FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   826   827   828   829   830   831   832   833   834   835   836   837   838   839   840   >>  
d his accomplished wife. They occupied a large hospital-tent, which about a dozen beautiful greyhounds were free to enter at will. The ambulance was repaired, and the next morning we renewed our journey, escorted by the major and his wife on their fine saddle-horses. They accompanied us about ten miles of the way; and, though age has since begun to tell on them, I shall ever remember them in their pride and strength as they galloped alongside our wagons down the long slopes of the Spanish Peaks in a driving snow-storm. And yet again would it be a pleasant task to recall the many banquets and feasts of the various associations of officers and soldiers, who had fought the good battles of the civil war, in which I shared as a guest or host, when we could indulge in a reasonable amount of glorification at deeds done and recorded, with wit, humor, and song; these when memory was fresh, and when the old soldiers were made welcome to the best of cheer and applause in every city and town of the land. But no! I must hurry to my conclusion, for this journey has already been sufficiently prolonged. I had always intended to divide time with my natural successor, General P. H. Sheridan, and early, notified him that I should about the year 1884 retire from the command of the army, leaving him about an equal period of time for the highest office in the army. It so happened that Congress had meantime by successive "enactments" cut down the army to twenty-five thousand men, the usual strength of a corps d'armee, the legitimate command of a lieutenant-general. Up to 1882 officers not disabled by wounds or sickness could only avail themselves of the privileges of retirement on application, after thirty years of service, at sixty-two years of age; but on the 30th of June, 1882, a bill was passed which, by operation of the law itself, compulsorily retired all army officers, regardless of rank, at the age of sixty-four years. At the time this law was debated in Congress, I was consulted by Senators and others in the most friendly manner, representing that, if I wanted it, an exception could justly and easily be made in favor of the general and lieutenant-general, whose commissions expired with their lives; but I invariably replied that I did not ask or expect an exception in my case, because no one could know or realize when his own mental and physical powers began to decline. I remembered well the experience of Gil Blas with th
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   826   827   828   829   830   831   832   833   834   835   836   837   838   839   840   >>  



Top keywords:

general

 

officers

 

exception

 

lieutenant

 

strength

 

command

 

journey

 
Congress
 
soldiers
 
retirement

privileges

 

wounds

 

application

 

sickness

 

disabled

 

enactments

 

period

 

highest

 
office
 

leaving


retire

 

happened

 

thousand

 
twenty
 

meantime

 

successive

 

legitimate

 

retired

 
expect
 

replied


commissions

 

expired

 

invariably

 

realize

 
experience
 
remembered
 

decline

 

mental

 

physical

 

powers


easily

 

compulsorily

 

notified

 

operation

 
passed
 

service

 

representing

 

manner

 
wanted
 

justly