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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lafayette, by Martha Foote Crow
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Lafayette
+
+
+Author: Martha Foote Crow
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 11, 2009 [eBook #27777]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAFAYETTE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Jen Haines, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 27777-h.htm or 27777-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/7/7/7/27777/27777-h/27777-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/7/7/7/27777/27777-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+True Stories Of Great Americans
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+[Illustration: Publisher's Logo]
+
+The MacMillan Company
+New York · Boston · Chicago · Dallas
+Atlanta · San Francisco
+
+MacMillan & Co., Limited
+London · Bombay · Calcutta
+Melbourne
+
+The MacMillan Co. of Canada, Ltd.
+Toronto
+
+[Illustration: PORTAIT OF LAFAYETTE.
+From an authentic portrait.
+This shows Lafayette as a youthful general.]
+
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+by
+
+MARTHA FOOTE CROW
+
+
+ And what gave he to us?
+ He gave his starry youth,
+ His quick, audacious sword,
+ His name, his crested plume.
+ And what gave we?
+ We gave--a nation's heart!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The MacMillan Company
+1918
+
+All rights reserved
+
+Copyright, 1916,
+by The MacMillan Company.
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published May, 1916.
+Reprinted October, 1917.
+
+Norwood Press
+J.S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I PAGE
+ A BOY OF THE FRENCH NOBILITY 1
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ COLLEGE AND COURT 10
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ A BOY'S IDEALS 21
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ THE GREAT INSPIRATION 27
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ FIRST DAYS IN AMERICA 42
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ LAFAYETTE AT THE BRANDYWINE 52
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ A SUCCESSFUL FAILURE 62
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ LAFAYETTE AT MONMOUTH 73
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+ THE RETURN TO FRANCE 86
+
+ CHAPTER X
+ LAFAYETTE IN VIRGINIA 100
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+ THE TWO REDOUBTS 111
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+ THE SURRENDER OF YORKTOWN 119
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ LIONIZED BY TWO WORLDS 128
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ GATHERING CLOUDS 137
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+ LAFAYETTE IN PRISON 144
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ AN ATTEMPTED RESCUE 154
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ A WELCOME RELEASE 171
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ A TRIUMPHAL TOUR 179
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ LAST DAYS OF LAFAYETTE 193
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PORTRAIT OF LAFAYETTE _Frontispiece_
+
+ FACING PAGE THE COUNCIL AT HOPEWELL 78
+
+ THE SURRENDER OF CORNWALLIS 126
+
+ FRANCIS KINLOCH HUGER 160
+
+ A CARRIAGE IN WHICH LAFAYETTE RODE 186
+
+ THE CHILDREN'S STATUE OF LAFAYETTE 196
+
+
+
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BOY OF THE FRENCH NOBILITY
+
+
+Among the rugged Auvergne Mountains, in the southern part of France,
+stands a castle that is severe and almost grim in its aspect. Two bare
+round towers flank the building on the right and on the left. Rows of
+lofty French windows are built across the upper part of the front, and
+the small, ungenerous doorway below has a line of portholes on either
+side that suggest a thought of warlike days gone by.
+
+This castle, built in the fourteenth century, is called the Château de
+Chaviniac de Lafayette. Though it was burned to the ground in 1701, it
+was rebuilt as nearly like the earlier structure as possible; hence it
+represents, as it stands, the chivalrous days of the crusading period
+and so forms a fitting birthplace for a hero. In this half-military
+château was born one of the most valiant champions of liberty that
+any country has ever produced--the Marquis de Lafayette.
+
+The climate of the Haute-Loire--the highlands of Auvergne--is harsh;
+it has been called the French Siberia. There are upland moors like
+deserts across which sweep fierce winds, where the golden broom and
+the purple heather--flowers of the barren heights--are all that will
+flourish. There are, indeed, secluded valleys filled with muskmallows
+and bracken, but these are often visited by wild tempests, and sudden
+floods may make the whole region dreary and dangerous.
+
+In Lafayette's time the violence of the elements was not the only
+thing to be dreaded. When the children wandered too near the edge of
+the forest, they might catch sight of a wild boar nozzling about for
+mushrooms under the dead oak leaves; and if it had been a severe
+winter, it was quite within possibility that wolves or hyenas might
+come from their hiding places in the rocky recesses of the mountains
+and lurk hungrily near the villages.
+
+The family living in the old château was one whose records could be
+traced to the year one thousand, when a certain man by the name of
+Motier acquired an estate called Villa Faya, and thereafter he became
+known as Motier de la Fayette. In 1240 Pons Motier married the noble
+Alix Brun de Champetières; and from their line descended the famous
+Lafayettes known to all Americans. Other Auvergne estates were added
+to the Chaviniac acres as the years went by, some with old castles
+high up in the mountains behind Chaviniac, and all these were
+inherited by the father of America's famous champion.
+
+Lafayette's father was a notable warrior, as _his_ father had
+been--and his--and his--away back to the days of the Crusades. Pons
+Motier de la Fayette fought at Acre; Jean Motier de la Fayette fell at
+Poitiers. There were marshals who bore the banner in many a combat of
+olden times when the life of the country was at stake. It was a
+Lafayette who won the battle at Beaugé in 1421, when the English Duke
+of Clarence was defeated and his country was compelled to resign hope
+of a complete conquest of France. Among other men who bore the name,
+there were military governors of towns and cities, aids to kings in
+war, captains and seneschals. Many of them spent their lives in camps
+and on battlefields. One of them saw thirty years of active service;
+another found that after thirty-eight years of military life he had
+been present at no less than sixty-five sieges besides taking part in
+many pitched battles. Lafayette's grandfather was wounded in three
+battles; and his uncle, Jacques Roch Motier, was killed in battle at
+the age of twenty-three.
+
+During the summer before Lafayette's birth, his father, the young
+chevalier and colonel, not then twenty-five, had been living quietly
+in the Château Chaviniac. But a great conflict was going on--the Seven
+Years' War was being waged. He heard the call of his country and he
+felt it his duty to respond.
+
+There was a sad parting from his beautiful young wife; then he dashed
+down the steep, rocky roadway from the château to the village, and so
+galloped away--over the plains, through fords and defiles, toward the
+German border--never to return.
+
+Lafayette's ancestors on his mother's side were equally distinguished
+for military spirit. His mother was the daughter of the Comte de la
+Rivière, lieutenant general and captain of the second company of the
+King's Musketeers.
+
+But this "hero of two worlds" inherited something more than military
+spirit. The ancestors from which he descended formed a line of true
+gentlefolk. For hundreds of years they had been renowned throughout
+the region of their Auvergne estates for lofty character and a kindly
+attitude toward their humble peasant neighbors. It was only natural
+that this most famous representative of the line should become a
+valiant champion of justice and freedom.
+
+This great man was destined to have as many adventures as any boy of
+to-day could wish for. To recount them all would require not one book,
+but a dozen. Think of a lad of nineteen being a general in our
+Revolutionary War, and the trusted friend and helper of Washington!
+Lafayette was present at the surrender of Cornwallis, boyishly happy
+at the achievements of the American soldiery, and taking especial
+pride in his own American regiment. This period was followed by a
+worthy career in France, but for five years--from his thirty-fifth
+year to his fortieth--he was unjustly imprisoned in a grim old
+Austrian fortress. At the age of sixty-seven he made a wonderful tour
+through our country, being received with ceremonies and rejoicings
+wherever he went; for every one remembered with deep gratitude what
+this charming, courteous, elderly man had done for us in his youth. He
+lived to the ripe age of seventy-seven, surrounded by children and
+grandchildren, and interested in the work of the world up to the very
+last.
+
+The birth of Lafayette is recorded in the yellow and timeworn parish
+register of Chaviniac. This ancient document states that on September
+6, 1757, was born that "very high and very puissant gentleman
+Monseigneur Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert Dumotier de Lafayette,
+the lawful son of the very high and the very puissant Monseigneur
+Michel-Louis-Christophe-Roch-Gilbert Dumotier, Marquis de Lafayette,
+Baron de Wissac, Seigneur de Saint-Romain and other places, and of the
+very high and very puissant lady Madame Marie-Louise-Julie de la
+Rivière."
+
+But it was only on official documents that Lafayette's full name,
+terrifying in its length, was used. Reduced to republican simplicity,
+the Marquis de Lafayette's name was Gilbert Motier, although he was
+always proud of the military title, "General," bestowed on him by our
+country. To tell the truth, imposing names meant little to this friend
+of liberty, who was a true republican at heart and who, during the
+French Revolution, voluntarily resigned all the titles of nobility he
+had inherited.
+
+During his earliest childhood Lafayette was somewhat delicate. The
+child first opened his eyes in a sorrowful home at the old Château
+Chaviniac, for word had come, only a month before, that Lafayette's
+father had been killed at the battle of Minden, leaving the young
+mother a widow. The boy, however, grew in strength with the years.
+Naturally, all was done that could be done to keep him in health. At
+any rate, either through those mountain winds, or in spite of them, he
+developed a constitution so vigorous as to withstand the many strains
+he was to undergo in the course of his long and adventurous life.
+
+The supreme characteristic of the man showed early in the boy when, at
+only eight years of age, he became possessed of an unselfish impulse
+to go out and perform a feat which for one so young would have been
+heroic. It was reported in the castle that a dangerous hyena was
+prowling about in the vicinity of the estate, terrifying everybody.
+The boy's sympathy was roused, and, from the moment he first heard of
+it, his greatest longing was to meet the cruel creature and have it
+out with him.
+
+It is not recorded that the eight-year-old boy ever met that wild
+animal face to face, and it is well for the world that he did not. He
+was preserved to stand up against other and more significant spoilers
+of the world's welfare.
+
+His education was begun under the care of his mother, assisted by his
+grandmother, a woman of unusually strong character; these, together
+with two aunts, formed a group whose memory was tenderly revered by
+Lafayette to the end of his life.
+
+The boy Lafayette cared a great deal for hunting. Writing back to a
+cousin at home after he had been sent to Paris to school, he told her
+that what he would most like to hear about when she wrote to him would
+be the great events of the hunting season. His cousin, it appears, had
+written him an account of a hunt in the neighborhood, but she had not
+written enough about it to satisfy his desire. Why did she not give
+details? he asked. He reproachfully added that if he had been writing
+to her of a new-fashioned cap, he would have taken compass in hand and
+described it with mathematical accuracy. This she should have done
+concerning the great hunt if she had really wished to give him
+pleasure!
+
+This fortunate boy could select any career he liked; courtier, lawyer,
+politician, writer, soldier--whatever he chose. Never came opportunity
+more richly laden to the doorway of any youth.
+
+He chose to be a soldier. The double-barred doors of iron, the lofty,
+protected windows, the military pictures on the walls of his home--all
+spoke to the Chaviniac child of warfare and conflict. There was the
+portrait of his father in cuirass and helmet. There were far-away
+ancestors in glistening armor and laced jackets. There was also the
+military portrait of that Gilbert Motier de Lafayette who was marshal
+in the time of Charles VII, and whose motto "Cur non" (Why not?) was
+chosen by Lafayette for his own when he started on his first voyage.
+The instinct for warfare, for the organization of armies, for struggle
+and conquest, were strong in him, and were fostered and nourished by
+every impression of his boyhood's home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+COLLEGE AND COURT
+
+
+In the year 1768 the boy Lafayette, then eleven years old, left his
+mountain home and went to Paris, where he was placed by his mother in
+the Collège du Plessis, a school for boys of the nobility.
+
+The arrangements for the student in a French college at that time were
+simple. A room scarcely wider than a cell was assigned to each boy. It
+was locked at night; but holes were cut in the door so that the fresh
+air might come in. This, at least, was the theory. Practically,
+however, the little cell must have been very stuffy, for the windows
+in the halls were shut tight in order that the health of the pupils
+might not be injured by currents of damp air from outside.
+
+Special attention was given to diet, care being taken that the boys
+should not eat any uncooked fruit lest it should injure them. Parents
+might come to visit their children, but they were not allowed to pass
+beyond the threshold--a familiar chat on home matters might interfere
+with the studious mood of the scholars.
+
+What were the studies of this young aristocrat?
+
+First and foremost, heraldry. From earliest days his tutors had
+instilled into him the idea that the study of the coats of arms of
+reigning and noble families, together with all that they stood for,
+was first in importance.
+
+Then the young student must dance, write, and draw. He must be able to
+converse wittily and with apt repartee. Fencing and vaulting were
+considered essential, as well as riding with grace and skill and
+knowing all about the management of the horse.
+
+As far as books were concerned, the Latin masters--Cæsar, Sallust,
+Virgil, Terence, Cicero--were carefully studied. The boys were obliged
+to translate from Latin into French and from French into Latin.
+Occasionally this training proved useful. It is related that one of
+the French soldiers who came to New England and who could not speak
+English resorted to Latin and found to his joy that the inhabitant of
+Connecticut, from whom he wished to purchase supplies for his
+regiment, could be communicated with by that obsolete medium; and what
+would Lafayette have done when imprisoned in an Austrian dungeon if he
+had not been able to converse with his official jailers in the Latin
+tongue!
+
+In historical studies the greatest attention was given to wars and
+treaties and acquisitions of territory. The royal families of his
+native country and of neighboring kingdoms were made familiar. History
+was taught as if it were a record of battles only. Swords and coats of
+mail decorated the mantelpieces in the school and the latest methods
+of warfare were studied.
+
+In addition to all these military matters, a great deal of attention
+must have been given to acquiring the power of clear and forcible
+expression in the French language. While Lafayette can never be
+included among the great orators of the world, he possessed a
+wonderfully pellucid and concise diction. He was a voluminous writer.
+If all the letters he sent across the ocean from America could be
+recovered from the bottom of the Atlantic, there would be enough to
+make several large volumes. Sometimes he dispatched as many as thirty
+letters at one time. He sent them by way of Spain, by way of Holland,
+or by any other roundabout route that offered promise of final
+delivery. But privateersmen frequently captured the boats that carried
+them, and very often the letter-bags were dropped overboard. Still
+another circumstance deprived the world of many of his writings. When
+revolutionists took possession of the Lafayette home in Chaviniac,
+they sought in every nook and cranny to find evidence that they would
+have been glad to use against these representatives of the nobility.
+Madame de Lafayette had carefully stuffed all the letters she could
+find into the maw of the immense old range in the castle kitchen.
+Other treasures were buried in the garden, there to rot before they
+could be found again.
+
+Of the extant writings of Lafayette there are six volumes in French,
+made up of letters and miscellaneous papers, many of them on weighty
+subjects, while numerous letters of Lafayette are to be found among
+the correspondence of George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin
+Franklin, and other statesmen and generals of Revolutionary days.
+
+Of the English language Lafayette's knowledge was mainly gained during
+the six long weeks of his first voyage to America. And what he
+acquired he at once put into practice. He learned the language from
+books, and from good books. As a result his English, both spoken and
+written, had a special polish.
+
+At the Collège du Plessis Lafayette was an industrious student. All
+his life he regarded time as a gift of which the best use was to be
+made, and, according to his own expression, he was "not at liberty to
+lose it himself, and still less to be the occasion of the loss of it
+to others." Therefore he would not, unless it was absolutely
+unavoidable, be unpunctual to engagements, or keep people waiting his
+pleasure. As a boy in college he never had to be urged to study;
+neither was he in any way an unmanageable boy. In spite of the
+intensity of his nature, he never deserved to be chastised.
+
+It should be understood that corporal chastisement was the rule in the
+schools of that time. In the year 1789 one simple-hearted old
+school-master solemnly reported that during the fifty years of his
+experience as teacher he administered nine hundred thousand canings,
+twenty thousand beatings, one hundred thousand slaps, and twenty
+thousand switchings. Among smaller items he mentions ten thousand
+fillips and a million and a quarter raps and hits. He hurled a Bible,
+a catechism, or a singing-book at some hapless child twelve thousand
+times, and caused seven hundred to kneel on peas as a punishment. Then
+he punished eight hundred thousand for not learning their lessons and
+seventy-six thousand for not learning their Bible verses. So much for
+one teacher a half century before Lafayette's day! And people still
+talk and write about "the good old times"!
+
+The surroundings of Lafayette during his youth must have been of a
+kind to develop strength of character. He was to be one of the
+historical personages against whom scandalmongers have not been able
+to unearth a mass of detraction. His close companions during army days
+testified that they never heard him swear or use gross language of any
+kind. As Edward Everett in his great eulogy said, from Lafayette's
+home, his ancestry, his education, his aristocratic marriage, and his
+college life, he "escaped unhurt."
+
+Lafayette's mother took up her residence in Paris in order to be near
+her son. She allowed herself to be presented at court that she might
+be in touch with what was going on and give her boy all the aid
+possible. She saw to it that her uncle should place him in the army
+lists that he might secure the advantage of early promotion.
+
+After a while the tall boy was entered in the regiment of the Black
+Musketeers, and it became a favorite occupation of his to watch the
+picturesque reviews of those highly trained soldiers. This entertainment
+was for holidays, however, and did not interfere with his studies.
+
+It was not for very many years that Lafayette was to profit by his
+highborn mother's devoted care and foresight. In 1770, when her son
+was only thirteen years old, she died in Paris. In a painting on the
+walls of the château to-day the face of that aristocratic lady shines
+out in its delicate beauty. A pointed bodice of cardinal-colored
+velvet folds the slender form and loose sleeves cover the arms. In the
+romantic fashion of the pre-revolutionary period, the arm is held out
+in a dramatic gesture, and one tiny, jeweled hand clasps the
+shepherd's crook, the consecrated symbol of the story-book lady of
+that period.
+
+About the time of her death, one of her uncles passed away, leaving to
+the young student at the Collège du Plessis a large and valuable
+estate. This placed Lafayette in a very advantageous position so far
+as worldly matters were concerned. His fortune being now princely, his
+record at college without blemish, his rank unexceptionable among the
+titles of nobility, he was quickly mentioned as an eligible partner in
+marriage for a young daughter of one of the most influential families
+in France,--a family that lived, said one American observer, in the
+splendor and magnificence of a viceroy, which was little inferior to
+that of a king. This daughter was named, in the grand fashion of the
+French nobility, Marie-Adrienne-Françoise de Noailles. In her family
+she was called simply Adrienne.
+
+Adrienne de Noailles was not old enough to give promise of the
+greatness of character of which she later showed herself possessed;
+but, as it proved, Lafayette found that in her he had a companion who
+was indeed to be his good genius. She became the object of the
+unwavering devotion of his whole life; and she responded with an
+affection that was without limit; she gave a quick and perfect
+understanding to all his projects and his ideals; she followed his
+career with an utterly unselfish zeal; and when heavy sorrows came,
+her courage and her cleverness were Lafayette's resource. Her name
+should appear among those of the world's heroines.
+
+At the time of the proposed alliance, Lafayette was fourteen; the
+suggested fiancée was scarcely twelve. Her mother, the Duchess d'Ayen,
+a woman of great efficiency and of lofty character, knew that the
+Marquis de Lafayette was almost alone in the world, with no one to
+guide him in his further education or to lend aid in advancing his
+career. Moreover, she held that to have so large a fortune was rather
+a disadvantage than otherwise, since it might be a help or a
+hindrance, according to the wisdom of the owner, and she rightly saw
+that the allurements of the Paris of 1770 to an unprotected youth of
+fortune would be almost irresistible. She therefore refused to allow a
+daughter of hers to accept the proposal. For several months she
+withheld her consent, but at last she relented, on consideration that
+the young people should wait for two years before the marriage should
+take place. This admirable mother, who had carefully educated and
+trained her daughters, now took the further education of Lafayette
+into her care; she soon became very fond of him and cherished him as
+tenderly as if he had been her own son.
+
+The marriage took place in Paris on the 11th of April, 1774. It was an
+affair of great splendor. There were many grand banquets; there were
+visits of ceremony, with new and elaborate toilettes for each visit;
+there were numberless beautiful presents, the families represented and
+their many connections vying with each other in the richness and
+fineness of their gifts. Diamonds and jewels in settings of quaint
+design were among them, and besides all these there were the ancestral
+jewels of Julie de la Rivière, the mother of Lafayette, to be
+received by the new bride, and by her handed down to her descendants.
+
+The arrangement was that the wedded pair should make their home with
+the mother of the bride, the young husband paying eight thousand
+livres a year as his share of the expense. The sumptuous home was the
+family mansion of the Noailles family; it was situated in the rue St.
+Honoré, not far from the palace of the Tuileries, at the corner where
+the rue d'Alger has now been cut through. The Hôtel de Noailles it was
+called, and it was so large that to an observer of to-day it would
+appear more like a splendid hotel than like a private residence. When,
+a few years after Lafayette's wedding, John Adams was representing the
+United States in Paris, and was entertained in this palatial home, he
+was so amazed that he could not find words in English or in French to
+describe the elegance and the richness of the residence. In it were
+suites of rooms for several families, for troops of guests, and for
+vast retinues of servants. The building measured from six hundred to
+seven hundred feet from end to end. There were splendid halls and
+galleries and arcades. Toward the street the façade was plain but the
+interior was decorated with astonishing richness. The inner rooms
+faced on a garden so large that a small hunt could be carried on
+within it, with fox, horses, and hounds, all in full cry. Magnificent
+trees waved their branches above the great garden, and rabbits
+burrowed below.
+
+Here was a delightful place for a few people to pursue beautiful
+lives. John Adams made a note of the fact that the Noailles family
+held so many offices under the king that they received no less than
+eighteen million livres (more than three and a half million dollars)
+income each year. It must be remembered that the streets of Paris
+about this time were crowded with a rabble of beggars. But of this the
+dwellers in such magical palaces and parks saw but little and thought
+less.
+
+Conditions such as these give a hint of the causes that led to the
+French Revolution and explain in some degree why thoughts of liberty,
+fraternity, and equality were haunting the minds of the youth of
+France, and, to some of the more open-minded among them, suggesting
+dreams of noble exploit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A BOY'S IDEALS
+
+
+By this time Lafayette was a tall, slender young fellow, of commanding
+height, and with a look of piercing and imperative sincerity in his
+clear, hazel eyes. His hair was red--some one in the family used to
+call him "the big boy with red hair"; but hero worshipers need have no
+misgivings about this characteristic, nor feel that they must
+apologize for it as a defect. Lafayette said of himself that he was an
+awkward boy. It may be that the youth who was rapidly growing to a
+height of "five feet eleven" may have felt, as most boys do at that
+age, as if he were all hands and feet. But that Lafayette was really
+awkward--it is unthinkable! Not one single lady of all the beauties in
+France and America, who handed it down to her descendants that she
+"once danced with Lafayette," ever mentioned the fact that her partner
+lacked any element of grace, while many speak of the ease of manner
+and address of the distinguished man. One friend of Lafayette's early
+days reports that he was too tall to make a distinguished appearance
+on horseback or to dance with special grace; but this was said in a
+period when the dancing-master's art was the ideal of social conduct.
+Those who did not know Lafayette very well at this time thought him
+cold and serious and stiff. Perhaps he was shy; yet beneath that calm
+exterior seethed a volcano of emotion of which no casual onlooker
+dreamed.
+
+Lafayette was fortunate in having a cousin, the Count de Ségur, who
+understood him and who realized that under that surface of gravity was
+hidden, as he said, "a spirit the most active, a character the most
+firm, a soul the most burning with passionate fervor."
+
+After his marriage Lafayette continued his studies at the Collège du
+Plessis, and later he spent a year at the military academy at
+Versailles, that his education as an officer might be complete.
+
+In the summer his inclinations led him to make various journeys to the
+fortified city of Metz, where the regiment "de Noailles" was in garrison
+under the charge of the Prince de Poix who was a brother-in-law of
+Adrienne, Lafayette's wife. On his way back from one of these visits he
+stayed at Chaillot for a time and there was inoculated for smallpox.
+This preventive method was a medical novelty at that time. To submit to
+the experiment showed a great freedom from prejudice on the part of the
+youth. The Duchess d'Ayen had once suffered from the ravages of this
+disease, so she could safely stay with the now adored son-in-law through
+this disagreeable period of seclusion.
+
+Soon after this the youthful Marquis de Lafayette and his shy girl
+bride were presented at court. The benevolent king, Louis XVI, was
+then reigning. The queen, Marie Antoinette, was the head of a social
+life that was elaborately formal and splendid. Marie Antoinette
+herself was young and light-hearted, and was at this time without
+fears from misadventure at the hands of the state or from any personal
+enemies. The king had thousands of servants and attendants in his
+military and personal households. A court scene was a display of knots
+of ribbon, lace ruffles, yellow and pink and sky-blue satin coats,
+shoes with glittering buckles, red-painted heels, and jeweled
+trimmings. Fountains threw their spray aloft, and thousands of candles
+flung radiance broadcast. Said Chateaubriand, "No one has seen
+anything who has not seen the pomp of Versailles." And no one dreamed
+that the end was nearing, or realized that no nation can live when
+the great mass of the people are made to toil, suffer, and die, in
+order that a favored few may have luxuries and amusement.
+
+Into this Vanity Fair the young Marquis de Lafayette was now plunged. The
+grand world flowed to the feet of the Marquis and Marchioness de Lafayette.
+More than that, the queen at once took the tall, distinguished-looking
+young chevalier into the circle of her special friends. The circle included
+some who were to follow Lafayette in his adventure to the New World in aid
+of American independence, and some who were to follow in another long
+procession equally adventurous and as likely to be fatal--the Revolution
+in their own country. During the Terror some of them, including their
+beautiful and well-meaning queen, were to lose their lives. Of any such
+danger as this, these young nobles, in the present state of seemingly
+joyous and abundant prosperity, were farthest from dreaming.
+
+On the whole, however, court life did not have much charm for
+Lafayette. It was a part of the duty of the Marquis and Marchioness de
+Lafayette to take part in the plays and merrymakings that centered
+about a queen who loved amusement only too well. But Lafayette could
+not throw his whole heart into the frivolity of the social sphere in
+which he was now moving. There were features of life at court that he
+could not tolerate. His knee would not crook; he already knew, as
+Everett said, that he was not born "to loiter in an antechamber."
+
+It was liberty itself--the revolt against tyranny in every realm of
+life--that interested him from the first. Lafayette was against
+whatever stood for tyranny, against whatever appeared to be an
+institution that could foster despotism. He believed that the
+well-being of society would be advanced by giving the utmost freedom
+to all, high and low, educated and uneducated. He saw a world in
+chains only waiting for some hero to come along and strike off the
+fetters.
+
+Where did Lafayette, a born aristocrat, get these ideas? Certainly not
+from the peasants as they knelt beside the road when he, their
+prospective liege lord, rode by. He was brought up to believe that it
+was the sacred privilege of the ruling class to throw largesse to the
+poor, who stood aside, waiting and expectant, to receive the gifts.
+
+It is hard to say where Lafayette imbibed his love of freedom. One
+might as well ask where that "wild yeast in the air" comes from that
+used to make the bread rise without "emptins." There was a "wild
+yeast in the air" in the France of 1760 and 1770, and all the young
+people of that country, whether highborn or lowborn, were feeling the
+ferment.
+
+If Lafayette had pursued the course that his circumstances urged, he
+would soon have crystallized into a narrow, subservient character,
+without purpose or ideals. By all the standards of his time, he would be
+thought to be throwing away his life if he should take steps to alienate
+himself from the glittering, laughing, sympathetic friends who stood
+about him at court. All advancement for him appeared to be in line with
+the influences there. But if he had done this, if he had followed the
+star of court preferment, he would have remained only one of many highly
+polished nonentities--and would have lost his head at last. By throwing
+away his life, by choosing the way of self-sacrifice, he won the whole
+world; by throwing away his world, the natural world of compliance and
+ease about him, he won a world, nay, two worlds. He became what Mirabeau
+named him, the "hero of two worlds."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE GREAT INSPIRATION
+
+
+In the summer of 1775 Lafayette was stationed at the French garrison
+of Metz, where the Prince de Poix commanded the regiment "de
+Noailles." While he was there the Duke of Gloucester, brother of
+George III, king of England, came to that city and was present at a
+dinner given in his honor at the house of the governor of the
+garrison, the Count de Broglie. This count was a person of great
+sympathy and discernment. He had been observing the tall, red-haired
+boy of quiet, assured manner and few words, who represented so
+distinguished a family and gave so great promise for a future career.
+Eighteen years before he had seen this boy's father fall in battle, so
+he had a special interest in him. He now included young Lafayette
+among the guests at the dinner.
+
+It appears that the Duke of Gloucester had just received letters from
+England telling about the revolt of the American colonies against the
+British government--about their prejudice in the little matter of a
+tax on tea, and about the strong measures to be taken by the English
+ministry to crush the rebellion. As the Duke of Gloucester was not on
+very good terms with his brother, King George, he told the story with
+somewhat vindictive glee.
+
+This was probably the first that Lafayette had heard of American
+independence. Instantly his sympathy was touched to the quick. All the
+warlike and chivalric sentiments that he had inherited, all that had
+been carefully instilled by family tradition and by education, rose at
+once to the highest intensity. To the long and eager conversations
+that followed the news brought by the guest of the evening, Lafayette
+eagerly listened, and afterwards requested the duke to explain the
+situation more fully. His curiosity was deeply excited, his heart was
+at once enlisted. The idea of a people fighting against oppression
+stirred his imagination. From what he learned from the duke, the cause
+appealed to his sense of justice; it seemed the noblest that could be
+offered to the judgment of man. Before he left the table he had
+determined in his own mind to go to America and offer himself to the
+people who were struggling for freedom and independence.
+
+From that moment his purpose was fixed. To realize his design he must
+go at once to Paris. Arriving there, he confided his plan to his two
+friends, the Viscount de Noailles and the Count de Ségur, inviting
+them to share his project. Noailles had just turned nineteen, and
+Ségur was twenty-two; Lafayette was eighteen. But the youngest
+differed from the others in one respect; he had already come into his
+fortune, and controlled an income of about two thousand livres, an
+amount that in purchasing power represented a fortune such as few
+young men in any country or at any time have commanded. The others
+could contribute nothing to Lafayette's plans but cordial sympathy.
+They did indeed go so far as to consult their parents, expressing
+their desire to join in Lafayette's chivalrous adventure, but their
+parents promptly and emphatically refused consent.
+
+The surprise of the Noailles family can be imagined when they heard
+that the quiet, reserved youth had suddenly decided to cross the sea
+and take up the fragile cause of a few colonists revolting against a
+great monarchy. It was not long before all came to admit that the soul
+of the big boy had in it a goodness and a valor that nothing could
+daunt.
+
+Many, however, who heard about the project Lafayette entertained felt
+a new admiration for the spirited boy. One of these smartly said that
+if Madame de Lafayette's father, the Duc d'Ayen, could have the heart
+to thwart such a son-in-law, he ought never to hope to marry off his
+remaining daughters! It made no difference to this lordly family that
+the tidings of the American revolt were echoing through Europe and
+awakening emotions that those monarchies had never experienced before;
+nor did they notice that the young nobility of France were feeling the
+thrill of a call to serve in a new cause. They were blind to those
+signs of the times; and no one dared to speak of them to the Duke
+d'Ayen, for he, with the other ruling members of the family, violently
+opposed Lafayette's plan.
+
+While these things were going on, word came that those audacious
+colonists had carried their project so far as to issue a Declaration
+of Independence of the British government and to set up for themselves
+as a nation. The Noailles family were amazed, but they could not
+change their point of view.
+
+Not being able to unravel all the threads of destiny that were enmeshing
+him, Lafayette was working in the dark, only knowing that he wanted to
+go, and that he could not bring himself to give up the project. He knew
+also that he must depend solely upon himself. Then there came into his
+mind the motto that he had since boyhood seen upon the shield of one of
+his famous ancestors in the castle at Chaviniac--"Cur non," Why not? He
+adopted this motto for his own and placed it as a device upon his coat of
+arms, that it might be an encouragement to himself as well as an answer
+to the objections of others.
+
+Lafayette consulted his commander and relative, the Count de Broglie.
+He on his part did all he could to dissuade the lad; he pointed out
+that the scheme was Utopian; he showed up its great hazards; he said
+that there was no advantage to be had in going to the aid of those
+insignificant rebels--that there was no glory to be gained. Lafayette
+listened respectfully and said that he hoped his relative would not
+betray his confidence; for, as soon as he could arrange it, go to
+America he would! The Count de Broglie promised not to reveal his
+secret, but he added:
+
+"I have seen your uncle die in the wars of Italy; I witnessed your
+father's death at the battle of Minden; and I will not be accessory to
+the ruin of the only remaining branch of the family."
+
+These things made no impression upon the determination of the young
+hero, and the Count de Broglie was in despair. When he finally found,
+however, that the boy's determination was fixed, he entered into his
+plans with almost paternal tenderness. Though he would give him no
+aid, he introduced him to the Baron de Kalb who was also seeking an
+opportunity to go to America, and he thought his age and experience
+would be of value to the young adventurer.
+
+This Baron de Kalb was an officer in the French army with the rank of
+lieutenant colonel. He was a man of fifty-five, who had served in the
+Seven Years' War and who had been employed by the French government
+ten years before to go secretly to the American colonies in order to
+discover how they stood on the question of their relations with
+England.
+
+At that time there was a representative of the colonies in Paris to
+whom all who felt an interest in American liberty had recourse. This
+man was Silas Deane. To him Lafayette secretly went.
+
+"When I presented to Mr. Deane my boyish face," said Lafayette later
+in life, "I dwelt more (for I was scarcely nineteen years of age) upon
+my ardor in the cause than on my experience."
+
+Naturally, for he had had no experience whatever. But he could speak
+of the effect that his going would have upon France, since because of
+his family and connections notice would surely be taken of his action.
+This might influence other young men and might win favor for the
+colonies in their struggle. Silas Deane was quick to see this and to
+draw up an agreement which he asked Lafayette to sign. It was as
+follows:
+
+"The wish that the Marquis de Lafayette has shown to serve in the army
+of the United States of North America and the interest that he takes
+in the justice of their cause, making him wish for opportunities to
+distinguish himself in the war, and to make himself useful to them as
+much as in him lies; but not being able to obtain the consent of his
+family to serve in a foreign country and to cross the ocean, except on
+the condition that he should go as a general officer, I have believed
+that I could not serve my country and my superiors better than by
+granting to him, in the name of the very honorable Congress, the rank
+of Major-General, which I beg the States to confirm and ratify and to
+send forward his commission to enable him to take and hold rank
+counting from to-day, with the general officers of the same grade. His
+high birth, his connections, the great dignities held by his family at
+this court, his disinterestedness, and, above all, his zeal for the
+freedom of our colonies, have alone been able to induce me to make
+this promise of the said rank of Major-General, in the name of the
+United States. In witness of which I have signed these presents, done
+at Paris, this seventh of October, seventeen hundred and seventy-six."
+
+To this startling document the undaunted boy affixed the following:
+
+"To the above conditions I agree, and promise to start when and how
+Mr. Deane shall judge it proper, to serve the said States with all
+possible zeal, with no allowance nor private salary, reserving to
+myself only the right to return to Europe whenever my family or my
+king shall recall me; done at Paris this seventh day of October, 1776.
+
+(signed) "THE MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE."
+
+About this time Dr. Benjamin Franklin was added to the group of
+American envoys. He was an instant success in the Parisian world. With
+his baggy coat, his coonskin cap, and his one-eyed spectacles,
+Franklin was the admired of all the grand ladies of the court, while
+his ability to "bottle lightning" was a favorite topic for discussion.
+The queen favored Franklin and the American cause; the king also; but
+neither dared to say so openly lest the spies of England, France's
+hereditary enemy, should find it out. Lafayette was obliged to
+preserve the utmost secrecy in making his arrangements and to secure
+the interviews in such a way that no one would suspect what he was
+planning.
+
+Unfortunately, bad news began to come from America. The disasters of
+Long Island and White Plains had befallen, and the English army was
+being reënforced by regiments of Hessians. This news destroyed what
+credit the colonies had in France. No one now had any hope for their
+endeavors, and no one could be found who would consider fitting out a
+vessel for Lafayette and his friends.
+
+The American envoys thought it no more than right to tell this to the
+eager Lafayette and to try to dissuade him from his project to go to
+America. To this end they sent him word to come for another secret
+conference. He did so, and the envoys explained to him the discouraging
+situation.
+
+One of the points wherein this young Lafayette approached nearest to
+greatness was in the way he could face some black disaster, and, with
+an absolutely quenchless spirit and the most adroit cleverness, turn
+the disaster into an advantage. This happened when Lafayette went to
+see these envoys. He received the news with a brow of unruffled calm.
+He thanked Mr. Deane for his kindness in trying to save him from
+disaster. Then he added: "Until now, Sir, you have only seen my ardor
+in your cause; I may now prove to be really useful. I shall myself
+purchase a ship to carry out your officers. We must show our
+confidence in the future of the cause, and it is especially in the
+hour of danger that I wish to share your fortunes."
+
+This reply cast another light upon the circumstances. The American
+envoys regarded the enthusiasm of the young nobleman with approbation;
+the plan was pressed forward, preparations were made to find a vessel,
+to buy it, and fit it out. All this had to be done secretly, as the
+eagerness of Lafayette called for haste.
+
+Meantime, a plan had been made for Lafayette to go on a visit to
+England with his relative, the Prince de Poix. It would be better not
+to interfere with the arrangement already made, it was thought; though
+Lafayette was impatient to carry out his plan for embarking, he wisely
+agreed to visit England first. In this plan Mr. Deane and Dr. Franklin
+concurred.
+
+Lafayette made the journey with the Prince de Poix, and for three
+weeks had a busy time, being richly entertained and observing English
+life. He was in a rather delicate situation, for he was now a guest
+among a people with whom in one respect he could not sympathize and
+toward whom he entertained a hostile feeling. But in all he did he
+carefully drew the line between the honor of the guest and the
+attitude of the diplomatist. Though he went to a dance at the house of
+Lord Germain, minister of the English colonies, and at that of Lord
+Rawdon, who had but just come from New York, and though he made the
+acquaintance of the Clinton whom he was soon to meet on opposing sides
+of the battle line at Monmouth, he chivalrously denied himself the
+pleasure and profit of inspecting the fortifications and seaports
+where ships were being fitted out to fight the American rebels. More
+than that; he openly avowed his feelings about the hazardous and
+plucky attempt of the colonies to free themselves from England; and he
+frankly expressed his joy when news of their success at Trenton was
+received. This very spirit of independence in the young French noble
+made him all the more a favorite among the English who, together with
+their king, did not in the least dream that the foolish rebels across
+the sea could accomplish anything by their fantastic revolt.
+
+Among other acquaintances made in England at this time was one
+Fitzpatrick, whose life was to be strangely mingled with Lafayette's
+in later days. Fighting on opposite sides of the conflict in America,
+they were yet to meet cordially between battles, and Lafayette was to
+send letters in Fitzpatrick's care to his wife in France--letters in
+which he took pains to inclose no matters relating to the war, since
+that would have been unsportsmanlike; still later, owing to a tragic
+concurrence of events, this even-minded and generous Englishman was to
+make persistent appeals to the English government to take measures to
+free Lafayette from a hateful imprisonment in an Austrian stronghold,
+gallant appeals, made, alas, in vain!
+
+As soon as Lafayette could conveniently withdraw from his English
+hosts he did so, and hurried back to Paris, where he kept himself as
+much out of sight as possible until the final preparations for the
+voyage were completed. At last all was ready and Lafayette reached
+Bordeaux where the boat was waiting. Here swift messengers overtook
+him to say that his plans were known at Versailles. Lafayette set
+sail, but he went only as far as Los Pasajos, a small port on the
+north coast of Spain. Here letters of importance awaited the young
+enthusiast, impassioned appeals from his family and commands from his
+king. The sovereign forbade his subject to proceed to the American
+continent under pain of punishment for disobedience; instead, he must
+repair to Marseilles and there await further orders.
+
+Lafayette knew what this meant. His father-in-law was about to go to
+Italy and would pass Marseilles on the way. Lafayette was to be made
+to go with him on an expedition where he knew he would be monotonously
+employed, with no prospect of exercising his energies in any congenial
+project. He was not without many proofs as to what might happen to him
+if he disobeyed these orders and risked the displeasure of the king.
+The Bastille was still standing and the royal power was absolute!
+
+Letters from his wife also made a strong appeal. A little child now
+brightened their home; yet the young husband and father must have
+reflected that his own father had left a young and beautiful wife;
+that the young soldier had torn himself away from his home and bride
+in Chaviniac, following the lure of arms, and had, but a few weeks
+before his own son's birth, rushed off to the battlefield where he ran
+the risk of returning no more. Why should not the son take the same
+risk and leave all for a great cause? To be sure, the father lost in
+the venture, but perhaps the son would not. It was in the Lafayette
+blood to seek for hazard and adventure. Cur non? Why not?
+
+He was convinced that he would do no harm to any one but himself by
+following out his purpose, and he decided not to risk further
+interference from family or ministry. To get away safely he adopted a
+ruse. He started out as if to go to Marseilles; but costuming himself as
+a courier, he proceeded instead toward Los Pasajos, where his ship and
+friends were awaiting him. The masquerade was successful until he reached
+St. Jean de Luz where a hairbreadth escape was in store for him. Here
+certain officers were watching for Lafayette. The clever daughter of an
+innkeeper recognized him as the young nobleman who had passed some days
+before on the way to Bordeaux. A sign from Lafayette was enough to keep
+her from making known her discovery, and he slept, unrecognized, on the
+straw in the stable, while one of his fellow-adventurers played the part
+of passenger. This is why it has been said that but for the clever wit of
+an innkeeper's daughter, Lafayette might have languished for the next few
+years in the Bastille instead of spending them gloriously in aiding us to
+gain our independence.
+
+Lafayette reached Los Pasajos in safety. From the picturesque cliffs
+back of the harbor he saw his ship, _La Victoire_--name of good
+omen!--lying at anchor. There was the happy meeting of friends who
+were to share his adventures and successes in the New World, and on
+the 20th of April, 1777, they sailed forth on their voyage.
+
+Two letters followed the enthusiastic fugitive. One was from Silas
+Deane, who testified to the American Congress that a young French
+nobleman of exalted family connections and great wealth had started
+for America in order to serve in the American army. He affirmed that
+those who censured his act as imprudent still applauded his spirit;
+and he assured Congress that any respect shown Lafayette in America
+would be appreciated by his powerful relations, by the court, and by
+the whole French nation.
+
+The other letter was a royal mandate calling upon the American
+Congress to refuse all employment whatsoever to the young Marquis de
+Lafayette. The first letter traveled fast; the second missive was
+subjected to intentional delays and did not reach its destination
+until Lafayette had been made an officer in the American army.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+FIRST DAYS IN AMERICA
+
+
+"Here one day follows another, and what is worse, they are all alike.
+Nothing but sky and nothing but water; and to-morrow it will be just
+the same."
+
+So wrote the restless Lafayette when he had been four weeks on the
+ship. The time had thus far been spent, after a sharp affliction of
+seasickness, in studying books on military science, and on the natural
+features of the country he was approaching.
+
+In time land-birds were seen, and he sat down to write to Adrienne a
+fifteen-hundred-word letter which should be sent back by the first
+returning ship.
+
+"It is from very far that I am writing to you, dear heart," he began,
+"and to this cruel separation is added the still more dreadful
+uncertainty of the time when I shall hear from you again. I hope,
+however, that it is not far distant, for, of all the many causes that
+make me long to get ashore again, there is nothing that increases my
+impatience like this."
+
+The thought of his little daughter Henriette comes forward again and
+again. "Henriette is so delightful that she has made me in love with
+all little girls," he wrote.
+
+Never did a more gallant company set sail than these young noblemen of
+France who were following a course across the sea only a little more
+northerly than that which Columbus first traced, and with something of
+the same high hazard that inspired the great discoverer. Their names
+should be remembered by a people that profited by their bravery.
+Besides the Baron de Kalb, with his fifty-five years, and the Viscount
+de Maury (who rode out of Bordeaux as a grand gentleman while the
+disguised Lafayette went before as courier), there was Major de Gimat,
+first aid-de-camp to Lafayette and always his special favorite, who
+gave up his horse to his young commander, thereby saving his life at
+the battle of Brandywine, and who was wounded in an attack on a
+redoubt at Yorktown. Then there was Captain de la Colombe who, after
+the close of the war in America, pursued closely the fortunes of
+Lafayette, following him even into prison. There was Colonel de
+Valfort who, in later years, became an Instructor of Napoleon; and
+Major de Buysson who was at the battle of Camden and brought word of
+the eleven wounds that were needed to cause the death of the intrepid
+Baron de Kalb. The list included still other names of members of noble
+families in France.
+
+Something was indeed happening to the youth of France in 1750 and
+1760. A restless ardor, a love of adventure, a love of glory, together
+with the bewitchment of that beautiful word "liberty," were among the
+motives that inspired their actions. They went into the military
+service at fourteen or even earlier, and were colonels of regiments at
+twenty-two or twenty-four. They were "sick for breathing and exploit."
+
+An amusing story is told of one of these adventurous boys. He got into
+a quarrel with a school-mate about the real positions of the Athenians
+and Persians at the battle of Platæa. He even made a small wager on it
+and then set out to find whether he had been right or not. He actually
+went on foot to Marseilles and from there sailed as cabin-boy to
+Greece, Alexandria, and Constantinople. There a French ambassador
+caught the young investigator and sent him home! Before he was
+twenty-four, however, he was in America, covering himself with glory
+at Germantown and at Red Bank. This was the kind of youths they were;
+and many thrilling stories could be told about the lives of these
+gallant young Frenchmen.
+
+And how young they were! More than a hundred of the French officers
+who came to America to serve in the Revolution were in the early
+twenties. There were a few seasoned old warriors, of course, but the
+majority of them were young. Such were the companions-in-arms of
+Lafayette, himself still in his teens.
+
+Lafayette's voyage was not without adventure. He had a heavy ship with
+but two inferior cannon and a few guns--he could not have escaped from
+the smallest privateer. But should they be attacked, he resolved to
+blow up the ship rather than surrender. When they had gone some forty
+leagues, they met a small ship. The captain turned pale; but the crew
+were now much attached to Lafayette and had great confidence in him,
+and the officers were numerous. They made a show of resistance; but it
+proved to be only a friendly American ship.
+
+As they proceeded on their way, Lafayette noticed that the captain was
+not keeping the boat due west. He commanded that the point aimed for
+should be Charleston, South Carolina. The man was evidently turning
+southward toward the West Indies, this being the sea-crossing lane at
+that time. Lafayette soon found out that the captain had smuggled
+aboard a cargo which he intended to sell in a southern port. Only by
+promising to pay the captain the large sum he would have made by that
+bargain did Lafayette succeed in getting him to sail directly to the
+coast of the colonies.
+
+After a seven weeks' voyage the coast was near. Unfortunately, it
+swarmed with hostile English vessels, but after sailing for several
+days along the shore, Lafayette met with an extraordinary piece of
+good fortune. A sudden gale of wind blew away the frigates for a short
+time, and his vessel passed without encountering either friend or foe.
+
+They were now near Charleston; but in order to reach the harbor they were
+obliged to go ashore in the ship's yawl to inquire their way and if
+possible to find a pilot. Lafayette took with him in the small boat the
+Baron de Kalb, Mr. Price, an American, the Chevalier de Buysson, and some
+of the other officers, together with seven men to row. Night came on as
+they were making toward a light they saw on shore. At last a voice called
+out to them. They answered, telling who they were and asking for a
+night's shelter. They were cordially invited to come ashore and into a
+house, where they were received with great hospitality by the owner.
+They found themselves in the summer residence of Major Benjamin Huger
+(pronounced as if spelled Eugee), member of a notable Carolina family
+having French Huguenot antecedents, who, when he learned the purpose of
+the visitors, did everything in his power to make them comfortable and to
+further them on their way.
+
+It was one of the curious coincidences that make up so large a part of
+the story of Lafayette's life that the first family to meet him on his
+arrival in this country had in its circle a small child who, when he
+grew up, was to take upon himself the dangerous task of rescuing
+Lafayette from the prison in which he was unjustly immured. That story
+will be told in its proper place.
+
+Lafayette was soon in Charleston, making preparations for the long
+journey to Philadelphia, where Congress was in session at that time.
+He was charmed with everything he found.
+
+The Chevalier de Buysson has left us a description of the uncomfortable
+journey to Philadelphia. The procession was as follows: first came one of
+Lafayette's companions in hussar uniform; next, Lafayette's carriage--a
+clumsy contrivance which was a sort of covered sofa on four springs; at
+the side one of his servants rode as a squire. The Baron de Kalb
+occupied the carriage with Lafayette. Two colonels, Lafayette's
+counselors, rode in a second carriage; the third was for the aids, the
+fourth for the luggage, and the rear was brought up by a negro on
+horseback. By the time they had traveled four days, the bad roads had
+reduced the carriages to splinters, the horses gave out, and buying
+others took all the ready money. After that the party traveled on foot,
+often sleeping in the woods. They were almost dead with hunger; they were
+exhausted with the heat; several were suffering from fever. After thirty
+days of this discouraging travel, they at last reached Philadelphia.
+
+No campaign in Europe, declared de Buysson, could have been more
+difficult than this journey; but, he said, they were encouraged by the
+bright prospects of the reception they would surely have when they
+reached Philadelphia. All were animated by the same spirit, he said,
+and added, "The enthusiasm of Lafayette would have incited all the
+rest of us if any one had been less courageous than he."
+
+But the reception of these wayworn strangers at the seat of government
+proved to be rather dubious. It appeared that at this time Congress
+was being bothered by many applications from foreigners who demanded
+high rank in the American army. The Committee of Foreign Affairs,
+being practical men of business, looked askance at men who traveled
+three thousand miles to help an unknown people; they did not wholly
+believe in the disinterested motives of the strangers; and they
+allowed Lafayette and his French officers to trail from office to
+office, presenting their credentials to inattentive ears.
+
+Finally that sense of power which always buoyed Lafayette's spirit in
+critical moments came to his rescue. He determined to gain a hearing.
+He wrote to Congress a letter in which he said:
+
+"After the sacrifices that I have made in this cause, I have the right
+to ask two favors at your hands; one is that I may serve without pay,
+at my own expense; and the other is that I may be allowed to serve at
+first as a volunteer."
+
+Congress was clear-sighted enough to recognize in this letter a spirit
+quite different from that which had seemed to actuate some of the
+foreign aspirants for glory. And by this time they had received an
+informing letter from Silas Deane; so they hastened to pass a
+resolution (on July 31, 1777) accepting Lafayette's services and "in
+consideration of his zeal, illustrious family, and connections," they
+bestowed on him the rank of Major General in the Army of the United
+States.
+
+The second letter with its royal command from Louis XVI might now
+follow, but it could have no effect. Lafayette was definitely
+committed to the American cause to which, as he said in his answer to
+Congress, the feelings of his heart had engaged him; a cause whose
+import concerned the honor, virtue, and universal happiness of
+mankind, as well as being one that drew from him the warmest affection
+for a nation who, by its resistance of tyranny, exhibited to the
+universe so fine an example of justice and courage.
+
+Lafayette's letter to Congress asked that he might be placed as near
+to General Washington as possible and serve under his command.
+
+A day or two after this a military dinner was given in Philadelphia
+which was attended by General Washington. Lafayette also was invited.
+That was Lafayette's first introduction to Washington. Lafayette had
+admired Washington almost from the time he first heard his name. To
+the young Frenchman, the occasion was momentous. He now saw before him
+a man whose face was somewhat grave and serious yet not stern. On the
+contrary, it was softened by a most gracious and amiable smile. He
+observed that the General was affable in manner and that he conversed
+with his officers familiarly and gayly. General Washington, with his
+customary prudence, looked closely at the nineteen-year-old volunteer,
+and wondered whether the stuff was to be found in that slight figure
+and intent gaze that would make a helper of value to the colonies, one
+whose judgment and loyalty could be relied upon. It must be that his
+decision was favorable to the youth, for after the dinner he drew him
+aside and conversed with him in the friendliest way. He spoke with him
+of his plans and aspirations, showed that he appreciated Lafayette's
+sacrifices, and that he realized the greatness of the effort he had
+made in order to bring aid to the colonies. Then Washington invited
+him to become one of his military family, which offer Lafayette
+accepted with the same frankness with which it was made.
+
+Perhaps Lafayette was in a mood to be pleased, for in spite of the
+assailing mosquitoes at night and the many difficulties he had to
+overcome, everything he saw in America gave him great satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAFAYETTE AT THE BRANDYWINE
+
+
+When Lafayette joined the army at Washington's headquarters, a few
+miles north of Philadelphia, he was very much surprised by what he
+saw. Instead of the ample proportions and regular system of European
+encampments, with the glitter and finish of their appointments;
+instead of feather-trimmed hats and violet-colored facings, with
+marching and countermarching in the precision and grace of a minuet,
+he saw a small army of eleven thousand men, poorly clad, with nothing
+that could by the utmost courtesy be called a uniform, and woefully
+lacking in knowledge of military tactics.
+
+But Lafayette had on his rose-colored spectacles. The pitiful
+condition of the American soldiers awakened nothing but sympathy in
+his heart--never any contempt. In spite of their disadvantages, he
+perceived that they had in them the making of fine soldiers, and that
+they were being led by zealous officers.
+
+Lafayette, now a major general in the American army, attended the
+councils of war and stood by Washington when he reviewed the troops.
+When the General took occasion to speak rather apologetically of the
+deficiencies in his little army, suggesting that Lafayette must feel
+the difference between these untrained soldiers and those he was
+accustomed to see, Lafayette had the self-possession and tact to
+answer that he had come to America to learn, not to teach. This answer
+charmed Washington and endeared the young French officer to the whole
+army.
+
+Washington, having heard that an English fleet was coming up
+Chesapeake Bay, moved south to meet the portentous army that he knew
+would promptly be debarked. On their way south the American troops had
+to pass through the city of Philadelphia. In view of the dark
+forebodings that the approach of the English was causing in the minds
+of the people, Washington was desirous that the soldiers should make
+as fine an appearance as possible in passing through the city, and
+made special regulations for that day. The army was to march in one
+column through the city; the order of divisions was stated; each
+officer without exception was to keep his post with a certain space
+between, no more and no less; each brigadier was to appoint patrols
+to arrest stragglers from the camp and all others of the army who did
+not obey this order; the drums and fifes of each brigade were to be
+collected in the center of it, and a tune for the quickstep was to be
+played; but it must be played with such moderation that the men could
+keep step to it with ease.
+
+An army that needed admonitions like these could still awaken
+enthusiasm from spectators. The austere commander in chief looked very
+handsome as he passed; the slim, eager-eyed French major general rode
+at his side; every window shone with curious and admiring eyes and the
+sidewalks were crowded with applauding citizens. The men could not
+help catching the spirit of the occasion; each soldier stuck a sprig
+of green in his hat to make up as far as possible for the lack of fine
+uniforms and military brilliancy.
+
+They were on their way to the place which was to be the scene of the
+battle of Brandywine, one of the most disastrous defeats of the
+Revolution. At the head of Chesapeake Bay the English had landed a
+large and finely equipped army, and from that point they threatened
+Philadelphia. Washington, with an inferior and poorly furnished force,
+placed his army in form to receive the attack at the Birmingham
+meetinghouse near Chad's Ford on Brandywine Creek, a point about
+fifty miles south of Philadelphia.
+
+Lafayette accompanied General Washington to the battle. His rank of
+major general gave him no command. Practically, he was a volunteer.
+But when he saw that the American troops were in danger of defeat
+before the superior English force, he asked to be allowed to go to the
+front. He plunged into the midst of the panic that followed the
+failure of the American line to stand up before the galling fire of
+the well-trained British soldiers. The retreat was rapidly becoming a
+panic. At this point Lafayette sprang from his horse and rushed in
+among the soldiers; by starting forward in the very face of the enemy
+and calling the disorganized men to follow, he did all in his power to
+induce the men to form and make a stand. It was impossible. The odds
+were too great against the Americans. Lafayette and the other generals
+waited until the British were within twenty yards of them before they
+retired.
+
+But at the height of the confusion, when Lafayette was too excited to
+notice it, a musket ball struck his left leg just below the knee. Of
+this he was unconscious until one of the generals called his attention
+to the fact that blood was running over the top of his boot. Lafayette
+was helped to remount his horse by his faithful aid, Major de Gimat,
+and insisted on remaining with the troops until the loss of blood made
+him too weak to go further. Then he stopped long enough to have a
+bandage placed on his leg.
+
+Night was coming on. The American troops were going pellmell up the
+road toward Chester. There was horrible confusion, and darkness was
+coming on. At a bridge just south of Chester, the American soldiers
+were at the point of complete disorganization. Seeing the great need
+for some decisive mind to bring order out of this chaos, Lafayette
+made a stand and placed guards along the road. Finally Washington came
+up and made Lafayette give himself into the hands of the surgeons. At
+midnight Washington wrote to Congress, and in his letter he praised
+the bravery of the young French soldier. Lafayette had passed his
+twentieth birthday but four days before.
+
+General Washington was happy to have this French officer proved by
+test of battle and to find his favorable judgment more than warranted.
+He showed the most tender solicitude for his young friend and gave him
+into the care of the surgeons with instructions to do all in their
+power for him, and to treat him as if he were his own son.
+
+Lafayette's spirits were not in the least dashed. When the doctors
+gathered round to stanch the blood, expressing their apprehensions for
+his safety, he looked at the wound and pluckily exclaimed,
+
+"Never mind, gentlemen; I would not take fifteen hundred guineas for
+that."
+
+It was partly this buoyant, merry spirit that made Lafayette win all
+hearts. To the army he was now no stranger. His broken English was
+becoming more and more understandable. But words were not necessary;
+the look in his eyes said that he was a fearless and sincere man; that
+he had not come to this country to "show off," but from a true love
+for the principles for which he had offered his sword. Never was there
+a more complete adoption than that of Lafayette by the American army.
+
+Lafayette's first care on reaching Philadelphia was to write to
+Adrienne lest she should receive exaggerated news concerning his
+wound.
+
+"It was a mere trifle," he wrote. "All I fear is that you should not
+have received my letter. As General Howe is giving in the meantime
+rather pompous details of his American exploits to the king his
+master, if he should write word that I am wounded, he may also write
+word that I am killed, which would not cost him anything; but I hope
+that my friends, and you especially, will not give faith to reports of
+those persons who last year dared to publish that General Washington
+and all the general officers of his army, being in a boat together,
+had been upset and every individual drowned."
+
+Years afterwards when Lafayette, then an elderly man, revisited our
+country, he referred to his wound in these gracious words: "The honor
+to have mingled my blood with that of many other American soldiers on
+the heights of the Brandywine has been to me a source of pride and
+delight."
+
+After a few days it was thought wise to take the wounded Lafayette to
+a quieter place. So Henry Laurens, the President of Congress, who
+happened to be passing on his way to York, Pennsylvania, whither
+Congress had removed, took him in his traveling carriage to Bethlehem,
+where dwelt a community of Moravians, in whose gentle care Lafayette
+was left for the four wearisome weeks of convalescence.
+
+"Be perfectly at ease about me," he wrote Adrienne. "All the faculty
+in America are engaged in my service. I have a friend who has spoken
+to them in such a manner that I am certain of being well attended to;
+that friend is General Washington. This excellent man, whose talents
+and virtues I admired, and whom I have learned to revere as I have
+come to know him better, has now become my intimate friend; his
+affectionate interest in me instantly won my heart. I am established
+in his house and we live together like two attached brothers with
+mutual confidence and cordiality."
+
+Again Lafayette writes: "Our General is a man formed in truth for this
+revolution, which could not have been accomplished without him. I see
+him more intimately than any other man, and I see that he is worthy of
+the adoration of his country.... His name will be revered in every age
+by all true lovers of liberty and humanity."
+
+At last Lafayette was well enough to go into service again. He
+requested permission this time to join General Greene who was making
+an expedition into New Jersey in the hope of crippling the force of
+Lord Cornwallis. Lafayette was given command of a detachment of three
+hundred men, and with these he reconnoitered a situation Lord
+Cornwallis was holding at Gloucester opposite Philadelphia. Here he
+came so near to the English that he could plainly see them carrying
+provisions across the river to aid in the projected taking of the
+city, and he so heedlessly exposed himself to danger that he might
+easily have been shot or imprisoned if the English had been alert. By
+urgent entreaty he was called back. After gaining this information, he
+met a detachment of Hessians in the service of the British army, and
+though they numbered more than his own detachment, he succeeded in
+driving them back. In the management of this enterprise he showed
+great skill, both in the vigor of his attack and in the caution of his
+return. He took twenty prisoners. General Greene, in reporting to
+Washington, said that Lafayette seemed determined to be found in the
+way of danger.
+
+General Washington was now convinced that the titled volunteer could
+be trusted with a command. He wrote to Congress as follows:
+
+"It is my opinion that the command of troops in that state cannot be in
+better hands than the Marquis's. He possesses uncommon military talents;
+is of a quick and sound judgment; persevering and enterprising, without
+rashness; and besides these, he is of a conciliating temper and perfectly
+sober,--which are qualities that rarely combine in the same person. And
+were I to add that some men will gain as much experience in the course of
+three or four years as some others will in ten or a dozen, you cannot
+deny the fact and attack me on that ground."
+
+On this recommendation, Lafayette was appointed to the command of a
+division composed entirely of Virginians. Needless to say he was
+overjoyed; for though the division was weak in point of numbers, and
+in a state of destitution as to clothing, he was promised cloth for
+uniforms and he hoped to have recruits of whom he could make soldiers.
+
+When Lafayette enlisted in the American army, he was not to lack for
+companionship. John Laurens had come from his study of history and
+military tactics at Geneva and, leaving his young wife and child
+behind, even as Lafayette had done, had rushed home to serve his
+country in her need. Alexander Hamilton was now both military aid and
+trusted adviser and secretary to General Washington. These three young
+men, all boys at the same time in different quarters of the globe, had
+come together while still in early youth and were entering into the
+great work of the American Revolution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A SUCCESSFUL FAILURE
+
+
+It was on the 20th of December that Lafayette received the joyful news
+of the birth of a second daughter. She was named Anastasie. The whole
+camp shared in the happiness of the young father. In fact, the affairs
+of the young hero interested everybody so much that there was indeed
+some danger that he would be spoiled. And he certainly would have been
+but for the balance of good judgment and mental poise that offset
+youthful rashness and vanity.
+
+At about the same time, in a long letter to his father-in-law, he
+explained the course of action he had marked out for himself. He said:
+"I read, I study, I examine, I listen, I reflect; and the result of
+all is the endeavor at forming an opinion into which I infuse as much
+common sense as possible. I will not talk much, for fear of saying
+foolish things; for I am not disposed to abuse the confidence which
+the Americans have kindly placed in me."
+
+This was Lafayette's real spirit and his secret counsel to himself;
+and we can but wonder that a young man so impetuous, so enthusiastic,
+one who had had the courage to start out on this hazardous enterprise,
+should have combined with those qualities so cool and steady a
+judgment and so rigid a self-control. But it was just this combination
+of qualities that led Lafayette on to his successes.
+
+There was, however, severe discipline in store for him. His strength
+of purpose was to be put to a sharp test. This came about in two ways:
+first, in the stern ordeal of the winter at Valley Forge, and
+afterwards in the expedition into the wilderness north of Albany.
+
+Everybody knows what the hardships of the American army were in those
+dark days of the Revolution, the winter of 1777-78. Washington had
+suffered defeat and disaster; but he, like his faithful followers, was
+of the temper that could not be depressed. At Valley Forge the men
+built a city of wooden huts, and these afforded at least a shelter
+from the storms, though they were scarcely better than dungeons. Their
+sufferings were terrible. They were inadequately clothed; many had
+neither coats, hats, shirts, nor shoes; they were in want of food;
+illness followed. Many had to have feet or legs amputated because of
+the effects of freezing. Lafayette had to see all this, and to him
+their patient endurance seemed nothing short of miraculous.
+
+He even tried to make merry a little over their sad situation, and
+over the nearness of the British army, for he wrote to his wife, "I
+cannot tell whether it will be convenient for General Howe to make us
+a visit in our new settlement; but we shall try to receive him with
+proper consideration if he does."
+
+For the moment the American cause was under a cloud. Should Lafayette
+return to France now? If he did, this would have been the interpretation
+of his act--he had lost faith in the American undertaking. This belief
+would have been heralded throughout the British army and would soon have
+been echoed in France. Lafayette did not wish to shoulder the
+responsibility of the effect his withdrawal might have on the hopes of
+help from French sympathy and French resources, and on the determination
+of other recruits who might come over and bring aid. He decided to remain
+with Washington and the American army and share whatever fate might be
+theirs. So Lafayette courageously remained. Accustomed to a life of
+luxury, he nevertheless adapted himself at once to the melancholy
+conditions at Valley Forge.
+
+There was a strange surprise awaiting Lafayette when he came to know
+the American situation more intimately. Before he left Europe, his
+sincere mind had clothed the cause of liberty in this country in the
+most rosy colors. He thought that here almost every man was a lover of
+liberty who would rather die free than live a slave. Before leaving
+France he thought that all good Americans were united in one mind, and
+that confidence in the commander in chief was universal and unbounded;
+he now believed that if Washington were lost to America, the
+Revolution would not survive six months. He found that there were open
+dissensions in Congress; that there were parties who hated one
+another; people were criticizing without knowing anything about war
+methods; and there were many small jealousies. All this disheartened
+him greatly; he felt that it would be disastrous if slavery, dishonor,
+ruin, and the unhappiness of a whole world should result from trifling
+differences between a few jealous-minded men.
+
+After a time the disaffected ones in the army tried to win Lafayette
+from his close allegiance to Washington. They entertained him with
+ideas of glory and shining projects--a clever way to entice him into
+their schemes. Deceived for a time, he received their proffers of
+friendship and their flattering compliments, but when he noted that
+some of them were able to speak slightingly and even disrespectfully
+of the commander in chief, he dashed the temptation away with absolute
+contempt.
+
+Filled with the desire to ward off all possible peril from an influence
+which he knew would disrupt the American cause, he impetuously started in
+to help. He sought an interview with Washington, but not finding an early
+opportunity for this, he wrote him a long and noble letter which has been
+preserved. In it he said:
+
+"I am now fixed to your fate, and I shall follow it and sustain it by
+my sword as by all means in my power. You will pardon my importunity
+in favor of the sentiment which dictated it. Youth and friendship make
+me, perhaps, too warm, but I feel the greatest concern at all that has
+happened for some time since."
+
+In answer to this impulsive and true-hearted letter, General Washington
+wrote one of the most distinctive and characteristic of all the hundreds
+of letters of his that are preserved. He said:
+
+"Your letter of yesterday conveyed to me fresh proof of that
+friendship and attachment which I have happily experienced since the
+first of our acquaintance and for which I entertain sentiments of the
+purest affection. It will ever constitute part of my happiness to know
+that I stand well in your opinion because I am satisfied that you can
+have no views to answer by throwing out false colors, and that you
+possess a mind too exalted to condescend to low arts and intrigues to
+acquire a reputation."
+
+It must have been welcome to the harassed heart of the man who stood
+at the head of so great a cause to receive the proofs of this young
+man's friendship and of his absolutely loyal support. Washington
+closed the letter with these gracious and inspiriting words:
+
+"Happy, thrice happy, would it have been for this army, and for the
+cause we are embarked in, if the same generous spirit had pervaded all
+the actors in it.... But we must not, in so great a contest, expect to
+meet with nothing but sunshine. I have no doubt that everything
+happens for the best, that we shall triumph over all our misfortunes,
+and in the end be happy; when, my dear Marquis, if you will give me
+your company in Virginia, we will laugh at our past difficulties and
+the folly of others; and I will endeavor, by every civility in my
+power, to show you how much and how sincerely I am your affectionate
+and obedient servant."
+
+The political conspiracy developed into what is known in history as
+the "Cabal." Thwarted in their attempt to draw into their interests
+the man whose importance to them, as representing in an unofficial way
+the French influence in America, was fully appreciated, they hatched a
+scheme that should remove him from the side and from the influence of
+Washington. This scheme consisted of a project on paper to send an
+expedition into Canada, in order to win the people there to join the
+American revolt, if possible to do so, by persuasion or by force. The
+plan had many features that appealed to Lafayette.
+
+The conspirators of the Cabal had carried a measure in Congress to
+give Lafayette the promise of an independent command, and the
+commission for this was inclosed to General Washington. He handed it
+to the major general, who had so lately joined the army as a
+volunteer, with the simple words, "I would rather they had selected
+you for this than any other man."
+
+But Lafayette loyally put aside the tempting prospect of winning
+personal glory in the Old World and the New by this expedition, and
+declined to receive any commission from Congress that would make him
+independent of Washington. He would serve only as a subordinate of the
+commander in chief, as one detailed for special duties. He wished to
+be called "General and Commander of the Northern Army," not commander
+in chief. Congress accepted the condition.
+
+It was in this way, then, that Lafayette received the title of
+"General," a distinction that he valued more than that of Marquis, and
+that to the end of his days he preferred above all other titles.
+
+With characteristic enthusiasm Lafayette proceeded to York, where
+Congress was then assembled, and where the members of the conspiracy
+were living in comfort that contrasted curiously with the conditions
+surrounding General Washington at Valley Forge. At a dinner given
+while Lafayette was there, the northern expedition and Lafayette's
+brilliant prospects were made themes of praise. But Lafayette missed
+one name from the list of toasts; at the end of the dinner he arose
+and, calling attention to the omission, he proposed the name of the
+commander in chief. In silence the men drank the toast; they had
+learned by this time that the young French noble was made of
+unmanageable material.
+
+With a heart, however, for any fate, Lafayette started on the long,
+wearisome journey northward. There were rivers deep and swift to
+cross; the roads were bad and the wintry storms made them worse.
+Floating ice crowded the fords. Rain and hail and snow and slush made
+up a disheartening monotony.
+
+It certainly was dismal. On his way north the young general was made
+happy, however, by receiving a "sweet parcel of letters," telling him
+that his family were very well and that they were keeping in loving
+remembrance the man who was called in France, "The American Enthusiast."
+This warmed his heart as he plodded northward through the storm.
+
+On Lafayette's arrival at Albany, he found that none of the promises
+made to him as to supplies, available men, money, and other necessary
+equipment had been kept; and the judgment of advisers who knew the
+difficulties of a northern excursion in the depth of winter was
+against the expedition. Lafayette was exasperated and wrote frantic
+letters to Washington, to Congress, and to Henry Laurens.
+
+But it was of no avail. The expedition had to be given up. Lafayette
+remained at Albany during the months of February and March, giving his
+personal credit to pay many of the men and to satisfy other demands,
+and taking up various duties and projects. For one thing, he went up
+the Mohawk River to attend a large council of the Iroquois Indians.
+This was Lafayette's first official contact with the red men, and he
+at once manifested a friendship for them and an understanding of
+their nature that won their hearts. He sent one of his French
+engineers to build a fort for the Oneidas, and he was present at a
+grand treaty ceremony. A band of Iroquois braves followed Lafayette
+southward and later formed part of a division under his command.
+
+It was a discomfited but not a despairing young warrior who returned
+in April to Valley Forge. But joy was before him. The Cabal had
+vanished before the storm of loyalty to Washington that gathered when
+the conspiracy was discovered. Moreover, Lafayette received from
+Congress a testimonial, saying that they entertained a high sense of
+his prudence, his activity, and his zeal, and they believed that
+nothing would have been wanting on his part, or on the part of the
+officers who accompanied him, to give the expedition the utmost
+possible effect, if Congress had not thought it impracticable to
+prosecute it further. Better still, on the 2d of May came the great
+news that a treaty of commerce and alliance had been signed between
+France and the United States of America.
+
+This event caused a wild wave of joy to spread over the whole country.
+This treaty assured the permanence of the United States as a nation.
+To be sure, the war with England must still be carried on, but now
+that France was an ally they would have more hope and courage.
+
+In the doleful camp at Valley Forge there was the sincerest gratification
+and delight. A national salute of thirteen cannon was ordered; a
+thanksgiving sermon was preached; a fine dinner was served for the
+officers, and the table was made more delightful by the presence of Mrs.
+Washington, Lady Stirling, Mrs. Greene, and other wives and daughters of
+generals.
+
+Lafayette took part in these scenes of rejoicing, but there was a
+reason why, underneath it all, his heart was heavy. Almost with the
+letters announcing the joyous news of the treaty, came others telling
+him of the death, in October, 1777, of his little daughter Henriette,
+of whom he had said that he hoped their relationship would be more
+that of friends than of parent and child. This happiness was not to be
+theirs. Lafayette now thought that he had never realized before what
+it meant to be so far away from his home. The thought of Henriette and
+of the grief of Adrienne, which he was not able by his presence to
+help assuage, was with him every moment of the day; but even while his
+heart was heavy with grief, he felt that he must attend and bear his
+part in the public rejoicings.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+LAFAYETTE AT MONMOUTH
+
+
+The alliance with France put a new color upon every phase of the American
+contest. If, for instance, a French fleet should be already on its way
+across the Atlantic, and should enter Chesapeake Bay and threaten
+Philadelphia, the English would have to evacuate that city and retire to
+New York, risking the danger of being intercepted on the way by
+Washington's army. In view of such a possibility as this, the commander
+in chief of the American army held a council of war in which it was
+decided that they were not strong enough to risk a decisive engagement.
+It was, however, highly important that exact information should be gained
+as to the movements of the British around Philadelphia. In order that
+this might be accomplished, General Washington detached a group of
+soldiery from among the most able and valued of his army, and put them
+under Lafayette, with instructions to proceed into the country between
+the Delaware and Schuylkill, and there interrupt communications with
+Philadelphia, obstruct the incursions of the enemy's parties, and obtain
+intelligence of their motives and designs.
+
+Lafayette was overjoyed at being chosen for so important a charge; and
+on the 24th of May, 1778, he started out with about twenty-two hundred
+men. His force included the band of Iroquois warriors who had come
+from Albany to follow his fortunes, and who, because of their
+knowledge of forest-craft, were invaluable as scouts. The British
+could command about four times as many soldiers as had been assigned
+to Lafayette, but their intention was to keep the American force out
+of their way and, if possible, to avoid a direct encounter.
+
+For his camp Lafayette selected a piece of rising ground near the
+eleventh milestone north of Philadelphia, where there was a church, a
+grave-yard, and a few stone houses that might afford some protection
+in case of attack, and where four country roads led out to the four
+points of the compass. The place was called Barren Hill--name of
+ill-omen! But the fate of the day proved not altogether unfortunate
+for the young and intrepid commander.
+
+Naturally, the people in Philadelphia had heard of the approach of the
+young French noble whose fame had been ringing in their ears, and they
+prepared to go out and engage him--capture him, if possible. At that
+time they were indulging in a grand, week-long festival, with
+masquerades, dancing, and fireworks; and in anticipation of the quick
+capture of the young French hero, a special party was invited for the
+next evening at which the guests were promised the pleasure of meeting
+the distinguished prisoner.
+
+Lafayette had chosen his position in a region he had carefully
+examined. But the English were able to send bodies of troops up all
+the traveled approaches to the hill. While Lafayette was planning to
+send a spy to Philadelphia to find out, as Washington had directed,
+what preparations were there being made, the cry suddenly arose in his
+camp that they were being surrounded. It was a terrible moment. But
+Lafayette had this great quality--the power of being self-possessed
+under sudden danger. He did not lose his head, and he instantly
+thought of a plan of escape.
+
+There was a dilapidated road that his keen eye had detected leading
+along beneath a high bank which protected it from observation. He
+directed the main body of his men to pass down that old road, while a
+small number were commanded to make a pretense of a demonstration near
+the church; others were to show some false heads of columns along the
+edge of the forest by the stone houses. These were withdrawn as the
+main body of soldiers disappeared down the hidden road and began to
+dot the surface of the river with their bobbing heads as they swam
+across. Lafayette and his loyal aid-de-camp, Major de Gimat, brought
+up the rear with the remainder of the men, whom they transferred
+across the river without loss. Then they formed on the farther bank
+and determined to contest the ford if the British followed. But the
+British had marched up the hill from the two opposite sides, simply
+meeting each other at the top; they then marched down again and did
+not seem to be in any mind to pursue their enemy further.
+
+The only real encounter of that serio-comic day's adventures took
+place between the band of Iroquois and a company of Hessians in the
+pay of the British. The Indians were concealed in the brush at the
+side of the road when the Hessians, with waving black plumes in their
+tall hats and mounted on spirited horses, came along. The Indians rose
+as if from under the ground, giving their war whoop as they sprang.
+The horses, unused to this form of war cry, started back and fled far
+and wide; and the Indians, never having seen soldiers so accoutered,
+were as frightened as if confronted by evil spirits, and swiftly made
+good their escape from the impending "bad medicine."
+
+The British carried their chagrin with them back to Philadelphia, and
+the diners were disappointed in their guest of honor. Next morning
+Lafayette returned to the top of Barren Hill, thence marched back to
+Valley Forge, and there relieved the anxiety of General Washington who
+had feared for his safety.
+
+But the incident of Barren Hill, while it was not in any way an engagement,
+must be looked upon as a serious matter after all, for it gave Lafayette
+an opportunity to show that he was cool and self-possessed in a critical
+moment, and that he was clever and resourceful in finding ways to extricate
+himself from difficulties--both essential qualities in one who is to be
+trusted with great enterprises.
+
+In about a month the anticipated event took place--the British
+evacuated Philadelphia; and, with a baggage-train eleven miles long,
+started northward with the intention of joining forces with the army
+at New York.
+
+The question now was whether the army under General Washington should
+leave Valley Forge and with their inferior force make an attempt to
+intercept the British and bring on a battle. Several councils of war
+were held; one of special importance at Hopewell, a place north of
+Valley Forge, where the project of preparing for attack was earnestly
+favored by Lafayette, together with General Greene and Colonel
+Alexander Hamilton, but violently (and unaccountably at that time)
+opposed by General Lee. This council has been made the subject of one
+of the reliefs on the celebrated Monmouth Battle Monument. In this
+design Washington is represented as standing by the table in the
+center of the group, while Lafayette is spreading the map before the
+council and urging them to make a strong demonstration against the
+British, even if it should bring on a battle.
+
+The various generals sit about the table and each expresses in his
+attitude what his feelings are in this crisis. Steuben and Duportail
+(at the extreme left) evidently agree with Lafayette, and eagerly
+press for compliance with his plan. General Patterson (seated at the
+table) is of the same mind, and so is the true-hearted Greene (seated
+at the right of Patterson). Brave Colonel Scammel (between Washington
+and Lafayette), Washington's Adjutant General, carefully notes the
+opinion of each for the guidance of his chief. Back in the shadow sits
+the treacherous General Lee, who looks sulky and is evidently planning
+mischief. The homely rooftree covers a critical scene in the history
+of the Revolution.
