I intended to call over & see you yesterday when I was in Philadelphia, but I was unexpectedly detained by one man and forced to go to Washington so as to reach here last night.
I will call on you on my way back to New York.
But I write now to tell you why, because my visit will be on business
I believe you have never met Mr Rice,1 proprietor of the North American Review, altho' nominaly he may have corresponded with you—that is, his office
Editor may have written to you in his name, as he always does, even when Mr Rice is
in Europe. It is at loc.03285.002_large.jpg
loc.03285.003_large.jpg Mr Rice's
instance that I will call on you.
He has conceived the plan of procuring a collection of papers that, united in one volume, will be a permanent memorial of Lincoln. He has set about to secure the Reminiscences of all the eminent Americans who came into personal relations with him—each man to tell his story, whether it shall be short or long.
That's what he calls his Lincoln Series. Some of these
papers he may publish in the North American Review, & others in the North
American Review Syndicate: a group of influential papers which he supplies & that
publish simultaneously articles from famous men whom ordinarily newspapers cannot
reach—nor afford to pay separately even if they did reach them. All the
articles that you see marked "Copyright" loc.03285.004_large.jpg
loc.03285.005_large.jpg in the New York
Tribune or Phil. Times (Sunday editions) are supplied by Mr Rice.
Next: he intends to secure a series of papers giving the civil history of the civil war—legislation, &c.
He wants me to see you & ask you to write a paper on your experiences of the Civil War—the hospital life, & other phases that you witnessed & have not yet described.
Could you write an article giving your recollections of Lincoln and also your memories of the War? Short or long it will be gladly accepted & liberaly paid for. He will take it, whether it is a page or a hundred pages
I shall be here a week. I suppose I shall have no difficulty in finding the good grey poet in Camden.
Ever truly yours, James Redpath.Correspondent:
James Redpath (1833–1891),
an antislavery activist, journalist, and longtime friend of Whitman, was the
author of The Public Life of Capt. John Brown (Boston:
Thayer and Eldridge, 1860), a correspondent for the New York
Tribune during the war, and the originator of the "Lyceum" lectures. He
met Whitman in Boston in 1860, and he remained an enthusiastic admirer; see
Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Friday, January 4, 1889. He concluded his first letter to Whitman on
June 25, 1860: "I love you, Walt! A conquering
Brigade will ere long march to the music of your barbaric jawp." Redpath became
managing editor of The North American Review in 1886. See
also Charles F. Horner, The Life of James Redpath and the
Development of the Modern Lyceum, (New York: Barse & Hopkins,
1926); John R. McKivigan, Forgotten Firebrand: James Redpath
and the Making of Nineteenth-Century America, (Ithaca, NY: Cornell
University Press, 2008); and J.R. LeMaster, "Redpath, James [1833–1891]," Walt Whitman: An
Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York:
Garland Publishing, 1998).