Clapp, Henry Editor, Journalist, Poet, Reformer, Translator. Born in Massachusetts to a family of merchants and seamen, Clapp traveled to Paris to translate the socialist writings of Fourier. In Paris, Clapp abandoned his ardent sympathy for the temperance movement and embraced the leisurely café life of the city. Upon returning to New York in 1850, he sought to recreate this atmosphere, spending hours at Charlie Pfaff's beer cellar, drawing a crowd of journalists, painters, actors, and poets to cultivate an American Bohemia in which participants admired and discussed the work of Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens, and Washington Irving (Martin 15-7). Junius H. Browne notes that "[Clapp] was nearly twice as old as most of his companions; was witty, skeptical, cynical, daring, and had a certain kind of magnetism that drew and held men, though he was neither person nor manner, what would be called attractive" (152). Clapp, sometimes referred to as the "King of Bohemia," was often telling stories and jokes and displaying a facility for word play and puns, as Thomas Gunn, who socialized with the Bohemian crowd at Pfaff's, noted saying, "Clapp puns a good deal, and if permitted, always tries to ride roughshod over others" (vol. 10, 16). Clapp is best known as the tireless editor, instigator, and fundraiser for the <cite>Saturday Press,</cite> a short-lived but influential literary journal which showcased fiction, poetry, literary criticism, and social commentary by many of Pfaff's bohemians. William Dean Howells contended that the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> "embodied the new literary life of the city" ("First Impressions" 63). Its first issue was published on October 23, 1858 (Martin 79). Gunn characterized the <cite>Press</cite> writing "Clapp generally does an impudent, flippant, Frenchy tainted editorial in paragraphs of one sentence each, the rest is Ada Clare, Getty Gay, Banks (and brays) Arnold &c &c. Wilkin's provides a 'feulleton', brilliant, cool, impudent and amusing, reading like a translation from the French, and all the rest of the writers imitate him. The paper is a mere swindle on advertisers, principally publishers, the circulation being nominal" (vol. 11, 162). Scholar Mark Lause presents another view arguing that "in promoting what it saw as the best in its field, the Press became an advocate for good journalism and publishing" and received praise from many of its contemporary newspapers (78). The Civil War took a toll on the paper, and after the war, Clapp attempted to reestablish the Saturday Press, only to find that "the Bourgeois press was even more hostile toward Bohemianism than before," and the paper was shut down for good (Levin 68). Afterwards Clapp became a "'casual writer for City journals'" but no longer held any real journalistic standing (Lause 116). Howells characterizes Clapp as an editor who was "kind to some neglected talents, and befriended them with a vigor and a zeal," which included Walt Whitman, who owed a great debt to the patronage of Clapp ("First Impressions" 65). Clapp was dedicated to establishing Whitman's career by keeping his work before the public in the pages of the <cite>Press</cite>. To this end, Clapp published eleven of Whitman's poems and printed over twenty reviews of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite> in addition to publishing eight poems written as parodies or homages to Whitman's distinct style. Clapp also gave ample advertising space to Thayer and Eldridge, the Boston-based publishing firm that had recently released the third (1860) edition of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>. Clapp remained a tireless champion of Whitman's work; Whitman would later muse that his own history could not be written without including Henry Clapp, Jr (Lause 53). By 1870, he had begun to take some solace in drink, and during his final years, he spent "an untold number of stints in asylums." Scholar Justin Martin noted though that "still, as Clapp made his shambling rounds, [around New York City,] he was sometimes spotted by one member or another from the old Pfaff's set" (260). Clapp died on April 10, 1875 in a sad state, which Whitman described saying, "'he died in a gutter—drink—drink—took him down, down'" (Martin 161; Lause 116). The author of his obituary in the <i>New York Times</i> defined his legacy arguing that "no man was better known in the newspaper and artistic world a few years ago than than the eccentric and gifted King of the Bohemians" ("Obituary" 7). References & Biographical Resources\n"; <div class="view view-works-related-to-people view-id-works_related_to_people view-display-id-default"> <div class="view-content"> <ul id="views-bootstrap-works-related-to-people-default"class="views-bootstrap-list-group views-view-list-group"> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60161" about="/node/60161" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60161">"A Visit to Walt Whitman." <em>Brooklyn Eagle</em>, July 11, 1886, 10.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55726" about="/node/55726" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55726">Allen, Gay Wilson. <em>The Solitary Singer: A Critical Biography of Walt Whitman</em>. New York: MacMillan, 1955.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Allen writes that Whitman began frequenting Pfaff's at some point after Clapp, who had recently founded the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> made Pfaff's his "informal club and gathered around him a coterie of writers and wits reputed to be very sophisticated, irreverent, and 'Bohemian'" (229).Allen mentions that at this time, the term "Bohemian" was not a common American terms and had been imported from Paris with by Clapp and others, who returned from visits abroad "with contempt for its [America's] puritanism and a mania for shocking it" (229).Allen describes Clapp during this time as follows:"Clapp was a former New Englander who had been a sailor, had educated himself to be a freethinker and skeptic, had aquired a varied experience in journalism, had worked for a while with Horace Greeley and Albert Brisbane in trying to popularize the doctrines of Fourier and socialism, and was not attempting to edit a smart and sprightly literary and critical journal, which did manage to achieve considerable prestige but could seldom pay its contributors" (229).</p> <p>Allen briefly discusses Howells' interactions with Clapp during his first and only visit to the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> offices and Pfaff's (230-231).Allen responds to Howells' criticisms of Clapp by writing: "Clapp must have had more character and ability than Howells thought.In Whitman's later opinion he had 'abilities way out of the common,' which in a different environment and with financial resources, 'might have loomed up as a central influence' on American literature.Howells might have been partly right in thinking that Clapp had taken Whitman up because he was so obnoxious to respectable society, and Whitman's gratitude may have led him to exaggerate Clapp's importance.But the editor of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>, along with Ada Clare, Ned Wilkins, and several others, did render a service to the history of American literature by giving Whitman companionship and encouragement when he greatly needed them.In his old age Whitman told Traubel that his 'own history could be written with Henry left out.'Since no complete file of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> has survived, it is not possible to trace every detail of Henry Clapp's editorial support of Whitman, bt it seems not to have developed unitl late in 1859" (231).</p> <p>Allen mentions that there is proof Clapp received advance, unfinished copies of the Boston publication of the third edition of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>.Allen also discusses Clapp's strategy for publicizing the book, including his role in sending review copies to several important persons, including Mrs. Juliette H. Beach.During this time period, Clapp appears to have been preoccupied with keeping the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> in business and managing its financial difficulties.He was able to get a letter to Whitman in Boston via his brother George which discussed mainly his concerns about the stability of the paper, but also assured Whitman of his success and pledged to help him advance his book (242-244).</p> <p>Allen feels that Clapp was most likely the author of a long article on <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite> that appeared in the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> on May 19, 1860.The article began: "We announce a great Philosopher - perhaps a great Poet - in every way an original man."The critic also admitted, however, that the book had passages "which should never have been published at all."The critic also claimed, though, that the poems showed "the philosophic mind, deeply seeking, reasoning, feeling its way toward a clear knowledge of the system of the universe" and celebrated the "felicity of style" in phrases such as "bare-bosomed Night," "slumbering and liquid trees," and "Earth of the vitreous pour of the full moon, just tinged with blue!" (260).When the negative review attributed to Juliette Beach appeared in the paper, Clapp included the editorial comment that"It gives us pleasure to print every variety of opinion upon such subjects."The next week, he ran a correction after Mrs. Beach wrote the paper to explain that her husband had intercepted her copy of the book and had submitted his own review for publication.Mrs. Beach's own review most likely ran two weeks later, signed by "A Woman" (261).</p> <p>Allen notes that Whitman was "no match for the mercurial Fitz-James O'Brien, satirical George Arnold, or perhaps even his sardonic friend Henry Clapp" (270).</p> <p>In the fall of 1862, after the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> had dissolved, Clapp, Ada Clare, and several other Bohemians were writing and working at the <cite>Leader</cite> (273).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 229-31,242-244,260,261,269,270,273,280,494]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55848" about="/node/55848" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55848">Baker, Portia. "Walt Whitman and the Atlantic Monthly." <em>American Literature</em> 6, no. 3 (1934): 283-301.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Editor-in-chief of <cite>The Saturday Press</cite>.Clapp wrote a letter to Whitman about his anonymous contribution to the <cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite>.Clapp enjoyed the press commentary on the <cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite> at the publication of Whitman.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 290, 292]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55819" about="/node/55819" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55819">Belasco, Susan. "From the Field: Walt Whitman&#039;s Periodical Poetry." <em>American Periodicals</em> 14, no. 2 (2004): 247-59.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Belasco describes him as "Whitman's loyal friend, fellow Bohemian, and fiesty editor of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>."Clapp is mentioned as believing, along with Whitman, "that any publicity [for <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>] was good publicity" (251).</p> <p>For the publication of "A Child's Reminiscence" on December 24, 1859, on the first page of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>, Clapp included this notice at the beginning of his editorial column" "Our readers may, if they choose, consider as our Christmas or New Year's present to them, the curious warble, by Walt Whitman, of <cite>'A Child's Reminiscence,'</cite> on our First Page.Like the <cite>'Leaves of Grass,'</cite> the purport of this wild and plaintive song, well-enveloped, and eluding definition, is positive and unquestionable, like the effect of music.</p> <p>The piece will bear reading many times--perhaps, indeed, only comes forth, as from recesses, by many repititions" (252).