Major Pond1 has written to me fixing dates for my proposed Boston (including I believe Hartford & New Haven) lecturing tour2—but I am a little fearful, & have not answered & closed with him. I go out driving every day. Have just sent a poem to the Nineteenth Century.3 Love to you all.
Walt WhitmanCorrespondent:
William Sloane Kennedy,
John Burroughs, and Richard Maurice Bucke were
three of Whitman's closest friends and admirers. Kennedy (1850–1929) first
met Whitman while on the staff of the Philadelphia American in 1880, and would go on to write a book-length study of the
poet. Burroughs (1837–1921), a naturalist, met Whitman in Washington, D.C.
in 1864 and became one of Whitman's most frequent correspondents. He would also
go on to write several studies of Whitman. Bucke (1837–1902), a Canadian
physician, was Whitman's first biographer, and would later become one of his
medical advisors and literary executors.