A Sheaf of Whitman Letters
Walter Harding
Among the Whitman manuscripts owned by Mr. C. Waller Barrett of
New York City are a number of miscellaneous unpublished letters
relating to Whitman's publishing affairs. None of them individually
is of startling significance, but together they shed some light on
the circle of friends around Whitman and on his relations with his
editors. I am indebted to Mr. Barrett for permission to publish
them here.
I.
(Blue-lined white paper, 8" x 5", one page)
Mr. House informed me that you accepted, and would publish, my
"Bardic
Symbols." If so, would you as soon as convenient, have it placed in
type, and send me the proof?
About the two lines:
(See from my dead lips the ooze exuding at last!
See the prismatic colors glistening and rolling!)
I have in view, from them, an effect in the piece which I
clearly feel, but cannot as clearly define.—Though I should
prefer them in, still, as I told Mr. House, I agree that you may
omit them, if you decidedly wish to.
Yours & c
Walt Whitman
Portland av. near Myrtle
Brooklyn, N. Y.
This letter was apparently addressed to James Russell Lowell,
then the editor of the Atlantic Monthly. "Bardic Symbols"
was published in the Atlantic for April, 1860 (V, 445-447)
without the questioned lines. Later, when Whitman included the poem
in Leaves of Grass as "As I ebb'd with the ocean of life"
(one of the "Sea-Drift" poems), the lines were restored. It is
enlightening that only a few years before this, Lowell had deleted
a line from Thoreau's "Chesuncook," without permission when he
published it in the Atlantic. Thoreau took him strongly to
task for the liberty and refused thereafter to submit any of his
works to Lowell's editing. Apparently Lowell learned his lesson and
thereafter consulted his authors before censoring their works.
II.
(White paper, 4" x 6", four pages; envelope addressed to Charles W. Eldridge / care Major Hapgood / Paymaster U S Army / Washington D C, postmarked Brooklyn.)
Brooklyn
Tuesday afternoon June 28 '64
Dear comrade
I have been improving for the last two days, & think I shall
be up & around soon, as well as ever—I have had the services
of
a good physician, who has allowed me to get well quite
naturally—he decided that the only thing needing serious watching
was the throat & had prepared if the disease there went beyond a
certain point to call in a skilful New York doctor, for
consultation, but fortunately we were saved the trouble—I felt a
good deal like myself the most of yesterday, & the same
to-day—so I don't think I am hurrahing before I am out of the
woods.
—We have a letter from my brother George, down to 18th
inst.
he was all safe.
—My mother & folks are all well—
—I rece'd the letter enveloped to me 25th—
I sent a line to Wm O'Connor, 25th which I suppose he
rec'd—
—Has Nelly gone yet?
—I shall write to her next time—
—Remember me to Ashton with friendship—also to
Arnold
Johnson with sincere thanks & tell him I am getting
well—&
give my best respects & thanks to Major Hapgood.
Eldridge was a member of the firm of Thayer & Eldridge of
Boston who had published the 1860 edition of Leaves of
Grass
and then had gone bankrupt when the outbreak of war had
extinguished their Southern credit. Eldridge then became an
assistant in Major Hapgood's office in Washington and managed to
procure a desk for Whitman there and a small income for him for
minor copyist duties. Eldridge had also introduced Whitman to his
future biographer William O'Connor and his wife Nelly. J. Hubley
Ashton was Assistant Attorney-General. He later obtained a position
for Whitman in the Office of Indian Affairs. Arnold Johnson was
Charles Sumner's private secretary.
III.
(Blue-lined white paper, 8" x 5", four pages)
Attorney Generals Office.
Washington. Jan. 20, 1869.
James T. Fields.
>Dear Sir:
The package of February magazines sent on the 10th, arrived
safely yesterday. Accept my thanks. I am pleased with the
typographical appearance, correctness, &c. of my piece.