+
+ [Illustration: _From a photograph by Norman L. Coe & Son._
+ THE COUNCIL AT HOPEWELL.
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor J.E. Kelly, appears on
+ the Monmouth Battle Monument. It shows a conference of
+ Washington and his generals. Lafayette is shown standing
+ opposite to Washington.]
+
+Finally, Washington turned to General Wayne (behind Greene) and said,
+
+"Well, General, what would _you_ do?"
+
+"Fight, Sir!" crisply replied the ardent and indomitable Wayne--an
+answer that pleased alike the commander in chief and the young
+volunteer major general, to whom it seemed an intolerable insult that
+a hostile army should be allowed to march through one's own country
+unchallenged.
+
+General Lee was determined that the British should be allowed to pass
+through New Jersey without molestation. His sympathies were afterwards
+found to have been entirely with the British. At any rate, Washington
+did not follow his advice. He sent out men to fell trees in the
+enemy's path, to burn bridges before them, and to harass them as much
+as possible; and he forwarded detachments of such size that he needed
+a major general to take command of that branch of his army. The
+position was offered first to General Lee. He refused to take it.
+General Washington was then free to offer it to Lafayette, who
+accepted it with delight.
+
+As these plans were being matured, General Lee suddenly changed his
+mind and announced that he would take command of the advance force;
+and he appealed to Lafayette's generosity to allow him to do so, even
+after having once given his refusal. Lafayette unselfishly resigned
+the command. It is the opinion of historians that the outcome of the
+battle of Monmouth would have been very different if the American side
+had been left in the capable hands of the young Lafayette.
+
+The battle of Monmouth, which took place on the 28th of June, was
+widely scattered in its action over a hot and sandy plain. The outcome
+was that General Lee first brought his troops face to face with the
+enemy, and then, instead of leading on to the attack, gave the order
+for retreat. Afterwards, in the court-martial of Lee, it was made
+evident that the movement of the troops as ordered by Lee would have
+left Lafayette and his detachment abandoned in an extremely exposed
+position on the open plain, the troops that should have supported him
+having been withdrawn by Lee's orders and directed to retreat.
+Lafayette and the other generals felt great bitterness on that day
+because they had been swept into battle but had not been allowed to
+strike a blow.
+
+Everybody knows how Washington rode up, and when he saw the retreat,
+how he indignantly reproved General Lee and commanded the battalions
+to turn back and form in position for battle. Lafayette was in command
+of a division stationed at the second line under Lord Stirling who
+sustained the left wing; they were now placed on an eminence behind a
+morass and there played the batteries to such good effect that they
+were able to check the advance of the British. This halt gave
+Washington time to place his army to advantage. The British were
+driven from a strong position they had taken, and before dark the
+American troops had turned the British back. That night they lay upon
+the field in bright moonlight, and while Washington and Lafayette
+discussed the possible outcome of the next day, the British were
+silently withdrawing from the Monmouth plains. The next morning all
+had disappeared except some forty of their wounded. At Sandy Hook,
+where the British army crossed to New York, it was learned that they
+had lost about two thousand men by desertions and by losses at
+Monmouth. Many of the soldiers on both sides had died from the extreme
+heat on that 28th of June.
+
+During the battle Lafayette was master of himself. Almost fifty years
+later, Colonel Willett related that in the hottest of the fight he
+saw Lafayette ride up to one of the officers and, in a voice cool,
+steady, and slow, and with as much deliberation as if nothing exciting
+prevailed, say,
+
+"General, the enemy is making an attempt to cut off our right wing;
+march to his assistance with all your force."
+
+So saying he galloped off. Colonel Willett remembered that he was
+exceedingly well mounted, though plainly dressed, and "very sedate in
+his air for a Frenchman."
+
+A number of situations arose soon after this in which Lafayette found
+himself of great use. The French fleet under Count d'Estaing appeared
+near Delaware Bay and sailed up the coast. Washington was at White
+Plains. The British held New York. It was thought that the French
+fleet could accomplish much by going to Newport and there coöperating
+with the land forces. Lafayette was given a detachment and commanded
+to proceed to Providence where he was to stand ready to give all
+possible aid.
+
+But he was doomed to still another disappointment. The French fleet
+arrived off Point Judith near Newport; visits of ceremony were
+exchanged by the French and American generals; preparations were made;
+but through misunderstandings, the plans never worked out to an
+actual engagement. Before anything was accomplished, a severe storm
+overtook the fleet, and it withdrew to Boston for necessary repairs.
+
+During this trying time, Lafayette was a trusted resource to
+Washington, who devoutly wished to reconcile all differences and to
+bring peace out of dissension. For this Lafayette had peculiar
+qualities, as he understood the character of both the French and the
+Americans, and believed absolutely in the good intentions of the
+officers on both sides. Twice he rode to Boston and back again to help
+in settling some difficulty, making on one of those occasions a
+journey of seventy miles, at night, in six and a half hours--a feat
+paralleled only by Sheridan's famous ride to Winchester.
+
+But the fleet sailed away, bearing many disappointments with it,
+though much good had been done by its coming; it meant that the
+American cause had received definite encouragement from France.
+
+It was now October of 1778 and autumn weather was closing the campaign
+of the year. The sending of the French fleet to our shores had been
+virtually a declaration that a state of war existed between France and
+England, and the thought that this might develop into an actual war in
+which Lafayette, after his practical experience and training in the
+Continental army, could take part and win glory, inclined him strongly
+at this point to return to his native land. Permission was given to
+him to do this. The proper farewells, official and private, were made,
+and Lafayette started on his way to Boston where he was to embark.
+
+But the strain of the summer's excitement and overwork had been too
+much for Lafayette, and at Fishkill he was taken ill with a violent
+fever which prostrated him for some weeks. The greatest concern was
+felt for his life; the soldiers' love for him was shown by their great
+solicitude, and General Washington called upon him every day.
+
+Lafayette slowly recovered and finally resumed his journey to Boston,
+where he went on board the _Alliance_ which the government had given
+him to take him to France. At the moment of sailing he sent a letter
+to General Washington, in which he said:
+
+"Farewell, my dear General. I hope your French friends will ever be
+dear to you. I hope I shall soon see you again and tell you myself
+with what emotions I now leave the land you inhabit, and with what
+affection and respect I shall ever be your sincere friend."
+
+They set sail for Havre on the 11th of January, 1779. The voyage was
+not to be without adventure. They sailed into the teeth of a terrible
+three days' storm. Lafayette, as usual, was very seasick, and, as
+usual, was much discouraged thereby. For a time glory and fame had no
+charms for him! He declared he was surely going where he had wished to
+send all the English--namely, to the bottom of the sea!
+
+Still worse was to follow. No sooner was the storm over than another
+danger loomed up. The ship's crew included a number of renegade
+English sailors who conspired to mutiny, to overwhelm the officers,
+and to kill the crew and passengers. By including in their confidence
+an American sailor, whom they mistook for an Irishman, their plot came
+to naught. Lafayette summoned the whole crew, put thirty-three
+mutineers in chains, and thus saved himself from capture and the ship
+from being towed into a British port as a prize. Shortly after this
+Lafayette brought the frigate into the harbor of Brest, where he had
+the pleasure of seeing, for the first time, the American flag receive
+the national salute as the symbol of an acknowledged sister nation in
+alliance with his native country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE RETURN TO FRANCE
+
+
+When Lafayette learned of the birth of his little daughter Anastasie,
+whom he now ardently desired to see, he wrote to his wife:
+
+"What expressions can my tenderness find sufficiently strong for our
+dear Anastasie? You will find them in your own heart, and in mine,
+which is equally open to you.... That poor little child must supply
+all that we have lost."
+
+Letters like this would give great consolation to Madame de Lafayette,
+but alas, they came at long intervals, since many of her husband's
+long epistles never reached her. Therefore Adrienne felt his absence
+the more keenly, while rumors and exaggerated reports from America
+made her days an agony. When, however, he returned to France in
+February, 1779, her happiness was beyond all expression.
+
+Adrienne's joy was increased by the fact that while her rash young
+husband had left his native land under a cloud, because it was
+understood that he did so against the command of the king, his return
+was that of a conqueror, triumphant and in favor.
+
+He was not allowed, however, wholly to forget his formal error. His
+appeal to Adrienne for forgiveness for his absence was one that he had to
+make to others. His father-in-law testified in a letter that, so far as
+he was concerned, the recreant might be freely forgiven. Adrienne was
+only too willing to receive the one who had left her to go on a mission
+to the other side of the world; but what about the king whose command not
+to leave the shores of France he had practically disobeyed? Many a man
+had been shut up in the Bastille because of a much smaller offense.
+
+Lafayette was brought to the court at Versailles by his relative, the
+Prince de Poix. The king received him and graciously accorded a
+punishment. He was to suffer imprisonment for the space of _one
+week_--his prison to be the grand residence of his father-in-law, the
+Hôtel de Noailles! After that his pardon was to be freely granted by
+his Majesty, with this warning--that he should avoid public places for
+a time lest the people should manifest their admiration for his
+disobedient conduct by their applause.
+
+The king's warning was not indeed without reason. But there was no use
+in trying to keep the impressionable French people from worshiping a
+hero after their hearts had been captured by him. The gallantry and
+the human-heartedness of Lafayette, as well as the ideals he
+held--ideals that were becoming more and more captivating to the fancy
+and to the reason of the French nation--contributed to make him the
+favorite of the hour. A passage from a certain play never failed to
+receive enthusiastic applause from the audiences because it was held
+by all to be susceptible of direct application to Lafayette; and this
+passage the queen copied in her own hand because she thought of him
+when she read it. It dwelt upon the union of mature and youthful
+qualities in a character, and ran as follows:
+
+ "Why talk of youth
+ When all the ripe experience of the old
+ Dwells with him? In his schemes profound and cool
+ He acts with wise precaution, and reserves
+ For times of action, his impetuous fire.
+ To guard the camp, to scale the 'leaguered wall,
+ Or dare the hottest of the fight, are toils
+ That suit the impetuous bearing of his youth;
+ Yet like the gray-haired veteran he can shun
+ The field of peril. Still before my eyes
+ I place his bright example, for I love
+ His lofty courage, and his prudent thought;
+ Gifted like him, a warrior has no age."
+
+The queen's copy of this passage was given to Madame de Campan, the
+revered teacher of the young ladies of the court, and it met the fate
+of being burned on the very day Marie Antoinette's sad life came to an
+end at the hands of the executioner during the height of the Terror.
+
+The queen had shown her interest in Lafayette's arrival by arranging
+to have an interview with the young hero when he was making his first
+visit to Versailles. At her suggestion Lafayette was now advanced by
+the king to be commander of an important regiment in the army of
+France, the king's own Dragoons. He was stationed at Saintes and
+afterwards at St. Jean-d'Angely, near Rochefort, where the regiment
+was conveniently quartered to be ready in case a project for the
+invasion of England by way of the British Channel should be carried
+out. Such a plan was under consideration, and Lafayette looked forward
+with delight to the prospect of action against the country which he
+considered the ancient foe of France.
+
+But, to Lafayette's great grief, the plot to invade England failed;
+and he was now free to return to Paris and Versailles. The failure of
+the British plan also made it rather easier for the minds of
+prominent officials to look toward taking some further part in the
+American struggle. To aid this Lafayette gladly applied himself; for
+while loyal always to his own nation, and standing ready at any point
+to leave all to serve France, he had not for a moment forgotten the
+needs of his adopted country across the Atlantic. In fact, when he
+reached home, he had not waited for his one week's punishment to be
+over before beginning to create interest in the cause for which he had
+risked his life. Benjamin Franklin, then ambassador to the court of
+France from the United States, was promptly allowed, under pretense of
+calling upon Lafayette's father-in-law, to visit Lafayette himself.
+
+There was a constant stream of callers coming to see and congratulate
+him, and never was there one among them who was permitted to
+misunderstand the fact that Lafayette wished to move heaven and earth
+to secure help for the Continental army in its struggle for freedom.
+He found himself, in a more important sense than ever before, the tie
+between France and America, for he enjoyed the confidence of both
+countries.
+
+To Washington he wrote: "If there is anything in France concerning
+which not only as a soldier but as a politician, or in any other
+capacity, I can employ my exertions to the advantage of the United
+States, I hope it is unnecessary to say that I shall seize the
+opportunity and bless the day which shall render me useful to those
+whom I love with all the ardor and frankness of my heart."
+
+General Washington, on his part, wrote to Lafayette in this wise:
+
+"It gives me infinite pleasure to hear from your sovereign of the joy
+that your safe arrival in France has diffused among your friends....
+Your forward zeal in the cause of liberty, your singular attachment to
+this infant world, your ardent and persevering efforts not only in
+America, but since your return to France, to serve the United States,
+your polite attentions to Americans, and your strict and uniform
+friendship for me, have ripened the first impressions of esteem and
+attachment which I imbibed for you into such perfect love and
+gratitude, as neither time nor absence can impair. This will warrant
+my assuring you that whether in the character of an officer at the
+head of a corps of gallant Frenchmen if circumstances should require
+this, whether as major-general commanding a division of the American
+army, or whether, after our swords and spears have given place to the
+plowshare and pruning-hook, I see you as a private gentleman, a friend
+and companion, I shall welcome you with all the warmth of friendship
+to Columbia's shores; and in the latter case, to my rural cottage,
+where homely fare and a cordial reception shall be substituted for
+delicacies and costly living. This, from past experience, I know you
+can submit to; and if the lovely partner of your happiness will
+consent to participate with us in such rural entertainments and
+amusements, I can undertake on behalf of Mrs. Washington that she will
+do all in her power to make Virginia agreeable to the Marchioness. My
+inclination and endeavors to do this cannot be doubted, when I assure
+you that I love everybody that is dear to you."
+
+Such a visit as this the Marchioness was never to pay. And we can not
+blame her if, during her husband's brief visits, she felt like
+complaining that he absorbed himself in the interests of the American
+cause or was always planning fresh enterprises. But though she was now
+only nineteen years old, she was proving herself the high-minded woman
+who could sympathize entirely with her husband's ideals, and who could
+consider him dedicated to a great cause; therefore she could
+cheerfully lay aside merely selfish wishes. No one ever heard a
+complaint from her absolutely loyal lips. In December, 1779, the
+family was made happy by the birth of a son, to whom, in honor of his
+illustrious friend, Lafayette gave the name of George Washington.
+
+Lafayette had many testimonials from his friends in the United States
+showing their appreciation of his efforts for them; and among them was
+one of special import. It consisted of a sword richly ornamented, with
+a handle of solid gold, sent to him by the American Congress. To
+Franklin was intrusted the pleasant task of providing this rich gift.
+It was made in Paris and was engraved with representations of the
+actions in which Lafayette had taken part, together with his coat of
+arms, his chosen motto "Cur non?" and other emblematic designs
+selected by Franklin; and Franklin's grandson had the honor of
+conveying to Lafayette this testimonial of a nation's appreciation.
+
+"By the help of the exquisite artists of France," graciously wrote
+Franklin in an accompanying letter, "I find it easy to express
+everything but the sense we have of your worth."
+
+Lafayette may have been in a fair way to be spoiled, but if he was he
+had a happy way of concealing it. He answered, "In some of the devices
+I cannot help finding too honorable a reward for those slight services
+which, in concert with my fellow-soldiers, and under the god-like
+American hero's orders, I had the good fortune to render."
+
+This beautiful sword was in the course of time to meet with ill luck.
+When Revolutionists rifled the Château de Chaviniac, it was buried for
+safe-keeping and remained thus hidden for many years. Long afterwards
+Lafayette's son, George Washington Lafayette, grown to young manhood,
+unearthed the treasure and found that the blade was totally rusted
+away. Lafayette then had the happy thought of adjusting to this handle
+of pure gold the blade of a sword that had been made out of bolts and
+bars taken from the Bastille. Thus the associations of both worlds and
+of two struggles for freedom were united in one historic sword.
+
+There came a time when Lafayette felt himself warranted in presenting
+a Memoir to the Cabinet on the subject of giving direct relief to
+America. His plan, from a military standpoint, was masterly, and it
+produced so favorable an impression that it was accepted; and it soon
+became known to those worthy to be in the secret that France would
+send to America a reinforcement of six ships and six thousand men of
+the regular infantry. To this was added a loan of three million
+livres, and later still, through the appeals of Franklin, another loan
+of the same amount was supplied. The Count de Rochambeau, a trained
+soldier, was chosen to command the land forces and the Count de Ternay
+was to be admiral of the fleet. Lafayette was sent ahead to announce
+this happy news and to make preparations for the arrival of the
+expedition.
+
+Wearing the uniform of an American officer, Lafayette took his leave
+of the king; and on the 4th of March, 1780, he sailed on the frigate
+_Hermione_. He reached Boston harbor on the 28th of April, 1780, after
+an absence of fifteen months. When word swept through the city that a
+ship was coming in with Lafayette on board, the people crowded to the
+wharf to welcome the returning French friend of America. This was the
+beginning of civic processions in Lafayette's honor. They cheered him
+from the ship's side to the residence of Governor Hancock where
+addresses were listened to and congratulations exchanged. He called
+upon the Legislature then in session, and in the evening viewed the
+illuminations in his honor. Lafayette gave a dinner on board the ship
+to which he invited a large number of officials--the president of the
+Massachusetts Council, members of the legislature, the consul of
+France, and other men of dignity. The frigate was gayly decorated with
+the flags of many nations. Thirteen toasts were drunk--the number
+thirteen cannot have been an unlucky number in those days!--and after
+the toast to Washington the great guns boomed seventeen times.
+
+As rapidly as possible Lafayette rode to Washington's headquarters at
+Morristown, New Jersey, and made his happy announcement to the General
+himself. He then pressed on to Philadelphia to present to Congress the
+communication from the French government. He bore also a letter from
+Washington, in which the commander in chief introduced Lafayette as
+one who had "signally distinguished himself in the service of this
+country," and who, during the time that he had been in France, had
+"uniformly manifested the same zeal in our affairs which animated his
+conduct while he was among us"; who had been "on all occasions an
+essential friend to America."
+
+The greatest possible effort was now made to equip the Continental
+army, but the resources of the country had already been grievously
+overtaxed. Washington had hardly been able to keep his army together
+at all. Half of his six thousand men were unfit for duty. They had
+sometimes had no bread for six days; sometimes for two or three days
+they would have neither meat nor bread. The commander clearly realized
+that an army reduced to nothing, without provisions or any of the
+necessary means to carry on a war, needed not a little help only--it
+needed a great deal.
+
+When, on the 2d of May, the French fleet finally set sail, delays had
+reduced the number of soldiers and the amount of supplies. The English
+by this time had realized what was happening, and they carefully
+blockaded the second division of the squadron in the harbor of Brest;
+and when the first division reached Newport, the English cleverly
+surrounded the harbor with their ships, thus "bottling up" the French
+and rendering them inactive and useless. In this way the great good
+that was expected from the French expedition came to naught.
+
+During all this trying time, Lafayette acted the part of a single-minded
+friend of both the French and the American armies. He was sent by
+Washington to Newport to confer with the French generals, and later he
+was present at a joint meeting of the great French and American generals
+which was held at Hartford, Connecticut. Lafayette rode from one army to
+the other, holding conferences and putting important decisions into
+writing, or dictating the results of conversations. Many of these
+documents have been preserved in French or American state archives.
+
+Whatever time he could get apart from these labors he spent in
+training the battalion that had been assigned to him. This was a
+detachment of light infantry, selected from the best of the army. He
+took great pride in training these men, sent to France for black and
+white plumes for their caps, and tried to make them present as good an
+appearance as possible. The Marquis de Chastellux, who visited his
+camp on the Ramapo River, has left a delightful description of this
+visit in which he spoke of the fine appearance of the troops as their
+young commander had drawn them up on a height near his own station.
+Here, said Chastellux, Lafayette received his guest with more pride
+than if he had been entertaining at his estates in Auvergne. "Happy
+his country," said Chastellux, "if she employs his services; happier
+still if she has no use for them!"
+
+It was during this autumn that Benedict Arnold made what Lafayette
+called that "horrid compact with the enemy"--an event that amazed and
+distressed him beyond any words. Lafayette was with Washington when
+the plot was discovered. He was also a member of the board to try the
+British spy, André. His attitude toward André was very different from
+that toward Benedict Arnold. André, he said, conducted himself in a
+manner so frank, so noble, and so delicate, that he could not help
+feeling infinite sorrow for him.
+
+The winter of 1780-81 was the darkest period of the war. But it was to
+be followed by a happier season, one in which Lafayette was at last to
+have as large a share of action as his heart could wish.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+LAFAYETTE IN VIRGINIA
+
+
+The British still held the city of New York. General Washington's army
+sat in their impregnable camps on the Hudson and along the Delaware,
+where he could reach out a hand to New England on the east, and to
+Philadelphia on the south, at the same time threatening now and then
+the stronghold of the British. Meantime an active campaign was being
+carried on in the states south of Virginia. At the battle of
+Charleston the brave General Lincoln and his gallant army were
+compelled by the British to lay down their arms and give themselves up
+as prisoners of war without the usual courtesies. The ceremony of
+surrender was particularly galling. Forbidden by their conquerors to
+play a British or a Hessian air, they marched to the joyous melody of
+"Yankee Doodle," their colors cased, and their hearts rebellious. The
+battle of Camden was another defeat for the Americans. On that
+disastrous day fell the companion of Lafayette's first voyage, the
+Baron de Kalb, who died bravely after receiving no less than eleven
+wounds. Sir Henry Clinton, the British commander in the south, thought
+that defeats like these would finish the question for that part of the
+country, so he gave out proclamations of amnesty to the tractable and
+built scaffolds to hang the unsubmissive. But the south was not to be
+so easily subdued. The British met with defeat at King's Mountain, and
+in October, 1780, General Greene was sent to push the southern
+campaign more vigorously.
+
+One result of these southern disasters was to make the importance of
+Virginia increasingly evident as a base for operations in the
+Carolinas. Cornwallis saw this and he determined to reduce that state,
+to cut off the southern army from its base, and thus to control the
+approaches to the heart of the country. Accordingly, in January, 1781,
+he sent Benedict Arnold, who had been made a brigadier general in the
+British army, with a strong force, and with two trusted British
+colonels, to conduct a campaign in that state.
+
+If the British commander in chief had wished to fill the men of the
+Continental army with a fire that would make them unconquerable, this was
+the way to do it, and this was the man against whom they most desired to
+fight. On the other hand, General Washington chose a leader for the
+defense who was so well beloved by his men, and who was himself filled
+with so fiery an enthusiasm for the cause, that this alone would have
+been enough to bring into effect all the strength of those drained and
+exhausted men and to energize them for prodigies of valor. This leader
+was Lafayette. In February, 1781, he was commissioned to go against
+Arnold.
+
+Lafayette was glad to be trusted with a command and overjoyed at the
+prospect of action. But he still believed that the great final blow
+was to be struck at New York and he was most reluctant to be separated
+from Washington with whom he intensely longed to be when the great
+climax came. However, he obeyed orders with perfect alacrity and
+planned for a swift march in order to intercept any efforts on the
+part of Arnold to obtain access to the various storehouses and river
+crossings in Virginia. Leaving under guard his tents, artillery, and
+everything that could be spared, with orders to follow as rapidly as
+possible, he marched his men through heavy rains and over bad roads.
+
+The Virginia campaign, says a French historian, is to be ranked among
+the classic tales of all time; and in this campaign the young
+Lafayette was the most notable leader. It was on the 6th of April,
+1781, that General Washington wrote to Lafayette, giving him full
+instructions, which led him into the midst of active service.
+
+Lafayette's detachment included men from New Jersey, from New
+Hampshire, and from other New England states. Among them were some of
+the men who had been willing to take their lives in their hands and
+follow their young leader on the hazardous expedition into Canada.
+Although the men had no idea at this time what was before them, they
+were now going to follow Lafayette to the glory that he so ardently
+desired.
+
+But in spite of the splendid spirit of the troops, Lafayette found
+that they were in sore need of encouragement. They saw that they were
+not going toward the grand final attack; they were not used to the
+blind obedience exacted from trained European troops; and they did not
+understand this discouraging southward move.
+
+Fearing that the summer would be wasted, Lafayette thought of a device
+to strengthen the tie between himself and his detachment. He wrote it
+down in the order of the day that they were about to start out on an
+expedition that would tax all a soldier's powers, and in which there
+would be abundant dangers and difficulties. The enemy, he said, was
+far superior to them in numbers, thoroughly despised them, and was
+determined to conquer them. He added that no soldier should accompany
+him who was inclined to abandon him; nor was it necessary that any one
+should desert; for any man could, if he desired, have a pass and be
+sent to join his regiment in winter quarters.
+
+This method of approach had more than the desired effect. Lafayette
+soon wrote to Washington: "Our men are in high spirits. Their honor
+was interested, and murmurs as well as desertions are entirely out of
+fashion."
+
+Soon after the advent of Lafayette in the Virginia field, he came into
+contact with Benedict Arnold in a very curious way. The commander of
+the opposing British forces had died, and Arnold took his place. About
+that time Arnold sent a message under a flag of truce to Lafayette.
+When Lafayette learned that the letter which was brought in was from
+the traitor, he returned it unopened, sending a verbal message stating
+that with Benedict Arnold he would hold no communication whatever.
+Later he sent a formal letter to the officer that had brought the
+flag, in which he declined all correspondence with Arnold, but added
+with the utmost courtesy that "in case any other British officer
+should honour him with a letter, he would always be happy to give the
+officers every testimony of esteem."
+
+The subject of the letter from Arnold was an exchange of prisoners, a
+matter that interested him extremely, as he well knew that Lafayette
+could hardly have pleased the American people better than by
+presenting Benedict Arnold to them a prisoner. We know that Arnold's
+mind dwelt on this aspect of his sad situation from the fact that he
+once quizzed a captured American to find out what the Americans would
+do with him if they took him prisoner. The soldier audaciously replied
+that they would "cut off the leg that had been wounded in the
+country's service and hang the rest of him!" Lafayette's action in
+regard to the letter from Arnold was very gratifying to Washington; he
+said that in nothing had Lafayette pleased him more than in refusing
+to hold communication with Benedict Arnold.
+
+Soon after this Arnold was transferred to New York, and Cornwallis
+came forward with reënforcements, declaring that he would now "proceed
+to dislodge Lafayette from Richmond." The struggle between the young
+French officer (not yet twenty-four years old) in his first attempt
+at carrying on an independent campaign, and the veteran British
+commander with years of service behind him, was now taken up with more
+spirit than ever before. It was the crisis of the Revolution. If the
+Continental army could only hold out a little longer, it might be
+possible, by adroit advance and diplomatic retreat, to avoid unequal
+battles until the foe was worn out or until some favorable opportunity
+should arise for a direct attack. Cornwallis, of course, despised his
+exhausted enemy. A letter from him was intercepted and brought into
+the American camp; in the letter he said, "The Boy cannot escape me!"
+Lafayette's face must have been set in very grim lines when he read
+that letter.
+
+Technically, Lafayette had been taking orders from General Greene whose
+command was in the south and included Virginia. But on the 18th of May,
+Lafayette was ordered to take the entire command in Virginia and to send
+all reports directly to General Washington. "The Boy's" letters to
+Colonel Hamilton show that he fully recognized the gravity of affairs,
+the responsibility of his position, and the dangers of his own
+over-enthusiastic spirit. The British command of the adjacent waters, the
+superiority of their cavalry, and the great disproportion in the forces
+of the two armies, gave the enemy such advantages that Lafayette dared
+not venture to engage the British. The British generals thoroughly
+understood what they called Lafayette's "gasconading disposition," and
+they relied upon it to work woe to his plans and to contribute to their
+own glory. His prudence disappointed them as much as it satisfied
+Washington who had said of Lafayette, "This noble soldier combines all
+the military fire of youth with an unusual maturity of judgment."
+Lafayette desired to be worthy of this high praise.
+
+On April 29, Lafayette and his light infantry reached Richmond in time
+to prevent its capture and to protect the supplies that had been
+concentrated there. In the battle at Green Spring his bravery led him
+once more to plunge into the thick of the fight, losing his horse
+(some reports say two horses) which was shot under him or by his side.
+
+In Wayne's official report on that battle he said that "Lafayette was
+frequently requested to keep at a greater distance, but his native
+bravery rendered him deaf to the admonition."
+
+He compelled the admiration of his opponents by his skill in defensive
+maneuvers. The "Boy" obeyed his commander in chief, and he succeeded
+in misleading his foe, for Cornwallis believed that the American force
+was larger than it actually was; he also believed that he could break
+down the loyalty of the inhabitants of Pennsylvania and of Virginia.
+In both these points he was direfully mistaken. But Lafayette had high
+respect for Cornwallis as a general. "His Lordship plays so well," he
+complained, "that no blunder can be hoped from him to recover a bad
+step of ours."
+
+Finally, reënforcements did come to Lafayette. In despair the American
+Congress sent a special messenger express to Paris to bear one more
+urgent appeal for help. Washington wrote, "We are at the end of our
+tether; ... now or never our deliverance must come."
+
+Impetuous young John Laurens was chosen to be this Ambassador
+Extraordinary to France. Laurens was greatly admired and loved by
+Lafayette and he recommended him to the affections of his noble
+relatives in Paris. At the moment Laurens's father was being held a
+prisoner by the British in the Tower of London--a fact that no doubt
+quickened the zeal of the son. At all events, he was successful in his
+mission. The French fleet in the West Indies was ordered to the United
+States and the king himself became surety for several millions of
+livres in addition to what had already been sent to our aid.
+
+The time was coming when Lafayette could begin to move the British
+army before him little by little down the York River toward Yorktown,
+a method of procedure that now became, as the British reports
+described it, the "constant and good policy of the enemy." On the 24th
+of September, 1781, Cornwallis proceeded to occupy Yorktown and to
+strengthen it against attack.
+
+The city of Yorktown is situated near the entrance to Chesapeake Bay.
+At that place two rivers enter the bay, the York and the James, and
+upon a conspicuous bluff on the northern side of the neck of land
+between them stood this small town.
+
+Cornwallis began at once to prepare the place for assault. Around the
+village he built a series of fortifications consisting of seven redoubts
+and six batteries on the land side, and these he connected by
+intrenchments. He placed a line of batteries on the river bank to command
+the channel, and he established outworks to impede the approach of the
+enemy. Lafayette saw all this and rejoiced, for he believed that
+Cornwallis was at last where he most desired to have him--in a place
+where he would be open to attack, and with some hope of success. All the
+country around Yorktown was now familiar to Lafayette. He knew every
+inch of the land, the river, the morass, and the commanding hill. "Should
+a fleet come in at this moment, affairs would take a very happy turn," he
+wrote joyfully to General Washington.
+
+On the 30th of August the French fleet, under the Count de Grasse,
+with twenty-eight ships of the line, appeared in the waters of
+Chesapeake Bay; a few days later the Marquis de Saint Simon, field
+marshal in the French army, debarked a large reënforcement of French
+troops; and on the 4th of September Lafayette moved nearer to Yorktown
+and took a position with the troops he could bring together,--his own
+light infantry, the militia, and the reënforcements at Williamsburg, a
+town in the vicinity of the British position.
+
+Nothing now remained but the arrival of General Washington himself to
+take charge of the whole enterprise, and Lafayette's happiness was
+complete when, on the 14th of September, he resigned his command into
+the hands of his revered General.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE TWO REDOUBTS
+
+
+It is September, 1781. The "Boy" has not been caught. He is encamped
+at Williamsburg, and looks toward his powerful enemy who is surrounded
+by well-devised intrenchments at Yorktown, twelve miles down the
+river.
+
+The American and French troops, fifteen or sixteen thousand in number,
+arrived and took their places. General Washington was in supreme
+command. America had never before seen such an army. The Americans had
+done their utmost. That part of the French army that had come down
+from Connecticut with Rochambeau had astonished the people of
+Philadelphia as they marched through the city by the brilliancy of
+their rose-and-violet-faced uniforms, and by the display of their
+graceful and accurate military movements. Now they were to have an
+opportunity to show whether their warlike spirit was expressed chiefly
+in ruffles and tinsel trimmings, or whether they could win fame by
+more solid qualities.
+
+On the 29th of September the combined American and French armies moved
+southward to a point about four miles from the town. There they
+divided into two columns and the Americans defiled to the right, the
+French to the left. They then proceeded to arrange themselves around
+the town in an irregular semicircle that extended from the river bank
+at the west to the shore on the southeast, a distance of about two
+miles. Toward the southern side were ranged the various American
+regiments under Baron Steuben and General Wayne; and next to these
+stood what was called the Light Infantry corps under Lafayette. He had
+ventured to suggest to General Washington that he wished his division
+might be composed of the troops that had been with him through the
+fatigues and dangers of the Virginia campaign; this, he said, would be
+the greatest reward he could have for the services he might have
+rendered, as he had now the strongest attachment for those troops.
+Still another division stood at the extreme right. This was under the
+command of General Lincoln, who had been forced, through no fault of
+his own, to surrender to the British at Charleston.
+
+The approaches to Yorktown were easy; there were means of shelter
+everywhere, and the American army at once began preparations for the
+siege.
+
+At last the men finished the construction of two parallels. They were
+now within three hundred yards of the British defenses. General
+Washington then placed his siege guns in position. It was the first
+week in October, 1781. On the sixth the siege began.
+
+Every point in this dramatic history has been made the subject of
+story or poem, and naturally some legendary quality would after a time
+irradiate the incidents. Thus some writers affirm that General
+Washington gave the order for the first shot, and some say that it was
+Lafayette. The story is this. Before signing the order, General
+Washington turned to Thomas Nelson who was both governor of Virginia
+and a general in the army, and inquired,
+
+"At what object shall this gun be fired?"
+
+Pointing to his own dwelling where the roof appeared above the trees of
+Yorktown, and where it was understood Cornwallis had his headquarters,
+General Nelson answered,
+
+"There is my house; aim at that!"
+
+The story is that Washington turned to the gunner and said,
+
+"For every shot you cause to hit that house, I will give you five
+guineas."
+
+From the 6th to the 10th of October, the fire from the allied
+American and French army increased daily in vigor. On the 11th the
+second parallel was completed and entered, and the besieging line was
+thus tightened and strengthened. Within their intrenchments the
+British were watching for reënforcements that were fated never to
+come.
+
+On the 14th of October it was found that the British held two redoubts
+whose guns were inconveniently active, and the Americans believed they
+must be silenced. The redoubts had been built on two small hills on
+the American right, in a difficult region where rocky cuts alternated
+with swampy depressions. These two hills were called "Number Nine" and
+"Number Ten"; "Number Ten" was also called "Rock Redoubt." These
+redoubts were about three hundred yards in front of the British
+garrison, and Washington decided after consultation that they were of
+sufficient importance to take by storm.
+
+Accordingly the order was given. The reduction of Redoubt Number Nine
+was intrusted to a group of French grenadiers and chasseurs. Rock
+Redoubt stood nearest the river; this was assigned to Lafayette with
+his American regiments.
+
+Important among the men under General Lafayette's command was
+Lieutenant Colonel de Gimat, the French aid who had always been so
+faithful a follower of Lafayette; he commanded a body of men from
+Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Then there was Lieutenant Colonel
+Alexander Hamilton, the young American to whom Lafayette was
+personally so warmly attached, who afterwards was to become one of the
+most distinguished servants of the new nation, and who was to meet so
+strange and sad an end after his great work was done.
+
+When Hamilton heard a rumor that General Washington was intending to
+give to a certain Colonel Barber the opportunity to lead the attack,
+his spirit was immediately aroused. Without a moment's delay he
+hastened to headquarters and warmly urged his right to the honorable
+and dangerous task. He gained his point and returned in a state of
+exuberant satisfaction, exclaiming to his major, "We have it! We have
+it!" So Lafayette assigned Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Hamilton to
+lead the advance corps, to be assisted by Colonel de Gimat. In all
+there were four hundred men under Lafayette for this storming
+adventure.
+
+It was eight o'clock on the evening of October 14. The storming of the
+two redoubts had been carefully planned even down to the least
+details; but so energetic was the work of the men, so dashing was
+their valor, that when the time really came, the attack lasted but a
+few minutes.
+
+Lafayette's redoubt was taken in a mere flash of time--in less than
+ten minutes, some close observers said; others made it eight minutes.
+The six shells, the signal agreed upon, were fired. The men started
+the march. Rock Redoubt loomed before them in the thick dusk of
+twilight. They advanced in good order with their bayonets fixed and in
+utter silence, as they had been commanded. But when the first volley
+of musketry came down from the top of the redoubt, they broke their
+silence and huzzaed with all their power. Then they rushed forward,
+charging with their bayonets as they ran, and in almost no time they
+were within the redoubt, with the defending officer and forty-five men
+their prisoners. Not a shot had been fired; and so swift was the
+action that few of the Americans were lost.
+
+The not ungenerous rivalry between the groups of men who took the two
+redoubts is one of the most picturesque incidents of the American
+Revolution. If it had not been for the fact that the French detachment
+had paused to have the abatis cut through in regular order, they would
+probably have been in their redoubt before the Americans under
+Lafayette were in theirs; for when they were once on the height, they
+occupied but six minutes in making themselves masters of their redoubt
+and in manning it again for action.
+
+One move follows another quickly at such a time, and when Lafayette
+had entered his redoubt, he looked over the parapet and saw that the
+men on the other height were still struggling for the possession of
+theirs. It happened that a certain General Viomesnil had expressed a
+doubt as to the efficiency of the American troops, therefore Lafayette
+welcomed this opportunity to show their valor. He instantly sent an
+aid to announce to General Viomesnil, with a flourish of compliments,
+that the American troops were in possession of their redoubt and to
+say that if M. le Baron de Viomesnil desired any help, the Marquis de
+Lafayette would have great pleasure in assisting him! The Major sent
+word,
+
+"Tell the Marquis that I am not in mine, but that I will be in five
+minutes."
+
+This promise was made good by the brave and energetic French troops.
+Perhaps never before had the space of two minutes been of so much
+importance in the honor of two nations.
+
+General Washington who, in his eagerness to see this important action,
+had ridden near,--too near to please his officers and surgeons,--had
+closely watched the storming of the redoubts. When they were taken and
+the guns had been instantly whirled about to face the enemy, he turned
+to Generals Knox and Lincoln who stood near and said with emphasis,
+
+"The work is done, and well done."
+
+Then he mounted his horse and rode back to headquarters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE SURRENDER OF YORKTOWN
+
+
+At the siege of Yorktown much of the gallantry and glory of war was to
+be seen; but there was another side as well. The dwelling houses in
+ruin, the sufferings of the wounded men, the surgical operations, the
+amputations, the groans and sighs and homesickness, the dying gasps,
+the bodies of slain horses lying in the way--these also are war.
+
+In Yorktown itself many houses were in flames. A sortie had been
+attempted and had failed. British reënforcements had not come.
+Supplies were giving out. The outlook seemed hopeless. The men fought
+without spirit. An attempt was made to escape by sea. It also failed.
+A violent storm drove the boats back to shore. The idea of surrender
+was entertained.
+
+Consequently, on the 17th of October, General Cornwallis sent a note
+to General Washington asking for a cessation of hostilities for
+twenty-four hours, to settle terms for the surrender of Yorktown.
+Washington allowed two hours instead of twenty-four. Why waste any
+more time?
+
+Interviews were immediately held, and a treaty of capitulation was
+framed.
+
+When it was known that the British had yielded, a wave of the wildest
+joy spread through the American and French camps--and through the
+whole country as well. Messengers rode at top speed to Philadelphia to
+carry the good news. Congress was sitting there at the time. The rider
+came in at midnight. At one o'clock the watchers called "All's well,"
+as usual, but added,
+
+"_Cornwallis is taken!_"
+
+Windows were opened and heads thrust out. The streets soon filled with
+rejoicing people. What Lafayette called "a good noisy feu de joie"
+followed.
+
+The third article in the document of capitulation stated that the
+British troops should be required to march out to the place appointed
+in front of the posts, at two o'clock precisely, with shouldered arms,
+colors cased, and drums beating a British or a German march. They were
+then to ground their arms and return to their encampments. The same
+afternoon the works at Gloucester on the opposite side of the river
+were to be given up, the infantry to file out as prescribed for the
+garrison at York, and the cavalry to go forth with their swords drawn
+and their trumpets sounding.
+
+Over all this there had been a sharp discussion. The British wished to
+receive the "honors of war," that is, to go out with colors flying and
+drums beating; and the courteous Washington was inclined to grant this
+request. But Lafayette remembered the requirements the British had
+made at the defeat at Charleston. They had compelled the men to march
+out with colors cased, and had forbidden them to play a British or a
+Hessian air; and he thought that in fair retaliation the British army
+should now give up their arms in the manner required by them on that
+occasion. He suggested, however, one original variation,--that they
+should be not forbidden but _required_ to march to a British or a
+German air. Colonel Laurens was in accord with this. He had served at
+Charleston under General Lincoln, and he was only too glad to remind
+the British commissioners that it had been so arranged and required of
+the American troops after that defeat.
+
+"The article remains or I cease to be a commissioner," the young man
+said firmly. The high-spirited Laurens could but remember that at that
+very moment his own father was still imprisoned in the Tower of
+London.
+
+The condition remained; and at noon on the 19th of October the
+capitulation was signed. At one o'clock possession was taken of the
+enemies' works, and at two the garrison marched out.
+
+A field about a mile and a half south of Yorktown was chosen for the
+ceremony. The scene was brilliant and spectacular. All the American
+soldiers were drawn up in a line on one side of the road and the
+French stood opposite with General Rochambeau, their commander in
+chief, leading their line. General Washington, mounted on his horse
+and attended by his aids, was at the head. Washington was ardently
+admired by all the French officers and they must have envied him his
+magnificent appearance in this fortunate hour. That fearless and
+austere commander, who had shared the sufferings and privations of his
+men in the dark night of Valley Forge, now rejoiced with them in the
+hour of accomplishment.
+
+The French made a splendid appearance with their uniforms of bright
+colors and contrasting trimmings. Nearly all had the conventional
+three-cornered Revolutionary cap of blue; and the trousers were
+prevailingly of a lemon or canary yellow. Glittering orders were
+flashing on many uniforms, their banners were embroidered with golden
+lilies; each noble had his servants arrayed in silver-laced livery,
+and the French bands of many fifes, horns, and cymbals, played such
+music as was never heard before.
+
+The American soldiers, who had inherited no traditions of either the
+glory or the disasters of warfare, could not compare with the
+foreigners in their full-dress display. But in every heart among them
+there was a feeling that richly compensated for the lack of feathers
+and facings. Whether shopkeeper or farmer or mighty hunter from the
+interior who stood in that line, the tide of united nationality ran
+higher in his heart than ever before. And every last man among them
+was one degree happier by having the dashing young French Major
+General, their beloved "Marquis," on the American side of the
+procession instead of in the foreign line. The "Boy" that Cornwallis
+was so certain he could catch was splendid that day in the perfection
+of military form. He sat, as always, very perfectly on his horse and
+he had the grace to be proud of the company in which he stood. As to
+his own regiment of Light Infantry, he had always been fond of
+decorating them with finery. They appeared now in dark leather leggins
+and white trousers; their blue coats had white facings and white
+cuffs; and a blue feather stood up in front of the cap and waved over
+the crown. This was the regulation uniform for them, but perhaps,
+having just gone through the severities of their Virginia campaign,
+they were not able to "live up" to their fine clothes. However,
+nothing mattered on that great day.
+
+A vast concourse of American spectators was present to witness the
+surrender, but their desire to see Lord Cornwallis was not gratified. He
+pleaded indisposition and appointed General O'Hara in his place. As this
+general approached the group of commanding officers, the bands added
+their music. By the stipulation, they had been commanded to play an
+English or a Hessian march, but they were too proud to select one of
+their dignified national airs. Instead, they gave the tune of an English
+folk song of hoary age, known from time immemorial as "Derry Down," but
+now called "The World Turned Upside Down," a title the British bandmaster
+no doubt considered appropriate to the circumstances.
+
+But the dignity of the occasion required that they should now observe
+the proprieties, for there was a wonderful pageant to be viewed, and
+all felt the great import of the hour.
+
+The conquered army advanced between the two long lines of French and
+American soldiers. General O'Hara led the procession, riding slowly and
+proudly. As he approached General Washington, he removed his hat and
+apologized for the absence of General Cornwallis. General Washington
+received the apology and indicated that he had appointed General Lincoln,
+as the conquered commander of Charleston, to do the honors of the day and
+to receive the arms of the conquered. The moment was historic.
+
+In one of the halls at Yale University stands a celebrated picture,
+painted by Trumbull, which gives a vivid impression of the brilliancy
+and importance of the occasion. In this picture General Washington, in
+an attitude of great dignity, is placed in the center of the scene.
+Near him stands General Lincoln who is being richly rewarded for his
+bitter defeat at Charleston. His hand is held out to receive the sword
+which the representative of General Cornwallis is passing to him.
+
+At the left of the picture are seen the French officers. Rochambeau is
+at the back and a little separated from the rest, and the others in
+the line are the counts, marquises, and barons who were officers in
+the French army.
+
+General Lafayette, the American, was on the American side, not far
+from his beloved General Washington. The one nearest to the commander
+in chief is General (or Governor) Thomas Nelson, the one who had
+suggested that his own house roof be aimed at in the beginning of the
+siege; the next is Lafayette; then Baron Steuben; the others are
+representative commanders from various states.
+
+The ceremony that followed this climax was most impressive. General
+Lincoln received the sword of Cornwallis, and at once handed it back
+to General O'Hara. The several regiments came forward to deliver their
+colors. Twenty-eight British captains, each bearing a flag folded in a
+case, were drawn up in a line opposite the twenty-eight American
+sergeants who were stationed to receive the flags. Ensign Wilson, then
+but eighteen years old, the youngest commissioned officer in the
+American army, was chosen to conduct this ceremony and to hand the
+colors on to the American sergeants. Lafayette looked down from his
+place in the line of mounted American officers and felt that his most
+ardent hopes were now fulfilled, and that his motto, "Cur non," had
+brought him only the best of fortune.
+
+The day after the ceremony of surrender was the Sabbath, and General
+Washington ordered that divine service should be held in all the
+regiments and that Thanksgiving should be the theme. The next day he
+gave a dinner to which the general officers of the three armies were
+invited. Lafayette could not restrain his admiration for Cornwallis
+for his gallant and appropriate conduct upon all these rather
+embarrassing occasions.
+
+ [Illustration: _Photograph from Wm. H. Rau, Philadelphia._
+ THE SURRENDER OF CORNWALLIS.
+ From the painting by Colonel John Trumbull, the soldier-artist
+ of the Revolution.]
+
+If, however, he had possessed the gift of prophecy, he might have
+looked forward but one short century to the centennial of Yorktown,
+when the flags of the United States and of Great Britain would be run
+up together on the site of this historic surrender. Then he would have
+seen British and American officers stand together with bared heads and
+in brotherly friendliness, while salutes were fired and cheers rent
+the air.
+
+Looking still further, he would have seen the day when the people of
+France would unite with their one-time foe in various endeavors both
+peaceful and warlike. A strange planet is this, for the shifting of
+national loyalties and the rending and intertwining of bonds of union!
+If history could make the human race amenable to receiving any
+instruction whatever, we should learn that war never yet decided any
+problem that could not have been better settled in some other way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+LIONIZED BY TWO WORLDS
+
+
+Three days after the surrender, the 22d of October, Lafayette was on
+board the _Ville de Paris_ in Chesapeake Bay. It was believed that the
+surrender of Cornwallis would be practically conclusive as to the
+matter at issue between England and the United States. Lafayette
+therefore felt a sweep of thoughts toward home. Congress gave him
+leave of absence. The _Alliance_ was again placed at his disposal and
+awaited him in Boston harbor.
+
+An adoring France received him on his arrival. He had been the hero of
+the New World; he now became the hero of the Old. The king of France gave
+him audience; when he arrived the queen sent her carriage to bring
+Adrienne, who at the moment happened to be at some royal fête, as swiftly
+as possible to the Noailles mansion. Balls were given in his honor. He
+was presented with laurel at the opera. The king made him a field
+marshal, his commission to date from the day of Cornwallis's surrender,
+and he was invited by Richelieu to a dinner where all the field marshals
+of France were present, and where the health of Washington was drunk with
+words so full of reverent admiration that they did Lafayette's heart
+good.
+
+About this time a traveled American gentleman, Ledyard by name, was
+staying in Paris and commented on the popularity of the returned
+American hero. He said:
+
+"I took a walk to Paris this morning and saw the Marquis de Lafayette.
+He is a good man, this same Marquis. I esteem him. I even love him,
+and so we all do, except a few, who worship him.... If I find in my
+travels a mountain as much elevated above other mountains as he is
+above ordinary men, I will name it Lafayette."
+
+The meeting of Lafayette with Adrienne cannot be described. He had now
+proved the value of his love of freedom, and she was filled with pride
+in the acknowledgment he received on all sides. The family reunion was
+perfect. He wrote to Washington, "My daughter and your George have
+grown so much that I find I am much older than I thought." He had
+reached the advanced age of twenty-four!
+
+Lafayette was at once concerned with the concluding negotiations for
+peace between England and the United States. To hasten these and to
+carry on further military plans, France united with Spain in a
+projected expedition against the English possessions in the West
+Indies. For this purpose Lafayette, in December, 1782, went to Cadiz
+as chief of staff, where an armament of sixty ships and twenty-four
+thousand men were assembling. But while waiting for the final orders
+to sail, a swift courier brought the news to Cadiz that the treaty of
+peace had, on the 20th of January, 1783, been finally signed at Paris.
+Lafayette wished to be the one to carry this news to America, but he
+was told that his presence at the negotiations at Madrid was necessary
+to their success, and therefore he had to forego the pleasure of being
+the personal messenger of the good news. Instead, he was allowed to
+borrow from the fleet a ship which he sent, as swiftly as possible, to
+the land of his heart. The ship lent him was _Le Triomphe_, well named
+for this message, and this was the first ship to bring the news of the
+Peace to our shores.
+
+His work in Spain being successfully accomplished, he returned to
+Paris by swift posts, which means that he went in a carriage, with
+relays of good horses; and by driving day and night, over the
+mountains and through the valleys, following ancient Roman roads and
+crossing through many historic sites and cities, he covered the wide
+distance between the capital of Spain and that of France.
+
+The war being over, Washington, as every one knows, retired to his
+estate at Mount Vernon, an act incomprehensible to some, but fully
+understood by his "adopted son," Lafayette, who wrote:
+
+"Your return to a private station is called the finishing stroke of an
+unparalleled character. Never did a man exist who stands so honorably
+in the opinion of mankind, and your name if possible will become
+greater to posterity. Everything that is great and everything that is
+good were never hitherto united in one man; never did that man live
+whom the soldier, statesman, patriot, and philosopher could equally
+admire; and never was a revolution brought about which, in all its
+motives, its conduct, its consequences, could so well immortalize its
+glorious chief. I am proud of you, my dear General; your glory makes
+me feel as if it were my own; and while the world is gaping upon you,
+I am pleased to think and to tell that the qualities of your heart do
+render you still more valuable than anything you have done."
+
+From Mount Vernon, where the wearied and peace-loving warrior was
+very glad to be, Washington, in February, 1784, wrote to Lafayette:
+
+"At length, my dear Marquis, I am become a private citizen on the
+banks of the Potomac, and under the shadow of my own vine and
+fig-tree, free from the bustle of the camp, and the busy scenes of
+public life, I am pleasing myself with those tranquil enjoyments of
+which the soldier who is ever in pursuit of fame; the statesman whose
+watchful days and sleepless nights are spent in devising schemes to
+promote the welfare of his own, perhaps the ruin of other countries,
+as if this globe was insufficient for us all; the courtier who is
+always watching the countenance of his prince in hopes of catching a
+gracious smile, can have but little conception."
+
+He then goes on to give a brief history of recent events--the
+evacuation of New York, the American troops entering that city in good
+order, and New York finally freed from the British flag. He regretfully
+declined the pressing invitation of Lafayette to come to Paris, and
+again invited him and Madame de Lafayette to pay a visit at Mount
+Vernon. The correspondents appear to have thought of each other
+frequently, though separated by the wide seas. Later, Lafayette had
+joyous news to impart, for he wrote to Washington:
+
+"I want to tell you that Madame de Lafayette and my three children are
+well, and that all of us in the family join to present their dutiful
+affectionate compliments to Mrs. Washington and yourself. Tell her
+that I hope soon to thank her for a dish of tea at Mount Vernon. Yes,
+my dear General, before the month of June is over, you will see a
+vessel coming up the Potomac and out of that vessel will your friend
+jump, with a panting heart and all the feelings of perfect happiness."
+
+During Lafayette's visit to America in 1784 the people had an
+opportunity to show their gratitude to one who had freely given his
+services to them in their day of need. In New York he was received
+with the greatest enthusiasm by the whole people, including his
+affectionate companions in arms. From here on he listened to the
+ringing of bells and the resounding of huzzas by day and saw lavish
+illuminations in his honor by night. A visit of ten days at Mount
+Vernon gave great pleasure to Washington as well as to Lafayette. In
+Boston his coming was celebrated at the stump of the Liberty Tree that
+the British had cut down during their occupation of the city. Many
+speeches were made during this journey, and Lafayette showed himself
+tactful in adapting his words to the occasion. His tact was prompted
+by a sincere liking for all people, a benevolent feeling toward the
+whole world. This was the foundation of much that was attractive and
+useful in his character.
+
+During this journey Lafayette went as far north as Portsmouth and as
+far south as Yorktown. The various great battlefields of the campaign
+of 1781 each received a visit in the company of Washington and of
+other companions in arms. The different states vied with one another
+in giving his name to their towns and villages--a custom that has
+continued to this day. The state of Virginia placed a bust of
+Lafayette in the capitol at Richmond; another was presented to the
+city of Paris by the minister of the United States, and was received
+with great pomp at the Hôtel de Ville, or city hall. Three states,
+Maryland, Connecticut, and Virginia, conferred on him the right of
+citizenship for himself and his children, an enactment that later
+became national; and so Lafayette became an American citizen in legal
+form as well as in spirit. How little did he think that this right
+would become so precious a boon to him and would be so sorely needed!
+
+The bust in the Hôtel de Ville was destroyed at the time of the Terror;
+and the day came soon after when nearly all that remained to the "Hero
+of Two Worlds" was a certificate of citizenship in a country to which he
+was not native, while the owner of the certificate, because of his
+principles, was hurried from prison to prison. In 1784 he was riding on
+the high tide of success and popularity, but tragic days were soon to
+come in the life of America's loyal friend.
+
+Lafayette took his farewell of Congress at Trenton, New Jersey, where
+it was then in session. The scene was dignified and affecting. It was
+at the close of this ceremony that Lafayette pronounced that wish--one
+might call it a prayer--which has been so often quoted.
+
+"May this immense Temple of Freedom ever stand a lesson to oppressors,
+an example to the oppressed, and a sanctuary for the rights of
+mankind! And may these happy United States attain that complete
+splendor and prosperity which will illustrate the blessings of their
+government, and in ages to come rejoice the departed souls of their
+founders."
+
+Following his return from America at this time, Lafayette made a long
+tour through Germany and Austria. His purpose was to improve himself,
+he said, by the inspection of famous fields of battle, by conversation
+with the greatest generals, and by the sight of well-trained troops.
+He visited Frederick the Great who, in the eyes of the exquisite
+Frenchman, presented a most untidy appearance in a dirty uniform
+covered over with Spanish snuff. He saw him review thirty-one
+battalions and seventy-five squadrons, thirty thousand men in all, and
+he admired the "perfectly regular machine wound up for forty years" by
+which they clicked off their movements. At the table of Frederick,
+Lafayette ate, at one time, with Cornwallis on one side and the son of
+the king of England on the other; on which occasion the Prussian
+despot indelicately amused himself by plying the young soldier with
+questions about American affairs. One wonders if in all his travels
+Lafayette caught any glimpse on the horizon of a certain grim fortress
+wherein, because of his hatred of despots like Frederick, fate decreed
+that he was to be immured for five long years.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+GATHERING CLOUDS
+
+
+The great storm of the French Revolution was now to appear on the
+horizon, climb to its height, and break in terror over France. During
+these years, from 1784 to 1792, Lafayette was for most of the time in
+Paris where he took part in events of great importance and in such a
+way as to command respect from those who sympathized with his liberal
+ideas and to win detraction from devotees of monarchial systems.
+
+At first, however, no one dreamed what the future held for France.
+Lafayette busied himself in doing what he could to further the affairs
+of the United States, turning his attention to commercial questions
+such as he had never supposed would interest him. Whale-oil, for
+instance, became a favorite subject with him; his services on behalf
+of that American industry were acknowledged by the seagoing people of
+Nantucket who sent him a gigantic, five-hundred-pound cheese, the
+product of scores of farms, as a testimonial of their appreciation.
+
+A cause that interested him intensely was slavery. His views on this
+subject he summed up in 1786 in a letter to John Adams:
+
+"In the cause of my black brethren I feel myself warmly interested, and
+most decidedly side, so far as respects them, against the white part of
+mankind. Whatever be the complexion of the enslaved, it does not, in my
+opinion, alter the complexion of the crime which the enslaver commits, a
+crime much blacker than any African face. It is to me a matter of great
+anxiety and concern, to find that this trade is sometimes carried on
+under the flag of liberty, our dear and noble stripes, to which virtue
+and glory have been constant standard-bearers."
+
+Lafayette not only had a lofty sentiment about the condition of the
+slaves, but he put his theory into practice by buying at great expense
+an estate in Cayenne, or French Guiana, with a large number of slaves
+whom he put under a system of education, with the intention of making
+them free as soon as they were fitted for economic independence.
+Madame de Lafayette interested herself in the management of this
+estate; she provided pastors and teachers to go to Cayenne as
+missionaries and educators.
+
+The experiment was going on well when the Revolution broke over
+France. Then it was doomed. While Lafayette was languishing in the
+dungeon at Olmütz, one of his great anxieties was for his Cayenne
+charge. He would have been even more unhappy if he had known that when
+the revolutionists took possession of his property, they caused that
+estate to be sold, together with all the slaves, who thus went back
+into slavery--a great inconsistency in those same revolutionists who
+imagined they were working for liberty and enfranchisement!
+
+During this time Lafayette had two great interests: one, a public life
+marked by increasing premonitions of national danger; the other, at
+Chaviniac where his family stayed and where he was instituting all
+sorts of reforms on his own estate and in the village of Chaviniac,
+and working steadily for the welfare of the people who were dependent
+upon him. He founded an annual fair and a weekly market day. He built
+roads at his own expense. In the village he established a resident
+physician whose services the poor could have at any time without cost
+to themselves. He founded a weaving business and a school to teach the
+art. The agricultural advancement of America had interested him, so he
+brought a man from England to teach new methods to his farmers. New
+implements were imported and new breeds of cattle were introduced. In
+every way he brought enlightenment and betterment.
+
+Meantime a spirit was rising that was soon to sweep not only over
+Paris but through all the provinces of France. Lafayette saw this
+storm coming. One day, in 1789, he was walking in the grand gallery of
+the Château de Chaviniac with a gentleman of the neighborhood. They
+spoke together of what the emancipation of the peasant would mean to
+the people of the Auvergne region. At that moment a group of peasants
+from his estate came in to offer Lafayette some nosegays and cheeses.
+They presented these gifts on bended knees, in an attitude of deep
+submission and respect.
+
+"There," said the neighbor, "see how little disposed these peasants
+are to receive your boasted emancipation; depend upon it, they think
+very little on the matter."
+
+"Well, well," replied Lafayette, "a few years hence we shall see who
+was right."
+
+They did! The time was not far distant when the peasants of Auvergne,
+as well as the rabble of Paris, went singing:
+
+ Ah! ça ira, ça ira, ça ira!
+ Celui qui s'élève, on l'abaissera,
+ Et qui s'abaisse, on l'élèvera.
+
+Significant events followed, and on every important occasion Lafayette
+bore a part. He was a member of the Assembly of Notables, and he led a
+minority of the nobility who demanded the calling of the States General,
+a representative assembly. He presented his famous composition, the
+Declaration of Rights, modeled on Jefferson's Declaration of Independence.
+He was made by acclamation Colonel General of the new National Guard
+and gave them the white cockade. He represented the people on the great
+day of the oath of loyalty to the new constitution. For a time he was
+riding on the top wave of popularity.
+
+Lafayette believed in freedom for all people and to every man his
+rights. But he thought that France was not yet ready for the form of
+government that was succeeding in America. For France he believed the
+constitutional monarchy to be the best. He thought--and every one now
+thinks--that Louis XVI was a man of good intentions, and he believed
+these good intentions would show that monarch what was for the welfare
+and happiness of the people. Therefore he defended the king and the
+royal family as a part of the form of government that was the best
+for France. The newly adopted constitution appeared to him to be the
+just expression of royal authority.
+
+In his blind optimism Lafayette could not believe but that his ideas
+would in the end have their proper weight. He stood with the nobility,
+resting proudly on their good intentions, and facing a brute force
+newly awakened by the tocsin of liberty. To this unreasoning instinct,
+liberty meant nothing but license. The result of putting this license
+into power meant anarchy.
+
+Now came Lafayette's time of difficulty. He was accused of conniving
+at the attempt of the king and queen to escape. Afterwards the queen
+in her trial testified that Lafayette had known nothing whatever of
+the project. Lafayette was also blamed for the death of Foulon, a
+minister who was hanged, beheaded, and dragged through the streets by
+the mob. The fact was that he did all in his power to control the mob
+that caused Foulon's death. They accused him of firing on the mob.
+That he did, in defense of the life of the king--first standing before
+the cannon to give his life if need be. He was accused of being too
+liberal and of being too aristocratic. He was burned between the two
+fires. The people seemed determined not to understand him. They said
+that if Lafayette truly loved the people it was but another evidence
+that his soul was plebeian--his simplicity of manner and unstudied
+grace of speech were but further proofs thereof. Brutality and
+lawlessness, veiled under the name of patriotism, could hardly do less
+than hate an incorruptible man like Lafayette who was outspoken in his
+beliefs.
+
+A coalition of European powers stood ready to invade France and place
+the monarchy again on a secure basis. Lafayette was at the head of one
+of three armies sent to withstand the forces of the coalition, but his
+own soldiers were secretly in sympathy with the revolutionary frenzy.
+
+The end came when Lafayette defied the Jacobin party, and they in turn
+declared him a traitor and put a price on his head. But even at that
+late day, if there had been in France any number of men who possessed
+Lafayette's calmness, self-control, and generous spirit, the state
+might still have been saved from tumult and degradation. As it was,
+France turned its face away from its best light and hope, and
+Lafayette was, as Carlyle picturesquely said, "hooted forth over the
+borders into Cimmerian night." He put his army into the best order
+possible, and with a company of devoted officers and followers started
+for a neutral country.
+
+Meantime in Paris the feet of the people were at the threshold of the
+Terror.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+LAFAYETTE IN PRISON
+
+
+Lafayette attempted to cross the frontier on his way to America when he
+was intercepted and taken prisoner. This was at Rochefort, on neutral
+territory. The arrest of peaceful citizens on their way through neutral
+territory to a neutral country was treason to all international covenant
+and courtesy; evidently, the phrase "international courtesy" had not
+then been coined; but the act has been abhorred by unprejudiced military
+men the world over.
+
+The party were taken to Namur, thence to Wesel, where some were
+released; later, three remained to be imprisoned in Magdeburg. Lafayette
+is reported to have owned as his highest ambition that his name should
+be a terror to all kings and monarchs. If he made this remark, his wish
+was fulfilled; for at a meeting of a committee of the Coalition it was
+agreed that the "existence of Lafayette was incompatible with the safety
+of the governments of Europe."
+
+Following this decision, in May, 1794, the king of Prussia gave him into
+the keeping of the Emperor of Austria, and the dangerous prisoner,
+together with three of the officers who were with him when arrested,
+Latour-Maubourg, Bureaux-de-Pusy, and Lameth, were promptly carried to
+the strong fortress of Olmütz, high up in the gloomy Carpathian
+Mountains. Lameth nearly died and therefore was released, but the other
+two remained, not, however, being allowed to see or to communicate with
+their distinguished companion.
+
+Lafayette had no apologies to make for the step he had taken. Indeed,
+he had great hopes that he would escape from his captors. Friends were
+finding means to communicate with him and plots were forming in the
+undercurrents of correspondence.
+
+But on the whole he much preferred to take his liberty than to have it
+granted to him. If indeed liberty were granted, it would be with
+conditions "like those made by a lower class of brigands in the corner
+of a thicket," and the discussion would in all probability result in a
+shutting on him of quadruple doors.
+
+He "much preferred to take his liberty than to have it granted to
+him." Accordingly plans were made. In one letter he calls for a good
+chart, arms, a passport, a wig, some drugs to insure a quiet night's
+sleep to the jailors, with instructions as to the dose to be given,
+and an itinerary for the route, with dangerous places indicated in it.
+They must know the exact time horses were to be ready, and the exact
+house where they were to stand. He was in buoyant spirits.
+
+"Although a sojourn of fourteen months in the prisons of their Majesties
+has not contributed to my health," he wrote, "still I have a strong
+constitution and my early habits of life, added to the recollection of
+my fetters, will enable me to make a very rapid journey."
+
+Finishing one of these letters, he says, "I hear them opening my first
+locks [the outer doors] and must stop writing." Latour-Maubourg adds a
+passage in his own hand. He begs for a piece of sealing wax and emphasizes
+that Lafayette must surely be rescued, whether the others are or not.
+
+The prisoners looked out for those who were helping them to escape;
+these helpers were to be protected from suspicion. To do this they put
+a manikin with a nightcap on in Lafayette's bed, dug a channel under
+the chimney, and left a coat in the passage well smudged with soot.
+
+Why none of these plans worked is not known. Lafayette was carted on
+to Neisse, but the plotting still went on. At last the grim and
+impregnable fortress of Olmütz received the three prisoners. Here he
+could receive no letters; he could read no paper; he was harshly told
+that he should never again know anything of what was going on in the
+outside world; that he was now a complete nonentity, a being known
+only by a number, and that no person in Europe knew where he was nor
+ever should know until his death.
+
+Lafayette's misery was turned to a still darker hue by the fact that
+he felt the gravest alarm for the welfare of Madame de Lafayette. As
+he was being carted from prison to prison, on his way eastward toward
+that final destination in the mountain fortress, the news that was
+smuggled to him by secret and mysterious bearers was not of a kind to
+bring peace to his mind. He heard of the extremes to which the
+revolutionary frenzy was carrying the Parisian people; he heard that
+the king and queen and various members of their family had been
+proscribed, denounced, and sentenced to death by a committee miscalled
+a "Committee of Public Safety," and that the nobility were being
+ruthlessly sacrificed. Saddest of all this for him was the news that
+his wife, that woman of heroic character, of marvelous spiritual
+charm, and of liberal and philanthropic mind, had been imprisoned and
+was in danger of perishing on the scaffold. This word--and nothing
+more! The darkness of life behind walls seven feet thick was not
+lightened for many a long month by any further news in regard to
+Adrienne. The thoughts of Lafayette in his prison were as sad as can
+be imagined.
+
+As months and years passed on, Lafayette may be forgiven if he
+sometimes thought that he had been wholly forgotten. But it was not
+so. It was not an easy matter to liberate a man whose very existence
+was a menace to every throne. The kings had him completely in their
+power--they wished to keep him out of sight.
+
+It goes without saying that to President Washington the imprisonment
+of his young friend, to whom he was bound by strong and vital bonds of
+gratitude and friendship, was a source of genuine anguish. But what
+could he do? As Lafayette said, America was far away and the politics
+of Europe were tortuous. In them Washington had no part and no
+influence; and he could not go to war for he had no equipment for any
+such exploit.
+
+He did, however, put in train many schemes designed to influence others
+to aid his loyal friend. He used the greatest secrecy; the correspondence
+as it is preserved refers only to "our friend" and to "the one you
+know," so that if the letters were lost, no one could possibly divine
+what was being done. The President sent letters to the representatives of
+the United States in both France and England, commanding that informal
+solicitations for the release of that friend of America should be made,
+and that these were to be followed by formal ones if necessary. He wrote
+to the king of Prussia, urging the release of his dear friend as an act
+of justice as well as a personal favor to himself; and to the Emperor of
+Austria, begging that Lafayette might be allowed to come to America. The
+letter has that thorough goodness and that amplitude of dignity that were
+characteristics of Washington.
+
+ "PHILADELPHIA, 15 May, 1796.
+
+ "TO THE EMPEROR OF GERMANY:
+
+ "It will readily occur to your Majesty that occasions
+ may sometimes exist, on which official considerations
+ would constrain the chief of a nation to be silent and
+ passive, in relation to objects which affect his
+ sensibility, and claim his interposition as a man.
+ Finding myself precisely in this situation at present, I
+ take the liberty of writing this private letter to your
+ Majesty, being persuaded that my motives will also be my
+ apology for it.
+
+ "In common with the people of this country, I retain a
+ strong and cordial sense of the services rendered to
+ them by the Marquis de Lafayette; and my friendship for
+ him has been constant and sincere. It is natural,
+ therefore, that I should sympathize with him and his
+ family in their misfortunes, and endeavor to mitigate
+ the calamities which they experience; among which, his
+ present confinement is not the least distressing.
+
+ "I forbear to enlarge on this delicate subject. Permit
+ me only to submit to your Majesty's consideration
+ whether his long imprisonment and the confiscation of
+ his estates, and the indigence and dispersement of his
+ family, and the painful anxieties incident to all these
+ circumstances, do not form an assemblage of sufferings
+ which recommend him to the mediation of humanity? Allow
+ me, Sir, to be its organ on this occasion; and to
+ entreat that he may be permitted to come to this
+ country, on such conditions and under such restrictions
+ as your Majesty may think fit to prescribe.
+
+ "As it is a maxim with me not to ask what under similar
+ circumstances I would not grant, your Majesty will do me
+ the justice to believe that this request appears to me
+ to correspond with those great principles of magnanimity
+ and wisdom, which form the basis of sound policy and
+ durable glory.
+
+ "May the Almighty and merciful Sovereign of the universe
+ keep your Majesty under his protection and guidance!"
+
+Little by little the place where Lafayette was imprisoned became known
+to a few, and public sentiment was aroused to the point of bringing up
+the matter before the British Parliament. It was a certain General
+Fitzpatrick who, strange to say, had met Lafayette in London before he
+went to America, and again between battles when they were ranged on
+opposite sides of the Revolution, who now brought up the question.
+Twice he made a motion in favor of acting for the release of
+Lafayette. Fitzpatrick was the kind of man who could not bear to
+entertain the idea that there should exist "in any corner of British
+soil, in any English heart, conceptions so narrow as to wish to see
+the illustrious pupil of Washington perishing in a dungeon on account
+of his political principles." General Fitzpatrick's motion was
+seconded by General Tarleton, who had fought Lafayette through the
+length and breadth of Virginia. Pitt and Burke spoke against it.
+
+Lord Grey said that if asked what would be gained by furthering the
+release of Lafayette, he would reply that "we should exculpate
+ourselves from the suspicion of being accomplices in the foulest wrong
+that ever disgraced humanity." The question was put to vote and stood
+forty-six yeas and one hundred and fifty-three nays. Such was the
+composition of the British Parliament at that time.
+
+The next year Fitzpatrick renewed his efforts for Lafayette and
+proposed another motion. In an eloquent speech which should make his
+name honored for all time, he reviewed the former debate and paid a
+wonderful tribute to the character of Madame de Lafayette. The
+discussion that followed dwelt mainly on the question whether
+Lafayette was to be considered as a subject of the emperor or as a
+prisoner of war. The vote stood, yeas fifty, nays one hundred and
+thirty-two. Evidently the British Parliament had not made any great
+advance in the intervening year.
+
+Meantime secret plans were being made to rescue Lafayette. The
+beautiful Angelica Schuyler Church, daughter of the American general,
+Philip Schuyler, was then in London; her husband, John Barker Church,
+had fought under Lafayette, and was now in the British Parliament.
+Mrs. Church was the sister-in-law of Alexander Hamilton, one of
+Lafayette's dearest friends among his young companions-in-arms, and
+she was in touch with a group of French émigrés. In fact, she was the
+center of a little volcano of feeling for the exile.
+
+This secret circle kept up a constant communication with Mr. Pinckney
+and Mr. Jay. Mrs. Church wrote to Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State
+in the United States, and to many others, begging, pleading for help.
+For Lafayette, whom she had known in New York, her heart was
+constantly bleeding.
+
+Proceeding from a mysterious writer who signed his name "Eleutherios,"
+spirited articles soon began to appear in the English newspapers, and
+thus constantly fed a flame of feeling. All sorts of fears for Lafayette
+were entertained. "I see him in a dungeon," wrote one; "I see him in
+Siberia; I see him poisoned; I see him during what remains of his life
+torn by the uncertainty of the fate of all that he loves."
+
+Soon after this the name of a Hanoverian doctor begins to appear in
+the documents preserved. This Dr. Bollman had carried one exploit
+through successfully, bringing out of Paris during the Terror a
+certain French émigré and conveying him to London in safety. Bollman
+was to be engaged by the London group to start out and see what could
+be done for Lafayette. This scheme resulted in a great adventure in
+which an American youth figured nobly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+AN ATTEMPTED RESCUE
+
+
+The hope that potentates and governments might take up the cause of
+Lafayette began to fail and other plans were made. Chivalric dreams of
+going to seek the place where he was confined and effect what seemed the
+impossible--a personal rescue--began to haunt the minds of daring youths.
+A letter is on record from a young man who wrote to Washington to ask if
+he might not have permission to go and seek Lafayette, and, if possible,
+conduct him and his family to America. Washington told him that all was
+being done that could be done, and that personal attempts would only
+result in failure. But there was another enterprising soul who did not
+wait for permission--he acted upon his own initiative. The story of that
+splendid young American must now be told.
+
+Francis Kinloch Huger was the first child that Lafayette saw after he
+landed in America. It will be remembered that the little company of
+adventurers first touched shore on the country estate of Major
+Benjamin Huger, at Prospect Hill, near Charleston, South Carolina.
+Here Lafayette was received hospitably and sent on in his host's
+carriage to Charleston.
+
+The child Francis was then five years old and was the young representative
+of a remarkable family of Huguenot extraction. The first Daniel Huger
+came from Loudon, France, soon after the Edict of Nantes, and his
+descendants to-day number six thousand; among them are found a large
+number of distinguished names. Five Huger brothers held important
+positions in Revolutionary times. Three served in the war; Brigadier
+General Isaac Huger was second in command to General Greene at Guilford
+Court House; Lieutenant Colonel Frank Huger was promoted from Moultrie's
+Regiment to be Quartermaster General of the Southern Army of the
+Revolution; and Major Benjamin Huger, Lafayette's host and the father of
+the child Francis, was killed in 1780 before the lines at Charleston. Of
+the other two brothers in this remarkable family group, Daniel was one of
+Governor Rutledge's Privy Council and later a member of Congress, and
+John was on the Council of Safety and Secretary of State.
+
+The boy Francis thus came from a stock of stalwart men. He was eight
+years old when his father was killed at Charleston. The pity of it was
+driven into his young soul when the ignominy of that defeat was
+accomplished.
+
+Immediately after that event young Huger was sent to England to
+acquire a medical education. Later he, as the custom was, went on his
+travels and to hear lectures at great seats of learning. But the
+passion for chivalric action that was inspiring youth everywhere he
+could not quell. He dreamed of finding Lafayette.
+
+Meantime, American, English, and French friends of the illustrious
+prisoner were busy in London, and they had commissioned the "Hanoverian
+doctor," known as Dr. Bollman, to make a search for him. This man made
+careful preparations. He traveled in a leisurely way through Germany in
+the guise of a wealthy and philanthropic physician. He let it be known
+that he was a sort of follower of Cagliostro, a notorious Italian whose
+ideas were popular at the time. He treated the poor free of charge and
+he showed a special interest in prisoners.
+
+At last he reached Olmütz, a journey at that time something like going
+from New York to Nome. He made acquaintance with the attending physician
+of the garrison and was invited to dinner. He in return asked the
+surgeon to dine with him at his inn. The dinner was sumptuous. M. de
+Colombe, who tells this part of the story, says that the wine was
+especially excellent. No one could distrust a simple-hearted doctor, an
+unselfish student of mankind, and especially one who ordered such
+delicious wine! In time, conversation turned upon prisoners of note. It
+was rumored, hinted the artful and ingenious doctor, that there was such
+an one at Olmütz. Could this be true? It was even so, the unsuspecting
+surgeon admitted; the great Lafayette was under his close care. The
+doctor inquired for Lafayette's health and was told that it was fairly
+good. Dr. Bollman ventured to send his compliments to the prisoner with
+a message that he had lately left Lafayette's friends in England. The
+unsuspecting surgeon carried the innocent message.
+
+On another occasion he brought word that Lafayette would like to know
+who those friends were. The doctor tried to speak the names, but could
+not pronounce them so that the Austrian could understand them. He felt
+in his pocket for a bit of paper (which he had carefully placed there
+beforehand) and on it wrote the names which he sent to Lafayette.
+These words also were written on the paper:
+
+"If you read this with as much care as did your friend at Magdeburg,
+you will receive equal satisfaction."
+
+The reference was to a prisoner at Magdeburg who received a book which
+contained messages written on the flyleaves in lemon juice. He held
+the book to the fire and by doing this the written words came out in
+brown lines and could be read. Lafayette took the hint, and discovered
+the message written with this invisible ink on the bit of paper. After
+this Bollman was allowed to lend Lafayette a book to read. It came
+back with lemon-juice messages on its margins. Lafayette wrote that he
+was sometimes allowed to drive, and as he was unknown to Bollman, he
+suggested a signal by which he could be recognized. He said that his
+lieutenant was a sheepish dolt, and that his corporal was covetous,
+treacherous, and cowardly. He added that the rides were allowed for
+the sake of his health. It appears that the government did not wish to
+arouse the frenzy of indignation that would follow if Lafayette were
+allowed to die in prison, so he was occasionally taken out to ride a
+league or even two from the fortress gate. If a rescuer and a trusty
+helper should appear, they could surely effect the escape. Lafayette
+would agree to frighten the cowardly little corporal himself; they
+need not provide a sword for him, for he would take the corporal's. An
+extra horse, one or two horses along the road--it could easily be
+done. It was a bold plan, but the bolder the plan, the more unexpected
+it was, and the better chance of success. Every day he would watch for
+them along the road.
+
+After securing this definite information, the doctor retired to Vienna
+to make further plans.
+
+This account may be in some respects the later elaboration of a story
+many times retold. But it sounds probable. At any rate, in some such
+way Dr. Bollman gained communication with Lafayette's cell, and
+brought the welcome news that friends were working for him. Then they
+projected a plan.
