loc.03180.001.jpg
Feb. 3 '881
—The little head in oil, with hat (of Elias Hicks2) sent me from Richmond Indiana painted by Sidney Morse3—As I understand it is from a photo, or daguerreotype of Elias, from life, taken about 1828 or '29 there.4
..."a little sketch in oil (on a box cover) from an old photo of a steel engraving brought me by a Mr. Harris5 who heard Elias preach when he was 10 years old. He says my copy [this picture] is quite as good as the original. I don't think so myself; but it approximates."6
loc.03180.002.jpg
loc.03180.003.jpg
loc.03180.004.jpg
Correspondent:
Thomas Biggs Harned
(1851–1921) was one of Whitman's literary executors. Harned was a lawyer
in Philadelphia and, having married Augusta Anna Traubel (1856–1914), was
Horace Traubel's brother-in-law. For more on him, see Dena Mattausch, "Harned, Thomas Biggs (1851–1921)," Walt
Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings (New
York: Garland Publishing, 1998). For more on his relationship with Whitman, see
Thomas Biggs Harned, Memoirs of Thomas B. Harned, Walt
Whitman's Friend and Literary Executor, ed. Peter Van Egmond (Hartford:
Transcendental Books, 1972).