Transcribe Hornaday, W. T. Letter to Ward, Henry A. (1882-05-27)

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ybg {Written upside down at top of page - You are mistaken in thinking I carried the idea in my first letter that Webster was </u indispensable > to you. I only claimed that he would make a better foreman than the other, & that I am still sure of. When I see you I can tell you things I cannot write. No objection to </u Webster's > seeing </u that > letter at all.]

Washington, D. C. Sunday, May 27th 1882.

              June 24

Dear Professor Ward;

    I was very glad to get your good letter

of the 23rd which I had anxiously expected. Naturally I feel a deep and abiding interest in the </s Per? of them > Establishment, and I only regret that I am entirely unable to show it. I shall always take pride in referring to it as my real Alma Mater and you as my bringer - up. I am glad to see by Prof. Baird's letter that he, too, fully appreciates your kindness to your impecunious,- and sometimes </u ungrateful > - "Boys". It would also have done you good to have heard the encomiums of </s a > our Dr. White (C.A.) on you and your peculiar and magnificent work as a scientific educator of the masses. If you could </u only > live to read your own obituary notices and your biography it would, I am sure, partly compensate you for what you have endured from "the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune" in this life.

    It certainly is cold-blooded. </u quite > reptilian in fact,

to ask a man who employs a large force, to give up his best workman, whose services are so important. Prof. Baird and I agree that you are "one man out of the thousand" in your willingness to assist your assistants., for most men would cling to Webster - or one like him - with a death grip. If </u any > of us could ever do anything to benefit you in return it would not seem so much, but the opportunity may not come until your children's day.

    Had Webster been a less-unfortunate  man in his day I

would not have asked any sacrifice in his behalf; but in his circumstances and with his temprement it is almost a matter of life and death. I am </u very > sorry that he is complaining so much, but after all it is not much