They are not quite full — not quite entire : the woman who has denied the best of herself — the woman who has discredited the animal want, the eager physical hunger, the wish of that which though we will not allow it to be freely spoken of is still... With Walt Whitman in Camden - Seite 452von Horace Traubel - 1914Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Horace Traubel - 1914 - 638 Seiten
...animal want, the eager physical hunger, tr.«wish of that which though we will not allow it to be freeJr spoken of is still the basis of all that makes life...while and advances the horizon of discovery. Sex: MX: *ex: whether you sing or make a machine, or go to the North Pole, or love your mother, or build... | |
| M. Jimmie Killingsworth - 1989 - 222 Seiten
...has discredited the animal want, the eager physical hunger, the wish of that which we will not allow to be freely spoken of is still the basis of all that makes life worthwhile . . . Sex: Sex: Sex" (Traubel 3:452-53). The subject is also broached in Whitman's journalistic... | |
| Geoffrey M. Sill - 1994 - 340 Seiten
...that these women without the full exercise of their sexuality, and of course its resulting childbirth, are not quite full — not quite entire: the woman...while and advances the horizon of discovery. . . . sex is the root of it all: sex: the coming together of men and women: sex, sex. (WWC 3: 52—53) At this... | |
| David S. Reynolds - 2000 - 288 Seiten
...258), for example, and in the statement to Traubel already quoted above: "that which we will not allow to be freely spoken of is still the basis of all that makes life worthwhile . . . Sex: Sex: Sex. ... the life below the life" (WWC, III:452-53). The heavy coding of... | |
| M. Jimmie Killingsworth - 2007 - 123 Seiten
...life, he told Horace Traubel that "the eager physical hunger, the wish of that which we will not allow to be freely spoken of is still the basis of all that makes life worthwhile . . . Sex: Sex: Sex." Using an organic metaphor that hints at the place of sex in the whole... | |
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