224 Benjamin Franklin [1781
seas, to furnish the arms, ammunition, and clothing
specified in the estimate heretofore transmitted, and
to assist with the loan mentioned in the letter, they
flatter themselves that, under the Divine blessing,
the war must speedily be terminated with glory and
advantage to both nations.”
By several letters to me from intelligent persons it
appears that the great and expensive exertions of the
last year, by which a force was assembled capable of
facing the enemy, and which accordingly drew to-
wards New York, and lay long near that city, was
rendered ineffectual by the superiority of the enemy
at sea; and that their successes in Carolina had been
chiefly owing to that superiority, and to the want of
the necessary means for furnishing, marching, and
paying the expense of troops sufficient to defend
that province. The Marquis de Lafayette writes
to me that it is impossible to conceive, without see-
ing it, the distress which the troops have suffered
for want of clothing; and the following is a para-
graph of a letter from General Washington, which
I ought not to keep back from your Excellency, viz.:
“I doubt not that you are so fully informed by Con-
gress of our political and military state, that it would
be superfluous to trouble you with any thing relative
to either. If I were to speak on topics of the kind,
it would be to show that our present situation makes
one of two things essential to us—a peace, or the
most vigorous aid of our allies, particularly in the
article of money. Of their disposition to serve us,
we cannot doubt; their generosity will do every