[George Washington, Vol. I by Henry Cabot Lodge]@TWC D-Link book
George Washington, Vol. I

CHAPTER V
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A little more than a month later he planned another attack, and was again voted down by his officers.
Councils of war never fight, it is said, and perhaps in this case it was well that such was their habit, for the schemes look rather desperate now.

To us they serve to show the temper of the man, and also his self-control in this respect at the beginning of the war, for Washington became ready enough afterwards to override councils when he was wholly free from doubt himself.
Thus the planning of campaigns, both distant and near, went on, and at the same time the current of details, difficult, vital, absolute in demanding prompt and vigorous solution, went on too.

The existence of war made it necessary to fix our relations with our enemies, and that these relations should be rightly settled was of vast moment to our cause, struggling for recognition.

The first question was the matter of prisoners, and on August 11 Washington wrote to Gage:-- "I understand that the officers engaged in the cause of liberty and their country, who by the fortune of war have fallen into your hands, have been thrown indiscriminately into a common gaol appropriated for felons; that no consideration has been had for those of the most respectable rank, when languishing with wounds and sickness; and that some have been even amputated in this unworthy situation.
"Let your opinion, sir, of the principle which actuates them be what it may, they suppose that they act from the noblest of all principles, a love of freedom and their country.

But political principles, I conceive, are foreign to this point.


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