In this personal notebook from the early 1860s, Whitman wrote a number of comments that refer to his involvement with the Pfaff's bohemians. On an early page in the notebook, Whitman writes Ada Clare's name and address. Given that Clare's home on West Forty-Second Street was second only to Pfaff's itself as the gathering place of the mid-century bohemians, Whitman's inclusion of this address in his notebook demonstrates his involvement in the bohemian scene. Only a few pages later, Whitman writes the draft of an unfinished poem about Pfaff's, "The Two Vaults," which is reproduced below.
Whitman's poem beginning "The vault at Pfaffs" and Aldrich's "At the Cafe" both describe patrons of Pfaff's who hide a secret sorrow amid the merriment at the bar.
Blake writes of the Pfaff's-inspired poem "The Two Vaults," "The poem expresses Whitman's frustration that he does not capture the attention of the passerby. Hidden in the vault, he cannot circulate among the crowds. Whether he envies the commodities or sees himself rightfully among them, his isolation is a kind of death, for to be alive in Leaves of Grass is frequently to be on display. The storefronts 'blaze', the fabrics 'vividly' attract the eye. The poet's eye moves from the objects to the people to the people's flitting interest in each other on Broadway. If thriving as a poet meant that one had been consumed by the people, then reaching these crowds would make both Whitman and his book complete. As long as he sat in the basement saloon, his identity as a poet would amount to an unsubstantiated claim" (62-63).
Whitman's poem beginning "The vault at Pfaffs" and Aldrich's "At the Cafe" both describe patrons of Pfaff's who hide a secret sorrow amid the merriment at the bar.
Whitman writes "86 West 42d st. Ada Clare" on an early page in the notebook where he lists the names and addresses of other people he knew at the time.
The West 42nd Street Coterie was a bohemian group that often gathered at Ada Clare’s home.
27 Memorial Drive West, Bethlehem, PA 18015