I am well and hearty as ever I received you kind and welcomb letter and was to hear that you are enjoying good health I wrote answer to you letter but it got mislaid and I did not mail it I was looking over some letters to day and I came acrost yours so I thought I would wright another we have had very cold weather here this Winter and there is a great deal of Ice loc.01865.006_large.jpg in the river the Fulton Fery 1 Boats was over and hour going acrost this morning
I am not on the cars any more I had some word with one of the employees and as I was in the right rather than to have any trouble I told the Presedend I would leave as the weather was so cold and look for something else to do but I have found nothing as yet I would come to W if I thought I could get any thing to do so good by for the presant
I remain yours John loc.01865.007_large.jpgP.S.
Dear Father I should like to see you very much and if you see or hear of any one that wants to get a sober and steady young man you can wright for me and I will come out there with much love
I remain your Loveing Son John M. Rogers Direct to No. 3 Fulton St. Brooklyn N.Y. loc.01865.008_large.jpg Jack Rogers Feb. 9.Correspondent:
John (Jack) M. Rogers was a
Brooklyn driver with whom Whitman had a loving relationship. Whitman
first met him in Brooklyn on September 21, 1870. For more on Rogers and his
relationship with the poet, see Charley Shively, ed., Calamus
Lovers: Walt Whitman's Working-Class Camerados (San Francisco: Gay
Sunshine Press, 1987), 122–135.