About the Author
----------------
Robert Ellsberg is the publisher of Orbis Books. For five
years (1975-1980) he
was part of the Catholic Worker community in New York City,
serving for two
years as managing editor of the Catholic Worker newspaper. He has
edited
Dorothy Day: Selected Writings and has co-edited A Penny a Copy:
Readings
from the Catholic Worker. This volume is a companion to his
previous book, The
Duty of Delight: The Diaries of Dorothy Day, which won two First
Place Book
Awards from the Catholic Press Association. His own books include
All Saints,
The Saints' Guide to Happiness, and Blessed Among All Women. He
lives in
Ossining, New York.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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Preface
This volume and its companion, The Duty of Delight: The Diaries
of Dorothy Day, complete the publication of Dorothy Day’s
personal papers, part of the Dorothy Day–Catholic Worker
Collection housed at Marquette University’s Raynor Memorial
Libraries in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. According to her wishes,
these materials were sealed for twenty-five years after her death
in 1980.
After receiving an invitation from the University in 2005 to
edit these writings, I chose to begin first with the diaries.
That project was a greater editorial challenge, both in terms of
the sheer quantity of material to be transcribed, and the
difficulty of deciphering Day’s handwriting. In contrast, it was
a positive to turn to the letters. As these were intended
to be read, at least by their recipients, they were mercifully
legible—many of them typed. The relatively limited number of
letters, however, was a disappointment.
While she spent little time each day writing in her
diary—sometimes only a few minutes—Day evidently spent many hours
writing letters. Many of these were short notes, postcards,
polite acknowledgments, and the like. But in many other letters
she poured out her thoughts and feelings in a personal way, quite
different from her public writings. With the exception of letters
of an official character, she did not keep carbons or drafts.
Thus, the extent of the letters available for this collection
reflects the choice of her correspondents to preserve them and
their willingness, or that of their heirs, to make them
available. I have no illusions that these letters represent any
more than a small fraction of the many thousands of letters she
wrote in her lifetime. Many letters to close friends, colleagues,
and even family members were lost or dided. Fortunately, a
wealth of material remained, including her precious early
letters to Forster Battherham, to her daughter Tamar, to Ammon
Hennacy, Thomas Merton, Catherine de Hueck Doherty, and many
other lifelong friends and fellow travelers. In making the
selection for this book, I included only those that seemed to
hold particular interest. All were edited to omit repetition and
inconsequential detail.
Many people helped with this project. I am particularly grateful
to those who stepped forward, in response to my appeals, to share
their letters from Dorothy Day. These include the Woodcrest
Bruderhof, Sidney Callahan, Jeff Dietrich and Catherine Morris,
Jim Douglass, Francisco Fernandez, Eric Gauchat (the son of Bill
and Dorothy Gauchat), Judith Gregory, her Paul Lachance, Karl
Meyer, and the family of Karl Stern. I am immensely grateful to
Kate and Martha Hennessy for their consistent encouragement of
this project and for sharing Dorothy’s many cards and letters to
her grandchildren. Johannah Turner, who grew up in the Catholic
Worker, was exceptionally generous with her talents as a
proofreader. Other careful readers were Tom Cornell and Jim
Forest, whose long personal memories of the Catholic Worker story
and many of its fabulous characters were an invaluable resource.
Rachelle Linner and Julie Pycior helped track down sources. Pat
Jordan and Frank Donovan offered critical assistance on numerous
points. Thanks also to Rosalie Riegle, Claudia Larson, Jim
Martin, Jim Allaire, George Horton, Michael Harank, and Gabrielle
Earnshaw.
This project would not have been possible without the expert
assistance of Phil Runkel, the dedicated archivist of the Dorothy
Day–Catholic Worker Collection at Marquette University’s Raynor
Memorial Libraries. It was he who obtained and catalogued the
majority of the letters selected here. For this work, as well as
his tireless willingness to pursue all leads, no matter how
unlikely, and for his patient attention to any and all questions,
he has been a true partner in this project. I am grateful to Matt
Blessing, Head of Special Collections and Archives at Marquette,
for initially entrusting this project to me and for his many
years of support. It has been an honor to work again with Andrew
Tallon, director of Marquette University Press, who, together
with Maureen Kondrick, oversaw every aspect of this publication.
In addition, once again I wish to thank the Archdiocese of New
York and Marquette University’s Edward Simmons Religious
Commitment Fund for their generous financial support.
I am glad for an rtunity to thank Dorothy’s daughter, Tamar
Hennessy, who preserved so many of these letters, and who was
generous, in the final months of her life, in sharing memories of
her parents. Readers of The Duty of Delight as well as this book
will appreciate that some of these memories were not particularly
happy. Tamar deeply loved her mother and treasured her
association with the Catholic Worker. But she was initially
apprehensive about publishing private materials that stirred up
complicated emotions. In the end, I am glad that she made her
peace with the past and with this project, and I am grateful for
the trust she placed in me.
Finally, it is only right to acknowledge my debt to Dorothy Day,
whom I met in 1975 when I was nineteen and who asked me, just a
few months later, to take on the job of editing The Catholic
Worker. I could not know at that time just how significant this
assignment would be, nor how much her example and her spirit
would dominate the rest of my life. I possess only one letter
from Dorothy, a picture postcard—like countless others she wrote,
too insignificant to include in this collection. I received it
while fasting in a jail cell in Colorado where I was confined as
a result of an anti-nuclear protest. It was an aerial picture of
Cape Cod. On the reverse she had written:
Dear Bob—Hope this card refreshes you and does not tantalize
you. We all love
you and hold you in our prayers. Dan Mauk will feature you on
the first page in
CW. Love in Christ, Dorothy
I knew that Dorothy’s bedroom wall was covered with postcards
like this: pictures of ains, deserts, tropical birds, and
polar bears. … I hung her card on the wall of my cell and I have
remembered it many times since. It has never ceased to refresh
me.
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