Your letter of 31st Oct.1 just to hand and was glad to get it as also the long piece re Schliemann2 which I shall read as soon as I find a few minutes. Ross3 & Barber4 still both off duty, no one in their place and so I am pretty well tied up. I do not understand this last newspaper racket about your health. As far as I know (and I think I know as much as any one) you are abt. as you have been for the last three years (not getting any younger, but otherwise unchanged), the paralysis either not extending at all or so slowly that it's increase is imperceptible—as to the paralysis "going to the heart" that is all rubbish—paralysis cannot go to the heart. If you live untill the paralysis attacks the heart and so kills you you will live to be a thousand years old which is a fate I would not wish my best friend or worst enemy
I send you my love always R M BuckeCorrespondent:
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).