[188] Life of Caius Marius, tr. Langhorne.
[189] Ibid., from the French of Amiot, Cambridge, 1676, p. 368.
[190] Ibid., tr. Langhorne.
[191] Life of Sertorius, tr. Langhorne.
[192] Ibid.
[193] “Out of which materials he made up a legion.”—Decline of the Roman Republic, Vol. II. Chap. XVIII. p. 239.
[194] Mr. Charles C. Hazewell, in an elaborate article, brought his rare acuteness and reading in reply to the critics. Daily Evening Traveller, October 19, 1861.
[195] The New York Herald, in reproducing the letter, attributed it to Prince Napoleon. In like spirit, Maurice Sand, son of George Sand, who was in the suite of the Prince, in his Six Mille Lieues à toute Vapeur, in the Revue des Deux Mondes, 1862, Jan.-Fév., p. 686.
[196] Lettres sur les États-Unis d’Amérique, par le Lieutenant-Colonel Ferri-Pisani, Aide-de-Camp de S. A. I. Prince Napoléon, pp. 121, 122.
[197] Mr. Sumner insisted that the Union could be saved only through Freedom.