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Elizabeth R. Coffin to Walt Whitman, 1 January 1891

 loc.01211.001_large.jpg Walt Whitman Dear Friend,

I am moved this first day of the new year to send you a message of love and thanks. Through this year just gone I have come to count you my dear friend. I have found your love folded "in every leaf."1 And it grows to be a need for me to let you know how  loc.01211.002_large.jpg much joy and strength you have given me—and through me to others who did not know you till I took you to them.

Since I found my beloved Socrates2 no one has spoken such sane and manly words to me as you.

And you are in this world with me and it seems ungrateful to take so much in silence. I want you to know that you have  loc.01211.003_large.jpg helped another human being, who returns you love for the help and thanks you beyond expressing for "that blithe throat of thine."3

Dear friend may the new year be blessed and beautiful in all it brings to you.

Gratefully Yours Elizabeth R. Coffin  loc.01211.004_large.jpg

Correspondent:
The writer of this letter may be Elizabeth Rebecca Coffin (1850–1930), who was a Brooklyn native, an artist, and an educator. She was the first person in the United States to earn a Master of Fine Arts degree. Known for her paintings of Nantucket, Massachusetts, she later opened a school in Nantucket that offered trade and craft courses for men and women.


Notes

  • 1. Coffin is quoting from Whitman's "In Cabin'd Ships at Sea," one of the poems in his Inscriptions series. [back]
  • 2. Socrates (c. 470–399 BC) was a classic Greek philsopher, and he is known as a founder of Western thought and as the first moral philosopher. The most comprehensive account of Socrates is found in Plato's dialogues; Plato, also an Athenian philosopher, was a student of Socrates. [back]
  • 3. Coffin is referring to Whitman's poem "Of That Blithe Throat of Thine." [back]
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