</p> <p>Belasco notes that Clapp was "eager to attract attention and readers to his newspaper" and "not only published Whitman's poems but also printed parodies of Whitman's poems, as well as promotional advertisements for the 1860 edition of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>.Throughout the early months of 1860, Clapp was reguarly publishing Whitman" (252)."You and Me and To-Day" was printed in the January 14,1860, edition of the paper as one of Clapp's "original" poems, a feature which ran in nearly every edition of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>, usually on the first page (252).Clapp published "Of Him I Love Day and Night" on January 28,1860, as "Poemet" with anotation "For the Saturday Press" at the upper left-hand corner of page 2.Clapp would publish a second "Poemet" ("That Shadow My Likenes," a Calamus poem) and "Leaves" ("whose three numbered verses became three distinct poems, two in the Calamus cluster and one in the Enfans d'Adam cluster in the 1860 <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>) in this spot (252-253).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 251,252-253]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56587" about="/node/56587" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56587">Belphegor. "Dramatic Feuilleton." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, December 12, 1865, 280-281.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55733" about="/node/55733" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55733">Browne, Junius Henri. <em>The Great Metropolis; A Mirror of New York</em>. Hartford: American Publishing, 1869.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Browne cites him as the head of the "original" Bohemians of New York City and the United States.Clapp was their leader "as well by age as experience and a certain kind of domineering dogmatism."Browne notes that Clapp had been previously associated with several New York papers and was "one of the first to introduce the personal style of the Paris fuilleton into the literary weeklies" (152).</p> <p>Browne notes that Clapp began the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> after the "inception" of the "informal society" of the Bohemians.Browne calls the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> the paper "to which the brotherhood contributed for money when they could get it, and for love when money could not be had" (152-3).Browne mentions that Clapp was able to keep the paper running for a year and tried to revive it twice after its first failure.</p> <p>Browne mentions that Clapp was able to keep the paper running for a year and tried to revive it twice after its first failure.He claims that since then "Clapp, bitter from his many failures, now lives a careless life; writes epigrammatic paragraphs and does the dramatic for one of the weeklies.He is stated to be over fifty; but his mind is vigorous as ever, his tongue as fluent, and his pen as sharp" (153).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 152-153]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59759" about="/node/59759" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59759">Clapp, Ebenezer. <em>The Clapp Memorial: Record of the Clapp Family in America, Containing Sketches of the Original Six Emigrants and a Genealogy of their Descendants Bearing the Name. With a Supplement and the Proceedings at Two Family Meetings.</em>. Boston: David Clapp &amp; Son, 1876.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 39-40, 341-343]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57872" about="/node/57872" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57872">Clapp, Henry Jr. "Card." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, October 22, 1859, 2.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57735" about="/node/57735" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57735">Clare, Ada. "Thoughts and Things VII." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, December 10, 1859, 2.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60106" about="/node/60106" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60106">Clark, George Pierce. "&#039;Saerasmid,&#039; an Early Promoter of Walt Whitman." <em>American Literature</em> 27, no. 2 (1955): 259-262.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56162" about="/node/56162" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56162">Congdon, Charles T. <em>Reminiscences of a Journalist</em>. Boston: James R. Osgood, 1880.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 338, 339]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59783" about="/node/59783" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59783">"Conserving Walt Whitman&#039;s Fame: Selections from Horace Traubel&#039;s &lt;cite&gt;Conservator&lt;/cite&gt;, 1890-1919." In <em>Conserving Walt Whitman&#039;s Fame: Selections from Horace Traubel&#039;s &lt;cite&gt;Conservator&lt;/cite&gt;, 1890-1919</em>, edited by Schmidgall, Gary. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2006.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55803" about="/node/55803" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55803">"Current Memoranda." <em>Potter&#039;s American Monthly</em>, September 1, 1875, 710-715.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 714]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55872" about="/node/55872" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55872">Derby, J.C. <em>Fifty Years among Authors, Books and Publishers</em>. New York: G. W. Carleton and Co., 1884.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Derby writes that at the time of the founding of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> Clapp "was a man well-known at the time in journalistic circles."Clapp was editor-in-chief of the paper (232).Derby also writes about how Clapp often took charge of the <cite>Saturday Press's</cite> advertising receipts as he did not like to sleep in the morning and Aldrich often slept in (232). </p> <p>He is mentioned as one of the "brightest and most popular humorous men of the day," known to rally around the book store of George W. Carleton.Derby calls him "that famous King of all Bohemia."Derby notes that "the noonday hour frequently found most of them at Pfaff's celebrated German restuarant, in a Broadway basement, near Bleecker-street, the rendezvous at that day of the so-called Bohemians" (239).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 232,239,412]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55804" about="/node/55804" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55804">"Died in Bowery Lodgings: Sad Ending of the Career of George G. Clapp." <em>New York Times</em>, April 10, 1893, 3.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>George G. Clapp's brother and leader of the Bohemian group that gathered at Pfaff's and made it "a famous resort back in the fifties."</p> <p>The obituary notes that Clapp was known as the "'King of Bohemia,' a title by no means easy to win or hold in such brilliant company.He barely escaped genius.To this day the impresion of his remarkable gifts and strong personality is held in vivid recognition by those who knew him, however alightly."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 3]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55739" about="/node/55739" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55739">Donaldson, Thomas. <em>Walt Whitman the Man</em>. New York; F.P. Harper, 1896.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 208]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="71341" about="/node/71341" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/71341">"Drama: Dramatic Critics in New York." <em>The Round Table</em>, January 2, 1864, 43-44.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60137" about="/node/60137" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60137">Edwards, Henry Sutherland. <em>Personal Recollections</em>. London: Cassell and Company, 1900.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56335" about="/node/56335" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56335">Ego. "Letter from Paris." <em>New-York Saturday Press</em>, March 10, 1866, 3.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56295" about="/node/56295" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56295">Ego. "Letter from Paris." <em>New-York Saturday Press</em>, March 31, 1866, 4.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56281" about="/node/56281" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56281">Ego. "Letter from Paris [from our own correspondent]." <em>New-York Saturday Press</em>, April 17, 1866, 4.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55740" about="/node/55740" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55740">English, Thomas Dunn. "That Club at Pfaaf&#039;s [sic]." <em>The Literary World</em>, June 12, 1886, 202.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>English claims O'Brien, Clapp, and Arnold "used to laughingly class themselves as Bohemians, speak of Pfaff, his beer; but they spoke of no club" (202).English states, "I remember very well saying to one of these gentlemen, with a feeble attempt at pleasantry -- 'As there are so many buyers of beer among your people it is quite proper that you should have a cellar to receive you'" (202).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 202]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55741" about="/node/55741" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55741">Epstein, Daniel Mark. <em>Lincoln and Whitman: Parallel Lives in Civil War Washington</em>. New York: Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2004.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Described as "powerful, arch, and often caustic." Epstein also alleges that he might have been a lover of Whitman's. </p> <p>Clapp is described as a "most skillful and devoted publicist," who"could make hay out of scandal." He ran both good and bad press for promoting Whitman.Epstein claims that Clapp gave Whitman the advice, "Better to have people stirred against you if they can't be stirred for you."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 55-56,57,310,314]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55853" about="/node/55853" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55853">Erkkila, Betsy. <em>Whitman the Political Poet</em>. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp was responsible for sending a review copy of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite> to Juliette Beach that was intercepted by her husband.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 311]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59762" about="/node/59762" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59762">Eytinge, Rose. <em>The Memories of Rose Eytinge: Being Recollections &amp; Observations of Men, Women, and Events, during Half a Century</em>. New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1905.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Mentions Henry Clapp as one of the "group of men and women, all of whom had distinguished themselves in various avenues, — in literature, art, music, drama, war, philanthropy" who met at Ada Clare's house on West 42nd Street in New York on Sunday evenings (21-22).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 22]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56669" about="/node/56669" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56669">Figaro [Clapp, Henry Jr.]. "Dramatic Feuilleton." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, October 14, 1865, 168-169.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55861" about="/node/55861" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55861">Folsom, Ed and Kenneth M. Price. <em>Re-Scripting Walt Whitman: An Introduction to His Life and Work</em>. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Mentioned as a writer Whitman met at Pfaff's.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 61]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57876" about="/node/57876" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57876">Folsom, Ed and Kenneth M. Price. "Walt Whitman." <em>The Walt Whitman Archive</em>, January 1, 2006.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp is mentioned as both a friend of Whitman and an advocate of his poetry.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60707" about="/node/60707" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60707">Ford, James L. "New York&#039;s Bohemia: A Kingdom Which Still Exists, Although Pfaff&#039;s Restaurant is No More." <em>The Philadelphia Inquirer</em>, November 27, 1892, 14.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60165" about="/node/60165" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60165">G. J. M. "Bohemianism: The American Authors Who Met in a Cellar." <em>Brooklyn Eagle</em>, May 25, 1884, 9.