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Sketches and Studies

Chapter 4 THE MEXICAN WAR.

Word Count: 868    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

give up the cherished purpose of spending the remainder of his life in a private station. That exceptional case was brought about, in 1847, by the Mexican War. He showed his readiness t

quota of New England towards the ten that were to be raised. And shortly afterwards,-in March, 1847,-he was commissioned as brigadier

ardihood of veterans, but a native and spontaneous fire; and there is surely a chivalrous beauty in the devotion of the citizen soldier to his country's cause, which the man who makes arms his profession, and is but doing his regular business on the field of battle, cann

st of bustle, with some of the officers of his command about him, mingled with the friends whom he was to leave behind. The severest point of the crisis was over, for he had already bidden his family farewell. His spirits appeared to have risen with the occasion. He was evidently in his element; nor, to say the truth, dangerous as was the path before him, could it be

ment. The passage was long and tedious, with protracted calms, and so smooth a sea that a sail-boat might have performed the voyage in safety. The Kepler arrived at Vera Cruz in precisely a month after her departure

mere hasty jottings-down in camp, and at the intervals of weary marches, but will doubtless bring the reader closer to the man than any

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ced one. He had proved himself, moreover, physically apt for war, by his easy endurance of the fatigues of the march; every step of which (as was the case with few other officers) was performed either on horseback or on foot. Nature, indeed, has

mendation of the great soldier who is now his rival in the presidential contest. He reached the main army at Pu

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