It is impossible to think of you as addressed formally, and so I address you directly.
For years you have been to me an inspiration and a reverence, as you are to thousands of the young men of America.
I wish to purchase your complete poems, latest edition, and have been told that I could order them from you direct, but the price was unknown.
I enclose three dollars. If too small I will remit balance. If too much, do not return anything.
I never before asked a great man for his autograph, but if I could see your name, written by yourself, on the fly leaf it would be my most valued treasure.
I trust the enclosed poem will not offend.1
Please send to the above address in "Mannahatta."2
J. Wm. Lloyd. loc.03250.002_large.jpgCorrespondent:
John William Lloyd
(1857–1940) was an American utopian anarchist, founder of The Comradeship
of Free Socialists and the group's magazine, The Free
Comrade. A brief autobiographical note appears in Richard Maurice
Bucke's seminal work, Cosmic Consciousness: A Study in the
Evolution of the Human Mind (Philadelphia: Innes and Sons, 1905),
describing his various careers—including "hygienic physician,"
homesteader, poultry farmer, and Florida orange-grower—as well as his wide
exposure to world religions and political philosophies (284–285). Lloyd
was the author of several books of poetry, including Wind–Harp Songs (Buffalo, New York: The Peter Paul Book Company,
1895), which contains the ode "Mount Walt Whitman," written on the occasion of
Whitman's death in 1892. In this poem, Lloyd declares, "Ah, Walt, Walt, poet of
Nature, comrade of free men, / Other poets have been Olympian, / But you are
Olympus itself" (35). Lloyd was connected to other Whitman disciples, including
Edward Carpenter, Horace Traubel, and John Johnston, of the Bolton Whitman
Fellowship. Like Carpenter, Lloyd was interested in the study of sexology. Lloyd
was also the author of a sex manual, The Karezza Method or
Magnetation: The Art of Connubial Love (Privately Printed, 1931). For
more information, see Terence S. Kissack, "Whitman and the Shifting Grounds of
the Politics of Homosexuality," in Free Comrades: Anarchism
and Homosexuality in the United States, 1895–1917 (Oakland: AK
Press, 2008), 69–95.