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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50232 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50232)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boys' Life of Lafayette, by Helen Nicolay
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Boys' Life of Lafayette
-
-Author: Helen Nicolay
-
-Release Date: October 16, 2015 [EBook #50232]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOYS' LIFE OF LAFAYETTE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Madeleine Fournier. Images from the Internet Archive.
-
-
-
-
-THE BOYS' LIFE OF LAFAYETTE
-
-
-[Illustration: MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE
-
-From an engraving by Jones]
-
-
-
-The Boys' Life of LAFAYETTE
-
-by
-
-Helen Nicolay
-
-Illustrated
-
-Harper & Brothers Publishers
-
-New York and London
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-CHAP. PAGE
-
- Preface............................... ix
- I. Warriors and Wild Beasts.............. 1
- II. Educating a Marquis................... 9
- III. A New King............................ 19
- IV. An Unruly Courtier.................... 29
- V. Leading a Double Life................. 39
- VI. A Sea-turn............................ 48
- VII. An American Pilgrimage................ 57
- VIII. An Astonishing Reception.............. 64
- IX. Proving Himself a Soldier............. 72
- X. Letters............................... 81
- XI. A Fool's Errand....................... 91
- XII. Farce and Treachery................... 104
- XIII. A Liaison Officer..................... 113
- XIV. Near-mutiny and near-imprisonment..... 122
- XV. Help--and Disappointment.............. 129
- XVI. Black Treachery....................... 139
- XVII. Preparing for the Last Act............ 149
- XVIII. Yorktown.............................. 158
- XIX. "The Wine of Honor"................... 168
- XX. The Passing of Old France............. 180
- XXI. The Tricolor.......................... 191
- XXII. The Sans-culottes..................... 200
- XXIII. Popularity and Prison................. 208
- XXIV. South Carolina to the Rescue!......... 221
- XXV. Volunteers in Misfortune.............. 235
- XXVI. Exiles................................ 246
- XXVII. A Grateful Republic................... 258
-XXVIII. Leave-takings......................... 269
- XXIX. President--or King-maker.............. 276
- XXX. Seventy-six Years Young............... 289
- Index................................. 301
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE................ _Frontispiece_
-THE MANOR-HOUSE OF CHAVANIAC........ _Facing p._ 6
-FRANKLIN AT THE FRENCH COURT........ " 42
-WASHINGTON AND THE COMMITTEE OF CONGRESS
- AT VALLEY FORGE.................. " 94
-VALLEY FORGE—WASHINGTON AND LAFAYETTE " 94
-THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH............... " 110
-THE BASTILLE......................... " 194
-SIEGE OF THE BASTILLE................ " 194
-MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE................. " 262
-MADAME DE LAFAYETTE.................. " 262
-MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE AND LOUIS-PHILIPPE " 286
-
-
-
-[Pg ix]PREFACE
-
-This is no work of fiction. It is sober history; yet if the bare facts
-it tells were set forth without the connecting links, its preface might
-be made to look like the plot of a dime novel.
-
-It is the story of a poor boy who inherited great wealth; who ran away
-from home to fight for liberty and glory; who became a major-general
-before he was twenty years old; who knew every nook and corner of the
-palace at Versailles, yet was the blood-brother of American Indians;
-who tried vainly to save the lives of his king and queen; who was in
-favor of law, yet remained a rebel to the end of his days; who suffered
-an unjust imprisonment which has well been called "a night five years
-long"; who was twice practically Dictator of France; and who, in his
-old age, was called upon to make a great decision.
-
-But it is no work of fiction. It is only the biography of a French
-gentleman named Lafayette.
-
-
-
-[Pg 1]THE BOYS' LIFE OF LAFAYETTE
-
-
-I
-
-WARRIORS AND WILD BEASTS
-
-
-"The Lafayettes die young, but die fighting," was a saying in that part
-of France where they had been people of consequence for seven hundred
-years before the most famous of them came into the world. The family
-name was Motier, but, after the custom of the time, they were better
-known by the name of their estate, La Fayette, in Auvergne, a region
-which had been called the French Siberia. Although situated in central
-southern France, fully three hundred and fifty miles from Paris, it is
-a high wind-swept country of plains and cone-shaped hills, among whose
-rugged summits storms break to send destruction rushing down into the
-valleys. Unexpected, fertile, sheltered spots are to be found among
-these same hills, but on the whole it is not a gentle nor a smiling
-land.
-
-The history of France during the Middle Ages bears not a little
-[Pg 2]resemblance to this region of Auvergne, so full of sharp
-contrasts, often of disaster. Through all the turbulent centuries the
-men of the house of Lafayette bore their part, fighting gallantly for
-prince and king. Family tradition abounded in stories telling how
-they had taken part in every war since old Pons Motier de Lafayette,
-the Crusader, fought at Acre, in Palestine, in 1250. Jean fell at
-Poictiers in 1356. There was a Claude--exception to the rule that they
-died young--who took part in sixty-five sieges and no end of pitched
-battles. Though most of them fought on land, there was an occasional
-sailor to relieve the monotony; notably a vice-admiral of the reign
-of Francis First, who held joint command with Andrea Doria when that
-soldier of fortune went to the relief of Marseilles, and who sank or
-burned four Spanish galleons in the naval battle at the mouth of the
-Var.
-
-But the Lafayette who occupied most space in family tradition and
-written history was Gilbert, who was head of the family about the
-time Columbus discovered America. It was he who took for motto upon
-his coat of arms the words, "_Cur non?_" "Why not?" and by energetic
-deeds satisfactorily answered his own question. "Seneschal of the
-Bourbonnaise," "Lieutenant-General," "Governor of Dauphigny," and
-"Marshal of France" were a few of the titles and honors he gathered
-in the course of a long life, for he was another exception to the
-family rule. He was eighty-two before he passed away, ready to fight
-to the last. Although it is not true that he slew the English Duke of
-Clarence with his own hands at the battle of Baugé, it is true that he
-[Pg 3]fought under the banner of Joan of Arc at Orléans, and that he
-had many adventures on many fields. When there was no foreign enemy
-to battle against, he worked hard to subdue the bandits who infested
-France and made travel on the highroads more exciting than agreeable to
-timid souls in the reign of Charles VII.
-
-In time the Motiers de Lafayette divided into two branches, the elder
-keeping the estate and name and most of the glory; the younger, known
-as the Motiers of Champetières, enjoying only local renown. The women
-of the family also made a place for themselves in history. One, who had
-beauty, had also courage and wit to oppose the great Cardinal Richelieu
-himself. Another, less known in politics than in literature, though
-she tried her hand at both, became famous as a novelist. It was her
-grand-daughter who inherited part of the property at a time when there
-were no more men of the elder branch to carry on the name. In order
-that it might not die out, she arranged to have the estates pass back
-to the younger branch, which in time inherited the title also.
-
-The Lafayettes went on fighting and losing their lives early in battle.
-Thus it happened that a baby born to a young widow in the grim old
-manor-house of Chavaniac on the 6th of September, 1757, was the last
-male representative of his race, a marquis from the hour of his birth.
-His father had been made Chevalier of the Order of Saint-Louis and
-Colonel of Grenadiers at the early age of twenty-two, and fell before
-[Pg 4]he was twenty-five, leading his men in an obscure engagement of
-the Seven Years' War. This was about a month before his son was born.
-His family believed that the gallant colonel's life was sacrificed by
-the recklessness of his commanding officer.
-
-According to the old parish register, still preserved, "The very high
-and puissant gentleman, Monseigneur Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert
-Dumotier de Lafayette, the lawful son of the very high and 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," was baptized in the little parish
-church of Chavaniac twenty-four hours after his birth. Besides this
-terrifying name and the title, all the traditions and responsibilities
-of both branches of the family descended upon his infant shoulders.
-Being such a scrap of a baby, however, he was mercifully ignorant
-of responsibilities and ancient names. The one given him in baptism
-was shortened for daily use to Gilbert, the name of the old Marshal
-of France; but a time came when it was convenient to have a number,
-rightfully his, from which to choose. For his signature "La Fayette"
-covered the whole ground.
-
-His only near relatives were his young mother, his grandmother (a
-stately lady of strong character), and two aunts, sisters of his dead
-father, who came to live at Chavaniac. It was by this little group of
-[Pg 5]aristocratic Frenchwomen that the champion of liberty was brought
-up during those early years when character is formed. That he did not
-become hopelessly spoiled speaks well for his disposition and their
-self-control. He was not a strong baby, and they must have spent many
-anxious hours bending over him as he lay asleep, however much they
-concealed their interest at other times for fear of doing him moral
-harm.
-
-Until he was eleven they all lived together in the gloomy old château
-where he was born. This has been described as "great and rather heavy."
-It had been fortified in the fourteenth century. Two round towers with
-steep, pointed roofs flanked it on the right and left. Across its front
-high French windows let in light to the upper floors. From them there
-was a far-reaching view over plain and river, and steep hills dotted
-with clumps of trees. But loopholes on each side of an inhospitable
-narrow doorway told of a time when its situation had been more prized
-for defense than for mere beauty of scenery. It had a dungeon and other
-grim conveniences of life in the Middle Ages, which must have stamped
-themselves deep on the mind of an impressionable child. The castles of
-Wissac and Saint-Romain, of which the boy was also lord, could be seen
-higher up among the hills. There were glimpses, too, of peasant homes,
-but these were neither neat nor prosperous. Bad laws, and abuse of law
-that had been going on for centuries, had brought France to a point
-where a few people were growing inordinately rich at the expense of all
-[Pg 6]the rest. The king suffered from this as well as the peasants.
-The country was overrun by an army of tax-collectors, one for every
-one hundred and thirty souls in France, each of them bent on giving up
-as little as possible of the money he collected. To curry favor with
-the great nobles, who were more powerful than the king himself, their
-property was not taxed so heavily as it should have been, while poorer
-people, especially the peasants, were robbed to make up the difference.
-"The people of our country live in misery; they have neither furniture
-nor beds; during part of the year the most of them have no nourishment
-except bread made of oats and barley, and even this they must snatch
-from their own mouths and those of their children in order to pay the
-taxes." That was written about this very region of Auvergne a few years
-before Lafayette was born. In self-defense the peasants made their
-homes look even more wretched than they really were. On occasion, when
-convinced that the stranger knocking at their door was no spy, they
-could bring a wheaten loaf and a bottle of wine from their secret store
-and do the honors most hospitably.
-
-The La Fayettes were not rich, though they were the great people of
-their neighborhood. Only one Frenchman in a hundred belonged to the
-nobility, but that one received more consideration than all the other
-ninety-nine combined. When the boy marquis rode out with his mother,
-or that stately lady his grandmother, the peasants in the little
-village which had grown up around the walls of Chavaniac, clinging to
-it for protection, bowed down as though the child were a sovereign.
-[Pg 7]Some of them knelt in the dust as the coach passed by. Truly it
-was strange soil for the growth of democratic ideas. It was well for
-the boy's soul that in spite of lands and honor the household was of
-necessity a frugal one. The wide acres were unproductive. Men who had
-fought so often and so well for their princes had found little leisure
-to gather wealth for their children. Besides, it was thought out of the
-question for a nobleman to engage in gainful pursuits. The wealth such
-men enjoyed came through favor at court; and in this household of women
-there was no longer any one able to render the kind of service likely
-to be noticed and rewarded by a king.
-
-[Illustration: THE MANOR-HOUSE OF CHAVANIAC
-
-Birthplace of Lafayette]
-
-So the lad grew from babyhood in an atmosphere of much ceremony and
-very little luxury. On the whole, his was a happy childhood, though by
-no means gay. He loved the women who cherished him so devotedly. In his
-_Memoirs_, written late in life, he calls them "tender and venerated
-relatives." They looked forward to the day when in his turn he should
-become a soldier, dreading it, as women will, but accepting it, as
-such women do, in the spirit of _noblesse oblige_, believing it the
-one possible calling for a young man of his station. To prepare him
-for it he was trained in manly exercises, by means of which he outgrew
-the delicacy of his earliest years and became tall and strong for his
-age. He was trained also in horsemanship, to which he took kindly, for
-he loved all spirited animals. In books, to which he did not object,
-[Pg 8]though he was never wholly a scholar, he followed such studies as
-could be taught him by the kindly Abbé Feyon, his tutor.
-
-On his rides, when he met the ragged, threadbare people who lived among
-the hills, they saluted him and looked upon him almost with a sense of
-ownership. Was he not one of their Lafayettes who had been fighting
-and dying gallantly for hundreds of years? As for him, his friendly,
-boyish eyes looked a little deeper through their rags into their
-sterling peasant hearts than either he or they realized. In the old
-manor-house his day-dreams were all of "riding over the world in search
-of reputation," he tells us; a reputation to be won by doing gallant
-deeds. "You ask me," we read in his _Memoirs_, "at what time I felt
-the earliest longings for glory and liberty. I cannot recall anything
-earlier than my enthusiasm for tales of heroism. At the age of eight
-my heart beat fast at thought of a hyena which had done some damage
-and made even more noise in the neighborhood. The hope of meeting that
-beast animated all my excursions." Had the encounter taken place, it
-might have been thrilling in the extreme. It might even have deprived
-history of a bright page; for it was nothing less than hunger which
-drove such beasts out of the woods in winter to make raids upon lonely
-farms--even to terrify villagers at the very gates of Chavaniac.
-
-
-[Pg 9]II
-
-EDUCATING A MARQUIS
-
-
-The first period of Gilbert's life came to an end when he was eleven
-years old. His mother was by no means ignorant of the ways of the world
-and she had powerful relatives at court. She realized how much they
-could do to advance her boy's career by speaking an occasional word in
-his behalf; and also how much truth there is in the old saying "Out
-of sight, out of mind." They might easily forget all about her and
-her boy if they remained hidden in the provinces. So they went up to
-Paris together, and she had herself presented at court and took up her
-residence in the French capital, while Gilbert became a student at the
-Collège Du Plessis, a favorite school for sons of French noblemen. His
-mother's uncle, the Comte de la Rivière, entered his name upon the army
-lists as member of a regiment of Black Mousquetaires, to secure him the
-benefit of early promotion. He was enrolled, too, among the pages of
-Marie Leszczynska, the Polish wife of King Louis XV, but his duties,
-as page and soldier, were merely nominal. He does not say a word about
-[Pg 10]being page in his _Memoirs_. Of the regiment he merely says that
-it served to get him excused from classes when there was to be a parade.
-
-He remained three years at Du Plessis. He found studying according to
-rule decidedly irksome, and very different from the solitary lessons at
-Chavaniac, where the few rules in force had been made for his benefit,
-if not for his convenience. He tells us that he was "distracted from
-study only by the desire to study without restraint," and that such
-success as he gained was "inspired by a desire for glory and troubled
-by the desire for liberty." Sometimes the latter triumphed. It amused
-him, when he was old, to recall how, being ordered to write an essay on
-"the perfect steed," he sacrificed a good mark and the praise of his
-teachers to the pleasure of describing a spirited horse that threw his
-rider at the very sight of a whip.
-
-The Collège Du Plessis must have been almost like a monastery. Each
-boy had a stuffy little cell into which he was locked at night. No
-member of a student's family might cross the threshold, and the many
-careful rules for health and diet were quite the opposite of those
-now practised. This period of Lafayette's school-days was a time when
-men's ideas on a variety of subjects were undergoing vast change. The
-old notion that learning was something to be jealously guarded and
-made as difficult and disagreeable as possible died hard. It is true
-that the good Fénelon, who believed in teaching children to read from
-books printed in French instead of in Latin, and who thought it could
-[Pg 11]do them no harm if the books were "well bound and gilded on
-the edge," had gone to his reward half a century before; but he had
-been writing about the education of girls! When Lafayette was only
-five years old one Jean Jacques Rousseau had published a fantastic
-story called _Émile_, which was nothing in the world but a treatise on
-education in disguise. In this he objected to the doctrine of original
-sin, holding that children were not born bad; and he reasoned that they
-did not learn better nor more quickly for having knowledge beaten into
-them with rods. But this man Rousseau was looked upon as an infidel
-and a dangerous character. Probably at Du Plessis the discipline and
-course of study belonged to the old order of things, though there
-were concessions in the way of teaching the young gentlemen manners
-and poetry and polite letter-writing, which they would need later in
-their fashionable life at court. History as taught them was hopelessly
-tangled up in heraldry, being all about the coats of arms and the
-quarrels of nobles in France and neighboring countries. When something
-about justice and liberty and the rights of the people did creep into
-the history lesson the tall young student from Auvergne fell upon it
-with avidity. Perhaps it was because of such bits scattered through
-the pages of Roman authors that he learned considerable Latin, and
-learned it well enough to remember it forty years later, when he found
-it useful to piece out his ignorance of German in talking with his
-Austrian jailers.
-
-In spite of queer notions about hygiene, like those which bade him
-[Pg 12]shut out fresh air from his room at night and avoid the risk of
-eating fresh fruit, he grew in body as well as in mind during the years
-at Du Plessis, and he had almost reached his man's height of five feet
-eleven inches, when one day in 1770 a messenger came to the college,
-bringing the news that his mother had just died. A very few days later
-her death was followed by that of her father, who was wealthy and had
-made the boy his heir. Thus, almost within a week, he found himself
-infinitely poorer than he had ever been before, yet very rich, deprived
-of those dearest to him and in possession of a large fortune.
-
-People began to take a sudden lively interest in him. The son of a
-young widow studying in the Collège Du Plessis was of consequence only
-to himself and his mother. But the young Marquis de Lafayette, of such
-old and excellent family, such good disposition, such a record in his
-studies, such a very large income--above all, a generous young man with
-no near relatives to give meddling advice about how he should spend his
-money, became fair prey for all the fortune-hunters prowling around the
-corrupt court of old Louis XV.
-
-These were many. The king was bored as well as old. His days were
-filled with a succession of tiresome ceremonies. A crowd of bowing
-courtiers was admitted to his bedroom before he got up in the morning.
-Crowds attended him at every turn, even assisting in his toilet at
-night. Frederick the Great had said, "If I were king of France, the
-first thing I would do would be to appoint another king to hold court
-[Pg 13]in my place"! But indolent old Louis had not the energy even to
-break down customs which had come to him from the days of kings long
-dead. "He cared for nothing in this life except to hunt, and feared
-nothing in the life to come except hell." When not hunting, his one
-desire was to be let alone to pursue whatever evil fancy entered his
-brain.
