194 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



The Man Walt Whitman, pp. 57-71. 



Leaa^es of Grass and Modekn Science, pp. 249-251. 



Walt Whitman and the Cosmic Sense, pp. 329-347. 



Also translations of foreign critiques as follows: 



Walt Whitman, Karl Enortz: Translated from the German hy Alfred Forman 

 and Richard Maurice Bucke, pp. 215-230. 



Walt Whitman, the Poet of American Democracy, Rudolph Schmidt: 

 Translated from the Danish by R. M. Bain and Richard Maurice Bucke, 

 pp. 231-248. 



Walt Whitman, T. TT. Rolleston: Translated from the German hy Alfred For- 

 man and Richard Maurice Bucke, pp. 285-295. 



1894. 



Cosmic Consciousness. " The Conservator. " Philadelphia, May, June, 1894. 



Cosmic Consciousness. A paper read before the American Medico Psycholog- 

 ical Association Philadelphia 18 May 1891 by Dr. R. M. Bucke. 

 " Light rare, untenable, lighting the very light." Philadelphia, " The 

 Conservator." 1894, (pamphlet), pp. 18. 



Memories of Walt Whitman. 



Walt Whitman Fellow.ship Papers, 6, pp. 35-45, Sept., 1894. 



(Read at the Organization Meeting of the Fellowship at Reisser's, 

 Philadelphia, May 31st, 1894.) 



1895. 



Was Whitman Mad? "The Conservator." Philadelphia, June: 

 *' Jt urnal of Hygiene,' Sept. 



Was Walt Whitman Mad? [Read for Dr. Bucke, who was not present, by 

 Thomas B. Harned. Afternoon Session, Annual Meeting, May 31st.] 

 Walt Whitman Fellowship Papers, Second Tear: 9 pp. 22-30 

 The pro. of Walt Whitman. "The Conservator," Philadelphip, Octcber 1895. 



1896. 



Mr. Fawcett's Objections. " The Conservator," Philadelphia. Jan. 1896. 

 Notes on the Text, &c. " The Conservator," Philadelphia, May, June, Aug. 



1896. 

 Letter to the London, Ont., Daily News, Sept. 23, 1896, on the Bacon-Shake- 

 speare Question. 



1897. 



Memories of Walt Whitman (2). 



Walt Whitman Fellowship Papers, May 1897. Third Tear: 10, pp. 

 35-42. 



[Read at the annual meeting of the Walt Whitman Fellowship, 

 Boston, May 31, 1896.] 

 Shakespeare or Bacon. The proof (partly from a just discovered anagram) 

 that the real author of the so-called " Shakespeare " drama was 

 Francis Bacon. Canadian Magazine, Sept. 1897. 



