I send you a nice letter from O'Connor2
His rabies (nor is it without foundation) against McCaulay, still continues as you see3—
O'Connor is a "brick"—
I trust you are moving on the enemies work, in regard to the Springfield Repub article.4 They seem so genuinely anxious to get it I wd like to send it off this week. If you come around 7 or 8 pm—this evening there is enough "four mark" for two bouncing good punches
Yours James Matlack Scovel W.W loc_no.00146_large.jpgCorrespondent:
James Matlack Scovel
(1833–1904) began to practice law in Camden in 1856. During the Civil War,
he was in the New Jersey legislature and became a colonel in 1863. He campaigned
actively for Horace Greeley in 1872, and was a special agent for the U.S.
Treasury during Chester Arthur's administration. In the 1870s, Whitman
frequently went to Scovel's home for Sunday breakfast (Whitman's Commonplace
Book, Charles E. Feinberg Collection of the Papers of Walt Whitman,
1839–1919, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.). For a description of
these breakfasts, see Walt Whitman's Diary in Canada, ed.
William Sloane Kennedy (Boston: Small, Maynard, 1904), 59–60. For Scovel,
see George R. Prowell's The History of Camden County, New
Jersey (Philadelphia: L. J. Richards, 1886).