I received your beautiful gift yesterday afternoon just in time for Xmas, and I cannot express how much it pleases me. Kennedy1 brought it in to the Herald office for me and I was very sorry to be out at the time, for I have not seen him for some months, having been in Europe most of the Autumn. The book is a noble one2—a form loc_es.00116.jpg worthy of its contents, and to me, as to many, it will be an inestimable treasure. I think the friendly touches your hands have given it bestow an influence, real though impalpable, which may make itself felt more strongly than might be imagined by most men.
It is interesting and instructive to me to watch the development of our dear country on the prophetic lines that your "Democratic Vistas" indicate. Evolutionary processes are rapid at certain stages, and bit by bit one may detect, if his eyes be clear, loc_es.00117.jpg the realization and the budding promises of realization—and in this sense even the black clouds are welcome for the sake of the clearer skies that follow.
If you do any reading now a days you will find Edward Bellamy's 3 "Looking Backward" a noble work, and delightful as well. It has made a profound impression and will do much towards realizing a grander future for our land.
I enclose a photograph of myself with wishes that loc_es.00118.jpg the New Year may be kind to you.
Faithfully yours Sylvester BaxterCorrespondent:
Sylvester Baxter (1850–1927)
was on the staff of the Boston Herald. Apparently he met
Whitman for the first time when the poet delivered his Lincoln address in Boston
in April, 1881; see Rufus A. Coleman, "Whitman and Trowbridge," PMLA 63 (1948), 268. Baxter wrote many newspaper columns
in praise of Whitman's writings, and in 1886 attempted to obtain a pension for
the poet. For more, see Christopher O. Griffin, "Baxter, Sylvester [1850–1927]," Walt Whitman:
An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York:
Garland Publishing, 1998).