[From Canal Boy to President by Horatio Alger, Jr.]@TWC D-Link bookFrom Canal Boy to President CHAPTER XXII 4/11
He was a born actor, a man of undoubted courage, fertile in expedients, and devoted to the Union cause. Garfield was a judge of men, and he was impressed in the man's favor at first sight.
He describes Jordan as a tall, gaunt, sallow man, about thirty years of age, with gray eyes, a fine falsetto voice, and a face of wonderful expressiveness.
To the young colonel he was a new type of man, but withal a man whom he was convinced that he could trust. "Why did you come into this war ?" he asked, with some curiosity. "To do my share, colonel, and I've made a bargain with the Lord.
I gave Him my life to start with, and if He has a mind to take it, it's His. I've nothing to say agin it." "You mean you have come into the war, not expecting to get out of it alive ?" "Yes, colonel." "You know what I want you to do.
Will you die rather than let this dispatch be taken ?" "I will." Garfield looked into the man's face, and he read unmistakable sincerity. He felt that the man could be trusted, and he said so. The dispatch was written upon tissue paper.
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