[The Life of George Washington, Vol. 3 (of 5) by John Marshall]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of George Washington, Vol. 3 (of 5) CHAPTER IV 5/25
Thus, at a season when the men ought to have been in camp, the measures for raising them were still to be adopted. About this period, several circumstances conspired to foment those pernicious divisions and factions in congress, which, in times of greater apparent danger, patriotism would have suppressed. [Sidenote: Divisions in congress.] The ministers of the United States, in Europe, had reciprocally criminated each other, and some of them had been recalled.
Their friends in congress supported their respective interests with considerable animation; and, at length, Mr.Deane published a manifesto, in which he arraigned at the bar of the public, the conduct not only of those concerned in foreign negotiations, but of the members of Congress themselves. The irritation excited by these and other contests was not a little increased by the appearance, in a New York paper, of an extract from a letter written by Mr.Laurens, the president of congress, to Governor Huiston, of Georgia, which, during the invasion of that state, was found among his papers.
In this letter, Mr.Laurens had unbosomed himself with the unsuspecting confidence of a person communicating to a friend the inmost operations of his mind.
In a gloomy moment, he had expressed himself with a degree of severity, which even his own opinion, when not under the immediate influence of chagrin, would not entirely justify, and had reflected on the integrity and patriotism of members, without particularizing the individuals he designed to censure. These altercations added much to the alarm with which General Washington viewed that security which had insinuated itself into the public mind; and his endeavours were unremitting to impress the same apprehensions on those who were supposed capable of removing the delusion.
In his confidential letters to gentlemen of the most influence in the several states, he represented in strong terms the dangers which yet threatened the country, and earnestly exhorted them to a continuance of those sacrifices and exertions which he still deemed essential to the happy termination of the war.
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