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File Details: AYEHm, 300 DPI, TIFF, Copy Negative, 1.8 Mb

Image ID: AYEH

Credit:

by Reeder (William)

Date:

1891

Equipment:

book; mirror; rocking chair; vase

Locations & Lines:

Camden NJ; New Jersey

Persons:

Whitman (Walter)

Sources:

Library of Congress

Library of Congress says: Walt Whitman, 1819-1892.

Walt Whitman Archive says: Dr. William Reeder was a Philadelphia physician and admirer of Whitman. On May 24, 1891, Horace Traubel recorded Reeder’s visit the previous night, when he took “flash pictures in front and back bedrooms” (Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Sunday, May 24, 1891). Of Reeder himself, Whitman remarked: “I liked him—felt that he attracted me—he has a clear, transparent nature—that subtle best thing in a young man, dear to me beyond speech” (Monday, April 27, 1891). In 1891, Reeder took photos of the poet’s tomb at Camden’s Harleigh Cemetery. Whitman appreciated the photographer’s talent, telling Traubel that Reeder was “quite an artist,” and that he possesed “taste” and a “good eye!” (Wednesday, July 8, 1891).
In another of the surviving photographs, the legendary chaos that surrounded Whitman in his last years is visible in the confusion of manuscripts and crumpled newspapers piled under and around his rocking chair (see also Jeannette Gilder’s 1891 photograph of the poet). Whitman likened the mass of paper to a sea and resisted efforts of his housekeeper and friends to sort it out. Whenever pressed, he always insisted that whatever he needed surfaced eventually.
In his Complete Prose Works, Whitman describes his room as an “old ship’s cabin,” writing that the floor is “cover’d by a deep litter of books, papers, magazines, thrown-down letters and circulars, rejected manuscripts, memoranda, bits of light or strong twine, a bundle to be ‘express’d,’ and two or three venerable scrap books” (517). Something in the disorder of his papers seemed almost to mirror Whitman’s aesthetic of pastiche and all-inclusiveness. Dr. John Johnston, founder of the “Bolton College” of Whitman admirers, described the “literary chaos” as a “kosmos.”

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