I am content to have waited 40 years for this birthday-book which I have from you and Horace.2 If 40 more could hold promise and deserving of such another, I should face them with both hope and patience.
If this coveted but not-to-have-been-asked-for autograph means, as it seems to do, that the hand which wrote it is much stronger than when last I felt its generous touch, that token is alone enough to gladden this my little day.—Long life and all love!
J.H. Clifford. loc.01299.004_large.jpg loc.01299.005_large.jpg loc.01299.006_large.jpg loc.01299.001_large.jpg see notes Aug 23, 1888 loc.01299.002_large.jpgCorrespondent:
John Herbert Clifford (b. 1848) was
a Unitarian minister from Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennyslvania. In an 1890
interview, Whitman agreed with Clifford's assessment of the poet as a "prophet
and bard." See "Walt Whitman on Himself." Shortly after Whitman's death in March
1892, Clifford contributed to "Sprigs of Lilac for Walt Whitman" in The Conservator, writing, "It was a great honor and
sacred service to be one of the friends chosen to bear Walt Whitman to his final
resting-place" (The Conservator, [June 1892], 26). Later,
Clifford was part of the Philadelphia branch of the Walt Whitman Fellowship.
Whitman referred to him as "a man-minister, not a minister-man" (Horace Traubel,
With Walt Whitman in Camden, Monday, June 18,1888).