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On April 15, 1879, the Tribune carried a two-column report of Whitman's Lincoln address—"A Poet on the Platform" (p. 2, cols. 3-4). The first paragraph of the "news report,"

The poet Walt Whitman made his beginning as a lecturer last night at Steck Hall, in Fourteenth-st. His subject was the death of President Lincoln. He reads from notes, sitting in a chair, as he is still much disabled from paralysis. He desires engagements as a reader of his own poems and as a lecturer. The following was last night's discourse. . . .
draws upon a letter sent to Reid the preceding day: