If Tuesday, November 10th.—should be a sunny day, you must give me the pleasure and favor of sending a carriage for you—to come to the Union League,—and assist in giving honor to Mr. Jefferson and Mr. Florence,1 the comedians.—I have asked a small party,—a hand full, to luncheon to meet them,—and if you could be of the company, I should be most happy.—It will be private, informal,—under the rose, my desire to show two eminent & worthy men, who have given the world much in the way of sunshine, that they are well remembered in Philadelphia.—
So write me that I may send loc_jm.00438.jpg loc_jm.00437.jpg for you.—I have not seen you since I called to take leave before departing for China.—You have been much in my thoughts, ever in reverent admiration of your genius.—What a talk Robert Ingersoll2 and I had over you when we were together!
By the way, Frank Carpenter,3 who painted the Lincoln proclamation of Emancipation, told me in New York that he wanted to paint you.—I believe he gave me a commission in that regard, which I have been truant in delivering. You will I am sure allow me to deliver it, when you honor me as my guest on November 10—
Yours always Jno. Russell Young. Walt Whitman, Esq. loc_jm.00307.jpgCorrespondent:
John Russell Young
(1841–1899) was a noted journalist in Philadelphia, New York, and
Washington, D. C. A Pennsylvania native, he began writing at the Philadelphia
Press at age seventeen and was named a managing
editor in 1862. After serving as a war journalist during the Civil War, he moved
to New York in 1865 to work at the New York Tribune,
which he edited from 1866 to 1868. In 1870 he established his own newspaper, the
New York Standard. In 1877, he was invited to accompany
President Ulysses S. Grant on a world tour; Young published Around the World with General Grant, a two-volume account of the tour,
in 1879. Young's knowledge of the Chinese language earned him the position of
the American ambassador to China from 1882 to 1885.