-
-The people at court had two desires--to flatter the king and to get
-money. The first was the surest means to the second. Everybody, good
-and bad, seemed in need of money, for the few rich nobles had set a
-style of living which not even the king could afford to follow. It
-was all part of the same tangle, the result of accidents and crimes
-and carelessness extending through many reigns, which had brought
-about ever-increasing visits of the tax-collectors and reduced the
-peasants to starvation. One after another important concessions had
-been given away as a mark of royal favor, or else had been sold
-outright. A clever man in the reign of Louis XIV had remarked that
-whenever his Majesty created an office the Lord supplied a fool to buy
-it. In the reign of his grandson, Louis XV, things were even worse. A
-high-sounding official title, carrying with it a merely nominal duty
-and some privilege that might be turned into coin, was the elegant way
-of overcoming financial difficulty. Even the wax candles burned in
-the sconces at Versailles were sold for the benefit of the official
-who had charge of their lighting. He saw to it that plenty of candles
-were lighted, and that none of them burned too long before going to
-swell his income. What the great nobles did lesser ones imitated; and
-[Pg 14]so on, down a long line. No wonder that young Lafayette, having
-inherited his fortune, became suddenly interesting.
-
-Of course, not everybody was corrupt, even at court. There were people
-who could not possibly be classed as fortune-hunters. Even to these
-the fact that the young heir was tall and silent and awkward, not
-especially popular at school, and not likely to shine in a society
-whose standards were those of dancing-school manners and lively wit,
-did not weigh for a moment against the solid attraction of his wealth.
-To fathers and mothers of marriageable daughters both his moral and
-material qualifications appealed. He was barely fourteen years old
-when proposals of marriage began to be made in the careful French
-way, which assumes that matrimony is an affair to be arranged between
-guardians, instead of being left to the haphazard whim of young people.
-An early letter of Lafayette's written about this time was partly
-upon this subject. It might have been penned by a world-wise man of
-thirty. The Comte de la Rivière appears to have been the person to
-whom these proposals were first addressed. He, and possibly the Abbé
-Feyon, discussed them with Lafayette in a business-like way; and the
-young man, not being in love, either with a maid or with the idea
-of matrimony, listened without enthusiasm, suggesting that better
-matches might be found among the beauties of Auvergne. New duties and
-surroundings engrossed him. He had left Du Plessis for the Military
-Academy at Versailles, where there was more army and less cloister in
-his training; where he spent part of his money upon fine horses and
-[Pg 15]lent them generously to friends; and where, for amusement in his
-hours of leisure, he could watch the pageant of court life unrolling at
-the very gates of the academy. Matrimony could wait.
-
-Among those more interested in providing a wife for him than he was in
-finding one for himself was the lively Duc d'Ayen, a rich and important
-nobleman, the father of five daughters. The eldest of these was fully a
-year younger than Lafayette, while the others descended toward babyhood
-like a flight of steps. Even in that day of youthful marriages it
-seemed early to begin picking out husbands for them. But there were
-five, and the duke felt he could not begin better than by securing
-this long-limbed boy for a son-in-law. He suggested either his eldest
-daughter, Louise, or the second child, Adrienne, then barely twelve,
-as a future Marquise de Lafayette. He did not care which was chosen,
-but of course it must be one of the older girls, since the bridegroom
-would have to wait too long for the others to grow up. The match was
-entirely suitable, and was taken under favorable consideration by the
-bridegroom's family; but when it occurred to the duke to mention the
-matter to his wife, he found opposition where it was least expected.
-Madame d'Ayen absolutely refused her consent. These two were quite
-apt to hold different views. The husband liked the luxury of the
-court and chuckled over its shams. His wife, on the contrary, was of
-a most serious turn of mind and had very little sense of humor. The
-frivolities of court life really shocked her. She looked upon riches as
-[Pg 16]a burden, and fulfilled the social duties of her position only
-under protest as part of that burden. The one real joy of her life lay
-in educating her daughters. She studied the needs of their differing
-natures. She talked with them much more freely than was then the
-custom, and did all in her power to make of them women who could live
-nobly at court and die bravely when and wherever their time came.
-
-She had no fault to find with young Lafayette. Her opposition was a
-matter of theory and just a little selfish, for her married life had
-not been happy enough to make her anxious to see her girls become wives
-of even the best young men. As for this Motier lad, she thought him
-particularly open to temptation because of his youth and loneliness and
-great wealth. He had lacked the benefit of a father's training. So, for
-that matter, had her own children. Their father was almost always away
-from home.
-
-The duke's airy manner hid a persistent spirit, and, in spite of his
-worldliness, he esteemed the good character of the boy. The discussion
-lasted almost a year and developed into the most serious quarrel of
-their married life. No wonder, under the circumstances, that the duke
-did not, as his daughter expressed it, "like his home." The little
-girls knew something was wrong, and shared their mother's unhappiness
-without guessing the cause. The duke's acquaintances, on the other
-hand, to whom the cause was no secret, looked upon the contest of wills
-as a comedy staged for their benefit. One of them said in his hearing
-that no woman of Madame d'Ayen's strength of character, who had gone
-[Pg 17]so far in refusal, would ever consent to the marriage. At this
-the duke warmly rushed to the defense of his wife and answered that a
-woman of her character, once convinced that she was wrong, would give
-in completely and utterly.
-
-That was exactly what happened. After months of critical observation
-she found herself liking Lafayette better and better. The duke assured
-her that the marriage need not take place for two years, and that
-meantime the young man should continue his studies. She gave her
-consent and took the motherless boy from that moment into her heart;
-while the little girls, sensitive to the home atmosphere, felt the joy
-of reconciliation without even yet knowing how nearly it concerned them.
-
-It was decided among the elders that Adrienne, the second daughter, was
-to become Madame Lafayette, because the young Vicomte de Noailles, a
-cousin to whom Louise had been partial from babyhood, had made formal
-proposals for her hand. This cousin was a friend and schoolfellow of
-Lafayette's, and during the next few months the youths were given the
-opportunity of meeting their future wives apparently by chance while
-out walking, and even under the roof of the duke; but for a year
-nothing was said to the girls about marriage. Their mother did not
-wish to have their minds distracted from their lessons or from that
-important event in the lives of Catholic maidens, their first communion.
-
-Two months before her marriage actually took place Louise was told
-that she was to be the bride of Noailles; and at the time of that
-wedding Adrienne was informed of the fate in store for her. She found
-[Pg 18]nothing whatever to question in this. It seemed altogether
-delightful, and far simpler than deciding about the state of her own
-soul. The truth was that her heart had already begun to feel that love
-for Gilbert de Motier which was to grow and become the controlling
-factor of her life. Girl-like, her head was just a little turned by
-the momentous news of her engagement. Her mother tried to allay her
-excitement, but she also took care to let Adrienne know how much she
-liked the young man and to repeat to her all the good things she had
-found out about him. And to her joy, Adrienne found that Lafayette felt
-for the elder lady "that filial affection" which also grew as the years
-went on.
-
-How he felt about marriage as the day approached we do not know;
-neither do we know the details of the wedding which must have been
-celebrated with some splendor on the 11th of April, 1774. The bride was
-not yet fifteen, the groom was sixteen. He was given leave of absence
-from his regiment, and the newly wedded pair took up their residence in
-the wonderful Paris home of Adrienne's family, the Hotel de Noailles.
-Although not far from the Tuileries, in the very heart of the city, it
-possessed a garden so large that a small hunt could be carried on in
-it, with dogs and all. John Adams is authority for this. He visited the
-Lafayettes there some time later, and found it unbelievably vast and
-splendid.
-
-
-[Pg 19]III
-
-A NEW KING
-
-
-Less than a month after their marriage these young people were dressed
-in black, as was all the rest of fashionable Paris. The gay spring
-season had been brought to a premature and agitated end by the news
-that the king lay dead of smallpox, the loathsome disease he most
-dreaded.
-
-Smallpox was distressingly common in those days before vaccination had
-been discovered; but courageous people protected themselves against it
-even then by deliberately contracting the disease from a mild case and
-allowing it to run its course under the best possible conditions. It
-was found to be much less deadly in this way, though the patients often
-became very ill, and it required real courage to submit to it.
-
-The old king had never been at all brave. He feared discomfort in this
-life almost as much as he dreaded hell in the next; so he had fled the
-disease instead of courting it, and in time it came to have special
-terrors for him. He had been riding through the April woods with a
-hunting party and had come upon a sad little funeral procession--a very
-[Pg 20]humble one. Always curious, he stopped the bearers and asked
-who they were carrying to the grave. "A young girl, your Majesty."
-The king's watery old eyes gleamed. "Of what did she die?" "Smallpox,
-Sire." In terrified anger the monarch bade them begone and bury the
-corpse deep; then he dismissed the hunt and returned to the palace. Two
-days later he was stricken. The disease ran its course with amazing
-virulence, as though taking revenge for his misspent life. Some of the
-courtiers fled from Versailles. Others, to whom the king's displeasure
-seemed a worse menace than smallpox, remained. His favorites tried
-to keep the truth from the public. Daily bulletins announced that he
-was getting better. When it was learned that he might die the people
-crowded the church of Ste.-Geneviève, the patron saint of Paris,
-kissing the reliquary and raising sobs and prayers for his recovery.
-When he died, on the 10th of May, his body was hastily covered with
-quicklime and conveyed, by a little handful of attendants who remained
-faithful, to St.-Denis, where the kings of France lie buried. It was
-done without ceremony in the dead of night. Forty days later his bones
-were laid in the tomb of his ancestors with all possible funeral pomp.
-There was decorous official mourning for the customary length of time;
-but the old king had never been an inspiring figure and most of his
-subjects were secretly glad he was out of the way.
-
-During July and August of that year Lafayette was "in service" with
-the Black Mousquetaires. In September, when his period of active duty
-[Pg 21]was over and he could do as he chose, he had himself exposed to
-smallpox, and he and his wife and mother-in-law shut themselves up in a
-house at Chaillon, hired for the occasion, where during his illness and
-convalescence Madame d'Ayen devoted herself to her new son night and
-day.
-
-Even while the rafters of Ste.-Geneviève were echoing to sobs and
-prayers for the old king's recovery, people whispered under their
-breath what they really thought of him; and by the time Lafayette
-and his wife could take their places in the world again Louis XV had
-been systematically forgotten. His grandson, the new king, was a
-well-meaning young man, only three years older than Lafayette. One of
-the king's intimates said that the chief trouble with Louis XVI was
-that he lacked self-confidence. Marie Antoinette, his queen, was fond
-of pleasure, and for four long years, ever since their marriage, they
-had been obliged to fill the difficult position of heirs apparent,
-hampered by all the restraints of royalty while enjoying precious few
-of its privileges. Like every one else, they were anxious to get the
-period of mourning well over and to see the real beginning of their
-reign, which promised to be long and prosperous. Nobody realized that
-the time had come when the sins and abuses of previous reigns must be
-paid for, and that the country was on the verge of one of the greatest
-revolutions of history.
-
-To outward appearance it was a time of hope. Population was increasing
-rapidly; inventions and new discoveries were being made every day.
-[Pg 22]"More truths concerning the external world were discovered in
-France during the latter half of the eighteenth century than during all
-preceding periods together," says Buckle. Even in the lifetime of the
-old king it had been impossible to stem the tide of progress: what more
-natural than to believe these blessings would continue, now that his
-evil influence was removed?
-
-Not only had discoveries been made; they had been brought within the
-reach of more people than ever before. About the time Lafayette was
-born the first volume of a great book called the _Encyclopedia_ had
-made its appearance in the French language, modeled after one already
-produced in England. Priests had denounced it; laws had been made
-ordering severe penalties for its use. But it was too valuable to be
-given up and volume after volume continued to appear. Voltaire wrote an
-audacious imaginary account of the way it was used in the palace. The
-king's favorite did not know how to mix her rouge; the king's ministers
-wanted to learn about gunpowder. The forbidden book was sent for. A
-procession of lackeys staggered into the room, bending under the weight
-of twenty huge volumes, and everybody found the information desired.
-The bit of audacity hid a great truth. The _Encyclopedia_ had brought
-knowledge to the people and all were anxious to profit by it.
-
-"The people," however, were not considered by nobles who lived
-in palaces. Indeed, they were only beginning to consider
-themselves--beginning dimly to comprehend that their day was dawning.
-[Pg 23]Two decades would have to pass before they were fully awake,
-but the scene was already being set for their great drama. Paris, the
-largest city in France, had increased in size one-third during the past
-twenty-five years. The old theory had been that too large a town was a
-public menace, both to health and to government. Nine times already in
-its history the limits of Paris had been fixed and had been outgrown.
-It now held between seven hundred thousand and eight hundred thousand
-souls. When viewed from the tower of Notre Dame it spread out ten or
-twelve miles in circumference, round as an orange, and cut into two
-nearly equal parts by the river Seine.
-
-"One is a stranger to one's neighbor in this vast place," a man wrote
-soon after this. "Sometimes one learns of his death only by receiving
-the invitation to his funeral." "Two celebrated men may live in this
-city twenty-five years and never meet." "So many chimneys send forth
-warmth and smoke that the north wind is tempered in passing over the
-town." Streets were so narrow and houses so high that dwellers on
-the lower floors "lived in obscurity"; while elsewhere there were
-palaces like the great house belonging to the De Noailles family with
-its garden large enough to stage a small hunt. Such gardens were
-carefully walled away from the public. These walled-in gardens and the
-high, evil-smelling houses in which people lived "three hundred years
-behind the times," crowded together and hungry from birth to death,
-were equally prophetic of the awakening to come; for the improvements
-[Pg 24]celebrated by this writer in describing old Paris were either
-of a kind to let light in upon the people or to make conditions more
-intolerable for them.
-
-Advertising signs no longer creaked from iron gibbets, threatening to
-tumble and crush the passers-by. Spurs as big as cartwheels and the
-huge gloves and giant boots which formerly proclaimed the business
-carried on under them had been banished or were now screwed securely
-to the walls, which gave the streets a clean-shaven appearance. The
-candle lanterns that used to splutter and drip and go out, leaving
-Paris in darkness, were replaced, on nights when the moon was off duty,
-by lamps burning "tripe-oil" and fitted with reflectors. By means of
-this brilliant improvement fashionable quarters were almost safe after
-nightfall, whereas in former years there had been danger of attack and
-robbery, even within pistol-shot of the grand home where Lafayette
-went to live after his marriage. In addition to the lights glowing
-steadily under their reflectors--one light to every seventy or one
-hundred inhabitants--there were many professional lantern-bearers whose
-business in life was escorting wayfarers to and from their homes. Paris
-after nightfall was atwinkle, for "to live by candle-light is a sign of
-opulence."
-
-There was a fire department, newly installed, ready to come on call,
-and, strange to say, "it cost absolutely nothing to be rescued."
-That, however, was the only cheap thing in Paris. "The poorer one
-is the more it costs to live!" was a cry that rose then, as now,
-[Pg 25]in all its bitterness. With money anything could be bought.
-Voltaire declared that a Roman general on the day of his triumph never
-approached the luxury to be found here. Wares came to the city from
-the ends of the earth, and Parisians invented new wares of their own.
-Somebody had contrived umbrellas like those used in the Orient, except
-that these folded up when not in use. Somebody else had invented the
-business of renting them at a charge of two liards to gallants crossing
-the Pont Neuf who wished to shield their complexions. There were
-little stations at each end of the bridge where the money could be
-paid or the umbrella given up. Even seasons of the year set no limit
-to extravagance in Paris. "A bouquet of violets in the dead of winter
-costs two louis (about nine dollars), and some women wear them!"
-
-Water was delivered daily to the tall houses, from carts, by a force of
-twenty thousand men, who carried it as high as the seventh floor for
-a trifle more than it cost to cross the Pont Neuf under the shade of
-an umbrella. Drivers sent their water-carts skidding over the slime,
-for the narrow, cobble-paved streets were black with slippery mud.
-Coaches and other vehicles swung around corners and dashed along at
-incredible speed, while pedestrians fled in every direction. There were
-no sidewalks and no zones of safety. The confusion was so great that
-dignified travel by sedan-chair had become well-nigh impossible. King
-Louis XV once said, "If I were chief of police I would forbid coaches";
-but, being only King Louis, he had done nothing. Pedestrians were often
-[Pg 26]run down; then there would be even greater confusion for a few
-moments, but only the shortest possible halt to traffic. "When on the
-pavements of Paris it is easy to see that the people do not make the
-laws," said one who had suffered.
-
-These people who suffered in Paris at every turn were now beginning to
-find a cyclopedia of their own in another invention of comparatively
-recent date--the cafés, warmed and lighted, where even men who had
-not sous enough to satisfy their hunger might cheat their stomachs
-with a thimbleful of sour wine or a morsel of food, and sit for hours
-listening and pondering the talk of others who came and went. There was
-much talk, and in one part of Paris or another it touched upon every
-known subject. Each café had its specialty; politics in one, philosophy
-in another, science in a third. Men of the same cast of mind gravitated
-toward the same spot. Cafés had already become schools. Soon they were
-to become political clubs. It was a wonderful way to spread new ideas.
-
-Some of the cafés were very humble, some very expensive, but none were
-strictly fashionable. To be seen dining in such a place indicated that
-a man had no invitations to dinner, so the eighteen or twenty thousand
-fops who, curled and perfumed, went from house to house cared little
-for cafés. They ate like grasshoppers, through the welcome of one
-host on Monday and another on Tuesday, and so down the week, "knowing
-neither the price of meat nor of bread, and consuming not one-quarter
-of that which was set before them," while thousands went hungry--which
-[Pg 27]is the reason that after a time the men in the cafés rose
-and took a terrible revenge. Paris was by no means all France, but
-whatever Paris did and felt the other towns were doing also; and slowly
-but surely the passions animating them would make their way to the
-loneliest peasant hut on the remotest edge of the kingdom.
-
-Thus, while the nobles in their gardens still dreamed pleasantly of
-the power that was passing from them, the people were slowly rousing
-from torpor to resentment. It is well to linger over these conditions
-in order to understand fully all that Lafayette's acts meant in the
-society in which he moved. He was not one of the twenty thousand fops,
-but he belonged to the fortunate class to whom every door seemed open
-during the early years of the new reign. His military duties were
-agreeable and light, he had plenty of money, a charming wife, powerful
-family connections, and he was admitted to the inmost circle at court.
-If he had longings to experiment with the democratic theories set forth
-by radical authors like Rousseau, even that was not forbidden him.
-Their writings had attracted much attention and had already brought
-about increased liberality of manners. While the court at Versailles
-and the city of Paris were very distinct, Paris being only a huge town
-near at hand, the distance between them was but fourteen miles, and
-it was quite possible for young men like Lafayette to go visiting, so
-to speak, in circles not their own. Lafayette's friend, the Comte de
-Ségur, has left a picture of life as the young men of their circle knew
-it.
