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I know I am glad that your selections were put into my hands first, so that I was lifted up by them to
As he told you, there is a chance—not as yet more than a chance—that I may make my way over the Atlantic
. /70 Dear friend Walter I now take my pen in h and to let you know how I am getting along.
received your letter of the Eight & was very glad to hear from you. we have been Stoping stopping at my
I am going to buy a fraim frame for your Picture I have it up in my room I wou ld like to see you very
Boss Mr Hawkins is going to leave the firm the first of march & my friend Oliver Allen & I thought we
My Dear friend Walt I now take my pen in hand to let you know how I am getting along I am in very good
health at present & I hope you are the same. my father is not very well at present he has been Laid
I bought some medicine for a freind friend of my fathers & he gave me the money to pay for them & I Spent
Robbins & then I will be Disgraced & Discarged Discharged I asked my Sister to lend three & she would
New York June 1/70 Friend Walter I now take my pen in hand to write to you I am in good health at Present
not want to lend me the I asked for, why Did you not write and say so—not to make out you Did not get my
of it when you was I though thought I would put you in—mind of it if I would be man Enough to keep my
I would not mind if you would give me my Clothes now as I need them very I cant can't go out any wear
Nov 5 18 70 My dear Mr.
Huntington: I write to say I would like to postpone the pleasure of my visit to, & breakfast with, you
Walt Whitman I send the Galaxy with one of my last pieces —as I am not certain whether I sent it to you
My Mother, brother George, & all, are well.
baby boy, now about a month resident in this mad world—(I write about the baby for Nelly and Jenny)—My
I am quite busy flying around—the printers & stereotypers commence on my immortal work to-morrow—My dear
, dear friend, I hope you are well & in good spirits—I send you my love—also to Charles Eldridge, if
best love—in which I am joined by my Mother.
Brooklyn May 11, 1870 Dear William, My hand has been pretty bad, but looks more encouraging to-day.
My dear friend, I shall return to Washington next Saturday, 15th—William, it would be a favor if you
I write this in my room home, early afternoon—Mother & I having had tete-a-tete dinner—so good & quiet
My friends: I send you a page & a half piece—" A warble for lilac-time "—if available for the April Galaxy
Brooklyn May 11, 1870 Sir: The hurt on my hand has not healed.
There is nothing new or noteworthy in my own affairs.
I keep fashioning & shaping my books at my leisure, & hope to put them in type the current year.
You speak of my prose preface to first "Leaves of Grass."
I am writing this at my desk in the Treasury building here, an immense pile, in which our office occupies
From my large open window I have an extensive view of sky, Potomac river, hills & fields of Virginia,
I gaze at the Sea while I eat my food and think of thee. . . . and often while I gaze thereon I think
My address is at this office.
It is likely that this will shorten my leave, & that I shall have to come back & do my work myself, about
I don't write, I thought I would send a few lines—they would be better than nothing— God bless you, my
the hot weather, & especially since I left Washington—so I read & write as little as possible, beyond my
printing matters, &c—as that occupies several hours, & tires my eyes sometimes.
distinction however—I admire & love the French, & France as a nation—of all foreign nations, she has my
is—to say nothing—only a good smacking kiss, & many of them—& taking in return many, many, many, from my
Dear Son, I am sitting here in my room, having just eat a hearty dinner with my mammy , (who has this
month entered on her 76th year, but to my eyes looks young & handsome yet.)
c—he has one fault, & a bad one—that is he will drink, & spree it—which spoils all—True it is none of my
would give it up, & find his pleasure in some other way—Pete, should you see Allen again, give him my
Milburn, or any of the railroad boys, or other friends that may inquire after me, that I send them my
best respects—not forgetting my friends Mr. & Mrs.
every thing lovely—It will not be long now before I shall be back—Till then, take care of yourself, my
while said this morning—"Why Walt you are fatter & saucier than ever"— but I will close by sending my
love, to my darling son—& to him I shall always be the same old Walt.
Ned Stewarts Stewart's —When you write tell Ned I am here in Brooklyn, loafing around—& that I send my
fine—warm through the middle of the day, & cool mornings & nights— I fall in with quite a good many of my
you & me—no women in the house—he is single—he wants me to make my home there—I shall not do that, but
that night—My dear loving boy, how much I want to see you—it seems a long while—I have rec'd a good
loving son, & give my respects to any of the boys that ask about me.
to-day to be what you are, than to be him, with his $10,000 a year—poor thin-livered cuss that he is— My
duplicate printed copies of a poem I have written, "Passage to India," in which I endeavor to celebrate in my
price, time, selection of magazine, and in fact all the points of that sort, I leave absolutely to you— My
Nothing new or very different with my affairs. I remain in good health & spirits.
My dear friend, I have just received your letter of the 7th inst.
A new edition of my book will be printed this fall, with another small volume in prose.
I send you my love—Write whenever you can.
