[George Washington, Vol. I by Henry Cabot Lodge]@TWC D-Link bookGeorge Washington, Vol. I CHAPTER VI 40/40
By Trenton and Princeton Washington inflicted deadly blows upon the enemy, but he did far more by reviving the patriotic spirit of the country fainting under the bitter experience of defeat, and by sending fresh life and hope and courage throughout the whole people. It was the decisive moment of the war.
Sooner or later the American colonies were sure to part from the mother-country, either peaceably or violently.
But there was nothing inevitable in the Revolution of 1776, nor was its end at all certain.
It was in the last extremities when the British overran New Jersey, and if it had not been for Washington that particular revolution would have most surely failed. Its fate lay in the hands of the general and his army; and to the strong brain growing ever keener and quicker as the pressure became more intense, to the iron will gathering a more relentless force as defeat thickened, to the high, unbending character, and to the passionate and fighting temper of Washington, we owe the brilliant campaign which in the darkest hour turned the tide and saved the cause of the Revolution..
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