Our best & warmest thanks to you for your kindness in sending us the advance copy of "Good Bye My Fancy,"2 which reached us by last mail!
As I was then overwhelmed with work I took the book at once to Wallace3 & he has had it ever since until today & tho' I am still without opportunity for loc.02479.004_large.jpg reading it—I have had a fearfully busy week—but I could not let the mail go without sending you my personal thanks for your generous gift which I shall prize very highly indeed & take time to absorb & assimilate.
Meanwhile I take this opportunity of Congratulating you upon the successful accomplishment of your life task—finis coronat opus4—& the Completion of your "Carte-de-viste to posterity."5 It must be a great satisfaction to you loc.02479.005_large.jpg to feel that you have finished your work, & to us it is matter for congratulation & gratitude that you have been permitted to do so.
On this, the eve of your 72nd birthday, my thoughts have been much with you, & I am longing to hear some news of you & how you are keeping. Better, I sincerely hope & trust, my good kind old friend.
I am looking forward to spending a pleasant afternoon tomorrow (Sunday 31st) with Wallace & a few of loc.02479.006_large.jpg the friends. It will be a sacred & blessed day with us, full of tender & loving thoughts of you
I send you a copy of the Annandale Observer containing some verses suggested by my recent visit to my native place—
Now as time presses I must close, with kindest regards to all your household & with my heart's best love to you
Yours affectionately J. Johnston loc.02480.001_large.jpg see notes July 8 1891 loc.02480.002_large.jpgCorrespondent:
Dr. John Johnston (1852–1927)
of Annan, Dumfriesshire, Scotland, was a physician, photographer, and avid
cyclist. Johnston was trained in Edinburgh and served as a hospital surgeon in
West Bromwich for two years before moving to Bolton, England, in 1876. Johnston
worked as a general practitioner in Bolton and as an instructor of ambulance
classes for the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railways. He served at Whalley Military
Hospital during World War I and became Medical Superintendent of Townley's
Hospital in 1917 (John Anson, "Bolton's Illustrious Doctor Johnston—a man
of many talents," Bolton News [March 28, 2021]; Paul
Salveson, Moorlands, Memories, and Reflections: A Centenary
Celebration of Allen Clarke's Moorlands and Memories [Lancashire
Loominary, 2020]). Johnston, along with the architect James W. Wallace, founded
the "Bolton College" of English admirers of the poet. Johnston and Wallace
corresponded with Whitman and with Horace Traubel and other members of the
Whitman circle in the United States, and they separately visited the poet and
published memoirs of their trips in John Johnston and James William Wallace, Visits to Walt Whitman in 1890–1891 by Two Lancashire
Friends (London: Allen and Unwin, 1917). For more information on
Johnston, see Larry D. Griffin, "Johnston, Dr. John (1852–1927)," Walt
Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New
York: Garland Publishing, 1998).