I see that Thorne,1 (who is a literary "mountebank" and who has a quarterly Review called the Globe takes a shy at you in his April No.—It is only a line or two and amounts to nothing!—
Stoddart2 manager of Lippincotts3 still treasures up the idea of having you to go to Gloucester to a Symposium: with the idea to have it written up for July Lippincott4 as one of the "Round Robin" Series—It is a good idea and you can say somethings which will be embalmed for futurity. Don't you think y[cut-away] in the early part of [cut-away] Ju[cut-away]
James.Couldn't you give me something of interest to the Time for Satur[cut-away]5
loc.03757.002_large.jpg ScovelCorrespondent:
James Matlack Scovel
(1833–1904) began to practice law in Camden in 1856. During the Civil War,
he was in the New Jersey legislature and became a colonel in 1863. He campaigned
actively for Horace Greeley in 1872, and was a special agent for the U.S.
Treasury during Chester Arthur's administration. In the 1870s, Whitman
frequently went to Scovel's home for Sunday breakfast (Whitman's Commonplace
Book, Charles E. Feinberg Collection of the Papers of Walt Whitman,
1839–1919, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.). For a description of
these breakfasts, see Walt Whitman's Diary in Canada, ed.
William Sloane Kennedy (Boston: Small, Maynard, 1904), 59–60. For Scovel,
see George R. Prowell's The History of Camden County, New
Jersey (Philadelphia: L. J. Richards, 1886).