Our good friend William D. O'Connor2 died this morning about 2 o'clock.
I doubt not that you will have been informed by his friends, or by the press, but as
it was my lot to be closely associated loc.03714.002_large.jpgwith him for several months before
he was forced to keep to the house, and as he often talked of you (I know from your
books that you loved him, and I know that he loved you), I am impelled to write you
the sad intelligence of the morning.
He seemed hopeful through the last weeks of his illness, but did not fear the End. He
had often said to me that his greatest fear was years of bedridden
lingering—such as sometimes accompanies maladies kindred to his. Often he quoted: "Come quickly, O beautiful
Death!" and now that it has come loc.03714.003_large.jpgwe cannot wish him back to that
shattered tenement of clay.
Peace to his ashes!
I have not seen you, Walt Whitman, but it is not necessary to see you in order to know you, and I send you my love
Your friend, James L. Sill Washington, D. C.Correspondent:
As yet we have no information about
this correspondent.