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57576" about="/node/57576" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57576">Gailey, Amanda. "Walt Whitman and the King of Bohemia: The Poet in the &lt;i&gt;Saturday Press&lt;/i&gt;." <em>The Walt Whitman Quarterly Review</em> 25, no. 4 (2008): 143-166.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55458" about="/node/55458" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55458">Gardette, Charles Desmarais and Robert Shelton Mackenzie. <em>The Whole Truth in the Question of &quot;The Fire Fiend&quot;: Between Dr. R. Shelton Mackenzie and C.D. Gardette; Briefly stated by the Latter.</em>. Philadelphia: Sherman &amp; Co., 1864.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Mackenzie claims that Clapp knew when he published "The Fire Fiend" in the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> that the poem and its story were a hoax.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57690" about="/node/57690" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57690">Gay, Getty. "The Royal Bohemian Supper." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, December 31, 1859, 2.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Referred to as "Baron Clapper."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55783" about="/node/55783" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55783">"General gossip of authors and writers." <em>Current Literature</em>, January 1, 1888, 476-480.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Mentioned as one of the Bohemians at Pfaff's "gossiped" about by Rufus B. Wilson in a "reminiscent letter to the Galveston News."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 479]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60179" about="/node/60179" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60179">Genoways, Ted. <em>Whitman and the Civil War: America&#039;s Poet During the Lost Years of 1860-1862</em>. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2009.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55828" about="/node/55828" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55828">Glicksberg, Charles I. "Walt Whitman in 1862." <em>American Literature</em> 6, no. 3 (1934): 264-282.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Glicksberg writes about Clapp Written about in a discussion of Walt Whitman.Clapp was called "Figaro" and is noted as a Pfaff's regular.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 273,275]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="78301" about="/node/78301" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/78301">Gould, Mitchell Santine. "Walt Whitman&#039;s Quaker Paradox." <em>Quaker History</em> 96, no. 1 (2007): 1-23.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55743" about="/node/55743" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55743">Greenslet, Ferris. <em>The Life of Thomas Bailey Aldrich</em>. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1908.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>He is mentioned as part of "a group of journalists and magazine-writers of great repute in their own day, but as remote as Prester John to ours" with whom Aldrich was familiar during his days in the "Literary Bohemia" in New York (38).</p> <p>Greenlset describes him as one who has gone the way of the "journalists of yester-year" and calls him "perhaps the intensest personality of the group, the 'King of Bohemia'" (39).Greenslet describes him as "a clever, morose little man, a hater of the brownstone respectability of his day.He died in middle life after a brilliant but far from prosperous career in variegated journalism" (39).</p> <p>Greenslet quotes Clapp's statement at the first failure of the "Saturday Press" in early 1860, "This paper is discontinued for lack of funds, which is, by a coincidence, precisely the reason for which it was started" (48).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 38,39,48]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="58013" about="/node/58013" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/58013">Guarneri, Carl J. <em>The Utopian Alternative: Fourierism in Nineteenth-Century America</em>. Cornell, NY: Cornell University Press, 1994.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 73,361]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60712" about="/node/60712" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60712">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 10." <em>Diaries, Vol. 10</em>(1858).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60713" about="/node/60713" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60713">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 11." <em>Diaries, Vol. 11</em>(1859).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60714" about="/node/60714" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60714">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 12." <em>Diaries, Vol. 12</em>(1860).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60715" about="/node/60715" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60715">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 13." <em>Diaries, Vol. 13</em>(1860).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60724" about="/node/60724" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60724">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 14." <em>Diaries, Vol. 14</em>(1860).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60716" about="/node/60716" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60716">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 16." <em>Diaries, Vol. 16</em>(1861).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60725" about="/node/60725" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60725">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 17." <em>Diaries, Vol. 17</em>(1861).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60718" about="/node/60718" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60718">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 19." <em>Diaries, Vol. 19</em>(1862).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60726" about="/node/60726" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60726">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 21." <em>Diaries, Vol. 21</em>(1862).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60720" about="/node/60720" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60720">Gunn, Thomas Butler. "Diaries, Vol. 9." <em>Diaries, Vol. 9</em>(1857).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55744" about="/node/55744" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55744">Hahn, Emily. <em>Romantic Rebels; An Informal History of Bohemianism in America</em>. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1967.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 2,10,21,28-29,32-33]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="58940" about="/node/58940" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/58940">Haynes, John Edward. <em>Pseudonyms of Authors: Including Anonyms and Initialisms</em>. New York, 1882.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>This text identifies the following pseudonym: Figaro (36).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 36]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55805" about="/node/55805" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55805">Hemstreet, Charles. "Literary New York: Its Landmarks and Associations.." <em>Literary New York: Its Landmarks and Associations.</em>(1903).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Hemstreet describes Pfaff's and the Bohemians as follows: "There of an evening met the literary Bohemians of the city, in the days when Bohemia really existed and before the world had well-nigh lost significance and respect.They were gifted men with great power of intellect, who spoke without fear and without favor and whose every word expressed a thought.They were real men and they made the world a real place, a place without affectation, without pretense, without show, without need of applause, and without undue cringing to mere conventional forms.These were the characteristics of the Bohemians, and Bohemia was wherever two or three of them were gathered together.Bohemia was the atmosphere they carried with them, and whether on the streets or in Pfaff's cellar they were at home.Pfaff's happening to be a convenient gathering-place, and beer happening to be the popular brew with most of them, they gathered there.It is a tradition that the place came into favor through the personal efforts of the energetic Henry Clapp.He was attracted to it, so the traditionruns, soon after he started the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> in 1858" (212-14).Hemstreet claims, however, that it is unimportant if Clapp was solely responsible for calling attention to Pfaff's; it only matters that it became the Bohemians' meeting place (214). </p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 212-214]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55874" about="/node/55874" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55874">Holloway, Emory. <em>Free and Lonesome Heart: The Secret of Walt Whitman</em>. New York: Vantage Press, 1960.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp is described as the "King of Bohemia" and Whitman's "avowed champion."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 109,110,111]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55843" about="/node/55843" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55843">Holloway, Emory. <em>Walt Whitman: An Interpretation in Narrative</em>. New York &amp; London: Alfred A. Knopf, 1926.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 157,162]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55774" about="/node/55774" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55774">Holloway, Emory. "Whitman Pursued." <em>American Literature</em> 27, no. 1 (1955): 1-11.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 8]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55439" about="/node/55439" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55439">Howells, William Dean. "First Impressions of Literary New York." <em>Harper&#039;s New Monthly Magazine</em>, June 1, 1895, 62-74.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Howells doesn't refer to him by name, but it's clear from the context that he's talking about Clapp.</p> <p>Howells claims that Clapp must have stolen the "shredded prose" style of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> from the writing of Victor Hugo (63).Howells states that Clapp "brought it back with him from one of those soujourns in Paris which posses one of the French accent rather than the French language" (63).</p> <p>Howells describes Clapp as "a man of such open and avowed cynicism that he may have been, for all I know, a kindly optimist at heart; some say, however, that he had really talked himself into being what he seemed.I only know that his talk, the first day first day I saw him, was of such a quality that if he was half as bad, he would have been too bad to be.He walked up and down his room saying what lurid things he would directly do if anyone accused him of respectibility, so that he might disabuse the minds of all witnesses" (63).</p> <p>Howells states that he "could not disown" his fascination with Clapp during his first meeting with him, even though Clapp's language caused him "inner disgust" (63).</p> <p>Clapp preferred the anonymity of writers in New York to the tradition and recognition of Boston writers (63).</p> <p>Howells feels that Clapp was toying with him when he asked him of his impression and relationship with Hawthorne (63).</p> <p>Howells discusses Clapp's death: "The editor passed away too, not long after, and the thing that he had inspired had ceased to be.He was a man of certain sardonic power, and used it rather fiercely and freely, with a joy probaby more apparent than real in the pain it gave.In my last knowledge of him he was much milder than when I first knew him, and I have a feeling that he too came to own before he died that man cannot live by snapping turtle alone.He was kind to some neglected talents, and befriended them with a vigor and a zeal which he would have been the last to let you call generous.The chief of these was Walt Whitman, who, when the Saturday Press took it up, had as hopeless a cause with the critics on either side of the ocean as any man would have" (65). </p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 63-65]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55806" about="/node/55806" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55806">Hyman, Martin D. "&#039;Where the Drinkers &amp; Laughers Meet&#039;: Pfaff&#039;s: Whitman&#039;s Literary Lair.." <em>Seaport</em> 26, (1991): 56-61.