Your good letter just rec'd & indeed welcomed—I remain ab't the same—cold weather here—no snow yet but raw & aching enough—Logan2 & Alys3 here day before yesterday. All well—your father here lately on his way to Milville—Ab't the sculptured head4, you have full power—I am writing a card to Ernest Rhys5 to-day—I was out driving Sunday, & out to supper evening—Would you like me to send you the Phila: papers—or any others?
Walt WhitmanCorrespondent:
Mary Whitall Smith Costelloe
(1864–1945) was a political activist, art historian, and critic, whom
Whitman once called his "staunchest living woman friend." A scholar of Italian
Renaissance art and a daughter of Robert Pearsall Smith, she would in 1885 marry
B. F. C. "Frank" Costelloe. She had been in contact with many of Whitman's
English friends and would travel to Britain in 1885 to visit many of them,
including Anne Gilchrist shortly before her death. For more, see Christina
Davey, "Costelloe, Mary Whitall Smith (1864–1945)," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D.
Kummings (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998).