+
+The story is again taken up in a coffeehouse in Vienna where Bollman
+is accustomed to go. Lafayette has suggested an assistant, and Bollman
+realizes that he can do nothing without one. Therefore he is looking
+about to find one who shall have spirit and fitness for the work. We
+see him now at the supper table, eagerly conversing with a certain
+young American, like himself a medical student on his travels.
+Curiously enough, it is Francis Kinloch Huger, now twenty-one years
+old. They talk of America. Bollman, with elaborate inadvertence,
+touches on the personality of Lafayette. The young man relates his
+childish memory of the arrival of that enthusiastic youth when he
+first came ashore at his father's South Carolina country place.
+Bollman tests Huger in various ways and makes up his mind that this is
+the best possible person to help him. He broaches the subject. Young
+Huger is only too ready--this very enterprise has been his dearest
+thought and his dream. The danger does not daunt him. "He did not let
+the grass grow under his feet," said his daughter years later, "but
+accepted at once."
+
+It was not, however, purely romantic sentiment with him; he did not
+accede on the impulse of a moment. "I felt it to be my duty to give him
+all the aid in my power," said Colonel Huger to Josiah Quincy many years
+later. And though he may not have been conscious of it at the time,
+there was still another reason, for he admitted, long afterwards, "I
+simply considered myself the representative of the young men of America
+and acted accordingly."
+
+The story may here be taken up almost in the words of Colonel Huger's
+daughter who wrote it down exactly as her father related it.
+
+ [Illustration: FRANCIS KINLOCH HUGER.
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor R. Tait McKenzie, shows the
+ brave young American who, with Dr. Bollman, attempted to
+ rescue Lafayette from the great fortress of Olmütz.]
+
+In October, 1794, they set out from Vienna in a light traveling carriage
+and with two riding horses, one of them being strong enough to carry two
+persons if necessary. They intended to appear in the characters of a
+young Englishman and his traveling tutor, and they were provided with
+passes for the long journey. With assumed carelessness they proceeded
+toward Olmütz. The gentlemen were generally riding, while their servants
+and the baggage were in the carriage. They went to the same inn where
+Dr. Bollman had stayed on his former visit. Here they remained two days,
+while they secretly sent a note to Lafayette and received his answer.
+They paid their bill at the inn, sent their carriage on ahead to a
+village called Hoff, and directed their servants to await them there.
+
+Now Bollman and Huger are riding leisurely along the level plain that
+surrounds the fortress. The huge, dark prison looms in the distance.
+Every portion of the wide plain is visible to the sentinels at the
+gates, and within reach of the cannon on the walls. It is market day
+and many persons are passing back and forth. The two foreign travelers
+look in every direction for the carriage which may bring Lafayette.
+Both are eager for his coming.
+
+At last they notice a small phaëton being driven slowly along. In the
+carriage they see a prisoner in a blue greatcoat with an officer
+beside him and an armed soldier riding behind. They spur on, and, as
+they pass, the prisoner gives the sign agreed upon. He raises his hat
+and wipes his forehead. The feelings excited by the assurance that
+this was indeed Lafayette, Huger never to his dying day forgot. The
+riders look as indifferent as possible, bow slightly, and pass on.
+
+The phaëton stops at the side of the road and Lafayette alights. He
+draws the officer toward a footpath that runs along the highroad at
+that point, and appears to be leaning on the officer as if scarcely
+able to walk.
+
+"This must be the time," cries Bollman.
+
+"He signs to us," says Huger in great excitement.
+
+The two young men put spurs to their horses and dash up together. As
+they approach, Lafayette seizes the officer's sword. A struggle
+follows. Bollman leaps from his horse and throws the bridle to Huger.
+But the flash of the drawn sword has frightened the horse; he dashes
+aside and gallops away. Huger dismounts, passes his arm through his
+bridle, and he and Bollman seize the soldier and tear his hands from
+Lafayette's throat. The soldier runs toward the town, shouting and
+waving his cap to call the attention of the sentinels.
+
+What was to be done? They had now but one horse. The alarm had been
+given. Not a minute could be lost.
+
+Huger gave his horse to Lafayette and told him hurriedly to go to
+Hoff, the rendezvous agreed upon. Lafayette mounted the horse and
+started out. But he could not bear to leave his two rescuers in such a
+plight, so he came back to ask if he could not do something for them.
+
+"No, no!" they cried. "Go to Hoff! Go to Hoff!" they repeated. "We
+will follow."
+
+Now if they had said this in French, if they had said "Allez à Hoff,"
+Lafayette would have understood the direction. But not knowing the
+name of this near-by village, he misunderstood. He thought the English
+words meant only "Go off!" A fatal misunderstanding!
+
+Huger and Bollman soon released their officer and both mounted the
+remaining horse. He was not used to "carrying double." The insulted
+creature set his feet in a ditch and threw them both. Bollman was
+stunned. Huger lifted him up and then started off to recover the
+horse. On the way he was thinking what course he should take in this
+critical and dangerous juncture.
+
+When he came back he had decided. He said that Bollman should take the
+horse and follow Lafayette, for Bollman knew German and could give
+more help than he could. Alarm guns were beginning to be fired from
+the battlements, and trains of soldiers were seen issuing from the
+gates; but these portentous signs did not influence him. Bollman was
+persuaded; he mounted, put spurs to his horse, and was soon out of
+sight. Young America stood alone on this wide, dangerous plain; the
+shadow of that ominous fortress fell gloomily on its border. The
+guards came down. Between two rows of fixed bayonets Huger passed into
+the fortress.
+
+The bold plan was doomed to complete failure! Lafayette rode twenty
+miles; but the blood on his greatcoat awakened suspicion; he was
+arrested and carried back to Olmütz where a heavier and gloomier
+imprisonment awaited him.
+
+The same fate awaited Bollman; but Lafayette's despair was the deeper
+because he feared that his brave rescuers had been executed for their
+gallant attempt in his behalf.
+
+The imprisonment accorded to the intrepid young American was as vile
+and cruel as any devised in the Dark Ages. He was put in a cell almost
+underground, with but one small slit near the top to let in a little
+light. A low bench and some straw formed the furnishings, while two
+chains linked him at ankle and wrist to the ceiling. To make things a
+trifle more cheerful for him, they showed him a prisoner in a cell
+which was only a walled hole in the ground! The prisoner had been
+there for many years and his name and residence were now utterly
+forgotten. The jailers also exhibited their expert method of swift
+decapitation and acted out the method with a large two-bladed sword.
+Daily questionings of a cruel kind were used in order to force him to
+confess the truth--or rather what they wished to believe was the
+truth--that he had been the agent of a widespread plot. He stated that
+it was no man's plot but his own. They threatened torture, but he did
+not flinch or change his statement.
+
+At last the officers were convinced that there had been no concerted
+plot. They then softened the rigors of Huger's imprisonment, gave him
+a cell with a window where a star could sometimes be seen, and
+lengthened his chains so that he could take as many as three whole
+steps. After a time he managed to get into communication with Bollman
+who was in the room above. With a knotted handkerchief Bollman lowered
+a little ink in a walnut shell from his window, together with a scrap
+of dingy paper. Huger then wrote a letter of a few lines only to
+General Thomas Pinckney, then American Minister at London. His
+entreaty was to let his mother know that he was still alive; also to
+let Lafayette's friends know that he would certainly have escaped but
+that he had been recognized as an Olmütz prisoner in a small town
+where he changed his horse; and that he had already mounted a fresh
+one when stopped. Huger's letter ended with the words, "Don't forget
+us. F.K.H. Olmütz, Jan. 5th, 1795." By bribery and cajolery they
+started this letter off.
+
+Suffice it to say at present that, through the intervention of General
+Pinckney, the two young men were finally released and made their way
+swiftly out of the country. It was well that they hurried, for the
+emperor decided they had been released too soon and sent an edict for
+their rearrest. They had, however, by that time crossed the line and
+were out of his domain.
+
+After a short stay in London, Huger started for America. The passengers
+on his ship discussed the story of Lafayette's attempted rescue through
+the entire six weeks of the voyage, and they never dreamed that their
+quiet young fellow-passenger was one of the rescuers until he received
+an ovation on landing. This is related by the only member of the Huger
+family living to-day (1916) who heard the story of the attempted rescue
+from the lips of "Colonel Frank" himself, as the family affectionately
+call him. She says that Colonel Frank was the most silent of men. He was
+the kind that _do_ more than they _talk_.
+
+When Huger reached Philadelphia, he called at once on President
+Washington and told him of the effort he had made. The President said
+that he had followed the whole course of events with the greatest
+solicitude and had wished that it might have met with the success it
+deserved.
+
+In time Colonel Huger married the second daughter of General Thomas
+Pinckney who had effected his release from Olmütz and under whom he
+fought in the war of 1812; he had eleven children and made his home on
+a large estate in the highlands of South Carolina. When Congress
+presented Lafayette with an extensive section of land, he asked Huger
+to share it with him. Colonel Huger thanked him for the generous
+offer, but sturdily announced that he himself was able to provide for
+his daughters and that his sons should look out for themselves. His
+faith in his sons was justified, for they made good their father's
+opinion of their ability. Among his children and grandchildren were
+many who not only amassed goodly fortunes but held honored positions
+in public and military affairs.
+
+When Lafayette made his memorable visit to America in 1824, he said
+that the one man in the country whom he most wished to see was the one
+who when a youth had attempted to rescue him from Olmütz. Colonel
+Huger had a corresponding desire to see Lafayette. On the General's
+arrival he started north at once, reached New York, and sought out the
+lodgings of Lafayette early in the morning, in order that their first
+meeting might be entirely without interruption. No account of that
+meeting has ever been made public, but the rescuer and his champion
+were together most of the time during that patriotic journey. Josiah
+Quincy once had the privilege of driving Colonel Huger in his coach
+through the suburbs of Boston and of calling with him upon many
+distinguished personages. Huger charmed and delighted every one.
+Josiah Quincy said that he had that "charm of a high-bred southerner
+which wrought with such peculiar fascination upon those inheriting
+Puritan blood." Besides his attractive personality, there was the
+romantic association with the attempted rescue. Scott's novels were
+then in the full blossom of popularity; but there was no hero in all
+those brave tales whose adventures appeared more chivalrous and
+thrilling.
+
+To be sure, the effort at rescue had resulted in failure. Lafayette
+remained in prison. But it was known where he was, and, what was
+better, word had been conveyed to him that he was not forgotten. Yet
+the conditions of his imprisonment were now more severe than before,
+and his mind must have suffered intensely from being thrown back upon
+itself after that one hour's prospect of liberty.
+
+On the way from Wesel to Magdeburg Lafayette had had a moment's
+conversation with a stranger who told him something of what was
+happening in Paris, and of the lawlessness and carnage of the Reign of
+Terror. Lafayette saw to what lengths an unregulated mob might go,
+even when originally inspired by a noble passion for liberty. He heard
+of the death of Louis XVI, and called it an assassination. He realized
+that these things were being done in France by the people in whom he
+had so blindly, so persistently, believed. He was deeply disappointed.
+Yet he did not quite lose faith. The cause of the people was still
+sacred to him; they might destroy for him whatever charm there had
+been in what he called the "delicious sensation of the smile of the
+multitude"; but his belief in the ultimate outcome for democratic
+government, as the best form of government for the whole world,
+remained unchanged.
+
+And in the prison at Olmütz he celebrated our great holiday, the
+Fourth of July, as usual.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A WELCOME RELEASE
+
+
+More than a year had passed after the attempt at rescue when one day
+Lafayette heard the big keys turning in the several locks, one after
+another, that barred his cell, and in a moment his wife and two
+daughters stood before his amazed eyes! Could this be true, or was it
+a vision?
+
+It will be remembered that shortly after Lafayette's arrest he had
+heard that Madame de Lafayette was imprisoned and was in danger of
+perishing on the scaffold. A year later the news was smuggled to him
+that she was still alive. But what had been happening to her and to
+his three children during all these dismal years?
+
+Through the instrumentality of James Monroe, the ambassador to France
+from the United States,--the only foreign power that in the days of
+the French Revolution would send its representative,--Madame de
+Lafayette was liberated from an imprisonment that tried her soul, even
+as Olmütz had proved and tested the spirit of her husband. Through
+all those tragic months Adrienne showed herself a woman of high and
+unswerving courage.
+
+Now, indeed, was the American citizenship of her husband--and it had
+included his family also--of value to her. Madame de Lafayette's first
+letter to Mr. Monroe shows this. This dignified letter is preserved in
+the manuscript department of the New York Public Library and is here
+printed for the first time:
+
+"Having learned that a minister of the United States has recently
+arrived in France, who has been sent by his government and invested
+with powers representing a people in whose interests I have some
+rights that are dear to my heart, I have felt that such misfortunes as
+I have not already suffered were no longer to be feared for me, that
+the most unjust of captivities was about to be at an end, and that my
+sufferings accompanied by irreproachable conduct towards the
+principles and towards the laws of my country, cause me to have
+confidence in the name of this protecting nation at a moment when the
+voice of justice is once more heard, and when the National Convention
+is undertaking to deliver such patriots as have been unjustly
+imprisoned. I have begun to hope that the wishes of my heart shall be
+fulfilled--that I may be returned to my children. For ten months I
+have been taken away from them. From the very moment of their birth
+they have heard that they have a second country, and they have the
+right to hope that they will be protected by it."
+
+Through the official authority of Mr. Monroe, Madame de Lafayette was
+given money and passports. When Washington first heard of her plight,
+he sent her a reverent letter inclosing a thousand dollars, and he was
+unceasing in his correspondence with representatives in France and
+England for herself as well as for Lafayette. She sent her son, George
+Washington de Lafayette, to his illustrious namesake in America, and
+as "Madame Motier, of Hartford, Connecticut," she, with her two young
+daughters, made her way to Hamburg where, instead of taking ship for
+America, she took carriage across the wide spaces of Germany and
+Austria. Here she gained an audience with the emperor, and bowing at
+his feet asked permission to go to the fortress of Olmütz and stay
+with her husband until he was set free.
+
+"Your request is granted," he said; "but as for Lafayette--I cannot
+free him; my hands are tied." Exactly what it was that had "tied the
+hands" of the great potentate has never been revealed.
+
+Her petition being granted, Madame de Lafayette continued her journey.
+Two days more and she and her daughters were with her husband.
+
+The day of their meeting was spent in trying to bear the joy of the
+reunion. Not until the daughters were sent to their cell did she tell
+Lafayette of the sad things that had happened. Her mother, her
+grandmother, and her sister had, with many friends and relatives, been
+led to the scaffold. These and many other facts of tragic interest to
+the man so long deprived of any word from outside his prison were
+shared with Lafayette.
+
+It may go without saying that Lafayette's prison days were now far
+easier to bear, except that to see Madame de Lafayette grow more and
+more broken in health as days went on, in their close, unlighted, and
+malodorous cells, must have caused an added sorrow. After a time she
+was obliged to ask the emperor to allow her to go to Vienna for
+medical attendance. He granted the request, but with the proviso that
+she should never return. Then she decided to remain with her husband,
+even at the risk of her life.
+
+Shall the miseries of their prison life be dwelt upon? Their jailers
+were the coarsest of human beings. They surpassed in brutality the
+slave drivers of Constantinople. The food, which the family bought
+for themselves, was coarse and miserably cooked. Tobacco floated in
+the coffee. Lafayette's clothes were in tatters. When his shoes had
+been soled fifteen times and resented the indignity any further, his
+daughter Anastasie took it upon herself to make shoes for him out of
+an old coat.
+
+Lafayette's dingy cell was, however, now brightened by companionship
+and by inspiring conversation. Even work was going on, for Madame de
+Lafayette prepared a life of her mother while she was at Olmütz. It
+was written with a toothpick and a little lampblack on the margins of
+a copy of Buffon which she succeeded in obtaining. One of the
+daughters amused the family by making pencil sketches; one of the
+burly old turnkey, with his sword, candle, and keys, and his hair in a
+comical queue behind, amused the family very much and was carried with
+them when they left their dismal abode.
+
+Before the desolate prison of Olmütz fades from our view, let one
+laurel wreath be placed upon the head of young Felix Pontonnier,
+sixteen years old when he became the servant of Lafayette, whom he
+faithfully followed into prison. He was with Lafayette when he was
+arrested and was bidden to look after his master's belongings; so he
+was separated from him for several days. This gave him an excellent
+opportunity to escape, but he refused to take advantage of it. Of his
+own accord he joined Lafayette once more, and during the whole long
+season of his captivity he gave ample proof of his devotion. He
+possessed a rare inventive genius and was constantly on the alert to
+devise means for making the prisoners comfortable and to find out ways
+for carrying on secret correspondence. He invented a special language
+known only to himself and to the prisoners, and also a unique
+gesture-language. He whistled notes like a captive bird; with varied
+modulations he conveyed to the prisoners whatever news he could ferret
+out. Prison life proved to be bad for him, and his health was several
+times endangered. For a fancied offense he was once confined in total
+darkness for three months. But none of his sufferings dashed his gay
+spirits. He was constantly sustained by a buoyant cheer, and his
+wonderful devotion should win him a place among heroes. After the five
+years of captivity were over, Lafayette made Felix the manager of his
+farm at La Grange. He filled this position with success and probity.
+
+It was through the fiat of Napoleon Bonaparte that the removal of
+Lafayette from Olmütz was made possible. Bonaparte was influenced by a
+long-sighted policy; he desired to win to himself the man of so unique
+a personality. He was also spurred on by various writers and
+diplomats, by representatives of the French Directory, and by
+Brigadier General Henri Jacques Guillaume Clarke, who was for a time
+governor of Vienna and who won the title of "the incorruptible" from
+Napoleon. President Washington's dignified and effective letter to the
+Emperor of Austria is believed to have left its mark; and in a
+thousand ways public opinion had awakened to the ignominy of leaving
+such a man as Lafayette in prison. Lafayette disliked to be indebted
+to anybody but himself for an escape from his dungeon; but he
+willingly admitted that he owed much to his devoted wife whose many
+letters imploring help for her husband were among the causes that
+unlocked the double-barred doors of Olmütz.
+
+When finally released, Lafayette was taken in a carriage from Olmütz
+to Dresden, thence by way of Dresden, Leipzig, and Halle to Hamburg,
+where the American consul received him. So wearied was Madame de
+Lafayette that she made the journey with the greatest difficulty, and
+a voyage to America at that time was out of the question. The family,
+therefore, took refuge in an obscure town in Holland, since there was
+no other European country where the monarchy would be safe if it
+conferred the right of residence upon any man who bore the name of
+Lafayette.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+A TRIUMPHAL TOUR
+
+
+For some years events did not shape themselves so that Lafayette could
+return to Paris. That he, in 1799, was considering the possibility of
+a voyage to America is shown by a letter written in that year to his
+"deliverer," Francis Kinloch Huger, which his descendant of the same
+name has kindly allowed to be printed here. It was sent from Vianen in
+Holland, and introduces his fellow-prisoner, M. Bureaux-de-Pusy, who
+was seeking a home in the United States.
+
+ VIANEN, 17th April, 1799.
+ MY DEAR HUGER:
+
+ Here is one of my companions in captivity, Bureaux Pusy,
+ an Olmütz prisoner, and at these sounds my heart vibrates
+ with the sentiments of love, gratitude, admiration, which
+ forever bind and devote me to you! How I envy the
+ happiness he is going to enjoy! How I long, my dear and
+ noble friend, to fold you in my arms! Pusy will relate to
+ you the circumstances which hitherto have kept me on this
+ side of the Atlantic--even now the illness of my wife,
+ and the necessity of her having been a few weeks in France
+ before I set out, prevent me from embarking with Pusy and
+ his amiable family. But in the course of the summer I
+ shall look over to you and with inexpressible delight I
+ shall be welcomed by my beloved deliverer. No answer from
+ you has yet come to me. We are expecting every day my
+ friend McHenry's nephew--perhaps I may be blessed with a
+ letter from you!
+
+ I need not recommend to you Bureaux Pusy. The conspicuous
+ and honorable part he has acted in the French Revolution,
+ his sufferings during our imprisonment--you but too well
+ know what it is--are sufficient introductions to your
+ great and good heart. He is one of the most accomplished
+ men that can do honour to the country where he is born,
+ and to the country where he wishes to become a citizen. He
+ is my excellent friend. Every service, every mark of
+ affection he can receive from you and your friends, I am
+ happily authorized to depend upon.
+
+ My son is gone to Paris. My wife and my two daughters, who
+ love you as a brother, present you with the sincere,
+ grateful expressions of their friendship. The last word
+ George told me at his setting out was not to forget him in
+ my letter to you. He will accompany me to America.
+
+ Adieu, my dear Huger, I shall to the last moment of my
+ life be wholly
+
+ Yours,
+ LAFAYETTE.
+
+The wish to revisit the land of his adoption was strong, but many
+years were to pass before it could be carried out. He was forty years
+old when he was liberated from Olmütz, and he was sixty-seven when he
+paid his last visit to our shores.
+
+He little dreamed of the reception he was to find, for the whole
+American people were waiting to greet, with heart and soul, the man who,
+in his youth, had taken so noble a part in their struggle for freedom.
+He reached New York on the 16th of August, 1824. He came with modest
+expectation of some honorable attentions--nothing more. On the _Cadmus_
+he asked a fellow-traveler about the cost of stopping at American hotels
+and of traveling in steamboats and by stage; of this his secretary, M.
+Levasseur, made exact note. He came to visit the interesting scenes of
+his youth and to enjoy a reunion with a few surviving friends and
+compatriots. Instead, he found a whole country arising with one vast
+impulse to do him honor. It was not mere formality; it was a burst of
+whole-souled welcome from an entire nation. So astonished was he, so
+overcome, to find a great demonstration awaiting him, where he had
+expected to land quietly and to engage private lodgings, that his eyes
+overflowed with tears.
+
+The harbor of New York was entered on a Sunday. He was asked to accept
+a sumptuous entertainment on Staten Island till Monday, when he could
+be received by the city with more honor. On that day citizens and
+officers, together with old Revolutionary veterans, attended him. Amid
+the shouting of two hundred thousand voices he reached the Battery.
+The band played "See the Conquering Hero Comes," the "Marseillaise,"
+and "Hail, Columbia." Lafayette had never dreamed of such a reception
+or of such sweeps of applause. The simple-hearted loyalty of the
+American people had a chance to show itself, and their enthusiasm knew
+no bounds. Lafayette's face beamed with joy. Four white horses bore
+him to the City Hall, while his son, George Washington Lafayette, his
+secretary, M. Levasseur (who wrote an account of the whole journey of
+1824), and the official committee followed in carriages. The mayor
+addressed the city's guest; and Lafayette's reply was the first of
+many hundred appropriate and graceful speeches made by him during the
+journey. There were many ceremonies; school children threw garlands of
+flowers in his way; corner stones were laid by him; squares were
+renamed for "General Lafayette" (as he assured everybody he preferred
+to be called by that title), and societies made him and his son
+honorary members for life.
+
+Hundreds of invitations to visit different cities poured in. The whole
+country must be traveled over to satisfy the eagerness of a grateful
+nation. Are republics ungrateful? That can never be said of our own
+republic after Lafayette's visit to the United States in 1824.
+
+He set out for Boston by way of New Haven, New London, and Providence.
+All along the way the farmers ran out from the fields, shouting
+welcomes to the cavalcade, and children stood by the roadside decked
+with ribbons on which the picture of Lafayette was printed. Always a
+barouche with four white horses was provided to carry him from point
+to point. It was not a bit of vanity on the part of Lafayette that he
+was ever seen behind these steeds of snowy white. President Washington
+had set the fashion. His fine carriage-horses he caused to be covered
+with a white paste on Saturday nights and the next morning to be
+smoothed down till they shone like silver. It was a wonderful sight
+when that majestic man was driven to church--the prancing horses, the
+outriders, and all. And when Lafayette came, nothing was too good for
+him! The towns sent out the whitest horses harnessed to the best
+coaches procurable,--cream color, canary color, or claret color,--for
+the hero to be brought into town or sped upon his way departing.
+Returning to New York by way of the Connecticut River and the Sound,
+he found again a series of dinners and toasts, as well as a ball held
+in Castle Garden, the like of which, in splendor and display, had
+never before been thought of in this New World.
+
+Lafayette left the festivity before it was ever in order to take the
+boat, at two in the morning, to go up the Hudson River. He arose at
+six to show his son and his secretary the place where André was
+captured. As soon as the fog lifted, he described, in the most
+enthusiastic manner, the Revolutionary events which he had seen.
+
+At West Point there was a grand banquet. One of the speakers alluded
+to the fact that at Valley Forge, when the soldiers were going
+barefooted, Lafayette provided them with shoes from his own resources,
+and then proposed this toast:
+
+"To the noble Frenchman who placed the Army of the Revolution on a new
+and better footing!"
+
+At the review of the cadets, Generals Scott and Brown, in full
+uniform, with tall plumes in their hats, stood by General Lafayette.
+The three, each towering nearly six feet in height, made a magnificent
+tableau, declares one record of the day.
+
+Returning from the Hudson River excursion, the party went southward,
+visiting Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington. With ceremonies of
+great dignity Congress received Lafayette, and later voted him a
+present of two hundred thousand dollars, together with a whole
+township anywhere he might choose in the unappropriated lands of the
+country.
+
+Among other places visited was Yorktown, where the party attended a
+brilliant celebration. The marks of battle were still to be seen on
+many houses, and broken shells and various implements of war were
+found scattered about. An arch had been built where Lafayette stormed
+the redoubt, and on it were inscribed the names of Lafayette,
+Hamilton, and Laurens. Some British candles were discovered in the
+corner of a cellar, and these were burned to the sockets while the old
+soldiers told tales of the surrender of Yorktown.
+
+The party visited other places connected with the campaign in
+Virginia. Lafayette called on ex-President Jefferson at Monticello,
+his stately home near Charlottesville, Virginia, and was conducted by
+Jefferson to the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.
+
+Charleston was the next stopping-place; this was the home of the Huger
+family. Here were more combinations of "Yankee Doodle" and the
+"Marseillaise," more laying of corner stones, more deputations, more
+dinners, more public balls. It is not difficult to understand how it
+happened that, in the last half of the nineteenth century, there were
+so many old ladies living who could boast of having danced with
+Lafayette in their youth.
+
+Proceeding on their way by boat and carriage, the company came to
+Savannah, and thence moved across Georgia and Alabama, down the river to
+the Gulf of Mexico, along the shore to the mouth of the Mississippi, and
+up the "grand rivière" to St. Louis. "Vive Lafayette" was the universal
+cry all the way.
+
+All the cities vied with each other in doing honor to the nation's
+guest. At Pittsburg, for instance, a bedroom was prepared for the
+distinguished visitor in a hall that had been a Masonic lodge room. The
+ceiling was arched, and the sun, moon, and stars were painted upon it.
+The bed prepared for Lafayette was a vast "four-poster" of mahogany, on
+whose posts were inscribed the names of Revolutionary heroes. Above the
+canopy a large gilt eagle spread its wings and waved a streamer on which
+were written the names of Washington and Lafayette. In this city, as
+everywhere, Lafayette was shown everything notable, including all the
+foundries and factories.
+
+As usual, the hero left the city in a coach shining with the freshest
+paint, and drawn by four white steeds.
+
+ [Illustration: A CARRIAGE IN WHICH LAFAYETTE RODE.
+ This interesting relic is now in Cooperstown, New York.
+ The picture shows it being used in a present-day pageant,
+ filled with boys and girls in colonial costumes. (See page 187.)]
+
+At Buffalo, after a visit to Niagara, they embarked on the newly-built
+Erie Canal. Then followed a part of the journey that was much enjoyed
+by Lafayette--the beautiful country of central New York. He was
+charmed with this bit of travel after the long distances between towns
+in the western region.
+
+Syracuse was the next stopping-place. The carriage in which Lafayette
+traveled into that City of Sixty Hills was kept for many decades as a
+precious treasure. Not many years ago it was in a barn back of one of
+the houses on James Street in that city. Now, however, after wandering
+from place to place and taking part in various pageants, it may be
+seen in the celebrated village of Cooperstown, where the young folks,
+when they attire themselves in Revolutionary costume, may ride as
+bride or coachman, as shown in the picture.
+
+Lafayette reached the "Village of Syracuse" at six o'clock in the
+morning. The people had been watching all night for the arrival of the
+illustrious guest and were still watching when the colors of the
+illuminations were melting into those of sunrise. The guest of honor
+had been in his carriage all night and must have been weary, but he
+gayly asserted that the splendid supper that had been prepared the
+night before made an excellent breakfast, and he spent the three
+hours allotted to that "village" in shaking hands with the hundreds of
+people whose desire to see him had kept them waiting all night.
+
+At nine o'clock he bade good-by to his friends of a day and embarked
+upon the packet boat of the canal, while the air resounded with good
+wishes for his voyage. Through Rome they passed by night in an
+illumination that turned darkness into daylight, and at every place
+they received deputations from the city just ahead of the one where
+they were. There were cannon to welcome and cannon to bid farewell. At
+Utica three Oneida chiefs demanded an interview on the score of having
+been Lafayette's helpers in 1778. They were very old but still
+remarkably energetic. Lafayette begged them to accept certain gifts of
+silver, and they went away happy.
+
+The traveling was now hastened in order that General Lafayette might
+reach Boston by the Fourth of July, 1825, and take part in laying the
+corner stone of Bunker Hill Monument. This event in our national
+history has been described by Josiah Quincy in his "Figures of the
+Past" and by many others. It was a great national celebration, and a
+general meeting of Revolutionary comrades, one of whom wore the same
+coat he had worn at the battle of Bunker Hill, almost half a century
+before, and could point to nine bullet-holes in its texture. Daniel
+Webster delivered his grand oration. All Boston was on the alert.
+There were a thousand tents on the Common, and a dinner to which
+twelve hundred persons sat down. General Lafayette gave a reception to
+the ladies of the city. Then there was a ball--with the usual honor
+bestowed. Everybody was proud and happy to have General Lafayette as a
+national guest on that great day.
+
+One more incident must be related. In July of 1825 the people of
+Brooklyn were erecting an Apprentices' Free Library Building at the
+corner of Cranberry and Henry streets, later incorporated in the
+Brooklyn Institute, and they wished Lafayette to assist in laying the
+corner stone. He was brought to Brooklyn in great state, riding in a
+canary-colored coach drawn by four snow-white horses. The streets were
+crammed with people. Among them were many citizens and their wives, some
+old Revolutionary veterans, troops of Brooklyn children, and a number of
+negroes who had been freed by the recent New York Emancipation Acts.
+
+Through the closely packed masses of people the carriage of the noble
+Frenchman was slowly driven, the antics of the impatient horses
+attracting the attention of the small boy as much as the illustrious
+visitor himself. As they came near the stand where the ceremony was to
+take place, Lafayette saw that various gentlemen were carefully
+lifting some little children over the rough places where soil from
+excavations and piles of cut stone had been heaped, and were helping
+them to safe places where they could see and hear. He at once alighted
+from the carriage and came forward to assist in this work.
+
+Without suspecting it in the least, he was making another historic
+minute; for one of the boys he was thus to lift over a hard spot was a
+five-year-old child who afterwards became known to the world as Walt
+Whitman. Lafayette pressed the boy to his heart as he passed him along
+and affectionately kissed his cheek. Thus a champion of liberty from
+the Old World and one from the New were linked in this little act of
+helpfulness. When he was an old man, Whitman still treasured the
+reminiscence as one of indescribable preciousness.
+
+"I remember Lafayette's looks quite well," he said; "tall, brown, not
+handsome in the face, but of fine figure, and the pattern of
+good-nature, health, manliness, and human attraction."
+
+Through nearly all of this long and exciting journey, Lafayette was
+accompanied by Colonel Francis Kinloch Huger, by his secretary, and by
+his son, George Washington Lafayette, then a man full grown. The
+latter was almost overcome by the warmth of his father's reception.
+Writing to a friend at home, after having been in America but twenty
+days, he said:
+
+"Ever since we have been here my father has been the hero, and we the
+spectators, of the most imposing, beautiful, and affecting sights; the
+most majestic population in the world welcoming a man with common
+accord and conducting him in triumph throughout a journey of two
+hundred leagues. Women wept with joy on seeing him, and children
+risked being crushed to get near to a man whom their fathers kept
+pointing out to them as one of those who contributed the most in
+procuring them their happiness and independence. This is what it has
+been reserved to us to see. I am knocked off my feet--excuse the
+expression--by the emotions of all kinds that I experience."
+
+Lafayette has been accused of being a spoiled hero. In a moment of
+asperity Jefferson had alluded to Lafayette's love of approbation. If,
+indeed, Lafayette did yield to that always imminent human frailty, and
+if Olmütz had not been able to eradicate or subdue it, the itinerary
+of 1824 must have been to him a period of torture. He must have
+suffered from satiety to an unbearable degree, for praise and
+admiration were poured out by a grateful people to an extent not
+easily imagined. To keep up a fiction is the most wearying thing in
+the world. The only refreshing and vivifying thing is to be absolutely
+sincere. This it must be believed Lafayette was. His simple attitude
+toward the land of his adoption was shown in a letter to President
+Monroe in which he bade farewell to a nation where "in every man,
+woman, and child of a population of twelve million I have found a
+loving, indeed an enthusiastic, friend."
+
+It did as much good to the American people as it did to Lafayette to
+take part in this great tide of gratitude and devotion. A vast,
+swelling emotion is unifying and it is strengthening. Our people made
+a great stride toward nationalization when Lafayette came to let us,
+as a people, throw our heart at his feet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+LAST DAYS OF LAFAYETTE
+
+
+Mingled with the joys of Lafayette's visit to the United States in
+1824 there was one profound sorrow; he no longer saw here the great
+man to whom he had given such whole-hearted devotion. President
+Washington died in 1799; and one of the most affecting moments of all
+the journey of 1824 was when General Lafayette and his son, George
+Washington Lafayette, stood together by the tomb of the man whom both
+regarded as a father.
+
+On the centennial anniversary of the birth of Washington, in 1832, the
+27th Regiment State Artillery of New York sent Lafayette a magnificent
+commemorative medal. In acknowledgment of this gift Lafayette wrote to
+the Committee, calling the gift "a new testimony of that persevering
+affection which has been, during nearly sixty years, the pride and
+delight of my life to be the happy object. The only merit on my part
+which it does not exceed is to be found in the warmth of my gratitude
+and the patriotic devotion that binds to the United States the loving
+heart of an adopted son. The honor was enhanced by the occasion--the
+birthday of the matchless Washington, of whom it is the most gratifying
+circumstance to have been the beloved and faithful disciple."
+
+This attitude Lafayette never failed to hold. The relation between the
+two men was from beginning to end honorable to both in the highest
+degree. It was one of the great friendships of history.
+
+In one respect the private tastes of Washington and Lafayette were
+similar; both dearly loved a farm. No one can visit Mount Vernon
+without feeling the presence there of a lover of growing things. From
+this productive place fine hams and bacon were forwarded to Lafayette
+and his family in France and were there eaten with the keenest relish.
+Fine birds were also sent--ducks, pheasants, and red partridges. In
+return Lafayette dispatched by request some special breeds of wolf
+hounds and a pair of jackasses; also, strange trees and plants,
+together with varied gifts such as Paris only could devise. The
+visitor to Mount Vernon finds in the family dining room Lafayette's
+ornamental clock and rose jars, and his mahogany chair in Mrs.
+Washington's sitting room. The key to the Bastille, which he sent in
+1789, is shown under a glass cover on the wall by the staircase in the
+entrance hall, and a model of that ancient fortress of tyranny, made
+from a block of stone from the renowned French prison, sent over in
+1793, stands in happy irony in the banquet hall. A bedchamber on the
+second floor is pointed out as the room in which Lafayette slept. It
+still bears his name.
+
+After Lafayette returned to France, he lived for years in semi-exile on
+an estate known as La Grange, that Madame de Lafayette had inherited. It
+lay about forty miles east of Paris, in a beautiful country covered with
+peach orchards and vineyards. At the time it was, from an agricultural
+point of view, in a sadly neglected condition; and it was not by any
+means the least of the achievements of Lafayette that he turned his hand
+cleverly to the great task of developing this estate into a really
+productive farm, and succeeded. Beginning with a single plow--for he was
+too poor at first to buy numerous appliances--he gradually developed the
+estate into a valuable property. After a time he supplied himself with
+fine breeds of cattle, sheep, and pigs; indeed, specimens of various
+kinds from all zones of the earth were sent him by his friends the
+American shipmasters, who, it must be remembered, appreciated the
+ardent efforts he had made to establish American commerce. To
+Washington, who was a good farmer as well as a good President, every
+detail of these labors would have been interesting if he had been
+living.
+
+In patriarchal happiness Lafayette carried on the estate of eight
+hundred French acres, with all its industries, in a perfect system. In
+a fine old mansion built in the days of Louis IX, Lafayette lived with
+his two daughters and their families under an efficient household
+system. Sometimes twelve cousins, brothers and sisters, would be there
+together. The combined family formed a perfect little academy of its
+own; and just to live at La Grange was an education in itself. The
+walls were covered with pictures and memorabilia, to know which would
+mean to understand European and American history for a century past. A
+picture of Washington had the place of honor. The Declaration of
+Independence and the Declaration of Rights were hung side by side. A
+miniature of Francis Kinloch Huger in a frame of massive gold was
+among the treasures. Dress swords, gifts of many kinds, symbols of
+honors, and rich historical records decorated the whole house. Even
+the name of the estate, La Grange, was American, for it was so called
+in honor of the Manhattan Island home of his friend Alexander
+Hamilton.
+
+ [Illustration: THE CHILDREN'S STATUE OF LAFAYETTE.
+ This spirited statue, by the sculptor Paul Wayland Bartlett,
+ was a gift to France from five millions of American school
+ children. (See page 201.)]
+
+There was one room in the château at La Grange that was more sacred
+than any other; it was the room in which Madame de Lafayette had died.
+This chamber was never entered except on the anniversary of her death,
+and then by her husband alone, who cherished her memory tenderly and
+faithfully as long as he lived.
+
+Many wonderful visitors came to La Grange, and in later years to the
+Paris home of the Lafayettes. There were Irish guests to tell tales of
+romance; there were Poles to plead the cause of their country;
+misguided American Indians were sometimes stranded there; Arabs from
+Algeria; negro officers in uniform from the French West Indies--all
+people who had the passion for freedom in their hearts naturally and
+inevitably gravitated to Lafayette. His house was a modern Babel, for
+all languages of the world were spoken there.
+
+And Americans! So many Americans came along the Rosay Road that little
+boys learned the trick of meeting any foreign-looking persons who
+spoke bad French, and announced themselves as guides of all the
+"Messieurs Americains"; they would capture the portmanteau, swing it
+up to a strong shoulder, and then set out for the château at the
+regular jog trot of a well-trained porter.
+
+One of these American guests was the grandson of General Nathanael
+Greene with whom Lafayette had had cordial relations during the
+Virginia campaign. In the year 1828 this grandson visited La Grange
+and wrote an account full of delightful, intimate touches, which was
+printed in the _Atlantic Monthly_ in 1861. Of Lafayette himself he
+said:
+
+"In person he was tall and strongly built, with broad shoulders, large
+limbs, and a general air of strength.... He had more dignity of
+bearing than any man I ever saw. And it was not merely the dignity of
+self-possession, which early familiarity with society and early habits
+of command may give even to an ordinary man, but that elevation of
+manner which springs from an habitual elevation of thought, bearing
+witness to the purity of its source, as a clear eye and ruddy cheek
+bear witness to the purity of the air you daily breathe. In some
+respects he was the mercurial Frenchman to the last day of his life;
+yet his general bearing, that comes oftenest to my memory, was of calm
+earnestness, tempered and mellowed by quick sympathies."
+
+The death of Lafayette, on the 20th of May, 1834, set the bells
+a-tolling in many lands, but in none was the mourning more sincere
+than in our own. Members of Congress were commanded to wear the badge
+of sorrow for thirty days, and thousands of the people joined them in
+this outward expression of the sincere grief of their hearts.
+
+His services to his own country and to ours were many and valuable.
+But his personal example of character, integrity, and constancy was
+even more to us and to the world than his distinct services. What he
+_was_ endeared him to us, even more than the things he did. He gave
+his whole soul in youth to his world-wide dream of freedom--freedom
+under a constitution guaranteeing it, through public order, to every
+human being. He found himself in a world where monarchical government
+seemed the destiny and habit of mankind. He thought it a bad
+habit--one that ought to be broken. Sincerely and passionately
+believing this, he was willing to die in the service of any people who
+were ready to make the struggle against the existing national
+traditions. He made mistakes; he made the mistake of trusting Louis
+Philippe. In doing this he had with him the whole French people. But
+let it be said on the other hand that he did not make the mistake of
+trusting Bonaparte, whose blandishments he resisted during the whole
+passage of that meteor. And he was making no mistake when, to the
+very end of his life, he remained true to his love for the land he had
+aided in his youth. His visions did not all come true in exactly the
+shape he devised, but to the last he retained a glorious confidence
+that they would ultimately be realized in full.
+
+Lafayette was absolutely fearless. He had physical bravery; he was
+equally indomitable in moral and intellectual realms. He had the power
+of courage. He could decide quickly and then stand by the decision to
+the bitter end. The essence of his bold, adventurous youth is
+expressed in the motto he then chose, "Cur non." But the confirmed and
+tried spirit of his full manhood is more truly set forth in another
+motto: "Fais ce que dois, advienne que pourra." "Do what you ought,
+let come what may."
+
+For a man so possessed by a great, world-wide idea, so fearless, so
+constant, it is quite fitting that monuments should be erected and
+that his birthday should be celebrated. Probably there is no man in
+all history who has had so many cities, counties, townships,
+boulevards, arcades, mountains, villages, and hamlets named for him,
+in a country to which he was not native-born, as has the Frenchman
+Lafayette in the United States of America. Also, many notable statues
+of Lafayette stand in city squares and halls of art, both in our
+country and in his own. Among them there is one special statue in
+which the young people of America have a peculiar interest. On the
+19th of October, 1898, five millions of American school children
+contributed to a Lafayette Monument Fund. With this sum a bronze
+statue was made and presented to the French Republic. Mr. Paul Wayland
+Bartlett was the sculptor intrusted with this work. The statue was
+completed in 1908 and placed in a court of the Louvre in Paris. It was
+originally intended that the statue of Bonaparte should occupy the
+center of that beautiful court, but it is the statue of Lafayette that
+stands there--the "Boy" Cornwallis could not catch, the man Napoleon
+could not intimidate. No one can tell us just how Lafayette's statue
+happened to be assigned the place intended for Napoleon's; but however
+it was, the fact is a luminous example of how a man who loved people
+only to master and subjugate them did not reach the heart of the world
+so directly as the man who loved human beings for their own sakes and
+to do them good.
+
+
+Printed in the United States of America.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of Macmillan books by the
+same author.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TRUE STORIES OF GREAT AMERICANS
+
+"_Should be read by every boy and girl._"
+
+
+This important new series of brief and vivid biographies will give to
+the young mind an intimate picture of the greatest Americans who have
+helped to make American history. In each instance the author has been
+chosen either because he is particularly interested in the subject of
+the biography, or is connected with him by blood ties and possessed,
+therefore, of valuable facts. Only those, however, who have shown that
+they have an appreciation of what makes really good juvenile
+literature have been entrusted with a volume. In each case they have
+written with a child's point of view in mind, those events being
+emphasized which are calculated to appeal to the younger reader,
+making a full and well-balanced narrative, yet always authentic.
+
+"Most admirable in their construction and purpose. The volumes are
+interesting and attractive in appearance, graphic in style, and
+wonderfully inspiring in subject matter, reaching an enviable mark in
+juvenile literature."--_Philadelphia Public Ledger_.
+
+"Far away from the 'dry as dust' type of biography."--_San Francisco
+Bulletin._
+
+"Simply and attractively told.... Especially interesting to
+children."--_Christian Advocate._
+
+"An excellent series."--_New York Sun._
+
+See the following pages for descriptions of the individual books of
+this series.
+
+
+_The Lives of National Heroes Told in a New Way for Children_
+
+EACH VOLUME ILLUSTRATED, $.50
+
+
+ Christopher Columbus By Mildred Stapley
+
+Mildred Stapley has consulted new and recently discovered sources of
+contemporary information, and the history of Columbus' voyages is
+revised and corrected, though the romance and excitement still glow
+through the record of his achievements, and his fame as a daring
+navigator remains an example of courage and unequalled valor.
+
+
+ Captain John Smith By Rossiter Johnson
+
+The adventurous Captain who founded Virginia lived the life of a
+typical hero of romance--Soldier of Fortune in America, Europe, Asia,
+and Africa, pirate, slave, and friend of princes. He was an able
+executive and a man of energy and capacity.
+
+
+ William Penn By Rupert S. Holland
+
+The life of William Penn is of especial interest and value because the
+events of his career are closely related to American and English
+history at a time when America was separating herself from her parent
+country and shaping her destiny as an independent Republic.
+
+
+ Benjamin Franklin By E. Lawrence Dudley
+
+As a statesman, diplomat, scientist, philosopher, and man of letters,
+Benjamin Franklin was the foremost American of his time. The story of
+his life is an inspiring and stimulating narrative, with all the
+fascination and interest of Colonial and Revolutionary America.
+
+
+_New Illustrated Biographies for Young People_
+
+EACH VOLUME ILLUSTRATED, $.50
+
+
+ Thomas A. Edison By Francis Rolt-Wheeler
+
+Thomas Alva Edison is the typical American. From boyhood to ripest
+manhood he has been keen to see an opportunity, and quick to turn that
+opportunity to a practical use. His genius is peculiar because it is
+so American.
+
+
+ Robert Fulton By Alice C. Sutcliffe
+
+The life of Robert Fulton makes good reading. The story of his belief
+in and work upon a submarine and his journeys to France and England to
+lay his plans before the British Government--his steamboat, and the
+years of study and labor which went toward perfecting it--his
+paintings--his travels in foreign lands in days when American
+travellers were few--combine to make one of the most interesting and
+inspiring books of the series.
+
+
+ Robert E. Lee By Bradley Gilman
+
+Robert E. Lee ranks with the greatest of all English-speaking military
+leaders. Bradley Gilman has told the story of his life so as to reveal
+the greatness and true personality of a man "who has left an enduring
+memory of the highest idealism."
+
+
+ Davy Crockett By William C. Sprague
+
+No fictitious tale of perils and adventures could surpass the true
+story of Davy Crockett, pioneer. His life and adventures are closely
+bound up with the greatest events of American history.
+
+
+ Nathan Hale By Jean Christie Root
+
+There is hardly another story in the whole range of American history
+which contains so much of inspiration and splendid heroism as that of
+Nathan Hale.
+
+"There is more than the work of a gifted biographer here. There is a
+message."--_New York World._
+
+
+ U.S. Grant By F.E. Lovell Coombs
+
+There is but little fiction which can compare in interest with the
+true story of Ulysses S. Grant. Mr. Coombs has told it admirably.
+
+
+ Abraham Lincoln By Daniel E. Wheeler
+
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+inspiring story of the great war President told with spirit in a new
+way.
+
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+
+ Daniel Boone By Lucile Gulliver
+
+ La Salle By Louise S. Hasbrouck
+
+ Lafayette By Martha F. Crow
+
+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+List of Illustrations and Illustration Captions have been made
+consistent to each other as follows.
+
+"Portrait of Lafayette"--Caption has been extended from "Lafayette".
+
+"A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode" entry in the List of
+Illustrations has been extended from "Lafayette's Carriage".
+
+On page 109 "Yorktown was now familar to Lafayette" has been corrected
+to "Yorktown was now familiar to Lafayette".
+
+In the song quoted on page 141 the last line "Et qui s'abaisse, on
+l'évèra." has been changed to "Et qui s'abaisse, on l'élèvera."
+
+All other spelling, punctuation, grammatical and typesetting errors
+have been left as they were in the original book.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAFAYETTE***
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lafayette, by Martha Foote Crow</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Lafayette</p>
+<p>Author: Martha Foote Crow</p>
+<p>Release Date: January 11, 2009 [eBook #27777]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAFAYETTE***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Jen Haines,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="618"
+alt="Book Cover" title="Book Cover" />
+</div>
+
+<h1><br /><br />TRUE STORIES OF GREAT AMERICANS </h1>
+<hr class="hr2" />
+<h1><br /><br />LAFAYETTE<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></h1>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/logo1.jpg" width="200" height="62"
+alt="Macmillan Logo" title="Macmillan Logo" />
+</div>
+
+<h4> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</h4>
+
+<h5> NEW YORK &middot; BOSTON &middot; CHICAGO &middot; DALLAS<br />
+ ATLANTA &middot; SAN FRANCISCO<br /><br /><br /></h5>
+
+<h4> MACMILLAN &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span></h4>
+
+<h5> LONDON &middot; BOMBAY &middot; CALCUTTA
+ MELBOURNE<br /><br /><br /><br /></h5>
+
+<h4> THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span></h4>
+
+<h5> TORONTO<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></h5>
+
+<p><a name="Frontis" id="Frontis"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus01.jpg" width="400" height="537"
+alt="Portait of Lafayette.
+From an authentic portrait.
+This shows Lafayette as a youthful general."
+title="Portrait of Lafayette." />
+<p class="mini-caption">From an authentic portrait.</p>
+<p class="caption">Portait of Lafayette.</p>
+<p class="caption2">This shows Lafayette as a youthful general.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1><br /><br />LAFAYETTE</h1>
+
+<h3> BY</h3>
+
+<h2> MARTHA FOOTE CROW<br /><br /><br /><br /></h2>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">And what gave he to us?<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">He gave his starry youth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">His quick, audacious sword,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">His name, his crested plume.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And what gave we?<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">We gave&mdash;a nation's heart!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+</div></div>
+
+<h4><br /><br /><br />New York</h4>
+
+<h3>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</h3>
+
+<h4>1918</h4>
+
+<h5><i>All rights reserved</i></h5>
+
+<h5> <span class="smcap">COPYRIGHT, 1916,</span></h5>
+
+<h4> <span class="smcap">By</span> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.</h4>
+<hr class="hr3" />
+
+<h5> Set up and electrotyped. Published May, 1916.<br />
+ Reprinted October, 1917.</h5>
+
+<h5><br /><br /><br />Norwood Press<br />
+ J.S. Cushing Co.&mdash;Berwick &amp; Smith Co.<br />
+ Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.</h5>
+
+<h2><br /><br /><br />CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" summary="Table of Contents with Hyperlinks to Chapters">
+<tr><td class="td3" colspan="2">Page</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">A Boy of the French Nobility</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">College and Court</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">A Boy's Ideals</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">21</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Great Inspiration</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">27</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">First Days in America</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">42</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Lafayette at the Brandywine</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">52</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">A Successful Failure</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">62</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Lafayette at Monmouth</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">73</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Return to France</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">86</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Lafayette in Virginia</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">100</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Two Redoubts</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">111</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Surrender of Yorktown</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">119</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Lionized by Two Worlds</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">128</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Gathering Clouds</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">137</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Lafayette in Prison</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">144</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>CHAPTER XVI</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">An Attempted Rescue</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">154</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>CHAPTER XVII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">A Welcome Release</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">171</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>CHAPTER XVIII</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">A Triumphal Tour</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">179</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td4" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>CHAPTER XIX</b></a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Last Days of Lafayette</span></td>
+ <td class="td3">193</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<h2><br /><br /><br />LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" summary="List of Illustrations with Hyperlinks">
+
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Portrait of Lafayette</span></td>
+ <td class="td3"><a href="#Frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td3" colspan="2"><span class="smaller">FACING PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Council at Hopewell</span></td>
+ <td class="td3"><a href="#Page78pic">78</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Surrender of Cornwallis</span></td>
+ <td class="td3"><a href="#Page126pic">126</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">Francis Kinloch Huger</span></td>
+ <td class="td3"><a href="#Page160pic">160</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode</span></td>
+ <td class="td3"><a href="#Page186pic">186</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="td2"><span class="smcap">The Children's Statue of Lafayette</span></td>
+ <td class="td3"><a href="#Page196pic">196</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LAFAYETTE" id="LAFAYETTE"></a>LAFAYETTE</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">A Boy of the French Nobility</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">AMONG the rugged Auvergne Mountains, in the
+southern part of France, stands a castle that is
+severe and almost grim in its aspect. Two bare
+round towers flank the building on the right and
+on the left. Rows of lofty French windows are
+built across the upper part of the front, and the
+small, ungenerous doorway below has a line of
+portholes on either side that suggest a thought of
+warlike days gone by.</p>
+
+<p>This castle, built in the fourteenth century, is
+called the Ch&acirc;teau de Chaviniac de Lafayette.
+Though it was burned to the ground in 1701, it
+was rebuilt as nearly like the earlier structure as
+possible; hence it represents, as it stands, the
+chivalrous days of the crusading period and so
+forms a fitting birthplace for a hero. In this
+half-military ch&acirc;teau was born one of the most
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+valiant champions of liberty that any country
+has ever produced&mdash;the Marquis de Lafayette.</p>
+
+<p>The climate of the Haute-Loire&mdash;the highlands
+of Auvergne&mdash;is harsh; it has been called the
+French Siberia. There are upland moors like
+deserts across which sweep fierce winds, where the
+golden broom and the purple heather&mdash;flowers
+of the barren heights&mdash;are all that will flourish.
+There are, indeed, secluded valleys filled with
+muskmallows and bracken, but these are often
+visited by wild tempests, and sudden floods may
+make the whole region dreary and dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>In Lafayette's time the violence of the elements
+was not the only thing to be dreaded. When the
+children wandered too near the edge of the forest,
+they might catch sight of a wild boar nozzling
+about for mushrooms under the dead oak leaves;
+and if it had been a severe winter, it was quite
+within possibility that wolves or hyenas might
+come from their hiding places in the rocky recesses
+of the mountains and lurk hungrily near the
+villages.</p>
+
+<p>The family living in the old ch&acirc;teau was one
+whose records could be traced to the year one
+thousand, when a certain man by the name of
+Motier acquired an estate called Villa Faya, and
+thereafter he became known as Motier de la
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+Fayette. In 1240 Pons Motier married the
+noble Alix Brun de Champeti&egrave;res; and from
+their line descended the famous Lafayettes known
+to all Americans. Other Auvergne estates were
+added to the Chaviniac acres as the years went
+by, some with old castles high up in the mountains
+behind Chaviniac, and all these were inherited
+by the father of America's famous champion.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's father was a notable warrior, as <i>his</i>
+father had been&mdash;and his&mdash;and his&mdash;away
+back to the days of the Crusades. Pons Motier
+de la Fayette fought at Acre; Jean Motier de la
+Fayette fell at Poitiers. There were marshals
+who bore the banner in many a combat of olden
+times when the life of the country was at stake.
+It was a Lafayette who won the battle at Beaug&eacute;
+in 1421, when the English Duke of Clarence was
+defeated and his country was compelled to resign
+hope of a complete conquest of France. Among
+other men who bore the name, there were military
+governors of towns and cities, aids to kings in war,
+captains and seneschals. Many of them spent
+their lives in camps and on battlefields. One of
+them saw thirty years of active service; another
+found that after thirty-eight years of military life
+he had been present at no less than sixty-five
+sieges besides taking part in many pitched battles.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+Lafayette's grandfather was wounded in three
+battles; and his uncle, Jacques Roch Motier, was
+killed in battle at the age of twenty-three.</p>
+
+<p>During the summer before Lafayette's birth,
+his father, the young chevalier and colonel, not
+then twenty-five, had been living quietly in the
+Ch&acirc;teau Chaviniac. But a great conflict was
+going on&mdash;the Seven Years' War was being
+waged. He heard the call of his country and he
+felt it his duty to respond.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sad parting from his beautiful
+young wife; then he dashed down the steep,
+rocky roadway from the ch&acirc;teau to the village,
+and so galloped away&mdash;over the plains, through
+fords and defiles, toward the German border&mdash;never
+to return.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's ancestors on his mother's side were
+equally distinguished for military spirit. His
+mother was the daughter of the Comte de la
+Rivi&egrave;re, lieutenant general and captain of the
+second company of the King's Musketeers.</p>
+
+<p>But this "hero of two worlds" inherited something
+more than military spirit. The ancestors
+from which he descended formed a line of true
+gentlefolk. For hundreds of years they had been
+renowned throughout the region of their Auvergne
+estates for lofty character and a kindly attitude
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+toward their humble peasant neighbors. It was
+only natural that this most famous representative
+of the line should become a valiant champion of
+justice and freedom.</p>
+
+<p>This great man was destined to have as many
+adventures as any boy of to-day could wish for.
+To recount them all would require not one book,
+but a dozen. Think of a lad of nineteen being a
+general in our Revolutionary War, and the trusted
+friend and helper of Washington! Lafayette was
+present at the surrender of Cornwallis, boyishly
+happy at the achievements of the American soldiery,
+and taking especial pride in his own American
+regiment. This period was followed by a
+worthy career in France, but for five years&mdash;from
+his thirty-fifth year to his fortieth&mdash;he was
+unjustly imprisoned in a grim old Austrian fortress.
+At the age of sixty-seven he made a wonderful
+tour through our country, being received with
+ceremonies and rejoicings wherever he went; for
+every one remembered with deep gratitude what
+this charming, courteous, elderly man had done
+for us in his youth. He lived to the ripe age of
+seventy-seven, surrounded by children and grandchildren,
+and interested in the work of the world
+up to the very last.</p>
+
+<p>The birth of Lafayette is recorded in the yellow
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+and timeworn parish register of Chaviniac. This
+ancient document states that on September 6,
+1757, was born that "very high and very puissant
+gentleman Monseigneur Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert
+Dumotier de Lafayette, the lawful
+son of the very high and the very puissant Monseigneur
+Michel-Louis-Christophe-Roch-Gilbert
+Dumotier, Marquis de Lafayette, Baron de
+Wissac, Seigneur de Saint-Romain and other
+places, and of the very high and very puissant
+lady Madame Marie-Louise-Julie de la Rivi&egrave;re."</p>
+
+<p>But it was only on official documents that
+Lafayette's full name, terrifying in its length,
+was used. Reduced to republican simplicity, the
+Marquis de Lafayette's name was Gilbert Motier,
+although he was always proud of the military
+title, "General," bestowed on him by our country.
+To tell the truth, imposing names meant little to
+this friend of liberty, who was a true republican
+at heart and who, during the French Revolution,
+voluntarily resigned all the titles of nobility he
+had inherited.</p>
+
+<p>During his earliest childhood Lafayette was
+somewhat delicate. The child first opened his
+eyes in a sorrowful home at the old Ch&acirc;teau
+Chaviniac, for word had come, only a month before,
+that Lafayette's father had been killed at
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+the battle of Minden, leaving the young mother
+a widow. The boy, however, grew in strength
+with the years. Naturally, all was done that
+could be done to keep him in health. At any rate,
+either through those mountain winds, or in spite
+of them, he developed a constitution so vigorous
+as to withstand the many strains he was to undergo
+in the course of his long and adventurous life.</p>
+
+<p>The supreme characteristic of the man showed
+early in the boy when, at only eight years of age,
+he became possessed of an unselfish impulse to go
+out and perform a feat which for one so young
+would have been heroic. It was reported in the
+castle that a dangerous hyena was prowling about
+in the vicinity of the estate, terrifying everybody.
+The boy's sympathy was roused, and, from the
+moment he first heard of it, his greatest longing
+was to meet the cruel creature and have it out with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>It is not recorded that the eight-year-old boy
+ever met that wild animal face to face, and it is
+well for the world that he did not. He was preserved
+to stand up against other and more
+significant spoilers of the world's welfare.</p>
+
+<p>His education was begun under the care of his
+mother, assisted by his grandmother, a woman of
+unusually strong character; these, together with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+two aunts, formed a group whose memory was
+tenderly revered by Lafayette to the end of his life.</p>
+
+<p>The boy Lafayette cared a great deal for hunting.
+Writing back to a cousin at home after he
+had been sent to Paris to school, he told her that
+what he would most like to hear about when she
+wrote to him would be the great events of the
+hunting season. His cousin, it appears, had
+written him an account of a hunt in the neighborhood,
+but she had not written enough about it to
+satisfy his desire. Why did she not give details?
+he asked. He reproachfully added that if he had
+been writing to her of a new-fashioned cap, he
+would have taken compass in hand and described
+it with mathematical accuracy. This she should
+have done concerning the great hunt if she had
+really wished to give him pleasure!</p>
+
+<p>This fortunate boy could select any career he
+liked; courtier, lawyer, politician, writer, soldier&mdash;whatever
+he chose. Never came opportunity
+more richly laden to the doorway of any youth.</p>
+
+<p>He chose to be a soldier. The double-barred
+doors of iron, the lofty, protected windows, the
+military pictures on the walls of his home&mdash;all
+spoke to the Chaviniac child of warfare and conflict.
+There was the portrait of his father in cuirass
+and helmet. There were far-away ancestors
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+in glistening armor and laced jackets. There was
+also the military portrait of that Gilbert Motier de
+Lafayette who was marshal in the time of Charles
+VII, and whose motto "Cur non" (Why not?)
+was chosen by Lafayette for his own when he
+started on his first voyage. The instinct for warfare,
+for the organization of armies, for struggle
+and conquest, were strong in him, and were fostered
+and nourished by every impression of his boyhood's
+home.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">College and Court</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">IN the year 1768 the boy Lafayette, then eleven
+years old, left his mountain home and went to
+Paris, where he was placed by his mother in the
+Coll&egrave;ge du Plessis, a school for boys of the nobility.</p>
+
+<p>The arrangements for the student in a French
+college at that time were simple. A room scarcely
+wider than a cell was assigned to each boy. It was
+locked at night; but holes were cut in the door so
+that the fresh air might come in. This, at least,
+was the theory. Practically, however, the little
+cell must have been very stuffy, for the windows in
+the halls were shut tight in order that the health
+of the pupils might not be injured by currents of
+damp air from outside.</p>
+
+<p>Special attention was given to diet, care being
+taken that the boys should not eat any uncooked
+fruit lest it should injure them. Parents might
+come to visit their children, but they were not
+allowed to pass beyond the threshold&mdash;a familiar
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+chat on home matters might interfere with the
+studious mood of the scholars.</p>
+
+<p>What were the studies of this young aristocrat?</p>
+
+<p>First and foremost, heraldry. From earliest
+days his tutors had instilled into him the idea that
+the study of the coats of arms of reigning and
+noble families, together with all that they stood
+for, was first in importance.</p>
+
+<p>Then the young student must dance, write,
+and draw. He must be able to converse wittily
+and with apt repartee. Fencing and vaulting
+were considered essential, as well as riding with
+grace and skill and knowing all about the management
+of the horse.</p>
+
+<p>As far as books were concerned, the Latin masters&mdash;C&aelig;sar,
+Sallust, Virgil, Terence, Cicero&mdash;were
+carefully studied. The boys were obliged to translate
+from Latin into French and from French into
+Latin. Occasionally this training proved useful.
+It is related that one of the French soldiers who
+came to New England and who could not speak
+English resorted to Latin and found to his joy
+that the inhabitant of Connecticut, from whom
+he wished to purchase supplies for his regiment,
+could be communicated with by that obsolete medium;
+and what would Lafayette have done when
+imprisoned in an Austrian dungeon if he had not
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+been able to converse with his official jailers in
+the Latin tongue!</p>
+
+<p>In historical studies the greatest attention was
+given to wars and treaties and acquisitions of
+territory. The royal families of his native country
+and of neighboring kingdoms were made
+familiar. History was taught as if it were a record
+of battles only. Swords and coats of mail
+decorated the mantelpieces in the school and
+the latest methods of warfare were studied.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to all these military matters, a
+great deal of attention must have been given to
+acquiring the power of clear and forcible expression
+in the French language. While Lafayette
+can never be included among the great orators of
+the world, he possessed a wonderfully pellucid
+and concise diction. He was a voluminous writer.
+If all the letters he sent across the ocean from
+America could be recovered from the bottom of
+the Atlantic, there would be enough to make several
+large volumes. Sometimes he dispatched as many
+as thirty letters at one time. He sent them by
+way of Spain, by way of Holland, or by any other
+roundabout route that offered promise of final
+delivery. But privateersmen frequently captured
+the boats that carried them, and very often the
+letter-bags were dropped overboard. Still another
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+circumstance deprived the world of many of his
+writings. When revolutionists took possession
+of the Lafayette home in Chaviniac, they sought
+in every nook and cranny to find evidence that
+they would have been glad to use against these
+representatives of the nobility. Madame de Lafayette
+had carefully stuffed all the letters she
+could find into the maw of the immense old range
+in the castle kitchen. Other treasures were buried
+in the garden, there to rot before they could be
+found again.</p>
+
+<p>Of the extant writings of Lafayette there are
+six volumes in French, made up of letters and
+miscellaneous papers, many of them on weighty
+subjects, while numerous letters of Lafayette
+are to be found among the correspondence of
+George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin
+Franklin, and other statesmen and generals of
+Revolutionary days.</p>
+
+<p>Of the English language Lafayette's knowledge
+was mainly gained during the six long weeks of
+his first voyage to America. And what he acquired
+he at once put into practice. He learned
+the language from books, and from good books.
+As a result his English, both spoken and written,
+had a special polish.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+At the Coll&egrave;ge du Plessis Lafayette was an industrious
+student. All his life he regarded time
+as a gift of which the best use was to be made,
+and, according to his own expression, he was
+"not at liberty to lose it himself, and still less
+to be the occasion of the loss of it to others."
+Therefore he would not, unless it was absolutely
+unavoidable, be unpunctual to engagements, or
+keep people waiting his pleasure. As a boy in
+college he never had to be urged to study; neither
+was he in any way an unmanageable boy. In
+spite of the intensity of his nature, he never
+deserved to be chastised.</p>
+
+<p>It should be understood that corporal chastisement
+was the rule in the schools of that time. In
+the year 1789 one simple-hearted old school-master
+solemnly reported that during the fifty
+years of his experience as teacher he administered
+nine hundred thousand canings, twenty thousand
+beatings, one hundred thousand slaps, and twenty
+thousand switchings. Among smaller items he
+mentions ten thousand fillips and a million and
+a quarter raps and hits. He hurled a Bible, a
+catechism, or a singing-book at some hapless
+child twelve thousand times, and caused seven
+hundred to kneel on peas as a punishment. Then
+he punished eight hundred thousand for not learning
+their lessons and seventy-six thousand for not
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+learning their Bible verses. So much for one
+teacher a half century before Lafayette's day!
+And people still talk and write about "the good
+old times"!</p>
+
+<p>The surroundings of Lafayette during his youth
+must have been of a kind to develop strength of
+character. He was to be one of the historical personages
+against whom scandalmongers have not
+been able to unearth a mass of detraction. His
+close companions during army days testified that
+they never heard him swear or use gross language
+of any kind. As Edward Everett in his great
+eulogy said, from Lafayette's home, his ancestry,
+his education, his aristocratic marriage, and his
+college life, he "escaped unhurt."</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's mother took up her residence in
+Paris in order to be near her son. She allowed
+herself to be presented at court that she might
+be in touch with what was going on and give her
+boy all the aid possible. She saw to it that
+her uncle should place him in the army lists
+that he might secure the advantage of early
+promotion.</p>
+
+<p>After a while the tall boy was entered in the
+regiment of the Black Musketeers, and it became
+a favorite occupation of his to watch the picturesque
+reviews of those highly trained soldiers. This
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+entertainment was for holidays, however, and did
+not interfere with his studies.</p>
+
+<p>It was not for very many years that Lafayette
+was to profit by his highborn mother's devoted
+care and foresight. In 1770, when her son was
+only thirteen years old, she died in Paris. In a
+painting on the walls of the ch&acirc;teau to-day the
+face of that aristocratic lady shines out in its
+delicate beauty. A pointed bodice of cardinal-colored
+velvet folds the slender form and loose
+sleeves cover the arms. In the romantic fashion
+of the pre-revolutionary period, the arm is held
+out in a dramatic gesture, and one tiny, jeweled
+hand clasps the shepherd's crook, the consecrated
+symbol of the story-book lady of that period.</p>
+
+<p>About the time of her death, one of her uncles
+passed away, leaving to the young student at the
+Coll&egrave;ge du Plessis a large and valuable estate.
+This placed Lafayette in a very advantageous
+position so far as worldly matters were concerned.
+His fortune being now princely, his record at college
+without blemish, his rank unexceptionable
+among the titles of nobility, he was quickly mentioned
+as an eligible partner in marriage for a young
+daughter of one of the most influential families
+in France,&mdash;a family that lived, said one American
+observer, in the splendor and magnificence of a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+viceroy, which was little inferior to that of a king.
+This daughter was named, in the grand fashion
+of the French nobility, Marie-Adrienne-Fran&ccedil;oise
+de Noailles. In her family she was called simply
+Adrienne.</p>
+
+<p>Adrienne de Noailles was not old enough to
+give promise of the greatness of character of which
+she later showed herself possessed; but, as it
+proved, Lafayette found that in her he had a companion
+who was indeed to be his good genius. She
+became the object of the unwavering devotion of
+his whole life; and she responded with an affection
+that was without limit; she gave a quick and
+perfect understanding to all his projects and his
+ideals; she followed his career with an utterly
+unselfish zeal; and when heavy sorrows came, her
+courage and her cleverness were Lafayette's resource.
+Her name should appear among those
+of the world's heroines.</p>
+
+<p>At the time of the proposed alliance, Lafayette
+was fourteen; the suggested fianc&eacute;e was scarcely
+twelve. Her mother, the Duchess d'Ayen, a
+woman of great efficiency and of lofty character,
+knew that the Marquis de Lafayette was almost
+alone in the world, with no one to guide him in
+his further education or to lend aid in advancing
+his career. Moreover, she held that to have so
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+large a fortune was rather a disadvantage than
+otherwise, since it might be a help or a hindrance,
+according to the wisdom of the owner, and she
+rightly saw that the allurements of the Paris of
+1770 to an unprotected youth of fortune would be
+almost irresistible. She therefore refused to allow
+a daughter of hers to accept the proposal. For
+several months she withheld her consent, but at
+last she relented, on consideration that the young
+people should wait for two years before the marriage
+should take place. This admirable mother,
+who had carefully educated and trained her
+daughters, now took the further education of
+Lafayette into her care; she soon became very
+fond of him and cherished him as tenderly as if he
+had been her own son.</p>
+
+<p>The marriage took place in Paris on the 11th of
+April, 1774. It was an affair of great splendor.
+There were many grand banquets; there were
+visits of ceremony, with new and elaborate toilettes
+for each visit; there were numberless beautiful
+presents, the families represented and their many
+connections vying with each other in the richness
+and fineness of their gifts. Diamonds and jewels
+in settings of quaint design were among them, and
+besides all these there were the ancestral jewels
+of Julie de la Rivi&egrave;re, the mother of Lafayette,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+to be received by the new bride, and by her handed
+down to her descendants.</p>
+
+<p>The arrangement was that the wedded pair
+should make their home with the mother of the
+bride, the young husband paying eight thousand
+livres a year as his share of the expense. The
+sumptuous home was the family mansion of the
+Noailles family; it was situated in the rue St.
+Honor&eacute;, not far from the palace of the Tuileries,
+at the corner where the rue d'Alger has now been
+cut through. The H&ocirc;tel de Noailles it was called,
+and it was so large that to an observer of to-day
+it would appear more like a splendid hotel than
+like a private residence. When, a few years after
+Lafayette's wedding, John Adams was representing
+the United States in Paris, and was entertained
+in this palatial home, he was so amazed that he
+could not find words in English or in French to
+describe the elegance and the richness of the residence.
+In it were suites of rooms for several
+families, for troops of guests, and for vast retinues
+of servants. The building measured from six
+hundred to seven hundred feet from end to end.
+There were splendid halls and galleries and arcades.
+Toward the street the fa&ccedil;ade was plain
+but the interior was decorated with astonishing
+richness. The inner rooms faced on a garden
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+so large that a small hunt could be carried on within
+it, with fox, horses, and hounds, all in full cry.
+Magnificent trees waved their branches above the
+great garden, and rabbits burrowed below.</p>
+
+<p>Here was a delightful place for a few people to
+pursue beautiful lives. John Adams made a note
+of the fact that the Noailles family held so many
+offices under the king that they received no less
+than eighteen million livres (more than three and
+a half million dollars) income each year. It
+must be remembered that the streets of Paris about
+this time were crowded with a rabble of beggars.
+But of this the dwellers in such magical palaces
+and parks saw but little and thought less.</p>
+
+<p>Conditions such as these give a hint of the causes
+that led to the French Revolution and explain in
+some degree why thoughts of liberty, fraternity,
+and equality were haunting the minds of the
+youth of France, and, to some of the more open-minded
+among them, suggesting dreams of noble
+exploit.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">A Boy's Ideals</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">BY this time Lafayette was a tall, slender young
+fellow, of commanding height, and with a look of
+piercing and imperative sincerity in his clear, hazel
+eyes. His hair was red&mdash;some one in the family
+used to call him "the big boy with red hair";
+but hero worshipers need have no misgivings about
+this characteristic, nor feel that they must apologize
+for it as a defect. Lafayette said of himself
+that he was an awkward boy. It may be that the
+youth who was rapidly growing to a height of
+"five feet eleven" may have felt, as most boys do
+at that age, as if he were all hands and feet. But
+that Lafayette was really awkward&mdash;it is unthinkable!
+Not one single lady of all the beauties
+in France and America, who handed it down
+to her descendants that she "once danced with
+Lafayette," ever mentioned the fact that her
+partner lacked any element of grace, while many
+speak of the ease of manner and address of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+distinguished man. One friend of Lafayette's
+early days reports that he was too tall to make a
+distinguished appearance on horseback or to
+dance with special grace; but this was said in a
+period when the dancing-master's art was the
+ideal of social conduct. Those who did not know
+Lafayette very well at this time thought him
+cold and serious and stiff. Perhaps he was shy;
+yet beneath that calm exterior seethed a volcano of
+emotion of which no casual onlooker dreamed.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was fortunate in having a cousin,
+the Count de S&eacute;gur, who understood him and
+who realized that under that surface of gravity
+was hidden, as he said, "a spirit the most active,
+a character the most firm, a soul the most burning
+with passionate fervor."</p>
+
+<p>After his marriage Lafayette continued his
+studies at the Coll&egrave;ge du Plessis, and later he spent
+a year at the military academy at Versailles, that
+his education as an officer might be complete.</p>
+
+<p>In the summer his inclinations led him to make
+various journeys to the fortified city of Metz,
+where the regiment "de Noailles" was in garrison
+under the charge of the Prince de Poix who was a
+brother-in-law of Adrienne, Lafayette's wife. On
+his way back from one of these visits he stayed at
+Chaillot for a time and there was inoculated for
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+smallpox. This preventive method was a medical
+novelty at that time. To submit to the experiment
+showed a great freedom from prejudice on
+the part of the youth. The Duchess d'Ayen had
+once suffered from the ravages of this disease,
+so she could safely stay with the now adored son-in-law
+through this disagreeable period of seclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this the youthful Marquis de Lafayette
+and his shy girl bride were presented at
+court. The benevolent king, Louis XVI, was then
+reigning. The queen, Marie Antoinette, was the
+head of a social life that was elaborately formal
+and splendid. Marie Antoinette herself was young
+and light-hearted, and was at this time without
+fears from misadventure at the hands of the state
+or from any personal enemies. The king had
+thousands of servants and attendants in his military
+and personal households. A court scene was
+a display of knots of ribbon, lace ruffles, yellow
+and pink and sky-blue satin coats, shoes with
+glittering buckles, red-painted heels, and jeweled
+trimmings. Fountains threw their spray aloft,
+and thousands of candles flung radiance broadcast.
+Said Chateaubriand, "No one has seen
+anything who has not seen the pomp of Versailles."
+And no one dreamed that the end was
+nearing, or realized that no nation can live when
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+the great mass of the people are made to toil,
+suffer, and die, in order that a favored few may
+have luxuries and amusement.</p>
+
+<p>Into this Vanity Fair the young Marquis de
+Lafayette was now plunged. The grand world
+flowed to the feet of the Marquis and Marchioness
+de Lafayette. More than that, the queen at
+once took the tall, distinguished-looking young
+chevalier into the circle of her special friends.
+The circle included some who were to follow
+Lafayette in his adventure to the New World in
+aid of American independence, and some who were
+to follow in another long procession equally adventurous
+and as likely to be fatal&mdash;the Revolution
+in their own country. During the Terror
+some of them, including their beautiful and well-meaning
+queen, were to lose their lives. Of any
+such danger as this, these young nobles, in the
+present state of seemingly joyous and abundant
+prosperity, were farthest from dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, however, court life did not have
+much charm for Lafayette. It was a part of the
+duty of the Marquis and Marchioness de Lafayette
+to take part in the plays and merrymakings that
+centered about a queen who loved amusement
+only too well. But Lafayette could not throw
+his whole heart into the frivolity of the social
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+sphere in which he was now moving. There were
+features of life at court that he could not tolerate.
+His knee would not crook; he already knew, as
+Everett said, that he was not born "to loiter in
+an antechamber."</p>
+
+<p>It was liberty itself&mdash;the revolt against tyranny
+in every realm of life&mdash;that interested him from
+the first. Lafayette was against whatever stood
+for tyranny, against whatever appeared to be an
+institution that could foster despotism. He believed
+that the well-being of society would be
+advanced by giving the utmost freedom to all,
+high and low, educated and uneducated. He saw
+a world in chains only waiting for some hero to
+come along and strike off the fetters.</p>
+
+<p>Where did Lafayette, a born aristocrat, get
+these ideas? Certainly not from the peasants as
+they knelt beside the road when he, their prospective
+liege lord, rode by. He was brought up
+to believe that it was the sacred privilege of the
+ruling class to throw largesse to the poor, who
+stood aside, waiting and expectant, to receive the
+gifts.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to say where Lafayette imbibed his
+love of freedom. One might as well ask where that
+"wild yeast in the air" comes from that used to
+make the bread rise without "emptins." There
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+was a "wild yeast in the air" in the France of
+1760 and 1770, and all the young people of that
+country, whether highborn or lowborn, were feeling
+the ferment.</p>
+
+<p>If Lafayette had pursued the course that his
+circumstances urged, he would soon have crystallized
+into a narrow, subservient character,
+without purpose or ideals. By all the standards
+of his time, he would be thought to be throwing
+away his life if he should take steps to alienate
+himself from the glittering, laughing, sympathetic
+friends who stood about him at court. All advancement
+for him appeared to be in line with the
+influences there. But if he had done this, if he
+had followed the star of court preferment, he would
+have remained only one of many highly polished
+nonentities&mdash;and would have lost his head at
+last. By throwing away his life, by choosing the
+way of self-sacrifice, he won the whole world; by
+throwing away his world, the natural world of
+compliance and ease about him, he won a world,
+nay, two worlds. He became what Mirabeau
+named him, the "hero of two worlds."
