93/98 "Jonathan to John." After the release of the envoys there was much correspondence between friends across the water as to the merits of the case. British friends attempted to explain and to soothe, usually to their astonished discomfiture on receiving angry American replies. An excellent illustration of this is in a pamphlet published in Boston in the fall of 1862, entitled, Field and Loring, _Correspondence on the Present Relations between Great Britain and the United States of America_. The American, Loring, wrote, "The conviction is nearly if not quite universal that we have foes where we thought we had friends," p. |