Page:Speeches, correspondence and political papers of Carl Schurz, Volume 3.djvu/409

Rh of the Cabinet from the South. Looked at from certain points of view, this might be a good stroke of policy, if the right man can be found.

If you should desire about this or that person specific information which I can give, it will be gladly at your disposal, and I need not assure you that you can absolutely rely on my discretion, the necessity of which in such a case I appreciate fully. 



&emsp;

I thank you most sincerely for your kind letter of the 24th inst. I ought to apologize for having put any question to you, an answer to which I might have thought would be embarrassing. And I may assure you, that my last letter did not have that meaning.

What you tell me of the general drift of Governor Hayes's mind, as it appears in conversation, is very satisfactory and accords with my own observations. But you say “the risk is that his selections will not be so positive, as we could desire.” There may indeed be reason for an apprehension of that kind. Now, I have made it a rule in my correspondence with him to express my views on everything, public questions as well as individuals, with the utmost frankness and freedom, no matter whether he agrees with me or not. I told him at the beginning of the campaign that he should look upon me as one who would not claim, nor desire, nor expect anything from him except the privilege of telling him at all times without reserve what I thought about matters or men—and that I do. I have thus been trying to impress upon him the necessity, if he is declared elected and means to redeem his pledges, of making a good strong start, first by repeating in his