"Leaves of Grass"1
You are delicious! May my right-hand wither if I don't tell the world before another week, what one woman thinks of you.2
"Walt"? "what I assume, you shall assume!" Some one evening this week you are to spend with Jemmy3 & me—Wednesday?—say.
Yours truly, Fanny Fern Sunday, April 21st loc.02068.002_large.jpg loc.02068.005_large.jpg From Fanny Fern From Fanny Fern loc.02068.006_large.jpgCorrespondent:
"Fanny Fern" was the pen
name of the poet and novelist Sara Payson Willis Parton (1811–1872).
Willis was a professional journalist who wrote a weekly column for the New York Ledger, where she published a favorable review
of Leaves of Grass in 1856. She was married to James
Parton (1822–1891), a journalist and biographer. Despite Sara Payson
Willis Parton's early praise of Whitman's writing, the Partons had a falling out
with the poet in 1857 over a two-hundred dollar loan James Parton gave Whitman
for the purpose of pursuing a literary project—a debt that Whitman
believed to be settled, but according to the Partons, was never repaid (Oral S.
Coad, "Whitman vs. Parton," Journal of the Rutgers University
Library, 4 (December 1940). For more on Sara Payson Willis Parton, see
Susan Belasco Smith, "Parton, Sara Payson Willis (Fanny Fern) (1811–1872)," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and
Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).