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">The Great Inspiration</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">IN the summer of 1775 Lafayette was stationed
+at the French garrison of Metz, where the Prince
+de Poix commanded the regiment "de Noailles."
+While he was there the Duke of Gloucester, brother
+of George III, king of England, came to that city
+and was present at a dinner given in his honor at
+the house of the governor of the garrison, the Count
+de Broglie. This count was a person of great
+sympathy and discernment. He had been observing
+the tall, red-haired boy of quiet, assured manner
+and few words, who represented so distinguished
+a family and gave so great promise for a future
+career. Eighteen years before he had seen this
+boy's father fall in battle, so he had a special interest
+in him. He now included young Lafayette
+among the guests at the dinner.</p>
+
+<p>It appears that the Duke of Gloucester had
+just received letters from England telling about
+the revolt of the American colonies against the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+British government&mdash;about their prejudice in the
+little matter of a tax on tea, and about the strong
+measures to be taken by the English ministry to
+crush the rebellion. As the Duke of Gloucester
+was not on very good terms with his brother, King
+George, he told the story with somewhat vindictive
+glee.</p>
+
+<p>This was probably the first that Lafayette had
+heard of American independence. Instantly his
+sympathy was touched to the quick. All the warlike
+and chivalric sentiments that he had inherited,
+all that had been carefully instilled by family tradition
+and by education, rose at once to the highest
+intensity. To the long and eager conversations
+that followed the news brought by the guest of
+the evening, Lafayette eagerly listened, and afterwards
+requested the duke to explain the situation
+more fully. His curiosity was deeply excited, his
+heart was at once enlisted. The idea of a people
+fighting against oppression stirred his imagination.
+From what he learned from the duke, the cause
+appealed to his sense of justice; it seemed the
+noblest that could be offered to the judgment of
+man. Before he left the table he had determined
+in his own mind to go to America and offer himself
+to the people who were struggling for freedom
+and independence.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From that moment his purpose was fixed. To
+realize his design he must go at once to Paris.
+Arriving there, he confided his plan to his two
+friends, the Viscount de Noailles and the Count
+de S&eacute;gur, inviting them to share his project.
+Noailles had just turned nineteen, and S&eacute;gur was
+twenty-two; Lafayette was eighteen. But the
+youngest differed from the others in one respect;
+he had already come into his fortune, and controlled
+an income of about two thousand livres,
+an amount that in purchasing power represented
+a fortune such as few young men in any country
+or at any time have commanded. The others could
+contribute nothing to Lafayette's plans but cordial
+sympathy. They did indeed go so far as to
+consult their parents, expressing their desire to
+join in Lafayette's chivalrous adventure, but their
+parents promptly and emphatically refused consent.</p>
+
+<p>The surprise of the Noailles family can be
+imagined when they heard that the quiet, reserved
+youth had suddenly decided to cross the sea and
+take up the fragile cause of a few colonists revolting
+against a great monarchy. It was not long
+before all came to admit that the soul of the big
+boy had in it a goodness and a valor that nothing
+could daunt.</p>
+
+<p>Many, however, who heard about the project
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+Lafayette entertained felt a new admiration for
+the spirited boy. One of these smartly said that
+if Madame de Lafayette's father, the Duc d'Ayen,
+could have the heart to thwart such a son-in-law,
+he ought never to hope to marry off his remaining
+daughters! It made no difference to this lordly
+family that the tidings of the American revolt
+were echoing through Europe and awakening
+emotions that those monarchies had never experienced
+before; nor did they notice that the
+young nobility of France were feeling the thrill of
+a call to serve in a new cause. They were blind
+to those signs of the times; and no one dared to
+speak of them to the Duke d'Ayen, for he, with
+the other ruling members of the family, violently
+opposed Lafayette's plan.</p>
+
+<p>While these things were going on, word came
+that those audacious colonists had carried their
+project so far as to issue a Declaration of Independence
+of the British government and to set up
+for themselves as a nation. The Noailles family
+were amazed, but they could not change their
+point of view.</p>
+
+<p>Not being able to unravel all the threads of destiny
+that were enmeshing him, Lafayette was
+working in the dark, only knowing that he wanted
+to go, and that he could not bring himself to give
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+up the project. He knew also that he must depend
+solely upon himself. Then there came into
+his mind the motto that he had since boyhood seen
+upon the shield of one of his famous ancestors in
+the castle at Chaviniac&mdash;"Cur non," Why not?
+He adopted this motto for his own and placed it
+as a device upon his coat of arms, that it might be
+an encouragement to himself as well as an answer
+to the objections of others.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette consulted his commander and relative,
+the Count de Broglie. He on his part did all
+he could to dissuade the lad; he pointed out that
+the scheme was Utopian; he showed up its great
+hazards; he said that there was no advantage to
+be had in going to the aid of those insignificant
+rebels&mdash;that there was no glory to be gained.
+Lafayette listened respectfully and said that he
+hoped his relative would not betray his confidence;
+for, as soon as he could arrange it, go to America
+he would! The Count de Broglie promised not
+to reveal his secret, but he added:</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen your uncle die in the wars of Italy;
+I witnessed your father's death at the battle of
+Minden; and I will not be accessory to the ruin
+of the only remaining branch of the family."</p>
+
+<p>These things made no impression upon the determination
+of the young hero, and the Count de
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+Broglie was in despair. When he finally found,
+however, that the boy's determination was fixed,
+he entered into his plans with almost paternal
+tenderness. Though he would give him no aid,
+he introduced him to the Baron de Kalb who was
+also seeking an opportunity to go to America, and
+he thought his age and experience would be of
+value to the young adventurer.</p>
+
+<p>This Baron de Kalb was an officer in the French
+army with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was
+a man of fifty-five, who had served in the Seven
+Years' War and who had been employed by the
+French government ten years before to go secretly
+to the American colonies in order to discover how
+they stood on the question of their relations with
+England.</p>
+
+<p>At that time there was a representative of the
+colonies in Paris to whom all who felt an interest
+in American liberty had recourse. This man was
+Silas Deane. To him Lafayette secretly went.</p>
+
+<p>"When I presented to Mr. Deane my boyish
+face," said Lafayette later in life, "I dwelt more
+(for I was scarcely nineteen years of age) upon
+my ardor in the cause than on my experience."</p>
+
+<p>Naturally, for he had had no experience whatever.
+But he could speak of the effect that his
+going would have upon France, since because of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+his family and connections notice would surely be
+taken of his action. This might influence other
+young men and might win favor for the colonies
+in their struggle. Silas Deane was quick to see
+this and to draw up an agreement which he asked
+Lafayette to sign. It was as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"The wish that the Marquis de Lafayette has
+shown to serve in the army of the United States of
+North America and the interest that he takes in
+the justice of their cause, making him wish for
+opportunities to distinguish himself in the war,
+and to make himself useful to them as much as
+in him lies; but not being able to obtain the consent
+of his family to serve in a foreign country and
+to cross the ocean, except on the condition that he
+should go as a general officer, I have believed that
+I could not serve my country and my superiors
+better than by granting to him, in the name of
+the very honorable Congress, the rank of Major-General,
+which I beg the States to confirm and
+ratify and to send forward his commission to enable
+him to take and hold rank counting from to-day,
+with the general officers of the same grade.
+His high birth, his connections, the great dignities
+held by his family at this court, his disinterestedness,
+and, above all, his zeal for the freedom of
+our colonies, have alone been able to induce me to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+make this promise of the said rank of Major-General,
+in the name of the United States. In
+witness of which I have signed these presents, done
+at Paris, this seventh of October, seventeen hundred
+and seventy-six."
+</p></div>
+
+<p>To this startling document the undaunted boy
+affixed the following:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"To the above conditions I agree, and promise
+to start when and how Mr. Deane shall judge it
+proper, to serve the said States with all possible
+zeal, with no allowance nor private salary, reserving
+to myself only the right to return to Europe
+whenever my family or my king shall recall me;
+done at Paris this seventh day of October, 1776.
+</p></div>
+
+<p>
+
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">(signed) "<span class="smcap">The Marquis de Lafayette.</span>"</span><br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>About this time Dr. Benjamin Franklin was
+added to the group of American envoys. He was
+an instant success in the Parisian world. With
+his baggy coat, his coonskin cap, and his one-eyed
+spectacles, Franklin was the admired of all the
+grand ladies of the court, while his ability to
+"bottle lightning" was a favorite topic for discussion.
+The queen favored Franklin and the
+American cause; the king also; but neither dared
+to say so openly lest the spies of England, France's
+hereditary enemy, should find it out. Lafayette
+was obliged to preserve the utmost secrecy in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+making his arrangements and to secure the interviews
+in such a way that no one would suspect
+what he was planning.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, bad news began to come from
+America. The disasters of Long Island and
+White Plains had befallen, and the English army
+was being re&euml;nforced by regiments of Hessians.
+This news destroyed what credit the colonies had
+in France. No one now had any hope for their
+endeavors, and no one could be found who would
+consider fitting out a vessel for Lafayette and his
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>The American envoys thought it no more than
+right to tell this to the eager Lafayette and to try
+to dissuade him from his project to go to America.
+To this end they sent him word to come for another
+secret conference. He did so, and the envoys
+explained to him the discouraging situation.</p>
+
+<p>One of the points wherein this young Lafayette
+approached nearest to greatness was in the way
+he could face some black disaster, and, with an
+absolutely quenchless spirit and the most adroit
+cleverness, turn the disaster into an advantage.
+This happened when Lafayette went to see these
+envoys. He received the news with a brow of
+unruffled calm. He thanked Mr. Deane for his
+kindness in trying to save him from disaster. Then
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+he added: "Until now, Sir, you have only seen my
+ardor in your cause; I may now prove to be really
+useful. I shall myself purchase a ship to carry
+out your officers. We must show our confidence
+in the future of the cause, and it is especially in
+the hour of danger that I wish to share your fortunes."</p>
+
+<p>This reply cast another light upon the circumstances.
+The American envoys regarded the
+enthusiasm of the young nobleman with approbation;
+the plan was pressed forward, preparations
+were made to find a vessel, to buy it, and fit it out.
+All this had to be done secretly, as the eagerness
+of Lafayette called for haste.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, a plan had been made for Lafayette
+to go on a visit to England with his relative, the
+Prince de Poix. It would be better not to interfere
+with the arrangement already made, it was
+thought; though Lafayette was impatient to carry
+out his plan for embarking, he wisely agreed to
+visit England first. In this plan Mr. Deane and
+Dr. Franklin concurred.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette made the journey with the Prince de
+Poix, and for three weeks had a busy time, being
+richly entertained and observing English life. He
+was in a rather delicate situation, for he was now
+a guest among a people with whom in one respect
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+he could not sympathize and toward whom he entertained
+a hostile feeling. But in all he did he
+carefully drew the line between the honor of the
+guest and the attitude of the diplomatist. Though
+he went to a dance at the house of Lord Germain,
+minister of the English colonies, and at that of
+Lord Rawdon, who had but just come from New
+York, and though he made the acquaintance of the
+Clinton whom he was soon to meet on opposing
+sides of the battle line at Monmouth, he chivalrously
+denied himself the pleasure and profit of
+inspecting the fortifications and seaports where
+ships were being fitted out to fight the American
+rebels. More than that; he openly avowed his
+feelings about the hazardous and plucky attempt
+of the colonies to free themselves from England;
+and he frankly expressed his joy when news of their
+success at Trenton was received. This very spirit
+of independence in the young French noble made
+him all the more a favorite among the English who,
+together with their king, did not in the least
+dream that the foolish rebels across the sea could
+accomplish anything by their fantastic revolt.</p>
+
+<p>Among other acquaintances made in England
+at this time was one Fitzpatrick, whose life was
+to be strangely mingled with Lafayette's in later
+days. Fighting on opposite sides of the conflict
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+in America, they were yet to meet cordially between
+battles, and Lafayette was to send letters
+in Fitzpatrick's care to his wife in France&mdash;letters
+in which he took pains to inclose no matters
+relating to the war, since that would have been
+unsportsmanlike; still later, owing to a tragic
+concurrence of events, this even-minded and
+generous Englishman was to make persistent appeals
+to the English government to take measures
+to free Lafayette from a hateful imprisonment in
+an Austrian stronghold, gallant appeals, made,
+alas, in vain!</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Lafayette could conveniently withdraw
+from his English hosts he did so, and hurried
+back to Paris, where he kept himself as much out
+of sight as possible until the final preparations for
+the voyage were completed. At last all was ready
+and Lafayette reached Bordeaux where the boat
+was waiting. Here swift messengers overtook
+him to say that his plans were known at Versailles.
+Lafayette set sail, but he went only as far as Los
+Pasajos, a small port on the north coast of Spain.
+Here letters of importance awaited the young
+enthusiast, impassioned appeals from his family
+and commands from his king. The sovereign forbade
+his subject to proceed to the American continent
+under pain of punishment for disobedience;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+instead, he must repair to Marseilles and there
+await further orders.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette knew what this meant. His father-in-law
+was about to go to Italy and would pass
+Marseilles on the way. Lafayette was to be made
+to go with him on an expedition where he knew
+he would be monotonously employed, with no
+prospect of exercising his energies in any congenial
+project. He was not without many proofs as to
+what might happen to him if he disobeyed these
+orders and risked the displeasure of the king. The
+Bastille was still standing and the royal power was
+absolute!</p>
+
+<p>Letters from his wife also made a strong appeal.
+A little child now brightened their home; yet the
+young husband and father must have reflected
+that his own father had left a young and beautiful
+wife; that the young soldier had torn himself
+away from his home and bride in Chaviniac, following
+the lure of arms, and had, but a few weeks
+before his own son's birth, rushed off to the battlefield
+where he ran the risk of returning no more.
+Why should not the son take the same risk and
+leave all for a great cause? To be sure, the father
+lost in the venture, but perhaps the son would
+not. It was in the Lafayette blood to seek for
+hazard and adventure. Cur non? Why not?
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He was convinced that he would do no harm to
+any one but himself by following out his purpose,
+and he decided not to risk further interference from
+family or ministry. To get away safely he adopted
+a ruse. He started out as if to go to Marseilles;
+but costuming himself as a courier, he proceeded
+instead toward Los Pasajos, where his ship and
+friends were awaiting him. The masquerade was
+successful until he reached St. Jean de Luz where
+a hairbreadth escape was in store for him. Here
+certain officers were watching for Lafayette. The
+clever daughter of an innkeeper recognized him
+as the young nobleman who had passed some days
+before on the way to Bordeaux. A sign from
+Lafayette was enough to keep her from making
+known her discovery, and he slept, unrecognized,
+on the straw in the stable, while one of his fellow-adventurers
+played the part of passenger. This
+is why it has been said that but for the clever wit
+of an innkeeper's daughter, Lafayette might have
+languished for the next few years in the Bastille
+instead of spending them gloriously in aiding us to
+gain our independence.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette reached Los Pasajos in safety. From
+the picturesque cliffs back of the harbor he saw
+his ship, <i>La Victoire</i>&mdash;name of good omen!&mdash;lying
+at anchor. There was the happy meeting
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+of friends who were to share his adventures and
+successes in the New World, and on the 20th of
+April, 1777, they sailed forth on their voyage.</p>
+
+<p>Two letters followed the enthusiastic fugitive.
+One was from Silas Deane, who testified to the
+American Congress that a young French nobleman
+of exalted family connections and great wealth
+had started for America in order to serve in the
+American army. He affirmed that those who
+censured his act as imprudent still applauded his
+spirit; and he assured Congress that any respect
+shown Lafayette in America would be appreciated
+by his powerful relations, by the court, and by the
+whole French nation.</p>
+
+<p>The other letter was a royal mandate calling
+upon the American Congress to refuse all employment
+whatsoever to the young Marquis de Lafayette.
+The first letter traveled fast; the second
+missive was subjected to intentional delays and
+did not reach its destination until Lafayette had
+been made an officer in the American army.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">First Days in America</span></h4>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p class="cap">"HERE one day follows another, and what is
+worse, they are all alike. Nothing but sky and
+nothing but water; and to-morrow it will be just
+the same."</p></div>
+
+<p>So wrote the restless Lafayette when he had
+been four weeks on the ship. The time had thus
+far been spent, after a sharp affliction of seasickness,
+in studying books on military science, and on
+the natural features of the country he was approaching.</p>
+
+<p>In time land-birds were seen, and he sat down
+to write to Adrienne a fifteen-hundred-word letter
+which should be sent back by the first returning
+ship.</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"It is from very far that I am writing to you,
+dear heart," he began, "and to this cruel separation
+is added the still more dreadful uncertainty
+of the time when I shall hear from you again. I
+hope, however, that it is not far distant, for,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+of all the many causes that make me long to get
+ashore again, there is nothing that increases my impatience
+like this."</p></div>
+
+<p>The thought of his little daughter Henriette
+comes forward again and again. "Henriette is
+so delightful that she has made me in love with
+all little girls," he wrote.</p>
+
+<p>Never did a more gallant company set sail than
+these young noblemen of France who were following
+a course across the sea only a little more northerly
+than that which Columbus first traced, and
+with something of the same high hazard that inspired
+the great discoverer. Their names should
+be remembered by a people that profited by their
+bravery. Besides the Baron de Kalb, with his
+fifty-five years, and the Viscount de Maury (who
+rode out of Bordeaux as a grand gentleman while
+the disguised Lafayette went before as courier),
+there was Major de Gimat, first aid-de-camp to
+Lafayette and always his special favorite, who
+gave up his horse to his young commander, thereby
+saving his life at the battle of Brandywine, and
+who was wounded in an attack on a redoubt at
+Yorktown. Then there was Captain de la Colombe
+who, after the close of the war in America,
+pursued closely the fortunes of Lafayette, following
+him even into prison. There was Colonel de
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+Valfort who, in later years, became an Instructor
+of Napoleon; and Major de Buysson who was at
+the battle of Camden and brought word of the
+eleven wounds that were needed to cause the death
+of the intrepid Baron de Kalb. The list included
+still other names of members of noble families in
+France.</p>
+
+<p>Something was indeed happening to the youth
+of France in 1750 and 1760. A restless ardor, a
+love of adventure, a love of glory, together with
+the bewitchment of that beautiful word "liberty,"
+were among the motives that inspired their actions.
+They went into the military service at fourteen or
+even earlier, and were colonels of regiments at
+twenty-two or twenty-four. They were "sick for
+breathing and exploit."</p>
+
+<p>An amusing story is told of one of these adventurous
+boys. He got into a quarrel with a school-mate
+about the real positions of the Athenians and
+Persians at the battle of Plat&aelig;a. He even made a
+small wager on it and then set out to find whether
+he had been right or not. He actually went on
+foot to Marseilles and from there sailed as cabin-boy
+to Greece, Alexandria, and Constantinople.
+There a French ambassador caught the young
+investigator and sent him home! Before he was
+twenty-four, however, he was in America, cover
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>ing
+himself with glory at Germantown and at Red
+Bank. This was the kind of youths they were;
+and many thrilling stories could be told about the
+lives of these gallant young Frenchmen.</p>
+
+<p>And how young they were! More than a hundred
+of the French officers who came to America
+to serve in the Revolution were in the early twenties.
+There were a few seasoned old warriors, of
+course, but the majority of them were young.
+Such were the companions-in-arms of Lafayette,
+himself still in his teens.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's voyage was not without adventure.
+He had a heavy ship with but two inferior cannon
+and a few guns&mdash;he could not have escaped from
+the smallest privateer. But should they be attacked,
+he resolved to blow up the ship rather than
+surrender. When they had gone some forty leagues,
+they met a small ship. The captain turned pale;
+but the crew were now much attached to Lafayette
+and had great confidence in him, and the officers
+were numerous. They made a show of resistance;
+but it proved to be only a friendly American ship.</p>
+
+<p>As they proceeded on their way, Lafayette
+noticed that the captain was not keeping the boat
+due west. He commanded that the point aimed
+for should be Charleston, South Carolina. The
+man was evidently turning southward toward the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+West Indies, this being the sea-crossing lane at
+that time. Lafayette soon found out that the
+captain had smuggled aboard a cargo which he intended
+to sell in a southern port. Only by promising
+to pay the captain the large sum he would
+have made by that bargain did Lafayette succeed
+in getting him to sail directly to the coast of the
+colonies.</p>
+
+<p>After a seven weeks' voyage the coast was near.
+Unfortunately, it swarmed with hostile English
+vessels, but after sailing for several days along the
+shore, Lafayette met with an extraordinary piece
+of good fortune. A sudden gale of wind blew away
+the frigates for a short time, and his vessel passed
+without encountering either friend or foe.</p>
+
+<p>They were now near Charleston; but in order
+to reach the harbor they were obliged to go ashore
+in the ship's yawl to inquire their way and if possible
+to find a pilot. Lafayette took with him in
+the small boat the Baron de Kalb, Mr. Price, an
+American, the Chevalier de Buysson, and some of
+the other officers, together with seven men to row.
+Night came on as they were making toward a light
+they saw on shore. At last a voice called out to
+them. They answered, telling who they were
+and asking for a night's shelter. They were
+cordially invited to come ashore and into a house,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+where they were received with great hospitality
+by the owner. They found themselves in the
+summer residence of Major Benjamin Huger
+(pronounced as if spelled Eugee), member of a
+notable Carolina family having French Huguenot
+antecedents, who, when he learned the purpose of
+the visitors, did everything in his power to make
+them comfortable and to further them on their
+way.</p>
+
+<p>It was one of the curious coincidences that make
+up so large a part of the story of Lafayette's life
+that the first family to meet him on his arrival in
+this country had in its circle a small child who,
+when he grew up, was to take upon himself the
+dangerous task of rescuing Lafayette from the
+prison in which he was unjustly immured. That
+story will be told in its proper place.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was soon in Charleston, making
+preparations for the long journey to Philadelphia,
+where Congress was in session at that time. He
+was charmed with everything he found.</p>
+
+<p>The Chevalier de Buysson has left us a description
+of the uncomfortable journey to Philadelphia.
+The procession was as follows: first came one of
+Lafayette's companions in hussar uniform; next,
+Lafayette's carriage&mdash;a clumsy contrivance which
+was a sort of covered sofa on four springs; at the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+side one of his servants rode as a squire. The
+Baron de Kalb occupied the carriage with Lafayette.
+Two colonels, Lafayette's counselors, rode
+in a second carriage; the third was for the aids,
+the fourth for the luggage, and the rear was brought
+up by a negro on horseback. By the time they had
+traveled four days, the bad roads had reduced the
+carriages to splinters, the horses gave out, and buying
+others took all the ready money. After that
+the party traveled on foot, often sleeping in the
+woods. They were almost dead with hunger;
+they were exhausted with the heat; several were
+suffering from fever. After thirty days of this
+discouraging travel, they at last reached Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>No campaign in Europe, declared de Buysson,
+could have been more difficult than this journey;
+but, he said, they were encouraged by the bright
+prospects of the reception they would surely have
+when they reached Philadelphia. All were animated
+by the same spirit, he said, and added,
+"The enthusiasm of Lafayette would have incited
+all the rest of us if any one had been less
+courageous than he."</p>
+
+<p>But the reception of these wayworn strangers
+at the seat of government proved to be rather
+dubious. It appeared that at this time Congress
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+was being bothered by many applications from
+foreigners who demanded high rank in the American
+army. The Committee of Foreign Affairs,
+being practical men of business, looked askance
+at men who traveled three thousand miles to help
+an unknown people; they did not wholly believe
+in the disinterested motives of the strangers; and
+they allowed Lafayette and his French officers to
+trail from office to office, presenting their credentials
+to inattentive ears.</p>
+
+<p>Finally that sense of power which always buoyed
+Lafayette's spirit in critical moments came to his
+rescue. He determined to gain a hearing. He
+wrote to Congress a letter in which he said:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"After the sacrifices that I have made in this
+cause, I have the right to ask two favors at your
+hands; one is that I may serve without pay, at
+my own expense; and the other is that I may be
+allowed to serve at first as a volunteer."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Congress was clear-sighted enough to recognize
+in this letter a spirit quite different from that which
+had seemed to actuate some of the foreign aspirants
+for glory. And by this time they had received
+an informing letter from Silas Deane; so they
+hastened to pass a resolution (on July 31, 1777)
+accepting Lafayette's services and "in consideration
+of his zeal, illustrious family, and connec
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>tions," they
+bestowed on him the rank of Major
+General in the Army of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>The second letter with its royal command from
+Louis XVI might now follow, but it could have no
+effect. Lafayette was definitely committed to the
+American cause to which, as he said in his answer
+to Congress, the feelings of his heart had engaged
+him; a cause whose import concerned the honor,
+virtue, and universal happiness of mankind, as
+well as being one that drew from him the warmest
+affection for a nation who, by its resistance of tyranny,
+exhibited to the universe so fine an example
+of justice and courage.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's letter to Congress asked that he
+might be placed as near to General Washington as
+possible and serve under his command.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two after this a military dinner was
+given in Philadelphia which was attended by General
+Washington. Lafayette also was invited.
+That was Lafayette's first introduction to Washington.
+Lafayette had admired Washington almost
+from the time he first heard his name. To
+the young Frenchman, the occasion was momentous.
+He now saw before him a man whose face
+was somewhat grave and serious yet not stern.
+On the contrary, it was softened by a most gracious
+and amiable smile. He observed that the General was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+affable in manner and that he conversed
+with his officers familiarly and gayly. General
+Washington, with his customary prudence, looked
+closely at the nineteen-year-old volunteer, and
+wondered whether the stuff was to be found in
+that slight figure and intent gaze that would make
+a helper of value to the colonies, one whose judgment
+and loyalty could be relied upon. It must
+be that his decision was favorable to the youth, for
+after the dinner he drew him aside and conversed
+with him in the friendliest way. He spoke with
+him of his plans and aspirations, showed that he
+appreciated Lafayette's sacrifices, and that he
+realized the greatness of the effort he had made
+in order to bring aid to the colonies. Then Washington
+invited him to become one of his military
+family, which offer Lafayette accepted with the
+same frankness with which it was made.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Lafayette was in a mood to be pleased,
+for in spite of the assailing mosquitoes at night
+and the many difficulties he had to overcome,
+everything he saw in America gave him great
+satisfaction.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Lafayette at the Brandywine</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">WHEN Lafayette joined the army at Washington's
+headquarters, a few miles north of Philadelphia,
+he was very much surprised by what he saw.
+Instead of the ample proportions and regular system
+of European encampments, with the glitter and
+finish of their appointments; instead of feather-trimmed
+hats and violet-colored facings, with
+marching and countermarching in the precision
+and grace of a minuet, he saw a small army of eleven
+thousand men, poorly clad, with nothing that could
+by the utmost courtesy be called a uniform, and
+woefully lacking in knowledge of military tactics.</p>
+
+<p>But Lafayette had on his rose-colored spectacles.
+The pitiful condition of the American
+soldiers awakened nothing but sympathy in his
+heart&mdash;never any contempt. In spite of their
+disadvantages, he perceived that they had in them
+the making of fine soldiers, and that they were
+being led by zealous officers.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Lafayette, now a major general in the American
+army, attended the councils of war and stood
+by Washington when he reviewed the troops.
+When the General took occasion to speak rather
+apologetically of the deficiencies in his little army,
+suggesting that Lafayette must feel the difference
+between these untrained soldiers and those he was
+accustomed to see, Lafayette had the self-possession
+and tact to answer that he had come to America
+to learn, not to teach. This answer charmed
+Washington and endeared the young French
+officer to the whole army.</p>
+
+<p>Washington, having heard that an English
+fleet was coming up Chesapeake Bay, moved south
+to meet the portentous army that he knew would
+promptly be debarked. On their way south the
+American troops had to pass through the city of
+Philadelphia. In view of the dark forebodings
+that the approach of the English was causing in
+the minds of the people, Washington was desirous
+that the soldiers should make as fine an appearance
+as possible in passing through the city, and
+made special regulations for that day. The army
+was to march in one column through the city; the
+order of divisions was stated; each officer without
+exception was to keep his post with a certain
+space between, no more and no less; each brigadier
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+was to appoint patrols to arrest stragglers from the
+camp and all others of the army who did not obey
+this order; the drums and fifes of each brigade
+were to be collected in the center of it, and a tune
+for the quickstep was to be played; but it must
+be played with such moderation that the men
+could keep step to it with ease.</p>
+
+<p>An army that needed admonitions like these
+could still awaken enthusiasm from spectators.
+The austere commander in chief looked very
+handsome as he passed; the slim, eager-eyed
+French major general rode at his side; every
+window shone with curious and admiring eyes
+and the sidewalks were crowded with applauding
+citizens. The men could not help catching the
+spirit of the occasion; each soldier stuck a sprig
+of green in his hat to make up as far as possible
+for the lack of fine uniforms and military brilliancy.</p>
+
+<p>They were on their way to the place which was
+to be the scene of the battle of Brandywine, one
+of the most disastrous defeats of the Revolution.
+At the head of Chesapeake Bay the English had
+landed a large and finely equipped army, and from
+that point they threatened Philadelphia. Washington,
+with an inferior and poorly furnished force,
+placed his army in form to receive the attack
+at the Birmingham meetinghouse near Chad's
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+Ford on Brandywine Creek, a point about fifty
+miles south of Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette accompanied General Washington to
+the battle. His rank of major general gave him
+no command. Practically, he was a volunteer.
+But when he saw that the American troops were
+in danger of defeat before the superior English
+force, he asked to be allowed to go to the front.
+He plunged into the midst of the panic that followed
+the failure of the American line to stand up before
+the galling fire of the well-trained British soldiers.
+The retreat was rapidly becoming a panic. At
+this point Lafayette sprang from his horse and
+rushed in among the soldiers; by starting forward
+in the very face of the enemy and calling the disorganized
+men to follow, he did all in his power to
+induce the men to form and make a stand. It was
+impossible. The odds were too great against the
+Americans. Lafayette and the other generals
+waited until the British were within twenty yards
+of them before they retired.</p>
+
+<p>But at the height of the confusion, when Lafayette
+was too excited to notice it, a musket ball
+struck his left leg just below the knee. Of this
+he was unconscious until one of the generals called
+his attention to the fact that blood was running
+over the top of his boot. Lafayette was helped
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+to remount his horse by his faithful aid, Major de
+Gimat, and insisted on remaining with the troops
+until the loss of blood made him too weak to go
+further. Then he stopped long enough to have a
+bandage placed on his leg.</p>
+
+<p>Night was coming on. The American troops
+were going pellmell up the road toward Chester.
+There was horrible confusion, and darkness was
+coming on. At a bridge just south of Chester,
+the American soldiers were at the point of complete
+disorganization. Seeing the great need for some
+decisive mind to bring order out of this chaos,
+Lafayette made a stand and placed guards along
+the road. Finally Washington came up and made
+Lafayette give himself into the hands of the surgeons.
+At midnight Washington wrote to Congress,
+and in his letter he praised the bravery of
+the young French soldier. Lafayette had passed
+his twentieth birthday but four days before.</p>
+
+<p>General Washington was happy to have this
+French officer proved by test of battle and to find
+his favorable judgment more than warranted.
+He showed the most tender solicitude for his young
+friend and gave him into the care of the surgeons
+with instructions to do all in their power for him,
+and to treat him as if he were his own son.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's spirits were not in the least dashed.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+When the doctors gathered round to stanch the
+blood, expressing their apprehensions for his
+safety, he looked at the wound and pluckily exclaimed,</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, gentlemen; I would not take
+fifteen hundred guineas for that."</p>
+
+<p>It was partly this buoyant, merry spirit that
+made Lafayette win all hearts. To the army he
+was now no stranger. His broken English was
+becoming more and more understandable. But
+words were not necessary; the look in his eyes
+said that he was a fearless and sincere man; that
+he had not come to this country to "show off,"
+but from a true love for the principles for which
+he had offered his sword. Never was there a more
+complete adoption than that of Lafayette by the
+American army.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's first care on reaching Philadelphia
+was to write to Adrienne lest she should receive
+exaggerated news concerning his wound.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a mere trifle," he wrote. "All I fear is
+that you should not have received my letter. As
+General Howe is giving in the meantime rather
+pompous details of his American exploits to the
+king his master, if he should write word that I
+am wounded, he may also write word that I am
+killed, which would not cost him anything; but
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+I hope that my friends, and you especially, will
+not give faith to reports of those persons who
+last year dared to publish that General Washington
+and all the general officers of his army, being
+in a boat together, had been upset and every
+individual drowned."</p>
+
+<p>Years afterwards when Lafayette, then an elderly
+man, revisited our country, he referred to
+his wound in these gracious words: "The honor
+to have mingled my blood with that of many other
+American soldiers on the heights of the Brandywine
+has been to me a source of pride and delight."</p>
+
+<p>After a few days it was thought wise to take the
+wounded Lafayette to a quieter place. So Henry
+Laurens, the President of Congress, who happened
+to be passing on his way to York, Pennsylvania,
+whither Congress had removed, took him in his
+traveling carriage to Bethlehem, where dwelt a
+community of Moravians, in whose gentle care
+Lafayette was left for the four wearisome weeks
+of convalescence.</p>
+
+<p>"Be perfectly at ease about me," he wrote Adrienne.
+"All the faculty in America are engaged
+in my service. I have a friend who has spoken
+to them in such a manner that I am certain of being
+well attended to; that friend is General Washington.
+This excellent man, whose talents and virtues I admired,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+and whom I have learned to revere
+as I have come to know him better, has now
+become my intimate friend; his affectionate interest
+in me instantly won my heart. I am established
+in his house and we live together like
+two attached brothers with mutual confidence and
+cordiality."</p>
+
+<p>Again Lafayette writes: "Our General is a man
+formed in truth for this revolution, which could
+not have been accomplished without him. I see
+him more intimately than any other man, and I
+see that he is worthy of the adoration of his country....
+His name will be revered in every age
+by all true lovers of liberty and humanity."</p>
+
+<p>At last Lafayette was well enough to go into
+service again. He requested permission this time
+to join General Greene who was making an expedition
+into New Jersey in the hope of crippling
+the force of Lord Cornwallis. Lafayette was given
+command of a detachment of three hundred men,
+and with these he reconnoitered a situation Lord
+Cornwallis was holding at Gloucester opposite
+Philadelphia. Here he came so near to the English
+that he could plainly see them carrying provisions
+across the river to aid in the projected taking of
+the city, and he so heedlessly exposed himself to
+danger that he might easily have been shot or imprisoned
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+if the English had been alert. By urgent
+entreaty he was called back. After gaining this
+information, he met a detachment of Hessians in
+the service of the British army, and though they
+numbered more than his own detachment, he succeeded
+in driving them back. In the management
+of this enterprise he showed great skill, both in the
+vigor of his attack and in the caution of his return.
+He took twenty prisoners. General Greene, in
+reporting to Washington, said that Lafayette
+seemed determined to be found in the way of
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>General Washington was now convinced that
+the titled volunteer could be trusted with a command.
+He wrote to Congress as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"It is my opinion that the command of troops
+in that state cannot be in better hands than the
+Marquis's. He possesses uncommon military talents;
+is of a quick and sound judgment; persevering
+and enterprising, without rashness; and
+besides these, he is of a conciliating temper and
+perfectly sober,&mdash;which are qualities that rarely
+combine in the same person. And were I to add
+that some men will gain as much experience in the
+course of three or four years as some others will
+in ten or a dozen, you cannot deny the fact and
+attack me on that ground."
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>On this recommendation, Lafayette was appointed
+to the command of a division composed
+entirely of Virginians. Needless to say he was
+overjoyed; for though the division was weak in
+point of numbers, and in a state of destitution as
+to clothing, he was promised cloth for uniforms
+and he hoped to have recruits of whom he could
+make soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>When Lafayette enlisted in the American army,
+he was not to lack for companionship. John
+Laurens had come from his study of history and
+military tactics at Geneva and, leaving his young
+wife and child behind, even as Lafayette had done,
+had rushed home to serve his country in her need.
+Alexander Hamilton was now both military aid
+and trusted adviser and secretary to General
+Washington. These three young men, all boys at
+the same time in different quarters of the globe,
+had come together while still in early youth and
+were entering into the great work of the American
+Revolution.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">A Successful Failure</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">IT was on the 20th of December that Lafayette
+received the joyful news of the birth of a second
+daughter. She was named Anastasie. The whole
+camp shared in the happiness of the young father.
+In fact, the affairs of the young hero interested
+everybody so much that there was indeed some
+danger that he would be spoiled. And he certainly
+would have been but for the balance of good judgment
+and mental poise that offset youthful rashness
+and vanity.</p>
+
+<p>At about the same time, in a long letter to his
+father-in-law, he explained the course of action he
+had marked out for himself. He said: "I read,
+I study, I examine, I listen, I reflect; and the result
+of all is the endeavor at forming an opinion into
+which I infuse as much common sense as possible.
+I will not talk much, for fear of saying foolish
+things; for I am not disposed to abuse the confidence
+which the Americans have kindly placed in me."
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This was Lafayette's real spirit and his secret
+counsel to himself; and we can but wonder that
+a young man so impetuous, so enthusiastic, one
+who had had the courage to start out on this hazardous
+enterprise, should have combined with those
+qualities so cool and steady a judgment and so rigid
+a self-control. But it was just this combination of
+qualities that led Lafayette on to his successes.</p>
+
+<p>There was, however, severe discipline in store
+for him. His strength of purpose was to be put
+to a sharp test. This came about in two ways:
+first, in the stern ordeal of the winter at Valley
+Forge, and afterwards in the expedition into the
+wilderness north of Albany.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody knows what the hardships of the
+American army were in those dark days of the
+Revolution, the winter of 1777-78. Washington
+had suffered defeat and disaster; but he, like
+his faithful followers, was of the temper that could
+not be depressed. At Valley Forge the men built
+a city of wooden huts, and these afforded at least
+a shelter from the storms, though they were scarcely
+better than dungeons. Their sufferings were
+terrible. They were inadequately clothed; many
+had neither coats, hats, shirts, nor shoes; they
+were in want of food; illness followed. Many
+had to have feet or legs amputated because of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+the effects of freezing. Lafayette had to see all
+this, and to him their patient endurance seemed
+nothing short of miraculous.</p>
+
+<p>He even tried to make merry a little over their
+sad situation, and over the nearness of the British
+army, for he wrote to his wife, "I cannot tell
+whether it will be convenient for General Howe
+to make us a visit in our new settlement; but we
+shall try to receive him with proper consideration
+if he does."</p>
+
+<p>For the moment the American cause was under
+a cloud. Should Lafayette return to France now?
+If he did, this would have been the interpretation
+of his act&mdash;he had lost faith in the American undertaking.
+This belief would have been heralded
+throughout the British army and would soon have
+been echoed in France. Lafayette did not wish
+to shoulder the responsibility of the effect his
+withdrawal might have on the hopes of help from
+French sympathy and French resources, and on
+the determination of other recruits who might
+come over and bring aid. He decided to remain
+with Washington and the American army and
+share whatever fate might be theirs. So Lafayette
+courageously remained. Accustomed to a life of
+luxury, he nevertheless adapted himself at once to
+the melancholy conditions at Valley Forge.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was a strange surprise awaiting Lafayette
+when he came to know the American situation
+more intimately. Before he left Europe, his
+sincere mind had clothed the cause of liberty in
+this country in the most rosy colors. He thought
+that here almost every man was a lover of liberty
+who would rather die free than live a slave. Before
+leaving France he thought that all good Americans
+were united in one mind, and that confidence in
+the commander in chief was universal and unbounded;
+he now believed that if Washington
+were lost to America, the Revolution would not
+survive six months. He found that there were
+open dissensions in Congress; that there were
+parties who hated one another; people were criticizing
+without knowing anything about war
+methods; and there were many small jealousies.
+All this disheartened him greatly; he felt that
+it would be disastrous if slavery, dishonor, ruin, and
+the unhappiness of a whole world should result
+from trifling differences between a few jealous-minded
+men.</p>
+
+<p>After a time the disaffected ones in the army
+tried to win Lafayette from his close allegiance to
+Washington. They entertained him with ideas of
+glory and shining projects&mdash;a clever way to entice
+him into their schemes. Deceived for a time, he
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+received their proffers of friendship and their
+flattering compliments, but when he noted that
+some of them were able to speak slightingly and even
+disrespectfully of the commander in chief, he dashed
+the temptation away with absolute contempt.</p>
+
+<p>Filled with the desire to ward off all possible
+peril from an influence which he knew would disrupt
+the American cause, he impetuously started
+in to help. He sought an interview with Washington,
+but not finding an early opportunity for
+this, he wrote him a long and noble letter which
+has been preserved. In it he said:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"I am now fixed to your fate, and I shall follow
+it and sustain it by my sword as by all means in
+my power. You will pardon my importunity in
+favor of the sentiment which dictated it. Youth
+and friendship make me, perhaps, too warm, but
+I feel the greatest concern at all that has happened
+for some time since."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In answer to this impulsive and true-hearted
+letter, General Washington wrote one of the most
+distinctive and characteristic of all the hundreds
+of letters of his that are preserved. He said:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Your letter of yesterday conveyed to me fresh
+proof of that friendship and attachment which I
+have happily experienced since the first of our
+acquaintance and for which I entertain sentiments
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+of the purest affection. It will ever constitute
+part of my happiness to know that I stand well in
+your opinion because I am satisfied that you can
+have no views to answer by throwing out false
+colors, and that you possess a mind too exalted to
+condescend to low arts and intrigues to acquire a
+reputation."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It must have been welcome to the harassed heart
+of the man who stood at the head of so great a
+cause to receive the proofs of this young man's
+friendship and of his absolutely loyal support.
+Washington closed the letter with these gracious
+and inspiriting words:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Happy, thrice happy, would it have been for
+this army, and for the cause we are embarked in,
+if the same generous spirit had pervaded all the
+actors in it.... But we must not, in so great a
+contest, expect to meet with nothing but sunshine.
+I have no doubt that everything happens for the
+best, that we shall triumph over all our misfortunes,
+and in the end be happy; when, my dear Marquis,
+if you will give me your company in Virginia, we
+will laugh at our past difficulties and the folly
+of others; and I will endeavor, by every civility
+in my power, to show you how much and how sincerely
+I am your affectionate and obedient servant."
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The political conspiracy developed into what
+is known in history as the "Cabal." Thwarted
+in their attempt to draw into their interests
+the man whose importance to them, as representing
+in an unofficial way the French influence in
+America, was fully appreciated, they hatched
+a scheme that should remove him from the side
+and from the influence of Washington. This
+scheme consisted of a project on paper to send an
+expedition into Canada, in order to win the people
+there to join the American revolt, if possible to do
+so, by persuasion or by force. The plan had many
+features that appealed to Lafayette.</p>
+
+<p>The conspirators of the Cabal had carried a
+measure in Congress to give Lafayette the promise
+of an independent command, and the commission
+for this was inclosed to General Washington.
+He handed it to the major general, who had so
+lately joined the army as a volunteer, with the
+simple words, "I would rather they had selected
+you for this than any other man."</p>
+
+<p>But Lafayette loyally put aside the tempting
+prospect of winning personal glory in the Old
+World and the New by this expedition, and declined
+to receive any commission from Congress
+that would make him independent of Washington.
+He would serve only as a subordinate of the commander
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+in chief, as one detailed for special duties.
+He wished to be called "General and Commander
+of the Northern Army," not commander in chief.
+Congress accepted the condition.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this way, then, that Lafayette received
+the title of "General," a distinction that he valued
+more than that of Marquis, and that to the end
+of his days he preferred above all other titles.</p>
+
+<p>With characteristic enthusiasm Lafayette proceeded
+to York, where Congress was then assembled,
+and where the members of the conspiracy were
+living in comfort that contrasted curiously with
+the conditions surrounding General Washington at
+Valley Forge. At a dinner given while Lafayette
+was there, the northern expedition and Lafayette's
+brilliant prospects were made themes of praise.
+But Lafayette missed one name from the list of
+toasts; at the end of the dinner he arose and, calling
+attention to the omission, he proposed the
+name of the commander in chief. In silence
+the men drank the toast; they had learned by this
+time that the young French noble was made of
+unmanageable material.</p>
+
+<p>With a heart, however, for any fate, Lafayette
+started on the long, wearisome journey northward.
+There were rivers deep and swift to cross; the roads
+were bad and the wintry storms made them worse.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+Floating ice crowded the fords. Rain and hail and
+snow and slush made up a disheartening monotony.</p>
+
+<p>It certainly was dismal. On his way north the
+young general was made happy, however, by receiving
+a "sweet parcel of letters," telling him that
+his family were very well and that they were keeping
+in loving remembrance the man who was called
+in France, "The American Enthusiast." This
+warmed his heart as he plodded northward through
+the storm.</p>
+
+<p>On Lafayette's arrival at Albany, he found that
+none of the promises made to him as to supplies,
+available men, money, and other necessary equipment
+had been kept; and the judgment of advisers
+who knew the difficulties of a northern excursion
+in the depth of winter was against the expedition.
+Lafayette was exasperated and wrote frantic letters
+to Washington, to Congress, and to Henry Laurens.</p>
+
+<p>But it was of no avail. The expedition had to
+be given up. Lafayette remained at Albany during
+the months of February and March, giving his
+personal credit to pay many of the men and to
+satisfy other demands, and taking up various
+duties and projects. For one thing, he went up
+the Mohawk River to attend a large council of the
+Iroquois Indians. This was Lafayette's first official
+contact with the red men, and he at once manifested a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+friendship for them and an understanding
+of their nature that won their hearts. He sent
+one of his French engineers to build a fort for the
+Oneidas, and he was present at a grand treaty
+ceremony. A band of Iroquois braves followed
+Lafayette southward and later formed part of a
+division under his command.</p>
+
+<p>It was a discomfited but not a despairing young
+warrior who returned in April to Valley Forge.
+But joy was before him. The Cabal had vanished
+before the storm of loyalty to Washington that
+gathered when the conspiracy was discovered.
+Moreover, Lafayette received from Congress a
+testimonial, saying that they entertained a high
+sense of his prudence, his activity, and his zeal,
+and they believed that nothing would have been
+wanting on his part, or on the part of the officers
+who accompanied him, to give the expedition the
+utmost possible effect, if Congress had not thought
+it impracticable to prosecute it further. Better
+still, on the 2d of May came the great news that
+a treaty of commerce and alliance had been signed
+between France and the United States of America.</p>
+
+<p>This event caused a wild wave of joy to spread
+over the whole country. This treaty assured the
+permanence of the United States as a nation.
+To be sure, the war with England must still be
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+carried on, but now that France was an ally they
+would have more hope and courage.</p>
+
+<p>In the doleful camp at Valley Forge there was
+the sincerest gratification and delight. A national
+salute of thirteen cannon was ordered; a thanksgiving
+sermon was preached; a fine dinner was
+served for the officers, and the table was made
+more delightful by the presence of Mrs. Washington,
+Lady Stirling, Mrs. Greene, and other
+wives and daughters of generals.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette took part in these scenes of rejoicing,
+but there was a reason why, underneath it all, his
+heart was heavy. Almost with the letters announcing
+the joyous news of the treaty, came others
+telling him of the death, in October, 1777, of his
+little daughter Henriette, of whom he had said
+that he hoped their relationship would be more that
+of friends than of parent and child. This happiness
+was not to be theirs. Lafayette now thought
+that he had never realized before what it meant to
+be so far away from his home. The thought of
+Henriette and of the grief of Adrienne, which he
+was not able by his presence to help assuage,
+was with him every moment of the day; but even
+while his heart was heavy with grief, he felt that
+he must attend and bear his part in the public
+rejoicings.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Lafayette at Monmouth</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">THE alliance with France put a new color upon
+every phase of the American contest. If, for
+instance, a French fleet should be already on its
+way across the Atlantic, and should enter Chesapeake
+Bay and threaten Philadelphia, the English
+would have to evacuate that city and retire
+to New York, risking the danger of being intercepted
+on the way by Washington's army. In
+view of such a possibility as this, the commander
+in chief of the American army held a council of
+war in which it was decided that they were not
+strong enough to risk a decisive engagement.
+It was, however, highly important that exact information
+should be gained as to the movements
+of the British around Philadelphia. In order
+that this might be accomplished, General Washington
+detached a group of soldiery from among
+the most able and valued of his army, and put
+them under Lafayette, with instructions to proceed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+into the country between the Delaware and
+Schuylkill, and there interrupt communications
+with Philadelphia, obstruct the incursions of the
+enemy's parties, and obtain intelligence of their
+motives and designs.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was overjoyed at being chosen for so
+important a charge; and on the 24th of May,
+1778, he started out with about twenty-two hundred
+men. His force included the band of Iroquois
+warriors who had come from Albany to follow
+his fortunes, and who, because of their knowledge
+of forest-craft, were invaluable as scouts. The
+British could command about four times as many
+soldiers as had been assigned to Lafayette, but
+their intention was to keep the American force out
+of their way and, if possible, to avoid a direct
+encounter.</p>
+
+<p>For his camp Lafayette selected a piece of rising
+ground near the eleventh milestone north of
+Philadelphia, where there was a church, a grave-yard,
+and a few stone houses that might afford
+some protection in case of attack, and where four
+country roads led out to the four points of the
+compass. The place was called Barren Hill&mdash;name
+of ill-omen! But the fate of the day proved
+not altogether unfortunate for the young and intrepid
+commander.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Naturally, the people in Philadelphia had heard
+of the approach of the young French noble whose
+fame had been ringing in their ears, and they prepared
+to go out and engage him&mdash;capture him,
+if possible. At that time they were indulging in
+a grand, week-long festival, with masquerades,
+dancing, and fireworks; and in anticipation of the
+quick capture of the young French hero, a special
+party was invited for the next evening at which
+the guests were promised the pleasure of meeting
+the distinguished prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette had chosen his position in a region he
+had carefully examined. But the English were
+able to send bodies of troops up all the traveled
+approaches to the hill. While Lafayette was
+planning to send a spy to Philadelphia to find out,
+as Washington had directed, what preparations
+were there being made, the cry suddenly arose
+in his camp that they were being surrounded.
+It was a terrible moment. But Lafayette had
+this great quality&mdash;the power of being self-possessed
+under sudden danger. He did not lose his
+head, and he instantly thought of a plan of escape.</p>
+
+<p>There was a dilapidated road that his keen eye
+had detected leading along beneath a high bank
+which protected it from observation. He directed
+the main body of his men to pass down that old
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+road, while a small number were commanded to
+make a pretense of a demonstration near the
+church; others were to show some false heads of
+columns along the edge of the forest by the stone
+houses. These were withdrawn as the main body
+of soldiers disappeared down the hidden road and
+began to dot the surface of the river with their
+bobbing heads as they swam across. Lafayette
+and his loyal aid-de-camp, Major de Gimat,
+brought up the rear with the remainder of the men,
+whom they transferred across the river without
+loss. Then they formed on the farther bank and
+determined to contest the ford if the British followed.
+But the British had marched up the hill
+from the two opposite sides, simply meeting each
+other at the top; they then marched down again
+and did not seem to be in any mind to pursue their
+enemy further.</p>
+
+<p>The only real encounter of that serio-comic day's
+adventures took place between the band of Iroquois
+and a company of Hessians in the pay of the
+British. The Indians were concealed in the brush
+at the side of the road when the Hessians, with
+waving black plumes in their tall hats and mounted
+on spirited horses, came along. The Indians rose
+as if from under the ground, giving their war
+whoop as they sprang. The horses, unused to this
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+form of war cry, started back and fled far and
+wide; and the Indians, never having seen soldiers
+so accoutered, were as frightened as if confronted
+by evil spirits, and swiftly made good their escape
+from the impending "bad medicine."</p>
+
+<p>The British carried their chagrin with them
+back to Philadelphia, and the diners were disappointed
+in their guest of honor. Next morning
+Lafayette returned to the top of Barren Hill,
+thence marched back to Valley Forge, and there
+relieved the anxiety of General Washington who
+had feared for his safety.</p>
+
+<p>But the incident of Barren Hill, while it was not
+in any way an engagement, must be looked upon
+as a serious matter after all, for it gave Lafayette
+an opportunity to show that he was cool and self-possessed
+in a critical moment, and that he was
+clever and resourceful in finding ways to extricate
+himself from difficulties&mdash;both essential qualities
+in one who is to be trusted with great enterprises.</p>
+
+<p>In about a month the anticipated event took
+place&mdash;the British evacuated Philadelphia; and,
+with a baggage-train eleven miles long, started
+northward with the intention of joining forces with
+the army at New York.</p>
+
+<p>The question now was whether the army under
+General Washington should leave Valley Forge
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+and with their inferior force make an attempt to
+intercept the British and bring on a battle. Several
+councils of war were held; one of special
+importance at Hopewell, a place north of Valley
+Forge, where the project of preparing for attack
+was earnestly favored by Lafayette, together with
+General Greene and Colonel Alexander Hamilton,
+but violently (and unaccountably at that time)
+opposed by General Lee. This council has been
+made the subject of one of the reliefs on the celebrated
+Monmouth Battle Monument. In this
+design Washington is represented as standing by
+the table in the center of the group, while Lafayette
+is spreading the map before the council and urging
+them to make a strong demonstration against the
+British, even if it should bring on a battle.</p>
+
+<p>The various generals sit about the table and each
+expresses in his attitude what his feelings are in
+this crisis. Steuben and Duportail (at the extreme
+left) evidently agree with Lafayette, and eagerly
+press for compliance with his plan. General
+Patterson (seated at the table) is of the same mind,
+and so is the true-hearted Greene (seated at the
+right of Patterson). Brave Colonel Scammel (between
+Washington and Lafayette), Washington's
+Adjutant General, carefully notes the opinion
+of each for the guidance of his chief. Back in the
+shadow sits the treacherous General Lee, who
+looks sulky and is evidently planning mischief.
+The homely rooftree covers a critical scene in the
+history of the Revolution.</p>
+<p><a name="Page78pic" id="Page78pic"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus02.jpg" width="500" height="352"
+alt="From a photograph by Norman L. Coe &amp; Son.
+ The Council at Hopewell. This bas-relief, by the sculptor J.E. Kelly,
+ appears on the Monmouth Battle Monument.It shows a
+ conference of Washington and his generals.
+ Lafayette is shown standing opposite to Washington."
+title="From a photograph by Norman L. Coe &amp; Son.
+ The Council at Hopewell." />
+<p class="mini-caption">From a photograph by Norman L. Coe &amp; Son.</p>
+<p class="caption">The Council at Hopewell.</p>
+<p class="caption2">This bas-relief, by the sculptor J.E. Kelly, appears on the Monmouth Battle Monument.<br />
+It shows a conference of Washington and his generals. <br />Lafayette is shown standing opposite to Washington.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><br />Finally, Washington turned to General Wayne
+(behind Greene) and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Well, General, what would <i>you</i> do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fight, Sir!" crisply replied the ardent and
+indomitable Wayne&mdash;an answer that pleased
+alike the commander in chief and the young
+volunteer major general, to whom it seemed an
+intolerable insult that a hostile army should be
+allowed to march through one's own country
+unchallenged.</p>
+
+<p>General Lee was determined that the British
+should be allowed to pass through New Jersey
+without molestation. His sympathies were afterwards
+found to have been entirely with the British.
+At any rate, Washington did not follow his advice.
+He sent out men to fell trees in the enemy's path,
+to burn bridges before them, and to harass them
+as much as possible; and he forwarded detachments
+of such size that he needed a major general
+to take command of that branch of his army. The
+position was offered first to General Lee. He refused
+to take it. General Washington was then free
+to offer it to Lafayette, who accepted it with delight.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As these plans were being matured, General
+Lee suddenly changed his mind and announced
+that he would take command of the advance
+force; and he appealed to Lafayette's generosity
+to allow him to do so, even after having once given
+his refusal. Lafayette unselfishly resigned the
+command. It is the opinion of historians that
+the outcome of the battle of Monmouth would
+have been very different if the American side had
+been left in the capable hands of the young Lafayette.</p>
+
+<p>The battle of Monmouth, which took place on
+the 28th of June, was widely scattered in its action
+over a hot and sandy plain. The outcome was
+that General Lee first brought his troops face to
+face with the enemy, and then, instead of leading
+on to the attack, gave the order for retreat. Afterwards,
+in the court-martial of Lee, it was made
+evident that the movement of the troops as ordered
+by Lee would have left Lafayette and his detachment
+abandoned in an extremely exposed position
+on the open plain, the troops that should have
+supported him having been withdrawn by Lee's
+orders and directed to retreat. Lafayette and the
+other generals felt great bitterness on that day
+because they had been swept into battle but had
+not been allowed to strike a blow.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Everybody knows how Washington rode up, and
+when he saw the retreat, how he indignantly reproved
+General Lee and commanded the battalions
+to turn back and form in position for battle.
+Lafayette was in command of a division stationed
+at the second line under Lord Stirling who sustained
+the left wing; they were now placed on an eminence
+behind a morass and there played the batteries
+to such good effect that they were able to check
+the advance of the British. This halt gave Washington
+time to place his army to advantage. The
+British were driven from a strong position they
+had taken, and before dark the American troops
+had turned the British back. That night they
+lay upon the field in bright moonlight, and while
+Washington and Lafayette discussed the possible
+outcome of the next day, the British were silently
+withdrawing from the Monmouth plains. The
+next morning all had disappeared except some
+forty of their wounded. At Sandy Hook, where the
+British army crossed to New York, it was learned
+that they had lost about two thousand men by
+desertions and by losses at Monmouth. Many
+of the soldiers on both sides had died from the
+extreme heat on that 28th of June.</p>
+
+<p>During the battle Lafayette was master of himself.
+Almost fifty years later, Colonel Willett
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+related that in the hottest of the fight he saw
+Lafayette ride up to one of the officers and, in a
+voice cool, steady, and slow, and with as much
+deliberation as if nothing exciting prevailed, say,</p>
+
+<p>"General, the enemy is making an attempt to
+cut off our right wing; march to his assistance with
+all your force."</p>
+
+<p>So saying he galloped off. Colonel Willett
+remembered that he was exceedingly well mounted,
+though plainly dressed, and "very sedate in his
+air for a Frenchman."</p>
+
+<p>A number of situations arose soon after
+this in which Lafayette found himself of great
+use. The French fleet under Count d'Estaing
+appeared near Delaware Bay and sailed up the
+coast. Washington was at White Plains. The
+British held New York. It was thought that the
+French fleet could accomplish much by going to
+Newport and there co&ouml;perating with the land forces.
+Lafayette was given a detachment and commanded
+to proceed to Providence where he was to stand
+ready to give all possible aid.</p>
+
+<p>But he was doomed to still another disappointment.
+The French fleet arrived off Point Judith
+near Newport; visits of ceremony were exchanged
+by the French and American generals; preparations
+were made; but through misunderstandings,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+the plans never worked out to an actual engagement.
+Before anything was accomplished, a severe
+storm overtook the fleet, and it withdrew to
+Boston for necessary repairs.</p>
+
+<p>During this trying time, Lafayette was a trusted
+resource to Washington, who devoutly wished to
+reconcile all differences and to bring peace out of
+dissension. For this Lafayette had peculiar qualities,
+as he understood the character of both the
+French and the Americans, and believed absolutely
+in the good intentions of the officers on both sides.
+Twice he rode to Boston and back again to help
+in settling some difficulty, making on one of those
+occasions a journey of seventy miles, at night, in
+six and a half hours&mdash;a feat paralleled only by
+Sheridan's famous ride to Winchester.</p>
+
+<p>But the fleet sailed away, bearing many disappointments
+with it, though much good had been
+done by its coming; it meant that the American
+cause had received definite encouragement from
+France.</p>
+
+<p>It was now October of 1778 and autumn weather
+was closing the campaign of the year. The sending
+of the French fleet to our shores had been virtually
+a declaration that a state of war existed
+between France and England, and the thought
+that this might develop into an actual war in which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+Lafayette, after his practical experience and training
+in the Continental army, could take part and
+win glory, inclined him strongly at this point to
+return to his native land. Permission was given
+to him to do this. The proper farewells, official
+and private, were made, and Lafayette started
+on his way to Boston where he was to embark.</p>
+
+<p>But the strain of the summer's excitement and
+overwork had been too much for Lafayette, and
+at Fishkill he was taken ill with a violent fever
+which prostrated him for some weeks. The
+greatest concern was felt for his life; the soldiers'
+love for him was shown by their great solicitude,
+and General Washington called upon him every
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette slowly recovered and finally resumed
+his journey to Boston, where he went on board the
+<i>Alliance</i> which the government had given him to
+take him to France. At the moment of sailing
+he sent a letter to General Washington, in which
+he said:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Farewell, my dear General. I hope your
+French friends will ever be dear to you. I hope
+I shall soon see you again and tell you myself
+with what emotions I now leave the land you inhabit,
+and with what affection and respect I shall
+ever be your sincere friend."
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>They set sail for Havre on the 11th of January,
+1779. The voyage was not to be without adventure.
+They sailed into the teeth of a terrible
+three days' storm. Lafayette, as usual, was very
+seasick, and, as usual, was much discouraged
+thereby. For a time glory and fame had no charms
+for him! He declared he was surely going where
+he had wished to send all the English&mdash;namely,
+to the bottom of the sea!</p>
+
+<p>Still worse was to follow. No sooner was the
+storm over than another danger loomed up.
+The ship's crew included a number of renegade
+English sailors who conspired to mutiny, to overwhelm
+the officers, and to kill the crew and passengers.
+By including in their confidence an
+American sailor, whom they mistook for an Irishman,
+their plot came to naught. Lafayette
+summoned the whole crew, put thirty-three mutineers
+in chains, and thus saved himself from capture
+and the ship from being towed into a British
+port as a prize. Shortly after this Lafayette
+brought the frigate into the harbor of Brest, where
+he had the pleasure of seeing, for the first time,
+the American flag receive the national salute as
+the symbol of an acknowledged sister nation in
+alliance with his native country.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">The Return to France</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">WHEN Lafayette learned of the birth of his
+little daughter Anastasie, whom he now ardently
+desired to see, he wrote to his wife:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"What expressions can my tenderness find
+sufficiently strong for our dear Anastasie? You
+will find them in your own heart, and in mine,
+which is equally open to you.... That poor
+little child must supply all that we have lost."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Letters like this would give great consolation
+to Madame de Lafayette, but alas, they came at
+long intervals, since many of her husband's long
+epistles never reached her. Therefore Adrienne
+felt his absence the more keenly, while rumors
+and exaggerated reports from America made her
+days an agony. When, however, he returned to
+France in February, 1779, her happiness was
+beyond all expression.</p>
+
+<p>Adrienne's joy was increased by the fact that
+while her rash young husband had left his native
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+land under a cloud, because it was understood that
+he did so against the command of the king, his
+return was that of a conqueror, triumphant and
+in favor.</p>
+
+<p>He was not allowed, however, wholly to forget
+his formal error. His appeal to Adrienne for
+forgiveness for his absence was one that he had to
+make to others. His father-in-law testified in a
+letter that, so far as he was concerned, the recreant
+might be freely forgiven. Adrienne was only too
+willing to receive the one who had left her to go on
+a mission to the other side of the world; but what
+about the king whose command not to leave the
+shores of France he had practically disobeyed?
+Many a man had been shut up in the Bastille because
+of a much smaller offense.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was brought to the court at Versailles
+by his relative, the Prince de Poix. The king
+received him and graciously accorded a punishment.
+He was to suffer imprisonment for the
+space of <i>one week</i>&mdash;his prison to be the grand
+residence of his father-in-law, the H&ocirc;tel de Noailles!
+After that his pardon was to be freely granted by
+his Majesty, with this warning&mdash;that he should
+avoid public places for a time lest the people should
+manifest their admiration for his disobedient conduct
+by their applause.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The king's warning was not indeed without
+reason. But there was no use in trying to keep the
+impressionable French people from worshiping
+a hero after their hearts had been captured by
+him. The gallantry and the human-heartedness
+of Lafayette, as well as the ideals he held&mdash;ideals
+that were becoming more and more captivating
+to the fancy and to the reason of the French nation&mdash;contributed
+to make him the favorite of
+the hour. A passage from a certain play never
+failed to receive enthusiastic applause from the
+audiences because it was held by all to be susceptible
+of direct application to Lafayette; and this
+passage the queen copied in her own hand because
+she thought of him when she read it. It dwelt
+upon the union of mature and youthful qualities
+in a character, and ran as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">"Why talk of youth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When all the ripe experience of the old<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dwells with him? In his schemes profound and cool<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He acts with wise precaution, and reserves<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For times of action, his impetuous fire.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To guard the camp, to scale the 'leaguered wall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or dare the hottest of the fight, are toils<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That suit the impetuous bearing of his youth;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet like the gray-haired veteran he can shun<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The field of peril. Still before my eyes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I place his bright example, for I love<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His lofty courage, and his prudent thought;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gifted like him, a warrior has no age."<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+<p>The queen's copy of this passage was given to
+Madame de Campan, the revered teacher of the
+young ladies of the court, and it met the fate of
+being burned on the very day Marie Antoinette's
+sad life came to an end at the hands of the executioner
+during the height of the Terror.</p>
+
+<p>The queen had shown her interest in Lafayette's
+arrival by arranging to have an interview with
+the young hero when he was making his first visit
+to Versailles. At her suggestion Lafayette was
+now advanced by the king to be commander of
+an important regiment in the army of France,
+the king's own Dragoons. He was stationed at
+Saintes and afterwards at St. Jean-d'Angely, near
+Rochefort, where the regiment was conveniently
+quartered to be ready in case a project for the
+invasion of England by way of the British Channel
+should be carried out. Such a plan was under
+consideration, and Lafayette looked forward with
+delight to the prospect of action against the country
+which he considered the ancient foe of France.</p>
+
+<p>But, to Lafayette's great grief, the plot to invade
+England failed; and he was now free to return
+to Paris and Versailles. The failure of the British
+plan also made it rather easier for the minds of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+prominent officials to look toward taking some
+further part in the American struggle. To aid
+this Lafayette gladly applied himself; for while
+loyal always to his own nation, and standing
+ready at any point to leave all to serve France, he
+had not for a moment forgotten the needs of his
+adopted country across the Atlantic. In fact,
+when he reached home, he had not waited for his
+one week's punishment to be over before beginning
+to create interest in the cause for which he had
+risked his life. Benjamin Franklin, then ambassador
+to the court of France from the United States,
+was promptly allowed, under pretense of calling
+upon Lafayette's father-in-law, to visit Lafayette
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>There was a constant stream of callers coming
+to see and congratulate him, and never was there
+one among them who was permitted to misunderstand
+the fact that Lafayette wished to move
+heaven and earth to secure help for the Continental
+army in its struggle for freedom. He found
+himself, in a more important sense than ever
+before, the tie between France and America, for
+he enjoyed the confidence of both countries.</p>
+
+<p>To Washington he wrote: "If there is anything
+in France concerning which not only as a soldier
+but as a politician, or in any other capacity, I can
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+employ my exertions to the advantage of the
+United States, I hope it is unnecessary to say that
+I shall seize the opportunity and bless the day
+which shall render me useful to those whom I love
+with all the ardor and frankness of my heart."</p>
+
+<p>General Washington, on his part, wrote to Lafayette
+in this wise:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"It gives me infinite pleasure to hear from your
+sovereign of the joy that your safe arrival in France
+has diffused among your friends.... Your forward
+zeal in the cause of liberty, your singular
+attachment to this infant world, your ardent and
+persevering efforts not only in America, but since
+your return to France, to serve the United States,
+your polite attentions to Americans, and your
+strict and uniform friendship for me, have ripened
+the first impressions of esteem and attachment
+which I imbibed for you into such perfect love and
+gratitude, as neither time nor absence can impair.
+This will warrant my assuring you that whether
+in the character of an officer at the head of a
+corps of gallant Frenchmen if circumstances should
+require this, whether as major-general commanding
+a division of the American army, or whether,
+after our swords and spears have given place to
+the plowshare and pruning-hook, I see you as a
+private gentleman, a friend and companion, I shall
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+welcome you with all the warmth of friendship
+to Columbia's shores; and in the latter case, to my
+rural cottage, where homely fare and a cordial
+reception shall be substituted for delicacies and
+costly living. This, from past experience, I know
+you can submit to; and if the lovely partner of
+your happiness will consent to participate with
+us in such rural entertainments and amusements,
+I can undertake on behalf of Mrs. Washington
+that she will do all in her power to make Virginia
+agreeable to the Marchioness. My inclination
+and endeavors to do this cannot be doubted, when
+I assure you that I love everybody that is dear to
+you."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Such a visit as this the Marchioness was never
+to pay. And we can not blame her if, during her
+husband's brief visits, she felt like complaining
+that he absorbed himself in the interests of the
+American cause or was always planning fresh
+enterprises. But though she was now only nineteen
+years old, she was proving herself the high-minded
+woman who could sympathize entirely
+with her husband's ideals, and who could consider
+him dedicated to a great cause; therefore she
+could cheerfully lay aside merely selfish wishes.
+No one ever heard a complaint from her absolutely
+loyal lips. In December, 1779, the family was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+made happy by the birth of a son, to whom, in
+honor of his illustrious friend, Lafayette gave the
+name of George Washington.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette had many testimonials from his
+friends in the United States showing their appreciation
+of his efforts for them; and among them
+was one of special import. It consisted of a sword
+richly ornamented, with a handle of solid gold,
+sent to him by the American Congress. To
+Franklin was intrusted the pleasant task of providing
+this rich gift. It was made in Paris and
+was engraved with representations of the actions
+in which Lafayette had taken part, together with
+his coat of arms, his chosen motto "Cur non?"
+and other emblematic designs selected by Franklin;
+and Franklin's grandson had the honor of conveying
+to Lafayette this testimonial of a nation's
+appreciation.</p>
+
+<p>"By the help of the exquisite artists of France,"
+graciously wrote Franklin in an accompanying
+letter, "I find it easy to express everything but the
+sense we have of your worth."</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette may have been in a fair way to be
+spoiled, but if he was he had a happy way of concealing
+it. He answered, "In some of the devices
+I cannot help finding too honorable a reward for
+those slight services which, in concert with my
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+fellow-soldiers, and under the god-like American
+hero's orders, I had the good fortune to render."</p>
+
+<p>This beautiful sword was in the course of time to
+meet with ill luck. When Revolutionists rifled
+the Ch&acirc;teau de Chaviniac, it was buried for safe-keeping
+and remained thus hidden for many
+years. Long afterwards Lafayette's son, George
+Washington Lafayette, grown to young manhood,
+unearthed the treasure and found that the blade was
+totally rusted away. Lafayette then had the
+happy thought of adjusting to this handle of pure
+gold the blade of a sword that had been made out
+of bolts and bars taken from the Bastille. Thus
+the associations of both worlds and of two struggles
+for freedom were united in one historic sword.</p>
+
+<p>There came a time when Lafayette felt himself
+warranted in presenting a Memoir to the Cabinet
+on the subject of giving direct relief to America.
+His plan, from a military standpoint, was masterly,
+and it produced so favorable an impression that
+it was accepted; and it soon became known to
+those worthy to be in the secret that France would
+send to America a reinforcement of six ships and
+six thousand men of the regular infantry. To
+this was added a loan of three million livres, and
+later still, through the appeals of Franklin, another
+loan of the same amount was supplied. The Count
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+de Rochambeau, a trained soldier, was chosen
+to command the land forces and the Count de
+Ternay was to be admiral of the fleet. Lafayette
+was sent ahead to announce this happy news and
+to make preparations for the arrival of the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>Wearing the uniform of an American officer,
+Lafayette took his leave of the king; and on the
+4th of March, 1780, he sailed on the frigate <i>Hermione</i>.
+He reached Boston harbor on the 28th
+of April, 1780, after an absence of fifteen months.
+When word swept through the city that a ship was
+coming in with Lafayette on board, the people
+crowded to the wharf to welcome the returning
+French friend of America. This was the beginning
+of civic processions in Lafayette's honor. They
+cheered him from the ship's side to the residence
+of Governor Hancock where addresses were listened
+to and congratulations exchanged. He
+called upon the Legislature then in session, and in
+the evening viewed the illuminations in his honor.
+Lafayette gave a dinner on board the ship to which
+he invited a large number of officials&mdash;the president
+of the Massachusetts Council, members of
+the legislature, the consul of France, and other
+men of dignity. The frigate was gayly decorated
+with the flags of many nations. Thirteen toasts
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+were drunk&mdash;the number thirteen cannot have
+been an unlucky number in those days!&mdash;and
+after the toast to Washington the great guns
+boomed seventeen times.</p>
+
+<p>As rapidly as possible Lafayette rode to Washington's
+headquarters at Morristown, New Jersey,
+and made his happy announcement to the General
+himself. He then pressed on to Philadelphia to
+present to Congress the communication from the
+French government. He bore also a letter from
+Washington, in which the commander in chief
+introduced Lafayette as one who had "signally
+distinguished himself in the service of this country,"
+and who, during the time that he had been
+in France, had "uniformly manifested the same
+zeal in our affairs which animated his conduct
+while he was among us"; who had been "on all
+occasions an essential friend to America."</p>
+
+<p>The greatest possible effort was now made to
+equip the Continental army, but the resources
+of the country had already been grievously overtaxed.
+Washington had hardly been able to keep
+his army together at all. Half of his six thousand
+men were unfit for duty. They had sometimes
+had no bread for six days; sometimes for two or
+three days they would have neither meat nor
+bread. The commander clearly realized that an
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+army reduced to nothing, without provisions or any
+of the necessary means to carry on a war, needed
+not a little help only&mdash;it needed a great deal.</p>
+
+<p>When, on the 2d of May, the French fleet finally
+set sail, delays had reduced the number of soldiers
+and the amount of supplies. The English by this
+time had realized what was happening, and they
+carefully blockaded the second division of the
+squadron in the harbor of Brest; and when the
+first division reached Newport, the English cleverly
+surrounded the harbor with their ships, thus
+"bottling up" the French and rendering them
+inactive and useless. In this way the great good
+that was expected from the French expedition came
+to naught.</p>
+
+<p>During all this trying time, Lafayette acted the
+part of a single-minded friend of both the French
+and the American armies. He was sent by Washington
+to Newport to confer with the French
+generals, and later he was present at a joint meeting
+of the great French and American generals
+which was held at Hartford, Connecticut. Lafayette
+rode from one army to the other, holding
+conferences and putting important decisions into
+writing, or dictating the results of conversations.
+Many of these documents have been preserved
+in French or American state archives.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Whatever time he could get apart from these
+labors he spent in training the battalion that had
+been assigned to him. This was a detachment
+of light infantry, selected from the best of the
+army. He took great pride in training these men,
+sent to France for black and white plumes for their
+caps, and tried to make them present as good an
+appearance as possible. The Marquis de Chastellux,
+who visited his camp on the Ramapo River,
+has left a delightful description of this visit in which
+he spoke of the fine appearance of the troops as
+their young commander had drawn them up on
+a height near his own station. Here, said Chastellux,
+Lafayette received his guest with more pride
+than if he had been entertaining at his estates in
+Auvergne. "Happy his country," said Chastellux,
+"if she employs his services; happier still if she
+has no use for them!"</p>
+
+<p>It was during this autumn that Benedict Arnold
+made what Lafayette called that "horrid compact
+with the enemy"&mdash;an event that amazed and
+distressed him beyond any words. Lafayette was
+with Washington when the plot was discovered.
+He was also a member of the board to try the British
+spy, Andr&eacute;. His attitude toward Andr&eacute; was
+very different from that toward Benedict Arnold.
+Andr&eacute;, he said, conducted himself in a manner so
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+frank, so noble, and so delicate, that he could
+not help feeling infinite sorrow for him.</p>
+
+<p>The winter of 1780-81 was the darkest period
+of the war. But it was to be followed by a happier
+season, one in which Lafayette was at last to have
+as large a share of action as his heart could wish.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Lafayette in Virginia</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">THE British still held the city of New York.
+General Washington's army sat in their impregnable
+camps on the Hudson and along the Delaware,
+where he could reach out a hand to New
+England on the east, and to Philadelphia on the
+south, at the same time threatening now and then
+the stronghold of the British. Meantime an active
+campaign was being carried on in the states south
+of Virginia. At the battle of Charleston the brave
+General Lincoln and his gallant army were compelled
+by the British to lay down their arms and
+give themselves up as prisoners of war without
+the usual courtesies. The ceremony of surrender
+was particularly galling. Forbidden by their
+conquerors to play a British or a Hessian air,
+they marched to the joyous melody of "Yankee
+Doodle," their colors cased, and their hearts rebellious.
+The battle of Camden was another
+defeat for the Americans. On that disastrous
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+day fell the companion of Lafayette's first voyage,
+the Baron de Kalb, who died bravely after receiving
+no less than eleven wounds. Sir Henry
+Clinton, the British commander in the south,
+thought that defeats like these would finish the
+question for that part of the country, so he gave
+out proclamations of amnesty to the tractable
+and built scaffolds to hang the unsubmissive. But
+the south was not to be so easily subdued. The
+British met with defeat at King's Mountain, and
+in October, 1780, General Greene was sent to push
+the southern campaign more vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>One result of these southern disasters was to
+make the importance of Virginia increasingly
+evident as a base for operations in the Carolinas.
+Cornwallis saw this and he determined to reduce
+that state, to cut off the southern army from its
+base, and thus to control the approaches to the
+heart of the country. Accordingly, in January,
+1781, he sent Benedict Arnold, who had been made
+a brigadier general in the British army, with a
+strong force, and with two trusted British colonels,
+to conduct a campaign in that state.</p>
+
+<p>If the British commander in chief had wished
+to fill the men of the Continental army with a
+fire that would make them unconquerable, this
+was the way to do it, and this was the man against
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+whom they most desired to fight. On the other
+hand, General Washington chose a leader for the
+defense who was so well beloved by his men, and
+who was himself filled with so fiery an enthusiasm
+for the cause, that this alone would have been
+enough to bring into effect all the strength of
+those drained and exhausted men and to energize
+them for prodigies of valor. This leader was
+Lafayette. In February, 1781, he was commissioned
+to go against Arnold.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was glad to be trusted with a command
+and overjoyed at the prospect of action.
