431 Stevens St
Camden N Jersey
U S
America
April 23 '761
Dear Sir2
I have rec'd the P.O. money order, & the money (£4—$21.97) has been paid me—for which
accept warmest thanks.—No letter has yet reached me, specifying an order for my books,
new edition—but if one does not come in a few days, I believe I will send the Two
Vols. to same address as this note—As, I take it, that will be agreeable to you.
I am middling comfortable these times—Again thanks—
Walt Whitman
Notes
- 1. This letter's envelope bears the address,
"Edward Carpenter | 3 Wesley Terrace | Shaw Lane | Headingly | Leeds, England."
It is postmarked: "Camden | Apr | 23 | N.J.; Leeds | 162 | 10 My | 76." [back]
- 2. Like many other young disillusioned
Englishmen, Carpenter (1844–1929) deemed Walt Whitman a prophetic
spokesman of an ideal state cemented in the bonds of brotherhood. On July 12, 1874, he wrote for the first time to Walt
Whitman: "Because you have, as it were, given me a ground for the love of men I
thank you continually in my heart . . . . For you have made men to be not
ashamed of the noblest instinct of their nature." On January 3, 1876, Carpenter sent another impassioned letter. On April 8, 1876, he sent £4 for the 1876 volumes. See
also Whitman's May 1, 1877 letter to Anne
Gilchrist. [back]