I1 hope the dear poet is comfortable & improved. I have been anxious abt that water [illegible] the sleeplessness above all. It's too bad. What a blessed rare fellow our Bucke2 is! to care for your comfort. I tell you I wish the world were full of such men. As I sit here looking up Brattle Square Cambridge from my proof-room window, the gay elastic [illegible] children are trooping by as usual to school. Weather cold & bright.
W. S. Kennedy loc.02963.001.jpgCorrespondent:
William Sloane Kennedy
(1850–1929) was on the staff of the Philadelphia American and the Boston Transcript; he also
published biographies of Longfellow, Holmes, and Whittier (Dictionary of American Biography [New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933], 336–337). Apparently Kennedy called on
the poet for the first time on November 21, 1880 (William Sloane Kennedy, Reminiscences of Walt Whitman [London: Alexander
Gardener, 1896], 1). Though Kennedy was to become a fierce defender of Whitman,
in his first published article he admitted reservations about the "coarse
indecencies of language" and protested that Whitman's ideal of democracy was
"too coarse and crude"; see The Californian, 3 (February
1881), 149–158. For more about Kennedy, see Katherine Reagan, "Kennedy, William Sloane (1850–1929)," Walt
Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New
York: Garland Publishing, 1998).