User:AnnaKucsma~enwikisource/In Progress
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American authors
[edit]Dikinson
[edit]
Whitman
[edit]- Inscriptions → Leaves of Grass - Book I
- Starting from Paumanok → Leaves of Grass - Book II
- Song of Myself → Leaves of Grass - Book III
- Children of Adam → Leaves of Grass - Book IV
- Calamus → Leaves of Grass - Book V
- Salut au Monde! → Leaves of Grass - Book VI
- Song of the Open Road → Leaves of Grass - Book VII
- Crossing Brooklyn Ferry → Leaves of Grass - Book VIII
- Song of the Answerer → Leaves of Grass - Book IX
- Our Old Feuillage → Leaves of Grass - Book X
- A Song of Joys → Leaves of Grass - Book XI
- Song of the Broad-Axe → Leaves of Grass - Book XII
- Song of the Exposition → Leaves of Grass - Book XIII
- Song of the Redwood-Tree → Leaves of Grass - Book XIV
- A Song for Occupations → Leaves of Grass - Book XV
- A Song of the Rolling Earth → Leaves of Grass - Book XVI
- Birds of Passage → Leaves of Grass - Book XVII
- A Broadway Pageant → Leaves of Grass - Book XVIII
- Sea-Drift → Leaves of Grass - Book XIX
- By the Roadside → Leaves of Grass - Book XX
- Drum-Taps → Leaves of Grass - Book XXI
- Memories of President Lincoln → Leaves of Grass - Book XXII
- By Blue Ontario's Shore → Leaves of Grass - Book XXIII
- Autumn Rivulets → Leaves of Grass - Book XXIV
- Proud Music of the Storm → Leaves of Grass - Book XXV
- Passage to India → Leaves of Grass - Book XXVI
- Prayer of Columbus → Leaves of Grass - Book XXVII
- The Sleepers → Leaves of Grass - Book XXVIII
- To Think of Time → Leaves of Grass - Book XXIX
- Whispers of Heavenly Death → Leaves of Grass - Book XXX
- Thou Mother with Thy Equal Brood → Leaves of Grass - Book XXXI
- From Noon to Starry Night → Leaves of Grass - Book XXXII
- Songs of Parting → Leaves of Grass - Book XXXIII
- Sands at Seventy (First Annex) → Leaves of Grass - Book XXXIV
- Good-Bye My Fancy (Second Annex) → Leaves of Grass - Book XXXV
Other authors
[edit]- Author:Geoffrey Chaucer
- Author:Hildegard of Bingen, abbess & mystic
- Author:Joan of Arc, who dictated a whole lot of letters, many of which apparently still survive in some form or another.