Will write a word as I suppose you are back at B—Am greatly disappointed at not seeing you here—Horace T2 is too—but perhaps you will be coming to Phil. for two or three days the coming fall or winter—We all like the little "Quaker traits"3 piece—it is a bit of style too, like the happiest songs or pictures—veracity (I hope) of the most undeniable, with curious ease, carelessness & impromptude—Yes, I want to send a book (or books) to Trans: man (or men) for courtesy in sending me paper—It comes promptly & I always read it—
Walt Whitman uka_vm.00006_large.jpgCorrespondent:
William Sloane Kennedy
(1850–1929) was on the staff of the Philadelphia American and the Boston Transcript; he also
published biographies of Longfellow, Holmes, and Whittier (Dictionary of American Biography [New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933], 336–337). Apparently Kennedy called on
the poet for the first time on November 21, 1880 (William Sloane Kennedy, Reminiscences of Walt Whitman [London: Alexander
Gardener, 1896], 1). Though Kennedy was to become a fierce defender of Whitman,
in his first published article he admitted reservations about the "coarse
indecencies of language" and protested that Whitman's ideal of democracy was
"too coarse and crude"; see The Californian, 3 (February
1881), 149–158. For more about Kennedy, see Katherine Reagan, "Kennedy, William Sloane (1850–1929)," Walt
Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New
York: Garland Publishing, 1998).