Friday, April 25, 1862.Washington, DC.
| Sec. Welles rushes to White House to share with President news
that Flag Officer David G. Farragut (USN) has taken New Orleans. Story in
Richmond newspapers smuggled into Washington. West,
Welles, 177. President
sends letter of condolence to King of Portugal on death of brother.
Abraham Lincoln to Luiz I, 25 April
1862, CW, 5:199. In the
evening, U.S. Senator Orville Hickman Browning, of Illinois, visits President
Lincoln. Browning recalled, "He was alone and complaining of head ache."
Browning and Lincoln discuss poetry and, in particular, the works of English
poet Thomas Hood. Lincoln recites several of Hood's poems, including "The
Haunted House." Browning recollected, "His reading was admirable and his
criticisms evinced a high and just appreciation of the true spirit of poetry. .
. . I remained with [him] about an hour & a half, and left . . . in high
spirits, and a very genial mood." Theodore Calvin Pease and
James G. Randall, eds., The Diary of Orville
Hickman Browning, 2 vols., Collections of the Illinois State Historical
Library (Springfield: Illinois State Historical Library, 1925-1933),
1:542. |