[69] This I cannot find in "Complete Poems and Prose." It is included in the Boston edition, 1860-61, and the Camden edition, 1876.
[70] "Drum-Taps." Complete Poems, p. 247.
[71] Ibid., p, 238.
[72] "Leaves of Grass." Complete Poems, p. 107.
[73] Complete Poems, p. 109. Compare, "I hear it was charged against me," ibid., p. 107.
[74] Complete Poems, p. 110.
[75] Camden edition, 1876, p. 127. Complete Poems, p. 99. Compare "Democratic Vistas," Complete Prose, p. 247, note.
[76] These prose passages are taken from "Democratic Vistas," cited above, p. 119, note.
[77] While these sheets were going through the press, I communicated Whitman's reply to a judicious friend, whose remarks upon it express my own opinion more clearly and succinctly than I have done above: "I do not feel that this answer throws light on the really interesting question; does the sentiment of 'Calamus' represent, in its own way, the ideal which we should aim at impressing on passionate affections between men, as certainly liable to take other objectionable forms? Is there sufficient affinity between the actual and the ideal for this to be practicable? That is what I have never felt sure about when we have discussed these matters. But I do not feel that my doubts have been resolved in any negative direction by Walt Whitman."
[78] Kelts, Scythians, Dorians, Tartars, Normans.