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  see notes July 5 1888 My dear sir,

I send by this mail the second part of my study of your works. I hope I may not unintentionally have misrepresented you; but if I could be one of the means of drawing more general attention to your great   works than they have yet received in this country, I believe I should have done somet'g​ worth the doing.

May I venture to hope I may have a line from yourself when you have time? And may I again repeat the hope I expressed to you in a former note (when   I sent you my own vol. of poems)—the first—of which I am rather ashamed of now—on account of its Byronism—& too much leaven of aristocracy which is born with me—that you will not visit this country without coming to us?

Yours with much respect & in all sincerity Roden Noel  

I want to get hold of the American Ed. of your work—which was lent me by Buchanan but I understand it is difficult to procure.

The proclamation of comradeship seems to me the grandest & most momentous fact in your work & I heartily thank you for it.

Walt Whitman Esq