"Why, gentlemen," replied he, "since you have been so polite
as to ask my opinion, I will as
frankly give it, though I am afraid
it will seem very odd, especially coming from a soldier. However,
be that as it may, my opinion you have asked, and my opinion you shall have;
which is, that religion is the only thing to make a man happy
in
cottages or courts."
The young officers began to stare.
Gathering from their looks, that some of the company did not relish
this kind of
philosophy, he quickly thus resumed his speech.
"Pardon! gentlemen, I beg pardon! I must not be misunderstood.
By `religion', I don't mean `priest-craft'. I don't mean
that
superstitious grimace; that rolling up of white eyes,
and spreading of sanctified palms; with `disfigured faces and long prayers,'
and all the rest of that holy trumpery, which, so far from
making people
cheerful, tends but to throw them into the dumps.
But I mean, by `religion', that
divine effort of the soul,
which rises and embraces the great author of its being with
filial ardor,
and walks and converses with him, as a dutiful child with his revered father.
Now gentlemen, I would ask, all
prejudice apart, what is there
can so exalt the mind and gladden the heart, as this high friendship
with heaven, and those
immortal hopes that spring from religion?"
Here one of the company, half blushing, as palpably convicted
by the truth of the general's
argument smartly called out --
"Well but, general, don't you think we can do pretty well here in camp,
without religion?"
"What!" replied De Kalb, "would you give it all up to the priests?"
"Yes, to be sure I would," said the young officer, "for I am for every man's
following his own trade, general. They are priests, and we are soldiers.
So let them do all the praying, and we will do all the fighting."
"Why, as to the fighting part," rejoined De Kalb, "I have no objection
to doing all that for the priests, especially as their profession
does not allow them to fight for themselves. But as to giving them up
all the
devotion, I
confess I am not so
liberal. No! no! gentlemen,
charity begins at home; and I am not for
parting with pleasure so easily."
"PLEASURE!" replied the young officer with a sneer.
"Yes, sir, PLEASURE," returned De Kalb. "According to my creed, sir,
piety and pleasure are synonymous terms; and I should just as soon
think of living
physically, without bread, as of living pleasantly,
without religion. For what is religion, as I said before, but HABITUAL
FRIENDSHIP WITH GOD? And what can the heart
conceive so delightful?
Or what can so
gratify it in all its best and strongest desires.
For example, gentlemen, we are all fond of honor. I, for my part,
am fond of the friendship of the king of France. You glory in
the friendship of the great Washington. Then what must be the glory of him
who is in friendship with God? Again, gentlemen, we are all born to love,
to admire, to adore. If a man have no love, he is gloomy.
If he love a
worthless object, he is mortified. But if he love
a truly
worthy object, his face shines, his eyes sparkle,
his voice becomes sweet, and his whole air
expressive of
cheerfulness.
And as this happy feeling must, in the nature of things,
keep pace with the
excellence of the object that is beloved,
then what must be the
cheerfulness of him who loves the greatest, best,
and loveliest of all beings, whose
eternal perfections and goodness
can for ever make him happier than heart can ask or think?
"In a word, gentlemen, though I am a soldier, and soldiers you know
are seldom enthusiasts in this way, yet I
verily believe, as I said before,
that a man of enlightened and
fervent piety must be
infinitely happier
in a
cottage, than an irreligious
emperor in his palace."
In the
height of this
extraordinary conversation, an officer stepped in
and announced the
arrival of general Gates.
And here, as I have in this chapter given the reader what the jockies call
a `pretty long heat', I beg leave to order a halt and allow him
a little time to breathe.
Chapter 12.
Gen. Gates -- bon mot of British general Lee -- how an army
ought not to march -- De Kalb prophecies -- chickens counted
before they are hatched, alias, Marion and the author sent by Gen. Gates
to prevent the escape of Cornwallis, before he had run --
the British and American armies meet -- Gates and his
militia-men
leave De Kalb in the lurch -- his
gallantbehavior, and
glorious death.
When a poor fellow is going down hill, it is but too common, they say,
for every body to give him a kick.
"Let dogs delight to bark and bite,
For heaven hath made them so."
But, if I know myself aright, I can truly say, that nothing
of this vile spirit suggests a
syllable of what I now write
of the
fortunate" target="_blank" title="a.不幸的,运气差的">
unfortunate general Gates. On the
contrary, I feel an
ardent wish
to speak handsomely of him; and in one view of him I can so speak.
As a gentleman, few camps or courts ever produced his superior.
But though a perfect Chesterfield at court, in camp he was certainly
but a Paris. 'Tis true, at Saratoga he got his temples stuck round
with laurels as thick as a May-day queen with gaudy flowers.
And though the greater part of this was certainly the
gallant workmanship
of Arnold and Morgan, yet did it so hoist general Gates
in the opinion of the nation, that many of his dear friends,
with a
prudent regard, no doubt, to their own dearer selves,
had the courage to bring him forward on the military turf
and run him for the generalissimoship against the great Washington.
But though they were not able to
prosper him in this mad attempt,
yet they so far succeeded as to get him the command of the army of Carolina,
where his short and calamitous
career soon caused every good patriot
to thank God for continuing to his servant Washington,
the command of the American armies.
On his way from the northern states, general Gates passed
through Fredericksburg, where he fell in with general Charles Lee,
who, in his frank manner, asked him where he was going.
"Why, to take Cornwallis."
"I am afraid," quoth Lee, "you will find him a tough piece of English beef."
"Tough, sir," replied Gates; "tough! then begad I'll tender him.
I'll make `piloo' of him, sir, in three hours after I set eyes upon him."
"Aye! will you indeed?" returned Lee. "Well then send for me,
and I will go and help you to eat him."
Gates smiled; and bidding him adieu, rode off. Lee bawled after him,
"Take care, Gates! take care! or your northern laurels will degenerate
into southern willows."
The truth is, though general Lee was
extremely splenetic, other than which,
such a
miserable old
bachelor and infidel could hardly be,
yet he certainly had a knack of telling people's fortunes.
By
virtue of this
faculty he
presently discovered that general Gates
was no Fabius; but on the
contrary, too much inclined
to the fatal rashness of his
fortunate" target="_blank" title="a.不幸的,运气差的">
unfortunate colleague.
And so it turned out. For, from the moment he joined the army, he appeared
to act like one who thought of nothing but to have it proclaimed of him
in all the newspapers on the
continent, that in so many days, hours,
minutes, and seconds, he flew from Philadelphia to South Carolina,
`saw, fought, and conquered' Cornwallis; and flew back again
with the trophies of a second British army vanquished.
Instead of moving on as old De Kalb had done, with a
prudent regard
to the health and
refreshment of the troops, he, Jehu like,
drove them on without regard to either. He would not take the lower road,
as De Kalb
earnestly advised, through a rich and
plentiful country.
Oh no; that was too round about; would too long have delayed
his promised glory.
Like an eagle shaking his bold pinions in the clouds of his pride,
he must dash down at once upon his prey; and so, for a near cut,
take us through a pine
barren, sufficient to have starved
a
forlorn hope of caterpillars. I shall make no attempt to describe
the sufferings of the army. For, admitting that I should not lack words,
my reader would, I am sure, lack faith. Indeed, at this season,
when the old crop was gone and the new not quite come in,
what had we to expect, especially in such a
miserable country,