Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 5).djvu/116

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112
THE OLD GLADE ROAD

tion, that you are above the influences of prejudice, and ready to go heartily where reason and judgement shall direct. I wish, sincerely, that we may all entertain one and the same opinion; therefore I desire to have an interview with you at the houses built half way between our camps. I will communicate all the intelligence, which it has been in my power to collect; and, by weighing impartially the advantages and disadvantages of each route, I hope we shall be able to determine what is most eligable, and save the General trouble and loss of time."[1]

Concerning this meeting Washington wrote as follows to his friend Major Francis Halket, then in Forbes's camp at Carlisle: "I am just returned (August 2nd)[2] from a conference with Colonel Bouquet. I find him fixed, I think I may say unalterably fixed, to lead you a new way to the Ohio, through a road, every inch of which is to be cut at this advanced season, when we

  1. Sparks: Writings of Washington, (1834) vol. ii, p. 300, note.
  2. Quotations from Washington's correspondence can be identified by dates in Sparks's Writings of Washington.