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The Life of Francis Marion by William Gilmore Simms
page 75 of 349 (21%)
by a generous ardor of soul, into something other than a passive virtue.
The elasticity of spirit which it shows might be trained to any performance
within the compass of human endowment.

--
*1* Two ships of fifty guns; five of twenty-eight; 1 of twenty-six
and a bomb-vessel. Moultrie, vol. 1 pp. 174-5.
*2* Weems says 100.
*3* British account.
*4* Moultrie, Memoirs, Vol. 1, NOTE, p. 177.
*5* MS. Life of Brig.-Gen. Peter Horry, p. 21.
*6* Gen. Horry (then a captain) thus relates the incident:
"I commanded an eighteen pounder in the left wing of the fort.
Above my gun on the rampart, was a large American flag
hung on a very high mast, formerly of a ship; the men of war directing
their fire thereat, it was, from their shot, so wounded, as to fall,
with the colors, over the fort. Sergeant Jasper of the Grenadiers
leapt over the ramparts, and deliberately walked
the whole length of the fort, until he came to the colors
on the extremity of the left, when he cut off the same from the mast,
and called to me for a sponge staff, and with a thick cord
tied on the colors and stuck the staff on the rampart in the sand.
The Sergeant fortunately received no hurt, though exposed
for a considerable time, to the enemy's fire. Governor Rutledge
[after the battle], as a reward, took his small sword from his side,
and in presence of many officers, presented it to Sergeant Jasper,
telling him to wear it in remembrance of the 28th June,
and in remembrance of him. He also offered Jasper
a Lieutenant's commission, but as he could neither read nor write,
he modestly refused to accept it, saying, `he was not fit
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