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JAMES B. POND,
GENERAL AGENT AND
MANAGER.
EVERETT HOUSE, CORNER 4TH AVENUE
and 17TH STREET, NEW
YORK.
CONCERTS, LECTURES AND ALL DESCRIPTIONS OF MUSICAL,
LYCEUM AND LITERARY
ENTERTAINMENTS. ENGAGEMENTS WITH ALL THE MOST CELEBRATED ARTISTS EFFECTED BY THIS
AGENCY. All engagements for REV. HENRY WARD BEECHER'S. Lectures made through J. B. Pond; Sole
Agent for MARK TWAIN;
MR. GEO. W. CABLE'S Readings; CLARA
LOUISE KELLOGG
Concert Company; MR. HENRY M. STANLEY and MR. ED. HERON-ALLEN.
SEASON OF 1887-88,
LECTURERS
ABBOTT, REV. LYMAN
ALLEN, Mr.
ED HERON, Science of the Hand (new).
ARMSTRONG, WM. JACKSON
BASSETT,
R., "A Pek-in-China." (new.)
BEECHER, REV.
HENRY WARD
BLACKBURN, HENRY. "Art In EveryDay Life."
Illustrated.
BENJAMIN, Hon. W. G. S., "Persia." Illustrated.
BUNNER,
H. C., (Editor of Puck.)
CABLE, MR. GEO.
W.,
CLEMENS, SAMUEL L. ("Mark Twain")
CARLETON, WILL.
CONE, Col.
T. C. (of Georgia.)
CONWAY, MONCURE D.
DOREMUS, DR. OGDEN (Scientific)
DAUGHERTY, HON. DANIEL
GEORGE, HENRY.
INGERSOLL, EARNEST. "Railroading in the Rockies."
JOYCE,
COL. JOHN A. Anvil Sparks.
MOWBRAY, ARTHUR
H. (Illustrated).
NAST, THOMAS (If he Lectures).
NEWELL, WM. WELLS.
"Pompei and Roman Life," and Michael Angelo.
O'RELL, MAX
RICHARDSON,
LEANDER P.
STANLEY, HENRY M. The African explorer.
SCHURZ, HON. CARL
SCHWATKA, LIEUT. FRED'K, U.S.A.
SERVISS, MR.
GARRETT P. (Astronomy.) Illustrated.
STEWART, JOE H. (of
Texas.)
TALMAGE, REV. T. DEWITT
VON FINKELSTEIN, MISS L.
WOOD, DR. WALLACE, Italy and the Renaissance
(new).
RECITALS
BROWN, MISS NELLA F. (Through the Redpath Lyceum Bureau,
Boston.)
BLUME, MISS SETTIE
BRADFORD,
WILLIAM
CALHOUN, MARGARET CUSTER
FABIAN, EDWARD
LINCOLN,
FRANK
TAYLOR, MISS NETTIE.
WATSON, MRS. T CHARLES
WEBB, MRS. HARRIET
WILDER, MARSHALL P.
PIANISTS.
CARRENO, THERESE
GLOSE, MR.
AOLF
GILDER, MR. FRANK
KING, MADAME JULIA RIVE
SHERWOOD, WM. H.
VIOLINISTS
TORBETT, MISS OLLIE
LANZER, MR.
CARL
MUSIN, MONS. OVIEDE
COMBINATIONS
BOSTON STAR CONCERT CO.
CLARA LOUISE KELLOGG CONCERT
CO.
MISS OLLIE TORBETT CONCERT
CO.
BELLE COLE CONCERT CO.
GILMORE'S 22d REGIMENT BAND
MEIGS
SISTERS VOCAL QUARTETTE
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC CLUB
RICHBERG QUARTETTE (String.).
TEMPLE QUARTETTE, Boston.
WEBER QUARTETTE, of Boston.
I am simply agent, without proprietory
right in any of these entertainments, except Henry Ward Beecher's
Lectures and Geo. W. Cable's Readings.
JAS. B. POND
All engagements made by this Agency are conditional upon the
ability of the Artists or Lecturers to fulfill them. In case of detention by
sickness, accident, or any legitimate or unavoidable cause, it is understood
that there shall be no claim for damages, though a new date will always be
given during the same season, if possible.1
Everett House, New York, Apr. 25th , 1887.
Walt Whitman, Esq.,
Camden, N. J.
Dear Mr. Whitman:—
Your second postal received. Mr. Gilder2 told me of Mr.
Carnaghie's kind subscription.3 I congratulate you on
your remarkable success.
How would you like to go to Boston about Tuesday, May 10th?4 That would be a good time. If this meets your approval
let me know and I will fix the date.
I have had some very nice letters from Holmes, Norton, Grant, and others, expressing
the wish that you will visit the "hub".
Yours Sincerely,
J. B. Pond
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JB
Pond
Correspondent:
James Burton Pond (1838–1903)
was a famous lecture-manager and printer. He was also awarded the Medal of Honor
for his services in the Civil War. In his 1900 autobiography Eccentricities of Genius (G. W. Dillingham Co: New York), he writes of
Whitman: "Whitman gave a few readings under my management during his life. They
were mostly testimonials from friends, and benefits given in the theatres of New
York City"; Pond concludes with an anecdote about the poet's meeting with Sir
Edwin Arnold (497–501).
Notes
- 1. In addition to the printed
letterhead, James B. Pond's letter also includes a printed notice at the bottom
of the letter that reads: "I am now booking time for Mr. Henry George for next
season. Associations desiring him will find it to their advantage to apply
early. Please do not write letters on Postal Cards. They are liable to get
overlooked.—J.B.P." [back]
- 2. Richard Watson Gilder
(1844–1909) was the assistant editor of Scribner's
Monthly from 1870 to 1881 and editor of its successor, The Century, from 1881 until his death. Whitman had met
Gilder for the first time in 1877 at John H. Johnston's (Gay Wilson Allen, The Solitary Singer [New York: New York University Press,
1955], 482). Whitman attended a reception and tea given by Gilder after William
Cullen Bryant's funeral on June 14; see "A Poet's Recreation" in the New York Tribune, July 4, 1878. Whitman considered Gilder
one of the "always sane men in the general madness" of "that New York art
delirium" (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden,
Sunday, August 5, 1888). For more about Gilder, see Susan L.
Roberson, "Gilder, Richard Watson (1844–1909)," Walt
Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New
York: Garland Publishing, 1998). [back]
- 3. Andrew Carnegie
(1835–1919), the prominent industrialist and admirer of Whitman, had
donated twice to the support of the aged poet. [back]
- 4. Whitman's reply is not
extant, but it appears he did not go to Boston that May. [back]