-
-[Pg 28]"Devoting all our time to society, _fêtes_, and pleasure, ... we
-enjoyed at one and the same time all the advantages we had inherited
-from our ancient institutions, and all the liberty permitted by new
-fashions. The one ministered to our vanity, the other to our love of
-pleasure. In our castles, among our peasants, our guards, and our
-bailiffs, we still exercised some vestiges of our ancient feudal
-power. At court and in the city we enjoyed all the distinctions of
-birth. In camp our illustrious names alone were enough to raise us to
-superior command, while at the same time we were at perfect liberty to
-mix unhindered and without ostentation with all our co-citizens and
-thus to taste the pleasures of plebeian equality. The short years of
-our springtime of life rolled by in a series of illusions--a kind of
-well-being which could have been ours, I think, at no other age of the
-world."
-
-
-[Pg 29]IV
-
-AN UNRULY COURTIER
-
-
-During the winter after Adrienne's marriage the Duchesse d'Ayen took
-her two daughters regularly to the balls given each week by the queen,
-and after the balls invited the friends of her sons-in-law to supper,
-in a pathetically conscientious effort to make the home of the De
-Noailles a more agreeable place for the husbands of her children than
-it had been for her own. Adrienne inherited much of her mother's
-seriousness, but she was young enough to enjoy dancing, and, feeling
-that duty as well as inclination smiled upon this life, she was very
-happy. In December of that year her first child was born, a daughter
-who was named Henriette.
-
-Lafayette tells us in his _Memoirs_ that he did not feel thoroughly
-at ease in the gay society Marie Antoinette drew about her. Nor did
-the queen altogether approve of him, because of his silence and an
-awkwardness which did not measure up to the standards of deportment
-she had set for this circle of intimate friends. "I was silent," he
-says, "because I did not hear anything which seemed worth repeating;
-and I certainly had no thoughts of my own worthy of being put into
-[Pg 30]words." Some of his friends, who knew him better than the queen,
-realized that there was plenty of fire in him, in spite of his cold
-manner and slow speech. De Ségur was one of these, for at some period
-of his youth Lafayette, smitten with sudden and mistaken jealousy, had
-spent nearly an entire night trying to persuade De Ségur to fight a
-duel with him about a beauty for whom De Ségur did not care at all.
-
-Adrienne's family, wishing to do their best by him, tried to secure a
-place for him in the household of the prince who afterward became Louis
-XVIII. Lafayette did not want to hurt their feelings; neither did he
-fancy himself in the rôle they had chosen for him, where he believed
-he would be forced to govern his actions by another man's opinions. He
-kept his own counsel,but, "in order to save his independence," managed
-to have the prince overhear a remark which he made with the deliberate
-purpose of angering him. The office was of course given to some one
-else, and another bit of ill will went to swell the breezes blowing
-over the terraces at Versailles.
-
-There were bitter court factions. Friends of Louis XV had not relished
-seeing power slip out of their hands. The queen was an Austrian who
-never fully understood nor sympathized with the French. Neither her
-critics nor her partizans ever allowed themselves to forget her foreign
-birth. King Louis, not having confidence in himself, chose for his
-premier M. de Maurepas, who was over eighty, and should therefore have
-been a mine of wisdom and experience. Unfortunately, he was the wrong
-[Pg 31]man; he was not universally respected, and his white hairs
-crowned a pate that was not proof against the frivolities of society.
-The younger men were displeased. It was not customary to give young
-men positions of importance, but they were sure they could do quite as
-well as he. They had their café club also, a place called the Wooden
-Sword, where they discussed the most extravagant theories of new
-philosophy, reviled old customs, calling them "Gothic," their favorite
-term of reproach, and concocted schemes to amuse themselves and tease
-their elders. Having nothing serious to occupy them, they turned their
-attention to setting new fashions. A series of pageants and dances gave
-them excellent opportunity. The admiration they felt for themselves and
-one another in the romantic dress of the time of Henri IV made them
-resolve to adopt it and force it upon others for daily wear. That the
-capes and plumes and love-knots which became their slender figures so
-well made older and stouter men look ridiculous was perhaps part of
-their malicious intent.
-
-Age made common cause against them, and the youngsters went too far
-when they held a mock session of Parliament, one of those grave
-assemblages which had taken place in far-off days in France, but had
-been almost forgotten since. There was an increasing demand that the
-custom be revived, which was not relished by M. de Maurepas and his
-kind. When the old premier learned that a prince of the blood had
-played the role of President in this travesty, while Lafayette had
-been attorney-general and other sprigs of high family figured as [Pg
-32]counsel, barristers, and advocates, it was evident that a storm was
-brewing. De Ségur went straight to the king and told him the story in
-a way that made him laugh. This saved the participants from serious
-consequences, but it was agreed that such trifling must stop; and most
-of them were packed off to join their regiments.
-
-Lafayette's regiment was stationed at Metz, and he took his way there
-feeling much as he had felt when he wrote his school-boy essay on the
-"perfect steed." It was the most fortunate journey of his life, for at
-the end of it he met his great opportunity. The Duke of Gloucester,
-brother of the King of England, was traveling abroad. He came to
-Metz, and the military commander of the place, Comte de Broglie, gave
-a dinner in his honor to which he invited the chief officers of the
-garrison. It was not the only time that a dinner played an important
-part in Lafayette's career. Neither Lafayette's age nor his military
-rank quite entitled him to such an invitation; but the count had a
-kindly spot in his heart for young men. Besides, Adrienne Lafayette was
-a kinswoman of his, and he remembered that the father of this tall,
-silent lad had served under him in the Seven Years' War.
-
-The guest of honor was not the kind of loyal subject and brother who
-could speak no ill of his sovereign. In fact, he and King George
-were not on good terms. He had his own views about the troubles in
-America, and thought the king quite wrong in his attitude toward the
-Colonists. He had lately received letters, and at this dinner discussed
-[Pg 33]them with the utmost frankness, explaining the point of view
-of the "insurgents" and expressing his belief that they would give
-England serious trouble. Possibly Lafayette had never heard of George
-Washington until that moment. Certainly he had never considered the
-continent of North America except as a vague and distant part of the
-earth's surface with which he could have no personal concern. Yet twice
-already the names of his family and of America had been linked. The old
-marshal who took _Cur non?_ for his motto had lived when the voyage of
-Columbus had set the world ringing; and Gilbert de Motier, Lafayette's
-own father, had lost his life in the Seven Years' War, by which England
-won from France practically all the land she held in the New World.
-
-Slight and remote as these connections were, who can say that they
-did not unconsciously influence a spirit inclined toward liberty? The
-conversation of the Duke of Gloucester seemed to bring America from
-a great distance to within actual reach of Lafayette's hand. He hung
-upon every word. The prince may not have been altogether prudent in
-his remarks. It was an after-dinner conversation and in that day the
-English drank hard. Even so, the duke's indiscretions made the talk
-more interesting and, to Lafayette, more convincing. Every word spoken
-strengthened the belief that these American Colonists were brave men,
-well within their rights, fighting for a principle which would make
-the world better and happier. He realized with a thrill that men three
-[Pg 34]thousand miles away were not content with mere words, but
-were risking their lives at that very moment for the theories which
-philosophers had been preaching for a thousand years; the same theories
-that orators in six hundred Paris cafés had lately begun to declaim.
-
-Afterward he got permission to ask some of the questions with which
-his brain teemed; but long before the candles of that feast had burned
-down in their sockets his great resolution was made to "go to America
-and offer his services to a people struggling to be free." From that
-time on he could think of little else; but, as so often happens with
-quick and generous resolutions, the more he thought about it the more
-difficult it seemed to carry out. He had exulted at first that he
-was his own master with a fortune to dispose of as he chose. Then he
-remembered his wife and her family. He knew he could count upon her
-loyalty; but he was equally certain that he would meet determined
-opposition from the Duc d'Ayen and all his powerful connection, who had
-done their worldly best to make him a member of a prince's household.
-
-And disapproval of "the family" in France was not to be lightly
-regarded. No serious step could be undertaken by young people without
-their elders feeling it their solemn duty to give advice. Very likely
-the king and his ministers would also have something to say. "However,"
-he wrote in his _Memoirs_, "I had confidence in myself, and dared adopt
-as device for my coat of arms the words _Cur non?_ that they might
-serve me on occasion for encouragement, or by way of answer."
-
-[Pg 35]He knew almost nothing about America, and, as soon as military
-duties permitted, asked leave to go to Paris to make further inquiries,
-opening his heart very frankly to the Comte de Broglie. It happened
-that the count had vivid dreams of his own about America--dreams
-which centered on nothing less than the hope that with proper hints
-and encouragement the rebellious colonies might call him (the Comte
-de Broglie, of wide military experience) to take supreme command of
-their armies and lead them to victory, instead of trusting them to
-the doubtful guidance of local talent in the person of this obscure
-Col. George Washington. But De Broglie was not minded to confide such
-things to the red-haired stripling who looked at him so pleadingly. He
-conscientiously tried to dissuade him. "My boy," he said, "I saw your
-uncle die in the Italian wars. I witnessed your father's death.... I
-will not be accessory to the ruin of the only remaining branch of your
-family." But finding arguments made no impression, he gave him the
-coveted permission and also an introduction to a middle-aged Bavarian
-officer known as the Baron de Kalb. This man had made a voyage to
-America in the secret employment of the French government some years
-before, and he was even now acting as De Broglie's agent.
-
-Arrived in Paris, Lafayette found the town full of enthusiasm for the
-insurgents, or the Bostonians, as they were called. Already English
-whist had been abandoned for another game of cards known as _le
-Boston_, and soon the authorities might feel it necessary to forbid
-[Pg 36]the wearing of a certain style of head-dress called "_aux
-insurgents_" and to prohibit talk about American rebels in the cafés.
-Secretly the ministers of Louis wished the audacious rebels well,
-being convinced that whatever vexed England served to advance the
-interests of France, but officially they were strictly neutral. When
-Lord Stormont, the British ambassador, complained that agents of the
-American government were shipping supplies from French ports, they
-made a great show of activity, asked American vessels to leave, and
-forbade trade in contraband articles; but they obligingly shut their
-eyes to the presence of Silas Deane, the American envoy, in Paris.
-Diplomatically speaking, he did not exist, since Louis had not yet
-received him; but everybody knew that people of distinction in all
-walks of life went secretly to his lodgings.
-
-Lafayette knew not one word of English. Silas Deane knew little, if
-any, French, and it was De Kalb who acted as interpreter when the
-young nobleman went to call upon him. Liberty, like misery, brings
-about strange companionships. Three men more unlike could scarcely
-have been found. Although known as "Baron," Johann Kalb was a man of
-mystery who had in truth begun life as a butler and had won his place
-in the army through sheer merit. He was middle-aged, handsome, and
-grave. Silas Deane, the lawyer-merchant from Connecticut, was not only
-imperfectly equipped with French, his manners were so unpolished as to
-appear little short of repulsive. Lafayette's usual quiet was shaken by
-his new enthusiasm. His bearing, which seemed awkward at Versailles,
-[Pg 37]was more graceful than the Yankee envoy thought quite moral,
-or than the grave soldier of fortune had been able to achieve. And
-he was ridiculously young. Even he realized that. "In presenting my
-nineteen-year-old face to Mr. Deane," says the _Memoirs_, "I dwelt more
-on my zeal than on my experience; but I did make him comprehend that my
-departure would cause some little excitement and might influence others
-to take a similar step." He could make the family opposition count for
-something on his side!
-
-Whatever Silas Deane may have lacked in manner, his wits were not slow.
-He instantly saw the advantage of gaining such a convert to his cause.
-The two signed an agreement which was a rather remarkable document.
-On his part Silas Deane promised Lafayette the rank of major-general
-in the Continental Army. But hardened as Deane was to making lavish
-promises in the name of the Continental Congress, he knew that a
-major-general only nineteen years of age, who had never heard the sound
-of a hostile gun, would be received with question rather than with
-joy in America, so he added a few words explaining that Lafayette's
-"high birth, his connections, the great dignities held by his family
-at the 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." One would think Lafayette had been haggling, whereas quite
-the reverse appears to have been the truth.
-
-[Pg 38]Lafayette wrote: "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 for private
-salary, reserving to myself only the right to return to France whenever
-my family or the king shall recall me," and signed his name. After
-which he left the house of the American commissioner feeling that
-nothing short of all the king's horses and all the king's men could
-turn him from his purpose.
-
-
-[Pg 39]V
-
-LEADING A DOUBLE LIFE
-
-
-Lafayette found his brother-in-law De Noailles and De Ségur in Paris,
-and, certain of being thoroughly understood by these two friends,
-confided his plan to them. As he expected, both expressed a wish to
-accompany him. The wish may not have been entirely unselfish. Many
-young officers in the French army were chafing at the inaction which
-ten years of peace had forced upon them, and this chance to distinguish
-themselves in war may have appealed to them at first even more strongly
-than the justice of the American cause. It certainly added to the
-appeal of justice in Lafayette's own case; but meetings with Silas
-Deane and his associates, Arthur Lee and Mr. Carmichael, above all,
-with Benjamin Franklin, who came to Paris about this time, soon altered
-interest to a warmer and less selfish feeling.
-
-These Americans, with their unfashionable clothes, their
-straightforward speech, and their simple bearing, with plenty of pride
-in it, presented the greatest possible contrast to the curled and
-powdered flatterers surrounding Louis XVI. To meet them was like being
-met by a breath of fresh, wholesome air. The young men who came under
-[Pg 40]their influence fancied that Franklin might almost be a friend
-of Plato himself. "What added to our esteem, our confidence, and our
-admiration," wrote De Ségur, "were the good faith and simplicity with
-which the envoys, disdaining all diplomacy, told us of the frequent
-and oft-repeated reverses sustained by their militia, inexperienced as
-yet in the art of war." Merely as a sporting proposition it was a fine
-thing that they and their army were doing.
-
-De Ségur and De Noailles quietly entered into an agreement with
-the Americans, as Lafayette had done. So did others; and it became
-impossible to keep their plans secret. When the families of our three
-friends learned of their quixotic plan it was clear they would never
-consent. De Noailles played a bold card by applying directly to the
-War Office for permission to serve as a French officer in the American
-army, hoping in this way to match family opposition with official
-sanction, but the War Office refused. After that there was nothing to
-do but to submit, since they were not men of independent means like
-Lafayette, though both were older than he and held higher military
-rank. They were dependent upon allowances made them by their respective
-families, who thus had a very effective way of expressing disapproval.
-All they could do was to assure Lafayette of their sympathy and keep
-his secret, for they knew that the opposition which blocked them would
-only make him the more determined. The better to carry out his plan,
-however, he also pretended to listen to reason and to give up all
-thoughts of crossing the Atlantic.
-
-[Pg 41]De Kalb, meanwhile, almost succeeded in leaving France. But
-the French government decided that it would be a breach of neutrality
-to allow its officers to fight against England, and he was obliged to
-turn back. Knowing more about the secret hopes and plans of the Comte
-de Broglie than Lafayette knew, he proposed that they go together
-to consult him, and they spent several days at the count's country
-home. How much Lafayette learned about his host's American dreams is
-uncertain, nor does it make much difference in Lafayette's own story.
-The two elder men were quite willing to use his enthusiasm to further
-their own ends; but he had great need of their help. It was agreed that
-the voyage to America must on no account be given up, and that the
-best way would be for Lafayette to purchase and fit out a ship. This,
-however, was easier said than done. One cannot buy a ship as casually
-as a new pair of gloves.
-
-Not only was his family genuinely opposed and his government officially
-opposed to his going; England had spies in Paris. It was jestingly said
-that all the world passed at least once a day over the Pont Neuf, and
-men were supposed to be on watch there, to ascertain who had and who
-had not left the city. England, moreover, had agents at every seaport
-in northern France. But Bordeaux in the south seemed very far away in
-days of stage-coach travel, and consequently was not so well guarded.
-As luck would have it, the Comte de Broglie's secretary had a brother
-who knew all about ships and merchants in Bordeaux. He found a vessel
-[Pg 42]which would do, though she was not very good. Her name could
-not be improved upon, for she was called _La Victoire_. Perhaps, like
-her new owner, she was able to choose one to fit the occasion. She was
-to cost 112,000 francs, one-quarter down, and the rest within fifteen
-months of the date of delivery, which was fixed for the middle of
-March, 1777.
-
-Weeks before this time arrived very bad news had come from America. The
-report ran that Washington had lost practically everything. He had been
-defeated in the battles of Long Island and White Plains; New York was
-burned, and he and his troops, reduced now to a ragged mob of two or,
-at most, three thousand men, were in full retreat across New Jersey,
-pursued by thirty thousand British. It was well known that England
-was the most powerful military nation of Europe and that, not content
-with her own forces, she was hiring regiments of Hessians to send
-overseas. Clearly the triumph of such numbers must come speedily. All
-society, from Marie Antoinette down, admired the sturdy, independent
-Franklin, with his baggy coat and his homely wit. Portraits of him in
-his coonskin cap were to be seen in every home. He was a wizard who had
-done things with lightning no other mortal had done before, but even he
-could not bring success to a hopeless cause.
-
-[Illustration: FRANKLIN AT THE FRENCH COURT
-
-All society, from Marie Antoinette down, admired the sturdy,
-independent Franklin, who was always a welcome guest at court]
-
-The prospect must have appeared black indeed to the envoys themselves.
-Honorable men that they were, they felt in duty bound to explain the
-changed conditions to Lafayette, and not to allow him to ruin his whole
-[Pg 43]future because of a promise enthusiastically given. They sent
-him a message asking him to come and see them. He knew he was watched
-and dared not meet Franklin openly, but he went at once to Silas Deane
-and listened to all he had to tell him. When he finished the young
-Frenchman thanked him for his very frank statement of a bad situation
-and then made a very frank statement in return. "Heretofore," he said,
-"I have been able to show you only my willingness to aid you in your
-struggle. The time has now come when that willingness can be put to
-effective use, for I am going to buy a ship and take your officers out
-in it. Let us not give up our hope yet; it is precisely in the time
-of danger that I wish to share whatever fortune may have in store for
-you." After that it would have required superhuman unselfishness on the
-part of the Americans to dissuade him.
-
-How transactions which covered three months of time, two-thirds of
-the length of France, and involved so many individuals remained
-undiscovered is a mystery unless we assume that the opposition of the
-government was more feigned than real. Officials appear to have closed
-their eyes most obligingly whenever possible.
