Letter from Charles Sumner to William Henry Seward, July 24, 1858

  • Posted on: 7 June 2018
  • By: admin
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Letter from Charles Sumner to William Henry Seward, July 24, 1858
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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:1858-07-24

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Letter from Charles Sumner to William Henry Seward, July 24, 1858

action: sent

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

location: Paris, France

receiver: William Seward
Birth: 1801-05-16  Death: 1872-10-10

location: Unknown
Unknown

transcription: msr 

revision: crb 2017-04-26

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Page 1

Paris- 24th July ‘58
Hotel X Rue de la Paix
My dear Seward,
Since I wrote you
my case has shown a
new feature, which has
added to my troubles.
It has struck upon my
chest in a manner
which seems entirely
unprecedented. But my
physician
Birth: 1817-04-08 Death: 1894-04-02
, by a further
diagnosis, has ascertained

[top Margin] Govr Raymond
Birth: 1820-01-24 Death: 1869-06-18Certainty: Possible
has just left me.

Page 2

that the whole spinal
cord is in a morbid
state of instability & sensi-
bility, generated by the
original concern; & to
this he attributes my
relapse at Washington, &
this recent visitation. That
must be counteracted.
It came upon me in
the night with a force
which made me think
fire pleasant, & clung
Page 3

to me till the afternoon
of the next day at 6 o’clock
when my physician
arrived. During all this
time ^from 4 o’clock in the morning^ I sat upright
in a chair propped by
cushions, without seeing
a human being except
the Servts
xServts
x
Unknown

Unknown
. A new treat-
ment has commenced to
meet this;-pills of
bella donna twice a day, &
the warm bath an hour &
a half. How it will
all end I know not. I
owe these torments to my
Page 4

excellent constitution, for
without this long ago I
should have sunk where
natural pains
anxities would not have
reached me, & the wicked
would have ceased from
troubling.
My Dr. says that I am
patient, docile & most sub-
missive to pain. I believe this
is true. But I cannot
bear the heartlessness & fake-
ness of men.
Ever yours & Mrs Seward’s
Birth: 1805-09-24 Death: 1865-06-21

Charles Sumner