National Post

‘NOTHING IS EVER REALLY LOST’

In a Walt Whitman novel, unknown for 165 Years, clues to Leaves of Grass

- Jennifer Schuess ler The New York Times

Readers who picked up The New York Times on March 13, 1852, might have seen a small advertisem­ent on Page 3 for a serial tale set to begin the next day in a rival newspaper.

“A RICH REVELATION,” the ad began, teasing a rollicking tale touching on “the Manners and Morals of Boarding Houses, some Scenes from Church History, Operations in Wall- st.," and “graphic Sketches of Men and Women” (presented, fear not, with “explanatio­ns necessary to properly understand what it is all about”).

It was a less than tantalizin­g brew, perhaps. The story, which was never reviewed or reprinted, appears to have sunk like a stone.

But now comes another rich revelation: The anonymousl­y published tale was nothing less than a complete novel by Walt Whitman.

The 36,000- word Life and Adventures of Jack Engle, which was discovered last summer by a graduate student, is being republishe­d online Monday by The Walt Whitman Quarterly Review and in book form by the University of Iowa Press. A quasi- Dickensian tale of an orphan’s adventures, it feat ures a villainous l a wyer, virtuous Quakers, glad- handing politician­s, a sultry Spanish dancer and more than a few unlikely plot twists and jarring narrative shifts.

“This is Whitman’s take on the city mystery novel, a popular genre of the day that pitted the ‘ upper 10 thousand’ – what we would call the 1 percent – against the lower million,” said David S. Reynolds, a Whitman expert at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.

But it also, Reynolds and other scholars who have seen it say, offers clues to another mystery: how a workaday journalist and mostly convention­al poet transforme­d himself into the author of the sensuous, philosophi­cal, wildly experiment­al and altogether unclassifi­able free verse of Leaves of Grass.

“It’s like seeing the workshop of a great writer,” said Ed Folsom, the editor of The Walt Whitman Quarterly Review. “We’re discoverin­g the process of Whitman’s own discovery.”

That transforma­tion was one that Whitman himself wished to obscure. He said little about the early 1850s, when he worked as a carpenter in Brooklyn and published almost nothing, working instead on what became the 1855 first edition of Leaves of Grass.

That doesn’t faze Zachary Turpin, the graduate student at the University of Houston who found Jack Engle. In fact, this is the second time archival lightning has struck Turpin. Last year, he announced the discovery of Manly Health and Training, a previously unknown 47,000- word self- help treatise that Whitman published in The New York Atlas in 1858.

“A friend joked that that’s what would be on my gravestone,” Turpin said.

The library of lost American literature includes many “known unknowns,” as Turpin put it ( channeling Donald Rumsfeld), like Herman Melville’s The Isle of the Cross (the eighth and final novel he may, or may not, have finished) and Whitman’s The Sleep talker, a seemingly completed 1850 novel he discusses in his letters, but which doesn’t survive.

Turpin has made a specialty of looking for the “unknown unknowns,” using vast online databases that compile millions of pages of 19th-century newspapers. One day last May, he entered some names and phrases from fragmentar­y notes for a possible story concerning an embezzling lawyer named Covert and an orphan named Jack Engle – one of many entries in Whitman’s voluminous notebooks that the online Walt Whitman Archive had deemed to have no clear connection to any known published material. Up popped the advertisem­ent that included the name Jack Engle. The serial was to run in The Sunday Dispatch, a New York paper Whitman was known to have contribute­d to.

“My spider- sense was really tingling,” Turpin said.

Turpin ordered a scan of the first page f r om t he Librar y of Congress, which held the only known ( and as yet undigitize­d or microfilme­d) copy of that day’s Dispatch. A month later, he was stunned to open a file showing a yellowing page containing Jack Engle and other names from Whit man’s notes.

“I was at my inlaws’, setting up a Pack ’n Play, when the email arrived,” he recalled. “From that day until now, I’ ve had this simmering inside me.”

The 36,000- word tale, published in six typo- ridden installmen­ts, may not belong in the American literary canon.

“It’s not a great novel, though it’s not a bad read either,” said Reynolds, the author of Walt Whitman’s America.

Turpin called it “rollicking, interestin­g, beautiful, beautiful and bizarre,” with antic twists, goofy names and suddenly revealed conspiraci­es that recall “a pre- modern Thomas Pynchon” or even, he ventured, “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.”

This may sound a long way from Leaves of Grass. But Jack Engle and the other raffish young male characters, Reynolds said, are reminiscen­t of the man- of- the- streets persona – “Walt Whitman, an American, one of the roughs” – he created with Leaves of Grass.

And then there’s Chapter 19, which Folsom called “a magical moment.” Here, Jack enters the cemetery at Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan, and the madcap plot grinds to a halt in favour of reveries about nature, immortalit­y and the oneness of being that strikingly echo the imagery of Whitman’s great work.

“Long, rank grass covered my face,” says Jack, the first-person narrator. “Over me was the verdure, touched with brown, of trees nourished from the decay of the bodies of men.”

Turpin said the graveyard chapter put him in mind of “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry,” one of the most famous poems in Leaves of Grass, where Whitman declares, “I am with you, you men and women of a generation, or ever so many generation­s hence.”

But when asked how it felt to be the first in many generation­s to read Whitman’s nowresurre­cted novel, Turpin reached for another near-mystical line.

“Whitman said something really great: ‘Nothing is ever really lost, or can be lost,’” he said. “You really do start to believe it after a while.”

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Walt Whitman

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