-
-To divert suspicion from himself, Lafayette occupied several weeks
-in a visit to England which had been arranged long before. Franklin
-and Deane were most anxious to have him carry out this plan to visit
-the French ambassador in London. So Lafayette crossed the Channel and
-spent three weeks in the smoky city, where he received many social
-[Pg 44]courtesies. He appears to have enjoyed this season of gaiety
-much better than similar occasions at home. The necessity for hiding
-his plans gave zest to meetings and conversations that would otherwise
-have been commonplace enough, while the necessity for remaining true to
-his ideals of conduct--of continuing to be a guest and not a spy in an
-enemy country--exercised his conscience as well as his wit. It became a
-humorous adventure to dance at Lord Germain's in the same set with Lord
-Rawdon, just back from New York, and to encounter between acts at the
-opera General Clinton, against whom he was soon to fight at Monmouth.
-When presented to his Majesty George III he replied to that monarch's
-gracious hope that he intended to make a long stay in London, with an
-answer at once guarded and misleading. The king inquired what errand
-called him away, and Lafayette answered, with an inward chuckle, that
-if his Majesty knew he would not wish him to remain! Although taking
-good care not to betray his plans, he made no secret of his interest
-in the Colonists or his belief in the justice of their cause; and he
-avoided visiting seaport towns where expeditions were being fitted
-out against them, and declined all invitations likely to put him in a
-position to obtain information to which, under the circumstances, he
-felt he had no right.
-
-Before leaving London he wrote a long letter to his father-in-law, to
-be delivered only when he was safely on his way to Bordeaux. Then he
-crossed to France, but instead of going to his own home took refuge
-[Pg 45]with De Kalb at Chaillot, a suburb of Paris. Here he remained
-three days, making final preparations. On one of these days he appeared
-very early before the sleepy, astonished eyes of his friend De Ségur,
-sent away the servant, closed the door of the bedroom with great care,
-and hurled the bombshell of his news: "I am going to America. Nobody
-knows it, but I am too fond of you to leave without telling you my
-secret." Then he gave him the outline of his plan, including the port
-from which he was to sail and the names of the dozen French officers
-who were to accompany him. "Lucky dog! I wish I were going with you!"
-was the substance of De Ségur's answer, but it had not the usual ring
-of sincerity. De Ségur was about to marry a young aunt of Adrienne
-Lafayette's and his wedding-day was drawing very near.
-
-Lafayette managed to impart his secret to De Noailles also, but he
-left Paris without a farewell to Adrienne. The one hard thing in this
-hurried departure was that he did not dare to see or even to write
-directly to her. She was not well; and, besides the risk of arrest
-involved in visiting her, the interview could only be unnerving and
-distressing on both sides. The letter he wrote from London to her
-father appears to have been the nearest to a direct message, and that,
-it must be confessed, contained no mention of her name and no word
-exclusively for her. It was her mother, the upright Madame d'Ayen, who
-broke the news of his departure, tempering the seeming cruelty of his
-conduct with words of praise for his pluck and for the motive which
-[Pg 46]prompted him to act as he did. Madame d'Ayen was the only one
-of the immediate family who had a good word for the runaway. The young
-wife clung to her, appalled at the anger of her father. The duke was
-furious, and once more the worthy pair came to the verge of quarrel
-over this well-meaning young man. The count could see only madcap folly
-in exchanging an assured position at the French court for the doubtful
-honor of helping a lot of English farmers rebel against their king. For
-a few days the town buzzed with excitement. Lafayette's acquaintances
-were frankly astonished that the cold and indifferent young marquis
-had roused himself to such action, and thought it exceedingly "chic"
-that he should "go over to be hanged with the poor rebels." They were
-indignant at the bitterness of the duke's denunciation. One lady with a
-sharp tongue said that if he treated Lafayette so, he did not deserve
-to find husbands for the rest of his daughters.
-
-The runaway was safely out of Paris, but by no means out of danger. The
-Duc d'Ayen, who honestly felt that he was bringing disgrace upon the
-family, bestirred himself to prevent his sailing, and had a _lettre de
-cachet_ sent after him. A _lettre de cachet_ was an official document
-whose use and abuse during the last hundred years had done much to
-bring France to its present state of suppressed political excitement.
-It was an order for arrest--a perfectly suitable and necessary document
-when properly used. But men who had power, and also had private ends to
-gain, had been able to secure such papers by the hundreds with spaces
-[Pg 47]left blank wherein they could write whatever names they chose.
-It was a safe and deadly and underhand way of satisfying grudges. In
-Lafayette's case its use was quite lawful, because he was captain in a
-French regiment, leaving the country in disobedience to the wish of his
-sovereign, to fight against a nation with whom France was on friendly
-terms. Technically he was little better than a deserter. When such
-conduct was brought to official notice, only one course was possible.
-The _lettre de cachet_ was sent, a general order was issued forbidding
-French officers to take service in the American colonies, and directing
-that if any of them, "especially the Marquis de Lafayette," reached
-the French West Indies on such an errand he should forthwith return to
-France. Word was also sent to French seaports to keep a close watch
-upon vessels and to prevent the shipment of war materials to North
-America. Lafayette's friends became alarmed at all this activity and
-feared that it might have serious consequences not only for him, but
-for themselves. Officials began to receive letters from them calculated
-to shift the blame from their own shoulders, as well as to shield the
-young man. The French ambassador to England, whose guest he had been in
-London, was particularly disturbed, but felt somewhat comforted when he
-learned that a high official in the French army had asked King George
-for permission to fight as a volunteer under General Howe. This in a
-manner offset Lafayette's act, and England could not accuse France of
-partiality if her officers were to be found engaged on both sides.
-
-
-[Pg 48]VI
-
-A SEA-TURN
-
-
-Lafayette, meanwhile, was traveling southward with De Kalb. The
-government does not appear to have interested itself in De Kalb, who
-had a two years' furlough, obtained probably through the influence of
-the Comte de Broglie. At the end of three days they reached Bordeaux.
-Here they learned about the commotion Lafayette's departure had caused
-and that the king's order for his arrest was on the way. That it did
-not travel as speedily as the rumor seems to prove that Lafayette's
-friends were using all possible official delay to give him ample
-warning. He made good use of the time and succeeded in getting _La
-Victoire_ out of Bordeaux to the Spanish harbor of Los Pasajes in the
-Bay of Biscay, just across the French frontier.
-
-It was in leaving Bordeaux that Lafayette found a use for his many
-names. Each passenger leaving a French port was required to carry
-with him a paper stating his name, the place of his birth, his age,
-and general appearance. The one made out by a port official not
-over-particular in spelling described him as "Sr. Gilbert du Mottie,
-Chevalier de Chaviallac--age twenty years, tall, and blond." This was
-[Pg 49]all true except that his age was made a little stronger and the
-color of his hair a little weaker than facts warranted. His age was
-nineteen years and six months and his hair was almost red. He was the
-Chevalier de Chavaniac, though it is doubtful if one acquaintance in a
-hundred had ever heard the title.
-
-When he stepped ashore at Los Pasajes he was confronted by two officers
-who had followed from Bordeaux by land with the _lettre de cachet_.
-Letters from his family and from government officials also awaited him:
-"terrible letters," he called them. Those from his family upbraided
-him bitterly; the Ministry accused him of being false to his oath
-of allegiance. The _lettre de cachet_ peremptorily ordered him to
-Marseilles to await further instructions. He knew that this meant to
-await the arrival of his father-in-law, who was about to make a long
-journey into Italy and would insist upon Lafayette accompanying him,
-that he might keep an eye upon his movements.
-
-He was now in Spain, quite beyond the reach of French law, but he could
-not bring himself to actual disobedience while there was the remotest
-chance of having these commands modified; so he went back with the
-messengers to Bordeaux, and from there sent letters by courier to
-Paris, asking permission to return and present his case in person.
-De Kalb remained with the ship at Los Pasajes, impatient and not a
-little vexed. He foresaw a long delay, if indeed the expedition ever
-started. _La Victoire_ could not sail without its owner, or at least
-[Pg 50]without the owner's consent. De Kalb thought Lafayette had acted
-very foolishly; he should either have given up entirely or gone ahead
-regardless of the summons, Also he felt that the young man had not been
-quite frank; that in talking with him he had underestimated the family
-opposition. "Had he told me in Paris all that he has admitted since,"
-De Kalb wrote to his wife, "I would have remonstrated most earnestly
-against the whole scheme. As it is, the affair will cost him some
-money." Then, having freed his mind of his accumulated impatience, he
-added, "But if it be said that he has done a foolish thing, it may be
-answered that he acted from the most honorable motives and that he can
-hold up his head before all high-minded men."
-
-In Bordeaux Lafayette had presented himself before the commandant and
-made declaration that he alone would be answerable for the consequences
-of his acts; then he had set himself, with all the patience he could
-muster, to wait the return of his messenger. To his formal request he
-received no reply. From private letters he learned that he had only
-the Duc d'Ayen to thank for the _lettre de cachet_. Officials had been
-heard to say that they would have taken no notice of his departure had
-it not been for the duke's complaint. This convinced him that there was
-nothing to be gained by waiting; so he wrote to M. de Maurepas that
-he interpreted his silence to be consent, "and with this pleasantry,"
-as he says in the _Memoirs_, disappeared from Bordeaux. He informed
-the commandant that he was going to Marseilles in obedience to orders,
-[Pg 51]and sent the same message to De Kalb, adding the significant
-hint, however, that he had not given up hope, and the request that De
-Kalb look after his interests. He, indeed, set out by post-chaise on
-the road to Marseilles in company with the Vicomte de Mauroy, a young
-officer who like himself held one of Silas Deane's commissions. They
-left that road, however, at the first convenient opportunity and turned
-their horses directly toward Spain. They also made slight changes in
-their traveling arrangements, after which De Mauroy sat in the chaise
-alone, while Lafayette, dressed like a postilion, rode one of the
-horses. The commandant, having his own suspicions, sent some officers
-riding after them.
-
-At a little town near the frontier, called Saint-Jean-de-Luz, it was
-necessary to change horses. The masquerading post-boy threw himself
-down to rest in the stable while the gentleman in the chaise attended
-to the essential business. It was here that an inquisitive daughter
-of the innkeeper, who evidently knew a good deal about postilions,
-recognized in the youth stretched upon the straw the young gentleman
-she had seen riding in state in the other direction only a few days
-before. Her eyes and mouth opened in wonder, but a sign from Lafayette
-checked the exclamation upon her lips, and when the officers rode up a
-very demure but very positive young woman set them on the wrong trail.
-
-On the 17th of April Lafayette rejoined De Kalb at Los Pasajes, and on
-Sunday, April 20, 1777, _La Victoire_ set sail for America. In addition
-[Pg 52]to the captain and crew, De Kalb, the owner of the vessel, and
-De Mauroy, she had on board about a dozen officers of various grades,
-all of whom were anxious to serve in the Continental Army. The French
-government took no further measures to interfere. Grave matters of
-state nearer home claimed its attention; and, since signs of coming
-war with England grew plainer every day, it may have been well content
-to see this band of officers already enlisted against her. M. de
-Vergennes, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, was quoted as saying that
-the young man had run away again, and he would take good care this time
-not to mention the matter to the king.
-
-After six months of effort Lafayette was at last under way. The ship's
-papers had been made out for the West Indies; but inconvenient orders
-might be awaiting him there, so he ordered the captain to sail directly
-for the mainland. The captain demurred, explaining that an English
-cruiser could take them prisoners and confiscate their cargo if their
-course and their papers did not agree. As owner of the vessel Lafayette
-repeated his orders; he even threatened to depose the captain and put
-the second officer in command. But the captain's unwillingness appeared
-so extraordinary that he was moved to investigate farther, and found
-that the thrifty man had smuggled merchandise aboard to the value of
-$8,000 which he hoped to sell at a profit. Lafayette felt that it was
-not a time to be over-particular. He promised to make good whatever
-loss the captain might sustain, whereupon nervousness about English
-cruisers left him and he steered as directed.
-
-[Pg 53]It proved a long voyage. _La Victoire_ was at sea fifty-five
-dreary days, and Lafayette speedily fell a victim to the rollers
-of the Atlantic; but he wrote to his wife he "had the consolation
-vouchsafed to the wicked of suffering in company with many others."
-When he recovered he began to study English, in which he made
-considerable progress. He also studied military science as something
-about which it might be convenient for a major-general to know; and he
-wrote interminable pages to Adrienne, full of love, of ennui, and of
-whimsical arguments to prove that he had done the wisest thing, not
-only for his career, but for his health and safety, in offering his
-sword to the Continental Army.
-
-"I have been ever since my last letter to you in the most dismal of
-countries," he wrote after he had been out a month. "The sea is so
-wearisome, and I believe we have the same doleful influence upon each
-other, it and I." "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." "I ought to have landed before this, but the
-winds have cruelly opposed me. I shall not see Charleston for eight or
-ten days longer. Once I am there, I have every hope of getting news
-from France. I shall learn then so many interesting details, not only
-of what I am going to find before me, but above all of what I left
-behind me with such regret. Provided I find that you are well, and
-that you still love me, and that a certain number of our friends are
-in the same condition, I shall accept philosophically whatever else
-[Pg 54]may be." "How did you take my second departure? Did you love me
-the less? Have you forgiven me? Have you thought that in any event we
-should have been separated, I in Italy dragging along a life with no
-chance to distinguish myself and surrounded by people most hostile to
-my projects and my views?" "Consider the difference.... As the defender
-of that liberty which I adore, free myself beyond all others, coming
-as a friend to offer my services to this most interesting republic, I
-bring ... no selfish interests to serve. If I am striving for my own
-glory I am at the same time laboring for its welfare. I trust that for
-my sake you will become a good American; it is a sentiment made for
-virtuous hearts." "Do not allow yourself to feel anxiety because I am
-running great danger in the occupation that is before me. The post of
-major-general has always been a warrant of long life--so different
-from the service I should have had in France as colonel, for instance.
-With my present rank I shall only have to attend councils of war. Ask
-any of the French generals, of which there are so many because, having
-attained that rank, they run no further risk.... In order to show that
-I am not trying to deceive you I will admit that we are in danger at
-this moment, because we are likely at any time to be attacked by an
-English vessel, and we are not strong enough to defend ourselves. But
-as soon as I land I shall be in perfect safety. You see that I tell you
-everything in order that you may feel at ease and not allow yourself
-to be anxious without cause.... But now let us talk of more important
-[Pg 55]things," and he goes on to write about their baby daughter,
-Henrietta, and about the new baby, the announcement of whose birth he
-expected to receive very soon after landing. "Do not lose a moment in
-sending me the joyful news," he commands. "Mr. Deane and my friend
-Carmichael will aid you in this, and I am sure they would neglect no
-opportunity to make me happy as quickly as possible.... Adieu. Night
-coming on obliges me to stop, for I have lately forbidden the use of
-lights aboard the ship. See how careful I am!" He could afford to
-dwell on perils of the voyage, since these would be safely over before
-the missive could start on its way back to France. The danger was by
-no means imaginary. One of the letters written at the time Lafayette's
-departure was the talk of Paris, by a man who knew whereof he spoke,
-had said, "His age may justify his escapade, but I am truly sorry,
-not only for the interest you and the Duc d'Ayen have in the matter,
-but because I am afraid he may fall in with some English man-of-war,
-and, not being distinguished from the mass of adventurers who come
-into their hands, may be treated with a harshness not unknown to that
-nation."
-
-_La Victoire_ was a clumsy boat armed with only "two old cannon and
-a few muskets" and stood small chance if attacked. Lafayette was
-perfectly aware of this, and had no intention of being taken alive. He
-entered into an agreement with one of the company, a brave Dutchman
-named Bedaulx, to blow up the vessel as a last resort, the pleasant
-alternative in any case being hanging. So, with a sailor pledged to
-[Pg 56]ignite a few powder-kegs and the captain steering the ship by
-constraint rather than by desire, the long voyage was not devoid of
-thrills. These increased as they neared land. At forty leagues from
-shore _La Victoire_ was overhauled by a little vessel. "The captain
-grew pale," Lafayette tells us; but the crew was loyal and the officers
-were numerous and they put up a show of defense. She proved to be an
-American and so much the faster boat that she was soon out of sight,
-though _La Victoire_ tried hard to keep up with her. Scarcely was she
-gone when the lookout sighted two English frigates. With these they
-played a game of hide-and-seek until they were saved by a providential
-gale which blew the enemy out of his course long enough to enable _La
-Victoire_ to run into shelter near Georgetown, South Carolina.
-
-
-[Pg 57]VII
-
-AN AMERICAN PILGRIMAGE
-
-
-The bit of land to which that unneutral north wind had wafted the
-travelers was an island about fifteen miles from Georgetown, South
-Carolina. Nobody on _La Victoire_ knew the coast, so it was prudently
-decided to reconnoiter in a small boat. Lafayette, with De Kalb and
-two or three other officers and a few sailors, started off about two
-o'clock on the afternoon of June 13th, in the ship's yawl, and rowed
-until sunset without encountering a soul. After the sun went down they
-continued to row on and on, still in complete solitude, until about ten
-o'clock, when they came upon some negroes dredging for oysters.
-
-Thus the first human beings that Lafayette encountered in the land of
-the free were slaves; and it was not the least picturesque coincidence
-of his picturesque career that these ignorant creatures rendered him a
-service, instead of his helping them. Also it is rather amusing that
-this knight errant of noble lineage, who had come so far to fight
-for freedom, should have made his entry into America in the dead of
-[Pg 58]night, in an evil-smelling oyster-boat, instead of with pomp and
-ceremony from the ship his wealth had provided.
-
-Neither Frenchmen nor slaves could understand the speech of the others
-except in a vague way. The Frenchmen thought the slaves said there was
-a pilot somewhere on the island. They seemed to be offering to take
-them to the house of their master, an American officer; and as the tide
-had fallen and it was impossible to proceed farther in the yawl, they
-transferred themselves to the oyster-boat and gave themselves up to
-these mysterious guides. For two hours the blacks ferried them through
-the darkness. About midnight they saw a light, and soon were put ashore
-to make their way toward it. It was evident that their approach caused
-excitement. Dogs began to bark and the inmates of the large house from
-which the light shone appeared to be making preparations for a siege.
-A sharp challenge rang out, which indicated that they were mistaken
-for marauders from some British ship. De Kalb replied in his most
-polite English, explaining that they were French officers come to
-offer their swords to the Continental Army. Then, with the swiftness
-of a transformation in a fairy play, they found themselves in a glow
-of light, the center of warm interest, and being welcomed with true
-Southern hospitality. No wonder that ever after Lafayette had the
-kindest possible feelings for African slaves.
