[The Memoirs of General W. T. Sherman Vol. I. Part 1 by William T. Sherman]@TWC D-Link bookThe Memoirs of General W. T. Sherman Vol. I. Part 1 CHAPTER II 79/111
This was no uncommon thing in those days, when many a ranchero with his eleven leagues of land, his hundreds of horses and thousands of cattle, would receive us with all the grandiloquence of a Spanish lord, and confess that he had nothing in his house to eat except the carcass of a beef hung up, from which the stranger might cut and cook, without money or price, what he needed.
That night we slept on Salinas Plain, and the next morning reached Monterey.
All the missions and houses at that period were alive with fleas, which the natives looked on as pleasant titillators, but they so tortured me that I always gave them a wide berth, and slept on a saddle-blanket, with the saddle for a pillow and the serape, or blanket, for a cover.
We never feared rain except in winter.
As the spring and summer of 1848 advanced, the reports came faster and faster from the gold-mines at Sutter's saw-mill.
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