+But he still believed that the great final blow was
+to be struck at New York and he was most reluctant
+to be separated from Washington with whom
+he intensely longed to be when the great climax
+came. However, he obeyed orders with perfect
+alacrity and planned for a swift march in order to
+intercept any efforts on the part of Arnold to
+obtain access to the various storehouses and river
+crossings in Virginia. Leaving under guard his
+tents, artillery, and everything that could be
+spared, with orders to follow as rapidly as possible,
+he marched his men through heavy rains and over
+bad roads.</p>
+
+<p>The Virginia campaign, says a French historian,
+is to be ranked among the classic tales of all
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+time; and in this campaign the young Lafayette
+was the most notable leader. It was on the 6th
+of April, 1781, that General Washington wrote
+to Lafayette, giving him full instructions, which
+led him into the midst of active service.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's detachment included men from New
+Jersey, from New Hampshire, and from other New
+England states. Among them were some of the
+men who had been willing to take their lives in
+their hands and follow their young leader on the
+hazardous expedition into Canada. Although the
+men had no idea at this time what was before them,
+they were now going to follow Lafayette to the
+glory that he so ardently desired.</p>
+
+<p>But in spite of the splendid spirit of the troops,
+Lafayette found that they were in sore need of
+encouragement. They saw that they were not
+going toward the grand final attack; they were
+not used to the blind obedience exacted from
+trained European troops; and they did not
+understand this discouraging southward move.</p>
+
+<p>Fearing that the summer would be wasted,
+Lafayette thought of a device to strengthen the
+tie between himself and his detachment. He
+wrote it down in the order of the day that they
+were about to start out on an expedition that would
+tax all a soldier's powers, and in which there would
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+be abundant dangers and difficulties. The enemy,
+he said, was far superior to them in numbers,
+thoroughly despised them, and was determined
+to conquer them. He added that no soldier
+should accompany him who was inclined to abandon
+him; nor was it necessary that any one
+should desert; for any man could, if he desired,
+have a pass and be sent to join his regiment in
+winter quarters.</p>
+
+<p>This method of approach had more than the
+desired effect. Lafayette soon wrote to Washington:
+"Our men are in high spirits. Their honor
+was interested, and murmurs as well as desertions
+are entirely out of fashion."</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the advent of Lafayette in the Virginia
+field, he came into contact with Benedict
+Arnold in a very curious way. The commander
+of the opposing British forces had died, and Arnold
+took his place. About that time Arnold sent a
+message under a flag of truce to Lafayette. When
+Lafayette learned that the letter which was brought
+in was from the traitor, he returned it unopened,
+sending a verbal message stating that with Benedict
+Arnold he would hold no communication
+whatever. Later he sent a formal letter to the
+officer that had brought the flag, in which he declined
+all correspondence with Arnold, but added
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+with the utmost courtesy that "in case any other
+British officer should honour him with a letter, he
+would always be happy to give the officers every
+testimony of esteem."</p>
+
+<p>The subject of the letter from Arnold was an
+exchange of prisoners, a matter that interested
+him extremely, as he well knew that Lafayette
+could hardly have pleased the American people
+better than by presenting Benedict Arnold to
+them a prisoner. We know that Arnold's mind
+dwelt on this aspect of his sad situation from the
+fact that he once quizzed a captured American to
+find out what the Americans would do with him if
+they took him prisoner. The soldier audaciously
+replied that they would "cut off the leg that had
+been wounded in the country's service and hang
+the rest of him!" Lafayette's action in regard
+to the letter from Arnold was very gratifying to
+Washington; he said that in nothing had Lafayette
+pleased him more than in refusing to hold communication
+with Benedict Arnold.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this Arnold was transferred to New
+York, and Cornwallis came forward with re&euml;nforcements,
+declaring that he would now "proceed
+to dislodge Lafayette from Richmond."
+The struggle between the young French officer
+(not yet twenty-four years old) in his first attempt
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+at carrying on an independent campaign, and the
+veteran British commander with years of service
+behind him, was now taken up with more spirit
+than ever before. It was the crisis of the Revolution.
+If the Continental army could only hold
+out a little longer, it might be possible, by adroit
+advance and diplomatic retreat, to avoid unequal
+battles until the foe was worn out or until
+some favorable opportunity should arise for a
+direct attack. Cornwallis, of course, despised
+his exhausted enemy. A letter from him was intercepted
+and brought into the American camp;
+in the letter he said, "The Boy cannot escape me!"
+Lafayette's face must have been set in very grim
+lines when he read that letter.</p>
+
+<p>Technically, Lafayette had been taking orders
+from General Greene whose command was in the
+south and included Virginia. But on the 18th
+of May, Lafayette was ordered to take the entire
+command in Virginia and to send all reports directly
+to General Washington. "The Boy's" letters
+to Colonel Hamilton show that he fully recognized
+the gravity of affairs, the responsibility of his
+position, and the dangers of his own over-enthusiastic
+spirit. The British command of the adjacent
+waters, the superiority of their cavalry, and
+the great disproportion in the forces of the two
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+armies, gave the enemy such advantages that
+Lafayette dared not venture to engage the British.
+The British generals thoroughly understood what
+they called Lafayette's "gasconading disposition,"
+and they relied upon it to work woe to his plans
+and to contribute to their own glory. His prudence
+disappointed them as much as it satisfied
+Washington who had said of Lafayette, "This
+noble soldier combines all the military fire of youth
+with an unusual maturity of judgment." Lafayette
+desired to be worthy of this high praise.</p>
+
+<p>On April 29, Lafayette and his light infantry
+reached Richmond in time to prevent its capture
+and to protect the supplies that had been concentrated
+there. In the battle at Green Spring his
+bravery led him once more to plunge into the thick
+of the fight, losing his horse (some reports say two
+horses) which was shot under him or by his side.</p>
+
+<p>In Wayne's official report on that battle he said
+that "Lafayette was frequently requested to keep
+at a greater distance, but his native bravery
+rendered him deaf to the admonition."</p>
+
+<p>He compelled the admiration of his opponents
+by his skill in defensive maneuvers. The "Boy"
+obeyed his commander in chief, and he succeeded
+in misleading his foe, for Cornwallis believed that
+the American force was larger than it actually
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+was; he also believed that he could break down
+the loyalty of the inhabitants of Pennsylvania
+and of Virginia. In both these points he was
+direfully mistaken. But Lafayette had high respect
+for Cornwallis as a general. "His Lordship
+plays so well," he complained, "that no blunder
+can be hoped from him to recover a bad step of
+ours."</p>
+
+<p>Finally, re&euml;nforcements did come to Lafayette.
+In despair the American Congress sent a special
+messenger express to Paris to bear one more
+urgent appeal for help. Washington wrote, "We
+are at the end of our tether; ... now or never our
+deliverance must come."</p>
+
+<p>Impetuous young John Laurens was chosen to
+be this Ambassador Extraordinary to France.
+Laurens was greatly admired and loved by Lafayette
+and he recommended him to the affections
+of his noble relatives in Paris. At the moment
+Laurens's father was being held a prisoner by the
+British in the Tower of London&mdash;a fact that no
+doubt quickened the zeal of the son. At all
+events, he was successful in his mission. The
+French fleet in the West Indies was ordered to the
+United States and the king himself became surety
+for several millions of livres in addition to what
+had already been sent to our aid.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The time was coming when Lafayette could
+begin to move the British army before him little
+by little down the York River toward Yorktown,
+a method of procedure that now became, as the
+British reports described it, the "constant and
+good policy of the enemy." On the 24th of
+September, 1781, Cornwallis proceeded to occupy
+Yorktown and to strengthen it against attack.</p>
+
+<p>The city of Yorktown is situated near the entrance
+to Chesapeake Bay. At that place two
+rivers enter the bay, the York and the James, and
+upon a conspicuous bluff on the northern side of
+the neck of land between them stood this small
+town.</p>
+
+<p>Cornwallis began at once to prepare the place
+for assault. Around the village he built a series
+of fortifications consisting of seven redoubts and
+six batteries on the land side, and these he connected
+by intrenchments. He placed a line of batteries
+on the river bank to command the channel,
+and he established outworks to impede the approach
+of the enemy. Lafayette saw all this and
+rejoiced, for he believed that Cornwallis was at
+last where he most desired to have him&mdash;in a
+place where he would be open to attack, and with
+some hope of success. All the country around
+Yorktown was now familiar to Lafayette. He
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+knew every inch of the land, the river, the morass,
+and the commanding hill. "Should a fleet come
+in at this moment, affairs would take a very happy
+turn," he wrote joyfully to General Washington.</p>
+
+<p>On the 30th of August the French fleet, under
+the Count de Grasse, with twenty-eight ships of
+the line, appeared in the waters of Chesapeake
+Bay; a few days later the Marquis de Saint Simon,
+field marshal in the French army, debarked a
+large re&euml;nforcement of French troops; and on the
+4th of September Lafayette moved nearer to Yorktown
+and took a position with the troops he could
+bring together,&mdash;his own light infantry, the
+militia, and the re&euml;nforcements at Williamsburg,
+a town in the vicinity of the British position.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing now remained but the arrival of General
+Washington himself to take charge of the whole
+enterprise, and Lafayette's happiness was complete
+when, on the 14th of September, he resigned
+his command into the hands of his revered General.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">The Two Redoubts</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">IT is September, 1781. The "Boy" has not
+been caught. He is encamped at Williamsburg,
+and looks toward his powerful enemy who is surrounded
+by well-devised intrenchments at Yorktown,
+twelve miles down the river.</p>
+
+<p>The American and French troops, fifteen or
+sixteen thousand in number, arrived and took
+their places. General Washington was in supreme
+command. America had never before seen such
+an army. The Americans had done their utmost.
+That part of the French army that had come down
+from Connecticut with Rochambeau had astonished
+the people of Philadelphia as they marched through
+the city by the brilliancy of their rose-and-violet-faced
+uniforms, and by the display of their graceful
+and accurate military movements. Now they
+were to have an opportunity to show whether
+their warlike spirit was expressed chiefly in ruffles
+and tinsel trimmings, or whether they could win
+fame by more solid qualities.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On the 29th of September the combined American
+and French armies moved southward to a point
+about four miles from the town. There they
+divided into two columns and the Americans
+defiled to the right, the French to the left. They
+then proceeded to arrange themselves around the
+town in an irregular semicircle that extended
+from the river bank at the west to the shore on the
+southeast, a distance of about two miles. Toward
+the southern side were ranged the various
+American regiments under Baron Steuben and
+General Wayne; and next to these stood what was
+called the Light Infantry corps under Lafayette.
+He had ventured to suggest to General Washington
+that he wished his division might be composed of
+the troops that had been with him through the
+fatigues and dangers of the Virginia campaign;
+this, he said, would be the greatest reward he
+could have for the services he might have rendered,
+as he had now the strongest attachment for those
+troops. Still another division stood at the extreme
+right. This was under the command of General
+Lincoln, who had been forced, through no fault of
+his own, to surrender to the British at Charleston.</p>
+
+<p>The approaches to Yorktown were easy; there
+were means of shelter everywhere, and the American
+army at once began preparations for the siege.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last the men finished the construction of
+two parallels. They were now within three hundred
+yards of the British defenses. General
+Washington then placed his siege guns in position.
+It was the first week in October, 1781. On the
+sixth the siege began.</p>
+
+<p>Every point in this dramatic history has been
+made the subject of story or poem, and naturally
+some legendary quality would after a time irradiate
+the incidents. Thus some writers affirm that General
+Washington gave the order for the first shot,
+and some say that it was Lafayette. The story is
+this. Before signing the order, General Washington
+turned to Thomas Nelson who was both
+governor of Virginia and a general in the army,
+and inquired,</p>
+
+<p>"At what object shall this gun be fired?"</p>
+
+<p>Pointing to his own dwelling where the roof
+appeared above the trees of Yorktown, and where
+it was understood Cornwallis had his headquarters,
+General Nelson answered,</p>
+
+<p>"There is my house; aim at that!"</p>
+
+<p>The story is that Washington turned to the
+gunner and said,</p>
+
+<p>"For every shot you cause to hit that house, I
+will give you five guineas."</p>
+
+<p>From the 6th to the 10th of October, the fire
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+from the allied American and French army increased
+daily in vigor. On the 11th the second
+parallel was completed and entered, and the besieging
+line was thus tightened and strengthened.
+Within their intrenchments the British were watching
+for re&euml;nforcements that were fated never to
+come.</p>
+
+<p>On the 14th of October it was found that the
+British held two redoubts whose guns were inconveniently
+active, and the Americans believed
+they must be silenced. The redoubts had been
+built on two small hills on the American right, in
+a difficult region where rocky cuts alternated with
+swampy depressions. These two hills were called
+"Number Nine" and "Number Ten"; "Number
+Ten" was also called "Rock Redoubt." These
+redoubts were about three hundred yards in front
+of the British garrison, and Washington decided
+after consultation that they were of sufficient importance
+to take by storm.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly the order was given. The reduction
+of Redoubt Number Nine was intrusted to a
+group of French grenadiers and chasseurs. Rock
+Redoubt stood nearest the river; this was assigned
+to Lafayette with his American regiments.</p>
+
+<p>Important among the men under General Lafayette's
+command was Lieutenant Colonel de
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+Gimat, the French aid who had always been so
+faithful a follower of Lafayette; he commanded
+a body of men from Massachusetts and Rhode
+Island. Then there was Lieutenant Colonel
+Alexander Hamilton, the young American to whom
+Lafayette was personally so warmly attached, who
+afterwards was to become one of the most distinguished
+servants of the new nation, and who
+was to meet so strange and sad an end after his
+great work was done.</p>
+
+<p>When Hamilton heard a rumor that General
+Washington was intending to give to a certain
+Colonel Barber the opportunity to lead the attack,
+his spirit was immediately aroused. Without a
+moment's delay he hastened to headquarters and
+warmly urged his right to the honorable and
+dangerous task. He gained his point and returned
+in a state of exuberant satisfaction, exclaiming
+to his major, "We have it! We have
+it!" So Lafayette assigned Lieutenant Colonel
+Alexander Hamilton to lead the advance corps,
+to be assisted by Colonel de Gimat. In all there
+were four hundred men under Lafayette for this
+storming adventure.</p>
+
+<p>It was eight o'clock on the evening of October
+14. The storming of the two redoubts had been
+carefully planned even down to the least details;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+but so energetic was the work of the men, so dashing
+was their valor, that when the time really
+came, the attack lasted but a few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's redoubt was taken in a mere flash
+of time&mdash;in less than ten minutes, some close
+observers said; others made it eight minutes.
+The six shells, the signal agreed upon, were fired.
+The men started the march. Rock Redoubt
+loomed before them in the thick dusk of twilight.
+They advanced in good order with their bayonets
+fixed and in utter silence, as they had been commanded.
+But when the first volley of musketry
+came down from the top of the redoubt, they
+broke their silence and huzzaed with all their
+power. Then they rushed forward, charging with
+their bayonets as they ran, and in almost no time
+they were within the redoubt, with the defending
+officer and forty-five men their prisoners. Not
+a shot had been fired; and so swift was the action
+that few of the Americans were lost.</p>
+
+<p>The not ungenerous rivalry between the groups
+of men who took the two redoubts is one of the
+most picturesque incidents of the American Revolution.
+If it had not been for the fact that the
+French detachment had paused to have the abatis
+cut through in regular order, they would probably
+have been in their redoubt before the Americans
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+under Lafayette were in theirs; for when they
+were once on the height, they occupied but six
+minutes in making themselves masters of their
+redoubt and in manning it again for action.</p>
+
+<p>One move follows another quickly at such a
+time, and when Lafayette had entered his redoubt,
+he looked over the parapet and saw that the men
+on the other height were still struggling for the
+possession of theirs. It happened that a certain
+General Viomesnil had expressed a doubt as to the
+efficiency of the American troops, therefore Lafayette
+welcomed this opportunity to show their
+valor. He instantly sent an aid to announce to
+General Viomesnil, with a flourish of compliments,
+that the American troops were in possession of
+their redoubt and to say that if M. le Baron de
+Viomesnil desired any help, the Marquis de Lafayette
+would have great pleasure in assisting him!
+The Major sent word,</p>
+
+<p>"Tell the Marquis that I am not in mine, but
+that I will be in five minutes."</p>
+
+<p>This promise was made good by the brave and
+energetic French troops. Perhaps never before
+had the space of two minutes been of so much importance
+in the honor of two nations.</p>
+
+<p>General Washington who, in his eagerness to
+see this important action, had ridden near,&mdash;too
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+near to please his officers and surgeons,&mdash;had
+closely watched the storming of the redoubts.
+When they were taken and the guns had been
+instantly whirled about to face the enemy, he
+turned to Generals Knox and Lincoln who stood
+near and said with emphasis,</p>
+
+<p>"The work is done, and well done."</p>
+
+<p>Then he mounted his horse and rode back to
+headquarters.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">The Surrender of Yorktown</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">AT the siege of Yorktown much of the gallantry
+and glory of war was to be seen; but there was
+another side as well. The dwelling houses in
+ruin, the sufferings of the wounded men, the surgical
+operations, the amputations, the groans and sighs
+and homesickness, the dying gasps, the bodies of
+slain horses lying in the way&mdash;these also are war.</p>
+
+<p>In Yorktown itself many houses were in flames.
+A sortie had been attempted and had failed.
+British re&euml;nforcements had not come. Supplies
+were giving out. The outlook seemed hopeless.
+The men fought without spirit. An attempt was
+made to escape by sea. It also failed. A violent
+storm drove the boats back to shore. The idea
+of surrender was entertained.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, on the 17th of October, General
+Cornwallis sent a note to General Washington
+asking for a cessation of hostilities for twenty-four
+hours, to settle terms for the surrender of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+Yorktown. Washington allowed two hours instead
+of twenty-four. Why waste any more time?</p>
+
+<p>Interviews were immediately held, and a treaty
+of capitulation was framed.</p>
+
+<p>When it was known that the British had yielded,
+a wave of the wildest joy spread through the
+American and French camps&mdash;and through the
+whole country as well. Messengers rode at top
+speed to Philadelphia to carry the good news.
+Congress was sitting there at the time. The rider
+came in at midnight. At one o'clock the watchers
+called "All's well," as usual, but added,</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Cornwallis is taken!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Windows were opened and heads thrust out.
+The streets soon filled with rejoicing people. What
+Lafayette called "a good noisy feu de joie"
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>The third article in the document of capitulation
+stated that the British troops should be required
+to march out to the place appointed in front of
+the posts, at two o'clock precisely, with shouldered
+arms, colors cased, and drums beating a British
+or a German march. They were then to ground
+their arms and return to their encampments.
+The same afternoon the works at Gloucester on
+the opposite side of the river were to be given up,
+the infantry to file out as prescribed for the garrison
+at York, and the cavalry to go forth with their
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+swords drawn and their trumpets sounding.</p>
+
+<p>Over all this there had been a sharp discussion.
+The British wished to receive the "honors of war,"
+that is, to go out with colors flying and drums
+beating; and the courteous Washington was inclined
+to grant this request. But Lafayette remembered
+the requirements the British had made
+at the defeat at Charleston. They had compelled
+the men to march out with colors cased, and had
+forbidden them to play a British or a Hessian air;
+and he thought that in fair retaliation the British
+army should now give up their arms in the manner
+required by them on that occasion. He suggested,
+however, one original variation,&mdash;that they should
+be not forbidden but <i>required</i> to march to a British
+or a German air. Colonel Laurens was in accord
+with this. He had served at Charleston under
+General Lincoln, and he was only too glad to remind
+the British commissioners that it had been so
+arranged and required of the American troops
+after that defeat.</p>
+
+<p>"The article remains or I cease to be a commissioner,"
+the young man said firmly. The high-spirited
+Laurens could but remember that at that
+very moment his own father was still imprisoned
+in the Tower of London.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The condition remained; and at noon on the
+19th of October the capitulation was signed. At
+one o'clock possession was taken of the enemies'
+works, and at two the garrison marched out.</p>
+
+<p>A field about a mile and a half south of Yorktown
+was chosen for the ceremony. The scene
+was brilliant and spectacular. All the American
+soldiers were drawn up in a line on one side
+of the road and the French stood opposite with
+General Rochambeau, their commander in chief,
+leading their line. General Washington, mounted
+on his horse and attended by his aids, was at the
+head. Washington was ardently admired by all
+the French officers and they must have envied
+him his magnificent appearance in this fortunate
+hour. That fearless and austere commander,
+who had shared the sufferings and privations of
+his men in the dark night of Valley Forge, now rejoiced
+with them in the hour of accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>The French made a splendid appearance with
+their uniforms of bright colors and contrasting
+trimmings. Nearly all had the conventional three-cornered
+Revolutionary cap of blue; and the
+trousers were prevailingly of a lemon or canary
+yellow. Glittering orders were flashing on many
+uniforms, their banners were embroidered with
+golden lilies; each noble had his servants arrayed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+in silver-laced livery, and the French bands of
+many fifes, horns, and cymbals, played such music
+as was never heard before.</p>
+
+<p>The American soldiers, who had inherited no
+traditions of either the glory or the disasters of
+warfare, could not compare with the foreigners
+in their full-dress display. But in every heart
+among them there was a feeling that richly compensated
+for the lack of feathers and facings.
+Whether shopkeeper or farmer or mighty hunter
+from the interior who stood in that line, the tide
+of united nationality ran higher in his heart than
+ever before. And every last man among them
+was one degree happier by having the dashing
+young French Major General, their beloved
+"Marquis," on the American side of the procession
+instead of in the foreign line. The "Boy" that
+Cornwallis was so certain he could catch was
+splendid that day in the perfection of military
+form. He sat, as always, very perfectly on his
+horse and he had the grace to be proud of the
+company in which he stood. As to his own regiment
+of Light Infantry, he had always been fond
+of decorating them with finery. They appeared
+now in dark leather leggins and white trousers;
+their blue coats had white facings and white cuffs;
+and a blue feather stood up in front of the cap and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+waved over the crown. This was the regulation
+uniform for them, but perhaps, having just gone
+through the severities of their Virginia campaign,
+they were not able to "live up" to their fine clothes.
+However, nothing mattered on that great day.</p>
+
+<p>A vast concourse of American spectators was
+present to witness the surrender, but their desire
+to see Lord Cornwallis was not gratified. He
+pleaded indisposition and appointed General
+O'Hara in his place. As this general approached
+the group of commanding officers, the bands added
+their music. By the stipulation, they had been
+commanded to play an English or a Hessian march,
+but they were too proud to select one of their dignified
+national airs. Instead, they gave the
+tune of an English folk song of hoary age, known
+from time immemorial as "Derry Down," but
+now called "The World Turned Upside Down,"
+a title the British bandmaster no doubt considered
+appropriate to the circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>But the dignity of the occasion required that
+they should now observe the proprieties, for there
+was a wonderful pageant to be viewed, and all
+felt the great import of the hour.</p>
+
+<p>The conquered army advanced between the
+two long lines of French and American soldiers.
+General O'Hara led the procession, riding slowly
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+and proudly. As he approached General
+Washington, he removed his hat and apologized
+for the absence of General Cornwallis. General
+Washington received the apology and indicated
+that he had appointed General Lincoln, as the
+conquered commander of Charleston, to do the
+honors of the day and to receive the arms of the
+conquered. The moment was historic.</p>
+
+<p>In one of the halls at Yale University stands a
+celebrated picture, painted by Trumbull, which
+gives a vivid impression of the brilliancy and importance
+of the occasion. In this picture General
+Washington, in an attitude of great dignity, is
+placed in the center of the scene. Near him stands
+General Lincoln who is being richly rewarded for
+his bitter defeat at Charleston. His hand is held
+out to receive the sword which the representative
+of General Cornwallis is passing to him.</p>
+
+<p>At the left of the picture are seen the French
+officers. Rochambeau is at the back and a little
+separated from the rest, and the others in the
+line are the counts, marquises, and barons who
+were officers in the French army.</p>
+
+<p>General Lafayette, the American, was on the
+American side, not far from his beloved General
+Washington. The one nearest to the commander
+in chief is General (or Governor) Thomas
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Nelson, the one who had suggested that his own
+house roof be aimed at in the beginning of the
+siege; the next is Lafayette; then Baron Steuben;
+the others are representative commanders from
+various states.</p>
+
+<p>The ceremony that followed this climax was
+most impressive. General Lincoln received the
+sword of Cornwallis, and at once handed it back
+to General O'Hara. The several regiments came
+forward to deliver their colors. Twenty-eight
+British captains, each bearing a flag folded in a
+case, were drawn up in a line opposite the twenty-eight
+American sergeants who were stationed to
+receive the flags. Ensign Wilson, then but eighteen
+years old, the youngest commissioned officer
+in the American army, was chosen to conduct this
+ceremony and to hand the colors on to the American
+sergeants. Lafayette looked down from his place
+in the line of mounted American officers and felt
+that his most ardent hopes were now fulfilled, and
+that his motto, "Cur non," had brought him only
+the best of fortune.</p>
+
+<p>The day after the ceremony of surrender was the
+Sabbath, and General Washington ordered that
+divine service should be held in all the regiments
+and that Thanksgiving should be the theme.
+The next day he gave a dinner to which the general
+officers of the three armies were invited. Lafayette
+could not restrain his admiration for Cornwallis
+for his gallant and appropriate conduct upon all
+these rather embarrassing occasions.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page126pic" id="Page126pic"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus03.jpg" width="500" height="325"
+alt="Photograph from Wm. H. Rau, Philadelphia.
+ The Surrender of Cornwallis.
+ From the painting by Colonel John Trumbull, the soldier-artist of the Revolution."
+title="Photograph from Wm. H. Rau, Philadelphia.
+ The Surrender of Cornwallis.
+ From the painting by Colonel John Trumbull, the soldier-artist of the Revolution." />
+<p class="mini-caption">Photograph from Wm. H. Rau, Philadelphia.</p>
+<p class="caption">The Surrender of Cornwallis.</p>
+<p class="caption2">
+ From the painting by Colonel John Trumbull,<br />
+ the soldier-artist of the Revolution.</p>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>If, however, he had possessed the gift of prophecy,
+he might have looked forward but one
+short century to the centennial of Yorktown,
+when the flags of the United States and of Great
+Britain would be run up together on the site of
+this historic surrender. Then he would have
+seen British and American officers stand together
+with bared heads and in brotherly friendliness,
+while salutes were fired and cheers rent the air.</p>
+
+<p>Looking still further, he would have seen the
+day when the people of France would unite with
+their one-time foe in various endeavors both peaceful
+and warlike. A strange planet is this, for the
+shifting of national loyalties and the rending and
+intertwining of bonds of union! If history could
+make the human race amenable to receiving any
+instruction whatever, we should learn that war
+never yet decided any problem that could not have
+been better settled in some other way.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Lionized by Two Worlds</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">THREE days after the surrender, the 22d of
+October, Lafayette was on board the <i>Ville de Paris</i>
+in Chesapeake Bay. It was believed that the
+surrender of Cornwallis would be practically conclusive
+as to the matter at issue between England
+and the United States. Lafayette therefore felt
+a sweep of thoughts toward home. Congress gave
+him leave of absence. The <i>Alliance</i> was again
+placed at his disposal and awaited him in Boston
+harbor.</p>
+
+<p>An adoring France received him on his arrival.
+He had been the hero of the New World; he now
+became the hero of the Old. The king of France
+gave him audience; when he arrived the queen
+sent her carriage to bring Adrienne, who at the
+moment happened to be at some royal f&ecirc;te, as
+swiftly as possible to the Noailles mansion. Balls
+were given in his honor. He was presented with
+laurel at the opera. The king made him a field
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+marshal, his commission to date from the day of
+Cornwallis's surrender, and he was invited by
+Richelieu to a dinner where all the field marshals
+of France were present, and where the health of
+Washington was drunk with words so full of reverent
+admiration that they did Lafayette's heart
+good.</p>
+
+<p>About this time a traveled American gentleman,
+Ledyard by name, was staying in Paris and commented
+on the popularity of the returned American
+hero. He said:</p>
+
+<p>"I took a walk to Paris this morning and saw
+the Marquis de Lafayette. He is a good man, this
+same Marquis. I esteem him. I even love him,
+and so we all do, except a few, who worship him....
+If I find in my travels a mountain as much elevated
+above other mountains as he is above ordinary
+men, I will name it Lafayette."</p>
+
+<p>The meeting of Lafayette with Adrienne cannot
+be described. He had now proved the value of
+his love of freedom, and she was filled with pride
+in the acknowledgment he received on all sides.
+The family reunion was perfect. He wrote to
+Washington, "My daughter and your George have
+grown so much that I find I am much older than I
+thought." He had reached the advanced age of
+twenty-four!
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was at once concerned with the concluding
+negotiations for peace between England
+and the United States. To hasten these and to
+carry on further military plans, France united
+with Spain in a projected expedition against the
+English possessions in the West Indies. For this
+purpose Lafayette, in December, 1782, went to
+Cadiz as chief of staff, where an armament of
+sixty ships and twenty-four thousand men were
+assembling. But while waiting for the final orders
+to sail, a swift courier brought the news to Cadiz
+that the treaty of peace had, on the 20th of January,
+1783, been finally signed at Paris. Lafayette
+wished to be the one to carry this news to America,
+but he was told that his presence at the negotiations
+at Madrid was necessary to their success, and
+therefore he had to forego the pleasure of being
+the personal messenger of the good news. Instead,
+he was allowed to borrow from the fleet a ship which
+he sent, as swiftly as possible, to the land of his
+heart. The ship lent him was <i>Le Triomphe</i>, well
+named for this message, and this was the first ship
+to bring the news of the Peace to our shores.</p>
+
+<p>His work in Spain being successfully accomplished,
+he returned to Paris by swift posts, which
+means that he went in a carriage, with relays of
+good horses; and by driving day and night, over
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+the mountains and through the valleys, following
+ancient Roman roads and crossing through many
+historic sites and cities, he covered the wide distance
+between the capital of Spain and that of
+France.</p>
+
+<p>The war being over, Washington, as every one
+knows, retired to his estate at Mount Vernon, an
+act incomprehensible to some, but fully understood
+by his "adopted son," Lafayette, who wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Your return to a private station is called the
+finishing stroke of an unparalleled character.
+Never did a man exist who stands so honorably
+in the opinion of mankind, and your name if possible
+will become greater to posterity. Everything
+that is great and everything that is good were never
+hitherto united in one man; never did that man
+live whom the soldier, statesman, patriot, and
+philosopher could equally admire; and never was
+a revolution brought about which, in all its motives,
+its conduct, its consequences, could so well
+immortalize its glorious chief. I am proud of you,
+my dear General; your glory makes me feel as if
+it were my own; and while the world is gaping
+upon you, I am pleased to think and to tell that
+the qualities of your heart do render you still
+more valuable than anything you have done."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>From Mount Vernon, where the wearied and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+peace-loving warrior was very glad to be, Washington,
+in February, 1784, wrote to Lafayette:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"At length, my dear Marquis, I am become a
+private citizen on the banks of the Potomac, and
+under the shadow of my own vine and fig-tree,
+free from the bustle of the camp, and the busy
+scenes of public life, I am pleasing myself with
+those tranquil enjoyments of which the soldier who
+is ever in pursuit of fame; the statesman whose
+watchful days and sleepless nights are spent in
+devising schemes to promote the welfare of his
+own, perhaps the ruin of other countries, as if this
+globe was insufficient for us all; the courtier who
+is always watching the countenance of his prince
+in hopes of catching a gracious smile, can have
+but little conception."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>He then goes on to give a brief history of recent
+events&mdash;the evacuation of New York, the American
+troops entering that city in good order, and
+New York finally freed from the British flag.
+He regretfully declined the pressing invitation of
+Lafayette to come to Paris, and again invited him
+and Madame de Lafayette to pay a visit at
+Mount Vernon. The correspondents appear to
+have thought of each other frequently, though separated
+by the wide seas. Later, Lafayette had joyous
+news to impart, for he wrote to Washington:
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"I want to tell you that Madame de Lafayette
+and my three children are well, and that all of us in
+the family join to present their dutiful affectionate
+compliments to Mrs. Washington and yourself.
+Tell her that I hope soon to thank her for a dish of
+tea at Mount Vernon. Yes, my dear General,
+before the month of June is over, you will see a
+vessel coming up the Potomac and out of that vessel
+will your friend jump, with a panting heart
+and all the feelings of perfect happiness."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>During Lafayette's visit to America in 1784
+the people had an opportunity to show their
+gratitude to one who had freely given his services
+to them in their day of need. In New York he
+was received with the greatest enthusiasm by the
+whole people, including his affectionate companions
+in arms. From here on he listened to the ringing
+of bells and the resounding of huzzas by day and
+saw lavish illuminations in his honor by night.
+A visit of ten days at Mount Vernon gave great
+pleasure to Washington as well as to Lafayette.
+In Boston his coming was celebrated at the stump
+of the Liberty Tree that the British had cut down
+during their occupation of the city. Many speeches
+were made during this journey, and Lafayette
+showed himself tactful in adapting his words to
+the occasion. His tact was prompted by a sincere
+liking for all people, a benevolent feeling
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+toward the whole world. This was the foundation
+of much that was attractive and useful in his
+character.</p>
+
+<p>During this journey Lafayette went as far north
+as Portsmouth and as far south as Yorktown.
+The various great battlefields of the campaign of
+1781 each received a visit in the company of Washington
+and of other companions in arms. The
+different states vied with one another in giving
+his name to their towns and villages&mdash;a custom
+that has continued to this day. The state of Virginia
+placed a bust of Lafayette in the capitol at
+Richmond; another was presented to the city of
+Paris by the minister of the United States, and
+was received with great pomp at the H&ocirc;tel de
+Ville, or city hall. Three states, Maryland, Connecticut,
+and Virginia, conferred on him the right
+of citizenship for himself and his children, an enactment
+that later became national; and so Lafayette
+became an American citizen in legal form
+as well as in spirit. How little did he think that
+this right would become so precious a boon to
+him and would be so sorely needed!</p>
+
+<p>The bust in the H&ocirc;tel de Ville was destroyed at
+the time of the Terror; and the day came soon
+after when nearly all that remained to the "Hero
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+of Two Worlds" was a certificate of citizenship in
+a country to which he was not native, while the
+owner of the certificate, because of his principles,
+was hurried from prison to prison. In 1784 he
+was riding on the high tide of success and popularity,
+but tragic days were soon to come in the life
+of America's loyal friend.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette took his farewell of Congress at Trenton,
+New Jersey, where it was then in session.
+The scene was dignified and affecting. It was at
+the close of this ceremony that Lafayette pronounced
+that wish&mdash;one might call it a prayer&mdash;which
+has been so often quoted.</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"May this immense Temple of Freedom ever
+stand a lesson to oppressors, an example to the
+oppressed, and a sanctuary for the rights of mankind!
+And may these happy United States attain
+that complete splendor and prosperity which
+will illustrate the blessings of their government,
+and in ages to come rejoice the departed souls of
+their founders."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Following his return from America at this time,
+Lafayette made a long tour through Germany and
+Austria. His purpose was to improve himself, he
+said, by the inspection of famous fields of battle,
+by conversation with the greatest generals, and by
+the sight of well-trained troops. He visited Frederick
+the Great who, in the eyes of the exquisite
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+Frenchman, presented a most untidy appearance
+in a dirty uniform covered over with Spanish snuff.
+He saw him review thirty-one battalions and
+seventy-five squadrons, thirty thousand men in
+all, and he admired the "perfectly regular machine
+wound up for forty years" by which they clicked
+off their movements. At the table of Frederick,
+Lafayette ate, at one time, with Cornwallis on one
+side and the son of the king of England on the
+other; on which occasion the Prussian despot
+indelicately amused himself by plying the young
+soldier with questions about American affairs.
+One wonders if in all his travels Lafayette caught
+any glimpse on the horizon of a certain grim
+fortress wherein, because of his hatred of despots
+like Frederick, fate decreed that he was to be immured
+for five long years.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Gathering Clouds</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">THE great storm of the French Revolution was
+now to appear on the horizon, climb to its height,
+and break in terror over France. During these
+years, from 1784 to 1792, Lafayette was for most
+of the time in Paris where he took part in events of
+great importance and in such a way as to command
+respect from those who sympathized with
+his liberal ideas and to win detraction from devotees
+of monarchial systems.</p>
+
+<p>At first, however, no one dreamed what the
+future held for France. Lafayette busied himself
+in doing what he could to further the affairs of the
+United States, turning his attention to commercial
+questions such as he had never supposed
+would interest him. Whale-oil, for instance, became
+a favorite subject with him; his services on
+behalf of that American industry were acknowledged
+by the seagoing people of Nantucket who
+sent him a gigantic, five-hundred-pound cheese,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+the product of scores of farms, as a testimonial of
+their appreciation.</p>
+
+<p>A cause that interested him intensely was
+slavery. His views on this subject he summed up
+in 1786 in a letter to John Adams:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"In the cause of my black brethren I feel myself
+warmly interested, and most decidedly side, so
+far as respects them, against the white part of
+mankind. Whatever be the complexion of the
+enslaved, it does not, in my opinion, alter the complexion
+of the crime which the enslaver commits, a
+crime much blacker than any African face. It is to
+me a matter of great anxiety and concern, to find
+that this trade is sometimes carried on under the flag
+of liberty, our dear and noble stripes, to which virtue
+and glory have been constant standard-bearers."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lafayette not only had a lofty sentiment about
+the condition of the slaves, but he put his theory
+into practice by buying at great expense an estate
+in Cayenne, or French Guiana, with a large number
+of slaves whom he put under a system of education,
+with the intention of making them free as
+soon as they were fitted for economic independence.
+Madame de Lafayette interested herself in the management
+of this estate; she provided pastors and
+teachers to go to Cayenne as missionaries and
+educators.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The experiment was going on well when the
+Revolution broke over France. Then it was
+doomed. While Lafayette was languishing in the
+dungeon at Olm&uuml;tz, one of his great anxieties
+was for his Cayenne charge. He would have been
+even more unhappy if he had known that when
+the revolutionists took possession of his property,
+they caused that estate to be sold, together with
+all the slaves, who thus went back into slavery&mdash;a
+great inconsistency in those same revolutionists
+who imagined they were working for liberty and
+enfranchisement!</p>
+
+<p>During this time Lafayette had two great interests:
+one, a public life marked by increasing
+premonitions of national danger; the other, at
+Chaviniac where his family stayed and where he
+was instituting all sorts of reforms on his own
+estate and in the village of Chaviniac, and working
+steadily for the welfare of the people who were
+dependent upon him. He founded an annual
+fair and a weekly market day. He built roads at
+his own expense. In the village he established a
+resident physician whose services the poor could
+have at any time without cost to themselves. He
+founded a weaving business and a school to teach
+the art. The agricultural advancement of America
+had interested him, so he brought a man from England
+to teach new methods to his farmers. New
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+implements were imported and new breeds of cattle
+were introduced. In every way he brought
+enlightenment and betterment.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime a spirit was rising that was soon to
+sweep not only over Paris but through all the
+provinces of France. Lafayette saw this storm
+coming. One day, in 1789, he was walking in the
+grand gallery of the Ch&acirc;teau de Chaviniac with
+a gentleman of the neighborhood. They spoke
+together of what the emancipation of the peasant
+would mean to the people of the Auvergne region.
+At that moment a group of peasants from his
+estate came in to offer Lafayette some nosegays
+and cheeses. They presented these gifts on
+bended knees, in an attitude of deep submission
+and respect.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said the neighbor, "see how little
+disposed these peasants are to receive your boasted
+emancipation; depend upon it, they think very
+little on the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," replied Lafayette, "a few years
+hence we shall see who was right."</p>
+
+<p>They did! The time was not far distant when
+the peasants of Auvergne, as well as the rabble of
+Paris, went singing:
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ah! &ccedil;a ira, &ccedil;a ira, &ccedil;a ira!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Celui qui s'&eacute;l&egrave;ve, on l'abaissera,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et qui s'abaisse, on l'&eacute;l&egrave;vera.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Significant events followed, and on every important
+occasion Lafayette bore a part. He was a
+member of the Assembly of Notables, and he led
+a minority of the nobility who demanded the
+calling of the States General, a representative
+assembly. He presented his famous composition,
+the Declaration of Rights, modeled on Jefferson's
+Declaration of Independence. He was made by
+acclamation Colonel General of the new National
+Guard and gave them the white cockade. He
+represented the people on the great day of the oath
+of loyalty to the new constitution. For a time he
+was riding on the top wave of popularity.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette believed in freedom for all people and
+to every man his rights. But he thought that
+France was not yet ready for the form of government
+that was succeeding in America. For France
+he believed the constitutional monarchy to be the
+best. He thought&mdash;and every one now thinks&mdash;that
+Louis XVI was a man of good intentions,
+and he believed these good intentions would show
+that monarch what was for the welfare and happiness
+of the people. Therefore he defended the
+king and the royal family as a part of the form of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+government that was the best for France. The
+newly adopted constitution appeared to him to be
+the just expression of royal authority.</p>
+
+<p>In his blind optimism Lafayette could not believe
+but that his ideas would in the end have their
+proper weight. He stood with the nobility, resting
+proudly on their good intentions, and facing
+a brute force newly awakened by the tocsin of
+liberty. To this unreasoning instinct, liberty
+meant nothing but license. The result of putting
+this license into power meant anarchy.</p>
+
+<p>Now came Lafayette's time of difficulty. He
+was accused of conniving at the attempt of the
+king and queen to escape. Afterwards the queen
+in her trial testified that Lafayette had known
+nothing whatever of the project. Lafayette was
+also blamed for the death of Foulon, a minister
+who was hanged, beheaded, and dragged through
+the streets by the mob. The fact was that he did
+all in his power to control the mob that caused
+Foulon's death. They accused him of firing on
+the mob. That he did, in defense of the life of
+the king&mdash;first standing before the cannon to
+give his life if need be. He was accused of being
+too liberal and of being too aristocratic. He was
+burned between the two fires. The people seemed
+determined not to understand him. They said
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+that if Lafayette truly loved the people it was
+but another evidence that his soul was plebeian&mdash;his
+simplicity of manner and unstudied grace of
+speech were but further proofs thereof. Brutality
+and lawlessness, veiled under the name of patriotism,
+could hardly do less than hate an incorruptible man
+like Lafayette who was outspoken in his beliefs.</p>
+
+<p>A coalition of European powers stood ready to
+invade France and place the monarchy again on a
+secure basis. Lafayette was at the head of one of
+three armies sent to withstand the forces of the
+coalition, but his own soldiers were secretly in
+sympathy with the revolutionary frenzy.</p>
+
+<p>The end came when Lafayette defied the Jacobin
+party, and they in turn declared him a traitor and
+put a price on his head. But even at that late
+day, if there had been in France any number of
+men who possessed Lafayette's calmness, self-control,
+and generous spirit, the state might still
+have been saved from tumult and degradation.
+As it was, France turned its face away from its
+best light and hope, and Lafayette was, as Carlyle
+picturesquely said, "hooted forth over the borders
+into Cimmerian night." He put his army into the
+best order possible, and with a company of devoted
+officers and followers started for a neutral country.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime in Paris the feet of the people were
+at the threshold of the Terror.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Lafayette in Prison</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">LAFAYETTE attempted to cross the frontier on
+his way to America when he was intercepted and
+taken prisoner. This was at Rochefort, on neutral
+territory. The arrest of peaceful citizens on their
+way through neutral territory to a neutral country
+was treason to all international covenant and
+courtesy; evidently, the phrase "international
+courtesy" had not then been coined; but the act
+has been abhorred by unprejudiced military men
+the world over.</p>
+
+<p>The party were taken to Namur, thence to Wesel,
+where some were released; later, three remained
+to be imprisoned in Magdeburg. Lafayette is reported
+to have owned as his highest ambition that
+his name should be a terror to all kings and
+monarchs. If he made this remark, his wish was
+fulfilled; for at a meeting of a committee of the
+Coalition it was agreed that the "existence of
+Lafayette was incompatible with the safety of the
+governments of Europe."
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Following this decision, in May, 1794, the king
+of Prussia gave him into the keeping of the Emperor
+of Austria, and the dangerous prisoner, together
+with three of the officers who were with him when
+arrested, Latour-Maubourg, Bureaux-de-Pusy, and
+Lameth, were promptly carried to the strong fortress
+of Olm&uuml;tz, high up in the gloomy Carpathian
+Mountains. Lameth nearly died and therefore
+was released, but the other two remained, not,
+however, being allowed to see or to communicate
+with their distinguished companion.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette had no apologies to make for the
+step he had taken. Indeed, he had great hopes
+that he would escape from his captors. Friends
+were finding means to communicate with him and
+plots were forming in the undercurrents of correspondence.</p>
+
+<p>But on the whole he much preferred to take his
+liberty than to have it granted to him. If indeed
+liberty were granted, it would be with conditions
+"like those made by a lower class of brigands in
+the corner of a thicket," and the discussion would
+in all probability result in a shutting on him of
+quadruple doors.</p>
+
+<p>He "much preferred to take his liberty than to
+have it granted to him." Accordingly plans were
+made. In one letter he calls for a good chart,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+arms, a passport, a wig, some drugs to insure a
+quiet night's sleep to the jailors, with instructions
+as to the dose to be given, and an itinerary for
+the route, with dangerous places indicated in it.
+They must know the exact time horses were to be
+ready, and the exact house where they were to
+stand. He was in buoyant spirits.</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Although a sojourn of fourteen months in the
+prisons of their Majesties has not contributed to
+my health," he wrote, "still I have a strong constitution
+and my early habits of life, added to the
+recollection of my fetters, will enable me to make
+a very rapid journey."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Finishing one of these letters, he says, "I hear
+them opening my first locks [the outer doors] and
+must stop writing." Latour-Maubourg adds a
+passage in his own hand. He begs for a piece of
+sealing wax and emphasizes that Lafayette must
+surely be rescued, whether the others are or not.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners looked out for those who were
+helping them to escape; these helpers were to be
+protected from suspicion. To do this they put
+a manikin with a nightcap on in Lafayette's bed,
+dug a channel under the chimney, and left a coat
+in the passage well smudged with soot.</p>
+
+<p>Why none of these plans worked is not known.
+Lafayette was carted on to Neisse, but the plotting
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+still went on. At last the grim and impregnable
+fortress of Olm&uuml;tz received the three prisoners.
+Here he could receive no letters; he could read
+no paper; he was harshly told that he should
+never again know anything of what was going on
+in the outside world; that he was now a complete
+nonentity, a being known only by a number, and
+that no person in Europe knew where he was nor
+ever should know until his death.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's misery was turned to a still darker
+hue by the fact that he felt the gravest alarm for
+the welfare of Madame de Lafayette. As he was
+being carted from prison to prison, on his way
+eastward toward that final destination in the
+mountain fortress, the news that was smuggled to
+him by secret and mysterious bearers was not of a
+kind to bring peace to his mind. He heard of the
+extremes to which the revolutionary frenzy was
+carrying the Parisian people; he heard that the
+king and queen and various members of their family
+had been proscribed, denounced, and sentenced
+to death by a committee miscalled a "Committee
+of Public Safety," and that the nobility were
+being ruthlessly sacrificed. Saddest of all this
+for him was the news that his wife, that woman
+of heroic character, of marvelous spiritual charm,
+and of liberal and philanthropic mind, had been
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+imprisoned and was in danger of perishing on the
+scaffold. This word&mdash;and nothing more! The
+darkness of life behind walls seven feet thick was
+not lightened for many a long month by any
+further news in regard to Adrienne. The thoughts
+of Lafayette in his prison were as sad as can be
+imagined.</p>
+
+<p>As months and years passed on, Lafayette may
+be forgiven if he sometimes thought that he had
+been wholly forgotten. But it was not so. It was
+not an easy matter to liberate a man whose very
+existence was a menace to every throne. The
+kings had him completely in their power&mdash;they
+wished to keep him out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>It goes without saying that to President Washington
+the imprisonment of his young friend, to
+whom he was bound by strong and vital bonds of
+gratitude and friendship, was a source of genuine
+anguish. But what could he do? As Lafayette
+said, America was far away and the politics of
+Europe were tortuous. In them Washington had
+no part and no influence; and he could not go to
+war for he had no equipment for any such exploit.</p>
+
+<p>He did, however, put in train many schemes
+designed to influence others to aid his loyal friend.
+He used the greatest secrecy; the correspondence
+as it is preserved refers only to "our friend" and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+to "the one you know," so that if the letters were
+lost, no one could possibly divine what was being
+done. The President sent letters to the representatives
+of the United States in both France
+and England, commanding that informal solicitations
+for the release of that friend of America should
+be made, and that these were to be followed by
+formal ones if necessary. He wrote to the king
+of Prussia, urging the release of his dear friend as
+an act of justice as well as a personal favor to himself;
+and to the Emperor of Austria, begging that
+Lafayette might be allowed to come to America.
+The letter has that thorough goodness and that
+amplitude of dignity that were characteristics of
+Washington.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">"<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>, 15 May, 1796.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">"<span class="smcap">To the Emperor of Germany:</span></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockletter">
+<p>"It will readily occur to your Majesty that occasions may
+sometimes exist, on which official considerations would
+constrain the chief of a nation to be silent and passive, in
+relation to objects which affect his sensibility, and claim
+his interposition as a man. Finding myself precisely in
+this situation at present, I take the liberty of writing this
+private letter to your Majesty, being persuaded that my
+motives will also be my apology for it.</p>
+
+<p>"In common with the people of this country, I retain
+a strong and cordial sense of the services rendered to them
+by the Marquis de Lafayette; and my friendship for him
+has been constant and sincere. It is natural, therefore,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+that I should sympathize with him and his family in their
+misfortunes, and endeavor to mitigate the calamities which
+they experience; among which, his present confinement is
+not the least distressing.</p>
+
+<p>"I forbear to enlarge on this delicate subject. Permit
+me only to submit to your Majesty's consideration whether
+his long imprisonment and the confiscation of his estates,
+and the indigence and dispersement of his family, and the
+painful anxieties incident to all these circumstances, do
+not form an assemblage of sufferings which recommend
+him to the mediation of humanity? Allow me, Sir, to be
+its organ on this occasion; and to entreat that he may be
+permitted to come to this country, on such conditions and
+under such restrictions as your Majesty may think fit to
+prescribe.</p>
+
+<p>"As it is a maxim with me not to ask what under similar
+circumstances I would not grant, your Majesty will do me
+the justice to believe that this request appears to me to
+correspond with those great principles of magnanimity
+and wisdom, which form the basis of sound policy and durable
+glory.</p>
+
+<p>"May the Almighty and merciful Sovereign of the universe
+keep your Majesty under his protection and guidance!"
+</p></div>
+
+<p>Little by little the place where Lafayette was
+imprisoned became known to a few, and public
+sentiment was aroused to the point of bringing
+up the matter before the British Parliament. It
+was a certain General Fitzpatrick who, strange to
+say, had met Lafayette in London before he went
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+to America, and again between battles when they
+were ranged on opposite sides of the Revolution,
+who now brought up the question. Twice he made
+a motion in favor of acting for the release of Lafayette.
+Fitzpatrick was the kind of man who could
+not bear to entertain the idea that there should
+exist "in any corner of British soil, in any English
+heart, conceptions so narrow as to wish to see the
+illustrious pupil of Washington perishing in a dungeon
+on account of his political principles." General
+Fitzpatrick's motion was seconded by General
+Tarleton, who had fought Lafayette through the
+length and breadth of Virginia. Pitt and Burke
+spoke against it.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Grey said that if asked what would be
+gained by furthering the release of Lafayette, he
+would reply that "we should exculpate ourselves
+from the suspicion of being accomplices in the
+foulest wrong that ever disgraced humanity."
+The question was put to vote and stood forty-six
+yeas and one hundred and fifty-three nays. Such
+was the composition of the British Parliament at
+that time.</p>
+
+<p>The next year Fitzpatrick renewed his efforts
+for Lafayette and proposed another motion. In
+an eloquent speech which should make his name
+honored for all time, he reviewed the former debate
+and paid a wonderful tribute to the character
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+of Madame de Lafayette. The discussion that
+followed dwelt mainly on the question whether
+Lafayette was to be considered as a subject of the
+emperor or as a prisoner of war. The vote stood,
+yeas fifty, nays one hundred and thirty-two. Evidently
+the British Parliament had not made any
+great advance in the intervening year.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime secret plans were being made to
+rescue Lafayette. The beautiful Angelica Schuyler
+Church, daughter of the American general, Philip
+Schuyler, was then in London; her husband, John
+Barker Church, had fought under Lafayette, and
+was now in the British Parliament. Mrs. Church
+was the sister-in-law of Alexander Hamilton, one
+of Lafayette's dearest friends among his young
+companions-in-arms, and she was in touch with a
+group of French &eacute;migr&eacute;s. In fact, she was the
+center of a little volcano of feeling for the exile.</p>
+
+<p>This secret circle kept up a constant communication
+with Mr. Pinckney and Mr. Jay. Mrs.
+Church wrote to Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of
+State in the United States, and to many others,
+begging, pleading for help. For Lafayette, whom
+she had known in New York, her heart was constantly
+bleeding.</p>
+
+<p>Proceeding from a mysterious writer who signed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+his name "Eleutherios," spirited articles soon began
+to appear in the English newspapers, and
+thus constantly fed a flame of feeling. All sorts
+of fears for Lafayette were entertained. "I see
+him in a dungeon," wrote one; "I see him in Siberia;
+I see him poisoned; I see him during what
+remains of his life torn by the uncertainty of the
+fate of all that he loves."</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this the name of a Hanoverian doctor
+begins to appear in the documents preserved. This
+Dr. Bollman had carried one exploit through successfully,
+bringing out of Paris during the Terror
+a certain French &eacute;migr&eacute; and conveying him to
+London in safety. Bollman was to be engaged by
+the London group to start out and see what could
+be done for Lafayette. This scheme resulted in
+a great adventure in which an American youth
+figured nobly.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">An Attempted Rescue</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">THE hope that potentates and governments
+might take up the cause of Lafayette began to
+fail and other plans were made. Chivalric dreams
+of going to seek the place where he was confined
+and effect what seemed the impossible&mdash;a personal
+rescue&mdash;began to haunt the minds of daring
+youths. A letter is on record from a young man
+who wrote to Washington to ask if he might not
+have permission to go and seek Lafayette, and, if
+possible, conduct him and his family to America.
+Washington told him that all was being done that
+could be done, and that personal attempts would
+only result in failure. But there was another
+enterprising soul who did not wait for permission&mdash;he
+acted upon his own initiative. The story of
+that splendid young American must now be told.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Kinloch Huger was the first child that
+Lafayette saw after he landed in America. It will
+be remembered that the little company of adventurers
+first touched shore on the country estate of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+Major Benjamin Huger, at Prospect Hill, near
+Charleston, South Carolina. Here Lafayette was
+received hospitably and sent on in his host's carriage
+to Charleston.</p>
+
+<p>The child Francis was then five years old and
+was the young representative of a remarkable
+family of Huguenot extraction. The first Daniel
+Huger came from Loudon, France, soon after the
+Edict of Nantes, and his descendants to-day number
+six thousand; among them are found a
+large number of distinguished names. Five Huger
+brothers held important positions in Revolutionary
+times. Three served in the war; Brigadier
+General Isaac Huger was second in command to
+General Greene at Guilford Court House; Lieutenant
+Colonel Frank Huger was promoted from
+Moultrie's Regiment to be Quartermaster General
+of the Southern Army of the Revolution; and
+Major Benjamin Huger, Lafayette's host and the
+father of the child Francis, was killed in 1780
+before the lines at Charleston. Of the other two
+brothers in this remarkable family group, Daniel
+was one of Governor Rutledge's Privy Council and
+later a member of Congress, and John was on the
+Council of Safety and Secretary of State.</p>
+
+<p>The boy Francis thus came from a stock of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+stalwart men. He was eight years old when his
+father was killed at Charleston. The pity of it
+was driven into his young soul when the ignominy
+of that defeat was accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after that event young Huger was
+sent to England to acquire a medical education.
+Later he, as the custom was, went on his travels
+and to hear lectures at great seats of learning. But
+the passion for chivalric action that was inspiring
+youth everywhere he could not quell. He dreamed
+of finding Lafayette.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, American, English, and French
+friends of the illustrious prisoner were busy in
+London, and they had commissioned the "Hanoverian
+doctor," known as Dr. Bollman, to make
+a search for him. This man made careful
+preparations. He traveled in a leisurely way
+through Germany in the guise of a wealthy and
+philanthropic physician. He let it be known
+that he was a sort of follower of Cagliostro, a
+notorious Italian whose ideas were popular at
+the time. He treated the poor free of charge
+and he showed a special interest in prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>At last he reached Olm&uuml;tz, a journey at that
+time something like going from New York to
+Nome. He made acquaintance with the attending
+physician of the garrison and was invited to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+dinner. He in return asked the surgeon to dine
+with him at his inn. The dinner was sumptuous.
+M. de Colombe, who tells this part of the story,
+says that the wine was especially excellent. No
+one could distrust a simple-hearted doctor, an
+unselfish student of mankind, and especially one
+who ordered such delicious wine! In time, conversation
+turned upon prisoners of note. It was
+rumored, hinted the artful and ingenious doctor,
+that there was such an one at Olm&uuml;tz. Could this
+be true? It was even so, the unsuspecting surgeon
+admitted; the great Lafayette was under
+his close care. The doctor inquired for Lafayette's
+health and was told that it was fairly good. Dr.
+Bollman ventured to send his compliments to the
+prisoner with a message that he had lately left
+Lafayette's friends in England. The unsuspecting
+surgeon carried the innocent message.</p>
+
+<p>On another occasion he brought word that
+Lafayette would like to know who those friends
+were. The doctor tried to speak the names, but
+could not pronounce them so that the Austrian
+could understand them. He felt in his pocket
+for a bit of paper (which he had carefully placed
+there beforehand) and on it wrote the names
+which he sent to Lafayette. These words also
+were written on the paper:
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"If you read this with as much care as did your
+friend at Magdeburg, you will receive equal
+satisfaction."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The reference was to a prisoner at Magdeburg
+who received a book which contained messages
+written on the flyleaves in lemon juice. He held
+the book to the fire and by doing this the written
+words came out in brown lines and could be read.
+Lafayette took the hint, and discovered the message
+written with this invisible ink on the bit of
+paper. After this Bollman was allowed to lend
+Lafayette a book to read. It came back with
+lemon-juice messages on its margins. Lafayette
+wrote that he was sometimes allowed to drive,
+and as he was unknown to Bollman, he suggested
+a signal by which he could be recognized. He
+said that his lieutenant was a sheepish dolt, and
+that his corporal was covetous, treacherous, and
+cowardly. He added that the rides were allowed
+for the sake of his health. It appears that the
+government did not wish to arouse the frenzy of
+indignation that would follow if Lafayette were
+allowed to die in prison, so he was occasionally
+taken out to ride a league or even two from the
+fortress gate. If a rescuer and a trusty helper
+should appear, they could surely effect the escape.
+Lafayette would agree to frighten the cowardly
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+little corporal himself; they need not provide a
+sword for him, for he would take the corporal's.
+An extra horse, one or two horses along the road&mdash;it
+could easily be done. It was a bold plan,
+but the bolder the plan, the more unexpected it
+was, and the better chance of success. Every
+day he would watch for them along the road.</p>
+
+<p>After securing this definite information, the
+doctor retired to Vienna to make further plans.</p>
+
+<p>This account may be in some respects the later
+elaboration of a story many times retold. But it
+sounds probable. At any rate, in some such
+way Dr. Bollman gained communication with
+Lafayette's cell, and brought the welcome news
+that friends were working for him. Then they
+projected a plan.</p>
+
+<p>The story is again taken up in a coffeehouse
+in Vienna where Bollman is accustomed to go.
+Lafayette has suggested an assistant, and Bollman
+realizes that he can do nothing without one.
+Therefore he is looking about to find one who
+shall have spirit and fitness for the work. We
+see him now at the supper table, eagerly conversing
+with a certain young American, like himself a
+medical student on his travels. Curiously enough,
+it is Francis Kinloch Huger, now twenty-one years
+old. They talk of America. Bollman, with elaborate
+inadvertence, touches on the personality
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+of Lafayette. The young man relates his childish
+memory of the arrival of that enthusiastic youth
+when he first came ashore at his father's South
+Carolina country place. Bollman tests Huger in
+various ways and makes up his mind that this is
+the best possible person to help him. He broaches
+the subject. Young Huger is only too ready&mdash;this
+very enterprise has been his dearest thought
+and his dream. The danger does not daunt him.
+"He did not let the grass grow under his feet,"
+said his daughter years later, "but accepted at
+once."</p>
+
+<p>It was not, however, purely romantic sentiment
+with him; he did not accede on the impulse of a
+moment. "I felt it to be my duty to give him all
+the aid in my power," said Colonel Huger to
+Josiah Quincy many years later. And though he
+may not have been conscious of it at the time,
+there was still another reason, for he admitted,
+long afterwards, "I simply considered myself the
+representative of the young men of America and
+acted accordingly."</p>
+
+<p>The story may here be taken up almost in the
+words of Colonel Huger's daughter who wrote it
+down exactly as her father related it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page160pic" id="Page160pic"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illus04.jpg" width="400" height="398"
+alt="Francis Kinloch Huger.
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor R. Tait McKenzie, shows the brave young
+ American who, with Dr. Bollman, attempted to rescue Lafayette from the
+ great fortress of Olm&uuml;tz."
+title="Francis Kinloch Huger.
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor R. Tait McKenzie, shows the brave young
+ American who, with Dr. Bollman, attempted to rescue Lafayette from the
+ great fortress of Olm&uuml;tz." />
+<p class="caption">Francis Kinloch Huger.</p></div>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<span class="caption2">
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor R. Tait McKenzie, shows the brave young
+ American who, with Dr. Bollman, attempted to rescue Lafayette from the
+ great fortress of Olm&uuml;tz.</span>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In October, 1794, they set out from Vienna in a
+light traveling carriage and with two riding
+horses, one of them being strong enough to carry
+two persons if necessary. They intended to appear
+in the characters of a young Englishman and
+his traveling tutor, and they were provided with
+passes for the long journey. With assumed
+carelessness they proceeded toward Olm&uuml;tz. The
+gentlemen were generally riding, while their servants
+and the baggage were in the carriage. They
+went to the same inn where Dr. Bollman had stayed
+on his former visit. Here they remained two days,
+while they secretly sent a note to Lafayette and
+received his answer. They paid their bill at the
+inn, sent their carriage on ahead to a village called
+Hoff, and directed their servants to await them
+there.</p>
+
+<p>Now Bollman and Huger are riding leisurely
+along the level plain that surrounds the fortress.
+The huge, dark prison looms in the distance.
+Every portion of the wide plain is visible to the
+sentinels at the gates, and within reach of the
+cannon on the walls. It is market day and many
+persons are passing back and forth. The two
+foreign travelers look in every direction for the
+carriage which may bring Lafayette. Both are
+eager for his coming.</p>
+
+<p>At last they notice a small pha&euml;ton being driven
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+slowly along. In the carriage they see a prisoner
+in a blue greatcoat with an officer beside him and
+an armed soldier riding behind. They spur on,
+and, as they pass, the prisoner gives the sign
+agreed upon. He raises his hat and wipes his
+forehead. The feelings excited by the assurance
+that this was indeed Lafayette, Huger never to
+his dying day forgot. The riders look as indifferent
+as possible, bow slightly, and pass on.</p>
+
+<p>The pha&euml;ton stops at the side of the road and
+Lafayette alights. He draws the officer toward
+a footpath that runs along the highroad at that
+point, and appears to be leaning on the officer as
+if scarcely able to walk.</p>
+
+<p>"This must be the time," cries Bollman.</p>
+
+<p>"He signs to us," says Huger in great excitement.</p>
+
+<p>The two young men put spurs to their horses
+and dash up together. As they approach, Lafayette
+seizes the officer's sword. A struggle
+follows. Bollman leaps from his horse and throws
+the bridle to Huger. But the flash of the drawn
+sword has frightened the horse; he dashes aside
+and gallops away. Huger dismounts, passes his
+arm through his bridle, and he and Bollman seize
+the soldier and tear his hands from Lafayette's
+throat. The soldier runs toward the town, shouting
+and waving his cap to call the attention of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+sentinels.</p>
+
+<p>What was to be done? They had now but one
+horse. The alarm had been given. Not a minute
+could be lost.</p>
+
+<p>Huger gave his horse to Lafayette and told him
+hurriedly to go to Hoff, the rendezvous agreed
+upon. Lafayette mounted the horse and started
+out. But he could not bear to leave his two
+rescuers in such a plight, so he came back to ask if
+he could not do something for them.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" they cried. "Go to Hoff! Go to
+Hoff!" they repeated. "We will follow."</p>
+
+<p>Now if they had said this in French, if they had
+said "Allez &agrave; Hoff," Lafayette would have understood
+the direction. But not knowing the name
+of this near-by village, he misunderstood. He
+thought the English words meant only "Go off!"
+A fatal misunderstanding!</p>
+
+<p>Huger and Bollman soon released their officer
+and both mounted the remaining horse. He was
+not used to "carrying double." The insulted
+creature set his feet in a ditch and threw them both.
+Bollman was stunned. Huger lifted him up and
+then started off to recover the horse. On the way
+he was thinking what course he should take in
+this critical and dangerous juncture.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When he came back he had decided. He said
+that Bollman should take the horse and follow
+Lafayette, for Bollman knew German and could
+give more help than he could. Alarm guns were
+beginning to be fired from the battlements, and
+trains of soldiers were seen issuing from the gates;
+but these portentous signs did not influence him.
+Bollman was persuaded; he mounted, put spurs
+to his horse, and was soon out of sight. Young
+America stood alone on this wide, dangerous plain;
+the shadow of that ominous fortress fell gloomily
+on its border. The guards came down. Between
+two rows of fixed bayonets Huger passed into the
+fortress.</p>
+
+<p>The bold plan was doomed to complete failure!
+Lafayette rode twenty miles; but the blood on
+his greatcoat awakened suspicion; he was arrested
+and carried back to Olm&uuml;tz where a heavier and
+gloomier imprisonment awaited him.</p>
+
+<p>The same fate awaited Bollman; but Lafayette's
+despair was the deeper because he feared that his
+brave rescuers had been executed for their gallant
+attempt in his behalf.</p>
+
+<p>The imprisonment accorded to the intrepid
+young American was as vile and cruel as any
+devised in the Dark Ages. He was put in a cell
+almost underground, with but one small slit near
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+the top to let in a little light. A low bench and
+some straw formed the furnishings, while two
+chains linked him at ankle and wrist to the ceiling.
+To make things a trifle more cheerful for him, they
+showed him a prisoner in a cell which was only a
+walled hole in the ground! The prisoner had been
+there for many years and his name and residence
+were now utterly forgotten. The jailers also
+exhibited their expert method of swift decapitation
+and acted out the method with a large two-bladed
+sword. Daily questionings of a cruel
+kind were used in order to force him to confess
+the truth&mdash;or rather what they wished to believe
+was the truth&mdash;that he had been the agent
+of a widespread plot. He stated that it was
+no man's plot but his own. They threatened
+torture, but he did not flinch or change his
+statement.</p>
+
+<p>At last the officers were convinced that there
+had been no concerted plot. They then softened
+the rigors of Huger's imprisonment, gave him a
+cell with a window where a star could sometimes
+be seen, and lengthened his chains so that he could
+take as many as three whole steps. After a time
+he managed to get into communication with Bollman
+who was in the room above. With a knotted
+handkerchief Bollman lowered a little ink in a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+walnut shell from his window, together with a
+scrap of dingy paper. Huger then wrote a letter
+of a few lines only to General Thomas Pinckney,
+then American Minister at London. His entreaty
+was to let his mother know that he was still alive;
+also to let Lafayette's friends know that he would
+certainly have escaped but that he had been
+recognized as an Olm&uuml;tz prisoner in a small town
+where he changed his horse; and that he had already
+mounted a fresh one when stopped. Huger's
+letter ended with the words, "Don't forget us.
+F.K.H. Olm&uuml;tz, Jan. 5th, 1795." By bribery and
+cajolery they started this letter off.</p>
+
+<p>Suffice it to say at present that, through the
+intervention of General Pinckney, the two young
+men were finally released and made their way
+swiftly out of the country. It was well that they
+hurried, for the emperor decided they had been
+released too soon and sent an edict for their rearrest.
+They had, however, by that time crossed
+the line and were out of his domain.</p>
+
+<p>After a short stay in London, Huger started for
+America. The passengers on his ship discussed
+the story of Lafayette's attempted rescue through
+the entire six weeks of the voyage, and they never
+dreamed that their quiet young fellow-passenger
+was one of the rescuers until he received an ovation
+on landing. This is related by the only member
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+of the Huger family living to-day (1916)
+who heard the story of the attempted rescue from
+the lips of "Colonel Frank" himself, as the family
+affectionately call him. She says that Colonel
+Frank was the most silent of men. He was the
+kind that <i>do</i> more than they <i>talk</i>.</p>
+
+<p>When Huger reached Philadelphia, he called
+at once on President Washington and told him of
+the effort he had made. The President said that
+he had followed the whole course of events with
+the greatest solicitude and had wished that it
+might have met with the success it deserved.</p>
+
+<p>In time Colonel Huger married the second
+daughter of General Thomas Pinckney who had effected
+his release from Olm&uuml;tz and under whom he
+fought in the war of 1812; he had eleven children
+and made his home on a large estate in the highlands
+of South Carolina. When Congress presented
+Lafayette with an extensive section of land,
+he asked Huger to share it with him. Colonel
+Huger thanked him for the generous offer, but
+sturdily announced that he himself was able to
+provide for his daughters and that his sons should
+look out for themselves. His faith in his sons was
+justified, for they made good their father's opinion
+of their ability. Among his children and grandchildren
+were many who not only amassed goodly
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+fortunes but held honored positions in public and
+military affairs.</p>
+
+<p>When Lafayette made his memorable visit to
+America in 1824, he said that the one man in the
+country whom he most wished to see was the one
+who when a youth had attempted to rescue him
+from Olm&uuml;tz. Colonel Huger had a corresponding
+desire to see Lafayette. On the General's arrival
+he started north at once, reached New York, and
+sought out the lodgings of Lafayette early in the
+morning, in order that their first meeting might
+be entirely without interruption. No account of
+that meeting has ever been made public, but the
+rescuer and his champion were together most of the
+time during that patriotic journey. Josiah Quincy
+once had the privilege of driving Colonel Huger in
+his coach through the suburbs of Boston and of
+calling with him upon many distinguished personages.
+Huger charmed and delighted every one.
+Josiah Quincy said that he had that "charm of a
+high-bred southerner which wrought with such
+peculiar fascination upon those inheriting Puritan
+blood." Besides his attractive personality, there
+was the romantic association with the attempted
+rescue. Scott's novels were then in the full
+blossom of popularity; but there was no hero in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+all those brave tales whose adventures appeared
+more chivalrous and thrilling.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, the effort at rescue had resulted in
+failure. Lafayette remained in prison. But it
+was known where he was, and, what was better,
+word had been conveyed to him that he was not
+forgotten. Yet the conditions of his imprisonment
+were now more severe than before, and his mind
+must have suffered intensely from being thrown
+back upon itself after that one hour's prospect of
+liberty.</p>
+
+<p>On the way from Wesel to Magdeburg Lafayette
+had had a moment's conversation with a stranger
+who told him something of what was happening
+in Paris, and of the lawlessness and carnage of the
+Reign of Terror. Lafayette saw to what lengths
+an unregulated mob might go, even when originally
+inspired by a noble passion for liberty. He heard
+of the death of Louis XVI, and called it an assassination.
+He realized that these things were
+being done in France by the people in whom he
+had so blindly, so persistently, believed. He was
+deeply disappointed. Yet he did not quite lose
+faith. The cause of the people was still sacred
+to him; they might destroy for him whatever
+charm there had been in what he called the "delicious
+sensation of the smile of the multitude";
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+but his belief in the ultimate outcome for democratic
+government, as the best form of government
+for the whole world, remained unchanged.</p>
+
+<p>And in the prison at Olm&uuml;tz he celebrated our
+great holiday, the Fourth of July, as usual.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">A Welcome Release</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">MORE than a year had passed after the attempt
+at rescue when one day Lafayette heard the big
+keys turning in the several locks, one after another,
+that barred his cell, and in a moment his wife
+and two daughters stood before his amazed eyes!
+Could this be true, or was it a vision?</p>
+
+<p>It will be remembered that shortly after Lafayette's
+arrest he had heard that Madame de Lafayette
+was imprisoned and was in danger of perishing
+on the scaffold. A year later the news was
+smuggled to him that she was still alive. But
+what had been happening to her and to his three
+children during all these dismal years?</p>
+
+<p>Through the instrumentality of James Monroe,
+the ambassador to France from the United States,&mdash;the
+only foreign power that in the days of the
+French Revolution would send its representative,&mdash;Madame
+de Lafayette was liberated from an imprisonment
+that tried her soul, even as Olm&uuml;tz
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+had proved and tested the spirit of her husband.
+Through all those tragic months Adrienne showed
+herself a woman of high and unswerving courage.</p>
+
+<p>Now, indeed, was the American citizenship of
+her husband&mdash;and it had included his family
+also&mdash;of value to her. Madame de Lafayette's
+first letter to Mr. Monroe shows this. This
+dignified letter is preserved in the manuscript
+department of the New York Public Library and
+is here printed for the first time:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Having learned that a minister of the United
+States has recently arrived in France, who has
+been sent by his government and invested with
+powers representing a people in whose interests
+I have some rights that are dear to my heart, I
+have felt that such misfortunes as I have not already
+suffered were no longer to be feared for me,
+that the most unjust of captivities was about to
+be at an end, and that my sufferings accompanied
+by irreproachable conduct towards the principles
+and towards the laws of my country, cause me
+to have confidence in the name of this protecting
+nation at a moment when the voice of justice is
+once more heard, and when the National Convention
+is undertaking to deliver such patriots as
+have been unjustly imprisoned. I have begun to
+hope that the wishes of my heart shall be fulfilled&mdash;that
+I may be returned to my children. For ten
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+months I have been taken away from them. From
+the very moment of their birth they have heard
+that they have a second country, and they have the
+right to hope that they will be protected by it."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Through the official authority of Mr. Monroe,
+Madame de Lafayette was given money and
+passports. When Washington first heard of her
+plight, he sent her a reverent letter inclosing a
+thousand dollars, and he was unceasing in his correspondence
+with representatives in France and
+England for herself as well as for Lafayette. She
+sent her son, George Washington de Lafayette,
+to his illustrious namesake in America, and as
+"Madame Motier, of Hartford, Connecticut,"
+she, with her two young daughters, made her way
+to Hamburg where, instead of taking ship for
+America, she took carriage across the wide spaces
+of Germany and Austria. Here she gained an
+audience with the emperor, and bowing at his
+feet asked permission to go to the fortress of Olm&uuml;tz
+and stay with her husband until he was set free.</p>
+
+<p>"Your request is granted," he said; "but as
+for Lafayette&mdash;I cannot free him; my hands are
+tied." Exactly what it was that had "tied the
+hands" of the great potentate has never been revealed.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her petition being granted, Madame de Lafayette
+continued her journey. Two days more
+and she and her daughters were with her husband.</p>
+
+<p>The day of their meeting was spent in trying to
+bear the joy of the reunion. Not until the
+daughters were sent to their cell did she tell Lafayette
+of the sad things that had happened. Her
+mother, her grandmother, and her sister had,
+with many friends and relatives, been led to the
+scaffold. These and many other facts of tragic
+interest to the man so long deprived of any
+word from outside his prison were shared with
+Lafayette.</p>
+
+<p>It may go without saying that Lafayette's prison
+days were now far easier to bear, except that
+to see Madame de Lafayette grow more and more
+broken in health as days went on, in their close,
+unlighted, and malodorous cells, must have caused
+an added sorrow. After a time she was obliged
+to ask the emperor to allow her to go to Vienna
+for medical attendance. He granted the request,
+but with the proviso that she should never return.
+Then she decided to remain with her husband, even
+at the risk of her life.</p>
+
+<p>Shall the miseries of their prison life be dwelt
+upon? Their jailers were the coarsest of human
+beings. They surpassed in brutality the slave
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+drivers of Constantinople. The food, which the
+family bought for themselves, was coarse and
+miserably cooked. Tobacco floated in the coffee.
+Lafayette's clothes were in tatters. When his
+shoes had been soled fifteen times and resented the
+indignity any further, his daughter Anastasie
+took it upon herself to make shoes for him out of
+an old coat.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette's dingy cell was, however, now
+brightened by companionship and by inspiring conversation.
+Even work was going on, for Madame
+de Lafayette prepared a life of her mother while
+she was at Olm&uuml;tz. It was written with a toothpick
+and a little lampblack on the margins of a
+copy of Buffon which she succeeded in obtaining.
+One of the daughters amused the family by making
+pencil sketches; one of the burly old turnkey, with
+his sword, candle, and keys, and his hair in a
+comical queue behind, amused the family very
+much and was carried with them when they left
+their dismal abode.</p>
+
+<p>Before the desolate prison of Olm&uuml;tz fades from
+our view, let one laurel wreath be placed upon the
+head of young Felix Pontonnier, sixteen years old
+when he became the servant of Lafayette, whom
+he faithfully followed into prison. He was with
+Lafayette when he was arrested and was bidden
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+to look after his master's belongings; so he was
+separated from him for several days. This gave
+him an excellent opportunity to escape, but he refused
+to take advantage of it. Of his own accord
+he joined Lafayette once more, and during the
+whole long season of his captivity he gave ample
+proof of his devotion. He possessed a rare inventive
+genius and was constantly on the alert
+to devise means for making the prisoners comfortable
+and to find out ways for carrying on
+secret correspondence. He invented a special
+language known only to himself and to the prisoners,
+and also a unique gesture-language. He
+whistled notes like a captive bird; with varied
+modulations he conveyed to the prisoners whatever
+news he could ferret out. Prison life proved
+to be bad for him, and his health was several
+times endangered. For a fancied offense he was
+once confined in total darkness for three months.
+But none of his sufferings dashed his gay spirits.
+He was constantly sustained by a buoyant cheer,
+and his wonderful devotion should win him a
+place among heroes. After the five years of captivity
+were over, Lafayette made Felix the manager
+of his farm at La Grange. He filled this position
+with success and probity.</p>
+
+<p>It was through the fiat of Napoleon Bonaparte
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+that the removal of Lafayette from Olm&uuml;tz was
+made possible. Bonaparte was influenced by a
+long-sighted policy; he desired to win to himself
+the man of so unique a personality. He was also
+spurred on by various writers and diplomats, by
+representatives of the French Directory, and by
+Brigadier General Henri Jacques Guillaume Clarke,
+who was for a time governor of Vienna and who
+won the title of "the incorruptible" from Napoleon.
+President Washington's dignified and effective
+letter to the Emperor of Austria is believed
+to have left its mark; and in a thousand ways
+public opinion had awakened to the ignominy
+of leaving such a man as Lafayette in prison.
