PARIS, FRANCE, July
16, 1872.
Dear Brother: . . .
Of course I have watched the progress of political events as they appear from
this standpoint, and feel amazed to see the turn things have taken. Grant, who
never was a Republican, is your candidate; and Greeley, who never was a
Democrat but quite the reverse, is the Democratic candidate. I infer that Grant
will be re-elected, though several shrewd judges insist that Greeley will be
our next President. . . . There are a great many Americans located here in
business or prolonged stay, that constitute a society in themselves. They try
to monopolize my spare time, yet I have managed to see M. Thiers, and the
officers of Versailles, having dined with the President, and I am this moment
back from a tour of the southern line of forts, Valérien, D'Issy, Vanves, and
Montrouge, guided by a staff-officer especially appointed; and I have appointed
another day of next week to complete the circuit. En route to Paris I saw
Strasbourg, Wissembourg, Saarbruck, Metz, and Sedan, so that I shall be able to
understand the angry controversies that are sure to arise in the progress of
the trials that I see it is resolved to put Bazaine and others through. . .
Choosing between the two candidates on national grounds, I surely prefer Grant;
as to platforms and parties, of course I regard these as mere traps to catch
flies, but with General Grant as President, there will likely be more stability
and quietude, which the country needs. . . .
SOURCE: Rachel
Sherman Thorndike, Editor, The Sherman Letters: Correspondence Between
General and Senator Sherman from 1837 to 1891, p. 337-8
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