Can you write a brief article for the North American Review1 on Recent Aspects of American Literature as you have observed them? It need not be more than 4000 words in length—about ten pages of the Review—and in return for it we should be glad to place at your disposal the sum of Two hundred dollars. Or possibly there is some other subject on which loc.02915.002.jpg loc.02915.003.jpg you would be more willing to write. In that case we trust you will allow us an opportunity to consider it.2
I am, dear Sir, Faithfully Yours, William H. Rideing, assistant editor of the Review. To Walt Whitman. Esq. loc.02915.004.jpgCorrespondent:
William Henry Rideing
(1853–1918) was an American newspaper editor and author who began his
career at the New York Tribune, and worked at various
times for the New York Times, Newark
News, Springfield Republican, and Boston Journal. From 1881 to his death, Rideing was the
Associate Editor of The Youth's Companion and, in 1889,
became an assistant editor at the North American Review.
He is also author of several books, including A Little
Upstart: A Novel (Boston: Cupples, Upham, and Co. 1885), The Captured Cunarder: An Episode of the Atlantic
(Boston: Copeland and Day, 1896), and George Washington
(New York: Macmillan, 1916). For more information, see his obituary, "William H.
Rideing, Boston Editor, Dead" in The Boston Globe (August
23, 1918), 6.