[The Life of Francis Marion by William Gilmore Simms]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Francis Marion

CHAPTER 8
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It sent hundreds, whom nothing had moved before, into the ranks of Marion and Sumter.

The moment of defeat and greatest despondency--the dark before the dawn--was that when the people of the country were preparing to display the most animating signs of life.

The very fact that the force of Marion was so insignificant, was something in favor of that courage and patriotism, that confidence in his own resources and his men, which, defying all the inequalities of force, could move him to traverse the very paths of the conqueror, and pluck his prisoners from his very grasp.

The audacity and skill of Marion, exhibited in numerous small achievements of which history furnishes no particulars, extorted a reluctant confession from the enemy, whose unwilling language will suffice for our own.

Tarleton writes: "MR.


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