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The Critic
52 & 54 Lafayette Place
New York
"Bellevue"
Bordentown, N. J.
13 June 1890
Dear W. Whitman:
Nearly a month ago I sent you a request to vote1 (as a member of The Critic's2 Academy of Forty Immortals) for nine successors to the
members deceased since our leaders elected the Forty in 1884. I sent a list of about
65 unsuccessful candidates (or rather nominees) who were voted for at that time, &
asked you to pick out nine of them or to name nine others if you preferred. Nearly
all loc.02216.002.jpg the
"Academicians" have sent in their votes; but I don't want to announce the result of
the thing till I hear from you. If you have lost the printed
slip, I can send you another. We shall not tell how any individual voted,
but only how they all voted—the net result. I hope you'll not disappoint
us.3
Sincerely yours,
J. B. Gilder
Correspondent:
Joseph Benson Gilder (1858–1936) was, with his
sister Jeannette Leonard Gilder (1849–1916), co-editor of The Critic, a literary magazine.
Notes
- 1. This letter has not been
located. [back]
- 2. The
Critic was a literary magazine published in New York from 1881 until
1906. Four of Whitman's poems were published in the magazine: "The Dead Tenor" (1884), "Yonnondio" (1887), "To the Year 1889" (1889), and "The Pallid Wreath" (1891). [back]
- 3. The
Critic published its revised list of the "Forty Immortals" with its
nine new members, in the July 19, 1890, issue (pp. 33–34). Whitman was on
the original list published in 1884, with the twentieth highest number of votes,
just below William Dwight Whitney and just above Asa Gray (Oliver Wendell Holmes
came in first, closely followed by James Russell Lowell and John Greenleaf
Whittier). The article prints the new "Forty Immortals" list, with the nine
deceased members replaced by newly appointed authors and concludes by noting
that only three of the immortals failed to vote: George Bancroft (because he
"was in too feeble a condition"), Henry James (for "unaccounted" reasons), and
Whitman ( "who is a disbeliever in 'close corporations')." [back]