+Lafayette disliked to be indebted to anybody but
+himself for an escape from his dungeon; but he
+willingly admitted that he owed much to his
+devoted wife whose many letters imploring help
+for her husband were among the causes that unlocked
+the double-barred doors of Olm&uuml;tz.</p>
+
+<p>When finally released, Lafayette was taken in
+a carriage from Olm&uuml;tz to Dresden, thence by way
+of Dresden, Leipzig, and Halle to Hamburg, where
+the American consul received him. So wearied was
+Madame de Lafayette that she made the journey
+with the greatest difficulty, and a voyage to America
+at that time was out of the question. The family,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+therefore, took refuge in an obscure town in Holland,
+since there was no other European country
+where the monarchy would be safe if it conferred
+the right of residence upon any man who bore
+the name of Lafayette.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">A Triumphal Tour</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">FOR some years events did not shape themselves
+so that Lafayette could return to Paris. That he,
+in 1799, was considering the possibility of a voyage
+to America is shown by a letter written in that year
+to his "deliverer," Francis Kinloch Huger, which
+his descendant of the same name has kindly allowed
+to be printed here. It was sent from Vianen
+in Holland, and introduces his fellow-prisoner,
+M. Bureaux-de-Pusy, who was seeking a home in
+the United States.</p>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17.5em;"><span class="smcap">Vianen</span>, 17th April, 1799.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">My dear Huger:</span></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="blockletter">
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;Here is one of my companions in captivity, Bureaux
+Pusy, an Olm&uuml;tz prisoner, and at these sounds my heart
+vibrates with the sentiments of love, gratitude, admiration,
+which forever bind and devote me to you! How I envy
+the happiness he is going to enjoy! How I long, my dear
+and noble friend, to fold you in my arms! Pusy will relate
+to you the circumstances which hitherto have kept
+me on this side of the Atlantic&mdash;even now the illness of my wife,
+and the necessity of her having been a few weeks in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+France before I set out, prevent me from embarking with
+Pusy and his amiable family. But in the course of the
+summer I shall look over to you and with inexpressible
+delight I shall be welcomed by my beloved deliverer. No
+answer from you has yet come to me. We are expecting
+every day my friend McHenry's nephew&mdash;perhaps I may
+be blessed with a letter from you!</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;I need not recommend to you Bureaux Pusy. The
+conspicuous and honorable part he has acted in the French
+Revolution, his sufferings during our imprisonment&mdash;you
+but too well know what it is&mdash;are sufficient introductions
+to your great and good heart. He is one of the most accomplished
+men that can do honour to the country where
+he is born, and to the country where he wishes to become a
+citizen. He is my excellent friend. Every service, every
+mark of affection he can receive from you and your friends,
+I am happily authorized to depend upon.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;My son is gone to Paris. My wife and my two daughters,
+who love you as a brother, present you with the
+sincere, grateful expressions of their friendship. The last
+word George told me at his setting out was not to forget
+him in my letter to you. He will accompany me to
+America.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;Adieu, my dear Huger, I shall to the last moment of my
+life be wholly
+</p></div>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">Yours,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17em;"><span class="smcap">Lafayette.</span></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The wish to revisit the land of his adoption was
+strong, but many years were to pass before it could
+be carried out. He was forty years old when he
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+was liberated from Olm&uuml;tz, and he was sixty-seven
+when he paid his last visit to our shores.</p>
+
+<p>He little dreamed of the reception he was to
+find, for the whole American people were waiting
+to greet, with heart and soul, the man who, in
+his youth, had taken so noble a part in their struggle
+for freedom. He reached New York on the
+16th of August, 1824. He came with modest
+expectation of some honorable attentions&mdash;nothing
+more. On the <i>Cadmus</i> he asked a fellow-traveler
+about the cost of stopping at American hotels
+and of traveling in steamboats and by stage; of
+this his secretary, M. Levasseur, made exact
+note. He came to visit the interesting scenes of
+his youth and to enjoy a reunion with a few surviving
+friends and compatriots. Instead, he found
+a whole country arising with one vast impulse to
+do him honor. It was not mere formality; it
+was a burst of whole-souled welcome from an entire
+nation. So astonished was he, so overcome,
+to find a great demonstration awaiting him, where
+he had expected to land quietly and to engage
+private lodgings, that his eyes overflowed with tears.</p>
+
+<p>The harbor of New York was entered on a Sunday.
+He was asked to accept a sumptuous entertainment
+on Staten Island till Monday, when he
+could be received by the city with more honor.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+On that day citizens and officers, together with
+old Revolutionary veterans, attended him. Amid
+the shouting of two hundred thousand voices he
+reached the Battery. The band played "See the
+Conquering Hero Comes," the "Marseillaise," and
+"Hail, Columbia." Lafayette had never dreamed
+of such a reception or of such sweeps of applause.
+The simple-hearted loyalty of the American people
+had a chance to show itself, and their enthusiasm
+knew no bounds. Lafayette's face beamed with
+joy. Four white horses bore him to the City Hall,
+while his son, George Washington Lafayette, his
+secretary, M. Levasseur (who wrote an account of
+the whole journey of 1824), and the official committee
+followed in carriages. The mayor addressed
+the city's guest; and Lafayette's reply was the
+first of many hundred appropriate and graceful
+speeches made by him during the journey. There
+were many ceremonies; school children threw
+garlands of flowers in his way; corner stones
+were laid by him; squares were renamed for
+"General Lafayette" (as he assured everybody
+he preferred to be called by that title), and societies
+made him and his son honorary members for life.</p>
+
+<p>Hundreds of invitations to visit different cities
+poured in. The whole country must be traveled
+over to satisfy the eagerness of a grateful nation.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+Are republics ungrateful? That can never be said
+of our own republic after Lafayette's visit to the
+United States in 1824.</p>
+
+<p>He set out for Boston by way of New Haven,
+New London, and Providence. All along the way
+the farmers ran out from the fields, shouting welcomes
+to the cavalcade, and children stood by the
+roadside decked with ribbons on which the picture
+of Lafayette was printed. Always a barouche
+with four white horses was provided to carry him
+from point to point. It was not a bit of vanity on
+the part of Lafayette that he was ever seen behind
+these steeds of snowy white. President Washington
+had set the fashion. His fine carriage-horses
+he caused to be covered with a white paste on
+Saturday nights and the next morning to be
+smoothed down till they shone like silver. It
+was a wonderful sight when that majestic man was
+driven to church&mdash;the prancing horses, the outriders,
+and all. And when Lafayette came, nothing
+was too good for him! The towns sent out
+the whitest horses harnessed to the best coaches
+procurable,&mdash;cream color, canary color, or claret
+color,&mdash;for the hero to be brought into town or
+sped upon his way departing. Returning to New
+York by way of the Connecticut River and the
+Sound, he found again a series of dinners and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+toasts, as well as a ball held in Castle Garden, the
+like of which, in splendor and display, had never
+before been thought of in this New World.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette left the festivity before it was ever in
+order to take the boat, at two in the morning, to
+go up the Hudson River. He arose at six to show
+his son and his secretary the place where Andr&eacute;
+was captured. As soon as the fog lifted, he described,
+in the most enthusiastic manner, the
+Revolutionary events which he had seen.</p>
+
+<p>At West Point there was a grand banquet. One
+of the speakers alluded to the fact that at Valley
+Forge, when the soldiers were going barefooted,
+Lafayette provided them with shoes from his own
+resources, and then proposed this toast:</p>
+
+<p>"To the noble Frenchman who placed the Army
+of the Revolution on a new and better footing!"</p>
+
+<p>At the review of the cadets, Generals Scott and
+Brown, in full uniform, with tall plumes in their
+hats, stood by General Lafayette. The three,
+each towering nearly six feet in height, made a
+magnificent tableau, declares one record of the day.</p>
+
+<p>Returning from the Hudson River excursion,
+the party went southward, visiting Philadelphia,
+Baltimore, and Washington. With ceremonies of
+great dignity Congress received Lafayette, and
+later voted him a present of two hundred thousand
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+dollars, together with a whole township anywhere
+he might choose in the unappropriated lands of
+the country.</p>
+
+<p>Among other places visited was Yorktown, where
+the party attended a brilliant celebration. The
+marks of battle were still to be seen on many houses,
+and broken shells and various implements of war
+were found scattered about. An arch had been
+built where Lafayette stormed the redoubt, and on
+it were inscribed the names of Lafayette, Hamilton,
+and Laurens. Some British candles were
+discovered in the corner of a cellar, and these
+were burned to the sockets while the old soldiers
+told tales of the surrender of Yorktown.</p>
+
+<p>The party visited other places connected with
+the campaign in Virginia. Lafayette called on ex-President
+Jefferson at Monticello, his stately home
+near Charlottesville, Virginia, and was conducted
+by Jefferson to the University of Virginia in
+Charlottesville.</p>
+
+<p>Charleston was the next stopping-place; this
+was the home of the Huger family. Here were
+more combinations of "Yankee Doodle" and the
+"Marseillaise," more laying of corner stones, more
+deputations, more dinners, more public balls.
+It is not difficult to understand how it happened
+that, in the last half of the nineteenth century,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+there were so many old ladies living who could
+boast of having danced with Lafayette in their
+youth.</p>
+
+<p>Proceeding on their way by boat and carriage,
+the company came to Savannah, and thence moved
+across Georgia and Alabama, down the river to
+the Gulf of Mexico, along the shore to the mouth
+of the Mississippi, and up the "grand rivi&egrave;re" to
+St. Louis. "Vive Lafayette" was the universal
+cry all the way.</p>
+
+<p>All the cities vied with each other in doing honor
+to the nation's guest. At Pittsburg, for instance,
+a bedroom was prepared for the distinguished
+visitor in a hall that had been a Masonic lodge
+room. The ceiling was arched, and the sun, moon,
+and stars were painted upon it. The bed prepared
+for Lafayette was a vast "four-poster" of
+mahogany, on whose posts were inscribed the
+names of Revolutionary heroes. Above the canopy
+a large gilt eagle spread its wings and waved a
+streamer on which were written the names of
+Washington and Lafayette. In this city, as everywhere,
+Lafayette was shown everything notable,
+including all the foundries and factories.</p>
+
+<p>As usual, the hero left the city in a coach shining
+with the freshest paint, and drawn by four white
+steeds.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page186pic" id="Page186pic"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/illus05.jpg" width="500" height="348"
+alt="A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode. This interesting relic is now in Cooperstown, New York.
+ The picture shows it being used in a present-day pageant, filled with boys and girls in
+ colonial costumes. (See page 187.)"
+title="A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode." />
+<p class="caption">A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode.</p>
+<span class="caption2">This interesting relic is now
+ in Cooperstown, New York. <br />The picture shows it being used in a present-day pageant, filled
+ with boys and girls in colonial costumes. (See page <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.)</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+<p>At Buffalo, after a visit to Niagara, they embarked
+on the newly-built Erie Canal. Then followed
+a part of the journey that was much enjoyed
+by Lafayette&mdash;the beautiful country of
+central New York. He was charmed with this
+bit of travel after the long distances between towns
+in the western region.</p>
+
+<p>Syracuse was the next stopping-place. The
+carriage in which Lafayette traveled into that
+City of Sixty Hills was kept for many decades as
+a precious treasure. Not many years ago it was in
+a barn back of one of the houses on James Street
+in that city. Now, however, after wandering from
+place to place and taking part in various pageants,
+it may be seen in the celebrated village of Cooperstown,
+where the young folks, when they attire
+themselves in Revolutionary costume, may ride
+as bride or coachman, as shown in the picture.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette reached the "Village of Syracuse" at
+six o'clock in the morning. The people had been
+watching all night for the arrival of the illustrious
+guest and were still watching when the colors of
+the illuminations were melting into those of sunrise.
+The guest of honor had been in his carriage
+all night and must have been weary, but he gayly
+asserted that the splendid supper that had been
+prepared the night before made an excellent breakfast,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+ and he spent the three hours allotted to that
+"village" in shaking hands with the hundreds of
+people whose desire to see him had kept them
+waiting all night.</p>
+
+<p>At nine o'clock he bade good-by to his friends of
+a day and embarked upon the packet boat of the
+canal, while the air resounded with good wishes
+for his voyage. Through Rome they passed by
+night in an illumination that turned darkness into
+daylight, and at every place they received deputations
+from the city just ahead of the one where they
+were. There were cannon to welcome and cannon
+to bid farewell. At Utica three Oneida chiefs demanded
+an interview on the score of having been
+Lafayette's helpers in 1778. They were very old
+but still remarkably energetic. Lafayette begged
+them to accept certain gifts of silver, and they went
+away happy.</p>
+
+<p>The traveling was now hastened in order that
+General Lafayette might reach Boston by the
+Fourth of July, 1825, and take part in laying
+the corner stone of Bunker Hill Monument. This
+event in our national history has been described
+by Josiah Quincy in his "Figures of the Past"
+and by many others. It was a great national
+celebration, and a general meeting of Revolutionary
+comrades, one of whom wore the same coat he
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+had worn at the battle of Bunker Hill, almost half
+a century before, and could point to nine bullet-holes
+in its texture. Daniel Webster delivered
+his grand oration. All Boston was on the alert.
+There were a thousand tents on the Common, and
+a dinner to which twelve hundred persons sat
+down. General Lafayette gave a reception to
+the ladies of the city. Then there was a ball&mdash;with
+the usual honor bestowed. Everybody was
+proud and happy to have General Lafayette as
+a national guest on that great day.</p>
+
+<p>One more incident must be related. In July
+of 1825 the people of Brooklyn were erecting an
+Apprentices' Free Library Building at the corner
+of Cranberry and Henry streets, later incorporated
+in the Brooklyn Institute, and they wished Lafayette
+to assist in laying the corner stone. He was
+brought to Brooklyn in great state, riding in a
+canary-colored coach drawn by four snow-white
+horses. The streets were crammed with people.
+Among them were many citizens and their wives,
+some old Revolutionary veterans, troops of Brooklyn
+children, and a number of negroes who had
+been freed by the recent New York Emancipation
+Acts.</p>
+
+<p>Through the closely packed masses of people
+the carriage of the noble Frenchman was slowly
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+driven, the antics of the impatient horses attracting
+the attention of the small boy as much as the
+illustrious visitor himself. As they came near the
+stand where the ceremony was to take place,
+Lafayette saw that various gentlemen were carefully
+lifting some little children over the rough
+places where soil from excavations and piles of
+cut stone had been heaped, and were helping them
+to safe places where they could see and hear. He
+at once alighted from the carriage and came forward
+to assist in this work.</p>
+
+<p>Without suspecting it in the least, he was making
+another historic minute; for one of the boys he
+was thus to lift over a hard spot was a five-year-old
+child who afterwards became known to the
+world as Walt Whitman. Lafayette pressed the
+boy to his heart as he passed him along and affectionately
+kissed his cheek. Thus a champion of
+liberty from the Old World and one from the New
+were linked in this little act of helpfulness. When
+he was an old man, Whitman still treasured the
+reminiscence as one of indescribable preciousness.</p>
+
+<p>"I remember Lafayette's looks quite well," he
+said; "tall, brown, not handsome in the face, but
+of fine figure, and the pattern of good-nature,
+health, manliness, and human attraction."</p>
+
+<p>Through nearly all of this long and exciting journey,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+ Lafayette was accompanied by Colonel Francis
+Kinloch Huger, by his secretary, and by his
+son, George Washington Lafayette, then a man full
+grown. The latter was almost overcome by the
+warmth of his father's reception. Writing to a
+friend at home, after having been in America but
+twenty days, he said:</p>
+
+<div class="nonblockletter">
+<p>"Ever since we have been here my father has
+been the hero, and we the spectators, of the most
+imposing, beautiful, and affecting sights; the most
+majestic population in the world welcoming a
+man with common accord and conducting him in
+triumph throughout a journey of two hundred
+leagues. Women wept with joy on seeing him,
+and children risked being crushed to get near to a
+man whom their fathers kept pointing out to them
+as one of those who contributed the most in procuring
+them their happiness and independence.
+This is what it has been reserved to us to see. I
+am knocked off my feet&mdash;excuse the expression&mdash;by
+the emotions of all kinds that I experience."</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lafayette has been accused of being a spoiled
+hero. In a moment of asperity Jefferson had alluded
+to Lafayette's love of approbation. If, indeed,
+Lafayette did yield to that always imminent
+human frailty, and if Olm&uuml;tz had not been able to
+eradicate or subdue it, the itinerary of 1824 must
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+have been to him a period of torture. He must have
+suffered from satiety to an unbearable degree, for
+praise and admiration were poured out by a grateful
+people to an extent not easily imagined. To
+keep up a fiction is the most wearying thing in the
+world. The only refreshing and vivifying thing
+is to be absolutely sincere. This it must be believed
+Lafayette was. His simple attitude toward
+the land of his adoption was shown in a letter to
+President Monroe in which he bade farewell to a
+nation where "in every man, woman, and child of
+a population of twelve million I have found a loving,
+indeed an enthusiastic, friend."</p>
+
+<p>It did as much good to the American people as
+it did to Lafayette to take part in this great tide
+of gratitude and devotion. A vast, swelling emotion
+is unifying and it is strengthening. Our
+people made a great stride toward nationalization
+when Lafayette came to let us, as a people, throw
+our heart at his feet.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Last Days of Lafayette</span></h4>
+
+<p class="cap">MINGLED with the joys of Lafayette's visit to
+the United States in 1824 there was one profound
+sorrow; he no longer saw here the great man to
+whom he had given such whole-hearted devotion.
+President Washington died in 1799; and one of
+the most affecting moments of all the journey of
+1824 was when General Lafayette and his son,
+George Washington Lafayette, stood together by
+the tomb of the man whom both regarded as a
+father.</p>
+
+<p>On the centennial anniversary of the birth of
+Washington, in 1832, the 27th Regiment State
+Artillery of New York sent Lafayette a magnificent
+commemorative medal. In acknowledgment of
+this gift Lafayette wrote to the Committee, calling
+the gift "a new testimony of that persevering affection
+which has been, during nearly sixty years,
+the pride and delight of my life to be the happy
+object. The only merit on my part which it does
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+not exceed is to be found in the warmth of my
+gratitude and the patriotic devotion that binds to
+the United States the loving heart of an adopted
+son. The honor was enhanced by the occasion&mdash;the
+birthday of the matchless Washington, of whom
+it is the most gratifying circumstance to have been
+the beloved and faithful disciple."</p>
+
+<p>This attitude Lafayette never failed to hold.
+The relation between the two men was from beginning
+to end honorable to both in the highest degree.
+It was one of the great friendships of history.</p>
+
+<p>In one respect the private tastes of Washington
+and Lafayette were similar; both dearly loved a
+farm. No one can visit Mount Vernon without
+feeling the presence there of a lover of growing
+things. From this productive place fine hams and
+bacon were forwarded to Lafayette and his family
+in France and were there eaten with the keenest
+relish. Fine birds were also sent&mdash;ducks,
+pheasants, and red partridges. In return Lafayette
+dispatched by request some special breeds of
+wolf hounds and a pair of jackasses; also, strange
+trees and plants, together with varied gifts such
+as Paris only could devise. The visitor to Mount
+Vernon finds in the family dining room Lafayette's
+ornamental clock and rose jars, and his mahogany
+chair in Mrs. Washington's sitting room. The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+key to the Bastille, which he sent in 1789, is shown
+under a glass cover on the wall by the staircase
+in the entrance hall, and a model of that ancient
+fortress of tyranny, made from a block of stone
+from the renowned French prison, sent over in
+1793, stands in happy irony in the banquet hall.
+A bedchamber on the second floor is pointed out
+as the room in which Lafayette slept. It still
+bears his name.</p>
+
+<p>After Lafayette returned to France, he lived
+for years in semi-exile on an estate known as La
+Grange, that Madame de Lafayette had inherited.
+It lay about forty miles east of Paris, in a beautiful
+country covered with peach orchards and vineyards.
+At the time it was, from an agricultural
+point of view, in a sadly neglected condition;
+and it was not by any means the least of the
+achievements of Lafayette that he turned his hand
+cleverly to the great task of developing this estate
+into a really productive farm, and succeeded.
+Beginning with a single plow&mdash;for he was too
+poor at first to buy numerous appliances&mdash;he gradually
+developed the estate into a valuable property.
+After a time he supplied himself with fine breeds
+of cattle, sheep, and pigs; indeed, specimens of
+various kinds from all zones of the earth were sent
+him by his friends the American shipmasters, who,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+it must be remembered, appreciated the ardent
+efforts he had made to establish American commerce.
+To Washington, who was a good farmer
+as well as a good President, every detail of these
+labors would have been interesting if he had been
+living.</p>
+
+<p>In patriarchal happiness Lafayette carried on the
+estate of eight hundred French acres, with all its
+industries, in a perfect system. In a fine old
+mansion built in the days of Louis IX, Lafayette
+lived with his two daughters and their families
+under an efficient household system. Sometimes
+twelve cousins, brothers and sisters, would be there
+together. The combined family formed a perfect
+little academy of its own; and just to live at La
+Grange was an education in itself. The walls
+were covered with pictures and memorabilia, to
+know which would mean to understand European
+and American history for a century past. A picture
+of Washington had the place of honor. The
+Declaration of Independence and the Declaration
+of Rights were hung side by side. A miniature of
+Francis Kinloch Huger in a frame of massive gold
+was among the treasures. Dress swords, gifts of
+many kinds, symbols of honors, and rich historical
+records decorated the whole house. Even the
+name of the estate, La Grange, was American, for
+it was so called in honor of the Manhattan Island
+home of his friend Alexander Hamilton.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page196pic" id="Page196pic"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illus06.jpg" width="400" height="569"
+alt="The Children&#39;s Statue of Lafayette.
+ This spirited statue, by the sculptor Paul Wayland Bartlett, was a gift to
+ France from five millions of American school children. (See page 201.)"
+title="The Children&#39;s Statue of Lafayette.
+ This spirited statue, by the sculptor Paul Wayland Bartlett, was a gift to
+ France from five millions of American school children. (See page 201.)" />
+<p class="caption">The Children&#39;s Statue of Lafayette.</p>
+<span class="caption2">This spirited statue, by the sculptor Paul Wayland Bartlett, was a gift to
+ France from five millions of American school children. (See page <a href="#Page_200">201</a>.)</span>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was one room in the ch&acirc;teau at La Grange
+that was more sacred than any other; it was the
+room in which Madame de Lafayette had died. This
+chamber was never entered except on the anniversary
+of her death, and then by her husband alone,
+who cherished her memory tenderly and faithfully
+as long as he lived.</p>
+
+<p>Many wonderful visitors came to La Grange,
+and in later years to the Paris home of the Lafayettes.
+There were Irish guests to tell tales of romance;
+there were Poles to plead the cause of
+their country; misguided American Indians were
+sometimes stranded there; Arabs from Algeria;
+negro officers in uniform from the French West
+Indies&mdash;all people who had the passion for freedom
+in their hearts naturally and inevitably gravitated
+to Lafayette. His house was a modern
+Babel, for all languages of the world were spoken
+there.</p>
+
+<p>And Americans! So many Americans came
+along the Rosay Road that little boys learned the
+trick of meeting any foreign-looking persons who
+spoke bad French, and announced themselves as
+guides of all the "Messieurs Americains"; they
+would capture the portmanteau, swing it up to a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+strong shoulder, and then set out for the ch&acirc;teau
+at the regular jog trot of a well-trained porter.</p>
+
+<p>One of these American guests was the grandson
+of General Nathanael Greene with whom Lafayette
+had had cordial relations during the Virginia campaign.
+In the year 1828 this grandson visited La
+Grange and wrote an account full of delightful,
+intimate touches, which was printed in the <i>Atlantic
+Monthly</i> in 1861. Of Lafayette himself he said:</p>
+
+<p>"In person he was tall and strongly built, with
+broad shoulders, large limbs, and a general air of
+strength.... He had more dignity of bearing
+than any man I ever saw. And it was not merely
+the dignity of self-possession, which early familiarity
+with society and early habits of command
+may give even to an ordinary man, but that elevation
+of manner which springs from an habitual
+elevation of thought, bearing witness to the purity
+of its source, as a clear eye and ruddy cheek
+bear witness to the purity of the air you daily
+breathe. In some respects he was the mercurial
+Frenchman to the last day of his life; yet his
+general bearing, that comes oftenest to my memory,
+was of calm earnestness, tempered and mellowed
+by quick sympathies."</p>
+
+<p>The death of Lafayette, on the 20th of May,
+1834, set the bells a-tolling in many lands, but in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+none was the mourning more sincere than in our
+own. Members of Congress were commanded to
+wear the badge of sorrow for thirty days, and thousands
+of the people joined them in this outward
+expression of the sincere grief of their hearts.</p>
+
+<p>His services to his own country and to ours
+were many and valuable. But his personal example
+of character, integrity, and constancy was
+even more to us and to the world than his distinct
+services. What he <i>was</i> endeared him to us, even
+more than the things he did. He gave his whole
+soul in youth to his world-wide dream of freedom&mdash;freedom
+under a constitution guaranteeing it,
+through public order, to every human being. He
+found himself in a world where monarchical government
+seemed the destiny and habit of mankind.
+He thought it a bad habit&mdash;one that ought to be
+broken. Sincerely and passionately believing this,
+he was willing to die in the service of any people
+who were ready to make the struggle against the
+existing national traditions. He made mistakes;
+he made the mistake of trusting Louis Philippe.
+In doing this he had with him the whole French
+people. But let it be said on the other hand that
+he did not make the mistake of trusting Bonaparte,
+whose blandishments he resisted during the whole
+passage of that meteor. And he was making no
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+mistake when, to the very end of his life, he remained
+true to his love for the land he had aided
+in his youth. His visions did not all come true
+in exactly the shape he devised, but to the last he
+retained a glorious confidence that they would
+ultimately be realized in full.</p>
+
+<p>Lafayette was absolutely fearless. He had
+physical bravery; he was equally indomitable in
+moral and intellectual realms. He had the power
+of courage. He could decide quickly and then
+stand by the decision to the bitter end. The
+essence of his bold, adventurous youth is expressed
+in the motto he then chose, "Cur non." But the
+confirmed and tried spirit of his full manhood is
+more truly set forth in another motto: "Fais ce
+que dois, advienne que pourra." "Do what you
+ought, let come what may."</p>
+
+<p>For a man so possessed by a great, world-wide
+idea, so fearless, so constant, it is quite fitting
+that monuments should be erected and that his
+birthday should be celebrated. Probably there is
+no man in all history who has had so many cities,
+counties, townships, boulevards, arcades, mountains,
+villages, and hamlets named for him, in a
+country to which he was not native-born, as has
+the Frenchman Lafayette in the United States of
+America. Also, many notable statues of Lafayette
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+stand in city squares and halls of art, both
+in our country and in his own. Among them there
+is one special statue in which the young people of
+America have a peculiar interest. On the 19th
+of October, 1898, five millions of American school
+children contributed to a Lafayette Monument
+Fund. With this sum a bronze statue was made
+and presented to the French Republic. Mr. Paul
+Wayland Bartlett was the sculptor intrusted with
+this work. The statue was completed in 1908 and
+placed in a court of the Louvre in Paris. It was
+originally intended that the statue of Bonaparte
+should occupy the center of that beautiful court,
+but it is the statue of Lafayette that stands there&mdash;the
+"Boy" Cornwallis could not catch, the
+man Napoleon could not intimidate. No one can
+tell us just how Lafayette's statue happened to be
+assigned the place intended for Napoleon's; but
+however it was, the fact is a luminous example of
+how a man who loved people only to master and
+subjugate them did not reach the heart of the world
+so directly as the man who loved human beings for
+their own sakes and to do them good.</p>
+
+<hr class="hr2" />
+
+<h4>Printed in the United States of America.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></h4>
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<p class="cap">THE following pages contain advertisements
+of Macmillan books by the same author</p>
+</div>
+
+<h2>TRUE STORIES OF GREAT AMERICANS</h2>
+
+<h4>"<i>Should be read by every boy and girl.</i>"</h4>
+
+<p>This important new series of brief and vivid biographies
+will give to the young mind an intimate picture of the greatest
+Americans who have helped to make American history. In
+each instance the author has been chosen either because he is
+particularly interested in the subject of the biography, or is
+connected with him by blood ties and possessed, therefore, of
+valuable facts. Only those, however, who have shown that
+they have an appreciation of what makes really good juvenile
+literature have been entrusted with a volume. In each case
+they have written with a child's point of view in mind, those
+events being emphasized which are calculated to appeal to the
+younger reader, making a full and well-balanced narrative, yet
+always authentic.</p>
+
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+volumes are interesting and attractive in appearance, graphic
+in style, and wonderfully inspiring in subject matter, reaching
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+Ledger.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Far away from the 'dry as dust' type of biography."&mdash;<i>San
+Francisco Bulletin.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Simply and attractively told.... Especially interesting
+to children."&mdash;<i>Christian Advocate.</i></p>
+
+<p>"An excellent series."&mdash;<i>New York Sun.</i></p>
+
+<h5>See the following pages for descriptions of the individual books
+of this series.</h5>
+
+<hr class="hr3" />
+
+<h4><i>The Lives of National Heroes Told in a New Way
+for Children</i></h4>
+<hr class="hr3" />
+<h3>EACH VOLUME ILLUSTRATED, $.50</h3>
+<hr class="hr3" />
+
+<div class="figright"> By Mildred Stapley</div>
+<p class="sans">Christopher Columbus</p>
+
+<p>Mildred Stapley has consulted new and recently discovered
+sources of contemporary information, and the history of
+Columbus' voyages is revised and corrected, though the
+romance and excitement still glow through the record of his
+achievements, and his fame as a daring navigator remains an
+example of courage and unequalled valor.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright"> By Rossiter Johnson</div>
+<p class="sans">Captain John Smith</p>
+
+<p>The adventurous Captain who founded Virginia lived the
+life of a typical hero of romance&mdash;Soldier of Fortune in
+America, Europe, Asia, and Africa, pirate, slave, and friend
+of princes. He was an able executive and a man of energy
+and capacity.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By Rupert S. Holland</div>
+<p class="sans">William Penn </p>
+
+<p>The life of William Penn is of especial interest and value because
+the events of his career are closely related to American
+and English history at a time when America was separating
+herself from her parent country and shaping her destiny as an
+independent Republic.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By E. Lawrence Dudley</div>
+<p class="sans">Benjamin Franklin </p>
+
+<p>As a statesman, diplomat, scientist, philosopher, and man of
+letters, Benjamin Franklin was the foremost American of his
+time. The story of his life is an inspiring and stimulating
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+Revolutionary America.<br /><br /></p>
+
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+
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+
+<hr class="hr3" />
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+<hr class="hr3" />
+
+<div class="figright">By Francis Rolt-Wheeler</div>
+<p class="sans">Thomas A. Edison </p>
+
+<p>Thomas Alva Edison is the typical American. From boyhood
+to ripest manhood he has been keen to see an opportunity,
+and quick to turn that opportunity to a practical use.
+His genius is peculiar because it is so American.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By Alice C. Sutcliffe</div>
+<p class="sans">Robert Fulton </p>
+
+<p>The life of Robert Fulton makes good reading. The story
+of his belief in and work upon a submarine and his journeys
+to France and England to lay his plans before the British
+Government&mdash;his steamboat, and the years of study and labor
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+in foreign lands in days when American travellers were few&mdash;combine
+to make one of the most interesting and inspiring
+books of the series.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By Bradley Gilman</div>
+<p class="sans">Robert E. Lee </p>
+
+<p>Robert E. Lee ranks with the greatest of all English-speaking
+military leaders. Bradley Gilman has told the story of his
+life so as to reveal the greatness and true personality of a man
+"who has left an enduring memory of the highest idealism."<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By William C. Sprague</div>
+<p class="sans">Davy Crockett </p>
+
+<p>No fictitious tale of perils and adventures could surpass the
+true story of Davy Crockett, pioneer. His life and adventures
+are closely bound up with the greatest events of American
+history.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="hr3" />
+
+<h4><i>New Illustrated Biographies for Young People</i></h4>
+
+<hr class="hr3" />
+<h3>EACH VOLUME ILLUSTRATED, $.50</h3>
+<hr class="hr3" />
+
+<div class="figright">By Jean Christie Root</div>
+<p class="sans">Nathan Hale </p>
+
+<p>There is hardly another story in the whole range of American
+history which contains so much of inspiration and splendid
+heroism as that of Nathan Hale.</p>
+
+<p>"There is more than the work of a gifted biographer here.
+There is a message."&mdash;<i>New York World.</i><br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By F.E. Lovell Coombs</div>
+<p class="sans">U.S. Grant </p>
+
+<p>There is but little fiction which can compare in interest with
+the true story of Ulysses S. Grant. Mr. Coombs has told it
+admirably.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By Daniel E. Wheeler</div>
+<p class="sans">Abraham Lincoln </p>
+
+<p>Another view of the greatest product of American democracy.
+The inspiring story of the great war President told with
+spirit in a new way.<br /><br /></p>
+
+<h3>NEW VOLUMES</h3>
+<div class="figright">By Lucile Gulliver</div>
+<p class="sans">Daniel Boone</p><p><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By Louise S. Hasbrouck</div>
+<p class="sans">La Salle</p><p><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figright">By Martha F. Crow</div>
+<p class="sans">Lafayette</p><p><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="hr3" />
+
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+
+<h3><b>Publishers</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
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+ <b>New York</b></h3>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<p><b><i>Transcriber's Notes</i></b></p>
+<p>
+List of Illustrations and Illustration Captions have been made
+consistent to each other as follows.<br />
+"Portrait of Lafayette"&mdash;Caption has been extended from "Lafayette"<br />
+"A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode"&mdash;entry in the List of
+Illustrations has been extended from "Lafayette's Carriage"<br /><br />
+
+On page 109 "Yorktown was now familar to Lafayette"
+has been corrected to "Yorktown was now familiar to Lafayette"<br /><br />
+
+In the song quoted on page 141 the last line "Et qui s'abaisse, on l'évèra."
+has been changed to "Et qui s'abaisse, on l'élèvera."<br /><br />
+
+All other spelling, punctuation, grammatical and typesetting errors have
+been left as they were in the original book.<br /></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAFAYETTE***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 27777-h.txt or 27777-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/7/7/7/27777">http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/7/7/27777</a></p>
+<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.</p>
+
+<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lafayette, by Martha Foote Crow
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Lafayette
+
+
+Author: Martha Foote Crow
+
+
+
+Release Date: January 11, 2009 [eBook #27777]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAFAYETTE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Jen Haines, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 27777-h.htm or 27777-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/7/7/7/27777/27777-h/27777-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/7/7/7/27777/27777-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+True Stories Of Great Americans
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+[Illustration: Publisher's Logo]
+
+The MacMillan Company
+New York . Boston . Chicago . Dallas
+Atlanta . San Francisco
+
+MacMillan & Co., Limited
+London . Bombay . Calcutta
+Melbourne
+
+The MacMillan Co. of Canada, Ltd.
+Toronto
+
+[Illustration: PORTAIT OF LAFAYETTE.
+From an authentic portrait.
+This shows Lafayette as a youthful general.]
+
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+by
+
+MARTHA FOOTE CROW
+
+
+ And what gave he to us?
+ He gave his starry youth,
+ His quick, audacious sword,
+ His name, his crested plume.
+ And what gave we?
+ We gave--a nation's heart!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The MacMillan Company
+1918
+
+All rights reserved
+
+Copyright, 1916,
+by The MacMillan Company.
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published May, 1916.
+Reprinted October, 1917.
+
+Norwood Press
+J.S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I PAGE
+ A BOY OF THE FRENCH NOBILITY 1
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ COLLEGE AND COURT 10
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ A BOY'S IDEALS 21
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ THE GREAT INSPIRATION 27
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ FIRST DAYS IN AMERICA 42
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ LAFAYETTE AT THE BRANDYWINE 52
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ A SUCCESSFUL FAILURE 62
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ LAFAYETTE AT MONMOUTH 73
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+ THE RETURN TO FRANCE 86
+
+ CHAPTER X
+ LAFAYETTE IN VIRGINIA 100
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+ THE TWO REDOUBTS 111
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+ THE SURRENDER OF YORKTOWN 119
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ LIONIZED BY TWO WORLDS 128
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ GATHERING CLOUDS 137
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+ LAFAYETTE IN PRISON 144
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ AN ATTEMPTED RESCUE 154
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ A WELCOME RELEASE 171
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ A TRIUMPHAL TOUR 179
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ LAST DAYS OF LAFAYETTE 193
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PORTRAIT OF LAFAYETTE _Frontispiece_
+
+ FACING PAGE THE COUNCIL AT HOPEWELL 78
+
+ THE SURRENDER OF CORNWALLIS 126
+
+ FRANCIS KINLOCH HUGER 160
+
+ A CARRIAGE IN WHICH LAFAYETTE RODE 186
+
+ THE CHILDREN'S STATUE OF LAFAYETTE 196
+
+
+
+
+LAFAYETTE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BOY OF THE FRENCH NOBILITY
+
+
+Among the rugged Auvergne Mountains, in the southern part of France,
+stands a castle that is severe and almost grim in its aspect. Two bare
+round towers flank the building on the right and on the left. Rows of
+lofty French windows are built across the upper part of the front, and
+the small, ungenerous doorway below has a line of portholes on either
+side that suggest a thought of warlike days gone by.
+
+This castle, built in the fourteenth century, is called the Chateau de
+Chaviniac de Lafayette. Though it was burned to the ground in 1701, it
+was rebuilt as nearly like the earlier structure as possible; hence it
+represents, as it stands, the chivalrous days of the crusading period
+and so forms a fitting birthplace for a hero. In this half-military
+chateau was born one of the most valiant champions of liberty that
+any country has ever produced--the Marquis de Lafayette.
+
+The climate of the Haute-Loire--the highlands of Auvergne--is harsh;
+it has been called the French Siberia. There are upland moors like
+deserts across which sweep fierce winds, where the golden broom and
+the purple heather--flowers of the barren heights--are all that will
+flourish. There are, indeed, secluded valleys filled with muskmallows
+and bracken, but these are often visited by wild tempests, and sudden
+floods may make the whole region dreary and dangerous.
+
+In Lafayette's time the violence of the elements was not the only
+thing to be dreaded. When the children wandered too near the edge of
+the forest, they might catch sight of a wild boar nozzling about for
+mushrooms under the dead oak leaves; and if it had been a severe
+winter, it was quite within possibility that wolves or hyenas might
+come from their hiding places in the rocky recesses of the mountains
+and lurk hungrily near the villages.
+
+The family living in the old chateau was one whose records could be
+traced to the year one thousand, when a certain man by the name of
+Motier acquired an estate called Villa Faya, and thereafter he became
+known as Motier de la Fayette. In 1240 Pons Motier married the noble
+Alix Brun de Champetieres; and from their line descended the famous
+Lafayettes known to all Americans. Other Auvergne estates were added
+to the Chaviniac acres as the years went by, some with old castles
+high up in the mountains behind Chaviniac, and all these were
+inherited by the father of America's famous champion.
+
+Lafayette's father was a notable warrior, as _his_ father had
+been--and his--and his--away back to the days of the Crusades. Pons
+Motier de la Fayette fought at Acre; Jean Motier de la Fayette fell at
+Poitiers. There were marshals who bore the banner in many a combat of
+olden times when the life of the country was at stake. It was a
+Lafayette who won the battle at Beauge in 1421, when the English Duke
+of Clarence was defeated and his country was compelled to resign hope
+of a complete conquest of France. Among other men who bore the name,
+there were military governors of towns and cities, aids to kings in
+war, captains and seneschals. Many of them spent their lives in camps
+and on battlefields. One of them saw thirty years of active service;
+another found that after thirty-eight years of military life he had
+been present at no less than sixty-five sieges besides taking part in
+many pitched battles. Lafayette's grandfather was wounded in three
+battles; and his uncle, Jacques Roch Motier, was killed in battle at
+the age of twenty-three.
+
+During the summer before Lafayette's birth, his father, the young
+chevalier and colonel, not then twenty-five, had been living quietly
+in the Chateau Chaviniac. But a great conflict was going on--the Seven
+Years' War was being waged. He heard the call of his country and he
+felt it his duty to respond.
+
+There was a sad parting from his beautiful young wife; then he dashed
+down the steep, rocky roadway from the chateau to the village, and so
+galloped away--over the plains, through fords and defiles, toward the
+German border--never to return.
+
+Lafayette's ancestors on his mother's side were equally distinguished
+for military spirit. His mother was the daughter of the Comte de la
+Riviere, lieutenant general and captain of the second company of the
+King's Musketeers.
+
+But this "hero of two worlds" inherited something more than military
+spirit. The ancestors from which he descended formed a line of true
+gentlefolk. For hundreds of years they had been renowned throughout
+the region of their Auvergne estates for lofty character and a kindly
+attitude toward their humble peasant neighbors. It was only natural
+that this most famous representative of the line should become a
+valiant champion of justice and freedom.
+
+This great man was destined to have as many adventures as any boy of
+to-day could wish for. To recount them all would require not one book,
+but a dozen. Think of a lad of nineteen being a general in our
+Revolutionary War, and the trusted friend and helper of Washington!
+Lafayette was present at the surrender of Cornwallis, boyishly happy
+at the achievements of the American soldiery, and taking especial
+pride in his own American regiment. This period was followed by a
+worthy career in France, but for five years--from his thirty-fifth
+year to his fortieth--he was unjustly imprisoned in a grim old
+Austrian fortress. At the age of sixty-seven he made a wonderful tour
+through our country, being received with ceremonies and rejoicings
+wherever he went; for every one remembered with deep gratitude what
+this charming, courteous, elderly man had done for us in his youth. He
+lived to the ripe age of seventy-seven, surrounded by children and
+grandchildren, and interested in the work of the world up to the very
+last.
+
+The birth of Lafayette is recorded in the yellow and timeworn parish
+register of Chaviniac. This ancient document states that on September
+6, 1757, was born that "very high and very puissant gentleman
+Monseigneur Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert Dumotier de Lafayette,
+the lawful son of the very high and the very puissant Monseigneur
+Michel-Louis-Christophe-Roch-Gilbert Dumotier, Marquis de Lafayette,
+Baron de Wissac, Seigneur de Saint-Romain and other places, and of the
+very high and very puissant lady Madame Marie-Louise-Julie de la
+Riviere."
+
+But it was only on official documents that Lafayette's full name,
+terrifying in its length, was used. Reduced to republican simplicity,
+the Marquis de Lafayette's name was Gilbert Motier, although he was
+always proud of the military title, "General," bestowed on him by our
+country. To tell the truth, imposing names meant little to this friend
+of liberty, who was a true republican at heart and who, during the
+French Revolution, voluntarily resigned all the titles of nobility he
+had inherited.
+
+During his earliest childhood Lafayette was somewhat delicate. The
+child first opened his eyes in a sorrowful home at the old Chateau
+Chaviniac, for word had come, only a month before, that Lafayette's
+father had been killed at the battle of Minden, leaving the young
+mother a widow. The boy, however, grew in strength with the years.
+Naturally, all was done that could be done to keep him in health. At
+any rate, either through those mountain winds, or in spite of them, he
+developed a constitution so vigorous as to withstand the many strains
+he was to undergo in the course of his long and adventurous life.
+
+The supreme characteristic of the man showed early in the boy when, at
+only eight years of age, he became possessed of an unselfish impulse
+to go out and perform a feat which for one so young would have been
+heroic. It was reported in the castle that a dangerous hyena was
+prowling about in the vicinity of the estate, terrifying everybody.
+The boy's sympathy was roused, and, from the moment he first heard of
+it, his greatest longing was to meet the cruel creature and have it
+out with him.
+
+It is not recorded that the eight-year-old boy ever met that wild
+animal face to face, and it is well for the world that he did not. He
+was preserved to stand up against other and more significant spoilers
+of the world's welfare.
+
+His education was begun under the care of his mother, assisted by his
+grandmother, a woman of unusually strong character; these, together
+with two aunts, formed a group whose memory was tenderly revered by
+Lafayette to the end of his life.
+
+The boy Lafayette cared a great deal for hunting. Writing back to a
+cousin at home after he had been sent to Paris to school, he told her
+that what he would most like to hear about when she wrote to him would
+be the great events of the hunting season. His cousin, it appears, had
+written him an account of a hunt in the neighborhood, but she had not
+written enough about it to satisfy his desire. Why did she not give
+details? he asked. He reproachfully added that if he had been writing
+to her of a new-fashioned cap, he would have taken compass in hand and
+described it with mathematical accuracy. This she should have done
+concerning the great hunt if she had really wished to give him
+pleasure!
+
+This fortunate boy could select any career he liked; courtier, lawyer,
+politician, writer, soldier--whatever he chose. Never came opportunity
+more richly laden to the doorway of any youth.
+
+He chose to be a soldier. The double-barred doors of iron, the lofty,
+protected windows, the military pictures on the walls of his home--all
+spoke to the Chaviniac child of warfare and conflict. There was the
+portrait of his father in cuirass and helmet. There were far-away
+ancestors in glistening armor and laced jackets. There was also the
+military portrait of that Gilbert Motier de Lafayette who was marshal
+in the time of Charles VII, and whose motto "Cur non" (Why not?) was
+chosen by Lafayette for his own when he started on his first voyage.
+The instinct for warfare, for the organization of armies, for struggle
+and conquest, were strong in him, and were fostered and nourished by
+every impression of his boyhood's home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+COLLEGE AND COURT
+
+
+In the year 1768 the boy Lafayette, then eleven years old, left his
+mountain home and went to Paris, where he was placed by his mother in
+the College du Plessis, a school for boys of the nobility.
+
+The arrangements for the student in a French college at that time were
+simple. A room scarcely wider than a cell was assigned to each boy. It
+was locked at night; but holes were cut in the door so that the fresh
+air might come in. This, at least, was the theory. Practically,
+however, the little cell must have been very stuffy, for the windows
+in the halls were shut tight in order that the health of the pupils
+might not be injured by currents of damp air from outside.
+
+Special attention was given to diet, care being taken that the boys
+should not eat any uncooked fruit lest it should injure them. Parents
+might come to visit their children, but they were not allowed to pass
+beyond the threshold--a familiar chat on home matters might interfere
+with the studious mood of the scholars.
+
+What were the studies of this young aristocrat?
+
+First and foremost, heraldry. From earliest days his tutors had
+instilled into him the idea that the study of the coats of arms of
+reigning and noble families, together with all that they stood for,
+was first in importance.
+
+Then the young student must dance, write, and draw. He must be able to
+converse wittily and with apt repartee. Fencing and vaulting were
+considered essential, as well as riding with grace and skill and
+knowing all about the management of the horse.
+
+As far as books were concerned, the Latin masters--Caesar, Sallust,
+Virgil, Terence, Cicero--were carefully studied. The boys were obliged
+to translate from Latin into French and from French into Latin.
+Occasionally this training proved useful. It is related that one of
+the French soldiers who came to New England and who could not speak
+English resorted to Latin and found to his joy that the inhabitant of
+Connecticut, from whom he wished to purchase supplies for his
+regiment, could be communicated with by that obsolete medium; and what
+would Lafayette have done when imprisoned in an Austrian dungeon if he
+had not been able to converse with his official jailers in the Latin
+tongue!
+
+In historical studies the greatest attention was given to wars and
+treaties and acquisitions of territory. The royal families of his
+native country and of neighboring kingdoms were made familiar. History
+was taught as if it were a record of battles only. Swords and coats of
+mail decorated the mantelpieces in the school and the latest methods
+of warfare were studied.
+
+In addition to all these military matters, a great deal of attention
+must have been given to acquiring the power of clear and forcible
+expression in the French language. While Lafayette can never be
+included among the great orators of the world, he possessed a
+wonderfully pellucid and concise diction. He was a voluminous writer.
+If all the letters he sent across the ocean from America could be
+recovered from the bottom of the Atlantic, there would be enough to
+make several large volumes. Sometimes he dispatched as many as thirty
+letters at one time. He sent them by way of Spain, by way of Holland,
+or by any other roundabout route that offered promise of final
+delivery. But privateersmen frequently captured the boats that carried
+them, and very often the letter-bags were dropped overboard. Still
+another circumstance deprived the world of many of his writings. When
+revolutionists took possession of the Lafayette home in Chaviniac,
+they sought in every nook and cranny to find evidence that they would
+have been glad to use against these representatives of the nobility.
+Madame de Lafayette had carefully stuffed all the letters she could
+find into the maw of the immense old range in the castle kitchen.
+Other treasures were buried in the garden, there to rot before they
+could be found again.
+
+Of the extant writings of Lafayette there are six volumes in French,
+made up of letters and miscellaneous papers, many of them on weighty
+subjects, while numerous letters of Lafayette are to be found among
+the correspondence of George Washington, John Adams, Benjamin
+Franklin, and other statesmen and generals of Revolutionary days.
+
+Of the English language Lafayette's knowledge was mainly gained during
+the six long weeks of his first voyage to America. And what he
+acquired he at once put into practice. He learned the language from
+books, and from good books. As a result his English, both spoken and
+written, had a special polish.
+
+At the College du Plessis Lafayette was an industrious student. All
+his life he regarded time as a gift of which the best use was to be
+made, and, according to his own expression, he was "not at liberty to
+lose it himself, and still less to be the occasion of the loss of it
+to others." Therefore he would not, unless it was absolutely
+unavoidable, be unpunctual to engagements, or keep people waiting his
+pleasure. As a boy in college he never had to be urged to study;
+neither was he in any way an unmanageable boy. In spite of the
+intensity of his nature, he never deserved to be chastised.
+
+It should be understood that corporal chastisement was the rule in the
+schools of that time. In the year 1789 one simple-hearted old
+school-master solemnly reported that during the fifty years of his
+experience as teacher he administered nine hundred thousand canings,
+twenty thousand beatings, one hundred thousand slaps, and twenty
+thousand switchings. Among smaller items he mentions ten thousand
+fillips and a million and a quarter raps and hits. He hurled a Bible,
+a catechism, or a singing-book at some hapless child twelve thousand
+times, and caused seven hundred to kneel on peas as a punishment. Then
+he punished eight hundred thousand for not learning their lessons and
+seventy-six thousand for not learning their Bible verses. So much for
+one teacher a half century before Lafayette's day! And people still
+talk and write about "the good old times"!
+
+The surroundings of Lafayette during his youth must have been of a
+kind to develop strength of character. He was to be one of the
+historical personages against whom scandalmongers have not been able
+to unearth a mass of detraction. His close companions during army days
+testified that they never heard him swear or use gross language of any
+kind. As Edward Everett in his great eulogy said, from Lafayette's
+home, his ancestry, his education, his aristocratic marriage, and his
+college life, he "escaped unhurt."
+
+Lafayette's mother took up her residence in Paris in order to be near
+her son. She allowed herself to be presented at court that she might
+be in touch with what was going on and give her boy all the aid
+possible. She saw to it that her uncle should place him in the army
+lists that he might secure the advantage of early promotion.
+
+After a while the tall boy was entered in the regiment of the Black
+Musketeers, and it became a favorite occupation of his to watch the
+picturesque reviews of those highly trained soldiers. This entertainment
+was for holidays, however, and did not interfere with his studies.
+
+It was not for very many years that Lafayette was to profit by his
+highborn mother's devoted care and foresight. In 1770, when her son
+was only thirteen years old, she died in Paris. In a painting on the
+walls of the chateau to-day the face of that aristocratic lady shines
+out in its delicate beauty. A pointed bodice of cardinal-colored
+velvet folds the slender form and loose sleeves cover the arms. In the
+romantic fashion of the pre-revolutionary period, the arm is held out
+in a dramatic gesture, and one tiny, jeweled hand clasps the
+shepherd's crook, the consecrated symbol of the story-book lady of
+that period.
+
+About the time of her death, one of her uncles passed away, leaving to
+the young student at the College du Plessis a large and valuable
+estate. This placed Lafayette in a very advantageous position so far
+as worldly matters were concerned. His fortune being now princely, his
+record at college without blemish, his rank unexceptionable among the
+titles of nobility, he was quickly mentioned as an eligible partner in
+marriage for a young daughter of one of the most influential families
+in France,--a family that lived, said one American observer, in the
+splendor and magnificence of a viceroy, which was little inferior to
+that of a king. This daughter was named, in the grand fashion of the
+French nobility, Marie-Adrienne-Francoise de Noailles. In her family
+she was called simply Adrienne.
+
+Adrienne de Noailles was not old enough to give promise of the
+greatness of character of which she later showed herself possessed;
+but, as it proved, Lafayette found that in her he had a companion who
+was indeed to be his good genius. She became the object of the
+unwavering devotion of his whole life; and she responded with an
+affection that was without limit; she gave a quick and perfect
+understanding to all his projects and his ideals; she followed his
+career with an utterly unselfish zeal; and when heavy sorrows came,
+her courage and her cleverness were Lafayette's resource. Her name
+should appear among those of the world's heroines.
+
+At the time of the proposed alliance, Lafayette was fourteen; the
+suggested fiancee was scarcely twelve. Her mother, the Duchess d'Ayen,
+a woman of great efficiency and of lofty character, knew that the
+Marquis de Lafayette was almost alone in the world, with no one to
+guide him in his further education or to lend aid in advancing his
+career. Moreover, she held that to have so large a fortune was rather
+a disadvantage than otherwise, since it might be a help or a
+hindrance, according to the wisdom of the owner, and she rightly saw
+that the allurements of the Paris of 1770 to an unprotected youth of
+fortune would be almost irresistible. She therefore refused to allow a
+daughter of hers to accept the proposal. For several months she
+withheld her consent, but at last she relented, on consideration that
+the young people should wait for two years before the marriage should
+take place. This admirable mother, who had carefully educated and
+trained her daughters, now took the further education of Lafayette
+into her care; she soon became very fond of him and cherished him as
+tenderly as if he had been her own son.
+
+The marriage took place in Paris on the 11th of April, 1774. It was an
+affair of great splendor. There were many grand banquets; there were
+visits of ceremony, with new and elaborate toilettes for each visit;
+there were numberless beautiful presents, the families represented and
+their many connections vying with each other in the richness and
+fineness of their gifts. Diamonds and jewels in settings of quaint
+design were among them, and besides all these there were the ancestral
+jewels of Julie de la Riviere, the mother of Lafayette, to be
+received by the new bride, and by her handed down to her descendants.
+
+The arrangement was that the wedded pair should make their home with
+the mother of the bride, the young husband paying eight thousand
+livres a year as his share of the expense. The sumptuous home was the
+family mansion of the Noailles family; it was situated in the rue St.
+Honore, not far from the palace of the Tuileries, at the corner where
+the rue d'Alger has now been cut through. The Hotel de Noailles it was
+called, and it was so large that to an observer of to-day it would
+appear more like a splendid hotel than like a private residence. When,
+a few years after Lafayette's wedding, John Adams was representing the
+United States in Paris, and was entertained in this palatial home, he
+was so amazed that he could not find words in English or in French to
+describe the elegance and the richness of the residence. In it were
+suites of rooms for several families, for troops of guests, and for
+vast retinues of servants. The building measured from six hundred to
+seven hundred feet from end to end. There were splendid halls and
+galleries and arcades. Toward the street the facade was plain but the
+interior was decorated with astonishing richness. The inner rooms
+faced on a garden so large that a small hunt could be carried on
+within it, with fox, horses, and hounds, all in full cry. Magnificent
+trees waved their branches above the great garden, and rabbits
+burrowed below.
+
+Here was a delightful place for a few people to pursue beautiful
+lives. John Adams made a note of the fact that the Noailles family
+held so many offices under the king that they received no less than
+eighteen million livres (more than three and a half million dollars)
+income each year. It must be remembered that the streets of Paris
+about this time were crowded with a rabble of beggars. But of this the
+dwellers in such magical palaces and parks saw but little and thought
+less.
+
+Conditions such as these give a hint of the causes that led to the
+French Revolution and explain in some degree why thoughts of liberty,
+fraternity, and equality were haunting the minds of the youth of
+France, and, to some of the more open-minded among them, suggesting
+dreams of noble exploit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A BOY'S IDEALS
+
+
+By this time Lafayette was a tall, slender young fellow, of commanding
+height, and with a look of piercing and imperative sincerity in his
+clear, hazel eyes. His hair was red--some one in the family used to
+call him "the big boy with red hair"; but hero worshipers need have no
+misgivings about this characteristic, nor feel that they must
+apologize for it as a defect. Lafayette said of himself that he was an
+awkward boy. It may be that the youth who was rapidly growing to a
+height of "five feet eleven" may have felt, as most boys do at that
+age, as if he were all hands and feet. But that Lafayette was really
+awkward--it is unthinkable! Not one single lady of all the beauties in
+France and America, who handed it down to her descendants that she
+"once danced with Lafayette," ever mentioned the fact that her partner
+lacked any element of grace, while many speak of the ease of manner
+and address of the distinguished man. One friend of Lafayette's early
+days reports that he was too tall to make a distinguished appearance
+on horseback or to dance with special grace; but this was said in a
+period when the dancing-master's art was the ideal of social conduct.
+Those who did not know Lafayette very well at this time thought him
+cold and serious and stiff. Perhaps he was shy; yet beneath that calm
+exterior seethed a volcano of emotion of which no casual onlooker
+dreamed.
+
+Lafayette was fortunate in having a cousin, the Count de Segur, who
+understood him and who realized that under that surface of gravity was
+hidden, as he said, "a spirit the most active, a character the most
+firm, a soul the most burning with passionate fervor."
+
+After his marriage Lafayette continued his studies at the College du
+Plessis, and later he spent a year at the military academy at
+Versailles, that his education as an officer might be complete.
+
+In the summer his inclinations led him to make various journeys to the
+fortified city of Metz, where the regiment "de Noailles" was in garrison
+under the charge of the Prince de Poix who was a brother-in-law of
+Adrienne, Lafayette's wife. On his way back from one of these visits he
+stayed at Chaillot for a time and there was inoculated for smallpox.
+This preventive method was a medical novelty at that time. To submit to
+the experiment showed a great freedom from prejudice on the part of the
+youth. The Duchess d'Ayen had once suffered from the ravages of this
+disease, so she could safely stay with the now adored son-in-law through
+this disagreeable period of seclusion.
+
+Soon after this the youthful Marquis de Lafayette and his shy girl
+bride were presented at court. The benevolent king, Louis XVI, was
+then reigning. The queen, Marie Antoinette, was the head of a social
+life that was elaborately formal and splendid. Marie Antoinette
+herself was young and light-hearted, and was at this time without
+fears from misadventure at the hands of the state or from any personal
+enemies. The king had thousands of servants and attendants in his
+military and personal households. A court scene was a display of knots
+of ribbon, lace ruffles, yellow and pink and sky-blue satin coats,
+shoes with glittering buckles, red-painted heels, and jeweled
+trimmings. Fountains threw their spray aloft, and thousands of candles
+flung radiance broadcast. Said Chateaubriand, "No one has seen
+anything who has not seen the pomp of Versailles." And no one dreamed
+that the end was nearing, or realized that no nation can live when
+the great mass of the people are made to toil, suffer, and die, in
+order that a favored few may have luxuries and amusement.
+
+Into this Vanity Fair the young Marquis de Lafayette was now plunged. The
+grand world flowed to the feet of the Marquis and Marchioness de Lafayette.
+More than that, the queen at once took the tall, distinguished-looking
+young chevalier into the circle of her special friends. The circle included
+some who were to follow Lafayette in his adventure to the New World in aid
+of American independence, and some who were to follow in another long
+procession equally adventurous and as likely to be fatal--the Revolution
+in their own country. During the Terror some of them, including their
+beautiful and well-meaning queen, were to lose their lives. Of any such
+danger as this, these young nobles, in the present state of seemingly
+joyous and abundant prosperity, were farthest from dreaming.
+
+On the whole, however, court life did not have much charm for
+Lafayette. It was a part of the duty of the Marquis and Marchioness de
+Lafayette to take part in the plays and merrymakings that centered
+about a queen who loved amusement only too well. But Lafayette could
+not throw his whole heart into the frivolity of the social sphere in
+which he was now moving. There were features of life at court that he
+could not tolerate. His knee would not crook; he already knew, as
+Everett said, that he was not born "to loiter in an antechamber."
+
+It was liberty itself--the revolt against tyranny in every realm of
+life--that interested him from the first. Lafayette was against
+whatever stood for tyranny, against whatever appeared to be an
+institution that could foster despotism. He believed that the
+well-being of society would be advanced by giving the utmost freedom
+to all, high and low, educated and uneducated. He saw a world in
+chains only waiting for some hero to come along and strike off the
+fetters.
+
+Where did Lafayette, a born aristocrat, get these ideas? Certainly not
+from the peasants as they knelt beside the road when he, their
+prospective liege lord, rode by. He was brought up to believe that it
+was the sacred privilege of the ruling class to throw largesse to the
+poor, who stood aside, waiting and expectant, to receive the gifts.
+
+It is hard to say where Lafayette imbibed his love of freedom. One
+might as well ask where that "wild yeast in the air" comes from that
+used to make the bread rise without "emptins." There was a "wild
+yeast in the air" in the France of 1760 and 1770, and all the young
+people of that country, whether highborn or lowborn, were feeling the
+ferment.
+
+If Lafayette had pursued the course that his circumstances urged, he
+would soon have crystallized into a narrow, subservient character,
+without purpose or ideals. By all the standards of his time, he would be
+thought to be throwing away his life if he should take steps to alienate
+himself from the glittering, laughing, sympathetic friends who stood
+about him at court. All advancement for him appeared to be in line with
+the influences there. But if he had done this, if he had followed the
+star of court preferment, he would have remained only one of many highly
+polished nonentities--and would have lost his head at last. By throwing
+away his life, by choosing the way of self-sacrifice, he won the whole
+world; by throwing away his world, the natural world of compliance and
+ease about him, he won a world, nay, two worlds. He became what Mirabeau
+named him, the "hero of two worlds."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE GREAT INSPIRATION
+
+
+In the summer of 1775 Lafayette was stationed at the French garrison
+of Metz, where the Prince de Poix commanded the regiment "de
+Noailles." While he was there the Duke of Gloucester, brother of
+George III, king of England, came to that city and was present at a
+dinner given in his honor at the house of the governor of the
+garrison, the Count de Broglie. This count was a person of great
+sympathy and discernment. He had been observing the tall, red-haired
+boy of quiet, assured manner and few words, who represented so
+distinguished a family and gave so great promise for a future career.
+Eighteen years before he had seen this boy's father fall in battle, so
+he had a special interest in him. He now included young Lafayette
+among the guests at the dinner.
+
+It appears that the Duke of Gloucester had just received letters from
+England telling about the revolt of the American colonies against the
+British government--about their prejudice in the little matter of a
+tax on tea, and about the strong measures to be taken by the English
+ministry to crush the rebellion. As the Duke of Gloucester was not on
+very good terms with his brother, King George, he told the story with
+somewhat vindictive glee.
+
+This was probably the first that Lafayette had heard of American
+independence. Instantly his sympathy was touched to the quick. All the
+warlike and chivalric sentiments that he had inherited, all that had
+been carefully instilled by family tradition and by education, rose at
+once to the highest intensity. To the long and eager conversations
+that followed the news brought by the guest of the evening, Lafayette
+eagerly listened, and afterwards requested the duke to explain the
+situation more fully. His curiosity was deeply excited, his heart was
+at once enlisted. The idea of a people fighting against oppression
+stirred his imagination. From what he learned from the duke, the cause
+appealed to his sense of justice; it seemed the noblest that could be
+offered to the judgment of man. Before he left the table he had
+determined in his own mind to go to America and offer himself to the
+people who were struggling for freedom and independence.
+
+From that moment his purpose was fixed. To realize his design he must
+go at once to Paris. Arriving there, he confided his plan to his two
+friends, the Viscount de Noailles and the Count de Segur, inviting
+them to share his project. Noailles had just turned nineteen, and
+Segur was twenty-two; Lafayette was eighteen. But the youngest
+differed from the others in one respect; he had already come into his
+fortune, and controlled an income of about two thousand livres, an
+amount that in purchasing power represented a fortune such as few
+young men in any country or at any time have commanded. The others
+could contribute nothing to Lafayette's plans but cordial sympathy.
+They did indeed go so far as to consult their parents, expressing
+their desire to join in Lafayette's chivalrous adventure, but their
+parents promptly and emphatically refused consent.
+
+The surprise of the Noailles family can be imagined when they heard
+that the quiet, reserved youth had suddenly decided to cross the sea
+and take up the fragile cause of a few colonists revolting against a
+great monarchy. It was not long before all came to admit that the soul
+of the big boy had in it a goodness and a valor that nothing could
+daunt.
+
+Many, however, who heard about the project Lafayette entertained felt
+a new admiration for the spirited boy. One of these smartly said that
+if Madame de Lafayette's father, the Duc d'Ayen, could have the heart
+to thwart such a son-in-law, he ought never to hope to marry off his
+remaining daughters! It made no difference to this lordly family that
+the tidings of the American revolt were echoing through Europe and
+awakening emotions that those monarchies had never experienced before;
+nor did they notice that the young nobility of France were feeling the
+thrill of a call to serve in a new cause. They were blind to those
+signs of the times; and no one dared to speak of them to the Duke
+d'Ayen, for he, with the other ruling members of the family, violently
+opposed Lafayette's plan.
+
+While these things were going on, word came that those audacious
+colonists had carried their project so far as to issue a Declaration
+of Independence of the British government and to set up for themselves
+as a nation. The Noailles family were amazed, but they could not
+change their point of view.
+
+Not being able to unravel all the threads of destiny that were enmeshing
+him, Lafayette was working in the dark, only knowing that he wanted to
+go, and that he could not bring himself to give up the project. He knew
+also that he must depend solely upon himself. Then there came into his
+mind the motto that he had since boyhood seen upon the shield of one of
+his famous ancestors in the castle at Chaviniac--"Cur non," Why not? He
+adopted this motto for his own and placed it as a device upon his coat of
+arms, that it might be an encouragement to himself as well as an answer
+to the objections of others.
+
+Lafayette consulted his commander and relative, the Count de Broglie.
+He on his part did all he could to dissuade the lad; he pointed out
+that the scheme was Utopian; he showed up its great hazards; he said
+that there was no advantage to be had in going to the aid of those
+insignificant rebels--that there was no glory to be gained. Lafayette
+listened respectfully and said that he hoped his relative would not
+betray his confidence; for, as soon as he could arrange it, go to
+America he would! The Count de Broglie promised not to reveal his
+secret, but he added:
+
+"I have seen your uncle die in the wars of Italy; I witnessed your
+father's death at the battle of Minden; and I will not be accessory to
+the ruin of the only remaining branch of the family."
+
+These things made no impression upon the determination of the young
+hero, and the Count de Broglie was in despair. When he finally found,
+however, that the boy's determination was fixed, he entered into his
+plans with almost paternal tenderness. Though he would give him no
+aid, he introduced him to the Baron de Kalb who was also seeking an
+opportunity to go to America, and he thought his age and experience
+would be of value to the young adventurer.
+
+This Baron de Kalb was an officer in the French army with the rank of
+lieutenant colonel. He was a man of fifty-five, who had served in the
+Seven Years' War and who had been employed by the French government
+ten years before to go secretly to the American colonies in order to
+discover how they stood on the question of their relations with
+England.
+
+At that time there was a representative of the colonies in Paris to
+whom all who felt an interest in American liberty had recourse. This
+man was Silas Deane. To him Lafayette secretly went.
+
+"When I presented to Mr. Deane my boyish face," said Lafayette later
+in life, "I dwelt more (for I was scarcely nineteen years of age) upon
+my ardor in the cause than on my experience."
+
+Naturally, for he had had no experience whatever. But he could speak
+of the effect that his going would have upon France, since because of
+his family and connections notice would surely be taken of his action.
+This might influence other young men and might win favor for the
+colonies in their struggle. Silas Deane was quick to see this and to
+draw up an agreement which he asked Lafayette to sign. It was as
+follows:
+
+"The wish that the Marquis de Lafayette has shown to serve in the army
+of the United States of North America and the interest that he takes
+in the justice of their cause, making him wish for opportunities to
+distinguish himself in the war, and to make himself useful to them as
+much as in him lies; but not being able to obtain the consent of his
+family to serve in a foreign country and to cross the ocean, except on
+the condition that he should go as a general officer, I have believed
+that I could not serve my country and my superiors better than by
+granting to him, in the name of the very honorable Congress, the rank
+of Major-General, which I beg the States to confirm and ratify and to
+send forward his commission to enable him to take and hold rank
+counting from to-day, with the general officers of the same grade. His
+high birth, his connections, the great dignities held by his family at
+this court, his disinterestedness, and, above all, his zeal for the
+freedom of our colonies, have alone been able to induce me to make
+this promise of the said rank of Major-General, in the name of the
+United States. In witness of which I have signed these presents, done
+at Paris, this seventh of October, seventeen hundred and seventy-six."
+
+To this startling document the undaunted boy affixed the following:
+
+"To the above conditions I agree, and promise to start when and how
+Mr. Deane shall judge it proper, to serve the said States with all
+possible zeal, with no allowance nor private salary, reserving to
+myself only the right to return to Europe whenever my family or my
+king shall recall me; done at Paris this seventh day of October, 1776.
+
+(signed) "THE MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE."
+
+About this time Dr. Benjamin Franklin was added to the group of
+American envoys. He was an instant success in the Parisian world. With
+his baggy coat, his coonskin cap, and his one-eyed spectacles,
+Franklin was the admired of all the grand ladies of the court, while
+his ability to "bottle lightning" was a favorite topic for discussion.
+The queen favored Franklin and the American cause; the king also; but
+neither dared to say so openly lest the spies of England, France's
+hereditary enemy, should find it out. Lafayette was obliged to
+preserve the utmost secrecy in making his arrangements and to secure
+the interviews in such a way that no one would suspect what he was
+planning.
+
+Unfortunately, bad news began to come from America. The disasters of
+Long Island and White Plains had befallen, and the English army was
+being reenforced by regiments of Hessians. This news destroyed what
+credit the colonies had in France. No one now had any hope for their
+endeavors, and no one could be found who would consider fitting out a
+vessel for Lafayette and his friends.
+
+The American envoys thought it no more than right to tell this to the
+eager Lafayette and to try to dissuade him from his project to go to
+America. To this end they sent him word to come for another secret
+conference. He did so, and the envoys explained to him the discouraging
+situation.
+
+One of the points wherein this young Lafayette approached nearest to
+greatness was in the way he could face some black disaster, and, with
+an absolutely quenchless spirit and the most adroit cleverness, turn
+the disaster into an advantage. This happened when Lafayette went to
+see these envoys. He received the news with a brow of unruffled calm.
+He thanked Mr. Deane for his kindness in trying to save him from
+disaster. Then he added: "Until now, Sir, you have only seen my ardor
+in your cause; I may now prove to be really useful. I shall myself
+purchase a ship to carry out your officers. We must show our
+confidence in the future of the cause, and it is especially in the
+hour of danger that I wish to share your fortunes."
+
+This reply cast another light upon the circumstances. The American
+envoys regarded the enthusiasm of the young nobleman with approbation;
+the plan was pressed forward, preparations were made to find a vessel,
+to buy it, and fit it out. All this had to be done secretly, as the
+eagerness of Lafayette called for haste.
+
+Meantime, a plan had been made for Lafayette to go on a visit to
+England with his relative, the Prince de Poix. It would be better not
+to interfere with the arrangement already made, it was thought; though
+Lafayette was impatient to carry out his plan for embarking, he wisely
+agreed to visit England first. In this plan Mr. Deane and Dr. Franklin
+concurred.
+
+Lafayette made the journey with the Prince de Poix, and for three
+weeks had a busy time, being richly entertained and observing English
+life. He was in a rather delicate situation, for he was now a guest
+among a people with whom in one respect he could not sympathize and
+toward whom he entertained a hostile feeling. But in all he did he
+carefully drew the line between the honor of the guest and the
+attitude of the diplomatist. Though he went to a dance at the house of
+Lord Germain, minister of the English colonies, and at that of Lord
+Rawdon, who had but just come from New York, and though he made the
+acquaintance of the Clinton whom he was soon to meet on opposing sides
+of the battle line at Monmouth, he chivalrously denied himself the
+pleasure and profit of inspecting the fortifications and seaports
+where ships were being fitted out to fight the American rebels. More
+than that; he openly avowed his feelings about the hazardous and
+plucky attempt of the colonies to free themselves from England; and he
+frankly expressed his joy when news of their success at Trenton was
+received. This very spirit of independence in the young French noble
+made him all the more a favorite among the English who, together with
+their king, did not in the least dream that the foolish rebels across
+the sea could accomplish anything by their fantastic revolt.
+
+Among other acquaintances made in England at this time was one
+Fitzpatrick, whose life was to be strangely mingled with Lafayette's
+in later days. Fighting on opposite sides of the conflict in America,
+they were yet to meet cordially between battles, and Lafayette was to
+send letters in Fitzpatrick's care to his wife in France--letters in
+which he took pains to inclose no matters relating to the war, since
+that would have been unsportsmanlike; still later, owing to a tragic
+concurrence of events, this even-minded and generous Englishman was to
+make persistent appeals to the English government to take measures to
+free Lafayette from a hateful imprisonment in an Austrian stronghold,
+gallant appeals, made, alas, in vain!
+
+As soon as Lafayette could conveniently withdraw from his English
+hosts he did so, and hurried back to Paris, where he kept himself as
+much out of sight as possible until the final preparations for the
+voyage were completed. At last all was ready and Lafayette reached
+Bordeaux where the boat was waiting. Here swift messengers overtook
+him to say that his plans were known at Versailles. Lafayette set
+sail, but he went only as far as Los Pasajos, a small port on the
+north coast of Spain. Here letters of importance awaited the young
+enthusiast, impassioned appeals from his family and commands from his
+king. The sovereign forbade his subject to proceed to the American
+continent under pain of punishment for disobedience; instead, he must
+repair to Marseilles and there await further orders.
+
+Lafayette knew what this meant. His father-in-law was about to go to
+Italy and would pass Marseilles on the way. Lafayette was to be made
+to go with him on an expedition where he knew he would be monotonously
+employed, with no prospect of exercising his energies in any congenial
+project. He was not without many proofs as to what might happen to him
+if he disobeyed these orders and risked the displeasure of the king.
+The Bastille was still standing and the royal power was absolute!
+
+Letters from his wife also made a strong appeal. A little child now
+brightened their home; yet the young husband and father must have
+reflected that his own father had left a young and beautiful wife;
+that the young soldier had torn himself away from his home and bride
+in Chaviniac, following the lure of arms, and had, but a few weeks
+before his own son's birth, rushed off to the battlefield where he ran
+the risk of returning no more. Why should not the son take the same
+risk and leave all for a great cause? To be sure, the father lost in
+the venture, but perhaps the son would not. It was in the Lafayette
+blood to seek for hazard and adventure. Cur non? Why not?
+
+He was convinced that he would do no harm to any one but himself by
+following out his purpose, and he decided not to risk further
+interference from family or ministry. To get away safely he adopted a
+ruse. He started out as if to go to Marseilles; but costuming himself as
+a courier, he proceeded instead toward Los Pasajos, where his ship and
+friends were awaiting him. The masquerade was successful until he reached
+St. Jean de Luz where a hairbreadth escape was in store for him. Here
+certain officers were watching for Lafayette. The clever daughter of an
+innkeeper recognized him as the young nobleman who had passed some days
+before on the way to Bordeaux. A sign from Lafayette was enough to keep
+her from making known her discovery, and he slept, unrecognized, on the
+straw in the stable, while one of his fellow-adventurers played the part
+of passenger. This is why it has been said that but for the clever wit of
+an innkeeper's daughter, Lafayette might have languished for the next few
+years in the Bastille instead of spending them gloriously in aiding us to
+gain our independence.
+
+Lafayette reached Los Pasajos in safety. From the picturesque cliffs
+back of the harbor he saw his ship, _La Victoire_--name of good
+omen!--lying at anchor. There was the happy meeting of friends who
+were to share his adventures and successes in the New World, and on
+the 20th of April, 1777, they sailed forth on their voyage.
+
+Two letters followed the enthusiastic fugitive. One was from Silas
+Deane, who testified to the American Congress that a young French
+nobleman of exalted family connections and great wealth had started
+for America in order to serve in the American army. He affirmed that
+those who censured his act as imprudent still applauded his spirit;
+and he assured Congress that any respect shown Lafayette in America
+would be appreciated by his powerful relations, by the court, and by
+the whole French nation.
+
+The other letter was a royal mandate calling upon the American
+Congress to refuse all employment whatsoever to the young Marquis de
+Lafayette. The first letter traveled fast; the second missive was
+subjected to intentional delays and did not reach its destination
+until Lafayette had been made an officer in the American army.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+FIRST DAYS IN AMERICA
+
+
+"Here one day follows another, and what is worse, they are all alike.
+Nothing but sky and nothing but water; and to-morrow it will be just
+the same."
+
+So wrote the restless Lafayette when he had been four weeks on the
+ship. The time had thus far been spent, after a sharp affliction of
+seasickness, in studying books on military science, and on the natural
+features of the country he was approaching.
+
+In time land-birds were seen, and he sat down to write to Adrienne a
+fifteen-hundred-word letter which should be sent back by the first
+returning ship.
+
+"It is from very far that I am writing to you, dear heart," he began,
+"and to this cruel separation is added the still more dreadful
+uncertainty of the time when I shall hear from you again. I hope,
+however, that it is not far distant, for, of all the many causes that
+make me long to get ashore again, there is nothing that increases my
+impatience like this."
+
+The thought of his little daughter Henriette comes forward again and
+again. "Henriette is so delightful that she has made me in love with
+all little girls," he wrote.
+
+Never did a more gallant company set sail than these young noblemen of
+France who were following a course across the sea only a little more
+northerly than that which Columbus first traced, and with something of
+the same high hazard that inspired the great discoverer. Their names
+should be remembered by a people that profited by their bravery.
+Besides the Baron de Kalb, with his fifty-five years, and the Viscount
+de Maury (who rode out of Bordeaux as a grand gentleman while the
+disguised Lafayette went before as courier), there was Major de Gimat,
+first aid-de-camp to Lafayette and always his special favorite, who
+gave up his horse to his young commander, thereby saving his life at
+the battle of Brandywine, and who was wounded in an attack on a
+redoubt at Yorktown. Then there was Captain de la Colombe who, after
+the close of the war in America, pursued closely the fortunes of
+Lafayette, following him even into prison. There was Colonel de
+Valfort who, in later years, became an Instructor of Napoleon; and
+Major de Buysson who was at the battle of Camden and brought word of
+the eleven wounds that were needed to cause the death of the intrepid
+Baron de Kalb. The list included still other names of members of noble
+families in France.
+
+Something was indeed happening to the youth of France in 1750 and
+1760. A restless ardor, a love of adventure, a love of glory, together
+with the bewitchment of that beautiful word "liberty," were among the
+motives that inspired their actions. They went into the military
+service at fourteen or even earlier, and were colonels of regiments at
+twenty-two or twenty-four. They were "sick for breathing and exploit."
