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January 7. 1889.
Fairview Delgany. Co. Wicklow1
My dear Walt
I have to tell you that towards the end of December I sent back to the German publisher the last proofs
of the German Leaves of Grass. so we may soon expect its appearance now. I have ordered 100 copies & shall
direct him to send you 30 of
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these—you can have more if you send me a line to say so. The contents are as follows:—
- To Foreign Lands —
- Excelsior (Transl. by K. K.)
- Oneself I sing—
- Starting from Paumanok
- Song of Myself—
- For Thee O Democracy
- To a Boy of the West
- Doubt of Appearances
- Give me the Sun
- To one about to die (KK)
- That Shadow My Likeness.
- Brooklyn Ferry.
- I Sing the Body Electric.
- City dead House.
-
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- —Open Road.
- Salut au Monde
- Savantism.
- Who Learns my Lesson complete
- What am I—
- Square Deific.
- O Poverty, wincings—.—(KK)
- Faces (KK)
- The Letter (K. K.)
- Miracles
- Mystic Trumpeter (K K.)
- Passage to India
- On Journeys through the States
- Poets to Come—
- Out of the Cradle. (K. K.)
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I got the Camden Post from you today, with enclosure "Impromptu Criticism."2 I want to get the new 900 p. volume but don't know
its publisher or its price.3 If you'll tell the publisher to send me a copy with account, including postage I'll remit money-order
at once. Or if you are bringing the book out yourself I'll do so to you.
Dowden4 gave me your kind message—I am very glad to hear of your even partial recovery from your late
severe illness. Not over well myself, & very busy—life of
Lessing for Scott & Co5 on hand now which will be a troublesome business. but worth the trouble.
Goodbye
TW Rolleston.
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Correspondent:
Thomas William Hazen Rolleston
(1857–1920) was an Irish poet and journalist. After attending college in
Dublin, he moved to Germany for a period of time. He wrote to Whitman
frequently, beginning in 1880, and later produced with Karl Knortz the first
book-length translation of Whitman's poetry into German. In 1889, the collection
Grashalme: Gedichte [Leaves of
Grass: Poems] was published by Verlags-Magazin in Zurich, Switzerland.
See Walter Grünzweig, Constructing the German Walt Whitman (Iowa
City: University of Iowa Press, 1995). For more information on Rolleston, see
Walter Grünzweig, "Rolleston, Thomas William Hazen (1857–1920)," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D.
Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).
Notes
- 1. This letter is addressed:
Walt Whitman | 328 Mickle St. | Camden | New Jersey | United States. It is postmarked: Greystones | B | Ja 17 | 89; New York
| Jan 20; Paid L All. [back]
- 2. Bucke had written to Whitman
on December 20, 1888, registering at length his
enthusiasm for Whitman's just-published Complete Poems and
Prose. Whitman decided to have Bucke's letter printed for distribution
among his friends and disciples, and he titled it "An impromptu criticism on the
900 page Volume, 'The Complete Poems and Prose of Walt Whitman,' first issued
December, 1888." The first printing had several typos, including the addition of
an acute accent over the first "e" of "Goethe," so Whitman had the errors
corrected in a second printing that was completed by January 2, 1889. See Horace
Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Thursday, December 27, 1888. [back]
- 3. Whitman's Complete Poems & Prose (1888), a volume Whitman often referred to
as the "big book," was published by the poet himself—in an arrangement
with publisher David McKay, who allowed Whitman to use the plates for both Leaves of Grass and Specimen
Days—in December 1888. With the help of Horace Traubel, Whitman made
the presswork and binding decisions for the volume. Frederick Oldach bound the
book, which included a profile photo of the poet on the title page. For more
information on the book, see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and
Commentary (University of Iowa: Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, 2005). [back]
- 4. Edward Dowden (1843–1913), professor of
English literature at the University of Dublin, was one of the first to
critically appreciate Whitman's poetry, particularly abroad, and was primarily
responsible for Whitman's popularity among students in Dublin. In July 1871,
Dowden penned a glowing review of Whitman's work in the Westminster Review entitled "The Poetry of Democracy: Walt Whitman," in which Dowden described
Whitman as "a man unlike any of his predecessors. . . . Bard of America, and
Bard of democracy." In 1888, Whitman observed to Traubel: "Dowden is a book-man:
but he is also and more particularly a man-man: I guess that is where we
connect" (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden,
Sunday, June 10, 1888, 299). For more, see Philip W. Leon, "Dowden, Edward (1843–1913)," Walt Whitman: An
Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York:
Garland Publishing, 1998). [back]
- 5. Life of
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing by Rolleston was published in London by Walter
Scott Publishing Co. in 1889. [back]