-
-Mid-June in Carolina is very beautiful; and it must have seemed a
-wonderful world upon which he opened his eyes next morning. Outside
-his window was the green freshness of early summer; inside the
-[Pg 59]immaculate luxury of a gentleman's bedchamber--both doubly
-delightful after seven cramped weeks at sea. That the smiling blacks
-who came to minister to his wants were bondmen, absolutely at the mercy
-of their masters, and that the filmy gauze curtains enveloping his bed
-had been put there to prevent his being eaten alive by those "gnats
-which cover you with large blisters," about which he afterward wrote
-Adrienne, were drawbacks and inconsistencies he hardly realized in that
-first blissful awakening. He was always more inclined to enthusiasm
-than to faultfinding, and nothing that ever happened to him in America
-effaced the joy of his first impression.
-
-His host proved to be Major Benjamin Huger, of French Huguenot descent,
-so he had fallen among people of his own nation. Had Major Huger been
-one of his own relatives he could not have been kinder or his family
-more sympathetic; and it was a sympathy that lasted long, for in the
-group around the French officers was a little lad of five who took
-small part in the proceedings at the moment, but lost his heart to
-the tall Frenchman then and there, and made a quixotic journey in
-Lafayette's behalf after he was grown.
-
-The water was too shallow to permit _La Victoire_ to enter the harbor
-at Georgetown, so a pilot was sent to take her to Charleston while
-Lafayette and his companions went by land. The reports he received
-about vigilant English cruisers made him send his captain orders to
-land officers and crew and burn the ship if occasion arose and he had
-[Pg 60]time; but another unneutral wind brought _La Victoire_ into
-Charleston Harbor in broad daylight without encountering friend or foe.
-
-Major Huger furnished Lafayette and De Kalb with horses for the
-ninety miles and more of bad roads that lay between his plantation
-and Charleston. The others, for whom no mounts could be found, made
-the distance on foot, arriving ragged and worn. But as soon as the
-city knew why they had come, its inhabitants vied with one another
-in showering attentions upon them. One of his companions wrote that
-the marquis had been received with all the honors due to a marshal of
-France. Lafayette, who sent a letter to his wife by every ship he found
-ready to sail, was eloquent in praise of Charleston and its citizens.
-It reminded him of England, he said, but it was neater, and manners
-were simpler. "The richest man and the poorest are upon the same social
-level," he wrote, "and although there are some great fortunes in
-this country, I defy any one to discover the least difference in the
-bearing of one man to another." He thought the women beautiful, and
-Charlestonians the most agreeable people he had ever met. He felt as
-much at ease with them as though he had known them for twenty years;
-and he described a grand dinner at which the governor and American
-generals had been present, which lasted five hours. "We drank many
-healths and spoke very bad English, which language I am beginning to
-use a little. To-morrow I shall take the gentlemen who accompany me to
-call upon the governor, and then I shall make preparations to leave."
-
-[Pg 61]He hoped to provide funds for the journey to Philadelphia by
-selling certain goods he had brought on _La Victoire_. It would have
-been easy to do this had not his trustful nature and ignorance of
-business played him a sorry turn. He found that his unwilling friend,
-the captain, held a note which he had signed in a hurry of departure
-without realizing what it contained. It provided that the vessel and
-cargo must be taken back to Bordeaux and sold there. This was most
-embarrassing, because, in spite of his large possessions in France, he
-was a stranger in America and had no other way of providing for the
-immediate wants of himself and his companions. It proved even more
-embarrassing than at first seemed likely, for the ship never reached
-Bordeaux. She was wrecked on the Charleston bar at the very outset of
-her homeward voyage.
-
-In his enthusiasm Lafayette had written Adrienne, "What delights me
-most is that all citizens are brothers." Here unexpectedly was a chance
-to put the brotherly quality to the test. He carried his dilemma to his
-new-found friends. They were polite and sympathetic, but ready money
-was scarce, they told him, and even before _La Victoire_ came to her
-inglorious end he experienced "considerable difficulty" in arranging
-a loan. Whatever temporary jolt this gave his theories, his natural
-optimism triumphed both in securing money to equip his expedition and
-in preserving intact his good will toward the American people.
-
-By the 25th of June everything was ready and his company set out,
-[Pg 62]traveling in three different parties, in order not to overcrowd
-the inns of that sparsely settled region. The gentlemen who had
-been entertained by Major Huger traveled together. One of them, the
-Chevalier du Buisson, wrote an account of the journey which explains
-the order in which they set forth. "The aide-de-camp of the marquis
-undertook to be our guide, although he had no possible idea of the
-country.... The procession was headed by one of the marquis's people
-in huzzar uniform. The marquis's carriage was a sort of uncovered sofa
-on four springs, with a fore-carriage. At the side of his carriage
-he had one of his servants on horseback who acted as his squire. The
-Baron de Kalb was in the same carriage. The two colonels, Lafayette's
-counselors, followed in a second carriage with two wheels. The third
-was for the aides-de-camp, the fourth for the luggage, and the rear was
-brought up by a negro on horseback."
-
-According to Lafayette's reckoning, they traveled nearly nine hundred
-miles through the two Carolinas, Virginia, and the states of Maryland
-and Delaware. But only a small part of the progress was made in such
-elegance. Roads were rough and the weather was very hot, which was
-bad for men and horses alike. Some of the company fell ill; some of
-the horses went lame; some of the luggage was stolen; some of it had
-to be left behind. Extra horses had to be bought, and this used up
-most of the money. On the 17th of July Lafayette wrote to Adrienne
-from Petersburg: "I am at present about eight days' journey from
-Philadelphia in the beautiful land of Virginia.... You have learned of
-[Pg 63]the beginning of my journey and how brilliantly I set out in a
-carriage.... At present we are all on horseback, after having broken up
-the wagons in my usual praiseworthy fashion; and I expect to write you
-in a few days that we have arrived on foot." He admitted that there had
-been some fatigue, but as for himself he had scarcely noticed it, so
-interested had he been in the great new country with its vast forests
-and large rivers; "everything, indeed, to give nature an appearance of
-youth and of majesty." "The farther north I proceed the better I like
-this country and its people."
-
-There was no regularity about sending mail across the Atlantic, and as
-yet he had not heard from home. Doubtless the hope of finding letters
-spurred on his desire to reach Philadelphia. From Annapolis he and De
-Kalb alone were able to proceed without a halt, leaving the rest of the
-party behind for needed repose. They reached Philadelphia on July 27th.
-Even with this final burst of speed they had consumed a whole month in
-a journey that can now be made in less than twenty-four hours.
-
-
-[Pg 64]VIII
-
-AN ASTONISHING RECEPTION
-
-
-All Lafayette's company had been looking forward to their reception
-by Congress as full recompense for sufferings by the way. Knowing
-that they had come to offer help, and having already experienced the
-hospitality of Charleston, they dreamed of a similar welcome increased
-and made more effective by official authority. They hastened to present
-their letters of introduction and their credentials; and it was a
-great blow to find that they were met, not with enthusiasm, but with
-coldness. Lafayette said their reception was "more like a dismissal."
-We are indebted to the Chevalier du Buisson for an account of this
-unexpected rebuff. "After having brushed ourselves up a little we went
-to see the President of Congress, to whom we presented our letters
-of recommendation and also our contracts. He sent us to Mr. Moose
-[Morris?], a member of Congress, who made an appointment to meet us
-on the following day at the door of Congress, and in the mean time
-our papers were to be read and examined." Next day they were very
-punctual, but were made to wait a long time before "Mr. Moose" appeared
-[Pg 65]with a Mr. Lovell and told them all communication must be made
-through him. Still standing in the street, Mr. Lovell talked with
-them and finally walked away and left them, "after having treated us
-in excellent French, like a set of adventurers.... This was our first
-reception by Congress, and it would have been impossible for any one to
-be more stupefied than we were. Would it have been possible for M. de
-Lafayette, M. de Kalb, and M. de Mauroy with ten officers recommended
-as we had been, and secretly approved, if not openly avowed by the
-government of France, to expect such a reception as this?"
-
-One can imagine the varying degrees of resentment and disgust with
-which they watched Mr. Lovell disappear. If _La Victoire_ had been
-there, ready provisioned for a voyage, very likely not one of them
-would have remained an hour longer in America. But _La Victoire_ was
-not at hand and Lafayette's sunny optimism was on the spot to serve
-them well. "We determined," says Du Buisson, "to wait and to discover
-the cause of this affront, if possible, before making any complaint."
-
-They discovered that they had come at the worst possible time. A
-number of foreign adventurers had hurried from the West Indies and
-Europe and offered their services at the beginning of the war. Being
-desperately in need of trained officers, Congress had given some of
-them commissions, though their demands for rank and privilege were
-beyond all reason. This, coupled with their bad behavior after entering
-the army, had incensed officers of American birth, who threatened to
-[Pg 66]resign if any more Europeans were taken into the army with rank
-superior to their own. The protest had reached almost the proportions
-of a strike. At that very moment a French artillery officer named De
-Coudray was giving Congress no end of trouble, and indeed continued to
-do so until, "by a happy accident," as Franklin cynically put it, he
-was drowned in the Schuylkill River a few weeks later.
-
-There was nothing to prove that Lafayette and his friends differed
-from the rest. Like them they were foreigners with high-sounding
-titles in front of their names and requests for major-generalships
-tripping speedily after their offers of help. As for Silas Deane's
-contracts--Deane had commissioned some of the very worst of these men.
-Congress had reached the point where it proposed to end the trouble by
-refusing to honor any more of his agreements. Mr. Lovell told Lafayette
-and his companions smartly that French officers had a great fancy for
-entering the American army uninvited, that America no longer needed
-them, having plenty of experienced men of her own now; and walked away,
-leaving them standing there in the street.
-
-Lafayette, not being like the others, determined to make Congress aware
-of the fact. He wrote a letter to that august body, stating why and
-how he had come to America, and adding: "After the sacrifices that I
-have made in this cause I have the right to ask two favors at your
-hands. The one is to serve without pay, and the other that I be allowed
-to serve first as a volunteer." Congress immediately sat up and took
-[Pg 67]notice of the young man, the more readily because of two letters
-which arrived from Paris showing that he was of importance in his own
-country. The first was signed by Silas Deane and by Benjamin Franklin,
-and read:
-
-"The Marquis de Lafayette, a young nobleman of great family connection
-here and great wealth, is gone to America on a ship of his own,
-accompanied by some officers of distinction, in order to serve in our
-armies. He is exceedingly beloved, and everybody's good wishes attend
-him. We cannot but hope he may meet with such a reception as will make
-the country and his expedition agreeable to him. Those who censure
-it as imprudent in him do, nevertheless, applaud his spirit; and we
-are satisfied that the civilities and respect that may be shown him
-will be serviceable to our affairs here, as pleasing not only to his
-powerful relations, and to the court, but to the whole French nation.
-He leaves a beautiful young wife ... and for her sake particularly we
-hope that his bravery and ardent desire to distinguish himself will be
-a little restrained by the general's prudence, so as not to permit his
-being hazarded much, but on some important occasion." The other was a
-communication from the French government requesting the Congress of the
-United States not to give employment to the Marquis de Lafayette. But
-Congress took the hint contained in Franklin's letter and regarded this
-for just what it was--a bit of official routine.
-
-Mr. Lovell hastened to call upon Lafayette in company with another
-gentleman who had better manners, and made an attempt at apology. This
-[Pg 68]interview led to a more private talk in which he was offered
-a commission of major-general without pay and without promise of a
-command, to date from that time, and to have no connection whatever
-with Silas Deane's former promises. To this Lafayette agreed.
-
-Some of his friends did not fare so well, but even these felt that he
-did everything in his power to further their interests. "If he had had
-his way," says Du Buisson, "De Kalb would have been a major-general,
-and we should all have had places." The situation was particularly
-trying to De Kalb, who was so much older and had seen so much actual
-military service. On board _La Victoire_ he had been only Lafayette's
-guest, though the guest of honor and, next to the owner, the most
-important person aboard. Under such conditions, good manners forced him
-to play a subordinate part; and if it be true that he and De Broglie
-were using Lafayette's generosity to further their own ends, that was
-another reason for circumspect behavior. But after landing it must have
-been galling to see this young captain of twenty made a major-general
-"on demand," while his thirty-four years of experience were completely
-ignored. On the day after Lafayette's appointment De Kalb wrote
-Congress a letter in his turn, complaining bitterly and asking either
-that he be made a major-general, "with the seniority I have a right to
-expect," or that he and the other officers who had come with Lafayette
-be refunded the money they had spent on the journey. He said he was
-very glad Congress had granted Lafayette's wishes. "He is a worthy
-[Pg 69]young man, and no one will outdo him in enthusiasm in your cause
-of liberty and independence. My wish will always be that his success
-as a major-general will equal his zeal and your expectation." But De
-Kalb plainly had his doubts; and he did not hesitate to "confess,
-sir, that this distinction between him and myself is painful and very
-displeasing to me. We came on the same errand, with the same promises,
-and as military men and for military purposes. I flatter myself that
-if there was to be any preference, it would be due to me." He hinted
-that he might sue Mr. Deane for damages, and he added: "I do not think
-that either my name, my services, or my person are proper objects to
-be trifled with or laughed at. I cannot tell you, sir, how deeply I
-feel the injury done to me, or how ridiculous it seems to me to make
-people leave their homes, families, and affairs, to cross the sea under
-a thousand different dangers, to be received and to be looked at with
-contempt by those from whom you were to expect but warm welcome."
-
-Congress could have answered with perfect justice that it had not
-"made" these gentlemen travel one foot toward America or brave a
-single danger. But on the basis of Deane's contract it was clearly
-in the wrong and it had no wish to insult France, though it could
-not afford to anger the American generals. It therefore decided to
-thank the French officers for their zeal in coming to America and to
-pay their expenses home again. Most of them did return, some by way
-of Boston, others from Southern ports. De Kalb meant to accompany
-the latter group, but a fever detained him for several weeks in [Pg
-70]Philadelphia; and just as he was leaving a messenger brought him
-word that he had been made major-general through the influence of
-several members of Congress who had made his personal acquaintance and
-were more impressed by the man himself than by his petulant letter.
-At first he was inclined to refuse, fearing the other French officers
-might feel he had deserted them, but on reflection he accepted, and, as
-every one knows, rendered great service to the United States.
-
-Lafayette wrote Congress a letter of thanks in English--an excellent
-letter, considering the short time he had been using the language,
-but neither in wording nor in spelling exactly as a native would have
-written it. In this letter he expressed the hope that he might be
-allowed to "serve near the person of General Washington till such time
-as he may think proper to intrust me with a division of the army."
-
-General Washington's previous experience with the French had been
-unfortunate. He had met them as enemies in the neighborhood of Fort
-Duquesne before Lafayette was born. They had taken part in the defeat
-of General Braddock, and during the present war their actions had not
-been of a kind to endear them to him. Probably even after reading
-Franklin's letter he did not look forward with the least pleasure to
-meeting this young sprig of the French nobility. Still, Washington was
-a just man and the first to admit that every man has the right to be
-judged on his own merits.
-
-It was at a dinner, one of the lucky dinners in Lafayette's career,
-[Pg 71]that the two met for the first time. The company was a large
-one, made up of the most distinguished men in Philadelphia; but from
-the moment Washington entered the room Lafayette was sure he was the
-greatest in the company. "The majesty of his countenance and his figure
-made it impossible not to recognize him," while his manners seemed to
-Lafayette as affable and kindly as they were dignified. Washington on
-his part observed the slim young Frenchman throughout the evening, and
-was also favorably impressed. Before the party broke up he drew him
-aside for a short conversation and invited him to become a member of
-his military family, saying with a smile that he could not offer the
-luxuries of a court or even the conveniences to which Lafayette had
-been accustomed, but that he was now an American soldier and would of
-course accommodate himself to the privations of a republican camp.
-
-Pleased and elated as a boy, Lafayette accepted, sent his horses
-and luggage to camp, and took up his residence at Washington's
-headquarters. "Thus simply," he wrote in his _Memoirs_, "came about
-the union of two friends whose attachment and confidence were cemented
-by the greatest of interests." In truth this sudden flowering of
-friendship between the middle-aged Washington, who appeared so cool,
-though in fact he had an ardent nature, and the enthusiastic Frenchman
-twenty-five years his junior, is one of the pleasantest glimpses we
-have into the kindly human heart of each. It took neither of them one
-instant to recognize the worth of the other, and the mutual regard thus
-established lasted as long as life itself.
-
-
-[Pg 72]IX
-
-PROVING HIMSELF A SOLDIER
-
-
-The American army as Lafayette first saw it must have seemed a strange
-body of men to eyes accustomed to holiday parades in Paris. The memory
-of it remained with him years afterward when he wrote that it consisted
-of "about eleven thousand men, rather poorly armed, and much worse
-clad." There was a great variety in the clothing, some unmistakable
-nakedness, and the best garments were only loose hunting-shirts of gray
-linen, of a cut with which he had already become familiar in Carolina.
-The soldiers were drawn up in two lines, the smaller ones in front,
-"but with this exception there was no distinction made as to size." It
-was while reviewing these troops that Washington said, "it is somewhat
-embarrassing to us to show ourselves to an officer who has just come
-from the army of France," to which Lafayette made the answer that won
-the hearts of all, "I am here to learn, not to teach." He speedily
-learned that in spite of their appearance and their way of marching and
-maneuvering, which seemed to him childishly simple, they were "fine
-soldiers led by zealous officers," in whom "bravery took the place of
-science."
-
-[Pg 73]Judging by what they had accomplished, they were indeed wonders.
-It was now August, 1777. Lexington had been fought in April, 1775,
-and in that space of more than two years England had been unable to
-make real headway against the insurrection which General Gage had at
-first thought could be thoroughly crushed by four British regiments.
-That mistake had soon become apparent. Large reinforcements had been
-sent from England with new generals. At present there were two British
-armies in the field. Time and again the ragged Continentals had
-been beaten, yet in a bewildering fashion they continued to grow in
-importance in the eyes of the world.
-
-The first part of the struggle had all taken place in the neighborhood
-of Boston; hence the name "Bostonians" by which the Americans had
-been applauded in Paris. But after General Howe was held for a whole
-winter in Boston in a state of siege he sailed away for Halifax in
-March, 1776, with all his troops and all the Tories who refused to stay
-without him. This was nothing less than an admission that he was unable
-to cope with the Americans. He sent word to England that it would
-require at least 50,000 men to do it--10,000 in New England, 20,000
-in the Middle States, 10,000 in the South, and 10,000 to beat General
-Washington, who had developed such an uncanny power of losing battles,
-yet gaining prestige.
