Bright Butterflies mobile by Whitman (1972)
321 notes
·
View notes
Comes With A Trip And a Fall
Head Over Heels For A Paper Doll
87 notes
·
View notes
Alex Raymond - Flash Gordon and the Water World of Mongo in Whitman #1407 (1937)
262 notes
·
View notes
Beep, Beep, The Road Runner #066 (1977)
55 notes
·
View notes
(1973)
90 notes
·
View notes
The Night Before Christmas
Whitman (1950/1954)
25 notes
·
View notes
"UFO Space Strangers", album à colorier (Whitman, 1978) - Source Zontar.
14 notes
·
View notes
Vintage Comic - Black Hole #03
Pencil: N/A
Inks: N/A
Whitman (July1980)
13 notes
·
View notes
It is not upon you alone the dark patches fall,
The dark threw its patches down upon me also,
Walt Whitman, "Crossing the Brooklyn Ferry"
12 notes
·
View notes
in my english literature class we read whitman’s “i sing the body electric”. i am the only person in the class who enjoyed the poem. these people know nothing about poetry, sexuality, confession or desire. get me out of here. the moment we finished reading they begged to know what it meant, why certain words were used…what does it all mean? i am thankful to my teacher for convincing them he isn’t giving them the answers, urging them to try thinking for themselves. they laughed at the poem with discomfort and disgust, because apparently seniors in high school aren’t mature enough to read the line “you would wish long and long to be with him, you would wish to sit by him in the boat that you and he might touch each other”. you can’t read about making love without laughing and condemning the source? you can’t read following lines about orgasm? you find writing about orgasms to be shameful and then go home and wank to degrading pornography. i hate it here.
31 notes
·
View notes
from Song of my self, Walt Whitman
17 notes
·
View notes
What good amid these, O me, O life?
That you are here—that life exists and identity, that the powerful play goes on, and you may contribute a verse.
Walt Whitman
63 notes
·
View notes
Chuck Liese - UFO and Outer Space #21 Cover Original Art (Whitman, 1970)
37 notes
·
View notes
(1972)
235 notes
·
View notes
Tragic is the fate of a man disheartened by the very madness he weaves
2 notes
·
View notes