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31 1891 1 November 1-30, 1891 102 December 1-31, 1891 192 January 1-31, 1892 289 February 1-29, 1892
409 March 1-31, 1892 496 April 1-3, 1892 627 INDEX 633 ILLUSTRATIONS CONTAINED IN THIS VOLUME[Frontispiece
Drank 1 oz.1 Has slept a little. Taken a sip of milk a number of times.
Drank over one pint of milk, ate nearly a slice (large) of bread and butter and a cake of beef (1 1/2
Took 1 teaspoonful paregoric.1 Sleeping on left side.2 Still sleeping quietly upon left side.
March 1-31, 1891 47 April 1-30, 1891 116 May 1-31, 1891 175 June 1-30, 1891 250 July 1-31, 1891 294 August
1-31, 1891 378 September 1-31, 1891 458 APPENDICESI.
Fairchild: March 1, 1891Dear Mr.
1 June.
Ran one stretch of about 1 1/4 miles on soft soil: delicious—the active life of the moment—the yielding
August 1-31, 1890 31 September 1-30, 1890 96 October 1-31, 1890 163 November 1-30, 1890 239 December
1-31, 1890 316 January 1-31, 1891 389 February 1-10, 1891 444 APPENDIX: "LIBERTY IN LITERATURE" BY ROBERT
Ought to start, I think, about 1 P.M.
I enclose $1 due Walt on the book.W. stumbled over the first words.
[Inscribed by W.: "From the Philadelphia Daily Times, May 1, 1884."
October 1-31, 1889 32 November 1-30, 1889 105 December 1-31, 1889 170 January 1-31, 1890 223 February
1-28, 1890 273 March 1-31, 1890 312 April 1-30, 1890 347 May 1-31, 1890 385 June 1-30, 1890 444 July
Tuesday, October 1, 18898.05 P.M. W. in his room, reading letters.
Friday, November 1, 18897.30 P.M. W. reading The Century when I came.
Sunday, December 1, 1889 9.30 A.M.
May 1-31, 1889 110 June 1-30, 1889 251 July 1-31, 1889 333 August 1-31, 1889 403 September 1-14, 1889
Wednesday, May 1, 188910.45 A.M.
Then kissed him goodnight.Monday, July 1, 18897.50 P.M.
Shall probably start back Sept. 1, calling by the way, & be at Gtn. on the 8th.
Sunday and Monday, September 1-2, 1889Did not see W. at all.
........................... xvii Sculley Bradley Conversations: January 21 to April 7, 1889........ 1
: Walt Whitman"--Sarrazin's Autograph 2 Gabriel Sarrazin's review-article in La Nouvelle Revue, May 1,
III: Conversations, November 1, 1888, to January 20, 1889 (New York: Mitchell Kennerley, 1914)At the
Friday, February 1, 18897.45 P.M. W. cleaning his pen. Working about the table when I entered.
Left with Bucke.Friday, March 1, 18898 P.M. W. reading Century which he laid down on my entrance.
W. had me read the parallels to him."1.
Y., May 1, 1882.
ASHTON AND SECRETARY HARLAN, JULY 1, 1865 Facsimile of manuscript notes by Whitman, 1 July 1865, page
1 Facsimile of manuscript notes by Whitman, 1 July 1865, page 2 Facsimile of manuscript notes by Whitman
notes by Whitman, 1 July 1865, page 5 Facsimile of manuscript notes by Whitman, 1 July 1865, page 6
Wednesday, August 1, 1888.
April 1, 1883.
First he had me read the letter aloud. 14 Millborne Grove, Brompton,London, England, Feb. 1, '68.
The postmark was Chicago, March 1. The letter was written in New York.1267 Broadway, New York.
—the space for each averaging only 3 1/2 pages.
Sunday, April 1, 1888.At Harned's. A crowded table. W. in fine fettle.
Washington, D.C., February 1, 1885.
I took it and read it.1 East 28th St.,New York City, Dec. 29, 1887. Dear Mr.
Curtis.Tuesday, May 1, 1888.Called W.'
Christ Church, Oxford, Nov. 1, '84.
PS 32-38 CONTENTS PAOB PRELIMINARY 1 AND PERSONAL 23 BIOGRAPHICAL His RULING IDEAS AND AIMS 73 85 His
This much soon appeared to but I was troubled the s "co- me, by poet apparent 1 lossalegotism,"
This is what he "To " says Pupil: 1.Is reformneeded ? Isitthrough you ?
Johnson says, "Addison the of and Shake spea7s language poets, 1 speare of men.
After what 1 have already said,my reader will not be surprised when!
writes from Farmington, this (out of a long letter) about the Bolton message to him: Farmington, MISept. 1,
This is the letter.London, Oct. 1, 1888. Dear Mr.
Broadway New York" (envelope all crushed, torn, discolored) and forwarded from them to "Walt Whitman 91 1/
Wednesday, October 1, 1890Morris and I met Baker at Horticultural Hall at about five o'clock.
Wednesday, October 1, 1890
Courtesy Library of Congress, Traubel Collection David McKay, June 1, 1883.