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 58-61]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55807" about="/node/55807" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55807">"In and about the City: Death of Charles I. Pfaff. Something about the Proprietor of the Once Famous &quot;Bohemia.&quot;." <em>New York Times</em>, April 26, 1890, 2.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>The obituary identifies him as one of the "Knights of the Round Table" of the "lions of Bohemia."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 2]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56600" about="/node/56600" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56600">John. "Dramatic Feuilleton." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, November 25, 1865, 264-265.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55709" about="/node/55709" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55709">Lalor, Eugene T. "The Literary Bohemians of New York City in the Mid-Nineteenth Century." Ph.D. Dissertation, St. John&#039;s University, 1977.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 5,19-20,24-26,38,43,45-60]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55808" about="/node/55808" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55808">Lalor, Eugene. "Whitman among the New York Literary Bohemians: 1859–1862.." <em>Walt Whitman Review</em> 25, (1979): 131-145.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Lalor desribes him as one of the "brightest lights" of the New York Boehmians (131).Lalor writes that "at Pfaff's, he [Whitman] was a living shrine, a figure whom Henry Clapp, the recognized 'King of Bohemia,' would have liked to consider the ultimate Bohemian, whose success and artistry dictated adulation and deference" (133).Lalor writes that of all the people Whitman would encounter and associate with at Pfaff's, Clapp was the "individual most closely related" to him and "the most beneficial" (137).Lalor writes that of the "debts" Whitman owed to his "Bohemian interlude," they were "principally owed" to Henry Clapp (137).</p> <p>Taylor, Stoddard, Aldrich, and Stedman are mentioned as the parties in New York involved in the "inconsistent opposition" to the third edition of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite> in 1859-1860.Lalor writes that "It was chiefly against this ambivalent group and against the naysayers of New England that Clapp did battle for Whitman, with a characteristic originality of method which was both a tribute to the <cite>Press</cite> at the same time it was a boon to Whitman" (137).Lalor infers that Clapp and Whitman met, Clapp introduced Whitman to Bohemia, and the two men worked together to publicize <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite> and Whitman; "Whitman seems to have had a sympathetic if somewhat aloof attitude towards his champion.However their initial meeting came about, it was certainly fortuitous for Whitman" (137).Lalor states that "In essence, what Clapp did for Whitman was make the public listen, to help others hear and hear about this new voice in literature" (137).While Lalor feels that it is an oversimplification to claim that the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> existed mainly for the exploitation of Whitman, he does argue that "without Clapp's assistance, Whtiman may not have achieved the recognition he did within his lifetime" (138).Lalor quotes Mabbott's estimation of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> as "a smart New York paper" and Clapp as "brilliant and humorous, understood much of significance of Whitman" (138).Lalor also cites Emily Hahn: "if it hadn't been for Emerson's warm praise and Clapp's stubborn faith, even Whitman's self-confidence might have suffered.As it was, the staff of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> made him a cause, publishing his work and declaring his genius" (138).Lalor also quotes Parry and Allen for perspectives about the influence of Clapp and the <cite>Press</cite> on Whitman's career (138).Lalor claims that "The aims and purposes of the <cite>Press</cite> were closely interrelated with the character of Clapp and he, its editor-publisher, regarded independence, a freedom of unbridled expression, as inherent" (140).As a show of support for Whitman, Clapp even allowed him use of the editorial column, "sacrosant property" to Clapp; however, he also "maintained a degree of editorial autonomy in the selection of material about Whitman" that was published in the <cite>Press</cite> (140).Of these materials, more than half were condemnations of Whitman or "transparent and acknowledged parodies of his style."Lalor feels that Whitman probably had little or no say on what was published on him at this time and that these publications may have been reflective of Clapp's idea that any notice is valuable or his desire to present both sides of the debate about Whitman (140-141).</p> <p>Lalor cites Charleton's account of Arnold and Whitman's fight at Pfaff's and notes that "Clapp broke his black pipe while pulling at Arnold's coat-tail" (135).</p> <p>Whitman's relationship with Clapp appears to have ended in 1862, when Whitman left Bohemia.It does not appear that the two continued to correspond during the Civil War, while Whitman went on to the war and "the editor to slay other dragons and to puff other aspirants for literary fame."However, when Clapp revived the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> in 1865-1866, he paid Whitman tribute twice (141).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 131,133,135,137-45]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60173" about="/node/60173" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60173">Lause, Mark A. <em>The Antebellum Crisis and America&#039;s First Bohemians</em>. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 2009.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57886" about="/node/57886" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57886">Leland, Charles Godfrey. <em>Memoirs</em>. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1893.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 234]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60174" about="/node/60174" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60174">Levin, Joanna. <em>Bohemia in America, 1858-1920</em>. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2010.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55745" about="/node/55745" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55745">Levin, Joanna Dale. "American Bohemias, 1858-1912: A Literary and Cultural Geography." Ph.D Dissertation; Stanford University, 2001.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Levin notes that the group at Pfaff's "clustered around him."Levin lables him an "inconoclast" and credits him with the vision of a Parisian recreation at Pfaff's (6).Clapp picked Pfaff's for the quality of the coffee and beer and "foreign ambiance" (18).Clapp "'puffed' Pfaff's" (19) and set the tone for the group and created self-conscious Bohemian spirit (22).According to Levin, both Clapp and Whitman provide "direct links" in the discussion of the emergence of Bohemian "in the wake of antebellum reform movements and experimental utopian communities" (23).</p> <p>Clapp refered to as both the "King" and "Prince" of Bohemia.Levin quotes William Dean Howells'description of Clapp on p.73.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 6, 18,22,23,25,28,30-36,45-46,51,55,57-59,61,70-71,73,76-77,82,87,90,91,299]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59708" about="/node/59708" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59708">"Literary Items." <em>Saturday Press</em>, October 23, 1858, 3.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55779" about="/node/55779" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55779">"Literary News." <em>The Literary World</em>, May 11, 1873, 189-192.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>He is described as the "Prime Minister of this realm [the Kingdom of Bohemia] and editory of the <cite>Press</cite>.Clapp's current whereabouts are described as follows: "Henry Clapp, alone of his goodly company, maintains his old allegiance, and is pointed out to strangers in New York as the sole remaining representative of a literary coterie that was a power in its day."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 192]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55772" about="/node/55772" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55772">Loving, Jerome. "Walt Whitman: The Song of Himself." <em>Walt Whitman: The Song of Himself</em>(1999): 568 p.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Due to his leadership and influence, the Pfaffians were sometimes referred to as "Clappians." </p> <p>Clapp was most valued by Whitman during Whitman's visits to Pfaff's and during early days of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>.Clapp promoted the book in <cite>The Saturday Press</cite> and read poems as part of this effort.Of this time period, Whitman told Traubel, "one must know about Clapp to comprehend fully the history of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>."</p> <p>Loving mentions a late meeting with Whitman at Pfaff's in 1867.Clapp was a heavy drinker and died in the gutter of alcoholism in 1875.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 235,236,237-239,241-246,260,304, 318-319, 352,371]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59760" about="/node/59760" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59760">Lukens, Henry Clay. "American Literary Comedians." <em>Harper&#039;s New Monthly Magazine</em>, April 1, 1890, 783-797.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 793]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55771" about="/node/55771" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55771">Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. "Literary Clubland II: New York&#039;s Literary Clubs." <em>The Bookman: A Review of Books and Life</em>, June 1, 1905, 392-406.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>He is mentioned as the "king" of the "real literary Bohemians of the later fifties" who would gather at Pfaff's "at the noon-meal hour and through the evening until late into the night."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 396]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55929" about="/node/55929" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55929">Miller, Tice L. <em>Bohemians and Critics: American Theatre Criticism in the Nineteenth Century</em>. Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1981.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>"Henry Clapp believed in cutting his victims swift and deep" (77).</p> <p>William Winter told his son Jefferson that "Whenever old Clapp knew I was at work on a bit of satire he would keep vigilant guard, like a sort of grim old bird over a nestling, fending off intruders and interruptions, sucking away at an ill-smelling pipe while we were alone, and furtively and eagerly watching me out of the corner of one of his bright, glinting eyes.He was terribly embittered, and the sharper the satire the more he liked it" (77).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 1, 15, 18-42, 44, 47, 49, 51, 58, 64, 67, 69, 71, 74, 75, 77, 78, 80, 82, 101, 103, 104, 128-129, 130, 138, 165-167]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59959" about="/node/59959" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59959">Morris, Roy Jr. <em>The Better Angel: Walt Whitman in the Civil War</em>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 18-20, 24-25, 150]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55870" about="/node/55870" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55870">Mott, Frank Luther. <em>A History of American Magazines, Volume II: 1850-1865</em>. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1938.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Mott states that "Clapp was a man of volatile temperament, caustic wit, and a freedom and courage in criticism of the American scene which were rare in those days" (38).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 38-40]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="58858" about="/node/58858" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/58858">"[Notices]." