Your post card of 22d reached me yesterday afternoon. There
is nothing new as to my plans since I wrote you last some two or three days ago,
have not heard from Wm Gurd2 since. I
expect he will be here before the week is out. That he will soon after he gets here,
proceed to Ottawa to attend to the Canadian and European patents—I do not know
how long this will take but I hope he will be through there by Xmas time and that
quite early in the year he & I will go East to "float" the meter in the States.
It is a weary, almost an endless, business but there is nothing for it but to keep
pegging away. The weather here has made a decided turn for the loc_es.00485.jpg better within the last week, today is
clear, bright, cool and very bracing and delightfull. We are all well and all goes
quietly and pleasantly with us. I am not too well pleased at this postponement of my
trip East as I am anxious to see you and was counting on it in the immediate future
but I hope I shall not fail to get East early in January (at latest) and that you
will then be as well or better than now.— Did your little piece come out in
the "Critic" yesterday?3 if so I hope you will send me a
copy
Correspondent:
Richard Maurice Bucke (1837–1902) was a
Canadian physician and psychiatrist who grew close to Whitman after reading Leaves of Grass in 1867 (and later memorizing it) and
meeting the poet in Camden a decade later. Even before meeting Whitman, Bucke
claimed in 1872 that a reading of Leaves of Grass led him
to experience "cosmic consciousness" and an overwhelming sense of epiphany.
Bucke became the poet's first biographer with Walt
Whitman (Philadelphia: David McKay, 1883), and he later served as one
of his medical advisors and literary executors. For more on the relationship of
Bucke and Whitman, see Howard Nelson, "Bucke, Richard Maurice," Walt Whitman: An
Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York:
Garland Publishing, 1998).