+
+An amusing story is told of one of these adventurous boys. He got into
+a quarrel with a school-mate about the real positions of the Athenians
+and Persians at the battle of Plataea. He even made a small wager on it
+and then set out to find whether he had been right or not. He actually
+went on foot to Marseilles and from there sailed as cabin-boy to
+Greece, Alexandria, and Constantinople. There a French ambassador
+caught the young investigator and sent him home! Before he was
+twenty-four, however, he was in America, covering himself with glory
+at Germantown and at Red Bank. This was the kind of youths they were;
+and many thrilling stories could be told about the lives of these
+gallant young Frenchmen.
+
+And how young they were! More than a hundred of the French officers
+who came to America to serve in the Revolution were in the early
+twenties. There were a few seasoned old warriors, of course, but the
+majority of them were young. Such were the companions-in-arms of
+Lafayette, himself still in his teens.
+
+Lafayette's voyage was not without adventure. He had a heavy ship with
+but two inferior cannon and a few guns--he could not have escaped from
+the smallest privateer. But should they be attacked, he resolved to
+blow up the ship rather than surrender. When they had gone some forty
+leagues, they met a small ship. The captain turned pale; but the crew
+were now much attached to Lafayette and had great confidence in him,
+and the officers were numerous. They made a show of resistance; but it
+proved to be only a friendly American ship.
+
+As they proceeded on their way, Lafayette noticed that the captain was
+not keeping the boat due west. He commanded that the point aimed for
+should be Charleston, South Carolina. The man was evidently turning
+southward toward the West Indies, this being the sea-crossing lane at
+that time. Lafayette soon found out that the captain had smuggled
+aboard a cargo which he intended to sell in a southern port. Only by
+promising to pay the captain the large sum he would have made by that
+bargain did Lafayette succeed in getting him to sail directly to the
+coast of the colonies.
+
+After a seven weeks' voyage the coast was near. Unfortunately, it
+swarmed with hostile English vessels, but after sailing for several
+days along the shore, Lafayette met with an extraordinary piece of
+good fortune. A sudden gale of wind blew away the frigates for a short
+time, and his vessel passed without encountering either friend or foe.
+
+They were now near Charleston; but in order to reach the harbor they were
+obliged to go ashore in the ship's yawl to inquire their way and if
+possible to find a pilot. Lafayette took with him in the small boat the
+Baron de Kalb, Mr. Price, an American, the Chevalier de Buysson, and some
+of the other officers, together with seven men to row. Night came on as
+they were making toward a light they saw on shore. At last a voice called
+out to them. They answered, telling who they were and asking for a
+night's shelter. They were cordially invited to come ashore and into a
+house, where they were received with great hospitality by the owner.
+They found themselves in the summer residence of Major Benjamin Huger
+(pronounced as if spelled Eugee), member of a notable Carolina family
+having French Huguenot antecedents, who, when he learned the purpose of
+the visitors, did everything in his power to make them comfortable and to
+further them on their way.
+
+It was one of the curious coincidences that make up so large a part of
+the story of Lafayette's life that the first family to meet him on his
+arrival in this country had in its circle a small child who, when he
+grew up, was to take upon himself the dangerous task of rescuing
+Lafayette from the prison in which he was unjustly immured. That story
+will be told in its proper place.
+
+Lafayette was soon in Charleston, making preparations for the long
+journey to Philadelphia, where Congress was in session at that time.
+He was charmed with everything he found.
+
+The Chevalier de Buysson has left us a description of the uncomfortable
+journey to Philadelphia. The procession was as follows: first came one of
+Lafayette's companions in hussar uniform; next, Lafayette's carriage--a
+clumsy contrivance which was a sort of covered sofa on four springs; at
+the side one of his servants rode as a squire. The Baron de Kalb
+occupied the carriage with Lafayette. Two colonels, Lafayette's
+counselors, rode in a second carriage; the third was for the aids, the
+fourth for the luggage, and the rear was brought up by a negro on
+horseback. By the time they had traveled four days, the bad roads had
+reduced the carriages to splinters, the horses gave out, and buying
+others took all the ready money. After that the party traveled on foot,
+often sleeping in the woods. They were almost dead with hunger; they were
+exhausted with the heat; several were suffering from fever. After thirty
+days of this discouraging travel, they at last reached Philadelphia.
+
+No campaign in Europe, declared de Buysson, could have been more
+difficult than this journey; but, he said, they were encouraged by the
+bright prospects of the reception they would surely have when they
+reached Philadelphia. All were animated by the same spirit, he said,
+and added, "The enthusiasm of Lafayette would have incited all the
+rest of us if any one had been less courageous than he."
+
+But the reception of these wayworn strangers at the seat of government
+proved to be rather dubious. It appeared that at this time Congress
+was being bothered by many applications from foreigners who demanded
+high rank in the American army. The Committee of Foreign Affairs,
+being practical men of business, looked askance at men who traveled
+three thousand miles to help an unknown people; they did not wholly
+believe in the disinterested motives of the strangers; and they
+allowed Lafayette and his French officers to trail from office to
+office, presenting their credentials to inattentive ears.
+
+Finally that sense of power which always buoyed Lafayette's spirit in
+critical moments came to his rescue. He determined to gain a hearing.
+He wrote to Congress a letter in which he said:
+
+"After the sacrifices that I have made in this cause, I have the right
+to ask two favors at your hands; one is that I may serve without pay,
+at my own expense; and the other is that I may be allowed to serve at
+first as a volunteer."
+
+Congress was clear-sighted enough to recognize in this letter a spirit
+quite different from that which had seemed to actuate some of the
+foreign aspirants for glory. And by this time they had received an
+informing letter from Silas Deane; so they hastened to pass a
+resolution (on July 31, 1777) accepting Lafayette's services and "in
+consideration of his zeal, illustrious family, and connections," they
+bestowed on him the rank of Major General in the Army of the United
+States.
+
+The second letter with its royal command from Louis XVI might now
+follow, but it could have no effect. Lafayette was definitely
+committed to the American cause to which, as he said in his answer to
+Congress, the feelings of his heart had engaged him; a cause whose
+import concerned the honor, virtue, and universal happiness of
+mankind, as well as being one that drew from him the warmest affection
+for a nation who, by its resistance of tyranny, exhibited to the
+universe so fine an example of justice and courage.
+
+Lafayette's letter to Congress asked that he might be placed as near
+to General Washington as possible and serve under his command.
+
+A day or two after this a military dinner was given in Philadelphia
+which was attended by General Washington. Lafayette also was invited.
+That was Lafayette's first introduction to Washington. Lafayette had
+admired Washington almost from the time he first heard his name. To
+the young Frenchman, the occasion was momentous. He now saw before him
+a man whose face was somewhat grave and serious yet not stern. On the
+contrary, it was softened by a most gracious and amiable smile. He
+observed that the General was affable in manner and that he conversed
+with his officers familiarly and gayly. General Washington, with his
+customary prudence, looked closely at the nineteen-year-old volunteer,
+and wondered whether the stuff was to be found in that slight figure
+and intent gaze that would make a helper of value to the colonies, one
+whose judgment and loyalty could be relied upon. It must be that his
+decision was favorable to the youth, for after the dinner he drew him
+aside and conversed with him in the friendliest way. He spoke with him
+of his plans and aspirations, showed that he appreciated Lafayette's
+sacrifices, and that he realized the greatness of the effort he had
+made in order to bring aid to the colonies. Then Washington invited
+him to become one of his military family, which offer Lafayette
+accepted with the same frankness with which it was made.
+
+Perhaps Lafayette was in a mood to be pleased, for in spite of the
+assailing mosquitoes at night and the many difficulties he had to
+overcome, everything he saw in America gave him great satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAFAYETTE AT THE BRANDYWINE
+
+
+When Lafayette joined the army at Washington's headquarters, a few
+miles north of Philadelphia, he was very much surprised by what he
+saw. Instead of the ample proportions and regular system of European
+encampments, with the glitter and finish of their appointments;
+instead of feather-trimmed hats and violet-colored facings, with
+marching and countermarching in the precision and grace of a minuet,
+he saw a small army of eleven thousand men, poorly clad, with nothing
+that could by the utmost courtesy be called a uniform, and woefully
+lacking in knowledge of military tactics.
+
+But Lafayette had on his rose-colored spectacles. The pitiful
+condition of the American soldiers awakened nothing but sympathy in
+his heart--never any contempt. In spite of their disadvantages, he
+perceived that they had in them the making of fine soldiers, and that
+they were being led by zealous officers.
+
+Lafayette, now a major general in the American army, attended the
+councils of war and stood by Washington when he reviewed the troops.
+When the General took occasion to speak rather apologetically of the
+deficiencies in his little army, suggesting that Lafayette must feel
+the difference between these untrained soldiers and those he was
+accustomed to see, Lafayette had the self-possession and tact to
+answer that he had come to America to learn, not to teach. This answer
+charmed Washington and endeared the young French officer to the whole
+army.
+
+Washington, having heard that an English fleet was coming up
+Chesapeake Bay, moved south to meet the portentous army that he knew
+would promptly be debarked. On their way south the American troops had
+to pass through the city of Philadelphia. In view of the dark
+forebodings that the approach of the English was causing in the minds
+of the people, Washington was desirous that the soldiers should make
+as fine an appearance as possible in passing through the city, and
+made special regulations for that day. The army was to march in one
+column through the city; the order of divisions was stated; each
+officer without exception was to keep his post with a certain space
+between, no more and no less; each brigadier was to appoint patrols
+to arrest stragglers from the camp and all others of the army who did
+not obey this order; the drums and fifes of each brigade were to be
+collected in the center of it, and a tune for the quickstep was to be
+played; but it must be played with such moderation that the men could
+keep step to it with ease.
+
+An army that needed admonitions like these could still awaken
+enthusiasm from spectators. The austere commander in chief looked very
+handsome as he passed; the slim, eager-eyed French major general rode
+at his side; every window shone with curious and admiring eyes and the
+sidewalks were crowded with applauding citizens. The men could not
+help catching the spirit of the occasion; each soldier stuck a sprig
+of green in his hat to make up as far as possible for the lack of fine
+uniforms and military brilliancy.
+
+They were on their way to the place which was to be the scene of the
+battle of Brandywine, one of the most disastrous defeats of the
+Revolution. At the head of Chesapeake Bay the English had landed a
+large and finely equipped army, and from that point they threatened
+Philadelphia. Washington, with an inferior and poorly furnished force,
+placed his army in form to receive the attack at the Birmingham
+meetinghouse near Chad's Ford on Brandywine Creek, a point about
+fifty miles south of Philadelphia.
+
+Lafayette accompanied General Washington to the battle. His rank of
+major general gave him no command. Practically, he was a volunteer.
+But when he saw that the American troops were in danger of defeat
+before the superior English force, he asked to be allowed to go to the
+front. He plunged into the midst of the panic that followed the
+failure of the American line to stand up before the galling fire of
+the well-trained British soldiers. The retreat was rapidly becoming a
+panic. At this point Lafayette sprang from his horse and rushed in
+among the soldiers; by starting forward in the very face of the enemy
+and calling the disorganized men to follow, he did all in his power to
+induce the men to form and make a stand. It was impossible. The odds
+were too great against the Americans. Lafayette and the other generals
+waited until the British were within twenty yards of them before they
+retired.
+
+But at the height of the confusion, when Lafayette was too excited to
+notice it, a musket ball struck his left leg just below the knee. Of
+this he was unconscious until one of the generals called his attention
+to the fact that blood was running over the top of his boot. Lafayette
+was helped to remount his horse by his faithful aid, Major de Gimat,
+and insisted on remaining with the troops until the loss of blood made
+him too weak to go further. Then he stopped long enough to have a
+bandage placed on his leg.
+
+Night was coming on. The American troops were going pellmell up the
+road toward Chester. There was horrible confusion, and darkness was
+coming on. At a bridge just south of Chester, the American soldiers
+were at the point of complete disorganization. Seeing the great need
+for some decisive mind to bring order out of this chaos, Lafayette
+made a stand and placed guards along the road. Finally Washington came
+up and made Lafayette give himself into the hands of the surgeons. At
+midnight Washington wrote to Congress, and in his letter he praised
+the bravery of the young French soldier. Lafayette had passed his
+twentieth birthday but four days before.
+
+General Washington was happy to have this French officer proved by
+test of battle and to find his favorable judgment more than warranted.
+He showed the most tender solicitude for his young friend and gave him
+into the care of the surgeons with instructions to do all in their
+power for him, and to treat him as if he were his own son.
+
+Lafayette's spirits were not in the least dashed. When the doctors
+gathered round to stanch the blood, expressing their apprehensions for
+his safety, he looked at the wound and pluckily exclaimed,
+
+"Never mind, gentlemen; I would not take fifteen hundred guineas for
+that."
+
+It was partly this buoyant, merry spirit that made Lafayette win all
+hearts. To the army he was now no stranger. His broken English was
+becoming more and more understandable. But words were not necessary;
+the look in his eyes said that he was a fearless and sincere man; that
+he had not come to this country to "show off," but from a true love
+for the principles for which he had offered his sword. Never was there
+a more complete adoption than that of Lafayette by the American army.
+
+Lafayette's first care on reaching Philadelphia was to write to
+Adrienne lest she should receive exaggerated news concerning his
+wound.
+
+"It was a mere trifle," he wrote. "All I fear is that you should not
+have received my letter. As General Howe is giving in the meantime
+rather pompous details of his American exploits to the king his
+master, if he should write word that I am wounded, he may also write
+word that I am killed, which would not cost him anything; but I hope
+that my friends, and you especially, will not give faith to reports of
+those persons who last year dared to publish that General Washington
+and all the general officers of his army, being in a boat together,
+had been upset and every individual drowned."
+
+Years afterwards when Lafayette, then an elderly man, revisited our
+country, he referred to his wound in these gracious words: "The honor
+to have mingled my blood with that of many other American soldiers on
+the heights of the Brandywine has been to me a source of pride and
+delight."
+
+After a few days it was thought wise to take the wounded Lafayette to
+a quieter place. So Henry Laurens, the President of Congress, who
+happened to be passing on his way to York, Pennsylvania, whither
+Congress had removed, took him in his traveling carriage to Bethlehem,
+where dwelt a community of Moravians, in whose gentle care Lafayette
+was left for the four wearisome weeks of convalescence.
+
+"Be perfectly at ease about me," he wrote Adrienne. "All the faculty
+in America are engaged in my service. I have a friend who has spoken
+to them in such a manner that I am certain of being well attended to;
+that friend is General Washington. This excellent man, whose talents
+and virtues I admired, and whom I have learned to revere as I have
+come to know him better, has now become my intimate friend; his
+affectionate interest in me instantly won my heart. I am established
+in his house and we live together like two attached brothers with
+mutual confidence and cordiality."
+
+Again Lafayette writes: "Our General is a man formed in truth for this
+revolution, which could not have been accomplished without him. I see
+him more intimately than any other man, and I see that he is worthy of
+the adoration of his country.... His name will be revered in every age
+by all true lovers of liberty and humanity."
+
+At last Lafayette was well enough to go into service again. He
+requested permission this time to join General Greene who was making
+an expedition into New Jersey in the hope of crippling the force of
+Lord Cornwallis. Lafayette was given command of a detachment of three
+hundred men, and with these he reconnoitered a situation Lord
+Cornwallis was holding at Gloucester opposite Philadelphia. Here he
+came so near to the English that he could plainly see them carrying
+provisions across the river to aid in the projected taking of the
+city, and he so heedlessly exposed himself to danger that he might
+easily have been shot or imprisoned if the English had been alert. By
+urgent entreaty he was called back. After gaining this information, he
+met a detachment of Hessians in the service of the British army, and
+though they numbered more than his own detachment, he succeeded in
+driving them back. In the management of this enterprise he showed
+great skill, both in the vigor of his attack and in the caution of his
+return. He took twenty prisoners. General Greene, in reporting to
+Washington, said that Lafayette seemed determined to be found in the
+way of danger.
+
+General Washington was now convinced that the titled volunteer could
+be trusted with a command. He wrote to Congress as follows:
+
+"It is my opinion that the command of troops in that state cannot be in
+better hands than the Marquis's. He possesses uncommon military talents;
+is of a quick and sound judgment; persevering and enterprising, without
+rashness; and besides these, he is of a conciliating temper and perfectly
+sober,--which are qualities that rarely combine in the same person. And
+were I to add that some men will gain as much experience in the course of
+three or four years as some others will in ten or a dozen, you cannot
+deny the fact and attack me on that ground."
+
+On this recommendation, Lafayette was appointed to the command of a
+division composed entirely of Virginians. Needless to say he was
+overjoyed; for though the division was weak in point of numbers, and
+in a state of destitution as to clothing, he was promised cloth for
+uniforms and he hoped to have recruits of whom he could make soldiers.
+
+When Lafayette enlisted in the American army, he was not to lack for
+companionship. John Laurens had come from his study of history and
+military tactics at Geneva and, leaving his young wife and child
+behind, even as Lafayette had done, had rushed home to serve his
+country in her need. Alexander Hamilton was now both military aid and
+trusted adviser and secretary to General Washington. These three young
+men, all boys at the same time in different quarters of the globe, had
+come together while still in early youth and were entering into the
+great work of the American Revolution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A SUCCESSFUL FAILURE
+
+
+It was on the 20th of December that Lafayette received the joyful news
+of the birth of a second daughter. She was named Anastasie. The whole
+camp shared in the happiness of the young father. In fact, the affairs
+of the young hero interested everybody so much that there was indeed
+some danger that he would be spoiled. And he certainly would have been
+but for the balance of good judgment and mental poise that offset
+youthful rashness and vanity.
+
+At about the same time, in a long letter to his father-in-law, he
+explained the course of action he had marked out for himself. He said:
+"I read, I study, I examine, I listen, I reflect; and the result of
+all is the endeavor at forming an opinion into which I infuse as much
+common sense as possible. I will not talk much, for fear of saying
+foolish things; for I am not disposed to abuse the confidence which
+the Americans have kindly placed in me."
+
+This was Lafayette's real spirit and his secret counsel to himself;
+and we can but wonder that a young man so impetuous, so enthusiastic,
+one who had had the courage to start out on this hazardous enterprise,
+should have combined with those qualities so cool and steady a
+judgment and so rigid a self-control. But it was just this combination
+of qualities that led Lafayette on to his successes.
+
+There was, however, severe discipline in store for him. His strength
+of purpose was to be put to a sharp test. This came about in two ways:
+first, in the stern ordeal of the winter at Valley Forge, and
+afterwards in the expedition into the wilderness north of Albany.
+
+Everybody knows what the hardships of the American army were in those
+dark days of the Revolution, the winter of 1777-78. Washington had
+suffered defeat and disaster; but he, like his faithful followers, was
+of the temper that could not be depressed. At Valley Forge the men
+built a city of wooden huts, and these afforded at least a shelter
+from the storms, though they were scarcely better than dungeons. Their
+sufferings were terrible. They were inadequately clothed; many had
+neither coats, hats, shirts, nor shoes; they were in want of food;
+illness followed. Many had to have feet or legs amputated because of
+the effects of freezing. Lafayette had to see all this, and to him
+their patient endurance seemed nothing short of miraculous.
+
+He even tried to make merry a little over their sad situation, and
+over the nearness of the British army, for he wrote to his wife, "I
+cannot tell whether it will be convenient for General Howe to make us
+a visit in our new settlement; but we shall try to receive him with
+proper consideration if he does."
+
+For the moment the American cause was under a cloud. Should Lafayette
+return to France now? If he did, this would have been the interpretation
+of his act--he had lost faith in the American undertaking. This belief
+would have been heralded throughout the British army and would soon have
+been echoed in France. Lafayette did not wish to shoulder the
+responsibility of the effect his withdrawal might have on the hopes of
+help from French sympathy and French resources, and on the determination
+of other recruits who might come over and bring aid. He decided to remain
+with Washington and the American army and share whatever fate might be
+theirs. So Lafayette courageously remained. Accustomed to a life of
+luxury, he nevertheless adapted himself at once to the melancholy
+conditions at Valley Forge.
+
+There was a strange surprise awaiting Lafayette when he came to know
+the American situation more intimately. Before he left Europe, his
+sincere mind had clothed the cause of liberty in this country in the
+most rosy colors. He thought that here almost every man was a lover of
+liberty who would rather die free than live a slave. Before leaving
+France he thought that all good Americans were united in one mind, and
+that confidence in the commander in chief was universal and unbounded;
+he now believed that if Washington were lost to America, the
+Revolution would not survive six months. He found that there were open
+dissensions in Congress; that there were parties who hated one
+another; people were criticizing without knowing anything about war
+methods; and there were many small jealousies. All this disheartened
+him greatly; he felt that it would be disastrous if slavery, dishonor,
+ruin, and the unhappiness of a whole world should result from trifling
+differences between a few jealous-minded men.
+
+After a time the disaffected ones in the army tried to win Lafayette
+from his close allegiance to Washington. They entertained him with
+ideas of glory and shining projects--a clever way to entice him into
+their schemes. Deceived for a time, he received their proffers of
+friendship and their flattering compliments, but when he noted that
+some of them were able to speak slightingly and even disrespectfully
+of the commander in chief, he dashed the temptation away with absolute
+contempt.
+
+Filled with the desire to ward off all possible peril from an influence
+which he knew would disrupt the American cause, he impetuously started in
+to help. He sought an interview with Washington, but not finding an early
+opportunity for this, he wrote him a long and noble letter which has been
+preserved. In it he said:
+
+"I am now fixed to your fate, and I shall follow it and sustain it by
+my sword as by all means in my power. You will pardon my importunity
+in favor of the sentiment which dictated it. Youth and friendship make
+me, perhaps, too warm, but I feel the greatest concern at all that has
+happened for some time since."
+
+In answer to this impulsive and true-hearted letter, General Washington
+wrote one of the most distinctive and characteristic of all the hundreds
+of letters of his that are preserved. He said:
+
+"Your letter of yesterday conveyed to me fresh proof of that
+friendship and attachment which I have happily experienced since the
+first of our acquaintance and for which I entertain sentiments of the
+purest affection. It will ever constitute part of my happiness to know
+that I stand well in your opinion because I am satisfied that you can
+have no views to answer by throwing out false colors, and that you
+possess a mind too exalted to condescend to low arts and intrigues to
+acquire a reputation."
+
+It must have been welcome to the harassed heart of the man who stood
+at the head of so great a cause to receive the proofs of this young
+man's friendship and of his absolutely loyal support. Washington
+closed the letter with these gracious and inspiriting words:
+
+"Happy, thrice happy, would it have been for this army, and for the
+cause we are embarked in, if the same generous spirit had pervaded all
+the actors in it.... But we must not, in so great a contest, expect to
+meet with nothing but sunshine. I have no doubt that everything
+happens for the best, that we shall triumph over all our misfortunes,
+and in the end be happy; when, my dear Marquis, if you will give me
+your company in Virginia, we will laugh at our past difficulties and
+the folly of others; and I will endeavor, by every civility in my
+power, to show you how much and how sincerely I am your affectionate
+and obedient servant."
+
+The political conspiracy developed into what is known in history as
+the "Cabal." Thwarted in their attempt to draw into their interests
+the man whose importance to them, as representing in an unofficial way
+the French influence in America, was fully appreciated, they hatched a
+scheme that should remove him from the side and from the influence of
+Washington. This scheme consisted of a project on paper to send an
+expedition into Canada, in order to win the people there to join the
+American revolt, if possible to do so, by persuasion or by force. The
+plan had many features that appealed to Lafayette.
+
+The conspirators of the Cabal had carried a measure in Congress to
+give Lafayette the promise of an independent command, and the
+commission for this was inclosed to General Washington. He handed it
+to the major general, who had so lately joined the army as a
+volunteer, with the simple words, "I would rather they had selected
+you for this than any other man."
+
+But Lafayette loyally put aside the tempting prospect of winning
+personal glory in the Old World and the New by this expedition, and
+declined to receive any commission from Congress that would make him
+independent of Washington. He would serve only as a subordinate of the
+commander in chief, as one detailed for special duties. He wished to
+be called "General and Commander of the Northern Army," not commander
+in chief. Congress accepted the condition.
+
+It was in this way, then, that Lafayette received the title of
+"General," a distinction that he valued more than that of Marquis, and
+that to the end of his days he preferred above all other titles.
+
+With characteristic enthusiasm Lafayette proceeded to York, where
+Congress was then assembled, and where the members of the conspiracy
+were living in comfort that contrasted curiously with the conditions
+surrounding General Washington at Valley Forge. At a dinner given
+while Lafayette was there, the northern expedition and Lafayette's
+brilliant prospects were made themes of praise. But Lafayette missed
+one name from the list of toasts; at the end of the dinner he arose
+and, calling attention to the omission, he proposed the name of the
+commander in chief. In silence the men drank the toast; they had
+learned by this time that the young French noble was made of
+unmanageable material.
+
+With a heart, however, for any fate, Lafayette started on the long,
+wearisome journey northward. There were rivers deep and swift to
+cross; the roads were bad and the wintry storms made them worse.
+Floating ice crowded the fords. Rain and hail and snow and slush made
+up a disheartening monotony.
+
+It certainly was dismal. On his way north the young general was made
+happy, however, by receiving a "sweet parcel of letters," telling him
+that his family were very well and that they were keeping in loving
+remembrance the man who was called in France, "The American Enthusiast."
+This warmed his heart as he plodded northward through the storm.
+
+On Lafayette's arrival at Albany, he found that none of the promises
+made to him as to supplies, available men, money, and other necessary
+equipment had been kept; and the judgment of advisers who knew the
+difficulties of a northern excursion in the depth of winter was
+against the expedition. Lafayette was exasperated and wrote frantic
+letters to Washington, to Congress, and to Henry Laurens.
+
+But it was of no avail. The expedition had to be given up. Lafayette
+remained at Albany during the months of February and March, giving his
+personal credit to pay many of the men and to satisfy other demands,
+and taking up various duties and projects. For one thing, he went up
+the Mohawk River to attend a large council of the Iroquois Indians.
+This was Lafayette's first official contact with the red men, and he
+at once manifested a friendship for them and an understanding of
+their nature that won their hearts. He sent one of his French
+engineers to build a fort for the Oneidas, and he was present at a
+grand treaty ceremony. A band of Iroquois braves followed Lafayette
+southward and later formed part of a division under his command.
+
+It was a discomfited but not a despairing young warrior who returned
+in April to Valley Forge. But joy was before him. The Cabal had
+vanished before the storm of loyalty to Washington that gathered when
+the conspiracy was discovered. Moreover, Lafayette received from
+Congress a testimonial, saying that they entertained a high sense of
+his prudence, his activity, and his zeal, and they believed that
+nothing would have been wanting on his part, or on the part of the
+officers who accompanied him, to give the expedition the utmost
+possible effect, if Congress had not thought it impracticable to
+prosecute it further. Better still, on the 2d of May came the great
+news that a treaty of commerce and alliance had been signed between
+France and the United States of America.
+
+This event caused a wild wave of joy to spread over the whole country.
+This treaty assured the permanence of the United States as a nation.
+To be sure, the war with England must still be carried on, but now
+that France was an ally they would have more hope and courage.
+
+In the doleful camp at Valley Forge there was the sincerest gratification
+and delight. A national salute of thirteen cannon was ordered; a
+thanksgiving sermon was preached; a fine dinner was served for the
+officers, and the table was made more delightful by the presence of Mrs.
+Washington, Lady Stirling, Mrs. Greene, and other wives and daughters of
+generals.
+
+Lafayette took part in these scenes of rejoicing, but there was a
+reason why, underneath it all, his heart was heavy. Almost with the
+letters announcing the joyous news of the treaty, came others telling
+him of the death, in October, 1777, of his little daughter Henriette,
+of whom he had said that he hoped their relationship would be more
+that of friends than of parent and child. This happiness was not to be
+theirs. Lafayette now thought that he had never realized before what
+it meant to be so far away from his home. The thought of Henriette and
+of the grief of Adrienne, which he was not able by his presence to
+help assuage, was with him every moment of the day; but even while his
+heart was heavy with grief, he felt that he must attend and bear his
+part in the public rejoicings.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+LAFAYETTE AT MONMOUTH
+
+
+The alliance with France put a new color upon every phase of the American
+contest. If, for instance, a French fleet should be already on its way
+across the Atlantic, and should enter Chesapeake Bay and threaten
+Philadelphia, the English would have to evacuate that city and retire to
+New York, risking the danger of being intercepted on the way by
+Washington's army. In view of such a possibility as this, the commander
+in chief of the American army held a council of war in which it was
+decided that they were not strong enough to risk a decisive engagement.
+It was, however, highly important that exact information should be gained
+as to the movements of the British around Philadelphia. In order that
+this might be accomplished, General Washington detached a group of
+soldiery from among the most able and valued of his army, and put them
+under Lafayette, with instructions to proceed into the country between
+the Delaware and Schuylkill, and there interrupt communications with
+Philadelphia, obstruct the incursions of the enemy's parties, and obtain
+intelligence of their motives and designs.
+
+Lafayette was overjoyed at being chosen for so important a charge; and
+on the 24th of May, 1778, he started out with about twenty-two hundred
+men. His force included the band of Iroquois warriors who had come
+from Albany to follow his fortunes, and who, because of their
+knowledge of forest-craft, were invaluable as scouts. The British
+could command about four times as many soldiers as had been assigned
+to Lafayette, but their intention was to keep the American force out
+of their way and, if possible, to avoid a direct encounter.
+
+For his camp Lafayette selected a piece of rising ground near the
+eleventh milestone north of Philadelphia, where there was a church, a
+grave-yard, and a few stone houses that might afford some protection
+in case of attack, and where four country roads led out to the four
+points of the compass. The place was called Barren Hill--name of
+ill-omen! But the fate of the day proved not altogether unfortunate
+for the young and intrepid commander.
+
+Naturally, the people in Philadelphia had heard of the approach of the
+young French noble whose fame had been ringing in their ears, and they
+prepared to go out and engage him--capture him, if possible. At that
+time they were indulging in a grand, week-long festival, with
+masquerades, dancing, and fireworks; and in anticipation of the quick
+capture of the young French hero, a special party was invited for the
+next evening at which the guests were promised the pleasure of meeting
+the distinguished prisoner.
+
+Lafayette had chosen his position in a region he had carefully
+examined. But the English were able to send bodies of troops up all
+the traveled approaches to the hill. While Lafayette was planning to
+send a spy to Philadelphia to find out, as Washington had directed,
+what preparations were there being made, the cry suddenly arose in his
+camp that they were being surrounded. It was a terrible moment. But
+Lafayette had this great quality--the power of being self-possessed
+under sudden danger. He did not lose his head, and he instantly
+thought of a plan of escape.
+
+There was a dilapidated road that his keen eye had detected leading
+along beneath a high bank which protected it from observation. He
+directed the main body of his men to pass down that old road, while a
+small number were commanded to make a pretense of a demonstration near
+the church; others were to show some false heads of columns along the
+edge of the forest by the stone houses. These were withdrawn as the
+main body of soldiers disappeared down the hidden road and began to
+dot the surface of the river with their bobbing heads as they swam
+across. Lafayette and his loyal aid-de-camp, Major de Gimat, brought
+up the rear with the remainder of the men, whom they transferred
+across the river without loss. Then they formed on the farther bank
+and determined to contest the ford if the British followed. But the
+British had marched up the hill from the two opposite sides, simply
+meeting each other at the top; they then marched down again and did
+not seem to be in any mind to pursue their enemy further.
+
+The only real encounter of that serio-comic day's adventures took
+place between the band of Iroquois and a company of Hessians in the
+pay of the British. The Indians were concealed in the brush at the
+side of the road when the Hessians, with waving black plumes in their
+tall hats and mounted on spirited horses, came along. The Indians rose
+as if from under the ground, giving their war whoop as they sprang.
+The horses, unused to this form of war cry, started back and fled far
+and wide; and the Indians, never having seen soldiers so accoutered,
+were as frightened as if confronted by evil spirits, and swiftly made
+good their escape from the impending "bad medicine."
+
+The British carried their chagrin with them back to Philadelphia, and
+the diners were disappointed in their guest of honor. Next morning
+Lafayette returned to the top of Barren Hill, thence marched back to
+Valley Forge, and there relieved the anxiety of General Washington who
+had feared for his safety.
+
+But the incident of Barren Hill, while it was not in any way an engagement,
+must be looked upon as a serious matter after all, for it gave Lafayette
+an opportunity to show that he was cool and self-possessed in a critical
+moment, and that he was clever and resourceful in finding ways to extricate
+himself from difficulties--both essential qualities in one who is to be
+trusted with great enterprises.
+
+In about a month the anticipated event took place--the British
+evacuated Philadelphia; and, with a baggage-train eleven miles long,
+started northward with the intention of joining forces with the army
+at New York.
+
+The question now was whether the army under General Washington should
+leave Valley Forge and with their inferior force make an attempt to
+intercept the British and bring on a battle. Several councils of war
+were held; one of special importance at Hopewell, a place north of
+Valley Forge, where the project of preparing for attack was earnestly
+favored by Lafayette, together with General Greene and Colonel
+Alexander Hamilton, but violently (and unaccountably at that time)
+opposed by General Lee. This council has been made the subject of one
+of the reliefs on the celebrated Monmouth Battle Monument. In this
+design Washington is represented as standing by the table in the
+center of the group, while Lafayette is spreading the map before the
+council and urging them to make a strong demonstration against the
+British, even if it should bring on a battle.
+
+The various generals sit about the table and each expresses in his
+attitude what his feelings are in this crisis. Steuben and Duportail
+(at the extreme left) evidently agree with Lafayette, and eagerly
+press for compliance with his plan. General Patterson (seated at the
+table) is of the same mind, and so is the true-hearted Greene (seated
+at the right of Patterson). Brave Colonel Scammel (between Washington
+and Lafayette), Washington's Adjutant General, carefully notes the
+opinion of each for the guidance of his chief. Back in the shadow sits
+the treacherous General Lee, who looks sulky and is evidently planning
+mischief. The homely rooftree covers a critical scene in the history
+of the Revolution.
+
+ [Illustration: _From a photograph by Norman L. Coe & Son._
+ THE COUNCIL AT HOPEWELL.
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor J.E. Kelly, appears on
+ the Monmouth Battle Monument. It shows a conference of
+ Washington and his generals. Lafayette is shown standing
+ opposite to Washington.]
+
+Finally, Washington turned to General Wayne (behind Greene) and said,
+
+"Well, General, what would _you_ do?"
+
+"Fight, Sir!" crisply replied the ardent and indomitable Wayne--an
+answer that pleased alike the commander in chief and the young
+volunteer major general, to whom it seemed an intolerable insult that
+a hostile army should be allowed to march through one's own country
+unchallenged.
+
+General Lee was determined that the British should be allowed to pass
+through New Jersey without molestation. His sympathies were afterwards
+found to have been entirely with the British. At any rate, Washington
+did not follow his advice. He sent out men to fell trees in the
+enemy's path, to burn bridges before them, and to harass them as much
+as possible; and he forwarded detachments of such size that he needed
+a major general to take command of that branch of his army. The
+position was offered first to General Lee. He refused to take it.
+General Washington was then free to offer it to Lafayette, who
+accepted it with delight.
+
+As these plans were being matured, General Lee suddenly changed his
+mind and announced that he would take command of the advance force;
+and he appealed to Lafayette's generosity to allow him to do so, even
+after having once given his refusal. Lafayette unselfishly resigned
+the command. It is the opinion of historians that the outcome of the
+battle of Monmouth would have been very different if the American side
+had been left in the capable hands of the young Lafayette.
+
+The battle of Monmouth, which took place on the 28th of June, was
+widely scattered in its action over a hot and sandy plain. The outcome
+was that General Lee first brought his troops face to face with the
+enemy, and then, instead of leading on to the attack, gave the order
+for retreat. Afterwards, in the court-martial of Lee, it was made
+evident that the movement of the troops as ordered by Lee would have
+left Lafayette and his detachment abandoned in an extremely exposed
+position on the open plain, the troops that should have supported him
+having been withdrawn by Lee's orders and directed to retreat.
+Lafayette and the other generals felt great bitterness on that day
+because they had been swept into battle but had not been allowed to
+strike a blow.
+
+Everybody knows how Washington rode up, and when he saw the retreat,
+how he indignantly reproved General Lee and commanded the battalions
+to turn back and form in position for battle. Lafayette was in command
+of a division stationed at the second line under Lord Stirling who
+sustained the left wing; they were now placed on an eminence behind a
+morass and there played the batteries to such good effect that they
+were able to check the advance of the British. This halt gave
+Washington time to place his army to advantage. The British were
+driven from a strong position they had taken, and before dark the
+American troops had turned the British back. That night they lay upon
+the field in bright moonlight, and while Washington and Lafayette
+discussed the possible outcome of the next day, the British were
+silently withdrawing from the Monmouth plains. The next morning all
+had disappeared except some forty of their wounded. At Sandy Hook,
+where the British army crossed to New York, it was learned that they
+had lost about two thousand men by desertions and by losses at
+Monmouth. Many of the soldiers on both sides had died from the extreme
+heat on that 28th of June.
+
+During the battle Lafayette was master of himself. Almost fifty years
+later, Colonel Willett related that in the hottest of the fight he
+saw Lafayette ride up to one of the officers and, in a voice cool,
+steady, and slow, and with as much deliberation as if nothing exciting
+prevailed, say,
+
+"General, the enemy is making an attempt to cut off our right wing;
+march to his assistance with all your force."
+
+So saying he galloped off. Colonel Willett remembered that he was
+exceedingly well mounted, though plainly dressed, and "very sedate in
+his air for a Frenchman."
+
+A number of situations arose soon after this in which Lafayette found
+himself of great use. The French fleet under Count d'Estaing appeared
+near Delaware Bay and sailed up the coast. Washington was at White
+Plains. The British held New York. It was thought that the French
+fleet could accomplish much by going to Newport and there cooperating
+with the land forces. Lafayette was given a detachment and commanded
+to proceed to Providence where he was to stand ready to give all
+possible aid.
+
+But he was doomed to still another disappointment. The French fleet
+arrived off Point Judith near Newport; visits of ceremony were
+exchanged by the French and American generals; preparations were made;
+but through misunderstandings, the plans never worked out to an
+actual engagement. Before anything was accomplished, a severe storm
+overtook the fleet, and it withdrew to Boston for necessary repairs.
+
+During this trying time, Lafayette was a trusted resource to
+Washington, who devoutly wished to reconcile all differences and to
+bring peace out of dissension. For this Lafayette had peculiar
+qualities, as he understood the character of both the French and the
+Americans, and believed absolutely in the good intentions of the
+officers on both sides. Twice he rode to Boston and back again to help
+in settling some difficulty, making on one of those occasions a
+journey of seventy miles, at night, in six and a half hours--a feat
+paralleled only by Sheridan's famous ride to Winchester.
+
+But the fleet sailed away, bearing many disappointments with it,
+though much good had been done by its coming; it meant that the
+American cause had received definite encouragement from France.
+
+It was now October of 1778 and autumn weather was closing the campaign
+of the year. The sending of the French fleet to our shores had been
+virtually a declaration that a state of war existed between France and
+England, and the thought that this might develop into an actual war in
+which Lafayette, after his practical experience and training in the
+Continental army, could take part and win glory, inclined him strongly
+at this point to return to his native land. Permission was given to
+him to do this. The proper farewells, official and private, were made,
+and Lafayette started on his way to Boston where he was to embark.
+
+But the strain of the summer's excitement and overwork had been too
+much for Lafayette, and at Fishkill he was taken ill with a violent
+fever which prostrated him for some weeks. The greatest concern was
+felt for his life; the soldiers' love for him was shown by their great
+solicitude, and General Washington called upon him every day.
+
+Lafayette slowly recovered and finally resumed his journey to Boston,
+where he went on board the _Alliance_ which the government had given
+him to take him to France. At the moment of sailing he sent a letter
+to General Washington, in which he said:
+
+"Farewell, my dear General. I hope your French friends will ever be
+dear to you. I hope I shall soon see you again and tell you myself
+with what emotions I now leave the land you inhabit, and with what
+affection and respect I shall ever be your sincere friend."
+
+They set sail for Havre on the 11th of January, 1779. The voyage was
+not to be without adventure. They sailed into the teeth of a terrible
+three days' storm. Lafayette, as usual, was very seasick, and, as
+usual, was much discouraged thereby. For a time glory and fame had no
+charms for him! He declared he was surely going where he had wished to
+send all the English--namely, to the bottom of the sea!
+
+Still worse was to follow. No sooner was the storm over than another
+danger loomed up. The ship's crew included a number of renegade
+English sailors who conspired to mutiny, to overwhelm the officers,
+and to kill the crew and passengers. By including in their confidence
+an American sailor, whom they mistook for an Irishman, their plot came
+to naught. Lafayette summoned the whole crew, put thirty-three
+mutineers in chains, and thus saved himself from capture and the ship
+from being towed into a British port as a prize. Shortly after this
+Lafayette brought the frigate into the harbor of Brest, where he had
+the pleasure of seeing, for the first time, the American flag receive
+the national salute as the symbol of an acknowledged sister nation in
+alliance with his native country.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE RETURN TO FRANCE
+
+
+When Lafayette learned of the birth of his little daughter Anastasie,
+whom he now ardently desired to see, he wrote to his wife:
+
+"What expressions can my tenderness find sufficiently strong for our
+dear Anastasie? You will find them in your own heart, and in mine,
+which is equally open to you.... That poor little child must supply
+all that we have lost."
+
+Letters like this would give great consolation to Madame de Lafayette,
+but alas, they came at long intervals, since many of her husband's
+long epistles never reached her. Therefore Adrienne felt his absence
+the more keenly, while rumors and exaggerated reports from America
+made her days an agony. When, however, he returned to France in
+February, 1779, her happiness was beyond all expression.
+
+Adrienne's joy was increased by the fact that while her rash young
+husband had left his native land under a cloud, because it was
+understood that he did so against the command of the king, his return
+was that of a conqueror, triumphant and in favor.
+
+He was not allowed, however, wholly to forget his formal error. His
+appeal to Adrienne for forgiveness for his absence was one that he had to
+make to others. His father-in-law testified in a letter that, so far as
+he was concerned, the recreant might be freely forgiven. Adrienne was
+only too willing to receive the one who had left her to go on a mission
+to the other side of the world; but what about the king whose command not
+to leave the shores of France he had practically disobeyed? Many a man
+had been shut up in the Bastille because of a much smaller offense.
+
+Lafayette was brought to the court at Versailles by his relative, the
+Prince de Poix. The king received him and graciously accorded a
+punishment. He was to suffer imprisonment for the space of _one
+week_--his prison to be the grand residence of his father-in-law, the
+Hotel de Noailles! After that his pardon was to be freely granted by
+his Majesty, with this warning--that he should avoid public places for
+a time lest the people should manifest their admiration for his
+disobedient conduct by their applause.
+
+The king's warning was not indeed without reason. But there was no use
+in trying to keep the impressionable French people from worshiping a
+hero after their hearts had been captured by him. The gallantry and
+the human-heartedness of Lafayette, as well as the ideals he
+held--ideals that were becoming more and more captivating to the fancy
+and to the reason of the French nation--contributed to make him the
+favorite of the hour. A passage from a certain play never failed to
+receive enthusiastic applause from the audiences because it was held
+by all to be susceptible of direct application to Lafayette; and this
+passage the queen copied in her own hand because she thought of him
+when she read it. It dwelt upon the union of mature and youthful
+qualities in a character, and ran as follows:
+
+ "Why talk of youth
+ When all the ripe experience of the old
+ Dwells with him? In his schemes profound and cool
+ He acts with wise precaution, and reserves
+ For times of action, his impetuous fire.
+ To guard the camp, to scale the 'leaguered wall,
+ Or dare the hottest of the fight, are toils
+ That suit the impetuous bearing of his youth;
+ Yet like the gray-haired veteran he can shun
+ The field of peril. Still before my eyes
+ I place his bright example, for I love
+ His lofty courage, and his prudent thought;
+ Gifted like him, a warrior has no age."
+
+The queen's copy of this passage was given to Madame de Campan, the
+revered teacher of the young ladies of the court, and it met the fate
+of being burned on the very day Marie Antoinette's sad life came to an
+end at the hands of the executioner during the height of the Terror.
+
+The queen had shown her interest in Lafayette's arrival by arranging
+to have an interview with the young hero when he was making his first
+visit to Versailles. At her suggestion Lafayette was now advanced by
+the king to be commander of an important regiment in the army of
+France, the king's own Dragoons. He was stationed at Saintes and
+afterwards at St. Jean-d'Angely, near Rochefort, where the regiment
+was conveniently quartered to be ready in case a project for the
+invasion of England by way of the British Channel should be carried
+out. Such a plan was under consideration, and Lafayette looked forward
+with delight to the prospect of action against the country which he
+considered the ancient foe of France.
+
+But, to Lafayette's great grief, the plot to invade England failed;
+and he was now free to return to Paris and Versailles. The failure of
+the British plan also made it rather easier for the minds of
+prominent officials to look toward taking some further part in the
+American struggle. To aid this Lafayette gladly applied himself; for
+while loyal always to his own nation, and standing ready at any point
+to leave all to serve France, he had not for a moment forgotten the
+needs of his adopted country across the Atlantic. In fact, when he
+reached home, he had not waited for his one week's punishment to be
+over before beginning to create interest in the cause for which he had
+risked his life. Benjamin Franklin, then ambassador to the court of
+France from the United States, was promptly allowed, under pretense of
+calling upon Lafayette's father-in-law, to visit Lafayette himself.
+
+There was a constant stream of callers coming to see and congratulate
+him, and never was there one among them who was permitted to
+misunderstand the fact that Lafayette wished to move heaven and earth
+to secure help for the Continental army in its struggle for freedom.
+He found himself, in a more important sense than ever before, the tie
+between France and America, for he enjoyed the confidence of both
+countries.
+
+To Washington he wrote: "If there is anything in France concerning
+which not only as a soldier but as a politician, or in any other
+capacity, I can employ my exertions to the advantage of the United
+States, I hope it is unnecessary to say that I shall seize the
+opportunity and bless the day which shall render me useful to those
+whom I love with all the ardor and frankness of my heart."
+
+General Washington, on his part, wrote to Lafayette in this wise:
+
+"It gives me infinite pleasure to hear from your sovereign of the joy
+that your safe arrival in France has diffused among your friends....
+Your forward zeal in the cause of liberty, your singular attachment to
+this infant world, your ardent and persevering efforts not only in
+America, but since your return to France, to serve the United States,
+your polite attentions to Americans, and your strict and uniform
+friendship for me, have ripened the first impressions of esteem and
+attachment which I imbibed for you into such perfect love and
+gratitude, as neither time nor absence can impair. This will warrant
+my assuring you that whether in the character of an officer at the
+head of a corps of gallant Frenchmen if circumstances should require
+this, whether as major-general commanding a division of the American
+army, or whether, after our swords and spears have given place to the
+plowshare and pruning-hook, I see you as a private gentleman, a friend
+and companion, I shall welcome you with all the warmth of friendship
+to Columbia's shores; and in the latter case, to my rural cottage,
+where homely fare and a cordial reception shall be substituted for
+delicacies and costly living. This, from past experience, I know you
+can submit to; and if the lovely partner of your happiness will
+consent to participate with us in such rural entertainments and
+amusements, I can undertake on behalf of Mrs. Washington that she will
+do all in her power to make Virginia agreeable to the Marchioness. My
+inclination and endeavors to do this cannot be doubted, when I assure
+you that I love everybody that is dear to you."
+
+Such a visit as this the Marchioness was never to pay. And we can not
+blame her if, during her husband's brief visits, she felt like
+complaining that he absorbed himself in the interests of the American
+cause or was always planning fresh enterprises. But though she was now
+only nineteen years old, she was proving herself the high-minded woman
+who could sympathize entirely with her husband's ideals, and who could
+consider him dedicated to a great cause; therefore she could
+cheerfully lay aside merely selfish wishes. No one ever heard a
+complaint from her absolutely loyal lips. In December, 1779, the
+family was made happy by the birth of a son, to whom, in honor of his
+illustrious friend, Lafayette gave the name of George Washington.
+
+Lafayette had many testimonials from his friends in the United States
+showing their appreciation of his efforts for them; and among them was
+one of special import. It consisted of a sword richly ornamented, with
+a handle of solid gold, sent to him by the American Congress. To
+Franklin was intrusted the pleasant task of providing this rich gift.
+It was made in Paris and was engraved with representations of the
+actions in which Lafayette had taken part, together with his coat of
+arms, his chosen motto "Cur non?" and other emblematic designs
+selected by Franklin; and Franklin's grandson had the honor of
+conveying to Lafayette this testimonial of a nation's appreciation.
+
+"By the help of the exquisite artists of France," graciously wrote
+Franklin in an accompanying letter, "I find it easy to express
+everything but the sense we have of your worth."
+
+Lafayette may have been in a fair way to be spoiled, but if he was he
+had a happy way of concealing it. He answered, "In some of the devices
+I cannot help finding too honorable a reward for those slight services
+which, in concert with my fellow-soldiers, and under the god-like
+American hero's orders, I had the good fortune to render."
+
+This beautiful sword was in the course of time to meet with ill luck.
+When Revolutionists rifled the Chateau de Chaviniac, it was buried for
+safe-keeping and remained thus hidden for many years. Long afterwards
+Lafayette's son, George Washington Lafayette, grown to young manhood,
+unearthed the treasure and found that the blade was totally rusted
+away. Lafayette then had the happy thought of adjusting to this handle
+of pure gold the blade of a sword that had been made out of bolts and
+bars taken from the Bastille. Thus the associations of both worlds and
+of two struggles for freedom were united in one historic sword.
+
+There came a time when Lafayette felt himself warranted in presenting
+a Memoir to the Cabinet on the subject of giving direct relief to
+America. His plan, from a military standpoint, was masterly, and it
+produced so favorable an impression that it was accepted; and it soon
+became known to those worthy to be in the secret that France would
+send to America a reinforcement of six ships and six thousand men of
+the regular infantry. To this was added a loan of three million
+livres, and later still, through the appeals of Franklin, another loan
+of the same amount was supplied. The Count de Rochambeau, a trained
+soldier, was chosen to command the land forces and the Count de Ternay
+was to be admiral of the fleet. Lafayette was sent ahead to announce
+this happy news and to make preparations for the arrival of the
+expedition.
+
+Wearing the uniform of an American officer, Lafayette took his leave
+of the king; and on the 4th of March, 1780, he sailed on the frigate
+_Hermione_. He reached Boston harbor on the 28th of April, 1780, after
+an absence of fifteen months. When word swept through the city that a
+ship was coming in with Lafayette on board, the people crowded to the
+wharf to welcome the returning French friend of America. This was the
+beginning of civic processions in Lafayette's honor. They cheered him
+from the ship's side to the residence of Governor Hancock where
+addresses were listened to and congratulations exchanged. He called
+upon the Legislature then in session, and in the evening viewed the
+illuminations in his honor. Lafayette gave a dinner on board the ship
+to which he invited a large number of officials--the president of the
+Massachusetts Council, members of the legislature, the consul of
+France, and other men of dignity. The frigate was gayly decorated with
+the flags of many nations. Thirteen toasts were drunk--the number
+thirteen cannot have been an unlucky number in those days!--and after
+the toast to Washington the great guns boomed seventeen times.
+
+As rapidly as possible Lafayette rode to Washington's headquarters at
+Morristown, New Jersey, and made his happy announcement to the General
+himself. He then pressed on to Philadelphia to present to Congress the
+communication from the French government. He bore also a letter from
+Washington, in which the commander in chief introduced Lafayette as
+one who had "signally distinguished himself in the service of this
+country," and who, during the time that he had been in France, had
+"uniformly manifested the same zeal in our affairs which animated his
+conduct while he was among us"; who had been "on all occasions an
+essential friend to America."
+
+The greatest possible effort was now made to equip the Continental
+army, but the resources of the country had already been grievously
+overtaxed. Washington had hardly been able to keep his army together
+at all. Half of his six thousand men were unfit for duty. They had
+sometimes had no bread for six days; sometimes for two or three days
+they would have neither meat nor bread. The commander clearly realized
+that an army reduced to nothing, without provisions or any of the
+necessary means to carry on a war, needed not a little help only--it
+needed a great deal.
+
+When, on the 2d of May, the French fleet finally set sail, delays had
+reduced the number of soldiers and the amount of supplies. The English
+by this time had realized what was happening, and they carefully
+blockaded the second division of the squadron in the harbor of Brest;
+and when the first division reached Newport, the English cleverly
+surrounded the harbor with their ships, thus "bottling up" the French
+and rendering them inactive and useless. In this way the great good
+that was expected from the French expedition came to naught.
+
+During all this trying time, Lafayette acted the part of a single-minded
+friend of both the French and the American armies. He was sent by
+Washington to Newport to confer with the French generals, and later he
+was present at a joint meeting of the great French and American generals
+which was held at Hartford, Connecticut. Lafayette rode from one army to
+the other, holding conferences and putting important decisions into
+writing, or dictating the results of conversations. Many of these
+documents have been preserved in French or American state archives.
+
+Whatever time he could get apart from these labors he spent in
+training the battalion that had been assigned to him. This was a
+detachment of light infantry, selected from the best of the army. He
+took great pride in training these men, sent to France for black and
+white plumes for their caps, and tried to make them present as good an
+appearance as possible. The Marquis de Chastellux, who visited his
+camp on the Ramapo River, has left a delightful description of this
+visit in which he spoke of the fine appearance of the troops as their
+young commander had drawn them up on a height near his own station.
+Here, said Chastellux, Lafayette received his guest with more pride
+than if he had been entertaining at his estates in Auvergne. "Happy
+his country," said Chastellux, "if she employs his services; happier
+still if she has no use for them!"
+
+It was during this autumn that Benedict Arnold made what Lafayette
+called that "horrid compact with the enemy"--an event that amazed and
+distressed him beyond any words. Lafayette was with Washington when
+the plot was discovered. He was also a member of the board to try the
+British spy, Andre. His attitude toward Andre was very different from
+that toward Benedict Arnold. Andre, he said, conducted himself in a
+manner so frank, so noble, and so delicate, that he could not help
+feeling infinite sorrow for him.
+
+The winter of 1780-81 was the darkest period of the war. But it was to
+be followed by a happier season, one in which Lafayette was at last to
+have as large a share of action as his heart could wish.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+LAFAYETTE IN VIRGINIA
+
+
+The British still held the city of New York. General Washington's army
+sat in their impregnable camps on the Hudson and along the Delaware,
+where he could reach out a hand to New England on the east, and to
+Philadelphia on the south, at the same time threatening now and then
+the stronghold of the British. Meantime an active campaign was being
+carried on in the states south of Virginia. At the battle of
+Charleston the brave General Lincoln and his gallant army were
+compelled by the British to lay down their arms and give themselves up
+as prisoners of war without the usual courtesies. The ceremony of
+surrender was particularly galling. Forbidden by their conquerors to
+play a British or a Hessian air, they marched to the joyous melody of
+"Yankee Doodle," their colors cased, and their hearts rebellious. The
+battle of Camden was another defeat for the Americans. On that
+disastrous day fell the companion of Lafayette's first voyage, the
+Baron de Kalb, who died bravely after receiving no less than eleven
+wounds. Sir Henry Clinton, the British commander in the south, thought
+that defeats like these would finish the question for that part of the
+country, so he gave out proclamations of amnesty to the tractable and
+built scaffolds to hang the unsubmissive. But the south was not to be
+so easily subdued. The British met with defeat at King's Mountain, and
+in October, 1780, General Greene was sent to push the southern
+campaign more vigorously.
+
+One result of these southern disasters was to make the importance of
+Virginia increasingly evident as a base for operations in the
+Carolinas. Cornwallis saw this and he determined to reduce that state,
+to cut off the southern army from its base, and thus to control the
+approaches to the heart of the country. Accordingly, in January, 1781,
+he sent Benedict Arnold, who had been made a brigadier general in the
+British army, with a strong force, and with two trusted British
+colonels, to conduct a campaign in that state.
+
+If the British commander in chief had wished to fill the men of the
+Continental army with a fire that would make them unconquerable, this was
+the way to do it, and this was the man against whom they most desired to
+fight. On the other hand, General Washington chose a leader for the
+defense who was so well beloved by his men, and who was himself filled
+with so fiery an enthusiasm for the cause, that this alone would have
+been enough to bring into effect all the strength of those drained and
+exhausted men and to energize them for prodigies of valor. This leader
+was Lafayette. In February, 1781, he was commissioned to go against
+Arnold.
+
+Lafayette was glad to be trusted with a command and overjoyed at the
+prospect of action. But he still believed that the great final blow
+was to be struck at New York and he was most reluctant to be separated
+from Washington with whom he intensely longed to be when the great
+climax came. However, he obeyed orders with perfect alacrity and
+planned for a swift march in order to intercept any efforts on the
+part of Arnold to obtain access to the various storehouses and river
+crossings in Virginia. Leaving under guard his tents, artillery, and
+everything that could be spared, with orders to follow as rapidly as
+possible, he marched his men through heavy rains and over bad roads.
+
+The Virginia campaign, says a French historian, is to be ranked among
+the classic tales of all time; and in this campaign the young
+Lafayette was the most notable leader. It was on the 6th of April,
+1781, that General Washington wrote to Lafayette, giving him full
+instructions, which led him into the midst of active service.
+
+Lafayette's detachment included men from New Jersey, from New
+Hampshire, and from other New England states. Among them were some of
+the men who had been willing to take their lives in their hands and
+follow their young leader on the hazardous expedition into Canada.
+Although the men had no idea at this time what was before them, they
+were now going to follow Lafayette to the glory that he so ardently
+desired.
+
+But in spite of the splendid spirit of the troops, Lafayette found
+that they were in sore need of encouragement. They saw that they were
+not going toward the grand final attack; they were not used to the
+blind obedience exacted from trained European troops; and they did not
+understand this discouraging southward move.
+
+Fearing that the summer would be wasted, Lafayette thought of a device
+to strengthen the tie between himself and his detachment. He wrote it
+down in the order of the day that they were about to start out on an
+expedition that would tax all a soldier's powers, and in which there
+would be abundant dangers and difficulties. The enemy, he said, was
+far superior to them in numbers, thoroughly despised them, and was
+determined to conquer them. He added that no soldier should accompany
+him who was inclined to abandon him; nor was it necessary that any one
+should desert; for any man could, if he desired, have a pass and be
+sent to join his regiment in winter quarters.
+
+This method of approach had more than the desired effect. Lafayette
+soon wrote to Washington: "Our men are in high spirits. Their honor
+was interested, and murmurs as well as desertions are entirely out of
+fashion."
+
+Soon after the advent of Lafayette in the Virginia field, he came into
+contact with Benedict Arnold in a very curious way. The commander of
+the opposing British forces had died, and Arnold took his place. About
+that time Arnold sent a message under a flag of truce to Lafayette.
+When Lafayette learned that the letter which was brought in was from
+the traitor, he returned it unopened, sending a verbal message stating
+that with Benedict Arnold he would hold no communication whatever.
+Later he sent a formal letter to the officer that had brought the
+flag, in which he declined all correspondence with Arnold, but added
+with the utmost courtesy that "in case any other British officer
+should honour him with a letter, he would always be happy to give the
+officers every testimony of esteem."
+
+The subject of the letter from Arnold was an exchange of prisoners, a
+matter that interested him extremely, as he well knew that Lafayette
+could hardly have pleased the American people better than by
+presenting Benedict Arnold to them a prisoner. We know that Arnold's
+mind dwelt on this aspect of his sad situation from the fact that he
+once quizzed a captured American to find out what the Americans would
+do with him if they took him prisoner. The soldier audaciously replied
+that they would "cut off the leg that had been wounded in the
+country's service and hang the rest of him!" Lafayette's action in
+regard to the letter from Arnold was very gratifying to Washington; he
+said that in nothing had Lafayette pleased him more than in refusing
+to hold communication with Benedict Arnold.
+
+Soon after this Arnold was transferred to New York, and Cornwallis
+came forward with reenforcements, declaring that he would now "proceed
+to dislodge Lafayette from Richmond." The struggle between the young
+French officer (not yet twenty-four years old) in his first attempt
+at carrying on an independent campaign, and the veteran British
+commander with years of service behind him, was now taken up with more
+spirit than ever before. It was the crisis of the Revolution. If the
+Continental army could only hold out a little longer, it might be
+possible, by adroit advance and diplomatic retreat, to avoid unequal
+battles until the foe was worn out or until some favorable opportunity
+should arise for a direct attack. Cornwallis, of course, despised his
+exhausted enemy. A letter from him was intercepted and brought into
+the American camp; in the letter he said, "The Boy cannot escape me!"
+Lafayette's face must have been set in very grim lines when he read
+that letter.
+
+Technically, Lafayette had been taking orders from General Greene whose
+command was in the south and included Virginia. But on the 18th of May,
+Lafayette was ordered to take the entire command in Virginia and to send
+all reports directly to General Washington. "The Boy's" letters to
+Colonel Hamilton show that he fully recognized the gravity of affairs,
+the responsibility of his position, and the dangers of his own
+over-enthusiastic spirit. The British command of the adjacent waters, the
+superiority of their cavalry, and the great disproportion in the forces
+of the two armies, gave the enemy such advantages that Lafayette dared
+not venture to engage the British. The British generals thoroughly
+understood what they called Lafayette's "gasconading disposition," and
+they relied upon it to work woe to his plans and to contribute to their
+own glory. His prudence disappointed them as much as it satisfied
+Washington who had said of Lafayette, "This noble soldier combines all
+the military fire of youth with an unusual maturity of judgment."
+Lafayette desired to be worthy of this high praise.
+
+On April 29, Lafayette and his light infantry reached Richmond in time
+to prevent its capture and to protect the supplies that had been
+concentrated there. In the battle at Green Spring his bravery led him
+once more to plunge into the thick of the fight, losing his horse
+(some reports say two horses) which was shot under him or by his side.
+
+In Wayne's official report on that battle he said that "Lafayette was
+frequently requested to keep at a greater distance, but his native
+bravery rendered him deaf to the admonition."
+
+He compelled the admiration of his opponents by his skill in defensive
+maneuvers. The "Boy" obeyed his commander in chief, and he succeeded
+in misleading his foe, for Cornwallis believed that the American force
+was larger than it actually was; he also believed that he could break
+down the loyalty of the inhabitants of Pennsylvania and of Virginia.
+In both these points he was direfully mistaken. But Lafayette had high
+respect for Cornwallis as a general. "His Lordship plays so well," he
+complained, "that no blunder can be hoped from him to recover a bad
+step of ours."
+
+Finally, reenforcements did come to Lafayette. In despair the American
+Congress sent a special messenger express to Paris to bear one more
+urgent appeal for help. Washington wrote, "We are at the end of our
+tether; ... now or never our deliverance must come."
+
+Impetuous young John Laurens was chosen to be this Ambassador
+Extraordinary to France. Laurens was greatly admired and loved by
+Lafayette and he recommended him to the affections of his noble
+relatives in Paris. At the moment Laurens's father was being held a
+prisoner by the British in the Tower of London--a fact that no doubt
+quickened the zeal of the son. At all events, he was successful in his
+mission. The French fleet in the West Indies was ordered to the United
+States and the king himself became surety for several millions of
+livres in addition to what had already been sent to our aid.
+
+The time was coming when Lafayette could begin to move the British
+army before him little by little down the York River toward Yorktown,
+a method of procedure that now became, as the British reports
+described it, the "constant and good policy of the enemy." On the 24th
+of September, 1781, Cornwallis proceeded to occupy Yorktown and to
+strengthen it against attack.
+
+The city of Yorktown is situated near the entrance to Chesapeake Bay.
+At that place two rivers enter the bay, the York and the James, and
+upon a conspicuous bluff on the northern side of the neck of land
+between them stood this small town.
+
+Cornwallis began at once to prepare the place for assault. Around the
+village he built a series of fortifications consisting of seven redoubts
+and six batteries on the land side, and these he connected by
+intrenchments. He placed a line of batteries on the river bank to command
+the channel, and he established outworks to impede the approach of the
+enemy. Lafayette saw all this and rejoiced, for he believed that
+Cornwallis was at last where he most desired to have him--in a place
+where he would be open to attack, and with some hope of success. All the
+country around Yorktown was now familiar to Lafayette. He knew every
+inch of the land, the river, the morass, and the commanding hill. "Should
+a fleet come in at this moment, affairs would take a very happy turn," he
+wrote joyfully to General Washington.
+
+On the 30th of August the French fleet, under the Count de Grasse,
+with twenty-eight ships of the line, appeared in the waters of
+Chesapeake Bay; a few days later the Marquis de Saint Simon, field
+marshal in the French army, debarked a large reenforcement of French
+troops; and on the 4th of September Lafayette moved nearer to Yorktown
+and took a position with the troops he could bring together,--his own
+light infantry, the militia, and the reenforcements at Williamsburg, a
+town in the vicinity of the British position.
+
+Nothing now remained but the arrival of General Washington himself to
+take charge of the whole enterprise, and Lafayette's happiness was
+complete when, on the 14th of September, he resigned his command into
+the hands of his revered General.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE TWO REDOUBTS
+
+
+It is September, 1781. The "Boy" has not been caught. He is encamped
+at Williamsburg, and looks toward his powerful enemy who is surrounded
+by well-devised intrenchments at Yorktown, twelve miles down the
+river.
+
+The American and French troops, fifteen or sixteen thousand in number,
+arrived and took their places. General Washington was in supreme
+command. America had never before seen such an army. The Americans had
+done their utmost. That part of the French army that had come down
+from Connecticut with Rochambeau had astonished the people of
+Philadelphia as they marched through the city by the brilliancy of
+their rose-and-violet-faced uniforms, and by the display of their
+graceful and accurate military movements. Now they were to have an
+opportunity to show whether their warlike spirit was expressed chiefly
+in ruffles and tinsel trimmings, or whether they could win fame by
+more solid qualities.
+
+On the 29th of September the combined American and French armies moved
+southward to a point about four miles from the town. There they
+divided into two columns and the Americans defiled to the right, the
+French to the left. They then proceeded to arrange themselves around
+the town in an irregular semicircle that extended from the river bank
+at the west to the shore on the southeast, a distance of about two
+miles. Toward the southern side were ranged the various American
+regiments under Baron Steuben and General Wayne; and next to these
+stood what was called the Light Infantry corps under Lafayette. He had
+ventured to suggest to General Washington that he wished his division
+might be composed of the troops that had been with him through the
+fatigues and dangers of the Virginia campaign; this, he said, would be
+the greatest reward he could have for the services he might have
+rendered, as he had now the strongest attachment for those troops.
+Still another division stood at the extreme right. This was under the
+command of General Lincoln, who had been forced, through no fault of
+his own, to surrender to the British at Charleston.
+
+The approaches to Yorktown were easy; there were means of shelter
+everywhere, and the American army at once began preparations for the
+siege.
+
+At last the men finished the construction of two parallels. They were
+now within three hundred yards of the British defenses. General
+Washington then placed his siege guns in position. It was the first
+week in October, 1781. On the sixth the siege began.
+
+Every point in this dramatic history has been made the subject of
+story or poem, and naturally some legendary quality would after a time
+irradiate the incidents. Thus some writers affirm that General
+Washington gave the order for the first shot, and some say that it was
+Lafayette. The story is this. Before signing the order, General
+Washington turned to Thomas Nelson who was both governor of Virginia
+and a general in the army, and inquired,
+
+"At what object shall this gun be fired?"
+
+Pointing to his own dwelling where the roof appeared above the trees of
+Yorktown, and where it was understood Cornwallis had his headquarters,
+General Nelson answered,
+
+"There is my house; aim at that!"
+
+The story is that Washington turned to the gunner and said,
+
+"For every shot you cause to hit that house, I will give you five
+guineas."
+
+From the 6th to the 10th of October, the fire from the allied
+American and French army increased daily in vigor. On the 11th the
+second parallel was completed and entered, and the besieging line was
+thus tightened and strengthened. Within their intrenchments the
+British were watching for reenforcements that were fated never to
+come.
+
+On the 14th of October it was found that the British held two redoubts
+whose guns were inconveniently active, and the Americans believed they
+must be silenced. The redoubts had been built on two small hills on
+the American right, in a difficult region where rocky cuts alternated
+with swampy depressions. These two hills were called "Number Nine" and
+"Number Ten"; "Number Ten" was also called "Rock Redoubt." These
+redoubts were about three hundred yards in front of the British
+garrison, and Washington decided after consultation that they were of
+sufficient importance to take by storm.
+
+Accordingly the order was given. The reduction of Redoubt Number Nine
+was intrusted to a group of French grenadiers and chasseurs. Rock
+Redoubt stood nearest the river; this was assigned to Lafayette with
+his American regiments.
+
+Important among the men under General Lafayette's command was
+Lieutenant Colonel de Gimat, the French aid who had always been so
+faithful a follower of Lafayette; he commanded a body of men from
+Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Then there was Lieutenant Colonel
+Alexander Hamilton, the young American to whom Lafayette was
+personally so warmly attached, who afterwards was to become one of the
+most distinguished servants of the new nation, and who was to meet so
+strange and sad an end after his great work was done.
+
+When Hamilton heard a rumor that General Washington was intending to
+give to a certain Colonel Barber the opportunity to lead the attack,
+his spirit was immediately aroused. Without a moment's delay he
+hastened to headquarters and warmly urged his right to the honorable
+and dangerous task. He gained his point and returned in a state of
+exuberant satisfaction, exclaiming to his major, "We have it! We have
+it!" So Lafayette assigned Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Hamilton to
+lead the advance corps, to be assisted by Colonel de Gimat. In all
+there were four hundred men under Lafayette for this storming
+adventure.
+
+It was eight o'clock on the evening of October 14. The storming of the
+two redoubts had been carefully planned even down to the least
+details; but so energetic was the work of the men, so dashing was
+their valor, that when the time really came, the attack lasted but a
+few minutes.
+
+Lafayette's redoubt was taken in a mere flash of time--in less than
+ten minutes, some close observers said; others made it eight minutes.
+The six shells, the signal agreed upon, were fired. The men started
+the march. Rock Redoubt loomed before them in the thick dusk of
+twilight. They advanced in good order with their bayonets fixed and in
+utter silence, as they had been commanded. But when the first volley
+of musketry came down from the top of the redoubt, they broke their
+silence and huzzaed with all their power. Then they rushed forward,
+charging with their bayonets as they ran, and in almost no time they
+were within the redoubt, with the defending officer and forty-five men
+their prisoners. Not a shot had been fired; and so swift was the
+action that few of the Americans were lost.
+
+The not ungenerous rivalry between the groups of men who took the two
+redoubts is one of the most picturesque incidents of the American
+Revolution. If it had not been for the fact that the French detachment
+had paused to have the abatis cut through in regular order, they would
+probably have been in their redoubt before the Americans under
+Lafayette were in theirs; for when they were once on the height, they
+occupied but six minutes in making themselves masters of their redoubt
+and in manning it again for action.
+
+One move follows another quickly at such a time, and when Lafayette
+had entered his redoubt, he looked over the parapet and saw that the
+men on the other height were still struggling for the possession of
+theirs. It happened that a certain General Viomesnil had expressed a
+doubt as to the efficiency of the American troops, therefore Lafayette
+welcomed this opportunity to show their valor. He instantly sent an
+aid to announce to General Viomesnil, with a flourish of compliments,
+that the American troops were in possession of their redoubt and to
+say that if M. le Baron de Viomesnil desired any help, the Marquis de
+Lafayette would have great pleasure in assisting him! The Major sent
+word,
+
+"Tell the Marquis that I am not in mine, but that I will be in five
+minutes."
+
+This promise was made good by the brave and energetic French troops.
+Perhaps never before had the space of two minutes been of so much
+importance in the honor of two nations.
+
+General Washington who, in his eagerness to see this important action,
+had ridden near,--too near to please his officers and surgeons,--had
+closely watched the storming of the redoubts. When they were taken and
+the guns had been instantly whirled about to face the enemy, he turned
+to Generals Knox and Lincoln who stood near and said with emphasis,
+
+"The work is done, and well done."
+
+Then he mounted his horse and rode back to headquarters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE SURRENDER OF YORKTOWN
+
+
+At the siege of Yorktown much of the gallantry and glory of war was to
+be seen; but there was another side as well. The dwelling houses in
+ruin, the sufferings of the wounded men, the surgical operations, the
+amputations, the groans and sighs and homesickness, the dying gasps,
+the bodies of slain horses lying in the way--these also are war.
+
+In Yorktown itself many houses were in flames. A sortie had been
+attempted and had failed. British reenforcements had not come.
+Supplies were giving out. The outlook seemed hopeless. The men fought
+without spirit. An attempt was made to escape by sea. It also failed.
+A violent storm drove the boats back to shore. The idea of surrender
+was entertained.
+
+Consequently, on the 17th of October, General Cornwallis sent a note
+to General Washington asking for a cessation of hostilities for
+twenty-four hours, to settle terms for the surrender of Yorktown.
+Washington allowed two hours instead of twenty-four. Why waste any
+more time?
+
+Interviews were immediately held, and a treaty of capitulation was
+framed.
+
+When it was known that the British had yielded, a wave of the wildest
+joy spread through the American and French camps--and through the
+whole country as well. Messengers rode at top speed to Philadelphia to
+carry the good news. Congress was sitting there at the time. The rider
+came in at midnight. At one o'clock the watchers called "All's well,"
+as usual, but added,
+
+"_Cornwallis is taken!_"
+
+Windows were opened and heads thrust out. The streets soon filled with
+rejoicing people. What Lafayette called "a good noisy feu de joie"
+followed.
+
+The third article in the document of capitulation stated that the
+British troops should be required to march out to the place appointed
+in front of the posts, at two o'clock precisely, with shouldered arms,
+colors cased, and drums beating a British or a German march. They were
+then to ground their arms and return to their encampments. The same
+afternoon the works at Gloucester on the opposite side of the river
+were to be given up, the infantry to file out as prescribed for the
+garrison at York, and the cavalry to go forth with their swords drawn
+and their trumpets sounding.
+
+Over all this there had been a sharp discussion. The British wished to
+receive the "honors of war," that is, to go out with colors flying and
+drums beating; and the courteous Washington was inclined to grant this
+request. But Lafayette remembered the requirements the British had
+made at the defeat at Charleston. They had compelled the men to march
+out with colors cased, and had forbidden them to play a British or a
+Hessian air; and he thought that in fair retaliation the British army
+should now give up their arms in the manner required by them on that
+occasion. He suggested, however, one original variation,--that they
+should be not forbidden but _required_ to march to a British or a
+German air. Colonel Laurens was in accord with this. He had served at
+Charleston under General Lincoln, and he was only too glad to remind
+the British commissioners that it had been so arranged and required of
+the American troops after that defeat.
+
+"The article remains or I cease to be a commissioner," the young man
+said firmly. The high-spirited Laurens could but remember that at that
+very moment his own father was still imprisoned in the Tower of
+London.
+
+The condition remained; and at noon on the 19th of October the
+capitulation was signed. At one o'clock possession was taken of the
+enemies' works, and at two the garrison marched out.
+
+A field about a mile and a half south of Yorktown was chosen for the
+ceremony. The scene was brilliant and spectacular. All the American
+soldiers were drawn up in a line on one side of the road and the
+French stood opposite with General Rochambeau, their commander in
+chief, leading their line. General Washington, mounted on his horse
+and attended by his aids, was at the head. Washington was ardently
+admired by all the French officers and they must have envied him his
+magnificent appearance in this fortunate hour. That fearless and
+austere commander, who had shared the sufferings and privations of his
+men in the dark night of Valley Forge, now rejoiced with them in the
+hour of accomplishment.
+
+The French made a splendid appearance with their uniforms of bright
+colors and contrasting trimmings. Nearly all had the conventional
+three-cornered Revolutionary cap of blue; and the trousers were
+prevailingly of a lemon or canary yellow. Glittering orders were
+flashing on many uniforms, their banners were embroidered with golden
+lilies; each noble had his servants arrayed in silver-laced livery,
+and the French bands of many fifes, horns, and cymbals, played such
+music as was never heard before.
+
+The American soldiers, who had inherited no traditions of either the
+glory or the disasters of warfare, could not compare with the
+foreigners in their full-dress display. But in every heart among them
+there was a feeling that richly compensated for the lack of feathers
+and facings. Whether shopkeeper or farmer or mighty hunter from the
+interior who stood in that line, the tide of united nationality ran
+higher in his heart than ever before. And every last man among them
+was one degree happier by having the dashing young French Major
+General, their beloved "Marquis," on the American side of the
+procession instead of in the foreign line. The "Boy" that Cornwallis
+was so certain he could catch was splendid that day in the perfection
+of military form. He sat, as always, very perfectly on his horse and
+he had the grace to be proud of the company in which he stood. As to
+his own regiment of Light Infantry, he had always been fond of
+decorating them with finery. They appeared now in dark leather leggins
+and white trousers; their blue coats had white facings and white
+cuffs; and a blue feather stood up in front of the cap and waved over
+the crown. This was the regulation uniform for them, but perhaps,
+having just gone through the severities of their Virginia campaign,
+they were not able to "live up" to their fine clothes. However,
+nothing mattered on that great day.
+
+A vast concourse of American spectators was present to witness the
+surrender, but their desire to see Lord Cornwallis was not gratified. He
+pleaded indisposition and appointed General O'Hara in his place. As this
+general approached the group of commanding officers, the bands added
+their music. By the stipulation, they had been commanded to play an
+English or a Hessian march, but they were too proud to select one of
+their dignified national airs. Instead, they gave the tune of an English
+folk song of hoary age, known from time immemorial as "Derry Down," but
+now called "The World Turned Upside Down," a title the British bandmaster
+no doubt considered appropriate to the circumstances.
+
+But the dignity of the occasion required that they should now observe
+the proprieties, for there was a wonderful pageant to be viewed, and
+all felt the great import of the hour.
+
+The conquered army advanced between the two long lines of French and
+American soldiers. General O'Hara led the procession, riding slowly and
+proudly. As he approached General Washington, he removed his hat and
+apologized for the absence of General Cornwallis. General Washington
+received the apology and indicated that he had appointed General Lincoln,
+as the conquered commander of Charleston, to do the honors of the day and
+to receive the arms of the conquered. The moment was historic.
+
+In one of the halls at Yale University stands a celebrated picture,
+painted by Trumbull, which gives a vivid impression of the brilliancy
+and importance of the occasion. In this picture General Washington, in
+an attitude of great dignity, is placed in the center of the scene.
+Near him stands General Lincoln who is being richly rewarded for his
+bitter defeat at Charleston. His hand is held out to receive the sword
+which the representative of General Cornwallis is passing to him.
