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

CHAPTER VII
55/80

His complaint of not being properly notified he made to Gates alone, and put it in the form of a rebuke.

He knew of the movement against him from the beginning, but apparently the first person he confided in was Conway, when he sent him the brief note of November 9.

Even after the cabal was fully developed, he wrote about it only once or twice, when compelled to do so, and there is no evidence that he ever talked about it except, perhaps, to a few most intimate friends.

In a letter to Patrick Henry he said that he was obliged to allow a false impression as to his strength to go abroad, and that he suffered in consequence; and he added, with a little touch of feeling, that while the yeomanry of New York and New England poured into the camp of Gates, outnumbering the enemy two to one, he could get no aid of that sort from Pennsylvania, and still marvels were demanded of him.
Thus he went on his way through the winter, silent except when obliged to answer some friend, and always ready to meet his enemies.

When Conway complained to Congress of his reception at camp, Washington wrote the president that he was not given to dissimulation, and that he certainly had been cold in his manner.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books