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Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, [10 October 1891]

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Owing to postal changes, my address will in future be as above, instead of Millthorpe near Chesterfield.

Edward Carpenter  loc.01247.001_large.jpg

Correspondent:
Edward Carpenter (1844–1929) was an English writer and Whitman disciple. Like many other young disillusioned Englishmen, he deemed Whitman a prophetic spokesman of an ideal state cemented in the bonds of brotherhood. Carpenter—a socialist philosopher who in his book Civilisation, Its Cause and Cure posited civilization as a "disease" with a lifespan of approximately one thousand years before human society cured itself—became an advocate for same-sex love and a contributing early founder of Britain's Labour Party. On July 12, 1874, he wrote for the first time to Whitman: "Because you have, as it were, given me a ground for the love of men I thank you continually in my heart . . . . For you have made men to be not ashamed of the noblest instinct of their nature." For further discussion of Carpenter, see Arnie Kantrowitz, "Carpenter, Edward [1844–1929]," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).


Notes

  • 1. This letter is addressed: Walt Whitman | 328 Mickle. St | Camden | New Jersey | U.S. America It is postmarked: Sheffield | 13 F | OC 10 | 91; New York | Oct | 1891; Paid | K | All; Camden, N.J. | Oct 20 | 6 AM | Rec'd. [back]
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