Albany, April 24th 1877. Dear Mrs Gibbons, You must not let the stories about Governor Tilden’s private habits disturb you, for in the long run a lie never hurts anyone but its author. Mr. Tilden is a bigot in nothing, not even in temperance, drinks when he pleases, what he pleases, and as much as he pleases. I will not say that he has never been intoxicated, for I doubt if I have any male acquaintance who has not been. But in the course of a long acquaintance of thirty years and upwards and an intimacy during the past three years more close perhaps than has been engaged by any other person outside of his family, working with him and eating with him daily for weeks together, I have never seen him in all that period when it would have occurred to me to suspect him of a tendency to excess either in eating or in drinking, On the contrary if I were to select the attitude of his character which deserves in my estimation to rank among those for which he is specially distinguished, it would be that of moderation, caution, and self-control, which are the bases of the only kind of temperance that can be relied upon or that, in fact, amounts to anything. Were it not that according to the Nation proverb, “Most clubs will be found under the olive tree that bears the best fruit.” I should have lost my temper and my patience more frequently than I did during the late campaign of vituperation and detraction, of which Governor Tilden was the special notion. But as I said before and repeat with an amplification, “No wrong hurts any one but its author” My wife desires me to thank you for your attention to her wishes. She leaves me with the family on Thursday for the Squirrels Very Sincerely your friend John Bigelow