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Walt Whitman to Hannah Whitman Heyde, 7 December 1891

 loc_ad.00201_large.jpg Dear Sister

Y'r​ postal card2 came & was welcomed—my bad spell continues3—an etcher in N Y​ has etched the photo (with hat on leaning back, I call it "the laughing philosopher"4) & sent me—it is very fine—I always liked the pict:tho​ many friends did not—it is the best American etching I have seen (he sells it at $15)5—am sitting here as usual—lots of sickness ab't​ here6—oatmeal & an egg for b'kfast​ —small appetite—$2 enc'd

W W  loc_ad.00202_large.jpg

Correspondent:
Hannah Louisa Whitman Heyde (1823–1908) was the fourth child of Walter and Louisa Whitman and Walt Whitman's youngest sister. Hannah was named for her paternal grandmother, Hannah Brush Whitman (1753–1834), and her mother, Louisa Van Velsor Whitman (1795–1873). Although Walt Whitman had a close relationship with his younger brother Jeff Whitman, Hannah was his favorite, most beloved sibling. Until she married, Hannah lived at home with her parents and her brothers. Educated at the Hempstead Academy, Hannah taught school in rural Long Island. On March 23, 1852, Hannah married Charles Louis Heyde (ca. 1820–1892), a landscape painter. It is possible that Walt introduced Hannah to Charles. In August 1852 the Heydes departed for Vermont. The first decade of their marriage was marked by constant moving from boarding houses to hotels, mostly in rural Vermont, as Heyde sought out vantage points for his landscape paintings. In 1864 the Heydes settled in Burlington, purchasing a house on Pearl Street. After Hannah's marriage and relocation to Vermont, Mother Whitman became Hannah's faithful correspondent; Walt also kept in touch, sending letters and editions of Leaves of Grass after publication. Hannah faced several health crises during her marriage, partly due to the ongoing trauma of emotional, verbal, and physical intimate partner violence that she experienced. In the 1880s and 1890s Heyde increasingly had difficulty earning enough to cover household expenses; in addition, he may have become an alcoholic. He repeatedly asked Whitman for funds to cover their expenses. Whitman sent both Heyde and Hannah small amounts of money. After Heyde died in 1892, Hannah remained in Burlington, living in their house on Pearl Street until her death in 1908. For more information, see Paula K. Garrett, "Whitman (Heyde), Hannah Louisa (d. 1908)," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).


Notes

  • 1. In March 1884, Whitman purchased a house at 328 Mickle Street in Camden, New Jersey. He would live in this house until his death on March 26, 1892. [back]
  • 2. This letter has not been located. [back]
  • 3. In his letter to the Canadian physician Richard Maurice Bucke dated December 5, 1891, Whitman noted that he was suffering from "a great unmitigated mass of perturbation & belly–ache." [back]
  • 4. The etching was based on a photograph of Walt Whitman taken by George C. Cox on April 15, 1887. Whitman referred to this photograph as "The Laughing Philosopher." [back]
  • 5. William Carey, of the Century, sent the etchings on December 5, 1891 and was ready to act as Whitman's agent in the sale of them. The etching, by Thomas Johnson (1843–1904), is the frontispiece to Volume 7 of The Complete Writings of Walt Whitman (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1902). [back]
  • 6. The 1889–1890 flu pandemic killed around a million people worldwide; there was a deadly recurrence in late 1891 and early 1892. [back]
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