-
-The War Office in London refused to believe General Howe. It reasoned
-that New England was, after all, only a small section of country which
-[Pg 74]could be dealt with later; so it let it severely alone and
-concentrated attention upon New York with a view to getting command
-of the Hudson River. The Hudson would afford a direct route up to the
-Canadian border, and Canada was already British territory. It ought
-not to be difficult to gain control of one Atlantic seaport and one
-river. That accomplished, the rebellion would be cut in two as neatly
-as though severed with a knife, and it would be easy enough to dispose
-of New England and of the South in turn.
-
-So General Howe was ordered back to carry out this plan. He appeared
-off Staten Island with twenty-five thousand men on the day after the
-Declaration of Independence was signed. In the thirteen months that
-elapsed between his coming and the day Lafayette first reviewed the
-American army General Washington had been able to keep Howe and all
-his forces at bay. He had marched and retreated and maneuvered. He had
-lost battles and men. Lost New York, as had been reported in Paris; had
-indeed lost most of his army, as the American commissioners admitted
-to Lafayette; yet in some mysterious way he continued to fight. By
-brilliant strategy he had gained enough victory to rekindle hope after
-hope seemed dead; and never, even when the outlook was darkest, had the
-British been able to get full control of the Hudson River.
-
-The British government, annoyed by Howe's delay, sent over another army
-under General Burgoyne in the spring of 1777, with orders to go down
-[Pg 75]from Canada and end the matter. When last heard from, this army
-had taken Ticonderoga and was pursuing General Schuyler through eastern
-New York. General Howe, meanwhile, appeared to have dropped off the
-map. He was no longer in force near New York, nor had Washington any
-definite news of his whereabouts. This was the situation when Lafayette
-became a member of Washington's military family; a major-general
-without pay, experience, or a command.
-
-He took his commission seriously enough to cause his general some
-misgiving; for, after all, Washington knew nothing about his ability,
-only that he liked him personally. Lafayette frankly admitted his youth
-and inexperience, but always accompanied such admissions with a hint
-that he was ready to assume command as soon as the general saw fit to
-intrust him with it. On the 19th of August Washington wrote to Benjamin
-Harrison, a member of Congress, telling him his perplexity and asking
-him to find out how matters really stood. If Lafayette's commission had
-been merely honorary, as Washington supposed, the young man ought to
-be made fully aware of his mistake; if not, Washington would like to
-know what was expected of him. The answer returned was that Washington
-must use his own judgment; and for a time matters drifted. Lafayette
-meanwhile took gallant advantage of every small opportunity that came
-his way, both for assuming responsibility and for doing a kindness.
-He proved himself ready to bear a little more than his full share of
-hardship, and, by constant cheerfulness and willingness to accept
-[Pg 76]whatever duty was assigned him, came to be regarded as by far
-the best foreigner in the army--though of course hopelessly and forever
-a foreigner. In his letters home he often touched upon the discontent
-of other men of European birth "who complain, detest, and are detested
-in turn. They do not understand why I alone am liked.... For my part I
-cannot understand why they are so heartily detested.... I am happy in
-being loved by everybody, foreign and American. I like them all, hope
-to merit their esteem, and we are well content with each other."
-
-It was on the 21st of August, two days after Washington's letter to
-Mr. Harrison, that Lafayette was called to attend the first council of
-war--that duty about which he had playfully written to his wife. The
-question was what to do next, for General Howe and his army had not
-been seen or heard of for weeks. That meant that he was planning some
-surprise; but from which direction would it come?
-
-The truth was that General Howe had allowed himself to be lured away
-from the Hudson by his ambition to capture Philadelphia, knowing what
-a blow it would be to the Americans to lose their chief town where
-Congress was sitting. As soon as this was accomplished he meant to
-return to his former duty. To the American officers gathered around
-the map on the council table his whereabouts was a great mystery, for
-they thought ample time had elapsed for him to appear in Chesapeake
-Bay if Philadelphia was indeed his objective. Presumably he meant to
-attack some other place, and Charleston seemed to be the only other
-[Pg 77]place of sufficient importance to merit his attention. As it
-was manifestly impossible to get Washington's army that far south in
-time to be of assistance, it was determined to leave Charleston to its
-fate and to move nearer to New York to guard the Hudson. With Burgoyne
-descending from the north and Howe in hiding, it was quite possible
-that the river might soon be menaced from two directions. The battle
-of Bennington, a severe check for Burgoyne, had in fact occurred three
-days before, but it is probable they had not yet heard of it.
-
-The day after the council, ships carrying Howe's army were sighted
-in Chesapeake Bay, which proved without doubt that Philadelphia was
-his goal. Washington faced his men about, and, in order to cheer
-Philadelphians and give his soldiers a realization of what they were
-defending, marched the army through the city "down Front Street to
-Chestnut, and up Chestnut to Elm," riding, himself, at the head of
-his troops, a very handsome figure on his white horse, Lafayette
-conspicuous among the staff-officers, and the privates wearing
-sprigs of green in their hats as they marched to a lively air. They
-were joined as they went along by Pennsylvania militia and by other
-volunteers who hastened forward, American fashion, at prospect of a
-battle. Thus Washington's force was increased to about fifteen thousand
-by the time he neared the enemy. Most of these new arrivals were,
-however, worse off for clothing and arms--and discipline--than the
-original army, so his force by no means matched either in numbers or
-[Pg 78]equipment the eighteen thousand British soldiers, thoroughly
-supplied according to the best standards of the day, which were
-disembarked by Cornwallis "at the Head of Elk," the inlet of Chesapeake
-Bay nearest to the city.
-
-There were several preliminary skirmishes, during which Lafayette
-learned that Washington could be as personally reckless as the youngest
-lieutenant. On the day the British landed he exposed himself in a
-reconnaissance and was forced to remain through a night of storm, with
-Lafayette and Gen. Nathanael Greene, in a farm-house very near the
-enemy lines.
-
-The main battle for the defense of Philadelphia occurred on the 11th
-of September, on the banks of a little stream called the Brandywine,
-about twenty-five miles from the city. Washington intrenched his force
-upon the hilly ground of its east bank, but, owing to woods which made
-it hard to observe the enemy, to the ease with which the stream could
-be forded, and to the superior numbers of the British, this position
-was turned and his army forced back toward Chester. It was Lafayette's
-first battle, and the zeal with which he threw himself into the unequal
-contest, the quickness of his perceptions, and the courage he showed in
-following up his instinct of the thing to do with the act of doing it,
-won the admiration of all who saw him. After that day the army forgot
-he was a foreigner and looked upon him as one of themselves. "Never,"
-he says, "was adoption more complete."
-
-During the hottest of the fight he had leaped from his horse down
-among the men, striving by voice and example to rally them to make
-[Pg 79]a stand against Cornwallis's fast-approaching column. Lord
-Sterling and General Sullivan had come to his aid and the three had
-held their ground until the British were only twenty yards away, when
-they took refuge in a wood. Lafayette's left leg had been struck by
-a musket-ball, but he was unconscious of this until another officer
-called attention to the blood running from his boot. With the help of
-his French aide-de-camp, Major de Gimat, who had come with him on _La
-Victoire_, he remounted his horse, but remained with the troops and
-was borne along in the general retreat toward Chester, which became
-very like a rout as night approached; men and guns hurrying on in
-ever-increasing confusion. Near Chester there was a bridge, and here,
-though Lafayette was weak from loss of blood, he placed guards and,
-halting the fugitives as they came up, managed to bring something like
-order into the chaos. It was only after Washington and other generals
-reached the spot that he consented to have his wound properly dressed.
-Washington's midnight report to Congress mentioned the gallantry of the
-young Frenchman.
-
-Lafayette's injury was not at all dangerous, but it was quite
-serious enough to keep him in bed for a month or more. He was taken
-to Philadelphia, and Washington sent his most skilful surgeon to
-attend him, with orders to care for him as he would for his own son.
-Later, when Howe's continued approach made it certain the city must
-pass into British hands, he was sent by water to Bristol on the
-[Pg 80]Delaware River, and from that point Mr. Henry Laurens, the new
-President of Congress, on the way to join his fleeing fellow-members,
-who were to resume their sessions at York, gave him a lift in his
-traveling-carriage as far as Bethlehem, where the Moravians nursed him
-back to health.
-
-De Kalb and other military friends took a real, if humorously
-expressed, interest in his "little wound," and on his part he declared
-that he valued it at more than five hundred guineas. He had hastened to
-write his wife all about it, not too seriously, "for fear that General
-Howe, who sends his royal master rather exaggerated details of his
-exploits in America, may report that I am not only wounded, but dead.
-It would cost him no more." Reports of Lafayette's death were indeed
-circulated in France, but Madame d'Ayen managed to keep them from her
-daughter. Lafayette assured his wife that his injury was "only a flesh
-wound, touching neither bone nor nerves. The surgeons are astonished at
-the rapidity with which it heals, and fall into ecstasies every time
-it is dressed, pretending it is the loveliest thing in the world. For
-myself, I find it very dirty, very much of a bore, and quite painful
-enough; but in truth, if a man wanted a wound merely for diversion's
-sake he could not do better than come and examine mine, with a view to
-copying it. There, dear heart, is the true history of this thing that I
-give myself airs about and pompously call 'my wound' in order to appear
-interesting."
-
-
-[Pg 81]X
-
-LETTERS
-
-
-Lafayette had plenty of time for thought as he lay in his neat room,
-waited upon by the wife of the chief farmer of the Bethlehem Society
-and her daughter, Lissel. Much of the time was spent in wondering about
-Adrienne, of whom as yet he had received news only once. As this was
-brought him by Count Pulaski, who left Paris before the birth of the
-expected child, Lafayette did not know whether his new baby was a boy
-or a girl, whether it had been born alive or dead, or how his wife
-had come through the ordeal. He could only send her long letters at
-every opportunity, well knowing "that King George might receive some
-of them instead." In these he sent messages to many French friends,
-not forgetting his old tutor, the Abbé Feyon, but he did not enlarge
-upon all phases of his American Life. "At present I am in the solitude
-of Bethlehem, about which the Abbé Raynal has so much to say," he told
-her. "This community is really touching and very interesting. We will
-talk about it after I return, when I mean to bore every one I love,
-you, consequently, most of all, with stories of my travels." He did not
-[Pg 82]think it wise to refer in letters to one amusing phase of the
-situation in which he found himself at Bethlehem--the visits paid him
-by influential members of the Moravian brotherhood, who took a deep
-interest in his spiritual welfare and tried their best to convert him
-from a warrior into a pacifist.
-
-It was while listening, or appearing to listen, politely to their
-sermons upon peace that his mind darted over the earth, here and there,
-even to far-distant Asia, planning warlike expeditions for the aid of
-his American friends. When his peaceful hosts departed he wrote letters
-embodying these plans. As he says in his _Memoirs_, he could "do
-nothing except write letters." One, which he addressed to the French
-governor of Martinique, proposed an attack on the British West Indies,
-to be carried out under the American flag. He had also the temerity to
-write to M. de Maurepas, proposing a descent upon the British in India.
-The boldness of the idea, and the impudence of Lafayette in suggesting
-it while he was still under the ban of the French government, caused
-the old man to chuckle. "Once that boy got an idea in his head there
-was no stopping him," he said. "Some day he would strip Versailles of
-its furniture for the sake of his Americans," and thereafter he showed
-a marked partiality for "that boy."
-
-Matters had gone badly for the Americans since the battle of the
-Brandywine. General Howe occupied Philadelphia on September 26th; on
-October 4th Washington lost the battle of Germantown. Since then the
-[Pg 83]army had been moving from camp to camp, seeking a spot not
-too exposed, yet from which it could give General Howe all possible
-annoyance. Clearly this was no time to be lying in tidy, sunlit rooms
-listening to sermons on non-resistance. Before he was able to bear
-the weight of his military boot Lafayette rejoined the army. An entry
-in the diary of the Bethlehem Congregation, dated October 16, 1777,
-reads: "The French Marquis, whom we have found to be a very intelligent
-and pleasant young man, came to bid us adieu, and requested to be
-shown through the Sisters' House, which we were pleased to grant. He
-was accompanied by his adjutant, and expressed his admiration of the
-institution. While recovering from his wound he spent much of his time
-in reading." Under date of October 18th is another entry, "The French
-Marquis and General Woodford left for the army to-day."
-
-On the day between Lafayette's visit of farewell and his actual
-departure Gen. John Burgoyne, who had set out confidently from Canada
-to open the Hudson River, ended by surrendering his entire army. He
-had thought he was pursuing ragged Continental soldiers when in truth
-they were luring him through the autumn woods to his ruin. He awoke to
-find his communications cut and his army compelled to fight a battle or
-starve. It gallantly fought two battles near Saratoga, one on September
-19th, the other on October 7th; but both went against him and ten days
-later he gave up his sword and nearly six thousand British soldiers to
-"mere" Americans.
-
-[Pg 84]Up to that time a puzzled world had been unable to understand
-how the American cause continued to gain. The capture of a whole
-British army, however, was something tangible that Europe could fully
-comprehend, and respect for the Revolution measurably increased. The
-victory had even greater effect in Europe than in America, though at
-home there was much rejoicing and a marked gain in the value of those
-"promises to pay" which Congress issued as a means of getting money for
-current expenses.
-
-But Burgoyne's surrender threatened to have very serious effects upon
-the personal fortunes of General Washington, and in lesser degree
-upon those of Lafayette. People began contrasting the results of the
-summer's campaign. Washington, in command of the main army, had lost
-Philadelphia, while farther north General Gates, with fewer men, had
-not only captured Burgoyne, but cleared the whole region of enemy
-troops. There were those who did not hesitate to say that Washington
-ought to be deposed and Gates put in his place.
-
-In reality Gates had almost nothing to do with the surrender of
-Burgoyne. The strategy which led up to the battles of Saratoga was the
-work of General Schuyler, who was forced out of command by intrigue
-and superseded by Gates just before the crowning triumph. The battles
-themselves had not been fought under the personal orders of the new
-commander, but under Benedict Arnold and Gen. Daniel Morgan, with the
-help of the Polish General Kosciuszko in planning defenses. It was pure
-[Pg 85]luck, therefore, which brought Gates the fame; but, being a
-man of more ambition than good judgment, with an excellent opinion of
-himself, he was the last person in the world to discourage praise of
-his ability.
-
-Discontent against Washington was fanned by born intriguers like the
-Irish General Conway and by the more despicable Gen. Charles Lee, a
-traitor at heart. Lafayette became involved quite innocently, in the
-plot against him, known to history as the Conway Cabal. Two things,
-good in themselves, were responsible for it. One was his optimistic
-belief in human nature; the other, his increasing military renown. The
-latter was the result of a very small engagement in which he took a
-very large part shortly after rejoining the army. The main camp was
-then about fifteen miles from Philadelphia, but General Greene had
-taken his division over into New Jersey, where he was endeavoring to
-make life uncomfortable for General Howe. Lafayette obtained permission
-to join him as a volunteer, and on the 25th of November went out with
-about three hundred men to reconnoiter a position held by the British
-at Gloucester, opposite Philadelphia. He could clearly see them
-carrying across the river the provisions they had gathered in a raid
-in New Jersey, and they might easily have killed or captured him had
-they been on the lookout. Some of his men advanced to within two miles
-and a half of Gloucester, where they came upon a post of three hundred
-and fifty Hessians with field-pieces. What followed is told briefly in
-[Pg 86]his own words. "As my little reconnoitering party was all in
-fine spirits, I supported them. We pushed the Hessians more than half
-a mile from the place where their main body was, and we made them run
-very fast." The vigor, of his attack made Cornwallis believe General
-Greene's entire division was upon him, and he hurried to the relief of
-his Hessians. This was more than Lafayette bargained for, and he drew
-off in the gathering darkness with the loss of only one man killed and
-five wounded, carrying with him fourteen Hessian prisoners, while twice
-that number, including an officer, remained on the field.
-
-General Greene had described Lafayette to his wife as "one of the
-sweetest-tempered young gentlemen." Now his soldierly qualities
-impressed him. "The marquis is determined to be in the way of danger,"
-was the comment he appended to his own account of the affair; and he
-ordered Lafayette to make his report directly to Washington, which the
-young man did in the boyishly jubilant epistle written in quaint French
-English which told how the Hessians "ran very fast." The letter fairly
-bubbled with pride over the behavior of his militia and his rifle
-corps; and, not content with expressing this to his Commander-in-chief,
-he lined them up next morning and made them a little speech, telling
-them exactly how he felt about it. An Englishman or an American could
-scarcely have done it with grace, but it was manifestly spontaneous on
-his part--one of those little acts which so endeared Lafayette to his
-American friends both in and out of the army.
-
-[Pg 87]Washington sent on the news to Congress with the intimation
-that his young friend had now proved his ability and might be trusted
-with the command he so longed for. "He possesses uncommon military
-talents," Washington wrote, "is of a quick and sound judgment,
-persevering and enterprising without rashness, and, besides these, he
-is of conciliating temper and perfectly sober--which are qualities
-that rarely combine in the same person." At that moment of bickering
-in the army and of popular criticism of himself they must have
-seemed exceptionally rare to Washington. Congress expressed its
-willingness, and we learn from a long letter written by Lafayette to
-his father-in-law and carried across the ocean by no less a personage
-than John Adams, when he went to replace Silas Deane at Paris, that
-Washington offered him the choice of several different divisions.
-
-He chose one made up entirely of Virginians, though it was weak "even
-in proportion to the weakness of the entire army," and very sadly in
-need of clothing. "I am given hope of cloth out of which I must make
-coats and recruits out of which I must make soldiers in almost the
-same space of time. Alas! the one is harder than the other, even for
-men more skilled than I," he wrote, just before the army went into
-its melancholy winter quarters at Valley Forge. "We shall be in huts
-there all winter," Lafayette explained. "It is there that the American
-army will try to clothe itself, because it is naked with an entire
-nakedness; to form itself, because it is in need of instruction; and to
-[Pg 88]recruit its numbers, because it is very weak. But the thirteen
-states are going to exert themselves and send us men," he added,
-cheerfully. "I hope my division will be one of the strongest, and I
-shall do all in my power to make it one of the best."
-
-He was striving to make the most of his opportunity. "I read, I study,
-I examine, I listen, I reflect, and upon the result of all this I
-endeavor to form my opinion and to put into it as much common sense as
-I can. I am cautious about talking too much, lest I should say some
-foolish thing; and still more cautious in my actions lest I should do
-some foolish thing; for I do not want to disappoint the confidence the
-Americans have so kindly placed in me."
