Sprague Collection No 31
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328 Mickle street
Camden New Jersey1
Dec. 15 1885
Dear Herbert
I have rec'd your letter. Nothing now remains but a sweet & rich
memory—none more beautiful, all time, all life, all the earth—
—I cannot
write any thing of a letter to-day. I must sit alone & think.2
Walt Whitman
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Correspondent:
Herbert Harlakenden Gilchrist
(1857–1914), son of Alexander and Anne Gilchrist, was an English painter
and editor of Anne Gilchrist: Her Life and Writings
(London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1887). For more information, see Marion Walker Alcaro,
"Gilchrist, Herbert Harlakenden (1857–1914)," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D.
Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).
Notes
- 1. This letter is addressed:
Herbert H Gilchrist | 12 Well Road | Hampstead | London | England. It is
postmarked: CAMDEN | DEC | 15 | 4 PM | 1885 | N.J.; NEW YORK | DEC 16 | 130 AM |
85. [back]
- 2. On January 25, 1886, Herbert wrote to Whitman: "You
will be glad to hear that I am going to republish some of mother's essays;
giving some account of her beautiful life. May I quote from some of your letters
to mother? and will you help me to the extent of lending me, mother's letters to
you? those that you have kept? I should be glad of them quite soon, as I have
got to work already; at present thinking over her life is the only thing that I
take pleasure in: indeed I am unable to get my thoughts away, and I don't want
to. . . . never did son have such a sweet companionable dear mother as
mine." [back]