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    Ch.6: The American Army - Page 2

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    hereditary instinct, for you know that when we English
    have got together two companies, one machine gun, a sick bullock,
    forty generals, and a mass of W. O. forms, we say we possess "an
    army corps capable of indefinite extension."

    The American army is a beautiful little army. Some day, when all
    the Indians are happily dead or drunk, it ought to make the
    finest scientific and survey corps that the world has ever seen;
    it does excellent work now, but there is this defect in its
    nature: It is officered, as you know, from West Point.

    The mischief of it is that West Point seems to be created for the
    purpose of spreading a general knowledge of military matters
    among the people. A boy goes up to that institution, gets his
    pass, and returns to civil life, so they tell me, with a
    dangerous knowledge that he is a suckling Von Moltke, and may
    apply his learning when occasion offers. Given trouble, that man
    will be a nuisance, because he is a hideously versatile American,
    to begin with, as cock-sure of himself as a man can be, and with
    all the racial disregard for human life to back him, through any
    demi-semi-professional generalship.

    In a country where, as the records of the daily papers show, men
    engaged in a conflict with police or jails are all too ready to
    adopt a military formation and get heavily shot in a sort of
    cheap, half-constructed warfare, instead of being decently scared
    by the appearance of the military, this sort of arrangement does
    not seem wise.

    The bond between the States is of an amazing tenuity. So long as
    they do not absolutely march into the District of Columbia, sit
    on the Washington statues, and invent a flag of their own, they
    can legislate, lynch, hunt negroes through swamps, divorce,
    railroad, and rampage as much as ever they choose. They do not
    need knowledge of their own military strength to back their
    genial lawlessness.

    That regular army, which is a dear little army, should be kept to
    itself, blooded on detachment duty, turned into the paths of
    science, and now and again assembled at feasts of Free Masons,
    and so forth.

    It is too tiny to be a political power. The immortal wreck of
    the Grand Army of the Republic is a political power of the

    largest and most unblushing description. It ought not to help to
    lay the foundations of an amateur military power that is blind
    and irresponsible.

    By great good luck the evil-minded train, already delayed twelve
    hours by a burned bridge, brought me to the city on a Saturday by
    way of that valley which the Mormons, over their efforts, had
    caused to blossom like the rose. Twelve hours previously I had
    entered into a new world where, in conversation, every one was
    either a Mormon or a
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