Page:The War with Mexico, Vol 1.djvu/233



taking possession of Matamoros Taylor pitched his tent in the shade of a small tree about half a mile from town, and there he remained Dressed in attakapas pantaloons and a linen roundabout he sat enthroned on a box cushioned with an Arkansas blanket, and for dinner—table had a couple of rough blue chests. The slight pursuit of Arista and the search for concealed ordnance, arms and munitions did not require his personal attention June 6 Lieutenant Colonel Wilson with his four companies of the First Infantry, Price’s company of rangers and two of Bragg's guns under Lieutenant Thomas, the future “Rock of Chickamauga," marched for Reynosa, about sixty miles distant by the road, which had asked for the protection of American troops, and on the fifteenth Captain McCulloch and his company were sent OH on a scouting expedition; but the General had ample time for reflection, and his thoughts were not entirely agreeable.

Despite newspaper glorification, the low opinion of his abilities that was entertained by the officers must have impinged somewhat upon his consciousness. Captain Larnard, in fact, believed that he not only realized his inadequacy, but longed to retire; and certainly Taylor’s private letters exhibited the profoundest mental discomfort. Scott should come, he insisted over and over again; the campaign would be a failure, and the officer conducting it would be ruined. He distrusted the intentions of the administration, and he condemned its policy. As early as May 9 he feared too many volunteers, whom he disliked—were coming; by May 20 he knew what Gaines had done; and Scott’s letter of May 18 informed him that about 20,000 such troops were "to march upon Mexico."