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Camden1
Evn'g
Dec: 25 '88
Thanks dear Kitty, dear friend, dear girl, for the beautiful photo—it is indeed
beautiful—give my best love to your father and mother & sisters & Al
& wife & Harold2 & Calder3—
I have had a bad sickness seven months but am now some better—have sat up
nearly all day, & eaten some dinner.
Happy New Year to you & all—4
Walt Whitman
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Correspondent:
Katherine (sometimes spelled
"Catherine") B. Johnston (b. 1874) was a daughter of John H. Johnston, a jeweler
and close friend of Whitman's. Katherine had at least six siblings, four of whom
were older and two that were younger. When Whitman visited the Johnston family
for the first time early in 1877, Katherine ("Kittie," "Kitty") would have been
three years old.
Notes
- 1. This postal card is
addressed: Miss Kittie Johnston | 305 E 17th Street | New York City. It is
postmarked: Camden, N.J. | Dec [cut away]
| 1 30 PM | 88; D | 12-25-88 | 8 P | N.[cut away]. Whitman's name and address are printed on the envelope as
follows: WALT WHITMAN, | Camden, | New Jersey. [back]
- 2. Harold Johnston was one of
Kitty's brothers. [back]
- 3. Alma Calder Johnston was an
author and the second wife of John H. Johnston. For more on the Johnstons, see
Susan L. Roberson, "Johnston, John H. (1837–1919) and Alma Calder," (Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and
Donald D. Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998). [back]
- 4. On December 17, 1888, Katherine (Kitty) wrote to "My dear Uncle Walt":
"We have once more made a nest but need one dear person to make the family
complete; this person is a Grandpa; won't you come and be one to us? we would
all be so happy if you came. There is a pretty park in front which is nice even
in Winter; at night the electric lights are very pretty. Then in Summer you
could walk in the park with us children as you used to do on 5th Ave. Do come,
when ever it pleases you (but I want you very, very soon!)." "Kitty" and her brother Harold were
photographed with the poet in 1879 (See Edwin Haviland Miller, ed., Walt Whitman: The Correspondence (New York: New York
University Press, 1961–77), vol. 3, following page 202). [back]