[Memories and Anecdotes by Kate Sanborn]@TWC D-Link bookMemories and Anecdotes CHAPTER V 2/19
And when with the women of the circle again she said: "Now wasn't that just grand in that dear old man? I like him the more for his outspoken honesty and his unwillingness to pain me." How they laboured with "Walt" to induce him to leave out certain of his poems from the next edition! The wife went to her room to pray that he might yield, and the husband argued.
But no use, it was all "art" every word, and not one line would he ever give up.
The old poet was supposed to be poor and needy, and an enthusiastic daughter of Mrs.Smith had secured quite a sum at college to provide bed linen and blankets for him in the simple cottage at Camden.
Whitman was a great, breezy, florid-faced out-of-doors genius, but we all wished he had been a little less _au naturel_. To speak once more of Miss Willard, no one enjoyed a really laughable thing more than she did, but I never felt like being a foolish trifler in her presence.
Her outlook was so far above mine that I always felt not rebuked, but ashamed of my superficial lightness of manner. Just one illustration of the unconscious influence of her noble soul and her convincing words: Many years ago, at an anniversary of Sorosis in New York, I had half promised the persuasive president (Jennie June) that I would say something.
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