The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 78, April, 1864 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 78, April, 1864.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 78, April, 1864 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 78, April, 1864.

The Indian Chief.  By Gustavo Aimard.  Philadelphia.  T.B.  Peterson & Brothers. 8vo. paper, pp. 164. 50 cents.

FOOTNOTES: 

[Footnote A:  There are three accounts as to the time of the birth of “St. Arnaud, formerly Leroy.”  That which makes him oldest represents him as being fifty-eight at the Battle of the Alma.  The second makes him fifty-six, and the third fifty-three.  In either case he was not a young man; but, though suffering from mortal illness, he showed no want of vigor on almost every occasion when its display was required.]

[Footnote B:  The advocates of youth in generals have never, that we are aware, claimed Hamilcar Barcas as one of the illustrations of their argument; yet he must have been a very young man when he began his extraordinary career, if, as has been stated on good authority, he was not beyond the middle age when he lost his life in battle.  He was a great man, perhaps even as great a man as his son Hannibal, who did but carry out his father’s designs.]

[Footnote C:  At Fontenoy the Duke of Cumberland was but half the age of the Comte de Saxe.  In that battle an English soldier was taken prisoner, after fighting with heroic bravery.  A French officer complimented him, saying, that, if there had been fifty thousand men like him on the other side, the victory would have been theirs.  “No,” said the Englishman, “it was not the fifty thousand brave men who were wanting, but a Marshal Saxe.”  Cumberland was ever unlucky, save at Culloden.  Saxe was old beyond his years, being one of the fastest of the fast men of his time, as became the son of Augustus the Strong and Aurora von Koenigsmark.]

[Footnote D:  Henry V. was present, as Prince of Wales, at the Battle of Shrewsbury, before he was sixteen; and there is some reason for supposing that he commanded the royal forces in the Battle of Grosmont, fought and won in his eighteenth year.  He was but twenty-eight at Agincourt.  Splendid as was his military career, it was all over before he had reached to thirty-six years.  The Black Prince was but sixteen at Crecy, and in his twenty-seventh year at Poitiers.  Edward IV. was not nineteen when he won the great Battle of Towton, and that was not his first battle and victory.  He was always successful.  Richard III., as Duke of Gloucester, was not nineteen when he showed himself to be an able soldier, at Barnet; and he proved his generalship on other fields.  William I., Henry I., Stephen, Henry II., Richard I., Edward I., Edward III., Henry IV., and William III. were all distinguished soldiers.  The last English sovereign who took part in a battle was George II., at Dettingen.]

[Footnote E:  See Norfolk County Records, 1657; New England Historical and Genealogical Register, No.  II. p. 192.  The moral lapse of the first minister of Hampton at the age of fourscore is referred to in the third number of the same periodical.  Goody Cole, the Hampton witch, was twice imprisoned for the alleged practice of her arts.]

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 78, April, 1864 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.