Letter from Charles Sumner to Frances Miller Seward, 1852

  • Posted on: 7 June 2018
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Letter from Charles Sumner to Frances Miller Seward, 1852
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transcriber

Transcriber:spp:msr

student editor

Transcriber:spp:mec

Distributor:Seward Family Digital Archive

Institution:University of Rochester

Repository:Rare Books and Special Collections

Date:1852

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Letter from Charles Sumner to Frances Miller Seward, 1852

action: sent

sender: Charles Sumner
Birth: 1811-01-06  Death: 1874-03-11

location: New York, NY

receiver: Frances Seward
Birth: 1805-09-24  Death: 1865-06-21

location: Washington D.C., US

transcription: msr 

revision: obm 2017-04-24

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Page 1

N.Y. Avenue
Tuesday morning.
Dear Mrs Seward,
It was the part of friendship in
you to undeceive me as you did. I
thank you. I am now better enabled
to understand my real relations with
certain personsquarters. I am pained by preju-
dice & misconception, particularly
when I find them among persons whom
I heartily regard. But this is inci-
dent to my position.
While a private citizen, in no way
striving before the public, nor ma-
king myself a party to its conflicts, I
was at peace with all the world.
But there is no longer peace for
me. The sphere in which I am placed
exposes me to malignity, jealousy
& misconception, especially from po-
litical partisans. Sometimes I suffer
from Democrats & sometimes from Whigs.
Very well. In the consciousness of a
Page 2

life sincerely devoted to Truth, I can
abide even this.
Let me say, that I am unwilling
to be regarded as a politician. I have
always disclaimed the appellation; even
now I cannot accept it. Circum-
stances, entirely unexpected by my-
self, have thrown me into a politi-
cal situation, which I never desired.
My aim here is to perform the duties
of a senator, in the anxious hope
that I may in some humble way
serve our great cause. In the
politics of the country I see nothing
to tempt me, except the opportunity
to promote those good principles of
Freedom & Humanity with which our
true welfare & greatness are indisso-
lubly allied. Party has no attraction
for me; nor do I value any of the
rewards which it has for its victories.
My cause in the coming Presi-
dential contest will be in har-
Page 3

mony with my past life. With-
out personal ambition, & with a
single eye to the truth we have
at heart, I shall act, as, at
the time, & under the circumstances,
shall seem to me best. I am abso-
lutely uncommitted, except to my
principles. No candidate has any
reason from any thing I have ever said
to expect my support.
My rule has always been to do
what good I could, without regard to
personal consequences. That this vow
was early formed will appear from
the first page of a letter received this
winter, & now enclosed, from one of
my college companions
Unknown
. He was not
my intimate, nor have I any recollec-
tion of the incident to which it re-
lates; but I know that it was in
harmony with my opinion at the
time & ever since. And since I
am in this communicative mood,
I add another letter from a clergyman
Unknown

Page 4

in here, & also one from my dear
friend Longfellow
Birth: 1807-02-27 Death: 1882-03-24
. When you return
them, pray do not consider yourself
called upon to write a single word.
Put them under an envelope, & simply
direct them to me.
Your frankness has made me
frank. You will see that I write to
you as to a friend. Believe me,
dear Mrs Seward, Ever sincerely yours,
Charles Sumner
P.S. I challenge the minutest scrutiny
of everything I have written, said or done
on public affairs. All that I ask
is to be understood, & though persons
may differ from me, I am confident
that I shall have their regard.
Page 5

Mrs Seward
F St.
C. Sumner
W
Hand Shiftx

Frances Seward

Birth: 1805-09-24 Death: 1865-06-21
1852
Washington-