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will write you a line or two any how—(it is so long since I have written any thing in an envelope) —Pete
England —Eat my dinner alone, wished you could be with me then, & for a couple of hours, if no more —Pete
to Mr and Mrs Nash—Love to you my darling son, & here is a kiss for you— WW Walt Whitman to Peter Doyle
The envelope for this letter bears the address: Pete Doyle | M Street South | bet 4½ & 6th | Washington
Most of Whitman's communications with Doyle were written on post cards.
Kirkwood New Jersey July 2— Dear boy Pete I still keep pretty well, & am again down here at the farm
back—Love, love, love, Your old Walt I still make my headquarters in Camden— Walt Whitman to Peter Doyle
1929 north 22d street Philadelphia Wednesday June 20 —1877 Dear, dear boy Pete I am stopping here now
wood & creek & springs, where I pass my time alone, & yet not lonesome at all (often think of you Pete
visit this fall—& now good bye for this time, my own loving boy— Your Old Walt Walt Whitman to Peter Doyle
See the letter from Whitman to Peter Doyle of October 9, 1868.
"Birds and Poets," which had appeared in Scribner's Monthly in 1873 (see Whitman's letter to Peter Doyle