I enclose a piece, "Thou vast Rondure, swimming in
Space," of which I have to say to you as follows. It is to
appear in the April number of the London Fortnightly
Review.
—Having just received a note from the Editor of that Review,
Mr. Morley, in which he intimates that he has no objection to its
appearing simultaneously in America, I thought I would show it to
you. Very possibly you will not care anyhow to print a piece which
is to appear elsewhere. Should that, however, be no objection, and
should you consider the piece available for your purposes, the
price is $20. Of course it would have to go in your Number for
April. I reserve the right of printing in future book.
Respectfully, &c
Walt Whitman.
In 1861 James T. Fields took over the editing of the Atlantic
Monthly and in the issue of February, 1869 (XXIII, 199-203)
published Whitman's poem "Proud Music of the Sea-Storm." Apparently
Fields either did not care for "Thou vast Rondure" or did not
approve of publishing a poem appearing elsewhere, for he did not
include it in the Atlantic.
IV.
(White paper, unlined, with Harper's official
heading,
8" x 5")
Franklin Square,
New York, November 1, 1873.
Mr. Walt Whitman,
Dear Sir,
I send enclosed Messrs Harper & Brothers' check for One
Hundred Dollars ($100), in payment for your poem, "Song of the
Redwood Tree."
The Messrs Harper do not object to the subsequent publication of
the poem in book form, provided such publication is not made until
six months after the appearance of the poem in their Magazine.
With thanks for your poem (of which I will send you proof in a
few days), & the best wishes for your welfare, I am
Sincerely yours
H. M. Alden.
Ed. Harper's Mag.
P.S. The poem will appear in an early number. H. M. A.
Whitman's "The Song of the Redwood Tree" appeared in
Harper's
Monthly for February, 1874 (XLVIII, 366-367). It first appeared
in book form in Two Rivulets, published in 1876.
V.
(White paper, 8" x 5", one page).
Camden, N. Jersey.
431 Stevens St.
cor. West.
Feb. 12/76
Editor Commercial.
Dear Sir:
Wouldn't these articles be available for the paper. The price is
$60 for the two. Of course they are hitherto unpublished—(my
book, in which they go, will not be out for at least three
or four weeks.)
There are so many Commercials that it is impossible
to
identify this one positively. Possibly it was the Commercial
Advertiser, which had published some of Whitman's poetry as
early as 1871. "These articles" were possibly some of the prose
writings which appeared in Two Rivulets that year.
VI.
(Grey paper, unlined, 9½" x 6")
431 Stevens Street
Camden New Jersey March 21 '82
My friends
I believe you have in MS one or two clusters of my
Notes—Yours—they are paid for—I think I would like
to look
over them & touch them up to date (perhaps, or
not,
I could tell on seeing them)—
I wish you would send the MS therefore immediately
here—& I
will at once make the improvement changes (if any)—& return
to
you—
There is no clue as to the recipient of this letter nor as to
the "one or two clusters of my Notes."
VII.
(Postal card postmarked Camden, September 11, 1883, and
addressed to Karl Knortz, cor Morris Avenue & 155th Street, New
York City)
431 Stevens Street Camden New Jersey Sept
11'83—In a
note rec'd from you quite a while ago (from Johnstown, Pa:) you
mention some German translations of my poems by Dr ___?___ at
Berlin (since dead)—Would you please give me the
Dr's name
exactly & some particulars ab't the translations?___ Did you
get Dr. Bucke's volume, which was sent you June 21
last?___ I have received the translations into German. (slips,
papers, &c) you have so kindly sent me from time to time ___ have
not (otherwise) heard from you for some four months—I continue
(though a half paralytic) well as usual—
Walt Whitman
Dr. Knortz was a German-American scholar who translated many
American writers for German-speaking audiences. A large part of
Whitman's correspondence with him is printed in Horst Frenz's "Walt
Whitman's Letters to Karl eaking audiences. A large part of
Whitman's correspondence with him is printed in Horst Frenz's "Walt
Whitman's Letters to Karl Knortz" in the May, 1948, American
Literature (XX, 155-163). Mr Frenz derived his texts from the
appendix of Knortz's monograph on Whitman. The original manuscripts
for the following letters printed by Frenz are in the Barrett
collection: November 14, 1882; November 15, 1882; June 19, 1883;
January 10, 1884; April 27, 1885; June 14, 1886 (for which there
are important additions, see below); March 24, 1887; May 3, 1887;
September 10, 1888; January 8, 1889; and February 14, 1889. They
differ in no important details from Mr. Frenz's transcription
except that he occasionally spells out some of Whitman's elisions
in full and in the letter of November 14, 1882, transposes a
postscript into the main body of the letter. There are also
included in the Barrett
collection this letter of September 11, 1883 and one for June 14,
1887, for which see below.
