[Chapters from My Autobiography by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link bookChapters from My Autobiography CHAPTERS FROM MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY 9/36
My staff were opposed to the movement." (I think the General said they tried to persuade him to stop Sherman.
The chief of his staff, the General said, even went so far as to go to Washington without the General's knowledge and get the ear of the authorities, and he succeeded in arousing their fears to such an extent that they telegraphed General Grant to stop Sherman.) Then General Grant said, "Out of deference to the Government, I telegraphed Sherman and stopped him twenty-four hours; and then considering that that was deference enough to the Government, I telegraphed him to go ahead again." I have not tried to give the General's language, but only the general idea of what he said.
The thing that mainly struck me was his terse remark that the enemy originated the idea of the march to the sea.
It struck me because it was so suggestive of the General's epigrammatic fashion--saying a great deal in a single crisp sentence.
(This is my account, and signed "Mark Twain.") _Susy Resumes._ After papa and General Grant had had their talk, we went back to the hotel where mamma was, and papa told mamma all about his interview with General Grant.
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