| Walt Whitman (18191892). Prose Works. 1892. |
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| I. Specimen Days |
| 16. Sources of CharacterResults1860 |
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| TO sum up the foregoing from the outset (and, of course, far, far more unrecorded,) I estimate three leading sources and formative stamps to my own character, now solidified for good or bad, and its subsequent literary and other outgrowththe maternal nativity-stock brought hither from far-away Netherlands, for one, (doubtless the best)the subterranean tenacity and central bony structure (obstinacy, wilfulness) which I get from my paternal English elements, for anotherand the combination of my Long Island birth-spot, sea-shores, childhoods scenes, absorptions, with teeming Brooklyn and New Yorkwith, I suppose, my experiences afterward in the secession outbreak, for the third. | 1 |
| For, in 1862, startled by news that my brother George, an officer in the 51st New York volunteers, had been seriously wounded (first Fredericksburg battle, December 13th,) I hurriedly went down to the field of war in Virginia. But I must go back a little. | 2 |
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