Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v2.djvu/286

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270 Whitman experiences to the Brooklyn Eagle and Union and the New York Times. "" To supply the little comforts and necessities of the htin- dred thousand soldiers, Northern and Southern, to whom, as he estimated, he ministered courage and cheer, he privately raised several thousand doUars from friends and correspondents in the North. When he obtained a salaried position in 1865, a gener- ous portion of his earnings went into the same fund. But chiefly he gave himself, in undisguised affection. The full tenderness, almost motherliness, of this large-hearted, self- sacrificing man can be fully understood only in the modest but realistic account of his daily activities preserved in the letters written to his mother at the time and in the hospital-notebook jottings printed in Specimen Days. It would be a questionable service to Whitman to affirm that these three years of slow mar- tjnrdom sanctified the whole of his life; but it is hteraUy true that the deepest and best instincts in him never before had found such full and beautiful expression. Partly, at least, as a result of his hospital service his magnificent health was lost, and the last twenty years of his life were those of a paralytic cripple. Whitman's poetic power was still at its height. Drum- Taps, — the poetic complement to Specimen Days and The Wound- Dresser, — a booklet charged with the pathos and the spirituality of the war, was published in 1865, with the profoundly moving dirge for the martyred Lincoln. In Democratic Vistas (1871) he made use of prose, though with unequal success. This period was also important because of the friendships that it made or fostered. Perhaps the most important was that with William Douglas O'Connor. When, in 1865, Whit- man had been employed for several months in the Interior Department under Secretary Harlan, the latter, on learning that he was the author of Leaves of Grass, had him summarily dis- missed; then O'Connor came to his friend's defence in a bril- liant and passionate, though ill-advised, polemic, The Good Gray Poet, the title of which gave the bard a fit and endiuing sobriquet. The advertising value of such a polemic, or of such an incident, though it was rated highly by Whitman and by some of his friends, may now be questioned. Thanks to such ' Most of these letters were reprinted in Specimen Days or in The Wound' Dresser. See Bibliography.