W. had me read the parallels to him."1.
to me letters from Bucke (two), on one of which he had written: "Send Dr the slip (if you have it) 1/
The rough draft of a letter written by him (marked on the envelope "sent Oct 1 1863") to W. S.
" now due from Liverpool, consigned to us for your acct., one package containing apparel valued at £1.
Wednesday, May 1, 188910.45 A.M.
Wednesday, May 1, 1889
curious speculations: 7 March 1892My dear HoraceThis morning came your letters of e'g. of 3'd, 2 of 4th, 1
Had been in bed from 1:30. I then went in W.'
Only said, "Good morning, Mary dear." ...1 p.m. Turned to left side. Said he had had a good sleep.
Called me as I was leaving the room, "Mary, if the doctors come, you come in and talk to them." 1:55
then north through Fourth to the railroad—and it continued its reach and play for three hours till, at 1:
come across a quotation from him in the D. let me know.This morning I have your two letters of 18th & 1
Wednesday, July 1, 18918:00 P.M. Again W. on bed. "I was just going to get up.
Wednesday, July 1, 1891
None at this time.1 Sleeping very quietly. No hiccough.2 Had position changed.
That must have been a wonderful 1/2 hour with W., I[ngersoll] and F[arrell]—the report of it will make
Wednesday, January 1, 18901.30 P.M. W. in his room reading The Ledger.
Wednesday, January 1, 1890
thin paper to me as above.This is on the supposition that your big vol. costs £2 and the other one £1,
Wednesday, August 1, 1888.
Wednesday, August 1, 1888.
Wednesday, April 1, 18915:25 P.M. Quite the most vigorous talk with W. had for long time.
Ass. meeting) April 28 to May 1—then put in May at the seaside & in neighborhood of Phila. and go home
1 June.
Wednesday, April 1, 1891
LIST OF BOOKS. 1.
Price 1 (fivedollars). " one with 2.
* 1 & : ^A cj,- &aJd;gt; Ji *u?-.c tKft 1*3 VI **.! ^ &am_.gt; - g!;^.H-0-..-V-f:f : a iS?
How other authors would many the men named above agree upon 1 Mr.
Post, February 1, 1887, notes that Mr.
he think, for example, of t is this gem, cut by an eminent hand, in The Boston Transcript of April 1—
largeness of scale— Impossibility of reducing Jiis doctrine toa system — The main of points his creed 1
As early as w J 1 r < LIFE OF WALT WHITMAN xiii sixteen, or thereabouts, he the " tramped country, teaching
hope, they he said of me, I recognised the acumen of his insight into several points of my character. 1
Then asdisembodiedoranother separate, born, Ethereal,he lasathletirealitymy consolation, 1 I floainthe
APR 15 1<*tt PS 3231 S8 Symonds,John bit Whitmanddington PLEASEDO NOT REMOVE CARDS OR SLIPSFROM THIS
But for my poems, what " have 1 ?
This isall the claim I make formy pamphlet, anil that panqihlet is my act. 1 vaunt itand 1 stand by Mr
Who 1,arns my Lesson complete.
Not for him the stage where Achilles and ; 1 88 IVa/t Whitman.
" he cries, "Divine am 1 inside and out, and I make holy whatever 1 touch oram touched from.
Johnston 1 have purposely kept back tillnow.
When Walt was at Place's house in 1 881, with Dr.
Wednesday, October 2%th.~-1 called atW.'
We are all gloomy from the great cataclysm west.1 W. (To J. W.)
Y'rs of 1 5th rec'd & welcomed.
April 1, 1883.
—the space for each averaging only 3 1/2 pages.
Tuesday, September 1, 18915:00 P.M.
[Camden Post, Sept. 1, 1891] I had read it on boat. W. asked, "Who wrote it? Not you?
Tuesday, September 1, 1891
Tuesday, October 1, 18898.05 P.M. W. in his room, reading letters.
Tuesday, October 1, 1889
all produced the three greatest public men (to my thinking such) of the last hundred years in Europe—1.
Tuesday, May 1, 1888.Called W.'
Tuesday, May 1, 1888.
Stedman Spent several hours, to 1:30, working on W.'s literary effects.
presence.Talcott Williams writes with his last fund remittance: "I enclose my check for a dearly loved service." 1:
and get from him if possible answers (however brief) to the series of questions with which it ends.1
like the musical sense just coming into existence.2 As main trunk and stem of all the faculties are (1)
Tuesday, March 1, 1892Stopped at 328 at 8:15 A.M. Happy to learn W. had passed an easier night.
Tuesday, March 1, 1892
Christ Church, Oxford, Nov. 1, '84.
Tuesday, July 1, 18905.15 P.M.
Tuesday, July 1, 1890
Drank 1 oz. cold milk.12 p.m. Wishes to be left without change for a little while.
Drank 1 oz.1 Has slept a little. Taken a sip of milk a number of times.
Wished to be left quietly and alone for a while.1 Wishing nothing but water. 2 No hiccough—a little cough
Tuesday, January 1, 1889.7.35 P. M. W. spent an improved day. The cold, the cough, is gone.
Tuesday, January 1, 1889.
.: "From the Philadelphia Daily Times, May 1, 1884."