Knortz was for several years pastor of the German Independent
Protestant Congregation in Johnstown, Pa. In 1882 he moved to New
York to do free lance editorial work. Although by this time there
were several people translating Whitman into German, it seems
likely that Whitman was referring here to Ferdinand Freiligrath who
made the first translations in an essay in Augsburger Allgemeine
Zeitung for April 24, 1868. Dr. R. M. Bucke's book was his
Walt Whitman, published in Philadelphia in 1883.
VIII.
(Postal card postmarked Philadelphia, June 11, 1885, and
addressed to Sylvester Baxter, Outing office, 175 Tremont
St., Boston, Mass.)
328 Mickle Street
Camden N J June 11 '85
Received from Sylvester Baxter (Outing magazine
Boston)
Twelve Dollars for piece
Baxter was one of the circle of admirers of Whitman in Boston.
He did editorial work on a number of newspapers and periodicals and
was also one of the leaders in the abortive Boston Whitman
Club.
IX.
(White board, 4½" x 3½")
328 Mickle street — Dec 4 '85
Camden New Jersey U S America
Dear Herbert Gilchrist
As I doubt I made some small misfiguring in my last I send you
an exact list of what I have rec'd of your good British "offering:"
abt Sept. 8 |
£ 22 |
. |
2 |
. |
6 |
-- |
$107.54 |
Oct. 20th |
37 |
. |
12 |
. |
|
-- |
183.11 |
Nov. 28 |
31 |
|
19 |
|
|
-- |
155.53 |
—from which I am living—fuel, clothing, food,
&c—personally
living, this winter—
You may as well hand this card to Mr Rossetti
Although an international controversy had raged in 1876 over
Whitman's need of financial assistance, when Robert Buchanan
published an appeal for aid for him in an English journal, his
English admirers continued to help him. Traubel includes several
letters (II, 330; III, 65) from William Michael Rossetti in the
fall of 1885 sending contributions. Herbert Gilchrist was the son
of Whitman's ardent admirer Anne Gilchrist.
X.
(Blue-lined white paper, 10" x 7½", one page)
328 Mickle Street
Camden New Jersey
March 26 1886
Dear Sir
Yours of 26th rec'd—I send my heartiest thanks to the
members,
individually & collectively, of the Northwestern Literary and
Historical Society—
I have been unable to identify this letter or the reason for its
having been written.
XI.
(Blue-lined white paper, 10" x 8", two sheets; envelope
postmarked Camden, June 14, and addressed to Carl Knortz.)
328 Mickle Street
Camden New Jersey
June 14 '86
Dear Sir
Yours rec'd & I send you a few names I would like to have the
address forwarded to. I am ab't as usual in health. I wish you to
keep me posted of any thing that occurs—& I will you.
Edward Carpenter, Millthorpe, near Chesterfield, England
W S Kennedy, Belmont, Mass.
