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Foster (New York: United States Book Company, 1891), and by Arthur Conan Doyle, The History of Spiritualism
says I am doing very well— John Burroughs is here temporarily—he comes in often—Eldridge and Peter Doyle
beautiful day—I am now sitting in my room, by the stove, but there is hardly need of a fire—Peter Doyle
I wish—& two or three good friends here—So I want you to not feel at all uneasy—as I write, Peter Doyle
getting well soon—am on a fair way to it now— latest ½ past 4 I have just set up & had my bed made by Pete—I
Cole, a former conductor and a friend of Doyle, who wrote to Walt Whitman, probably in the early 1870
, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle, Whitman asked Doyle to visit him there.
comes & sits a few minutes every morning before going to work—he has been very good indeed—he & Peter Doyle
Despite his status as a veteran of the Confederate Army, Doyle's uneducated, youthful nature appealed
limited the time the two could spend together, their relationship rekindled in the mid-1880s after Doyle
After Whitman's death, Doyle permitted Richard Maurice Bucke to publish the letters Whitman had sent
For more on Doyle and his relationship with Whitman, see Martin G.
Murray, "Doyle, Peter," Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia, ed. J.R. LeMaster and Donald D.
of paralysis, Whitman's friends in Washington, D.C., helped to care for him: John Burroughs, Peter Doyle
improve in walking—& then I shall begin to feel all right—(but am still very feeble & slow)—Peter Doyle
Perhaps the Boyle referred to in "Letter from Walt Whitman to Peter Doyle, 23 September 1870" (Edwin
a beautiful day, & I was out a good deal—walked some, a couple of blocks, for the first time—Peter Doyle
paper I send you has a picture of a railroad depot they are building here—it is for the road Peter Doyle
your last week—& George & Lou—I sent three letters to you last week, & papers—I knew that policeman Doyle
that was shot dead here—he was Peter Doyle's brother—I was at the funeral yesterday—it was in the papers
Doyle was murdered on December 29, 1871, by Maria Shea, known as "Queen of Louse Alley," when he went
According to the Washington Daily Morning Chronicle, Doyle, a native of Ireland, was 38, had a wife and
is a draft of an article which Whitman prepared for a Washington newspaper to answer criticisms of Doyle
Wraymond (or Raymond), also called "Pittsburgh," worked for one of the Washington railroads; see Doyle's
jolliest man I ever met, an artist, a great talker," per Whitman's November 9, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle
Whitman heard Brignoli sing in 1867, in 1872 (see the letter from Whitman to Peter Doyle of March 15,
"Birds and Poets," which had appeared in Scribner's Monthly in 1873 (see Whitman's letter to Peter Doyle
as the contents confirm, was written at the same time as Whitman's March 15, 1872 letter to Peter Doyle
10 years ago) boxed up & stored with other traps in Washington at the house of old Mr Nash, Peter Doyle's
Washington on November 8, 1875 (see Whitman's November 3, 1875, and November 5, 1875 letters to Peter Doyle
In Whitman's February 19, 1875, letter to Peter Doyle—one of Whitman's closest comrades and companions—Whitman
His friends in Washington, D.C. helped to care for him: John Burroughs, Peter Doyle, and Ellen O'Connor
would just drop you a line for yourself—but no doubt you keep fully posted about me by my letters to Pete
Henry Hurt, like Doyle, worked for the Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company.
This and Whitman's May 8 letter to Peter Doyle can be assigned to 1874 because of the particularized
which are elaborated upon in Whitman's May 1 letter to Ellen O'Connor and his May 15 letter to Peter Doyle
In his September 5, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle, Whitman omitted this part of Grier's diagnosis.