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, June 18, 1859, 2.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55769" about="/node/55769" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55769">"Obituary: Henry Clapp." <em>The New-York Times</em>, April 11, 1875, 7.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>The <cite>Times</cite> "Obituary" begins: "No man was better known in the newspaper and artistic world a few years ago than than the eccentric and gifted King of the Bohemians Henry Clapp, Jr.He died yesterday, neither old nor young -- about the begining to a natural decline."Clapp is described as "a man of rare conversational powers, always entertaining and often inspired with wit and repartee."</p> <p>The "Obituary" gives a brief biography of Clapp's professional life.</p> <p>The "Obituary" mentions that when "the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> went the way of all journals that are too smart to live," Clapp, Stevens, and others started <cite>Vanity Fair</cite>, "the best imitation of <cite>Punch</cite> we have in this country."<cite>Vanity Fair</cite> is where several of the Bohemians re-assembled, but the periodical eventually went under.</p> <p>The "Obituary" mentions that both before and after his experience with <cite>Vanity Fair</cite> Clapp wrote regularly for the <cite>Leader</cite>Clapp wrote his articles under the pen name of"Figaro" and did mostly dramatic and musical criticisms.Of these, "His writings were spicy and attractive, but his judgment was indifferent and they all passed like sea-foam--fresh and pleasant for one moment, but gone and forgotten the next."</p> <p>The "Obituary" mentions that Clapp wrote for several City journals, but after <cite>Vanity Fair</cite> "he was merely a contributor, and had no regular journalistic standing."The author of the "Obituary" claims that he will be best remembered for his role as "King of the Bohemians" and the company which he kept during that period, many of whom have passed away.Clapp and Wilkins are cited as the "organizers" the "much wondered at, admired, and sought after" group of Bohemians.The "Obituary" states that it could name more of the Bohemians, but seems to feel that the enterprise is futile, especially now that death's "resistless sickle has swept in the first and practically the last of the Bohemians.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 7]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55847" about="/node/55847" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55847">Odell, George Clinton. <em>Annals of the New York Stage: Volume VI (1850-1857)</em>. New York: Columbia University Press, 1931.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Odell cites to 1850 theater reviews in <cite>The New York Herald</cite> written by "Figaro." These reviews range from March to May (New York Public Library file ends May 10).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 69-60]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60410" about="/node/60410" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60410">"Old &#039;Barry Gray&#039; Dead." <em>The New York World</em>, June 12, 1886, 5.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55766" about="/node/55766" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55766">Parry, Albert. "Garrets and Pretenders: A History of Bohemianism in America." <em>Garrets and Pretenders: A History of Bohemianism in America</em>(1933).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp was born November 11, 1814, in Nantucket, to "a family of seamen and merchants famous for longevity."His family did not support his early literary endeavors, which prompted the older Clapp to give this advice to young writers: "Never confide secrets to your relatives: blood will tell" (43).Clapp became "a radical and a cynic" after "a number of years at sea and behind the counter"; "When he finally emerged into the press and literature, he became known as the greatest hater of brownstone respectability of his time" (43). Parry writes, "It was said of him that exposed all kinds of sham except his own.But this was not quite true" (44).Clapp began his adult life as a Sunday-school teacher, temperence editor, and lecturer and later drifted towards Socialism, Bohemianism, and drinking; "To the end of his life he poked fun at almost all the new ideas and men discovered by him as well as at his old follies."Also, according to Parry, while he did bring Bohemianism to America, he did not enjoy the title of "King of Bohemia."Clapp helped Brisbane translate Fourier's works from the French, and the story he told about discovering that Brisbane had a glass eye when he was reading to Brisbane and he fell asleep seeming to have one eye open inspired O'Brien's "The Wondersmith" (44-45).</p> <p>Parry writes that "it was the bon mots that were destined to make Clapp's reputation in American letters.After his death, even his enemies admitted that Henry Clapp said more 'good things' than any other American journalist of his time."Parry continues to provide several examples of Clapp's most notable, remembered, or famous "bon mots" (45).According to Parry, some of Clapp's personal targets were Wall Street, which he called "Caterwaul Street," the government for selecting "In God we trust" for the motto that appears on coins, the island of Cuba, and the Union College of New York's conferring on Gen. Grant an LL.D. (45-46).</p> <p>Parry writes, "Clapp looked such an indefinite age that his confreres called him the Oldest Man.He was small of stature, haggard of appearance, but wiry and alert.His voice was thin and cutting.His eyes seemed the bluer and his beard the grayer for the incessant smoke of his pipe and the steam of his coffee.He looked the epithet of 'the intensest personality' often applied to him.The most characteristic sketch of him, drawn by an unknown admirer, hung on the walls of Pfaff's for many years" (46).Parry also includes the description of Clapp that appeared in the New York <cite>Leader</cite> in 1864, where he was then a contributor.Parry also notes, however, that other "more devastating characterizations" of Clapp began to appear in the press at this time.Both Clapp and Bohemia were attacked by outsiders and former Pfaffians turned "respectable."In answering these attacks, Clapp named "bogus Bohemians" among them, namely Stoddard and Stedman.Parry notes, however, that even Clapp had agreed that the pre-war Bohemia was much better than what existed after the Civil War and grew increasingly bitter and cynical over the years.According to Parry, "He was baffled by the fact that he, the oldest of the Bohemians, was outliving most of them.The brilliant of the group were dying fast, the mediocre lived on.Perhaps, he felt qualms as to the wisdom of lingering behind much longer in the doubtful company of Winter, who tried to make the American theater very respectable, and Stedman, who became a Wall Street broker to the detriment of his poetry."Parry also notes that Clapp took Arnold's death especially hard, and feels that this event started him "on his course of suicidal drinking" (47).According to Parry, "He knew that his end was approaching, and though he was cynical about America, her people, her politics, and her letters, he was cheerful about his own fate.There was something socratic in the Henry Clapp of the closing years.The few friends who understood him supplied him with money to buy the drinks.Herr Pfaff fed him gratis.But some meddlesome souls tried to save Clapp from his bliss; George Hall, mayor of Brooklyn, printer and temperance worker, sent him several times to the Binghamton Inebriate Asylum, but to no avail.Plainly, Clapp was proving how wrong William Douglas O'Connor was when he prophesied that Henry would most horribly end in respectibility as a member of the Common Council or Board of Aldermen -- 'the guilty result of Bohemianism'" (47).Clapp died April, 1875, and Parry reprints the harsh April 16, 1875 obituary from the New York <cite>Daily Graphic</cite> that states:</p> <p>"There has rarely been a more pathetic picture than this poor old man presented, reduced to rags, consumed by a horrible thirst, and utterly without a hope for this world or the next.What memories must have haunted him of the young men who used to meet him at Pfaff's and whom he had educated to believe that drink and infidelity were the marks of literary genius!From temperance lectures and Sunday-school teaching to beggary, lonliness, and the degredation is a stride that no man can take without knowing the keen misery of mourning over a wasted life" (47).</p> <p>The obituary then continues on, accusing him of corrupting and hastening the deaths of other young writers, such as Arnold, through his example.Parry also writes of Howells's negative remarks about Clapp and notes taht "there might have been consolation for the dying Clapp in the memory that he never paid Howells for his contributions" (47-48).</p> <p>In discussing the project for a writer undertaking a history of Greenwich Village and what was in New York before Greenwich Village, Parry writes: "Yet earlier, the writer is compelled to trace a connecting link between a great genius like Poe and a talented dilettante like Clapp because both of them were called Bohemians and, in fact, Clapp's group gathered in Pfaff's saloon a few short years after Poe's death from alcohol and madness" (xiii).Parry continues that this first Bohemian group "was not still-born.It had a justification of its own, however negligent most of its achievements and results may seem now.It burst forth in the wake of the sluggish and ponderous Knickerbocker school.It stormed the prim fastness of literary Boston.Rebellion against the slow waters and mild breezes emanating from the ancient seat of American culture was the main <cite>raison d'etre</cite> of New York's first Bohemians.Henry Clapp, Fitz-James O'Brien, Ada Clare, and their group were the first organizers writers to insist on transferring contemporary life and literature from the prison of salons to the freer air of saloons.They upheld the memory of Poe, they helped enthrone Whitman, and they prepared the path for much of the unorthodox that was to follow in American letters" (xiii).</p> <p>Clapp returned to New York and "boldly" declared himself a Bohemian after the "struggling journalist and theatrical critic" visited Paris.After this declaration he "named his articles <cite>feuilletons</cite>, and for lack of sidewalk cafes cultivated Pfaff's beer cellar under the Broadway pavement" (21).He was joined by actors, writers, artists, law and medical students who also called themselves Bohemians and was also imitated in several other New York saloons."They too called themselves Bohemians; they kept late hours; they pretended to flout conventions, and they clothed their poverty with the poetical cloak of Murger's philosophy.The time was propitious, for by the beginning of the second half of the century America had produced a sizeable class of professional men of arts, but was not as yet ready to pay them more than a gingery and dubious admiration" (21).According to Parry, "It was Charlie's coffee that attracted Clapp, his discoverer and first booster" (22).</p> <p>In a discussion of various Pfaffians's attempts to emulate or uphold the memory of Poe, especially his "distrust of mankind and his despair of the world," Parry writes that Clapp "endeavored to be as sexless and as sublimely morose as Poe, but since Henry was essentially a cynic and a wit he failed, and turned out to be caustically sullen instead -- yet quite sexless" (9).</p> <p>Parry writes that Clapp "reluctantly answered" to the title "the King of Bohemia" and that he and Ada Clare "were consorts in name only."According to Parry, Clapp was the "least active" of Clare's many admirers."Clapp, in spite of his volubility, kept much to himself; he liked to talk of everything except himself; no on knew whom or when he loved" (19).