I got a letter from Herbert, this morning—death & burial of Mrs. G2—gloomy, gloomy news. —No doubt you will receive, or have rec'd, a letter from H. but I tho't I w'd write. I am ab't as usual—the rainy ride Sunday, has not done me any harm. —Harry was here with me yesterday. Looks & feels & is quite well—came up on a little business & went back to Marlton on the 5 o'clock train—Brigh[t] & sunny here after a long dark spell—hope George is better
W WCorrespondent:
Susan M. Lamb Stafford
(1833–1910) was the mother of Harry Stafford (1858–1918), who, in
1876, became a close friend of Whitman while working at the printing office of
the Camden New Republic. Whitman regularly visited the
Staffords at their family farm near Kirkwood, New Jersey. Whitman enjoyed the
atmosphere and tranquility that the farm provided and would often stay for weeks
at a time (see David G. Miller, "Stafford, George and Susan M.," Walt Whitman: An
Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D. Kummings [New York:
Garland Publishing, 1998], 685).