10 April 1882 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: OFH, UCCL 02198)
An odd thing! We had two or three old friends to dinner, & were discussing your administration; & had just arrived at the verdict that its quiet & unostentatious, but real & substantial greatness, would steadily rise into higher & higher prominence, as time & distance give it a right perspective, until at last it would stand out against the horizon of history in its true proportions, when your most welcome letter was brought in! And previously we had been discussing a paper which I am to read before a Club of young girls in Boston next Saturday, entitled “Mental Telegraphy,” wherein I use, as an illustration, the fact that an approaching letter often foreshadows its coming by flinging its writer into the mind of the person who is about to receive it.! ⟦One will never believe how frequent an occurrence this is, until he begins to watch for it & take note of it: I began six years ago.⟧
I am deeply gratified by the happy reception which the book has enjoyed at the hands of your household; & I am peculiarly grateful to you for telling me the pleasant news, when, if you had so chosen, you could have followed the world’s wrong custom & refused to take the trouble. Such an attention, coming from you, has a value which I do not underestimate; for whereas, coming from an ordinary source, it might be considered in some vague nebulous way a sort of duyty, no such duties attach to one who has worn the purple of sovereignty—it is then an act of grace, & its worth is multiplied accordingly.
Thanking you again, I am, with great respect,
I never thought of it before, but it seems strange that there should be no title for an ex-President but plain Mr. Still, it is reasonably conspicuous, since in our day pretty much everybody else is Esq.
MS, OFH.
Richardson 1942, 129; Davis 1950, 2–3; MicroPUL, reel 2.
The document presumably never left Hayes’s possession and was deposited with his other papers in the Hayes Memorial Library, Fremont, Ohio, when it opened in 1916.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.