</p> <p>Clapp founded the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> in October 1858; the paper was "jestingly referred to as the house organ of Pfaff's."According to Parry, "The public gasped at the editorial paragraphs of Henry Clapp.For the first time in the memory of the living, the whiskers of American gods were pulled by a weekly with such nonchalant energy and air of authority."Parry also writes, "Often, Clapp and his paper appeared to be naive and hitting at small fry, but on the whole it did valuable spading of American life and spanking of the native arts" (24).Parry mentions that Clapp wrote under the "transparent incognito" of "Figaro" (24).Parry also notes others' views of Clapp and the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>: "When, in August, 1860, Howells paid a personal visit to New York and Clapp's editorial office, he found himself displeased with the foreign character of Henry's coterie which he called 'a sickly colony, transplanted from the mother asphalt of Paris, and never really striking root in the pavements of New York.'Winter said that in temperment and mentality Clapp was really more of a Frenchman than an American; he even compared him to Voltaire, in looks, at least.Even his enemies in the contemporary press wrote of Clapp: 'He caught the trick of French terseness and sharpness, and he <cite>feuilletons</cite> might have been written by a Parisian'" (24).</p> <p>Parry writes that after the Civil War, despite the losses among the former Pfaffians, illnesses, and changes in spirit, Clapp attempted to "revive the old spirit" of Bohemia.He brought back the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> on August 5, 1865, and several national newspapers gave positive reviews to the papers' first few issues.Pfaff advertised the paper's return (32).</p> <p>In terms of publicizing and reinforcing Whitman's ego, at Pfaff's Whitmat "was the shrine to which Clapp brought the faithful" (38).Parry notes that Clapp helped to spread Whitman's fame and would often show him off to visitors at the bar.Clapp missed him the rare evenings he did not show.While Clapp seems to have liked and enjoyed Whitman's presence at Pfaff's, several other regulars, such as Stedman and Winter did not mind when he was absent and did not miss his "gross bigotry."Parry cites Whitman's birthday toast of "That's the feller! to Clapp as one instance in which "Winter though it mighty poor eloquence in honor of Clapp and still worse English" (39).Clapp, "one of the first to proclaim the genius of Walt Whitman," however, would sometimes make friendly jests at Whitman's expense: "Walt, you include everything.What have you got to say to the bed-bug?" (39).According to Parry, "Clapp and his journal brought upon themselves the ire and the admiration of the day for their insistance that Whitman was greater than Longfellow" (39-40).Parry gives and overview of the poetry, editorials, parodies, and reviews of Whitman's work that Clapp published in the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>.During this period, Clapp and Whitman kept up a correspondence in which Clapp discussed some of the financial problems of the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> with Whitman.According to Parry, Whitman especially liked the stories in which Clapp would barricade the paper's office doors to prevent the entry of bill collectors and would prompt the staff to remain silent when creditors tested the doors; Whitman called Clapp's efforts "the most heroic fight to keep the <cite>Press</cite> alive" (40).Clapp introduced Burroughs to Whitman, as he knew both men through the <cite>Saturday Press</cite>, which is also how Burroughs took notice of Whitman's work.Parry notes that even though the <cite>Press</cite> died, "Clapp still championed the cause of Walt in a world so hostile to both of them" (41).</p> <p>Parry mentions that in the Summer of 1865, when Clapp attempted to "resurrect New York's Villonia, the opposition was terrifc."His former co-workers at the <cite>Leader</cite> strongly opposed the idea and went as far as to write articles and editorials to that effect (60).Much later, when the idea of Bohemianism was revived, in the form of the <cite>New Bohemian</cite> writers like Eva Katherin Clapp contributed based on claims of blood ties to Clapp, and the paper made "other mistakes that showed their complete ignorance of that old Bohemia which they tried to claim as their honorable family-tree" (186).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: xiii,9,19,21,22,24,32-33,38-41,43-48,44(ill.),49,60,61,68,97,99,100,110,118,125,138,186,212,284]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55765" about="/node/55765" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55765">Pattee, Fred Louis. "The Feminine Fifties." <em>The Feminine Fifties</em>(1940).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 293,300]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60708" about="/node/60708" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60708">"People of Prominence." <em>Pittsburgh Dispatch</em>, September 20, 1889, 4.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="57750" about="/node/57750" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/57750">"Pfaff&#039;s [from the N.Y. correspondent of the Boston &lt;cite&gt;Saturday Express&lt;/cite&gt;]." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, December 3, 1859, 2.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp is not mentioned by name here, but there is a description of "the king" of bohemia sitting atop his throne.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56712" about="/node/56712" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56712">Philo-Figaro. "A New Nation in Prospect." <em>New York Saturday Press</em>, September 23, 1865, 120.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55763" about="/node/55763" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55763">Rawson, A. L. "A Bygone Bohemia." <em>Frank Leslie&#039;s Popular Monthly</em>, January 1, 1896, 96-107.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 97-100]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="60110" about="/node/60110" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/60110">Renehan, Edward, Jr. <em>John Burroughs: An American Naturalist</em>. New York: Black Dome Press, 1998.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55762" about="/node/55762" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55762">Reynolds, David S. <em>Walt Whitman&#039;s America: A Cultural Biography</em>. New York: Knopf, 1995.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Nantucket-born, spent time in Paris and pronounced himself a bohemian upon his return in mid-1850s. Clapp is described as becoming "the archetypal bohemian, lashing out at everything but standing for little besides a love of fine coffee, strong liquor, and lively repartee."</p> <p>Clapp worked as a Sunday-school teacher,temperance lecturer, and an abolitionist.At one point, he became involved in socialism and translated Fourier's works for Albert Brisbane. Clapp also joined Stephen Pearl Andrews' free-love league after returning from Paris.He wrote against conventional marriage in 1858 in the free-love book <cite>Husband vs. Wife</cite>.Briefly revived <cite>The Saturday Press</cite> in 1865.Around 1867, Clapp worked as a clerk in a New York public office. </p> <p>In describing his career, Whitman told Traubel, "You will have to know something about Henry Clapp if you want to know all about me."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 376-378,453-454]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55918" about="/node/55918" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55918">"Richard Henry Stoddard." <em>Watchman</em> 85, no. 21 (1903): 5-6.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>The obituary states that "By the best of his leisure he struggled up into self-education, and the companionship of such men as Bayard Taylor and Henry Clapp" (5).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 5]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55761" about="/node/55761" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55761">Rogers, Cameron. <em>The Magnificent Idler, the story of Walt Whitman</em>. New York: Garden City, Doubleday, Page and Co., 1926.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp, who is identified as "a young newspaperman, with a journal of his own," is described as someone "whose ideas grow proportionately more shining with the recession of the dark tide [of liquor] in the bottle before him" (199). </p> <p>Rogers says that Clapp "breaks a spear in [Whitman's] defense daily" (200). Rogers writes of a trip to the opera that Clapp and Whitman take on the evening of April 13, 1861, in which Clapp attempts to call Whitman's attention to a beautiful actress on the stage only to have Whitman respond cooly ("'Look Walt, ain't she a beauty? Why, she smiled right at you.' But Walt was granite" [205].)</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 199-200,204-06,296]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="58856" about="/node/58856" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/58856">Seitz, Don Carlos. <em>Artemus Ward (Charles Farrar Browne): A Biography and Bibliography</em>. NY: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1919.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 76, 96, 99, 147]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55879" about="/node/55879" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55879">Sentilles, Renee M. "Performing Menken: Adah Isaacs Menken and the Birth of American Celebrity." <em>Performing Menken: Adah Isaacs Menken and the Birth of American Celebrity</em>(2003).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Sentilles describes him as "a living illustration of the connection between American bohemianism and middle-class idealism."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 141-142]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55758" about="/node/55758" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55758">Stansell, Christine. "Whitman at Pfaff&#039;s: Commercial Culture, Literary Life and New York Bohemia at Mid-Century." <em>Walt Whitman Quarterly Review</em> 10, no. 3 (1993): 107-126.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>He is listed as one of the Pfaffian writers that "have fallen into obscurity." Stansell wonders how much influence these writers weilded on Whitman's literary career (108).Stansell notes that Clapp "set the tone" at Pfaff's and"was known for his slashing wit and withering <cite>bon-mots</cite>: a disdain for puffery was a point of principle for his <cite>Saturday Press</cite>" (117).Stansell also writes that one can understand the "superheated conditions of literary work" in the 1850s from Clapp's correspondence to Whitman (117).</p> <p>Stansell writes that "Henry Clapp himself thought bohemia to be an entirely French phenomenon, impossible to transplant to America" (110).</p> <p>As one of the "Pfaffian regulars" who did "serious writing along with journalism", Clapp wrote criticism (114).Stansell writes that at Pfaff's "There was verbal play with literary material: O'Brien took the idea for a sensationalist Poe-esque story about a glass eye from a story Clapp told one night" (117).</p> <p>Stansell observes that the way Whitman referred to Clapp is similar to "the sort of evasion and half-glimpse which Whitman often used as a sexual code" and suggests that the two might have been lovers.Regardless of this fact, Stansell notes that Clapp was a "champion and friend" of Whitman; "a much needed ally at that time...when almost the whole press of America when it mentioned me at all treated me with derision or worse," and also, "Henry Clapp stepped out of the crowd of hooters" (119).Clapp was 44 and Whitman 39 when they met, and they "shared a general affiliation to radical reform."Clapp was born in Nantucket and had worked as an abolitionist lecturer in the 1830s, edited a temperance newsletter, and worked as the secretary to Albert Brisbane, the American Fourierist.Stansell notes that Clapp's political positions seem harder to gauge in the 1850s, as he separated his political and literary works, but notes that he attended a "star-studded convention of radicals in Rutland, Vermont" in the late 1850s -- "a gathering of spiritualists, free-thinkers, advocates of women's rights and free love, and abolitionists" (119).Stansell writes that "more salient...to Clapp's friendship with Whitman was his involvement in free love circles" and notes that he was arrested in a police raid in 1855, during a meeting of the New York Free Love League, "a discussion group of men and women presided over by the anarchist and sex radical Stephen Pearl Andrews."According to Stansell, Clapp was a prominent member of this group and spoke for them both the night of their arrest and at their trial (119-120).Stansell writes, however, that "By the time Whitman met him...Clapp sought a more protean oppositional identity than radical reform offered.He impressed others as a bohemian genius who set his entire existence against the forces of convention" (120). </p> <p>Stansell discusses Howells's visit in detail, focusing on Howells's interactions with Clapp when he visited the <cite>Saturday Press</cite> (120).According to Stansell, "Howells' mistake <cite>was</cite> to be from Boston.We can view the entire account of his meeting with Clapp as materializing from his decades-long battle against the ascendancy of New York over his beloved Boston as literary capital of the country.Howells was both drawn to the literary dynamism of New York and repelled by it, and he preserved until the end of his life a nostalgia for the well-bred Boston literary elite which had enfolded him in their circle when he first migrated to the city from the Midwest in 1861.For Howells, Clapp's 'bad' qualities were inseparable from his New-York-ness: 'he embodied the new literary life of that city.' And at the heart of that life was a contempt for Boston, 'a bitterness against Boston as great as the bitterness against respectability'" (120-121).