I send by this mail the second part of my study of your works. I hope I may not unintentionally have misrepresented you; but if I could be one of the means of drawing more general attention to your great loc.01811.002_large.jpg works than they have yet received in this country, I believe I should have done somet'g worth the doing.
May I venture to hope I may have a line from yourself when you have time? And may I again repeat the hope I expressed to you in a former note1 (when loc.01811.003_large_mflm.jpg I sent you my own vol. of poems)—the first—of which I am rather ashamed of now—on account of its Byronism2—& too much leaven of aristocracy which is born with me—that you will not visit this country without coming to us?
Yours with much respect & in all sincerity Roden Noel loc.01811.004_large_mflm.jpgI want to get hold of the American Ed. of your work—which was lent me by Buchanan3 but I understand it is difficult to procure.
The proclamation of comradeship seems to me the grandest & most momentous fact in your work & I heartily thank you for it.
Walt Whitman Esq
Correspondent:
Roden Noel (1834–1894) was an
English poet. Noel came from an aristocratic English family, and in his youth
developed socialist sympathies. He was a close friend of the poet and
influential critic Robert Buchanan, and it may have been through Buchanan that
Noel first encountered Leaves of Grass in 1871 (the same
year that he first wrote to Whitman). In 1871, Noel published an essay entitled
"A Study of Walt Whitman" in The Dark Blue (Harold
Blodgett, Walt Whitman in England [Ithaca, NY: Cornell
University Press, 1934], 147–149).