May 20 '811
Your pleasant note of 16th rec'd2—glad you
wrote—just now I am down in the country temporarily—in the Jersey
woods3—am well for me—
Walt Whitman
Notes
- 1. This letter bears the
address: Henry A Beers | New Haven | Conn:. It is postmarked: Kirkwood | May |
21(?) | N.J. [back]
- 2. Henry Augustin Beers
(1847–1926) was a poet and professor of English literature at Yale. On May
16, 1881, Beers wrote to thank Whitman for quoting his verses in The American on May 14: "To a young writer, uncertain of
himself, the slightest notice from an older & distinguished brother in the
craft is very precious . . . because it gives him heart in his work." Whitman
responded to Beers on May 20, 1881. Beers in 1898
termed Whitman "a great sloven" (see William Sloane Kennedy, The Fight of a Book for the World [West Yarmouth, MA: The Stonecroft
Press, 1926], 136). Similar reservations appear in his Four
Americans (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1919), 85–90. [back]
- 3. Whitman was at Glendale
from May 13 to 26 except for a brief visit to Camden on May 17 (Whitman's
Commonplace Book, Charles E. Feinberg Collection of the Papers of Walt Whitman,
1839–1919, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.); see also Walt Whitman's Diary in Canada, ed. William Sloane
Kennedy (Boston: Small, Maynard & Company, 1904), 58–59. [back]