I received your papers and the slips with them some days ago and was much pleased to hear from you although in an indirect way. I see by the papers you sent me that your health is not very good1 and I assure you that I am very sorry to hear it. I would like to know how you are situated whether there is any thing that I can do to contribute to your comfort and Happiness. If there is I will do it if it is in my power.
My Wife is quite sick and has been for the past two weeks. The Children are all well as usual.2
With Love I remain As ever Yours,3Correspondent:
Benton H. Wilson (1843–1914?)
was the son of Henry Wilson (1805–1870)—a harness and trunk maker—and
Ann S. Williams Wilson (1809–1887). Benton Wilson was a U. S. Civil War soldier recovering in Armory Square Hospital
in Washington, D.C., when he met Whitman. Later, Wilson was employed selling melodeons and sewing machines. He also
sold life insurance and may have worked as a pawnbroker. He married
Nellie Gage Morrell Wilson (ca. 1841–1892). Nellie had two children, Lewis
and Eva Morrell, from a previous marriage, and she and Benton were the parents of five children.
Wilson named his first child "Walter Whitman Wilson," after the poet; their other
children were Austin, Irene, Georgie, and Kathleen Wilson. Benton Wilson's
correspondence with Whitman spanned a decade, lasting from 1865 to 1875.