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Richard Maurice Bucke to Walt Whitman, 26 June 1891

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A thousand thanks, dear Walt, for the bound, autographed copy of "Goodbye"2 which reached me yesterday. It is a mighty pretty little book, beautifully printed on first class paper and whatever may be said (from a literary standpoint) about a falling off in verse or prose (which I neither disagree nor altogether agree with) I say now and will always maintain that the little volume is exactly what it should be from a far higher and more important point of view. We have now (I think) the whole man as far as he could be given in this way and (as far as I can see) there is no need of writing any more—still if there should be more to come we shall be glad to have it. I am pretty busy putting things in shape for my two months absence.3 Weather & grounds perfect here. Syringas piled up like snowdrifts

R M Bucke  loc_zs.00509.jpg see notes June 29 1891  loc_zs.00510.jpg

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).


Notes

  • 1. This letter is addressed: Walt Whitman | 328 Mickle Street | Camden | New Jersey | U.S.A. It is postmarked: LONDON | [illegible] | JU 26 | 91 | CANADA; CAMDEN, N.J. | JUN | 29 | 6AM | 1891 | REC'D. [back]
  • 2. Whitman's book Good-Bye My Fancy (1891) was his last miscellany, and it included both poetry and short prose works commenting on poetry, aging, and death, among other topics. Thirty-one poems from the book were later printed as "Good-Bye my Fancy" in Leaves of Grass (1891–1892), the last edition of Leaves of Grass published before Whitman's death in March 1892. For more information see, Donald Barlow Stauffer, "'Good-Bye my Fancy' (Second Annex) (1891)," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998). [back]
  • 3. As Bucke's letters in May and June 1891 both to Whitman and Horace Traubel make clear, he was going abroad to establish a foreign market for his gas and fluid meter, a subject to which he referred constantly in his communications but which the poet studiously ignored. [back]
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