</p> <p>According to Stansell, during the 1850's, the publishers and writers of New York "were just beginning to take advantage of the possibilities the new markets offered for a publishing business free of the dominance of the Boston critics and publishers.Clapp was a leader in this process, and Whitman would in some ways be its first great success.Clapp's prescience lay in his comprehension of how publicity and celebrity could, within a changing literary market, obviate the need for critical and moral approval.Whitman seemed to have something of this in mind when he noted that Clapp was the writers' avant-garde, 'our pioneer, breaking ground before the public was ready to settle.'At a moment whne some gentleman writers still shied away from advertising their books, Clapp fully grasped the democratizing features of the market.'It is a fundamental principle in political economy,' he instructed Whitman in 1860, 'that everything succeeds if money enough is spent on it'" (121-122). </p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 108-10,114,117,119-23]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55757" about="/node/55757" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55757">Starr, Louis Morris. <em>Bohemian Brigade; Civil War Newsmen in Action</em>. New York: Knopf, 1954.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>According to Starr, "Regularly toward nightfall, Pfaff escorted any unwary patrons who were sitting in the vault to some other part of his restaurant, Henry Clapp, Jr., took his seat at the head of the table, the initiates appeared, and presently, in Whitman's words, 'there was as good talk around that table as took place anywhere in the world'" (4).Starr writes that it had been about five years since "the bright-eyed, witty Clapp" had returned from Paris, where he had become "infatuated" with Henri Murger's <cite>Scenes de la Vie de Boheme</cite> and "set himself up here as 'the King of Bohemia.'"Starr continues, "No one, to judge from substantial evidence, was quite sure what Bohemia was all about, but the movement, if anything, was stronger than ever.'The New Theory of Bohemia' was warmly discussed in the current <cite>Knickerbocker</cite>, and the <cite>New York Illustrated News</cite> of February 23, 1861, had a starry-eye piece on the Pfaffians -- 'free-thinkers and free-lovers, and jolly companions well met, who make symposia, which for wit, for frolic, and now and then for real intellectual brilliance, are not to be found in any house within the golden circles of Fifth Avenue'" (4).</p> <p>As an example of his claim that "The wit and frolic, at least, were beyond cavil," Starr cites the following exchange: "Charles F. Browne ('Artemus Ward') read a telegram from a California lecture bureau: 'What will you take for forty nights?'Clapp sang out: 'Brandy and soda, tell them,' an answer that endeared Browne to the West Coast" (4).</p> <p>Clapp and Bohemianism were attractive to antebellum reporters, Starr claims: "So it was that, as 'tails' of a coinage stamped withteh names of the great opinion-makers, reporters in the metropolis of journalism were of sufficiently low estate to find in Clapp's Bohemia a certain rationale, and tehy embraced it with such fervor that the term 'Bohemian' would cling to them long after Clapp and his movement were forgotten" (7).</p> <p>Of the advances made by several papers in their printing processes, Clapp said: "The daily papers have taken to boasting that everything they print is stereotyped; we thought this fact had been patent from the beginning" (31).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 4,7,31,62]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55854" about="/node/55854" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55854">Stovall, Floyd. "The Foreground of Leaves of Grass." <em>The Foreground of Leaves of Grass</em>(1974).</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Called the "Prince of Bohmemia." Stovall discusses Clapp'spublication of Whitman's poetry in <cite>The Saturday Press</cite> and his "Bohemian fraternity."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 4-5, 6, 7,8,14, 37(n), 226]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56761" about="/node/56761" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56761">"The Queen of Bohemia [From the Philadelphia Dispatch]." <em> New-York Saturday Press</em>, November 10, 1860, 1.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56562" about="/node/56562" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56562">"Three New York Poets." <em>Scribner&#039;s Monthly</em>, July 1, 1881, 469-472.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>The writer refers to the "king of Bohemia" without directly referencing Clapp by name. The writer specifically mentions Clapp's tragic end, stating, "[t]he old king of Bohemia died a pauper, a half-dozen years ago, and some of his old subjects passed the hat around among the trim young journalists, who had never known him, and collected enough to put a head-stone over his grave" (469).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 469]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55876" about="/node/55876" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55876">Traubel, Horace. "Intimate with Walt: Selections from Whitman&#039;s Conversations with Horace Traubel, 1888-1892." In <em>Intimate with Walt: Selections from Whitman&#039;s Conversations with Horace Traubel, 1888-1892</em>, edited by Schmidgall, Gary. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2001.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Whitman recalls his loyalty during early days of <cite>Leaves of Grass</cite>. Clapp and <cite>The Saturday Press</cite> were much needed allies.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 98-99]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55330" about="/node/55330" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55330">Twain, Mark. "A Private History of the &#039;Jumping Frog&#039; Story." <em>The North American Review</em>, April 1, 1894, 446-453.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Twain claims that Artemus Ward gave Clapp the Jumping Frog story as a "present," and "Clapp put it in his <cite>Saturday Press</cite>, and it killed that paper with a suddenness that was beyond praise" (450).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 450]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59772" about="/node/59772" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59772">Twain, Mark. "The Autobiography of Mark Twain." In <em>The Autobiography of Mark Twain</em>, edited by Charles Neider. New York: HarperCollins, 2000.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 199]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55325" about="/node/55325" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55325">Vedder, Elihu. <em>The Digressions of V., Written for his Own Fun and that of His Friends, by Elihu Vedder; Containing the Quaint Legends of his Infancy, an Account of his Stay in Florence, the Garden of Lost Opportunities, Return Home on the Track of Columbus, His Struggle</em>. Boston &amp; New York: Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co., 1910.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55736" about="/node/55736" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55736">Walsh, William Shepard Jay Charlton. <em>Pen Pictures of Modern Authors</em>. New York: G. P. Putnam, 1882.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>"He had the greatest sort of contempt for any writer who would use a word of two or more syllables when the same meaning could be conveyed in one syllable.This man's name was Henry Clapp, Jr.He believed it to be his destiny to establish a new sort of literature in New York, something that would become national, and that would cut off from all newspaper and magazine articles the long Norman words, and keep all utterances confined to the short, expressive Saxon.With this object in view he drew around him many of the promising literary men of the day.Pfaff's restaurant on Broadway, a few doors east of where it now is, near the Grand Central Hotel, was selected as the headquarters where the genial company met and very soon the 'Pfaff's' had a national reputation[...]" (162).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 162, 166]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="59846" about="/node/59846" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/59846">Watson, J. W. "Notes and Comments: How Artemus Ward Became a Great Lecturer." <em>North American Review</em>, April 1, 1889, 521-522.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Watson lists Henry Clapp as an editor of <cite>Vanity Fair</cite> (521).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 521]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55784" about="/node/55784" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55784">Whitman, Walt. "Complete Writings of Walt Whitman." In <em>Complete Writings of Walt Whitman</em>, edited by Richard Maurice Bucke, Thomas B. Harned, and Horace L. Traubel. New York: Putnam, 1902.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Whitman records in his journal on August 16 that he met with Charles Pfaff for an excellent breakfast at his restaurant on 24th Street. "Our host himself, an old friend of mine, quickly appear'd on the scene to welcome me and bring up the news, and, first opening a big fat bottle of the best wine in the cellar, talk about ante-bellum times, '59 and '60, and the jovial suppers at his then Broadway place, near Bleecker street. Ah, the friends and names and frequenters, those times, that place. Most are dead—Ada Clare, Wilkins, Daisy Sheppard, O'Brien, Henry Clapp, Stnaley, Mullin, Wood, Brougham, Arnold—all gone. And there Pfaff and I, sitting opposite each other at the little table, gave rememberance to them in a style they would have themselves fully confirm'd, namely, big, brimming, fill'd-up champagne-glasses, drain'd in abstracted silence, very leisurely, to the last drop."</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 5:21]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56200" about="/node/56200" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56200">Whitman, Walt. "Letter to Henry Clapp, Jr., June 12, 1860." <em>Walt Whitman: The Correspondence</em> 1, (1961): 55.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56225" about="/node/56225" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56225">Whitman, Walt. "Letter to John Burroughs." <em>Letter to John Burroughs</em>(1867): 340-341.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56350" about="/node/56350" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56350">Whitman, Walt. "Letter to William D. O&#039;Connor, May 5, 1867." <em>Walt Whitman: The Correspondence</em> 1, (1961): 327-329.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="56207" about="/node/56207" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/56207">Whitman, Walt. "Letter to William D. O&#039;Connor, September 15, 1867." <em>Walt Whitman: The Correspondance</em> 1, (1961): 338-340.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55750" about="/node/55750" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55750">Wilson, Rufus Rockwell. <em>New York: Old &amp; New; Its Story, Streets, and Landmarks</em>. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott &amp; Co., 1903.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 140-42]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55751" about="/node/55751" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55751">Wilson, Rufus Rockwell and Otilie Erickson Wilson. <em>New York in Literature; The Story Told in the Landmarks of Town and Country</em>. Elmira, NY: Primavera Press, 1947.