T W Rolleston, Editor University Magazine Dublin Ireland
Wm M Rossetti, 5 Endsleigh Gardens, Enston Square, London n w
England (Dante Rossetti is dead)
Mrs. B F C Costelloe, 40 Grosvenor Road, Westminster, London S
w England
Ernest Rhys, 59 Cheyne Walk Chelsea, London S w England
J Addington Symonds, Davos Platz Graūbünden
Switzerland
E C Stedman 45 E 30th St New York City
Prof. Edward Dowden Temple Road Winstead Rathmines Dublin
Ireland
This letter is included by Mr. Frenz in his article, but it
lacks the list of names appended. The address was probably Knortz's
lecture on Whitman, which was published in New York in 1886 as No.
14 in a series of "Vorträge des geselligwissenschaftlichen
Vereins." The list of names will be familiar to students of
Whitman, for they are all among his most ardent friends and
disciples.
XII.
(Light green paper, 10" x 8", two sheets, originally used by
Ernest Rhys for his letter to Whitman of March 29, 1887).
Camden April 11 '87 Noon
Dear friend,
I send you Rhys's letter to me rec'd yesterday—tho I suppose
the disagreeable item in it, relating to the pub'n of y'r book has
been already written to you ab't by R ___ My under the weather
spell still continues, but with a slight let up. I expect to go
on to New York to speak my "Death of Lincoln" piece Thursday
afternoon next—Probably the Shake up will do me
good—
—I drove over last evening to spend a couple of hours with my
friends Mr & Mrs. Talcott Williams Phila. & take dinner
there—Enjoyed all—
—I receive the Transcripts & look them
over—then
send them to O'Connor—
—I don't make much reckoning of the N Y
performance—the best
is to be borne in mind (& warmly borne in mind) by a few dear N
Y friends— Sunny & summery weather here & my canary
is
singing like a house afire—
This letter was obviously written to William Sloane Kennedy,
Whitman's Boston admirer, who was hoping to publish a book on
Whitman in England. His Reminiscences of Walt Whitman,
however, did not finally appear until 1896. Whitman frequently
traveled to New York in his later years to deliver a lecture on
Lincoln on the anniversary of his death. Talcott Williams was an
editor of the Philadelphia Press, an admirer of Whitman, and
later director of the Columbia University School of Journalism.
Kennedy and others of Whitman's Boston admirers contributed
frequently to the Boston Transcript. O'Conner is, of course,
William D. O'Connor, the author of The Good Gray Poet.
Ernest Rhys's letter on the reverse of this manuscript discusses
the English publication of Specimen Days, tells of a visit
with Mrs. Costelloe, and announces that Wilson the publisher was
too ill to attempt bringing out Kennedy's book.
XIII.
(Postal card, postmarked Camden June 14, and addressed to
Karl Knortz.)
328 Mickle Street
Camden New Jersey June 14 '87
Yes Doctor I will loan you the Gilchrist book to read at your
leisure—Will send it on in a day or two—Go to Cox
photographer
Cor 12th St & Broadway (entrance 12th St.) & see critically
some photos of me he has taken—Shall be delighted to see you
here—
Whitman sent Knortz H. H. Gilchrist's Anne Gilchrist: Her
Life and Writings (New York, 1887) and later was annoyed that
Knortz had not returned it, complaining to Horace Traubel to that
effect on September 6, 1888. Whitman had eight or ten photographs
taken by George C. Cox, but only one, which Whitman called "the
laughing philosopher," was satisfactory to him. Cox sold these
photographs to the general public, and, according to Whitman, was
the only photographer who had the courtesy to pay him royalties.
Whitman apparently never had the opportunity of meeting Knortz, for
more than a year later, on September 3, 1888, he told Traubel that
his curiosity to meet him was still great.
XIV.
(Postal card postmarked September 30, 1889, and addressed to
O. O. Hemenway, Pittsfield, Illinois.)
Walt Whitman has rec'd y'r letter & request
—Yes he can send you two
copies fullest & latest ed'ns "Leaves of Grass"—The price of
the two $4 (2 each) (p o order preferred) address here 328 Mickle
Street, Camden New Jersey—
This final note is apparently merely a reply to a Western
admirer of Whitman.