Page:From Yauco to Las Marias.djvu/144

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
78
YAUCO TO LAS MARIAS

out a pack-train. Hindered by excessive heat, followed by heavy showers, it marched only to a point where the two roads, above mentioned, are joined by a crossroad, — or about nine miles. I did not hear from Colonel Burke during the night, as I had hoped to; and the remainder of my command had its wagons packed, and was preparing to pull out on the morning of the 13th, when a courier came to me from him with a report of the difficulties that had retarded his progress, and of the presence of a Spanish force near Las Marias, variously estimated at from 1,200 to 2,500. This force, the colonel said, had taken up a defensive position; and he was moving toward it . . .

Respectfully submitted,
Theodore Schwan,
Brigadier-General Commanding.


Mayaguez, Puerto Rico, Aug. 16.
My dear Gilmore, — Availing myself of the first breathing-spell I have had for some time, I wish in this informal way and in