Comments on: Sam P. for Nov. 17 http://swords.lookingforwhitman.org/2009/11/15/sam-p-for-nov-17/ Finer than prayer!(?) Sun, 21 Dec 2014 09:21:57 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.4.30 By: what is a hemroid http://swords.lookingforwhitman.org/2009/11/15/sam-p-for-nov-17/comment-page-1/#comment-6609 Thu, 02 Jun 2011 05:01:09 +0000 http://swords.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=73#comment-6609 Excellent website, mate! The Rosy Armpit of the Internet » Sam P. for Nov. 17 is basically something. I will be establishing my own soon i will really duplicate aspects of the one you have, lawfully obviously :)

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By: Erin Longbottom http://swords.lookingforwhitman.org/2009/11/15/sam-p-for-nov-17/comment-page-1/#comment-123 Tue, 17 Nov 2009 20:33:35 +0000 http://swords.lookingforwhitman.org/?p=73#comment-123 Okay so I don’t know that much about Bob Dylan (though I am familiar with the Joan Baez rendition of Blowin’ in the Wind, and a few other songs of his) but I really enjoyed this post. Something I have wondered when writing about Bruce Springsteen in connection with Whitman is whether Springsteen knows that connection exists, same with Bob Dylan(by the way, did you know that when Bob Dylan was arrested earlier this year because no one recognized him and he was creeping around an abandoned house, he was looking for the house where Bruce Springsteen wrote Born to Run? How’s that for a connection…). Essentially, Whitman was the genesis for this way of writing, and without him it’s hard to say that Bob or Bruce could have written their brand of music without him.

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