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  My dear Walt Whitman.

Yesterday I gave a letter of introduction to you to a lady friend of mine, Miss Helen Moore. Miss Moore was speaking to me of your poetry yesterday as she and I were walking through the galleries of the Louvre, she is an intellectual lady and she admires   a great deal you have written, she enjoyed so much your lecture on the assassination of Lincoln. She leaves Paris for her home in Philadelphia in a few weeks, stopping at London on her way.

Miss Moore has just had her first book published, "Mary Wolstonecraft Shelley" and I think you would feel that it was well written if you should read it.

I feel sure you will   find pleasure in Miss Moore's company for she is very appreciative.

I was more than pleased to receive the papers you sent me in which I found so much about you. I am sorry I could not have heard the lecture on Lincoln, there is a spirit and movement to your work that I feel directly.

I hope you are better and able to get about without trouble.   If you can find time and strength to write me even a line I shall be much pleased. There is something about a written word from one that brings more happiness than anything excepting the person himself.

Again many thanks for the papers and I trust that the letter of introduction I gave to Miss Moore will be agreeable to you and you will not feel I have taken too much liberty.

Sincerely Percy Ives