F. Colburn (Francis Colburn) Adams
Capitolo 14
you negotiate military and equipments. And these were only such things as a
gentleman clarified to be a rule and possession a government second
its his/her own way of thinking would sustain the most greater part in need of. In short, the
it is probable that of dust and the great guns are had need as a mean for convincing those
who differed with him that its opinions must have respected. This is a
strange world, my child and man it is the strangest and more
uncontrollable animal in him. The Mr. Davis understood this as
some gentleman inside my knowledge. And if he had held as I complain funeral an eye
on his/her finances as him it had on his/her political fortune, it would have
a lot of best state for him. He knew that if he could show to the world
what his/her new government was financially sounds, and probably to
continuous so, its perspectives would be bright indeed. And with
What it contained Washington, in his/her possession him
you/he/she could put on his/her application to the trust of the financial world with
more claimed to the agenda.
It was said indeed (but I think of an effort of calumny) that Mr.
Beauregard looked with an air of the great condescension on our noble
Treasury building, and it promised his/her followers of fight to an action of
his/her contents as soon as it entered the possession of his/her master. Indeed
it was said that the Mr. Beauregard promised to his/her men that when they got
Their Washington you/they should have luxuries for rations, and it fights with
their pockets filled with silver and gold. And with them
anticipations firmly mended on a base of kind to that you/he/she could doubt as
thing the result would be? This was the gilded prize that the Mr. Davis has hoped
to win with Washington. And with him he saw, or rather the thought him
saw, England that extends to him the correct hand of the friendship and the
Emperor of France that manufactures him one of his/her very best arcs, and thanking
him for the liberty he had taken with the liberty of a people.
These, then my child, is some of the reasons because we concluded