Yes—the fixing up of the sheets—placing of the plates, &c &c—all right and the paper-bound specimen satisfactory—But I think you can do it better for me—try—
I want fifty (50) copies bound in good strong paper covers—w'd it do in some handsome marble paper? W'd that be better? (I leave mainly to y'r taste & judgment)—if you have anything better as strong backs (stitching &c) as can consistently be made—uncut & untrimm'd like this sample (I like this sample even as it is pretty well)—
☞ I will send you the label to put on the backs—I am now having them printed—(will also have the 550 copies in handsome costlier stiff bindings afterwards.)
Walt Whitman 328 Mickle St CamdenCorrespondent:
Frederick Oldach was a German
bookbinder whose Philadelphia firm bound Whitman's Complete
Poems & Prose (1888), a volume that included a profile photo of the
poet on the title page. The nearly 900-page book was published in December 1888.
For more information on the book, see Ed Folsom, Whitman Making Books/Books Making Whitman: A Catalog and
Commentary (University of Iowa: Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, 2005).