Mr. House1 inform'd me that you accepted, and would publish, my "Bardic Symbols."2 If so, would you, as soon as convenient, have it put in type, and send me the proof?
About the two lines:
(See from my dead lips the ooze exuding
at last!
See the prismatic colors glistening and rolling!)
I have in view, from them, an effect in the piece which I clearly feel, but cannot as clearly define.—Though I should prefer them in, still, as I told Mr. House, I agree that you may omit them, if you decidedly wish to.
Correspondent:
American poet James
Russell Lowell was editor of the Atlantic Monthly from
1857 to 1861. No admirer of Whitman, he evidently printed Whitman's poem at
Emerson's suggestion; see Gay Wilson Allen, The Solitary
Singer: A Critical Biography of Walt Whitman (New York: Macmillan,
1955; rev. ed., New York University Press, 1967), 238. For other correspondence
with the Atlantic Monthly, see Whitman's letters from
March 2, 1860 and October 1, 1861. Portia Baker analyzes Whitman's relations with this
magazine in American Literature 6 (November 1934):
283–301.