I am very anxious not to leave this country without paying my respects to you, and bearing to you in person the messages which I bring from Mr. Swinburne1 and other common friends in England. I propose, therefore, if it be not inconvenient to you, to call upon you in Camden on Saturday loc.02228.002_large.jpg loc.02228.003_large.jpg next, in the forenoon.
Pray believe me to be Dear Mr. Whitman
Faithfully yours Edmund Gosse loc.02228.004_large.jpgCorrespondent:
Sir Edmund William Gosse (1849–1928), English
poet and author of Father and Son (a memoir published in
1907), had written to Whitman on December 12,
1873: "I can but thank you for all that I have learned from you, all the
beauty you have taught me to see in the common life of healthy men and women,
and all the pleasure there is in the mere humanity of other people" (see Horace
Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Friday, June 1, 1888). Gosse reviewed Two
Rivulets in "Walt Whitman's New Book," The Academy, 9 (24
June 1876), 602–603, and visited Whitman in 1885 (see Whitman's letter
inviting Gosse to visit on December 31, 1884, Gosse's December 29, 1884 letter to Whitman, and
The Correspondence, ed. Edwin Haviland Miller [New
York: New York University Press, 1961–1977], 3:384 n80). In a letter to
Richard Maurice Bucke on October 31, 1889, Whitman
characterized Gosse as "one of the amiable conventional wall-flowers of
literature." For more about Gosse, see Jerry F.
King, "Gosse, Sir Edmund (1849–1928)," Walt Whitman:
An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York:
Garland Publishing, 1998).