Camden New Jersey
Dec 20
My dear Jenny Gilder1
Yours of to-day rec'd —(The other also—but I thought you merely
contemplated it like, & no hurry)—I only write now in haste to say I will help
you to any thing on the subject you desire—Will turn it over in my mind to
write more fully Sunday, so you will get it Monday.
Walt Whitman
I have a notion that the raciest part of a fellow's life—mine at any rate—could
be told by giving copious strings of characteristic fine personal anecdotes,
incidents—&c—
Jenny, what is it for?
Notes
- 1. Early in December
Jeannette L. Gilder wrote to Whitman, in his words, "that she is going to write
my life & asking for items &c" (Walt Whitman, The
Correspondence [New York: New York University Press, 1961–69],
3:141). Although Whitman complied with her request, nothing came of the
proposal. About the same time, in a letter to John Burroughs of December 23–25, 1878, Whitman wrote: "(I
would like best to be told about in strings of continuous
anecdotes, incidents, mots, thumbnail personal sketches, characteristic &
true—)." The biographical principle enunciated here was to be followed
scrupulously a few years letter by Richard Maurice Bucke in his biography of the
poet. [back]