Of the day the original daguerreotype was taken, Whitman remembered,
"I was sauntering along the street: the day was hot: I was
dressed just as you see me there. A friend of mine—Gabriel
Harrison (you know him? ah! yes!—he has always been a good
friend!)—stood at the door of his place looking at the
passers-by. He cried out to me at once: ‘Old man!—old
man!—come here: come right up stairs with me this
minute’—and when he noticed that I hesitated cried still
more emphatically: ‘Do come: come: I’m dying for something to
do.’ This picture was the result." (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Friday, October 19, 1888)
The job of engraving the image for the 1855 frontispiece was given to Samuel Hollyer, who wrote, "the order
was given to McRae but as he was not a stipple engraver (but a mezzotint one) he
turned it over to me, and I had several sittings from Walt Whitman as it was
taken from a daguerrotype [sic] and was difficult to work from" (Genoways,
The Sesquicentennial Essays
,
p. 117). Though the image portrayed him as he was that summer day, Whitman later
worried it sent the wrong message, "The worst thing about this is, that I look
so damned flamboyant—as if I was hurling bolts at somebody—full of
mad oaths—saying defiantly, to hell with you!" (Friday, February 15, 1889). He also worried about the portrait
because "Many people think the dominant quality in Harrison's picture is its
sadness" (Friday, October 19, 1888), but he nevertheless liked the portrait
"because it is natural, honest, easy: as spontaneous as you are, as I am, this
instant, as we talk together" (Saturday, November 3, 1888). Whitman guessed that at the time of
this portrait he weighed "about a hundred and sixty-five or thereabouts: I
formerly lacked in flesh, though I was not thin . . . " (Sunday, November 4, 1888).
The engraving appeared in the 1855 and 1856 editions of Leaves of Grass, then again in the 1876 and 1881–1882 (and
following) editions, as well as—in a cropped version—William Michael Rossetti's 1868 British edition of Whitman's
poems. The first edition of Leaves of Grass
appeared with no author name on the title page, so readers had only this image
by which to identify the author. For its era, it was shocking. Readers were used
to formal portraits of authors, usually in frock coats and ties. Very often they
were posed at reading tables with books spread open before them or holding a
thick volume in their hands. The rebellious, open-collared pose presented here
was designed to stand in stark contrast. The first review in the New York Tribune proclaimed:
"From the unique effigies of the anonymous author of this
volume which graces the frontispiece, we may infer that he
belongs to the exemplary class of society sometimes irreverently
styled 'loafers.' He is therein represented in a garb, half
sailor’s, half workman’s, with no superfluous appendage of coat
or waistcoat, a 'wide-awake' perched jauntily on his head, one
hand in his pocket and the other on his hip, with a certain air
of mild defiance, and an expression of pensive insolence in his
face which seems to betoken a consciousness of his mission as
the 'coming man.'"
In reprinting it in the 1881 edition, Whitman insisted on
its facing "Song of Myself" because the portrait "is involved as part of the
poem" (yal.00110). Some of Whitman's friends did not share his
enthusiasm for the image; William Sloane Kennedy, for example, hoped "that this repulsive,
loaferish portrait, with its sensual mouth, can be dropped from future editions,
or be accompanied by other and better ones that show the mature man, and not
merely the defiant young revolter of thirty-seven, with a very large chip on his
shoulder, no suspenders to his trousers, and his hat very much on one side"
(The FIght of a Book for the World,
1926, p. 248). Whitman recalled how, when the 1855 Leaves
of Grass came out, the portrait "was much hatcheted by the fellows
at the time—war was waged on it: it passed through a great fire of
criticism" (Friday, October 19, 1888). William O'Connor liked it, Whitman said, "because of its
portrayal of the proletarian—the carpenter, builder, mason, mechanic," but
Whitman didn't share his view (Saturday, November 3, 1888).
For more information on Gabriel Harrison, see "Notes on Whitman's Photographers"; on Samuel Hollyer, see Ted Genoways, "'One goodshaped and wellhung man': Accentuated Sexuality and the Uncertain Authorship of the Frontispiece to the 1855 Edition of Leaves of Grass," Leaves of Grass: The Sesquicentennial Essays , 2007, pp. 87–123.
Engraver: Hollyer, Samuel, 1826–1919
Photographer: Harrison, Gabriel, 1818–1902
Date: July 1854
Technique: steel engraving
Place: New York (N.Y.)
Subject: Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892 | New York (N.Y.)
Creator of master digital image: Beeghly Library, Ohio Wesleyan
Rights: Public Domain. This image may be reproduced without permission.
Work Type: digital image
Date: ca. 2000–ca. 2006