I hear through Kennedy2 that you are ill or was so last Monday. I do hope you are well again. Drop me a card if you are able & tell me how you are. I meant to find time soon to come down & see you, if company does not bore you. I shall think of you loc.01335.002_large.jpg as able to be out occasionally enjoying these June days. The world has not been so beautiful to me for a long time as this spring: probably because I have been at work like an honest man. I had, in my years of loafing, forgotten how sweet toil was. I suppose those generations of farmers back of me have had something to do with it. They all seem to have come to life again in me & are happy since I have taken to the hoe & the crow-bar. I had quite loc.01335.003_large.jpg lost any interest in literature & was fast losing my interest in life itself, but these two months of work have sharpened my appetite for all things. I write you amid the fragrance of clover & the hum of bees. The air is full these days of all sweet meadow & woodland smells. The earth seems good enough to eat.
I propose for a few years to come to devote myself to fruit growing. I have 17 acres of land now, mainly all of it full in grapes & currants & raspberries. I think I can make some money & may be loc.01335.004_large.jpg renew my grip upon life. I was glad to see Kennedy. I like him much.
How I wish you was here, or somewhere else in the country where all these sweet influences of the season could minister to you. Your reluctance to move is just what ought to be overcome. It is like the lethargy of a man beginning to freeze.
We are all well. Julian3 goes to school in Po'keepsie, & is a fine boy. He goes & returns daily in the little steamer. I hope O'Connor4 is no worse. So drop me a line.
With much love J Burroughs loc.01277.001_large.jpg see notes July 3, 1888 loc.01277.002_large.jpgCorrespondent:
The naturalist John Burroughs
(1837–1921) met Whitman on the streets of Washington, D.C., in 1864. After
returning to Brooklyn in 1864, Whitman commenced what was to become a decades-long
correspondence with Burroughs. Burroughs was magnetically drawn to Whitman.
However, the correspondence between the two men is, as Burroughs acknowledged,
curiously "matter-of-fact." Burroughs would write several books involving or
devoted to Whitman's work: Notes on Walt Whitman, as Poet and
Person (1867), Birds and Poets (1877), Whitman, A Study (1896), and Accepting
the Universe (1924). For more on Whitman's relationship with Burroughs,
see Carmine Sarracino, "Burroughs, John [1837–1921] and Ursula [1836–1917]," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and
Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).