance, 192;
- occupation, 192-3;
- health, 193;
- thinks of lecturing, 193-4;
- in hospitals, 194-200;
- meets Lincoln, 201;
- first illness, 202, 203-4;
- willing to share in war, 203;
- in Brooklyn, 203-5, 209;
- prepares Drum-taps, 205;
- attitude to war, 205-9;
- seeks release of George W., 209-10;
- clerk in Indian Bureau, 210
- W. and Lincoln’s death, 211-2;
- Harlan incident, 213-4;
- as a clerk, 216;
- gentler, 217;
- decreasing vitality, 218;
- visits Mrs. Price, 219-20;
- relations with W. M. Rossetti, 223;
- with Symonds, 223-5;
- Mrs. Gilchrist’s letters, 225;
- W. and sex, 226;
- legendary element in story of W., 227;
- outcome of his personality, 228-9;
- W. and P. Doyle, 231-3;
- W.’s solitude, 233;
- W. and women, 234;
- supports Grant, 235;
- quarrel with O’Connor, 236;
- his Democratic Vistas, 236-42;
- publishes fifth edition of L. of G., 242;
- W. a careful writer, 244;
- public recitation of poems, 245;
- illness, 247-57;
- goes to Camden, 248;
- effect of mother’s death, 249;
- loneliness in Camden, 250;
- poems at this juncture, 253-5;
- his residence, 256;
- discharged from post, 257;
- poverty and help from England, 258-9;
- visits Timber Creek, 260-2;
- Mrs. Gilchrist comes to Phila., 263-5;
- W. sits for bust, 265;
- Carpenter’s visit and account of W., 267-9;
- Dr. Bucke’s do., 270;
- W.’s journey West, 271-4;
- and to Canada, 274-7;
- goes to Boston, 278-82;
- sees Emerson, 282;
- L. of G. troubles, 284-6;
- W. and other prophetic writers, 289-300;
- puts himself into his rhythm, 291;
- universality of W., 295;
- and vital power, 298;
- his friendship with Pearsall Smith, 301-4;
- W. takes the Mickle St. house, 305;
- second visit of Carpenter, 305-7;
- W. and labour problems, 306-13;
- was he a Socialist? 311-2;
- W. a “mugwump,” 314;
- his household, 317-9;
- visitors, 319-24;
- his politico-social views, 323-4;
- serious illness, 326;
- more querulous, 327;
- Swinburne’s attack, 327;
- increased need for silence, 331;
- birthday dinners, 331-2;
- Ingersoll’s lecture, 333-5;
- W. and L. of G., 335-6;
- his views of health, 338-40;
- his tomb, 341;
- last illness, 341-4;
- last letter, 342;
- death, 344;
- funeral, 344-6;
- note on visit to New Orleans, etc., 349-50.
- Whitman, his characteristics, described by phrenologist, 67-8.
- See also 303-4, 334, and under Anger, Coolness, Elemental quality, Evil in, Humility, Humour, Mysticism, Pride, Sanity, Wonder, etc.
- — Walter (father of W.), 56, 103;
- described, 6, 13-4;
- moves to Brooklyn, 10;
- relations with W., 12, 65;
- death, 86, 88;
- tomb, 341.
- — Zechariah, 5.
- Whitman, burying ground, West Hills, 9;
- family, and Hicks, 14;
- and L. of G., 88;
- homestead at West Hills, 2.
- See W. H.
- Whitmanites, 218.
- Whitman’s America, Introd.;
- W. owes much to A., xxv;
- its development, xxvi;
- extent of W.’s journeys, xxvii;
- W. a metropolitan American, and a type of America, xxvii-viii.
- “Whitman’s hollow,” 5.
- Whittier, J. G., 59, 336.
- “Whoever you are holding me now in hand,” 163.
- Whole, the idea of the, W.’s love for, 60-1.
- “Who learns my lesson complete?” 104.
- Wholesomeness, W.’s, 32.
- Wickedness, W.’s attitude to, 104.
- Williams, family of, 31, 347-8.
- — Naomi, 4, 347-8.
- — Roger, 4.
- Wilmot proviso, the, 43, 44.
- Wisconsin, State of, W. in, 54.
- Wisdom found in fellowship, 164.
- “Woman waits for Me, A,” 126.
- Woman, W. and, 102, 125-7, 148, 225-6, 240, 274.
- Women, W.’s relations with, 51-3, 71, 139, 160, 234, 263, 303, 323, 349-50.
- Women of America, 122;
- of Boston, 279.
- Women’s suffrage, 240;
- W. and, 125-6.
- Wonder, W.’s capacity for, 78.
- Wood, Fernando, 82, 178, 185.
- Wood, Silas, 7.
- Woodfall and Junius, 285.
- “Word out of the Sea, A.” See “Out of the Cradle”.
- Words, W.’s idea of, 96, 117-9;
- W. invents, 212.
- Wordsworth, W., 91, 97, 290;
- W. and, 59.
- Work, W.’s power of, 32.
- Working-man, American, W. and the, 312, 322.
- Worship, W. feels this is for solitude, 142.
- Worthington, Mr., 285-6.
- Yankee, W. dislikes the, 103.
- “Years of the Modern,” 205-6.
- Yeomen as citizens, 306, 308.
- Young people, W. and, 275, 303.
- Youth, America the land of, xx-xxii.