My dear friend, I am here a while on leave—am in good health as usual—have been engaged in electrotyping
a new edition of my book in better form—You sent me word a year or more ago of some Boston publisher
, or bookseller, who was willing (or perhaps wished) to sell my book —Who was it?
biography, The Ferry Boy and the Financier (Boston: Walker and Wise, 1864); he described their meetings in My
O'Connor in 1867: "Every year confirms my earliest impression, that no book has approached the power
It arises in my mind, as I write, to say something of that kind to you— I am not a little comforted when
I learn that the young men dwell in thought upon me & my utterances—as you do—& I frankly send you my
I am numbed with the frigid manners of the Christians; barbarism has given me the fullest joy of my life
well as usual—still work in this office—still board at the same house in M Street—& I suppose hold my
I will not write a long letter this time—but send you my love—& charge you to write more regularly in
branches, I came home from Washington and applied myself, as soon as possible, to school and to study…My
Nothing very new or different in my affairs.
here in Atty Gens office—same posish position —have good health—expect to bring out new editions of my
books before very long—how is the little boy—I send my love to him, & to your wife & parents.
wrote but then deleted: "O if we could only be together now even if only Dear Boy, dear, dear friend, my
In 1888 Walt Whitman commented to Horace Traubel about this letter: "I can't live some of my old letters
My dear friends, N. M. and J. B.
you word, in advance—The picture of the dear daughter will be welcome—I should also like another of my
dear loving boy Alfred, as soon as he gets any late ones, if he does so— So good bye & God bless you, my
dear friends, & my love to all.
cm; These lines appear to be very early ideas connected with the poem first published as Come, said my
Louis, Mar 18th 1870 My Dear Mother Mattie arrived all right on Wednesday abt about 3 ocl —in the afternoon—We
highly esteem though I do not endorse or hold by all they teach two of the Books are connected with my
much mistaken in your love of Books, interspersed with fine stanzas of oriental Poetry, altogether in my
My Discharge Papers are in the Hands of John P Hunt Attorney and Counsellor at Law 247 Broadway I wish
you would do me the favor of of of Looking up my Claim and Pushing it through for me as I have suffered
this John P Hunt and weather whether he is an authorized claim agent or not and about how Long Before my
1Drift Sandsloc.04185xxx.00310[Sands on the Shores of my 64th year]about 1883poetry1 leaf6 x 14 to 20.5
x 16.5 cmhandwritten; Trial titles and notes, including Sands on the Shores of my 64th year.
[Sands on the Shores of my 64th year]
1Drift Sandsloc.04229xxx.00310[Sands on the Shores of my 60th year]about 1879poetry1 leaf6 x 14 to 20.5
x 16.5 cmhandwritten; Trial titles and notes, including Sands on the Shores of my 60th year.
[Sands on the Shores of my 60th year]
previously published in Leaves of Grass, "Passage to India" was Whitman's attempt to "celebrate in my
Whitman referred to Rossetti's edition as a "horrible dismemberment of my book" in his August 12, 1871
succeeding poem, we have him clearly in trance, and the impressing spirit speaking through him:— Take my
see Hermes, unsuspected, dying, well-beloved, saying to the people, Do not weep for me, This is not my
Here is one which again proclaims his purpose:— I stand in my place, with my own day, here.
And what are my miracles? 2.
side, and some behind, and some embrace my arms and neck.
one night in passing off the platform of a Car, gave you a rose) I was compelled to many Car rides in my
I thank you Sir, with all my heart, and pray for you the abiding Presence and hourly Comfort of the divine
I go to my home in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, tomorrow.
L OUIS March 30th, 18 70 My dear Walt I suppose you think strange that I hav'nt written you before but
work goes on well we have delightful weather here everything looks like Spring I am glad I put off my
been ample and I should have enjoyed a visit with Mrs O Conner very much indeed Please convey to them my
love and express to them my hearty thanks for their kindness—also say to Mrs O C and family that we
for St Louis this afternoon he was very sorry that he could not see you. but I am certainly coming on my
that I will get there in the evening and I have no doubt when I call on Masons they will insist on my
6 9 june 8 My dear walt i got your letter and you may expect i was glad enoughf enough to hear you was
will get a nice black silk) i gess guess mrs price is like many others short of funds sometime walter my
tuesday Tuesday My dear Walt i received your letter on monday Monday glad to hear you get along so well
weather its it's hot to be shure sure but no use fretting about it well Walt i have been to day and had my
and one for myself i shall send han one in the package so you see walt Walt i bequeath something to my
5 April 1870 Brooklyn Apri l April 5 My dear Walt i have just received your letter and the order all
walter Walter dear its it's in your power to deal so generously to your mother) i am rather better of my
the top whether it was that or what i dont don't know but all that night i couldent couldn't sleep my
28 March 1870 monday Monday My dear walt Walt i received your letter and paper with Jesse death in it
institutionalizing Jesse because, according to her December 25, 1863 letter, she "could not find it in my
is dead i will write to george George i feel very sad of course if he has done ever so wrong he was my
institutionalizing Jesse because, according to her December 25, 1863 letter, she "could not find it in my
| May 1870 march March 23 My dear walt Walt i have just got your letter with the money in it i received
febuary February 23 My dear walt i have just got your letter and was glad to hear from you and received
Jeff Whitman wrote that Mason "used to be in my party on the Water Works" (see his February 10, 1863
very much indeed i wrote to her that i dident didn't know how to undertake the journeey journey in my
that it is "as much as Han can do to take care of herself" and that he had "paid off the mortgage on my
1870 July 20 My dear Walt i got your letter yesterday but the paper you spoke of i havent haven't received
1870 Janry January 19 My dear walt Walt i am like you this week i dont don't seem to have any thing new
worst of it was they had two dogs and before they could get them away i thought they would have torn my
a stir about the small pox ordering every one to be vasinated vaccinated ) well walter Walter dear my