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Thursday1
Mr dear Sir
You sometimes find a poor soldier whom a small sum would relieve and I beg you will distribute these pieces of paper as you shall see best on your visits to the Hospital.
[illegible]
G Wood
Mr
W: Whitman
Notes
- 1. As the manuscript of this
letter shows, the date of this letter reads simply, "Thursday"; because Whitman
responded to George Wood's letter on Saturday, January
17, 1863, we might thereby assume that the date of this letter is most
likely Thursday, January 15, 1863. George Wood (1799–1870) worked as a
clerk in the Treasury Department in 1822, and he held various posts in that
bureau until his death. He was the author of several satirical works, Peter Schlemihl in America (Philadelphia: Carey and Hart,
1848) and The Gates Wide Open; or, Scenes in Another
World (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1869); see National
Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Undoubtedly he became acquainted
with Whitman through Ellen and William O'Connor. Ellen O'Connor mentioned a Mr.
Wood in her letter of July 5, 1864. In reply to
Whitman's letter, evidently delivered by O'Connor and dated
"Thursday"—probably January 15,
1863—Wood wrote: "You sometimes find a poor soldier whom a Small Sum
would relieve and I beg you will distribute these pieces of paper as you shall
see best on your visit to the Hospital." [back]