Your splendid contribution to me has been rec'd by the hands of Horace Furness1 & is hereby deeply thank'd for ($100) & is opportune & will do me much good.
I send a copy of my Complete Works2 & some pictures—with a slip of little piece in May Century3—& my best respects, love & thanks—am just getting over the worst of a two months' siege of the grip—bad enough yet—get out in a wheel'd chair4—shall probably get out this afternoon—
God bless you, Doctor— Walt WhitmanCorrespondent:
Dr. S. (Silas) Weir
Mitchell (1829–1914) was a specialist in nervous disorders as well as a
poet and a novelist. On April 18, Whitman had his second interview with Dr.
Mitchell, who attributed his earlier paralysis to a small rupture of a blood
vessel in the brain but termed Whitman's heart "normal and healthy." Whitman
also noted that "the bad spells [Mitchell] tho't
recurrences by habit (? sort of automatic)" (Whitman's
Commonplace Book, Charles E. Feinberg Collection of the Papers of Walt Whitman,
1839–1919, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.). Mitchell was the first
physician to indicate the psychosomatic nature of many of Whitman's ailments.
Probably Whitman's impending lecture on the death of Lincoln unconsciously
brought back the emotional involvements of his hospital experiences with
comrades whom he had come to love only to be separated from them.