-
-There was not much to do after the army went into winter quarters;
-and France seemed very far away. "What is the use of writing news in
-a letter destined to travel for years and to reach you finally in
-tatters?" he wrote Adrienne on November 6th. "You may receive this
-letter, dear heart, in the course of five or six years, for I write
-by a crooked chance, of which I have no great opinion. See the route
-it will take. An officer of the army carries it to Fort Pitt, three
-hundred miles toward the back of the continent. There it will embark
-on the Ohio and float through a region inhabited by savages. When it
-reaches New Orleans a little boat will transport it to the Spanish
-Isles, from which a vessel of that nation will take it (Lord knows
-when!) when it returns to Europe. But it will still be far from you,
-[Pg 89]and only after having passed through all the grimy hands of
-Spanish postal officials will it be allowed to cross the Pyrenees.
-It may be unsealed and resealed five or six times before reaching
-you. So it will be proof that I neglect not a single chance, even the
-remotest, to send you news of me and to repeat how much I love you....
-It is cruel to think ... that my true happiness is two hundred leagues
-distant, across an immense ocean infested by scoundrelly English
-vessels. They make me very unhappy, those villainous ships. Only one
-letter from you, one single letter, dear heart, has reached me as yet.
-The others are lost, captured, lying at the bottom of the sea, to all
-appearances. I can only blame our enemies for this horrible privation;
-for you surely would not neglect to write me from every port and by
-every packet sent out by Doctor Franklin and Mr. Deane."
-
-On his part, he neglected not a single opportunity. On one occasion
-he even sent her a letter by the hand of an English officer, a Mr.
-Fitzpatrick, with whom he had begun a friendship during his visit to
-London. This gentleman had come to Philadelphia with General Howe, and
-Lafayette learned in some way that he was about to return to England.
-"I could not resist the desire to embrace him before his departure. We
-arranged a rendezvous in this town (Germantown). It is the first time
-that we have met without arms in our hands, and it pleases us both much
-better than the enemy airs we have heretofore given ourselves ... there
-is no news of interest. Besides, it would not do for Mr. Fitzpatrick to
-[Pg 90]transport political news written by a hand at present engaged
-against his army."
-
-It was this friendly enemy, Mr. Fitzpatrick, who lifted his voice in
-the British House of Commons in Lafayette's behalf, when the latter was
-a prisoner in Germany.
-
-
-[Pg 91]XI
-
-A FOOL'S ERRAND
-
-
-The more Lafayette studied Washington the more he was confirmed in
-his first swift impression. "Our general is a man really created for
-this Revolution, which could not succeed without him," he wrote the
-Duc d'Ayen. "I see him more intimately than any one else in the world,
-and I see him worthy the adoration of his country.... His name will be
-revered in future ages by all lovers of liberty and humanity."
-
-Such admiration seemed unlikely ground upon which to work for
-Washington's undoing, but this was what his enemies attempted. Part
-of their plan was to win away Washington's trusted friends, and
-Lafayette's good will would be particularly valuable, because he
-was looked upon in a way as representing France. The winter proved
-unusually severe, and when the sufferings of the soldiers at Valley
-Forge began to be noised abroad criticism of Washington increased. It
-was pointed out that Burgoyne's captured army was being fed at American
-expense, that General Clinton's forces were comfortably housed in New
-York, while General Howe and his officers were enjoying a brilliant
-[Pg 92]social season at Philadelphia; but at Valley Forge there was
-only misery. General Conway was there himself, working up his plot.
-
-Lafayette was so kindly disposed that it was hard for him to believe
-others evil-minded. Also he was frankly ambitious. Thomas Jefferson
-once said of him that he had "a canine appetite" for fame. Conway
-played skilfully on both these traits, professing great friendship for
-Lafayette and throwing out hints of glory to be gained in service under
-General Gates, to whom he knew Lafayette had written a polite note of
-congratulation after Saratoga. Lafayette appears to have taken it all
-at its face value until an incriminating letter from Conway to Gates
-fell into hands for which it was never intended. Then Lafayette went
-directly to Washington, meaning to unburden his heart, but the general
-was engaged and could not see him. He returned to his quarters and
-wrote him a long letter, breathing solicitude in every line. Washington
-answered with his usual calm dignity, but in a way to show that the
-young man's devotion was balm to his spirit.
-
-Conway had played upon Lafayette's homesickness also. Family news came
-to him very slowly. It was not until Christmas was being celebrated at
-Valley Forge with such sorry festivities as the camp could afford that
-he learned of the birth of his little daughter, Anastasie, which had
-occurred in the previous July. All the camp rejoiced with him, but the
-news increased his desire to be with his wife and children, if only for
-[Pg 93]a short time. If he had really contemplated a journey across the
-sea, however, he gave up the idea at once, believing that loyalty to
-his friend now made it his duty to "stand by."
-
-"The bearer of this letter will describe to you the attractive
-surroundings of the place I have chosen to stay in rather than to enjoy
-the happiness of being with you," he wrote Adrienne. "After you know
-in detail all the circumstances of my present position ... you will
-approve of my course. I almost dare to say you will applaud me....
-Besides the reason that I have given you, I have still another which
-I should not mention to everybody, because it might appear that I was
-assuming an air of ridiculous importance. My presence is more necessary
-to the American cause at this moment than you may imagine. Many
-foreigners who have failed to obtain commissions, or whose ambitious
-schemes after having obtained them could not be countenanced, have
-entered into powerful conspiracies; they have used every artifice to
-turn me against this Revolution and against him who is its leader; and
-they have taken every opportunity to spread the report that I am about
-to leave the continent. The British have openly declared this to be so.
-I cannot with good conscience play into the hands of these people. If I
-were to go, many Frenchmen who are useful here would follow my example."
-
-So he stayed at Valley Forge, which was indeed a place of icy torment.
-The men suffered horribly for lack of coats and caps and shoes.
-Their feet froze until they were black. Sometimes they had to be [Pg
-94]amputated. There was not enough food. Even colonels rarely had
-more than two meals a day, often only one, while the rank and file
-frequently went for several days without a distribution of rations.
-Enlistments ceased, and desertion was very easy with a wide-open
-country back of the camp and Howe's sleek, well-fed army only two
-marches away down the Lancaster Pike. It was small wonder that
-Washington's numbers dwindled until he could count only five or six
-thousand. Lafayette called the endurance of the wretched little army
-that held on "a miracle which every day served to renew." It was a
-miracle explained by the character of the Commander-in-chief, and of
-the remarkable group of officers he had gathered around him. As for
-Lafayette, he strove to live as frugally and be as self-denying as
-any of them. More than forty years later some of his American friends
-had proof of how well he succeeded; for an old soldier came up and
-reminded him how one snowy night at Valley Forge he had taken a gun
-from a shivering sentry and stood guard himself while he sent the man
-to his own quarters for a pair of stockings and his only blanket; and
-when these things were brought how he had cut the blanket in two and
-given him half. Though there was cruel suffering in that winter camp,
-there was much of such high-spirited gallantry to meet it; and there
-were also pleasant hours, for several of the officers had been joined
-by their wives, who did everything in their power to make the dull days
-brighter.
-
-[Illustration: WASHINGTON AND THE COMMITTEE OF CONGRESS AT VALLEY FORGE]
-
-[Illustration: VALLEY FORGE--WASHINGTON AND LAFAYETTE]
-
-[Pg 95]Washington's enemies, not yet having exhausted their wiles, hit
-upon a clever plan to remove Lafayette from his side. They succeeded
-in getting Congress to appoint a new War Board with General Gates at
-its head. This body exercised authority, though Washington remained
-Commander-in-chief. Without consulting him, the board decided, or
-pretended to decide, to send a winter expedition into Canada, with
-Lafayette at its head and Conway second in command. Conway had offered
-his resignation at the time his letter was discovered, but it had not
-been accepted. To emphasize the slight put upon Washington, Lafayette's
-new commission was inclosed in a letter to the Commander-in-chief, with
-the request that he hand it to the younger man. This Washington did
-with admirable self-control, saying, as he gave Lafayette the paper, "I
-would rather they had selected you for this than any other man."
-
-It is not often that such important duty falls to a soldier of
-twenty-one. Naturally enough, he was elated, and this duty was
-particularly tempting because it offered him, a Frenchman, the chance
-to go into a French province to reconquer a region which had been
-taken from his own people by Britain in the Seven Years' War. But he
-also was capable of exercising self-control, and he answered that he
-could accept it only on the understanding that he remained subordinate
-to Washington, as an officer of his army detailed for special duty,
-with the privilege of making reports directly to him and of sending
-duplicates to Congress. A committee of Congress happened to be visiting
-[Pg 96]Valley Forge that day, and he went impetuously before them and
-declared that he would rather serve as a mere aide under Washington
-than accept any separate command the War Board could give him. His
-conditions being agreed to, he departed happily enough for York,
-Pennsylvania, where Congress was still holding its sittings, in order
-to receive his instructions.
-
-There, in General Gates's own house, at another dinner memorable in his
-personal history, he got his first intimation of the kind of campaign
-the War Board wished him to carry on. Toast after toast was drunk--to
-the success of the northern expedition--to Lafayette and his brilliant
-prospects--and on through a long list, to which he listened in growing
-amazement, for he missed the most important of them all. "Gentlemen!"
-he cried, finally, springing to his feet, "I propose the health of
-General Washington!" and the others drank it in silence.
-
-He refused to have Conway for his second in command, and asked that De
-Kalb be detailed to accompany him instead. He proved so intractable, in
-short, that even before he set out for Albany, where he was to assume
-command, the conspirators saw it was useless to continue the farce; but
-they allowed him to depart on his cold journey as the easiest way of
-letting the matter end. The four hundred miles occupied two weeks by
-sleigh and horseback, a most discouraging sample of what he must expect
-farther north. "Lake Champlain is too cold for producing the least bit
-of laurel," he wrote Washington. "I go very slowly, sometimes drenched
-by rain, sometimes covered by snow, and not entertaining many [Pg
-97]handsome thoughts about the projected incursion into Canada."
-
-At Albany he found creature comforts, a bed, for one thing, with a
-supply of quilts and blankets that made it entirely possible to sleep
-without lying down in his clothes, which was a luxury he had scarcely
-enjoyed since leaving Bethlehem; but of preparations for invading
-Canada he found not one. The plans and orders that looked so well on
-paper, and which he had been assured were well under way, had not been
-heard of in Albany, or else had not been executed, for the best of
-reasons; because they could not be. General Conway was there ahead of
-him to represent the War Board, and told him curtly that the expedition
-was not to be thought of. Astounded, the young general refused
-to believe him until interviews with General Schuyler and others
-experienced in northern campaigning convinced him that this at least
-was not treachery, but cold, hard fact.
-
-The discovery was a great blow to Lafayette's pride. Members of
-Congress had urged him to write about the expedition to his friends
-in France. He was frankly afraid that he would be laughed at "unless
-Congress offers the means of mending this ugly business by some
-glorious operation." But he was in no mood to ask favors of Congress.
-"For you, dear General," he wrote Washington, "I know very well that
-you will do everything to procure me the one thing I am ambitious
-of--glory. I think your Excellency will approve of my staying on here
-until further orders."
-
-[Pg 98]March found him still at Albany, awaiting the orders which the
-War Board was in no haste to send, having already accomplished its
-purpose. He tried to retrieve something out of the hopeless situation,
-but with fewer men than he had been promised, and these clamoring for
-pay long overdue, he had little success. "Everybody is after me for
-monney," he wrote General Gates, "and monney will be spoken of by me
-till I will be enabled to pay our poor soldiers. Not only justice and
-humanity, but even prudence obliges us to satisfy them soon." As he
-had already done, and would do again, he drew upon his private credit
-to meet the most pressing public needs; but he could work against the
-enemy only in an indirect way by sending supplies to Fort Schuyler,
-where they were sorely needed.
-
-One interesting experience, unusual for a French nobleman, came to
-him during this tedious waiting. The Indians on the frontier became
-restless, and General Schuyler called a council of many tribes to meet
-"at Johnson Town" in the Mohawk Valley. He invited Lafayette to attend,
-hoping by his presence to reawaken the Indians' old partiality for the
-French. Five hundred men, women, and children attended this council,
-and very picturesque they must have looked with their tents and their
-trappings against the snowy winter landscape. The warriors were as
-gorgeous as macaws in their feathered war-bonnets, nose-jewels, and
-brilliant paint, but Lafayette noted that they talked politics with the
-skill of veterans, as the pipe passed from hand to hand.
-
-[Pg 99]He appears to have exercised his usual personal charm for
-Americans upon these original children of the soil as he had already
-exercised it upon the whites who came to supplant them. But he says
-of it only that they "showed an equal regard for his words and his
-necklaces." Before the council was over he was adopted into one of the
-tribes, and returned to Albany the richer by another name to add to his
-long collection--"Kayewla," which had belonged to a respected chief of
-a bygone day. The new Kayewla was so well liked that a band of Iroquois
-followed him south and became part of his military division.
-
-On his return to Albany an unexpected duty awaited him. A new form
-of oath of office, forever forswearing allegiance to George III and
-acknowledging the sovereignty and independence of the United States,
-had come, with the order that all must subscribe to it. So, to use the
-picturesque phrase of the Middle Ages, it was "between" his French
-hands that the officers of the northern military department swore
-fealty to the new United States of America.
-
-As spring advanced the influence of Gates and Conway waned and
-Washington regained his old place in public esteem. Conway himself left
-the country. Lafayette and De Kalb were ordered back to the main army;
-and in doing this Congress took pains to express by resolution its
-belief that the young general was in no way to blame for the failure
-of the winter expedition to Canada. When he reached Washington's
-headquarters in April he found Valley Forge much less melancholy than
-[Pg 100]when he left it; a change due not only to the more cheerful
-season of the year, but to wonders in the way of improved discipline
-that General von Steuben had brought about in a few short weeks.
-This officer of much experience had been trained under Frederick the
-Great, and, having served as his aide, was equipped in fullest measure
-with the knowledge and skill in military routine that Washington's
-volunteers so lacked. When he took up his duties he found a confusion
-almost unbelievable to one of his orderly military mind. Military terms
-meant nothing. A regiment might contain only thirty men, or it might
-be larger than another officer's brigade. It might be formed of three
-platoons or of twenty-one. There was one company that consisted of
-only a single corporal. Each colonel drilled his men after a system of
-his own; and the arms in the hands of these go-as-you-please soldiers
-"were in a horrible condition--covered with rust, half of them without
-bayonets," while there were many from which not a single shot could
-be fired. Yet this was the main army of the revolutionists who had
-set out to oppose England! Fortunately Baron von Steuben was no mere
-drillmaster. He had the invaluable gift of inspiring confidence and
-imparting knowledge. Between March, when he began his "intensive"
-training, and the opening of the summer campaign, he made of that band
-of lean and tattered patriots a real army, though it still lacked much
-of having a holiday appearance. The men's coats gave no indication of
-their rank, or indeed that they were in the army at all. They were
-of many colors, including red, and it was not impossible to see an
-[Pg 101]officer mounting guard at grand parade clad "in a sort of
-dressing-gown made of an old blanket or woolen bedcover." But the man
-inside the coat was competent for his job.
-
-It was a compatriot of Lafayette's, the French Minister of War,
-St.-Germain, who had persuaded General Steuben to go to America;
-so to France is due part of our gratitude for the services of this
-efficient German. Perhaps, going back farther, the real person we
-should thank is General Burgoyne, since it was his surrender which
-undoubtedly quickened the interest of the French in the efficiency
-of our ragamuffin army. French official machinery, which had been
-strangely clogged before, began to revolve when news of Burgoyne's
-surrender reached Paris early in December, 1777. The king, who had
-not found it convenient to receive the American commissioners up to
-that time, sent them word that he had been friendly all along; and as
-soon as diplomatic formality permitted, a treaty of amity and commerce
-was signed between France and America. That meant that France was
-now formally an ally, and that the United States might count upon
-her influence and even upon her military help. It was a great point
-gained, but Franklin refused to allow his old eyes to be dazzled by
-mere glitter when he "and all the Americans in Paris" were received by
-the king and queen at Versailles in honor of the event. He was less
-impressed by the splendor of the palace than by the fact that it would
-be the better for a thorough cleaning. After the royal audience was
-[Pg 102]over he and the other commissioners hastened to pay a visit of
-ceremony to young Madame Lafayette in order to testify to the part her
-husband had played in bringing about this happy occurrence.
-
-When news of the signing of this treaty reached America about the 1st
-of May, 1778, Lafayette embraced his grave general in the exuberance of
-his joy, and even kissed him in French fashion. There was an official
-celebration in camp on the 7th of May, with much burning of gunpowder,
-reviewing of troops, "suitable" discoursing by chaplains, and many
-hearty cheers. Washington's orders prescribed in great detail just when
-and how each part of the celebration was to be carried out, and this is
-probably the only time in history that an American army _en masse_ was
-ordered to cry, "Long live the king of France!"
-
-Lafayette, with a white sash across his breast, commanded the left; but
-it was a heavy heart that he carried under his badge that gala-day.
-Letters which came to him immediately after news of the treaty had
-brought sad tidings. He learned of the death of a favorite nephew,
-loved by him like a son, and also that his oldest child, the little
-Henriette, to whom he had been sending messages in every letter, had
-died in the previous October. "My heart is full of my own grief, and
-of yours which I was not with you to share," he wrote Adrienne. "The
-distance from Europe to America never seemed so immense to me as it
-does now.... The news came to me immediately after that of the treaty,
-and while bowed down with grief I had to receive congratulations and
-[Pg 103]take part in the public rejoicing." Had the letters come
-through without delay they would have arrived at the beginning of
-winter, at the moment when General Conway was fanning the flame of his
-homesickness. The desire to comfort his wife might have turned the
-scale and sent Lafayette across the sea instead of to Albany. Now,
-though he longed to go to her, he felt bound to remain for the campaign
-which was about to open.
-
-
-[Pg 104]XII
-
-FARCE AND TREACHERY
-
-
-Much as the French treaty had done for the Americans, it had by no
-means ended the war. There were as many British soldiers as ever on
-American soil, and General Howe at Philadelphia and General Clinton
-at New York could be trusted to make excellent use of them. Signs of
-British activity were already apparent. A large number of transports
-had sailed from Philadelphia, but whether they had gone to bring
-reinforcements or whether it meant that Philadelphia was being
-abandoned and that the Hudson was again to be the main point of attack
-Washington did not know. Lafayette was ordered to take some of the best
-troops at Valley Forge and find out.