+
+At the left of the picture are seen the French officers. Rochambeau is
+at the back and a little separated from the rest, and the others in
+the line are the counts, marquises, and barons who were officers in
+the French army.
+
+General Lafayette, the American, was on the American side, not far
+from his beloved General Washington. The one nearest to the commander
+in chief is General (or Governor) Thomas Nelson, the one who had
+suggested that his own house roof be aimed at in the beginning of the
+siege; the next is Lafayette; then Baron Steuben; the others are
+representative commanders from various states.
+
+The ceremony that followed this climax was most impressive. General
+Lincoln received the sword of Cornwallis, and at once handed it back
+to General O'Hara. The several regiments came forward to deliver their
+colors. Twenty-eight British captains, each bearing a flag folded in a
+case, were drawn up in a line opposite the twenty-eight American
+sergeants who were stationed to receive the flags. Ensign Wilson, then
+but eighteen years old, the youngest commissioned officer in the
+American army, was chosen to conduct this ceremony and to hand the
+colors on to the American sergeants. Lafayette looked down from his
+place in the line of mounted American officers and felt that his most
+ardent hopes were now fulfilled, and that his motto, "Cur non," had
+brought him only the best of fortune.
+
+The day after the ceremony of surrender was the Sabbath, and General
+Washington ordered that divine service should be held in all the
+regiments and that Thanksgiving should be the theme. The next day he
+gave a dinner to which the general officers of the three armies were
+invited. Lafayette could not restrain his admiration for Cornwallis
+for his gallant and appropriate conduct upon all these rather
+embarrassing occasions.
+
+ [Illustration: _Photograph from Wm. H. Rau, Philadelphia._
+ THE SURRENDER OF CORNWALLIS.
+ From the painting by Colonel John Trumbull, the soldier-artist
+ of the Revolution.]
+
+If, however, he had possessed the gift of prophecy, he might have
+looked forward but one short century to the centennial of Yorktown,
+when the flags of the United States and of Great Britain would be run
+up together on the site of this historic surrender. Then he would have
+seen British and American officers stand together with bared heads and
+in brotherly friendliness, while salutes were fired and cheers rent
+the air.
+
+Looking still further, he would have seen the day when the people of
+France would unite with their one-time foe in various endeavors both
+peaceful and warlike. A strange planet is this, for the shifting of
+national loyalties and the rending and intertwining of bonds of union!
+If history could make the human race amenable to receiving any
+instruction whatever, we should learn that war never yet decided any
+problem that could not have been better settled in some other way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+LIONIZED BY TWO WORLDS
+
+
+Three days after the surrender, the 22d of October, Lafayette was on
+board the _Ville de Paris_ in Chesapeake Bay. It was believed that the
+surrender of Cornwallis would be practically conclusive as to the
+matter at issue between England and the United States. Lafayette
+therefore felt a sweep of thoughts toward home. Congress gave him
+leave of absence. The _Alliance_ was again placed at his disposal and
+awaited him in Boston harbor.
+
+An adoring France received him on his arrival. He had been the hero of
+the New World; he now became the hero of the Old. The king of France gave
+him audience; when he arrived the queen sent her carriage to bring
+Adrienne, who at the moment happened to be at some royal fete, as swiftly
+as possible to the Noailles mansion. Balls were given in his honor. He
+was presented with laurel at the opera. The king made him a field
+marshal, his commission to date from the day of Cornwallis's surrender,
+and he was invited by Richelieu to a dinner where all the field marshals
+of France were present, and where the health of Washington was drunk with
+words so full of reverent admiration that they did Lafayette's heart
+good.
+
+About this time a traveled American gentleman, Ledyard by name, was
+staying in Paris and commented on the popularity of the returned
+American hero. He said:
+
+"I took a walk to Paris this morning and saw the Marquis de Lafayette.
+He is a good man, this same Marquis. I esteem him. I even love him,
+and so we all do, except a few, who worship him.... If I find in my
+travels a mountain as much elevated above other mountains as he is
+above ordinary men, I will name it Lafayette."
+
+The meeting of Lafayette with Adrienne cannot be described. He had now
+proved the value of his love of freedom, and she was filled with pride
+in the acknowledgment he received on all sides. The family reunion was
+perfect. He wrote to Washington, "My daughter and your George have
+grown so much that I find I am much older than I thought." He had
+reached the advanced age of twenty-four!
+
+Lafayette was at once concerned with the concluding negotiations for
+peace between England and the United States. To hasten these and to
+carry on further military plans, France united with Spain in a
+projected expedition against the English possessions in the West
+Indies. For this purpose Lafayette, in December, 1782, went to Cadiz
+as chief of staff, where an armament of sixty ships and twenty-four
+thousand men were assembling. But while waiting for the final orders
+to sail, a swift courier brought the news to Cadiz that the treaty of
+peace had, on the 20th of January, 1783, been finally signed at Paris.
+Lafayette wished to be the one to carry this news to America, but he
+was told that his presence at the negotiations at Madrid was necessary
+to their success, and therefore he had to forego the pleasure of being
+the personal messenger of the good news. Instead, he was allowed to
+borrow from the fleet a ship which he sent, as swiftly as possible, to
+the land of his heart. The ship lent him was _Le Triomphe_, well named
+for this message, and this was the first ship to bring the news of the
+Peace to our shores.
+
+His work in Spain being successfully accomplished, he returned to
+Paris by swift posts, which means that he went in a carriage, with
+relays of good horses; and by driving day and night, over the
+mountains and through the valleys, following ancient Roman roads and
+crossing through many historic sites and cities, he covered the wide
+distance between the capital of Spain and that of France.
+
+The war being over, Washington, as every one knows, retired to his
+estate at Mount Vernon, an act incomprehensible to some, but fully
+understood by his "adopted son," Lafayette, who wrote:
+
+"Your return to a private station is called the finishing stroke of an
+unparalleled character. Never did a man exist who stands so honorably
+in the opinion of mankind, and your name if possible will become
+greater to posterity. Everything that is great and everything that is
+good were never hitherto united in one man; never did that man live
+whom the soldier, statesman, patriot, and philosopher could equally
+admire; and never was a revolution brought about which, in all its
+motives, its conduct, its consequences, could so well immortalize its
+glorious chief. I am proud of you, my dear General; your glory makes
+me feel as if it were my own; and while the world is gaping upon you,
+I am pleased to think and to tell that the qualities of your heart do
+render you still more valuable than anything you have done."
+
+From Mount Vernon, where the wearied and peace-loving warrior was
+very glad to be, Washington, in February, 1784, wrote to Lafayette:
+
+"At length, my dear Marquis, I am become a private citizen on the
+banks of the Potomac, and under the shadow of my own vine and
+fig-tree, free from the bustle of the camp, and the busy scenes of
+public life, I am pleasing myself with those tranquil enjoyments of
+which the soldier who is ever in pursuit of fame; the statesman whose
+watchful days and sleepless nights are spent in devising schemes to
+promote the welfare of his own, perhaps the ruin of other countries,
+as if this globe was insufficient for us all; the courtier who is
+always watching the countenance of his prince in hopes of catching a
+gracious smile, can have but little conception."
+
+He then goes on to give a brief history of recent events--the
+evacuation of New York, the American troops entering that city in good
+order, and New York finally freed from the British flag. He regretfully
+declined the pressing invitation of Lafayette to come to Paris, and
+again invited him and Madame de Lafayette to pay a visit at Mount
+Vernon. The correspondents appear to have thought of each other
+frequently, though separated by the wide seas. Later, Lafayette had
+joyous news to impart, for he wrote to Washington:
+
+"I want to tell you that Madame de Lafayette and my three children are
+well, and that all of us in the family join to present their dutiful
+affectionate compliments to Mrs. Washington and yourself. Tell her
+that I hope soon to thank her for a dish of tea at Mount Vernon. Yes,
+my dear General, before the month of June is over, you will see a
+vessel coming up the Potomac and out of that vessel will your friend
+jump, with a panting heart and all the feelings of perfect happiness."
+
+During Lafayette's visit to America in 1784 the people had an
+opportunity to show their gratitude to one who had freely given his
+services to them in their day of need. In New York he was received
+with the greatest enthusiasm by the whole people, including his
+affectionate companions in arms. From here on he listened to the
+ringing of bells and the resounding of huzzas by day and saw lavish
+illuminations in his honor by night. A visit of ten days at Mount
+Vernon gave great pleasure to Washington as well as to Lafayette. In
+Boston his coming was celebrated at the stump of the Liberty Tree that
+the British had cut down during their occupation of the city. Many
+speeches were made during this journey, and Lafayette showed himself
+tactful in adapting his words to the occasion. His tact was prompted
+by a sincere liking for all people, a benevolent feeling toward the
+whole world. This was the foundation of much that was attractive and
+useful in his character.
+
+During this journey Lafayette went as far north as Portsmouth and as
+far south as Yorktown. The various great battlefields of the campaign
+of 1781 each received a visit in the company of Washington and of
+other companions in arms. The different states vied with one another
+in giving his name to their towns and villages--a custom that has
+continued to this day. The state of Virginia placed a bust of
+Lafayette in the capitol at Richmond; another was presented to the
+city of Paris by the minister of the United States, and was received
+with great pomp at the Hotel de Ville, or city hall. Three states,
+Maryland, Connecticut, and Virginia, conferred on him the right of
+citizenship for himself and his children, an enactment that later
+became national; and so Lafayette became an American citizen in legal
+form as well as in spirit. How little did he think that this right
+would become so precious a boon to him and would be so sorely needed!
+
+The bust in the Hotel de Ville was destroyed at the time of the Terror;
+and the day came soon after when nearly all that remained to the "Hero
+of Two Worlds" was a certificate of citizenship in a country to which he
+was not native, while the owner of the certificate, because of his
+principles, was hurried from prison to prison. In 1784 he was riding on
+the high tide of success and popularity, but tragic days were soon to
+come in the life of America's loyal friend.
+
+Lafayette took his farewell of Congress at Trenton, New Jersey, where
+it was then in session. The scene was dignified and affecting. It was
+at the close of this ceremony that Lafayette pronounced that wish--one
+might call it a prayer--which has been so often quoted.
+
+"May this immense Temple of Freedom ever stand a lesson to oppressors,
+an example to the oppressed, and a sanctuary for the rights of
+mankind! And may these happy United States attain that complete
+splendor and prosperity which will illustrate the blessings of their
+government, and in ages to come rejoice the departed souls of their
+founders."
+
+Following his return from America at this time, Lafayette made a long
+tour through Germany and Austria. His purpose was to improve himself,
+he said, by the inspection of famous fields of battle, by conversation
+with the greatest generals, and by the sight of well-trained troops.
+He visited Frederick the Great who, in the eyes of the exquisite
+Frenchman, presented a most untidy appearance in a dirty uniform
+covered over with Spanish snuff. He saw him review thirty-one
+battalions and seventy-five squadrons, thirty thousand men in all, and
+he admired the "perfectly regular machine wound up for forty years" by
+which they clicked off their movements. At the table of Frederick,
+Lafayette ate, at one time, with Cornwallis on one side and the son of
+the king of England on the other; on which occasion the Prussian
+despot indelicately amused himself by plying the young soldier with
+questions about American affairs. One wonders if in all his travels
+Lafayette caught any glimpse on the horizon of a certain grim fortress
+wherein, because of his hatred of despots like Frederick, fate decreed
+that he was to be immured for five long years.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+GATHERING CLOUDS
+
+
+The great storm of the French Revolution was now to appear on the
+horizon, climb to its height, and break in terror over France. During
+these years, from 1784 to 1792, Lafayette was for most of the time in
+Paris where he took part in events of great importance and in such a
+way as to command respect from those who sympathized with his liberal
+ideas and to win detraction from devotees of monarchial systems.
+
+At first, however, no one dreamed what the future held for France.
+Lafayette busied himself in doing what he could to further the affairs
+of the United States, turning his attention to commercial questions
+such as he had never supposed would interest him. Whale-oil, for
+instance, became a favorite subject with him; his services on behalf
+of that American industry were acknowledged by the seagoing people of
+Nantucket who sent him a gigantic, five-hundred-pound cheese, the
+product of scores of farms, as a testimonial of their appreciation.
+
+A cause that interested him intensely was slavery. His views on this
+subject he summed up in 1786 in a letter to John Adams:
+
+"In the cause of my black brethren I feel myself warmly interested, and
+most decidedly side, so far as respects them, against the white part of
+mankind. Whatever be the complexion of the enslaved, it does not, in my
+opinion, alter the complexion of the crime which the enslaver commits, a
+crime much blacker than any African face. It is to me a matter of great
+anxiety and concern, to find that this trade is sometimes carried on
+under the flag of liberty, our dear and noble stripes, to which virtue
+and glory have been constant standard-bearers."
+
+Lafayette not only had a lofty sentiment about the condition of the
+slaves, but he put his theory into practice by buying at great expense
+an estate in Cayenne, or French Guiana, with a large number of slaves
+whom he put under a system of education, with the intention of making
+them free as soon as they were fitted for economic independence.
+Madame de Lafayette interested herself in the management of this
+estate; she provided pastors and teachers to go to Cayenne as
+missionaries and educators.
+
+The experiment was going on well when the Revolution broke over
+France. Then it was doomed. While Lafayette was languishing in the
+dungeon at Olmuetz, one of his great anxieties was for his Cayenne
+charge. He would have been even more unhappy if he had known that when
+the revolutionists took possession of his property, they caused that
+estate to be sold, together with all the slaves, who thus went back
+into slavery--a great inconsistency in those same revolutionists who
+imagined they were working for liberty and enfranchisement!
+
+During this time Lafayette had two great interests: one, a public life
+marked by increasing premonitions of national danger; the other, at
+Chaviniac where his family stayed and where he was instituting all
+sorts of reforms on his own estate and in the village of Chaviniac,
+and working steadily for the welfare of the people who were dependent
+upon him. He founded an annual fair and a weekly market day. He built
+roads at his own expense. In the village he established a resident
+physician whose services the poor could have at any time without cost
+to themselves. He founded a weaving business and a school to teach the
+art. The agricultural advancement of America had interested him, so he
+brought a man from England to teach new methods to his farmers. New
+implements were imported and new breeds of cattle were introduced. In
+every way he brought enlightenment and betterment.
+
+Meantime a spirit was rising that was soon to sweep not only over
+Paris but through all the provinces of France. Lafayette saw this
+storm coming. One day, in 1789, he was walking in the grand gallery of
+the Chateau de Chaviniac with a gentleman of the neighborhood. They
+spoke together of what the emancipation of the peasant would mean to
+the people of the Auvergne region. At that moment a group of peasants
+from his estate came in to offer Lafayette some nosegays and cheeses.
+They presented these gifts on bended knees, in an attitude of deep
+submission and respect.
+
+"There," said the neighbor, "see how little disposed these peasants
+are to receive your boasted emancipation; depend upon it, they think
+very little on the matter."
+
+"Well, well," replied Lafayette, "a few years hence we shall see who
+was right."
+
+They did! The time was not far distant when the peasants of Auvergne,
+as well as the rabble of Paris, went singing:
+
+ Ah! ca ira, ca ira, ca ira!
+ Celui qui s'eleve, on l'abaissera,
+ Et qui s'abaisse, on l'elevera.
+
+Significant events followed, and on every important occasion Lafayette
+bore a part. He was a member of the Assembly of Notables, and he led a
+minority of the nobility who demanded the calling of the States General,
+a representative assembly. He presented his famous composition, the
+Declaration of Rights, modeled on Jefferson's Declaration of Independence.
+He was made by acclamation Colonel General of the new National Guard
+and gave them the white cockade. He represented the people on the great
+day of the oath of loyalty to the new constitution. For a time he was
+riding on the top wave of popularity.
+
+Lafayette believed in freedom for all people and to every man his
+rights. But he thought that France was not yet ready for the form of
+government that was succeeding in America. For France he believed the
+constitutional monarchy to be the best. He thought--and every one now
+thinks--that Louis XVI was a man of good intentions, and he believed
+these good intentions would show that monarch what was for the welfare
+and happiness of the people. Therefore he defended the king and the
+royal family as a part of the form of government that was the best
+for France. The newly adopted constitution appeared to him to be the
+just expression of royal authority.
+
+In his blind optimism Lafayette could not believe but that his ideas
+would in the end have their proper weight. He stood with the nobility,
+resting proudly on their good intentions, and facing a brute force
+newly awakened by the tocsin of liberty. To this unreasoning instinct,
+liberty meant nothing but license. The result of putting this license
+into power meant anarchy.
+
+Now came Lafayette's time of difficulty. He was accused of conniving
+at the attempt of the king and queen to escape. Afterwards the queen
+in her trial testified that Lafayette had known nothing whatever of
+the project. Lafayette was also blamed for the death of Foulon, a
+minister who was hanged, beheaded, and dragged through the streets by
+the mob. The fact was that he did all in his power to control the mob
+that caused Foulon's death. They accused him of firing on the mob.
+That he did, in defense of the life of the king--first standing before
+the cannon to give his life if need be. He was accused of being too
+liberal and of being too aristocratic. He was burned between the two
+fires. The people seemed determined not to understand him. They said
+that if Lafayette truly loved the people it was but another evidence
+that his soul was plebeian--his simplicity of manner and unstudied
+grace of speech were but further proofs thereof. Brutality and
+lawlessness, veiled under the name of patriotism, could hardly do less
+than hate an incorruptible man like Lafayette who was outspoken in his
+beliefs.
+
+A coalition of European powers stood ready to invade France and place
+the monarchy again on a secure basis. Lafayette was at the head of one
+of three armies sent to withstand the forces of the coalition, but his
+own soldiers were secretly in sympathy with the revolutionary frenzy.
+
+The end came when Lafayette defied the Jacobin party, and they in turn
+declared him a traitor and put a price on his head. But even at that
+late day, if there had been in France any number of men who possessed
+Lafayette's calmness, self-control, and generous spirit, the state
+might still have been saved from tumult and degradation. As it was,
+France turned its face away from its best light and hope, and
+Lafayette was, as Carlyle picturesquely said, "hooted forth over the
+borders into Cimmerian night." He put his army into the best order
+possible, and with a company of devoted officers and followers started
+for a neutral country.
+
+Meantime in Paris the feet of the people were at the threshold of the
+Terror.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+LAFAYETTE IN PRISON
+
+
+Lafayette attempted to cross the frontier on his way to America when he
+was intercepted and taken prisoner. This was at Rochefort, on neutral
+territory. The arrest of peaceful citizens on their way through neutral
+territory to a neutral country was treason to all international covenant
+and courtesy; evidently, the phrase "international courtesy" had not
+then been coined; but the act has been abhorred by unprejudiced military
+men the world over.
+
+The party were taken to Namur, thence to Wesel, where some were
+released; later, three remained to be imprisoned in Magdeburg. Lafayette
+is reported to have owned as his highest ambition that his name should
+be a terror to all kings and monarchs. If he made this remark, his wish
+was fulfilled; for at a meeting of a committee of the Coalition it was
+agreed that the "existence of Lafayette was incompatible with the safety
+of the governments of Europe."
+
+Following this decision, in May, 1794, the king of Prussia gave him into
+the keeping of the Emperor of Austria, and the dangerous prisoner,
+together with three of the officers who were with him when arrested,
+Latour-Maubourg, Bureaux-de-Pusy, and Lameth, were promptly carried to
+the strong fortress of Olmuetz, high up in the gloomy Carpathian
+Mountains. Lameth nearly died and therefore was released, but the other
+two remained, not, however, being allowed to see or to communicate with
+their distinguished companion.
+
+Lafayette had no apologies to make for the step he had taken. Indeed,
+he had great hopes that he would escape from his captors. Friends were
+finding means to communicate with him and plots were forming in the
+undercurrents of correspondence.
+
+But on the whole he much preferred to take his liberty than to have it
+granted to him. If indeed liberty were granted, it would be with
+conditions "like those made by a lower class of brigands in the corner
+of a thicket," and the discussion would in all probability result in a
+shutting on him of quadruple doors.
+
+He "much preferred to take his liberty than to have it granted to
+him." Accordingly plans were made. In one letter he calls for a good
+chart, arms, a passport, a wig, some drugs to insure a quiet night's
+sleep to the jailors, with instructions as to the dose to be given,
+and an itinerary for the route, with dangerous places indicated in it.
+They must know the exact time horses were to be ready, and the exact
+house where they were to stand. He was in buoyant spirits.
+
+"Although a sojourn of fourteen months in the prisons of their Majesties
+has not contributed to my health," he wrote, "still I have a strong
+constitution and my early habits of life, added to the recollection of
+my fetters, will enable me to make a very rapid journey."
+
+Finishing one of these letters, he says, "I hear them opening my first
+locks [the outer doors] and must stop writing." Latour-Maubourg adds a
+passage in his own hand. He begs for a piece of sealing wax and emphasizes
+that Lafayette must surely be rescued, whether the others are or not.
+
+The prisoners looked out for those who were helping them to escape;
+these helpers were to be protected from suspicion. To do this they put
+a manikin with a nightcap on in Lafayette's bed, dug a channel under
+the chimney, and left a coat in the passage well smudged with soot.
+
+Why none of these plans worked is not known. Lafayette was carted on
+to Neisse, but the plotting still went on. At last the grim and
+impregnable fortress of Olmuetz received the three prisoners. Here he
+could receive no letters; he could read no paper; he was harshly told
+that he should never again know anything of what was going on in the
+outside world; that he was now a complete nonentity, a being known
+only by a number, and that no person in Europe knew where he was nor
+ever should know until his death.
+
+Lafayette's misery was turned to a still darker hue by the fact that
+he felt the gravest alarm for the welfare of Madame de Lafayette. As
+he was being carted from prison to prison, on his way eastward toward
+that final destination in the mountain fortress, the news that was
+smuggled to him by secret and mysterious bearers was not of a kind to
+bring peace to his mind. He heard of the extremes to which the
+revolutionary frenzy was carrying the Parisian people; he heard that
+the king and queen and various members of their family had been
+proscribed, denounced, and sentenced to death by a committee miscalled
+a "Committee of Public Safety," and that the nobility were being
+ruthlessly sacrificed. Saddest of all this for him was the news that
+his wife, that woman of heroic character, of marvelous spiritual
+charm, and of liberal and philanthropic mind, had been imprisoned and
+was in danger of perishing on the scaffold. This word--and nothing
+more! The darkness of life behind walls seven feet thick was not
+lightened for many a long month by any further news in regard to
+Adrienne. The thoughts of Lafayette in his prison were as sad as can
+be imagined.
+
+As months and years passed on, Lafayette may be forgiven if he
+sometimes thought that he had been wholly forgotten. But it was not
+so. It was not an easy matter to liberate a man whose very existence
+was a menace to every throne. The kings had him completely in their
+power--they wished to keep him out of sight.
+
+It goes without saying that to President Washington the imprisonment
+of his young friend, to whom he was bound by strong and vital bonds of
+gratitude and friendship, was a source of genuine anguish. But what
+could he do? As Lafayette said, America was far away and the politics
+of Europe were tortuous. In them Washington had no part and no
+influence; and he could not go to war for he had no equipment for any
+such exploit.
+
+He did, however, put in train many schemes designed to influence others
+to aid his loyal friend. He used the greatest secrecy; the correspondence
+as it is preserved refers only to "our friend" and to "the one you
+know," so that if the letters were lost, no one could possibly divine
+what was being done. The President sent letters to the representatives of
+the United States in both France and England, commanding that informal
+solicitations for the release of that friend of America should be made,
+and that these were to be followed by formal ones if necessary. He wrote
+to the king of Prussia, urging the release of his dear friend as an act
+of justice as well as a personal favor to himself; and to the Emperor of
+Austria, begging that Lafayette might be allowed to come to America. The
+letter has that thorough goodness and that amplitude of dignity that were
+characteristics of Washington.
+
+ "PHILADELPHIA, 15 May, 1796.
+
+ "TO THE EMPEROR OF GERMANY:
+
+ "It will readily occur to your Majesty that occasions
+ may sometimes exist, on which official considerations
+ would constrain the chief of a nation to be silent and
+ passive, in relation to objects which affect his
+ sensibility, and claim his interposition as a man.
+ Finding myself precisely in this situation at present, I
+ take the liberty of writing this private letter to your
+ Majesty, being persuaded that my motives will also be my
+ apology for it.
+
+ "In common with the people of this country, I retain a
+ strong and cordial sense of the services rendered to
+ them by the Marquis de Lafayette; and my friendship for
+ him has been constant and sincere. It is natural,
+ therefore, that I should sympathize with him and his
+ family in their misfortunes, and endeavor to mitigate
+ the calamities which they experience; among which, his
+ present confinement is not the least distressing.
+
+ "I forbear to enlarge on this delicate subject. Permit
+ me only to submit to your Majesty's consideration
+ whether his long imprisonment and the confiscation of
+ his estates, and the indigence and dispersement of his
+ family, and the painful anxieties incident to all these
+ circumstances, do not form an assemblage of sufferings
+ which recommend him to the mediation of humanity? Allow
+ me, Sir, to be its organ on this occasion; and to
+ entreat that he may be permitted to come to this
+ country, on such conditions and under such restrictions
+ as your Majesty may think fit to prescribe.
+
+ "As it is a maxim with me not to ask what under similar
+ circumstances I would not grant, your Majesty will do me
+ the justice to believe that this request appears to me
+ to correspond with those great principles of magnanimity
+ and wisdom, which form the basis of sound policy and
+ durable glory.
+
+ "May the Almighty and merciful Sovereign of the universe
+ keep your Majesty under his protection and guidance!"
+
+Little by little the place where Lafayette was imprisoned became known
+to a few, and public sentiment was aroused to the point of bringing up
+the matter before the British Parliament. It was a certain General
+Fitzpatrick who, strange to say, had met Lafayette in London before he
+went to America, and again between battles when they were ranged on
+opposite sides of the Revolution, who now brought up the question.
+Twice he made a motion in favor of acting for the release of
+Lafayette. Fitzpatrick was the kind of man who could not bear to
+entertain the idea that there should exist "in any corner of British
+soil, in any English heart, conceptions so narrow as to wish to see
+the illustrious pupil of Washington perishing in a dungeon on account
+of his political principles." General Fitzpatrick's motion was
+seconded by General Tarleton, who had fought Lafayette through the
+length and breadth of Virginia. Pitt and Burke spoke against it.
+
+Lord Grey said that if asked what would be gained by furthering the
+release of Lafayette, he would reply that "we should exculpate
+ourselves from the suspicion of being accomplices in the foulest wrong
+that ever disgraced humanity." The question was put to vote and stood
+forty-six yeas and one hundred and fifty-three nays. Such was the
+composition of the British Parliament at that time.
+
+The next year Fitzpatrick renewed his efforts for Lafayette and
+proposed another motion. In an eloquent speech which should make his
+name honored for all time, he reviewed the former debate and paid a
+wonderful tribute to the character of Madame de Lafayette. The
+discussion that followed dwelt mainly on the question whether
+Lafayette was to be considered as a subject of the emperor or as a
+prisoner of war. The vote stood, yeas fifty, nays one hundred and
+thirty-two. Evidently the British Parliament had not made any great
+advance in the intervening year.
+
+Meantime secret plans were being made to rescue Lafayette. The
+beautiful Angelica Schuyler Church, daughter of the American general,
+Philip Schuyler, was then in London; her husband, John Barker Church,
+had fought under Lafayette, and was now in the British Parliament.
+Mrs. Church was the sister-in-law of Alexander Hamilton, one of
+Lafayette's dearest friends among his young companions-in-arms, and
+she was in touch with a group of French emigres. In fact, she was the
+center of a little volcano of feeling for the exile.
+
+This secret circle kept up a constant communication with Mr. Pinckney
+and Mr. Jay. Mrs. Church wrote to Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State
+in the United States, and to many others, begging, pleading for help.
+For Lafayette, whom she had known in New York, her heart was
+constantly bleeding.
+
+Proceeding from a mysterious writer who signed his name "Eleutherios,"
+spirited articles soon began to appear in the English newspapers, and
+thus constantly fed a flame of feeling. All sorts of fears for Lafayette
+were entertained. "I see him in a dungeon," wrote one; "I see him in
+Siberia; I see him poisoned; I see him during what remains of his life
+torn by the uncertainty of the fate of all that he loves."
+
+Soon after this the name of a Hanoverian doctor begins to appear in
+the documents preserved. This Dr. Bollman had carried one exploit
+through successfully, bringing out of Paris during the Terror a
+certain French emigre and conveying him to London in safety. Bollman
+was to be engaged by the London group to start out and see what could
+be done for Lafayette. This scheme resulted in a great adventure in
+which an American youth figured nobly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+AN ATTEMPTED RESCUE
+
+
+The hope that potentates and governments might take up the cause of
+Lafayette began to fail and other plans were made. Chivalric dreams of
+going to seek the place where he was confined and effect what seemed the
+impossible--a personal rescue--began to haunt the minds of daring youths.
+A letter is on record from a young man who wrote to Washington to ask if
+he might not have permission to go and seek Lafayette, and, if possible,
+conduct him and his family to America. Washington told him that all was
+being done that could be done, and that personal attempts would only
+result in failure. But there was another enterprising soul who did not
+wait for permission--he acted upon his own initiative. The story of that
+splendid young American must now be told.
+
+Francis Kinloch Huger was the first child that Lafayette saw after he
+landed in America. It will be remembered that the little company of
+adventurers first touched shore on the country estate of Major
+Benjamin Huger, at Prospect Hill, near Charleston, South Carolina.
+Here Lafayette was received hospitably and sent on in his host's
+carriage to Charleston.
+
+The child Francis was then five years old and was the young representative
+of a remarkable family of Huguenot extraction. The first Daniel Huger
+came from Loudon, France, soon after the Edict of Nantes, and his
+descendants to-day number six thousand; among them are found a large
+number of distinguished names. Five Huger brothers held important
+positions in Revolutionary times. Three served in the war; Brigadier
+General Isaac Huger was second in command to General Greene at Guilford
+Court House; Lieutenant Colonel Frank Huger was promoted from Moultrie's
+Regiment to be Quartermaster General of the Southern Army of the
+Revolution; and Major Benjamin Huger, Lafayette's host and the father of
+the child Francis, was killed in 1780 before the lines at Charleston. Of
+the other two brothers in this remarkable family group, Daniel was one of
+Governor Rutledge's Privy Council and later a member of Congress, and
+John was on the Council of Safety and Secretary of State.
+
+The boy Francis thus came from a stock of stalwart men. He was eight
+years old when his father was killed at Charleston. The pity of it was
+driven into his young soul when the ignominy of that defeat was
+accomplished.
+
+Immediately after that event young Huger was sent to England to
+acquire a medical education. Later he, as the custom was, went on his
+travels and to hear lectures at great seats of learning. But the
+passion for chivalric action that was inspiring youth everywhere he
+could not quell. He dreamed of finding Lafayette.
+
+Meantime, American, English, and French friends of the illustrious
+prisoner were busy in London, and they had commissioned the "Hanoverian
+doctor," known as Dr. Bollman, to make a search for him. This man made
+careful preparations. He traveled in a leisurely way through Germany in
+the guise of a wealthy and philanthropic physician. He let it be known
+that he was a sort of follower of Cagliostro, a notorious Italian whose
+ideas were popular at the time. He treated the poor free of charge and
+he showed a special interest in prisoners.
+
+At last he reached Olmuetz, a journey at that time something like going
+from New York to Nome. He made acquaintance with the attending physician
+of the garrison and was invited to dinner. He in return asked the
+surgeon to dine with him at his inn. The dinner was sumptuous. M. de
+Colombe, who tells this part of the story, says that the wine was
+especially excellent. No one could distrust a simple-hearted doctor, an
+unselfish student of mankind, and especially one who ordered such
+delicious wine! In time, conversation turned upon prisoners of note. It
+was rumored, hinted the artful and ingenious doctor, that there was such
+an one at Olmuetz. Could this be true? It was even so, the unsuspecting
+surgeon admitted; the great Lafayette was under his close care. The
+doctor inquired for Lafayette's health and was told that it was fairly
+good. Dr. Bollman ventured to send his compliments to the prisoner with
+a message that he had lately left Lafayette's friends in England. The
+unsuspecting surgeon carried the innocent message.
+
+On another occasion he brought word that Lafayette would like to know
+who those friends were. The doctor tried to speak the names, but could
+not pronounce them so that the Austrian could understand them. He felt
+in his pocket for a bit of paper (which he had carefully placed there
+beforehand) and on it wrote the names which he sent to Lafayette.
+These words also were written on the paper:
+
+"If you read this with as much care as did your friend at Magdeburg,
+you will receive equal satisfaction."
+
+The reference was to a prisoner at Magdeburg who received a book which
+contained messages written on the flyleaves in lemon juice. He held
+the book to the fire and by doing this the written words came out in
+brown lines and could be read. Lafayette took the hint, and discovered
+the message written with this invisible ink on the bit of paper. After
+this Bollman was allowed to lend Lafayette a book to read. It came
+back with lemon-juice messages on its margins. Lafayette wrote that he
+was sometimes allowed to drive, and as he was unknown to Bollman, he
+suggested a signal by which he could be recognized. He said that his
+lieutenant was a sheepish dolt, and that his corporal was covetous,
+treacherous, and cowardly. He added that the rides were allowed for
+the sake of his health. It appears that the government did not wish to
+arouse the frenzy of indignation that would follow if Lafayette were
+allowed to die in prison, so he was occasionally taken out to ride a
+league or even two from the fortress gate. If a rescuer and a trusty
+helper should appear, they could surely effect the escape. Lafayette
+would agree to frighten the cowardly little corporal himself; they
+need not provide a sword for him, for he would take the corporal's. An
+extra horse, one or two horses along the road--it could easily be
+done. It was a bold plan, but the bolder the plan, the more unexpected
+it was, and the better chance of success. Every day he would watch for
+them along the road.
+
+After securing this definite information, the doctor retired to Vienna
+to make further plans.
+
+This account may be in some respects the later elaboration of a story
+many times retold. But it sounds probable. At any rate, in some such
+way Dr. Bollman gained communication with Lafayette's cell, and
+brought the welcome news that friends were working for him. Then they
+projected a plan.
+
+The story is again taken up in a coffeehouse in Vienna where Bollman
+is accustomed to go. Lafayette has suggested an assistant, and Bollman
+realizes that he can do nothing without one. Therefore he is looking
+about to find one who shall have spirit and fitness for the work. We
+see him now at the supper table, eagerly conversing with a certain
+young American, like himself a medical student on his travels.
+Curiously enough, it is Francis Kinloch Huger, now twenty-one years
+old. They talk of America. Bollman, with elaborate inadvertence,
+touches on the personality of Lafayette. The young man relates his
+childish memory of the arrival of that enthusiastic youth when he
+first came ashore at his father's South Carolina country place.
+Bollman tests Huger in various ways and makes up his mind that this is
+the best possible person to help him. He broaches the subject. Young
+Huger is only too ready--this very enterprise has been his dearest
+thought and his dream. The danger does not daunt him. "He did not let
+the grass grow under his feet," said his daughter years later, "but
+accepted at once."
+
+It was not, however, purely romantic sentiment with him; he did not
+accede on the impulse of a moment. "I felt it to be my duty to give him
+all the aid in my power," said Colonel Huger to Josiah Quincy many years
+later. And though he may not have been conscious of it at the time,
+there was still another reason, for he admitted, long afterwards, "I
+simply considered myself the representative of the young men of America
+and acted accordingly."
+
+The story may here be taken up almost in the words of Colonel Huger's
+daughter who wrote it down exactly as her father related it.
+
+ [Illustration: FRANCIS KINLOCH HUGER.
+ This bas-relief, by the sculptor R. Tait McKenzie, shows the
+ brave young American who, with Dr. Bollman, attempted to
+ rescue Lafayette from the great fortress of Olmuetz.]
+
+In October, 1794, they set out from Vienna in a light traveling carriage
+and with two riding horses, one of them being strong enough to carry two
+persons if necessary. They intended to appear in the characters of a
+young Englishman and his traveling tutor, and they were provided with
+passes for the long journey. With assumed carelessness they proceeded
+toward Olmuetz. The gentlemen were generally riding, while their servants
+and the baggage were in the carriage. They went to the same inn where
+Dr. Bollman had stayed on his former visit. Here they remained two days,
+while they secretly sent a note to Lafayette and received his answer.
+They paid their bill at the inn, sent their carriage on ahead to a
+village called Hoff, and directed their servants to await them there.
+
+Now Bollman and Huger are riding leisurely along the level plain that
+surrounds the fortress. The huge, dark prison looms in the distance.
+Every portion of the wide plain is visible to the sentinels at the
+gates, and within reach of the cannon on the walls. It is market day
+and many persons are passing back and forth. The two foreign travelers
+look in every direction for the carriage which may bring Lafayette.
+Both are eager for his coming.
+
+At last they notice a small phaeton being driven slowly along. In the
+carriage they see a prisoner in a blue greatcoat with an officer
+beside him and an armed soldier riding behind. They spur on, and, as
+they pass, the prisoner gives the sign agreed upon. He raises his hat
+and wipes his forehead. The feelings excited by the assurance that
+this was indeed Lafayette, Huger never to his dying day forgot. The
+riders look as indifferent as possible, bow slightly, and pass on.
+
+The phaeton stops at the side of the road and Lafayette alights. He
+draws the officer toward a footpath that runs along the highroad at
+that point, and appears to be leaning on the officer as if scarcely
+able to walk.
+
+"This must be the time," cries Bollman.
+
+"He signs to us," says Huger in great excitement.
+
+The two young men put spurs to their horses and dash up together. As
+they approach, Lafayette seizes the officer's sword. A struggle
+follows. Bollman leaps from his horse and throws the bridle to Huger.
+But the flash of the drawn sword has frightened the horse; he dashes
+aside and gallops away. Huger dismounts, passes his arm through his
+bridle, and he and Bollman seize the soldier and tear his hands from
+Lafayette's throat. The soldier runs toward the town, shouting and
+waving his cap to call the attention of the sentinels.
+
+What was to be done? They had now but one horse. The alarm had been
+given. Not a minute could be lost.
+
+Huger gave his horse to Lafayette and told him hurriedly to go to
+Hoff, the rendezvous agreed upon. Lafayette mounted the horse and
+started out. But he could not bear to leave his two rescuers in such a
+plight, so he came back to ask if he could not do something for them.
+
+"No, no!" they cried. "Go to Hoff! Go to Hoff!" they repeated. "We
+will follow."
+
+Now if they had said this in French, if they had said "Allez a Hoff,"
+Lafayette would have understood the direction. But not knowing the
+name of this near-by village, he misunderstood. He thought the English
+words meant only "Go off!" A fatal misunderstanding!
+
+Huger and Bollman soon released their officer and both mounted the
+remaining horse. He was not used to "carrying double." The insulted
+creature set his feet in a ditch and threw them both. Bollman was
+stunned. Huger lifted him up and then started off to recover the
+horse. On the way he was thinking what course he should take in this
+critical and dangerous juncture.
+
+When he came back he had decided. He said that Bollman should take the
+horse and follow Lafayette, for Bollman knew German and could give
+more help than he could. Alarm guns were beginning to be fired from
+the battlements, and trains of soldiers were seen issuing from the
+gates; but these portentous signs did not influence him. Bollman was
+persuaded; he mounted, put spurs to his horse, and was soon out of
+sight. Young America stood alone on this wide, dangerous plain; the
+shadow of that ominous fortress fell gloomily on its border. The
+guards came down. Between two rows of fixed bayonets Huger passed into
+the fortress.
+
+The bold plan was doomed to complete failure! Lafayette rode twenty
+miles; but the blood on his greatcoat awakened suspicion; he was
+arrested and carried back to Olmuetz where a heavier and gloomier
+imprisonment awaited him.
+
+The same fate awaited Bollman; but Lafayette's despair was the deeper
+because he feared that his brave rescuers had been executed for their
+gallant attempt in his behalf.
+
+The imprisonment accorded to the intrepid young American was as vile
+and cruel as any devised in the Dark Ages. He was put in a cell almost
+underground, with but one small slit near the top to let in a little
+light. A low bench and some straw formed the furnishings, while two
+chains linked him at ankle and wrist to the ceiling. To make things a
+trifle more cheerful for him, they showed him a prisoner in a cell
+which was only a walled hole in the ground! The prisoner had been
+there for many years and his name and residence were now utterly
+forgotten. The jailers also exhibited their expert method of swift
+decapitation and acted out the method with a large two-bladed sword.
+Daily questionings of a cruel kind were used in order to force him to
+confess the truth--or rather what they wished to believe was the
+truth--that he had been the agent of a widespread plot. He stated that
+it was no man's plot but his own. They threatened torture, but he did
+not flinch or change his statement.
+
+At last the officers were convinced that there had been no concerted
+plot. They then softened the rigors of Huger's imprisonment, gave him
+a cell with a window where a star could sometimes be seen, and
+lengthened his chains so that he could take as many as three whole
+steps. After a time he managed to get into communication with Bollman
+who was in the room above. With a knotted handkerchief Bollman lowered
+a little ink in a walnut shell from his window, together with a scrap
+of dingy paper. Huger then wrote a letter of a few lines only to
+General Thomas Pinckney, then American Minister at London. His
+entreaty was to let his mother know that he was still alive; also to
+let Lafayette's friends know that he would certainly have escaped but
+that he had been recognized as an Olmuetz prisoner in a small town
+where he changed his horse; and that he had already mounted a fresh
+one when stopped. Huger's letter ended with the words, "Don't forget
+us. F.K.H. Olmuetz, Jan. 5th, 1795." By bribery and cajolery they
+started this letter off.
+
+Suffice it to say at present that, through the intervention of General
+Pinckney, the two young men were finally released and made their way
+swiftly out of the country. It was well that they hurried, for the
+emperor decided they had been released too soon and sent an edict for
+their rearrest. They had, however, by that time crossed the line and
+were out of his domain.
+
+After a short stay in London, Huger started for America. The passengers
+on his ship discussed the story of Lafayette's attempted rescue through
+the entire six weeks of the voyage, and they never dreamed that their
+quiet young fellow-passenger was one of the rescuers until he received
+an ovation on landing. This is related by the only member of the Huger
+family living to-day (1916) who heard the story of the attempted rescue
+from the lips of "Colonel Frank" himself, as the family affectionately
+call him. She says that Colonel Frank was the most silent of men. He was
+the kind that _do_ more than they _talk_.
+
+When Huger reached Philadelphia, he called at once on President
+Washington and told him of the effort he had made. The President said
+that he had followed the whole course of events with the greatest
+solicitude and had wished that it might have met with the success it
+deserved.
+
+In time Colonel Huger married the second daughter of General Thomas
+Pinckney who had effected his release from Olmuetz and under whom he
+fought in the war of 1812; he had eleven children and made his home on
+a large estate in the highlands of South Carolina. When Congress
+presented Lafayette with an extensive section of land, he asked Huger
+to share it with him. Colonel Huger thanked him for the generous
+offer, but sturdily announced that he himself was able to provide for
+his daughters and that his sons should look out for themselves. His
+faith in his sons was justified, for they made good their father's
+opinion of their ability. Among his children and grandchildren were
+many who not only amassed goodly fortunes but held honored positions
+in public and military affairs.
+
+When Lafayette made his memorable visit to America in 1824, he said
+that the one man in the country whom he most wished to see was the one
+who when a youth had attempted to rescue him from Olmuetz. Colonel
+Huger had a corresponding desire to see Lafayette. On the General's
+arrival he started north at once, reached New York, and sought out the
+lodgings of Lafayette early in the morning, in order that their first
+meeting might be entirely without interruption. No account of that
+meeting has ever been made public, but the rescuer and his champion
+were together most of the time during that patriotic journey. Josiah
+Quincy once had the privilege of driving Colonel Huger in his coach
+through the suburbs of Boston and of calling with him upon many
+distinguished personages. Huger charmed and delighted every one.
+Josiah Quincy said that he had that "charm of a high-bred southerner
+which wrought with such peculiar fascination upon those inheriting
+Puritan blood." Besides his attractive personality, there was the
+romantic association with the attempted rescue. Scott's novels were
+then in the full blossom of popularity; but there was no hero in all
+those brave tales whose adventures appeared more chivalrous and
+thrilling.
+
+To be sure, the effort at rescue had resulted in failure. Lafayette
+remained in prison. But it was known where he was, and, what was
+better, word had been conveyed to him that he was not forgotten. Yet
+the conditions of his imprisonment were now more severe than before,
+and his mind must have suffered intensely from being thrown back upon
+itself after that one hour's prospect of liberty.
+
+On the way from Wesel to Magdeburg Lafayette had had a moment's
+conversation with a stranger who told him something of what was
+happening in Paris, and of the lawlessness and carnage of the Reign of
+Terror. Lafayette saw to what lengths an unregulated mob might go,
+even when originally inspired by a noble passion for liberty. He heard
+of the death of Louis XVI, and called it an assassination. He realized
+that these things were being done in France by the people in whom he
+had so blindly, so persistently, believed. He was deeply disappointed.
+Yet he did not quite lose faith. The cause of the people was still
+sacred to him; they might destroy for him whatever charm there had
+been in what he called the "delicious sensation of the smile of the
+multitude"; but his belief in the ultimate outcome for democratic
+government, as the best form of government for the whole world,
+remained unchanged.
+
+And in the prison at Olmuetz he celebrated our great holiday, the
+Fourth of July, as usual.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A WELCOME RELEASE
+
+
+More than a year had passed after the attempt at rescue when one day
+Lafayette heard the big keys turning in the several locks, one after
+another, that barred his cell, and in a moment his wife and two
+daughters stood before his amazed eyes! Could this be true, or was it
+a vision?
+
+It will be remembered that shortly after Lafayette's arrest he had
+heard that Madame de Lafayette was imprisoned and was in danger of
+perishing on the scaffold. A year later the news was smuggled to him
+that she was still alive. But what had been happening to her and to
+his three children during all these dismal years?
+
+Through the instrumentality of James Monroe, the ambassador to France
+from the United States,--the only foreign power that in the days of
+the French Revolution would send its representative,--Madame de
+Lafayette was liberated from an imprisonment that tried her soul, even
+as Olmuetz had proved and tested the spirit of her husband. Through
+all those tragic months Adrienne showed herself a woman of high and
+unswerving courage.
+
+Now, indeed, was the American citizenship of her husband--and it had
+included his family also--of value to her. Madame de Lafayette's first
+letter to Mr. Monroe shows this. This dignified letter is preserved in
+the manuscript department of the New York Public Library and is here
+printed for the first time:
+
+"Having learned that a minister of the United States has recently
+arrived in France, who has been sent by his government and invested
+with powers representing a people in whose interests I have some
+rights that are dear to my heart, I have felt that such misfortunes as
+I have not already suffered were no longer to be feared for me, that
+the most unjust of captivities was about to be at an end, and that my
+sufferings accompanied by irreproachable conduct towards the
+principles and towards the laws of my country, cause me to have
+confidence in the name of this protecting nation at a moment when the
+voice of justice is once more heard, and when the National Convention
+is undertaking to deliver such patriots as have been unjustly
+imprisoned. I have begun to hope that the wishes of my heart shall be
+fulfilled--that I may be returned to my children. For ten months I
+have been taken away from them. From the very moment of their birth
+they have heard that they have a second country, and they have the
+right to hope that they will be protected by it."
+
+Through the official authority of Mr. Monroe, Madame de Lafayette was
+given money and passports. When Washington first heard of her plight,
+he sent her a reverent letter inclosing a thousand dollars, and he was
+unceasing in his correspondence with representatives in France and
+England for herself as well as for Lafayette. She sent her son, George
+Washington de Lafayette, to his illustrious namesake in America, and
+as "Madame Motier, of Hartford, Connecticut," she, with her two young
+daughters, made her way to Hamburg where, instead of taking ship for
+America, she took carriage across the wide spaces of Germany and
+Austria. Here she gained an audience with the emperor, and bowing at
+his feet asked permission to go to the fortress of Olmuetz and stay
+with her husband until he was set free.
+
+"Your request is granted," he said; "but as for Lafayette--I cannot
+free him; my hands are tied." Exactly what it was that had "tied the
+hands" of the great potentate has never been revealed.
+
+Her petition being granted, Madame de Lafayette continued her journey.
+Two days more and she and her daughters were with her husband.
+
+The day of their meeting was spent in trying to bear the joy of the
+reunion. Not until the daughters were sent to their cell did she tell
+Lafayette of the sad things that had happened. Her mother, her
+grandmother, and her sister had, with many friends and relatives, been
+led to the scaffold. These and many other facts of tragic interest to
+the man so long deprived of any word from outside his prison were
+shared with Lafayette.
+
+It may go without saying that Lafayette's prison days were now far
+easier to bear, except that to see Madame de Lafayette grow more and
+more broken in health as days went on, in their close, unlighted, and
+malodorous cells, must have caused an added sorrow. After a time she
+was obliged to ask the emperor to allow her to go to Vienna for
+medical attendance. He granted the request, but with the proviso that
+she should never return. Then she decided to remain with her husband,
+even at the risk of her life.
+
+Shall the miseries of their prison life be dwelt upon? Their jailers
+were the coarsest of human beings. They surpassed in brutality the
+slave drivers of Constantinople. The food, which the family bought
+for themselves, was coarse and miserably cooked. Tobacco floated in
+the coffee. Lafayette's clothes were in tatters. When his shoes had
+been soled fifteen times and resented the indignity any further, his
+daughter Anastasie took it upon herself to make shoes for him out of
+an old coat.
+
+Lafayette's dingy cell was, however, now brightened by companionship
+and by inspiring conversation. Even work was going on, for Madame de
+Lafayette prepared a life of her mother while she was at Olmuetz. It
+was written with a toothpick and a little lampblack on the margins of
+a copy of Buffon which she succeeded in obtaining. One of the
+daughters amused the family by making pencil sketches; one of the
+burly old turnkey, with his sword, candle, and keys, and his hair in a
+comical queue behind, amused the family very much and was carried with
+them when they left their dismal abode.
+
+Before the desolate prison of Olmuetz fades from our view, let one
+laurel wreath be placed upon the head of young Felix Pontonnier,
+sixteen years old when he became the servant of Lafayette, whom he
+faithfully followed into prison. He was with Lafayette when he was
+arrested and was bidden to look after his master's belongings; so he
+was separated from him for several days. This gave him an excellent
+opportunity to escape, but he refused to take advantage of it. Of his
+own accord he joined Lafayette once more, and during the whole long
+season of his captivity he gave ample proof of his devotion. He
+possessed a rare inventive genius and was constantly on the alert to
+devise means for making the prisoners comfortable and to find out ways
+for carrying on secret correspondence. He invented a special language
+known only to himself and to the prisoners, and also a unique
+gesture-language. He whistled notes like a captive bird; with varied
+modulations he conveyed to the prisoners whatever news he could ferret
+out. Prison life proved to be bad for him, and his health was several
+times endangered. For a fancied offense he was once confined in total
+darkness for three months. But none of his sufferings dashed his gay
+spirits. He was constantly sustained by a buoyant cheer, and his
+wonderful devotion should win him a place among heroes. After the five
+years of captivity were over, Lafayette made Felix the manager of his
+farm at La Grange. He filled this position with success and probity.
+
+It was through the fiat of Napoleon Bonaparte that the removal of
+Lafayette from Olmuetz was made possible. Bonaparte was influenced by a
+long-sighted policy; he desired to win to himself the man of so unique
+a personality. He was also spurred on by various writers and
+diplomats, by representatives of the French Directory, and by
+Brigadier General Henri Jacques Guillaume Clarke, who was for a time
+governor of Vienna and who won the title of "the incorruptible" from
+Napoleon. President Washington's dignified and effective letter to the
+Emperor of Austria is believed to have left its mark; and in a
+thousand ways public opinion had awakened to the ignominy of leaving
+such a man as Lafayette in prison. Lafayette disliked to be indebted
+to anybody but himself for an escape from his dungeon; but he
+willingly admitted that he owed much to his devoted wife whose many
+letters imploring help for her husband were among the causes that
+unlocked the double-barred doors of Olmuetz.
+
+When finally released, Lafayette was taken in a carriage from Olmuetz
+to Dresden, thence by way of Dresden, Leipzig, and Halle to Hamburg,
+where the American consul received him. So wearied was Madame de
+Lafayette that she made the journey with the greatest difficulty, and
+a voyage to America at that time was out of the question. The family,
+therefore, took refuge in an obscure town in Holland, since there was
+no other European country where the monarchy would be safe if it
+conferred the right of residence upon any man who bore the name of
+Lafayette.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+A TRIUMPHAL TOUR
+
+
+For some years events did not shape themselves so that Lafayette could
+return to Paris. That he, in 1799, was considering the possibility of
+a voyage to America is shown by a letter written in that year to his
+"deliverer," Francis Kinloch Huger, which his descendant of the same
+name has kindly allowed to be printed here. It was sent from Vianen in
+Holland, and introduces his fellow-prisoner, M. Bureaux-de-Pusy, who
+was seeking a home in the United States.
+
+ VIANEN, 17th April, 1799.
+ MY DEAR HUGER:
+
+ Here is one of my companions in captivity, Bureaux Pusy,
+ an Olmuetz prisoner, and at these sounds my heart vibrates
+ with the sentiments of love, gratitude, admiration, which
+ forever bind and devote me to you! How I envy the
+ happiness he is going to enjoy! How I long, my dear and
+ noble friend, to fold you in my arms! Pusy will relate to
+ you the circumstances which hitherto have kept me on this
+ side of the Atlantic--even now the illness of my wife,
+ and the necessity of her having been a few weeks in France
+ before I set out, prevent me from embarking with Pusy and
+ his amiable family. But in the course of the summer I
+ shall look over to you and with inexpressible delight I
+ shall be welcomed by my beloved deliverer. No answer from
+ you has yet come to me. We are expecting every day my
+ friend McHenry's nephew--perhaps I may be blessed with a
+ letter from you!
+
+ I need not recommend to you Bureaux Pusy. The conspicuous
+ and honorable part he has acted in the French Revolution,
+ his sufferings during our imprisonment--you but too well
+ know what it is--are sufficient introductions to your
+ great and good heart. He is one of the most accomplished
+ men that can do honour to the country where he is born,
+ and to the country where he wishes to become a citizen. He
+ is my excellent friend. Every service, every mark of
+ affection he can receive from you and your friends, I am
+ happily authorized to depend upon.
+
+ My son is gone to Paris. My wife and my two daughters, who
+ love you as a brother, present you with the sincere,
+ grateful expressions of their friendship. The last word
+ George told me at his setting out was not to forget him in
+ my letter to you. He will accompany me to America.
+
+ Adieu, my dear Huger, I shall to the last moment of my
+ life be wholly
+
+ Yours,
+ LAFAYETTE.
+
+The wish to revisit the land of his adoption was strong, but many
+years were to pass before it could be carried out. He was forty years
+old when he was liberated from Olmuetz, and he was sixty-seven when he
+paid his last visit to our shores.
+
+He little dreamed of the reception he was to find, for the whole
+American people were waiting to greet, with heart and soul, the man who,
+in his youth, had taken so noble a part in their struggle for freedom.
+He reached New York on the 16th of August, 1824. He came with modest
+expectation of some honorable attentions--nothing more. On the _Cadmus_
+he asked a fellow-traveler about the cost of stopping at American hotels
+and of traveling in steamboats and by stage; of this his secretary, M.
+Levasseur, made exact note. He came to visit the interesting scenes of
+his youth and to enjoy a reunion with a few surviving friends and
+compatriots. Instead, he found a whole country arising with one vast
+impulse to do him honor. It was not mere formality; it was a burst of
+whole-souled welcome from an entire nation. So astonished was he, so
+overcome, to find a great demonstration awaiting him, where he had
+expected to land quietly and to engage private lodgings, that his eyes
+overflowed with tears.
+
+The harbor of New York was entered on a Sunday. He was asked to accept
+a sumptuous entertainment on Staten Island till Monday, when he could
+be received by the city with more honor. On that day citizens and
+officers, together with old Revolutionary veterans, attended him. Amid
+the shouting of two hundred thousand voices he reached the Battery.
+The band played "See the Conquering Hero Comes," the "Marseillaise,"
+and "Hail, Columbia." Lafayette had never dreamed of such a reception
+or of such sweeps of applause. The simple-hearted loyalty of the
+American people had a chance to show itself, and their enthusiasm knew
+no bounds. Lafayette's face beamed with joy. Four white horses bore
+him to the City Hall, while his son, George Washington Lafayette, his
+secretary, M. Levasseur (who wrote an account of the whole journey of
+1824), and the official committee followed in carriages. The mayor
+addressed the city's guest; and Lafayette's reply was the first of
+many hundred appropriate and graceful speeches made by him during the
+journey. There were many ceremonies; school children threw garlands of
+flowers in his way; corner stones were laid by him; squares were
+renamed for "General Lafayette" (as he assured everybody he preferred
+to be called by that title), and societies made him and his son
+honorary members for life.
+
+Hundreds of invitations to visit different cities poured in. The whole
+country must be traveled over to satisfy the eagerness of a grateful
+nation. Are republics ungrateful? That can never be said of our own
+republic after Lafayette's visit to the United States in 1824.
+
+He set out for Boston by way of New Haven, New London, and Providence.
+All along the way the farmers ran out from the fields, shouting
+welcomes to the cavalcade, and children stood by the roadside decked
+with ribbons on which the picture of Lafayette was printed. Always a
+barouche with four white horses was provided to carry him from point
+to point. It was not a bit of vanity on the part of Lafayette that he
+was ever seen behind these steeds of snowy white. President Washington
+had set the fashion. His fine carriage-horses he caused to be covered
+with a white paste on Saturday nights and the next morning to be
+smoothed down till they shone like silver. It was a wonderful sight
+when that majestic man was driven to church--the prancing horses, the
+outriders, and all. And when Lafayette came, nothing was too good for
+him! The towns sent out the whitest horses harnessed to the best
+coaches procurable,--cream color, canary color, or claret color,--for
+the hero to be brought into town or sped upon his way departing.
+Returning to New York by way of the Connecticut River and the Sound,
+he found again a series of dinners and toasts, as well as a ball held
+in Castle Garden, the like of which, in splendor and display, had
+never before been thought of in this New World.
+
+Lafayette left the festivity before it was ever in order to take the
+boat, at two in the morning, to go up the Hudson River. He arose at
+six to show his son and his secretary the place where Andre was
+captured. As soon as the fog lifted, he described, in the most
+enthusiastic manner, the Revolutionary events which he had seen.
+
+At West Point there was a grand banquet. One of the speakers alluded
+to the fact that at Valley Forge, when the soldiers were going
+barefooted, Lafayette provided them with shoes from his own resources,
+and then proposed this toast:
+
+"To the noble Frenchman who placed the Army of the Revolution on a new
+and better footing!"
+
+At the review of the cadets, Generals Scott and Brown, in full
+uniform, with tall plumes in their hats, stood by General Lafayette.
+The three, each towering nearly six feet in height, made a magnificent
+tableau, declares one record of the day.
+
+Returning from the Hudson River excursion, the party went southward,
+visiting Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington. With ceremonies of
+great dignity Congress received Lafayette, and later voted him a
+present of two hundred thousand dollars, together with a whole
+township anywhere he might choose in the unappropriated lands of the
+country.
+
+Among other places visited was Yorktown, where the party attended a
+brilliant celebration. The marks of battle were still to be seen on
+many houses, and broken shells and various implements of war were
+found scattered about. An arch had been built where Lafayette stormed
+the redoubt, and on it were inscribed the names of Lafayette,
+Hamilton, and Laurens. Some British candles were discovered in the
+corner of a cellar, and these were burned to the sockets while the old
+soldiers told tales of the surrender of Yorktown.
+
+The party visited other places connected with the campaign in
+Virginia. Lafayette called on ex-President Jefferson at Monticello,
+his stately home near Charlottesville, Virginia, and was conducted by
+Jefferson to the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.
+
+Charleston was the next stopping-place; this was the home of the Huger
+family. Here were more combinations of "Yankee Doodle" and the
+"Marseillaise," more laying of corner stones, more deputations, more
+dinners, more public balls. It is not difficult to understand how it
+happened that, in the last half of the nineteenth century, there were
+so many old ladies living who could boast of having danced with
+Lafayette in their youth.
+
+Proceeding on their way by boat and carriage, the company came to
+Savannah, and thence moved across Georgia and Alabama, down the river to
+the Gulf of Mexico, along the shore to the mouth of the Mississippi, and
+up the "grand riviere" to St. Louis. "Vive Lafayette" was the universal
+cry all the way.
+
+All the cities vied with each other in doing honor to the nation's
+guest. At Pittsburg, for instance, a bedroom was prepared for the
+distinguished visitor in a hall that had been a Masonic lodge room. The
+ceiling was arched, and the sun, moon, and stars were painted upon it.
+The bed prepared for Lafayette was a vast "four-poster" of mahogany, on
+whose posts were inscribed the names of Revolutionary heroes. Above the
+canopy a large gilt eagle spread its wings and waved a streamer on which
+were written the names of Washington and Lafayette. In this city, as
+everywhere, Lafayette was shown everything notable, including all the
+foundries and factories.
+
+As usual, the hero left the city in a coach shining with the freshest
+paint, and drawn by four white steeds.
+
+ [Illustration: A CARRIAGE IN WHICH LAFAYETTE RODE.
+ This interesting relic is now in Cooperstown, New York.
+ The picture shows it being used in a present-day pageant,
+ filled with boys and girls in colonial costumes. (See page 187.)]
+
+At Buffalo, after a visit to Niagara, they embarked on the newly-built
+Erie Canal. Then followed a part of the journey that was much enjoyed
+by Lafayette--the beautiful country of central New York. He was
+charmed with this bit of travel after the long distances between towns
+in the western region.
+
+Syracuse was the next stopping-place. The carriage in which Lafayette
+traveled into that City of Sixty Hills was kept for many decades as a
+precious treasure. Not many years ago it was in a barn back of one of
+the houses on James Street in that city. Now, however, after wandering
+from place to place and taking part in various pageants, it may be
+seen in the celebrated village of Cooperstown, where the young folks,
+when they attire themselves in Revolutionary costume, may ride as
+bride or coachman, as shown in the picture.
+
+Lafayette reached the "Village of Syracuse" at six o'clock in the
+morning. The people had been watching all night for the arrival of the
+illustrious guest and were still watching when the colors of the
+illuminations were melting into those of sunrise. The guest of honor
+had been in his carriage all night and must have been weary, but he
+gayly asserted that the splendid supper that had been prepared the
+night before made an excellent breakfast, and he spent the three
+hours allotted to that "village" in shaking hands with the hundreds of
+people whose desire to see him had kept them waiting all night.
+
+At nine o'clock he bade good-by to his friends of a day and embarked
+upon the packet boat of the canal, while the air resounded with good
+wishes for his voyage. Through Rome they passed by night in an
+illumination that turned darkness into daylight, and at every place
+they received deputations from the city just ahead of the one where
+they were. There were cannon to welcome and cannon to bid farewell. At
+Utica three Oneida chiefs demanded an interview on the score of having
+been Lafayette's helpers in 1778. They were very old but still
+remarkably energetic. Lafayette begged them to accept certain gifts of
+silver, and they went away happy.
+
+The traveling was now hastened in order that General Lafayette might
+reach Boston by the Fourth of July, 1825, and take part in laying the
+corner stone of Bunker Hill Monument. This event in our national
+history has been described by Josiah Quincy in his "Figures of the
+Past" and by many others. It was a great national celebration, and a
+general meeting of Revolutionary comrades, one of whom wore the same
+coat he had worn at the battle of Bunker Hill, almost half a century
+before, and could point to nine bullet-holes in its texture. Daniel
+Webster delivered his grand oration. All Boston was on the alert.
+There were a thousand tents on the Common, and a dinner to which
+twelve hundred persons sat down. General Lafayette gave a reception to
+the ladies of the city. Then there was a ball--with the usual honor
+bestowed. Everybody was proud and happy to have General Lafayette as a
+national guest on that great day.
+
+One more incident must be related. In July of 1825 the people of
+Brooklyn were erecting an Apprentices' Free Library Building at the
+corner of Cranberry and Henry streets, later incorporated in the
+Brooklyn Institute, and they wished Lafayette to assist in laying the
+corner stone. He was brought to Brooklyn in great state, riding in a
+canary-colored coach drawn by four snow-white horses. The streets were
+crammed with people. Among them were many citizens and their wives, some
+old Revolutionary veterans, troops of Brooklyn children, and a number of
+negroes who had been freed by the recent New York Emancipation Acts.
+
+Through the closely packed masses of people the carriage of the noble
+Frenchman was slowly driven, the antics of the impatient horses
+attracting the attention of the small boy as much as the illustrious
+visitor himself. As they came near the stand where the ceremony was to
+take place, Lafayette saw that various gentlemen were carefully
+lifting some little children over the rough places where soil from
+excavations and piles of cut stone had been heaped, and were helping
+them to safe places where they could see and hear. He at once alighted
+from the carriage and came forward to assist in this work.
+
+Without suspecting it in the least, he was making another historic
+minute; for one of the boys he was thus to lift over a hard spot was a
+five-year-old child who afterwards became known to the world as Walt
+Whitman. Lafayette pressed the boy to his heart as he passed him along
+and affectionately kissed his cheek. Thus a champion of liberty from
+the Old World and one from the New were linked in this little act of
+helpfulness. When he was an old man, Whitman still treasured the
+reminiscence as one of indescribable preciousness.
+
+"I remember Lafayette's looks quite well," he said; "tall, brown, not
+handsome in the face, but of fine figure, and the pattern of
+good-nature, health, manliness, and human attraction."
+
+Through nearly all of this long and exciting journey, Lafayette was
+accompanied by Colonel Francis Kinloch Huger, by his secretary, and by
+his son, George Washington Lafayette, then a man full grown. The
+latter was almost overcome by the warmth of his father's reception.
+Writing to a friend at home, after having been in America but twenty
+days, he said:
+
+"Ever since we have been here my father has been the hero, and we the
+spectators, of the most imposing, beautiful, and affecting sights; the
+most majestic population in the world welcoming a man with common
+accord and conducting him in triumph throughout a journey of two
+hundred leagues. Women wept with joy on seeing him, and children
+risked being crushed to get near to a man whom their fathers kept
+pointing out to them as one of those who contributed the most in
+procuring them their happiness and independence. This is what it has
+been reserved to us to see. I am knocked off my feet--excuse the
+expression--by the emotions of all kinds that I experience."
+
+Lafayette has been accused of being a spoiled hero. In a moment of
+asperity Jefferson had alluded to Lafayette's love of approbation. If,
+indeed, Lafayette did yield to that always imminent human frailty, and
+if Olmuetz had not been able to eradicate or subdue it, the itinerary
+of 1824 must have been to him a period of torture. He must have
+suffered from satiety to an unbearable degree, for praise and
+admiration were poured out by a grateful people to an extent not
+easily imagined. To keep up a fiction is the most wearying thing in
+the world. The only refreshing and vivifying thing is to be absolutely
+sincere. This it must be believed Lafayette was. His simple attitude
+toward the land of his adoption was shown in a letter to President
+Monroe in which he bade farewell to a nation where "in every man,
+woman, and child of a population of twelve million I have found a
+loving, indeed an enthusiastic, friend."
+
+It did as much good to the American people as it did to Lafayette to
+take part in this great tide of gratitude and devotion. A vast,
+swelling emotion is unifying and it is strengthening. Our people made
+a great stride toward nationalization when Lafayette came to let us,
+as a people, throw our heart at his feet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+LAST DAYS OF LAFAYETTE
+
+
+Mingled with the joys of Lafayette's visit to the United States in
+1824 there was one profound sorrow; he no longer saw here the great
+man to whom he had given such whole-hearted devotion. President
+Washington died in 1799; and one of the most affecting moments of all
+the journey of 1824 was when General Lafayette and his son, George
+Washington Lafayette, stood together by the tomb of the man whom both
+regarded as a father.
+
+On the centennial anniversary of the birth of Washington, in 1832, the
+27th Regiment State Artillery of New York sent Lafayette a magnificent
+commemorative medal. In acknowledgment of this gift Lafayette wrote to
+the Committee, calling the gift "a new testimony of that persevering
+affection which has been, during nearly sixty years, the pride and
+delight of my life to be the happy object. The only merit on my part
+which it does not exceed is to be found in the warmth of my gratitude
+and the patriotic devotion that binds to the United States the loving
+heart of an adopted son. The honor was enhanced by the occasion--the
+birthday of the matchless Washington, of whom it is the most gratifying
+circumstance to have been the beloved and faithful disciple."
+
+This attitude Lafayette never failed to hold. The relation between the
+two men was from beginning to end honorable to both in the highest
+degree. It was one of the great friendships of history.
+
+In one respect the private tastes of Washington and Lafayette were
+similar; both dearly loved a farm. No one can visit Mount Vernon
+without feeling the presence there of a lover of growing things. From
+this productive place fine hams and bacon were forwarded to Lafayette
+and his family in France and were there eaten with the keenest relish.
+Fine birds were also sent--ducks, pheasants, and red partridges. In
+return Lafayette dispatched by request some special breeds of wolf
+hounds and a pair of jackasses; also, strange trees and plants,
+together with varied gifts such as Paris only could devise. The
+visitor to Mount Vernon finds in the family dining room Lafayette's
+ornamental clock and rose jars, and his mahogany chair in Mrs.
+Washington's sitting room. The key to the Bastille, which he sent in
+1789, is shown under a glass cover on the wall by the staircase in the
+entrance hall, and a model of that ancient fortress of tyranny, made
+from a block of stone from the renowned French prison, sent over in
+1793, stands in happy irony in the banquet hall. A bedchamber on the
+second floor is pointed out as the room in which Lafayette slept. It
+still bears his name.
+
+After Lafayette returned to France, he lived for years in semi-exile on
+an estate known as La Grange, that Madame de Lafayette had inherited. It
+lay about forty miles east of Paris, in a beautiful country covered with
+peach orchards and vineyards. At the time it was, from an agricultural
+point of view, in a sadly neglected condition; and it was not by any
+means the least of the achievements of Lafayette that he turned his hand
+cleverly to the great task of developing this estate into a really
+productive farm, and succeeded. Beginning with a single plow--for he was
+too poor at first to buy numerous appliances--he gradually developed the
+estate into a valuable property. After a time he supplied himself with
+fine breeds of cattle, sheep, and pigs; indeed, specimens of various
+kinds from all zones of the earth were sent him by his friends the
+American shipmasters, who, it must be remembered, appreciated the
+ardent efforts he had made to establish American commerce. To
+Washington, who was a good farmer as well as a good President, every
+detail of these labors would have been interesting if he had been
+living.
+
+In patriarchal happiness Lafayette carried on the estate of eight
+hundred French acres, with all its industries, in a perfect system. In
+a fine old mansion built in the days of Louis IX, Lafayette lived with
+his two daughters and their families under an efficient household
+system. Sometimes twelve cousins, brothers and sisters, would be there
+together. The combined family formed a perfect little academy of its
+own; and just to live at La Grange was an education in itself. The
+walls were covered with pictures and memorabilia, to know which would
+mean to understand European and American history for a century past. A
+picture of Washington had the place of honor. The Declaration of
+Independence and the Declaration of Rights were hung side by side. A
+miniature of Francis Kinloch Huger in a frame of massive gold was
+among the treasures. Dress swords, gifts of many kinds, symbols of
+honors, and rich historical records decorated the whole house. Even
+the name of the estate, La Grange, was American, for it was so called
+in honor of the Manhattan Island home of his friend Alexander
+Hamilton.
+
+ [Illustration: THE CHILDREN'S STATUE OF LAFAYETTE.
+ This spirited statue, by the sculptor Paul Wayland Bartlett,
+ was a gift to France from five millions of American school
+ children. (See page 201.)]
+
+There was one room in the chateau at La Grange that was more sacred
+than any other; it was the room in which Madame de Lafayette had died.
+This chamber was never entered except on the anniversary of her death,
+and then by her husband alone, who cherished her memory tenderly and
+faithfully as long as he lived.
+
+Many wonderful visitors came to La Grange, and in later years to the
+Paris home of the Lafayettes. There were Irish guests to tell tales of
+romance; there were Poles to plead the cause of their country;
+misguided American Indians were sometimes stranded there; Arabs from
+Algeria; negro officers in uniform from the French West Indies--all
+people who had the passion for freedom in their hearts naturally and
+inevitably gravitated to Lafayette. His house was a modern Babel, for
+all languages of the world were spoken there.
+
+And Americans! So many Americans came along the Rosay Road that little
+boys learned the trick of meeting any foreign-looking persons who
+spoke bad French, and announced themselves as guides of all the
+"Messieurs Americains"; they would capture the portmanteau, swing it
+up to a strong shoulder, and then set out for the chateau at the
+regular jog trot of a well-trained porter.
+
+One of these American guests was the grandson of General Nathanael
+Greene with whom Lafayette had had cordial relations during the
+Virginia campaign. In the year 1828 this grandson visited La Grange
+and wrote an account full of delightful, intimate touches, which was
+printed in the _Atlantic Monthly_ in 1861. Of Lafayette himself he
+said:
+
+"In person he was tall and strongly built, with broad shoulders, large
+limbs, and a general air of strength.... He had more dignity of
+bearing than any man I ever saw. And it was not merely the dignity of
+self-possession, which early familiarity with society and early habits
+of command may give even to an ordinary man, but that elevation of
+manner which springs from an habitual elevation of thought, bearing
+witness to the purity of its source, as a clear eye and ruddy cheek
+bear witness to the purity of the air you daily breathe. In some
+respects he was the mercurial Frenchman to the last day of his life;
+yet his general bearing, that comes oftenest to my memory, was of calm
+earnestness, tempered and mellowed by quick sympathies."
+
+The death of Lafayette, on the 20th of May, 1834, set the bells
+a-tolling in many lands, but in none was the mourning more sincere
+than in our own. Members of Congress were commanded to wear the badge
+of sorrow for thirty days, and thousands of the people joined them in
+this outward expression of the sincere grief of their hearts.
+
+His services to his own country and to ours were many and valuable.
+But his personal example of character, integrity, and constancy was
+even more to us and to the world than his distinct services. What he
+_was_ endeared him to us, even more than the things he did. He gave
+his whole soul in youth to his world-wide dream of freedom--freedom
+under a constitution guaranteeing it, through public order, to every
+human being. He found himself in a world where monarchical government
+seemed the destiny and habit of mankind. He thought it a bad
+habit--one that ought to be broken. Sincerely and passionately
+believing this, he was willing to die in the service of any people who
+were ready to make the struggle against the existing national
+traditions. He made mistakes; he made the mistake of trusting Louis
+Philippe. In doing this he had with him the whole French people. But
+let it be said on the other hand that he did not make the mistake of
+trusting Bonaparte, whose blandishments he resisted during the whole
+passage of that meteor. And he was making no mistake when, to the
+very end of his life, he remained true to his love for the land he had
+aided in his youth. His visions did not all come true in exactly the
+shape he devised, but to the last he retained a glorious confidence
+that they would ultimately be realized in full.
+
+Lafayette was absolutely fearless. He had physical bravery; he was
+equally indomitable in moral and intellectual realms. He had the power
+of courage. He could decide quickly and then stand by the decision to
+the bitter end. The essence of his bold, adventurous youth is
+expressed in the motto he then chose, "Cur non." But the confirmed and
+tried spirit of his full manhood is more truly set forth in another
+motto: "Fais ce que dois, advienne que pourra." "Do what you ought,
+let come what may."
+
+For a man so possessed by a great, world-wide idea, so fearless, so
+constant, it is quite fitting that monuments should be erected and
+that his birthday should be celebrated. Probably there is no man in
+all history who has had so many cities, counties, townships,
+boulevards, arcades, mountains, villages, and hamlets named for him,
+in a country to which he was not native-born, as has the Frenchman
+Lafayette in the United States of America. Also, many notable statues
+of Lafayette stand in city squares and halls of art, both in our
+country and in his own. Among them there is one special statue in
+which the young people of America have a peculiar interest. On the
+19th of October, 1898, five millions of American school children
+contributed to a Lafayette Monument Fund. With this sum a bronze
+statue was made and presented to the French Republic. Mr. Paul Wayland
+Bartlett was the sculptor intrusted with this work. The statue was
+completed in 1908 and placed in a court of the Louvre in Paris. It was
+originally intended that the statue of Bonaparte should occupy the
+center of that beautiful court, but it is the statue of Lafayette that
+stands there--the "Boy" Cornwallis could not catch, the man Napoleon
+could not intimidate. No one can tell us just how Lafayette's statue
+happened to be assigned the place intended for Napoleon's; but however
+it was, the fact is a luminous example of how a man who loved people
+only to master and subjugate them did not reach the heart of the world
+so directly as the man who loved human beings for their own sakes and
+to do them good.
+
+
+Printed in the United States of America.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following pages contain advertisements of Macmillan books by the
+same author.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TRUE STORIES OF GREAT AMERICANS
+
+"_Should be read by every boy and girl._"
+
+
+This important new series of brief and vivid biographies will give to
+the young mind an intimate picture of the greatest Americans who have
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+therefore, of valuable facts. Only those, however, who have shown that
+they have an appreciation of what makes really good juvenile
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+
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+
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+
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+_The Lives of National Heroes Told in a New Way for Children_
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+
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+
+
+ Captain John Smith By Rossiter Johnson
+
+The adventurous Captain who founded Virginia lived the life of a
+typical hero of romance--Soldier of Fortune in America, Europe, Asia,
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+
+
+ William Penn By Rupert S. Holland
+
+The life of William Penn is of especial interest and value because the
+events of his career are closely related to American and English
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+
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+ Benjamin Franklin By E. Lawrence Dudley
+
+As a statesman, diplomat, scientist, philosopher, and man of letters,
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+
+
+ Robert Fulton By Alice C. Sutcliffe
+
+The life of Robert Fulton makes good reading. The story of his belief
+in and work upon a submarine and his journeys to France and England to
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+
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+
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+
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+ Nathan Hale By Jean Christie Root
+
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+
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+
+
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+
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+
+ THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+List of Illustrations and Illustration Captions have been made
+consistent to each other as follows.
+
+"Portrait of Lafayette"--Caption has been extended from "Lafayette".
+
+"A Carriage in which Lafayette Rode" entry in the List of
+Illustrations has been extended from "Lafayette's Carriage".
+
+On page 109 "Yorktown was now familar to Lafayette" has been corrected
+to "Yorktown was now familiar to Lafayette".
+
+In the song quoted on page 141 the last line "Et qui s'abaisse, on
+l'evera." has been changed to "Et qui s'abaisse, on l'elevera."
+
+All other spelling, punctuation, grammatical and typesetting errors
+have been left as they were in the original book.
+
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