Treatise Compassionate Address To Ireland
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-compassionate-address-to-ireland-001 |
| Words | 397 |
From that time thirty, forty, sometimes fifty
of them died in a day by a pestilential fever; and in two
months’ time, upwards of fifteen hundred deserted to General
Howe. So that many were inclined to believe he had not
when we came away much more than five thousand effective
men left.” Never fright yourselves, therefore, about General
Washington’s huge army, that melted away like snow in. harvest. The English forces meantime are in perfect health,
(about sixteen thousand,) and have plenty of all things. 4. “But there are twenty or thirty thousand recruits to:
join him in a month or two; and what will General Howe do
then?” Just as he does now; he will regard any number of
them as much as he would so many sparrows. For what
could fifty thousand raw men do, that had never seen the face
of an enemy? especially when, by the tenure of their service,
they were only to stay in the army mine months? (The circum
stance concerning which General Washington so earnestly
expostulated with the Congress.) Will these dead-doing men,
do you think, be in haste to cut off all the old, weather-beaten
Englishmen? Otherwise they will not have made an end of
them, before the time comes for their returning home! 5. “But I do not believe the American army is in this
condition.” If you do not, I cannot help it. And you have
no more right to be angry at me for believing it, than I at
you for not believing it. Let each of us then, without
resentment or bitterness, permit the other to think for himself. 6. “O, but the French will swallow us up.” They will as
soon swallow up the sea. Pray, which way is it they are to
come at us, unless they can fly through the air? It is
certain our fleet, notwithstanding the shameless lies told to
the contrary, is now everyway in a better condition than it
ever was since England was a nation. And while we are
indisputably masters at sea, what can the French do but
gnash their teeth at us? “Nay, but Spain will join them.”
That is by no means clear. They have not forgot the
Havannah yet. But, if they do, we are well able to deal
with them both; full as able as we were the last war. 7.