Walt Whitman: Difference between revisions

From BoyWiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:


==Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett==
==Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett==
[[Image:170px-Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett.jpg|thumb|Walt Whitman (seated) and Bill Duckett. (1886)]]
 
[[Image:170px-Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett.jpg|thumb|250 px|right|Walt Whitman (seated) and Bill Duckett. (1886)]]
In 1884 when Whitman was 65 years old, he bought a house at 328 Mickle Street in Camden, New Jersey. Bill Duckett was a neighbor boy who lived three doors down and was somewhere between twelve and fifteen at the time.<ref>http://www.nambla.org/whitman.html</ref> The two may have met while playing [[:Wikipedia:Quoits|quoits]] and as Duckett latter recalled: "We boys had a quoit club, and W. made us a present of a handsome set of quoits for pitching." Soon after, he moved in with Whitman and the two lived together for about five years.
In 1884 when Whitman was 65 years old, he bought a house at 328 Mickle Street in Camden, New Jersey. Bill Duckett was a neighbor boy who lived three doors down and was somewhere between twelve and fifteen at the time.<ref>http://www.nambla.org/whitman.html</ref> The two may have met while playing [[:Wikipedia:Quoits|quoits]] and as Duckett latter recalled: "We boys had a quoit club, and W. made us a present of a handsome set of quoits for pitching." Soon after, he moved in with Whitman and the two lived together for about five years.
[[Image:Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett Wagon-md.jpg|thumb|left]]   
[[Image:Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett Wagon-md.jpg|thumb|400 px|left| text]]   
{{clr}}
{{clr}}
==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:42, 6 December 2013

Walt Whitman (May 31, 1819 – March 26, 1892) was an American poet, essayist and journalist. His work was very controversial in its time, particularly his poetry collection Leaves of Grass, which was described as obscene for its overt sexuality. [1]

Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett

File:170px-Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett.jpg
Walt Whitman (seated) and Bill Duckett. (1886)

In 1884 when Whitman was 65 years old, he bought a house at 328 Mickle Street in Camden, New Jersey. Bill Duckett was a neighbor boy who lived three doors down and was somewhere between twelve and fifteen at the time.[2] The two may have met while playing quoits and as Duckett latter recalled: "We boys had a quoit club, and W. made us a present of a handsome set of quoits for pitching." Soon after, he moved in with Whitman and the two lived together for about five years.

File:Walt Whitman and Bill Duckett Wagon-md.jpg
text

References

See also