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"></div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 63-65]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55290" about="/node/55290" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55290">Winter, William. <em>Old Friends; Being Literary Recollections of Other Days</em>. New York: Moffat, Yard and Company, 1909.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Winter recalls having been in New York only a few days before he was hired by Clapp as a sub-editor of "The Saturday Press."Winter states that Clapp started the paper in 1858, "that, all along, had led, and was leading, a precarious existance; and with that paper I remained associated until its suspension, in December, 1860" (57).Winter gives the precise date for the beginning of the "Saturday Press" as October 29, 1858; according to Winter, Clapp began the paper with Edward Howland (66).</p> <p>Winter states, "Clapp was an original character.We called him 'The Oldest Man.'His age was unknown to us.He seemed to be very old, but, as afterward I ascertained, he was then only forty-six.In appearance he was remotely suggestive of the portrait of Voltaire.He was a man of slight, seemingly fragile but really wiry figure; bearded; gray; with keen, light blue eyes, a haggard visage, a vivacious manner, and a thin, incisive voice [...] He was brilliant and buoyant in mind; impatient of the commonplace; intolerant of smug, ponderous, empty, obstructive respectability; prone to sarcasm; and he had for so long a time live in a continuous, bitter conflict with conventionality that he had become reckless of public opinion.His delight was to shock the commonplace mind and to sting the hide of the Pharisee with the barb of satire" (57-58).</p> <p>Winter states that "at the time of our first meeting I knew very little of his mercurial character and vicissitudinous career, but with both of them I presently became acquainted" (58).</p> <p>Winter mentions Clapp's long residence in Paris and states that "indeed, in his temperment, his mental constitution, and his conduct of life, he was more Frenchman than American" (58).</p> <p>According to Winter, Clapp "had met with crosses, disappointment, and sorrow, and he was wayward and erratic; but he possessed both the faculty of taste and the instinctive love of beauty, and, essentially, he was the apostle of freedom of thought" (58-59).</p> <p>Clapp was born in Nantucket, November 11, 1814.In his early adulthood, he was associated with the church, the temperance movement, he was an anti-slavery activist under Nathaniel P. Rogers of New Hampshire, "a man of brilliant ability, now forgotten, to whom he was devotedly attached, and whose name, in later years, he often mentioned to me, and always with affectionate admiration."Clapp's early writing career was based in New England, where he published early journalism essays in New Bedford and he edited a paper in Lynn, Mass., during which time he was also jailed for his aggressive pro-temperance editorial stance.According to Winter, Clapp's "views, on almost all subjects, were of a radical kind, and, accordingly, he excited venemous antagonism."Winter also mentions Clapp's in Fourierism and his assisting Brisbane in translating "The Social Destiny of Man.""His career, when I was first associated with him, had been, in material results, more or less, a failure, as all careers are, or are likely to be, that inveterately run counter to the tide of mediocrity.Such as he was, -- withered, bitter, grotesque, seemingly ancient, a good fighter, a kind heart, -- he was the Prince of our Bohemian circle" (59-60).</p> <p>Clapp "delighted in the satire" of the "Figureheads" of his day (61).Winter discusses some of Clapp's targets and the expected dislike for some of his satires.After the first failure of the "Saturday Press," Clapp wrote for "The New York Leader," then edited by John Clancy and Chareles G. Halpine (Miles O'Reilly).In about 1866 or 1867, Clapp brought back the "Saturday Press" with the announcement "This paper was stopped in 1860, for want of means: it is now started again for the same reason" (61-62).</p> <p>Of Clapp's later years, Winter says that "Over his signature, 'Figaro,' the vivacious old Bohemian, for several years, writing about the Stage, afforded amusement to the town; but gradually he drifted into penury, and, although help was not denied to him, he died in destitution, April 2, 1875: and I remember that, after his death, his name was airily traduced by persons who had never manifested even a tithe of his aiblity or accomplished anything comparable with the service which, not withstanding his faults and errors, he had rendered to literature and art" (63-63).</p> <p>Winter claims that Fitz-James O'Brien's story, "The Wondersmith" was inspired by an anecdote that Clapp told in O'Brien and Winter's presence.Clapp's story follows: "'Once, while I was working for Albert Brisbane' (so, in substance, said the Prince of Bohemia), 'I had to read to him, one evening, many pages of a translation I had made, for his use, of Fourier's book on the Social Destiny of Man.He was closely attentive and seemed to be deeply interested; but, after a time, I heard a slight snore, and looking at him, in profile, I saw that he was sound asleep--and yet the eye that I could see <cite>was wide open</cite>.The and thus I ascertained, somewhat to my surprise, that he had a glass eye'" (69).</p> <p>"His grave is in a little cemetary at Nantucket.His epitaph,--written by me, at the request of a few friends, but not approved by a near relative then living, and therefore not inscribed over his ashes, contains these lines:</p> <p>Wit stops to grieve and Laughter stops to sigh<br> That so much wit and laughter e'er could die;<br> But Pity, conscious of its anguish past,<br> Is glad this tortur'd spirit rests at last.<br> His purpose, thought, and goodness ran to waste,<br> He made a happiness he could not taste:<br> Mirth could not help him, talent could not save:<br> Through cloud and storm he drifted to the grave.<br> Ah, give his memory,--who made the cheer,<br> And gave so many smiles,--a single tear!" (63).</p> <p>Winter includes "One of Henry Clapp's grim witticisms on that subject [O'Brien receiving the military appointment initially intended for Aldrich]: 'Aldrich, I see,' he said, 'has been shot in O'Brien's shoulder.'"Winter qualifies this by stating that "The old cynic did not like either of them" (77).</p> <p>He is listed by Winter as one of the Bohemians who frequented Pfaff's Cave (88).</p> <p>In discussing the true nature of Bohemia and celebrations at Pfaff'sCave in response to Howells's recollection of the "orgy" he witnessed, Winter discusses a birthday celebration for Clapp in which Whitman was called upon to give the toast: "I have regretted the absence of Mr. Howells from a casual festival which occurred in Pfaff's Cave, much about the time of his advent there, when the lads (those tremendous revellers!) drank each a glass of beer in honor of the birthday of Henry Clapp, and when he might, for once, have felt the ravishing charm of Walt Whitman's clossal eloquence.It fell to the lot of that Great Bard, I remember, to propose the health of the Prince of Bohemia, which he did in the following marvellous words: 'That's <cite>the feller!</cite>" It was my privilege to hear that thrilling deliverance, and to admire and applaud that superb orator.Such amazing emanations of intellect seldom occur, and it seems indeed a pity that this one should not have had Mr. Howells to embroider it with his ingenious fancy and embalm it in the amber of his veracious rhetoric" (91-92).</p> <p>Aldrich writes in a letter to Winter that Clapp, Arnold, and possibly Winter were in attendance for a dinner at Delmonico's thrown by O'Brien using $35.00 borrowed from Aldrich.Aldrich was not invited (101).</p> <p>Winter reiterates that Clapp and Howland began "The Saturday Press" on Spruce Street in 1858.Aldrich was briefly associated with Clapp and writing in that paper.Winter contributed poems to the paper, such as "Orgia" before he was hired as a reviewer and sub-editor.Winter states that this began his "Bohemian life" (137).</p> <p>Winter mentions that Clapp had made the acquaintance of Stoddard and that Stoddard sometimes contributed to "Saturday Press." Stoddard "had difficulty, not unusual, in obtaining payment; for the resources of the paper were so slight that its continuance, from week to week, was a marvel.One day Clapp and I, having locked the doors of the 'Press' office, in order to prevent the probable access of creditors, were engaged in serious and rather melancholy conference as to the obtainment of money with which to pay the printer, when suddenly there came a loud, impatient knocking upon the outer door, and my senior, by a warning gesture, enjoined silence.The sound of a grumbling voice was then audible, and, after a while, the sound of footsteps retreating down the stairs.For several minutes Clapp did not speak but continued to smoke and listen, looking at me with a serious aspect.Then, removing the pipe from his lips, he softly murmered, ''Twas the voice of <cite>the Stoddard</cite>--I heard him complain!'" (293-294).</p> <p>Winter identifies which writers were specifically associated with Clapp and Bohemia and which writers have been mistaken as Bohemians and, in some cases, were adverse to the lifestyle (295).</p> <p>In a discussion of William North, Winter calls upon information he received from Clapp: "Henry Clapp, who knew him well, told me that it was one of North's peculiarities that, in whatever room he chanced to be, at night, he could not bear to have the door stand open, even an inch: yet the door of the room in which he died was found to be standing ajar by persons who, at morning, discovered the corpse" (316-317).</p> <p>Winter reprints a letter from Aldrich, that includes a "playful allusion to an old associate of ours, long since passed away--Henry Clapp, editor and publisher of 'The Saturday Press.'"Aldrich wrote Winter when Winter returned, in 1895, a copy of Aldrich's "The Course of True Love Never Did Run Smooth," that had been sent to Clapp in the form of a presentation copy from Aldrich.Winter states that he returned this copy becasue Aldrich "preferred to suppress the work as an immature production."Aldrich writes: "My long-forgotten little book, which you were so good to send to me, is much more unsubstantial and ghostly than the slightest of your 'Shadows,'--for they are of yesterday.How on earth did that particular copy fall into your hand?Did poor old Clapp express it to you C. O. D., by some supernatural messenger?The yellow pages have a strange, musty odor:<cite>Is</cite> that brimstone?" (375-376).</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 56(ill.), 57-60, 61,62-69,77,88,91-92,101,137,293-294,295,316-317,375-376]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55748" about="/node/55748" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55748">Wolle, Francis. <em>Fitz-James O&#039;Brien: A Literary Bohemian of the Eighteen-Fifties</em>. Boulder, Col.; University of Colorado, 1944.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Called the "King" of the Bohemians.The history of how Pfaff's became the "favorite resort" of the Bohemians is described.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 1, 2, 65, 92, 124-126, 128, 129, 166, 168, 174, 181, 192, 247]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> <li class="list-group-item"> <article data-history-node-id="55857" about="/node/55857" class="node node--type-work node--view-mode-bibliography-link"> <div class="node__content"> <a href="/node/55857">Zweig, Paul. <em>Walt Whitman: The Making of the Poet</em>. New York: Basic Books, Inc., Publishers, 1984.</a> </div> </article> <p class="list-group-item-text"><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-note"><div class="field-content"><p>Clapp became Whitman's champion for a while.Clapp's influence helped make Whitman known and "located him on the margin of literary respectability."Clapp published reviews of Whitman's work and "nursed controversies and kept Whitman in the public eye as a radical new voice."</p> <p>Clapp edited <cite>The Saturday Press</cite> until it ran out of money.</p> </div></div><div class="views-field views-field-field-mention-pages"><div class="field-content">[pages: 263,310,314,322,325]</div></div><div class="views-field views-field-edit-node"><span class="field-content"></span></div></p> </li> </ul> </div> </div>