I hear regularly from Peter Doyle—he is well & hearty, works hard for poor pay, on the Balt Baltimore
in the week; Whitman confirmed receipt of Eldridge's letter in a February 6, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle
letter to O'Connor and the similar phrasing of this postcard and Whitman's May 29, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle
I rec'd received a letter from Marvin to-day—from Peter Doyle yesterday—snowing here as I write—the baby
occasionally—I had seen in the newspapers of William's appointment, & was truly pleased—I hear from Peter Doyle
See also Whitman's July 10, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle, in which Whitman left instructions for the delivery
Whitman also wrote about Burroughs's visit in a January 15, 1876 letter to Peter Doyle.
muchly ,) in the parlor by the window—It is a rainy darkish day here—the wind south & mild— Walt If Pete
Doyle comes up to see you, read him this letter—also give him the printed slip to read— The following
See also Whitman's September 5, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle.
verified by the reference to Burroughs' visit mentioned in Whitman's April 16, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle
Nelly dear, I am guiltless of the cologne present—(don't know any thing about Peter Doyle, in this case
Whitman's statement explains why letters from Charles Eldridge, Peter Doyle, Ellen O'Connor, and others
Huntington (whose death was reported in Whitman's March 29, 1872 letter to Peter Doyle), or the widow
extreme—but I am standing it well, so far—to-day as I sit here writing, a fair breeze blowing in— Peter Doyle
The visit took place about May 25, 1874; in his May 29, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle, Whitman mentioned
that Doyle had recently left Camden.
Years of London Life: Memoirs of a Man of the World (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1885), 402, and Doyle's
O'Connor's tenure was brief; as of Walt Whitman's March 12–13, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle, O'Connor had
Whitman wrote at greater length about the new will in his October 3–4, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle.
On October 31, 1873, Whitman wrote Peter Doyle that "I got a letter from Mr.
Whitman also wrote of this meeting in his July 19, 1872 letter to Peter Doyle.
friend I am having quite a good spell to-day, (if it only lasts)—I wish you, in conjunction with Peter Doyle
West, here—put duplicate directions on—& send by Adams express—I write to-day to Peter Doyle, same request
Pete put the things in the trunk for me, & will know about them.
This letter and his October 13, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle indicate that Whitman had abandoned his plans
of this letter is determined by the reference to it in Whitman's October 9–10, 1873 letter to Peter Doyle
O'Connor and his July 28, 1871, letter to Peter Doyle.
In letters written the same day to Peter Doyle and William D.
On July 28, he wrote Peter Doyle, "I thought he would die while I was there—he was all wasted to a skeleton
Evidently Piper settled the bill in February; see Whitman's February 13, 1874 letter to Peter Doyle,
Peter Doyle has also come on from Washington, to spend a short time here & then return with me to Philadelphia
to his trip to Dartmouth College in June 1872, mentioned in Whitman's June 27, 1872 letter to Peter Doyle
, 1868 letter to Peter Doyle.
fancy. suppose," he replied, "myking for and associa tion with car drivers stage drivers, (Pete
Doyle, my friend, was a car driver),and boat hands attracted and attracts atten tion and produces inquiries
was happy Schlaf was resisting Bertz's assertions: "The question you raise about Calamus & [Peter] Doyle
The night before, in Washington, Peter Doyle, who liked the theater and was attracted by celebrities,
For his commemorative Lincoln lectures, which began in 1879, Whitman drew on Doyle's eyewitness account
Consider the memoirs ofPri vate Henry Robinson Berkeley, a Confederate soldier who, like Peter Doyle,
In corre spondence with Whitman, Doyle's love of the theater, including burlesque, is evident.
1877, then Whitman may have been referring to this image when he wrote from Philadelphia to Peter Doyle
organized into thirty–seven topics, chronologically arranged (e.g., "Opera Lover," "The 1856 ," "Peter Doyle
Walt Whitman and Peter Doyle by M.P.
Rice, ca. 1869 A sitting with Peter Doyle from the same session as another photograph of the couple.For
an 1868 portrait of Doyle also taken by M.
And, for an extended look at Whitman's relationship with Peter Doyle, see Martin G.
Murray, "Pete the Great: A Biography of Peter Doyle."