-
-He left camp on the 18th of May with about twenty-two hundred men,
-among them six hundred Pennsylvania militia and half a hundred
-Iroquois Indians. Crossing the Schuylkill, he established himself on
-high ground between that river and the Delaware, twelve miles from
-the city, at a hamlet called Barren Hill, whose chief ornament was a
-[Pg 105]church with a graveyard. It was an excellent spot for purposes
-of observation; for roads ran in various directions, while the abrupt
-fall of the land toward the Schuylkill protected his right, and there
-were substantial stone buildings in a wood in front which could be used
-as forts in case of need. He guarded against surprise on his left,
-the direction from which any considerable body of British was likely
-to approach, by placing there his large detachment of Pennsylvania
-militia. He planted his five cannon in good positions, sent out his
-Indian scouts, who wormed themselves several miles nearer the city, had
-interviews with promising individuals who were to act as spies, and was
-well pleased with himself.
-
-The British were also exceedingly well pleased when their spies brought
-in full information of Lafayette's position and numbers. They saw that
-he had separated himself from the American army and virtually placed
-himself in their hands; and short of Washington himself there was no
-officer they would so enjoy capturing. His prominence at home and
-his popularity in America made him a shining mark; moreover, he had
-fooled them in London before coming to America. It would be a great
-satisfaction to take him prisoner gently, without hurting him, treat
-him with mock courtesy, and send him back to England, a laughing-stock.
-
-They had force enough to make his capture practically certain, and
-set out in great glee, so sure of the result that before leaving town
-Generals Howe and Clinton, both of whom were in Philadelphia, sent out
-invitations to a reception for the following day "to meet the Marquis
-[Pg 106]de Lafayette." Although it was looked upon as something of a
-lark, the expedition was deemed sufficiently important for General
-Clinton to lead it in person, while General Howe accompanied him,
-and the admiral, General Howe's sailor brother, went along as a
-volunteer. Taking four men to Lafayette's one, and marching by night,
-they approached Barren Hill in a way to cut off the fords across the
-Schuylkill and also to intercept any assistance which might be sent
-from Valley Forge.
-
-Unconscious that he was in danger, Lafayette was talking, early on the
-morning of May 20th, with a young woman who was going into the city as
-a spy, when word was brought him that dragoons in red coats had been
-seen on the Whitemarsh road. This did not disturb him, for he knew that
-among the coats of many colors worn by his Pennsylvania militia some
-were red; but he sent out to verify the information, merely as a matter
-of routine. Soon the truth was learned--and exaggerated--and his men
-set up a cry that they were surrounded by the British.
-
-Fortunately Lafayette had a head which grew steadier in a crisis.
-Sending his aides flying in all directions, he found that while the
-way to Valley Forge was indeed cut off, one ford still remained open,
-though the British were rapidly advancing upon it. He quickly placed a
-small number of his men near the church, where the stone wall of the
-graveyard would serve as breastworks, stationed a few more near the
-woods as if they were heads of columns just appearing, and ordered
-[Pg 107]all the rest to drop quietly down the steep side of the hill
-until they were out of sight, and then hurry to the ford. The attention
-of the enemy was held long enough by the decoy troops to enable the
-others to reach the ford or swim across, their heads dotting the water
-"like the corks of a floating seine," and Lafayette, who had stayed
-behind, brought the last of his men to safety just as two columns of
-the British, marching up two sides of Barren Hill, met each other, face
-to face, at the top. Lafayette, on the opposite bank of the river,
-prepared for defense, but the British were too disgusted to follow.
-
-The real encounter of the serio-comic affair took place between the
-most gaudily dressed bands of fighters in the whole Revolution,
-Lafayette's Iroquois in their war regalia and Clinton's advance-guard
-of Hessian cavalry. As the latter advanced, the Indians rose from their
-hiding-places uttering their piercing war-whoops. The horses of the
-troopers were terrified by the brilliant, shrieking creatures, and
-bolted. But terror was not all upon one side. The Indians had never
-seen men like these Hessians, with their huge bearskin shakos and
-fierce dyed mustaches. They in their turn were seized with panic and
-rushed away, fleeing incontinently from "bad medicine."
-
-Absurd as the affair proved, with little harm done to anything except
-the feelings of the British, its consequences might easily have been
-serious, both to the Revolution and to Lafayette. The loss of two
-thousand of his best men would have dangerously crippled Washington's
-[Pg 108]little army; while the capture of Lafayette, on the very first
-occasion he was intrusted with a command of any size, must almost
-of necessity have ended his military usefulness forever. As it was,
-Barren Hill demonstrated that he was quick and resourceful in time
-of danger; and these were very valuable qualities in a war like the
-American Revolution, which was won largely through the skill of its
-generals in losing battles. To realize the truth of this and how well
-it was carried out, we have only to recall Washington's masterly work
-in the winter campaign in New Jersey, when he maneuvered and marched
-and gave way until the right moment came to stand; how General Schuyler
-lured Burgoyne to disaster; and how, in a later campaign in the South,
-General Greene was said to have "reduced the art of losing battles to a
-science." Years afterward, in talking with Napoleon, Lafayette called
-our Revolution "the grandest of contests, won by the skirmishes of
-sentinels and outposts." About a month after this affair at Barren Hill
-the English evacuated Philadelphia and moved slowly northward with a
-force of seventeen thousand men and a baggage-train nearly twelve miles
-long. The length of this train indicated that it was moving-day for the
-British army, which wanted to be nearer the Hudson, but certain other
-indications pointed to the opening of an active campaign in New Jersey.
-A majority of the American officers, including Gen. Charles Lee, who
-was second in command, argued against an attack because both in numbers
-and organization the British force was superior to their own. General
-[Pg 109]Lee went so far as to say that, instead of trying to interfere
-with General Clinton's retreat, it ought to be aided in every possible
-way, "even with a bridge of gold." Subsequent developments proved
-that it was not fear of a British victory, but sympathy with British
-plans, which prompted this view. Several other officers, however,
-Washington himself, Gen. Anthony Wayne, who was always ready to fight,
-General Greene, General Cadwallader, and Lafayette, were in favor
-of following and attacking at the earliest opportunity. It was this
-course that Washington chose, in spite of the majority of votes against
-it. It seemed to him that the difficulty Clinton must experience in
-maneuvering his army over the roads of that region, and the fact that
-almost half of his force would need to be employed in guarding the
-unwieldy baggage-train, justified the expectation of success. His plan
-was to throw out a strong detachment ahead of the main army to harass
-the British flanks and rear and to follow this up so closely that the
-main army would be ready to go to its support in case Clinton turned to
-fight.
-
-The command of the advanced detachment was the post of honor, and to
-this Lee was entitled because of his rank. He refused it and Washington
-offered it to Lafayette, who accepted joyously. He had already begun
-his march when Lee reconsidered and sent Washington word that he
-desired the command, after all, appealing at the same time to Lafayette
-with the words, "I place my fortune and my honor in your hands; you
-are too generous to destroy both the one and the other." Lee was
-[Pg 110]one of the few men Lafayette did not like, though he had no
-suspicion of his loyalty. He thought him ugly in face and in spirit,
-full of avarice and ambition. But Lee was his superior officer, and
-Lafayette was a soldier as well as a gentleman. He relinquished the
-command at once and offered to serve under Lee as a volunteer.
-
-It would have been better had he found it in his heart and in the
-military regulations to refuse, for on that sultry unhappy 28th of
-June when the two armies met and the battle of Monmouth Court House
-was fought, General Lee's indecision and confusion of orders, to give
-his conduct no harsher name, turned the advance of the Americans,
-who were in the best of spirits and eager to fight, into what their
-generals admitted was "a disgraceful rout." Officer after officer came
-to Lee beseeching him to let them carry out their original instructions
-and not to give orders to fall back; but he did everything to hinder
-success, answering stubbornly, "I know my business."
-
-At Lafayette's first intimation that things were going wrong, he sent
-a message to Washington, who was with the main army, some miles in the
-rear. Whether he learned the news first from this messenger or from a
-very scared fifer running down the road, Washington could not believe
-his eyes or his ears. Hurrying forward, he found Lee in the midst of
-the retreating troops and a brief but terrible scene took place between
-them; Washington in a white heat of anger, though outwardly calm,
-[Pg 111]Lee stammering and stuttering and finally bursting out with
-the statement that the whole movement had been made contrary to his
-advice. Washington's short and scorching answer ended Lee's military
-career. Then, turning away from him as though from a creature unworthy
-of further notice, the Commander-in-chief took up the serious task at
-hand. The soldiers responded to his presence instantly. With those on
-the field he and Lafayette were able to make a stand until reserves
-came up and a drawn battle was fought which lasted until nightfall. The
-conditions had been unusually trying, for the heat was so oppressive
-that men died of that alone, without receiving a wound. Both armies
-camped upon the field, Washington meaning to renew the contest next
-morning; but during the night the enemy retired to continue the march
-toward New York.
-
-[Illustration: THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH, JUNE 28, 1778]
-
-Lee was tried by court martial and suspended from any command in the
-armies of the United States for the period of one year. Afterward
-Congress dismissed him altogether. The judgment of history is that he
-deserved severer punishment and that his sympathies were undoubtedly
-with the British. He was of English birth, and from the beginning
-of his service in the American army he tried to thwart Washington.
-Lafayette was convinced that, though his name does not appear
-prominently in the doings of the Conway cabal, it was he and not
-General Gates who would have profited by the success of that plot.
-
-Since the British were able to continue their march as planned, they
-[Pg 112]claimed Monmouth as a victory. Washington also continued
-northward and, crossing the Hudson, established himself near White
-Plains, which brought the British and American forces once more into
-the relative positions they had occupied two years earlier, after the
-battle of Long Island.
-
-Monmouth proved to be the last engagement of consequence fought that
-year, and the last large battle of the Revolution to be fought in the
-Northern states. Very soon after this the British gave up their attempt
-to cut the rebellion in two by opening the Hudson, and substituted for
-it the plan of capturing the Southern states one by one, beginning with
-Georgia and working northward. They continued to keep a large force
-near New York, however, and that necessitated having an American army
-close by. These two forces were not idle; some of the most dramatic
-incidents of the whole war occurred here, though the main contest raged
-elsewhere, and in a larger sense, these armies were only marking time.
-
-
-[Pg 113]XIII
-
-A LIAISON OFFICER
-
-
-Lafayette's influence and duties took on a new character about the
-middle of July, 1778, when a fleet of twenty-six French frigates and
-ships of the line arrived, commanded by Admiral d'Estaing.
-
-These ships had sailed in such secrecy that even their captains did
-not know whither they were bound until they had been at sea some
-days. Then, while a solemn Mass was being sung aboard the flagship,
-the signal was hoisted to break the seals upon their orders. When the
-full meaning of these orders dawned upon the sailors and the thousand
-soldiers who accompanied the expedition shouts of joy and cries of
-_"Vive le Roi!"_ spread from ship to ship. But it was an expedition
-fated to ill luck. Storms and contrary winds delayed them five weeks
-in the Mediterranean, and seven more in crossing the Atlantic. Food
-and water were almost gone when they reached Delaware Bay, where
-the disappointing news awaited their commander that the British,
-fearing his blockade, had withdrawn to New York, taking the available
-food-supplies of the neighborhood with them. That was the explanation
-[Pg 114]of Clinton's long wagon-train. He left little behind for hungry
-sailors.
-
-D'Estaing landed Silas Deane, and the first minister sent from France
-to the United States, who had come over with; him sent messages
-announcing his arrival to Congress and to Washington, and proceeded up
-the coast. For eleven days he remained outside the bar at Sandy Hook
-in a position bad for his ships and worse for his temper; for inside
-the bar he could see many masts flying the British flag. But pilots
-were hard to find, most of them being in the service of his enemies;
-and without pilots he could not enter. When at last they were obtained
-it was only to tell him that the largest of his vessels drew too much
-water to enter without removing part of their guns, and this he could
-not afford to do with English ships lying inside. D'Estaing would not
-believe it until he himself had made soundings. "It is terrible to be
-within sight of your object and yet unable to attain it," he wrote. To
-add to his unhappiness he heard that an English fleet under Admiral
-Byron had sailed for American waters, and he knew that its arrival
-would raise the number of British ships and guns to a figure far
-exceeding his own. He put to sea again, his destination this time being
-Newport, where the British had a few ships and about six thousand men.
-Washington had suggested a combined attack here in case it was found
-impossible to accomplish anything at New York.
-
-Admiral d'Estaing came from Auvergne, as did Lafayette. Indeed,
-their families were related by marriage, and to his first official
-[Pg 115]communication Lafayette had added, at Washington's request, a
-long postscript giving personal and family details that the British
-could not possibly know, doing this to prove to the admiral that the
-proposed plans were genuine and not an invention of the enemy. The
-correspondence thus begun had continued with pleasure on both sides,
-and, after the fleet reached Newport, Lafayette spent a happy day on
-the flagship as the admiral's honored guest, though he was technically
-still a deserter, subject to arrest and deportation.
-
-The American part of the combined attack on Newport was to be made
-by a detachment of Washington's army co-operating with state troops
-and militia raised by General Sullivan, near by. The command of the
-Continentals was offered to Lafayette, who wrote to D'Estaing in boyish
-glee: "Never have I realized the charm of my profession, M. le Comte,
-as I do now that I am to be allowed to practise it in company with
-Frenchmen. I have never wished so much for the ability that I have not,
-or for the experience that I shall obtain in the next twenty years if
-God spares my life and allows us to have war. No doubt it is amusing
-to you to see me presented as a general officer; I confess that I am
-forced myself to smile sometimes at the idea, even in this country
-where people do not smile so readily as we do at home."
-
-Although scurvy had broken out with considerable violence on his ships,
-the French admiral held himself ready to carry out his part of a speedy
-attack. It was General Sullivan who had to ask a delay because [Pg
-116]so few of the militia responded to his summons. While expressing
-polite disappointment that so large a part of the American army was
-"still at home," D'Estaing tried to emphasize the need of haste. He
-believed in striking sudden, unexpected blows; and he had ever in mind
-the approach of that fleet of Admiral Byron's. Nine precious days
-passed, which the British commander at Newport utilized in preparing
-for defense and in sending messengers to New York.
-
-Meanwhile Lafayette returned to camp and started with his detachment
-for Newport. On the march he received a letter from Washington which
-must have caused him keen disappointment, since it took away half his
-authority. General Greene was a native of Rhode Island, with special
-knowledge of the region where the fighting was to take place, and
-because of this it had been decided at the last moment to combine the
-Continental troops with the militia and to give General Greene joint
-command with Lafayette. The young man's answer was a model of cheerful
-acquiescence. "Dear General: I have received your Excellency's favor
-by General Greene, and have been much pleased with the arrival of a
-gentleman who, not only on account of his merit and the justness of
-his views, but also by his knowledge of the country and his popularity
-in this state, may be very serviceable to the expedition. I willingly
-part with half of my detachment, though I had a great dependence upon
-them, as you find it convenient for the good of the service. Anything,
-[Pg 117]my dear General, you will order, or even wish, shall always
-be infinitely agreeable to me; and I will always feel happy in doing
-anything which may please you or forward the public good. I am of the
-same opinion as your Excellency that dividing our Continental troops
-among the militia will have a better effect than if we were to keep
-them together in one wing." Only a single sentence, near the end, in
-which he referred to himself as being with the expedition as "a man of
-war of the third class" betrayed his regret. Washington appears to have
-been much pleased and relieved by this reply, for he realized that he
-was drawing heavily upon Lafayette's store of patience.
-
-As it turned out, neither Greene nor Lafayette had authority enough to
-quarrel over or any glory in the enterprise, for on the 10th of August,
-at the moment when the combined attack was about to begin, the relief
-expedition of Admiral Howe's ships loomed suddenly out of the fog.
-The French vessels had been placed only with a view to an attack upon
-land, and most of the sailors had been disembarked to take part in it.
-D'Estaing had to get them hurriedly back again and to prepare for a
-sea-fight. Before this was over a wind-storm of great fury arose. It
-separated the combatants, but left D'Estaing so crippled that he was
-obliged to put into Boston for repairs.
-
-Some of these events were of a character no human foresight could
-prevent. All of them held possibilities of misunderstanding, and these
-misunderstandings were increased tenfold by differences in nationality,
-[Pg 118]in temper, and in language. Some of the French thought
-General Sullivan deliberately and jealously tried to block success.
-He reproached the French admiral for going to Boston after the storm
-instead of returning to his aid. Lafayette's very eagerness subjected
-him to criticism, yet he was the one man involved who understood
-the temperament of both the French and the Americans. The burden of
-explaining, of soothing, of trying to arrange the thousand prickly
-details of the situation fell upon him. Twice he rode to Boston and
-back for conferences with D'Estaing, making the journey of seventy
-miles once by night in six and a half hours--unexampled speed for those
-days. Such work now would be called the work of a liaison officer. He
-had need of all his tact, and even his sweet temper grew acid under the
-strain. He was strongly moved to fight a duel with General Sullivan;
-and both Washington and Congress had to intervene before the French
-admiral was completely assured of America's belief in his "zeal and
-attachment," and before Lafayette could be thoroughly appeased.
-
-Fond as he was of America, Lafayette was a Frenchman first of all. He
-had assured D'Estaing that he would rather fight as a common soldier
-under the French flag than as a general officer anywhere else. The
-coming of the French fleet had been to all intents a declaration of
-war by his country against England; and when the autumn was far enough
-advanced to make it certain there would be no more military activity in
-America before the next spring, he asked permission to return to France
-and offer his sword to his king.
-
-[Pg 119]Washington, who had more sympathy with the impulses of youth
-than we are apt to give him credit for, saw that after the trying
-experiences of the past few weeks a leave of absence would be the
-best thing for Lafayette and also for his American friends. The young
-man's nerves were completely on edge. He had not only wanted to fight
-General Sullivan and controlled the desire; he had actually sent a
-challenge, against the advice of Washington and Admiral d'Estaing, to
-the Earl of Carlisle, an Englishman in America on official business,
-because of some words the latter had used which Lafayette regarded as
-an insult to the French. Besides these grievances, his imagination
-was working overtime on a grand new scheme for the conquest of Canada
-which Washington could no more indorse than he could approve the desire
-to shed blood in private quarrels. The young man's friendship was too
-valuable to make it politic continually to thwart him. Undoubtedly
-this was a case where absence would make the heart grow fonder. Very
-possibly also the wise general foresaw how much good Lafayette might
-do in Paris as an advocate of American interests during the next few
-months.
-
-Lafayette did not wish to sever his relations with the Continental
-army. All he asked was a leave of absence, and this Congress readily
-granted in a set of complimentary resolutions, adding for good measure
-a letter "To our great, faithful, and beloved friend and ally, Louis
-the Sixteenth, King of France and Navarre," telling what a very wise
-[Pg 120]and gallant and patient and excellent young man he was. But it
-was weeks after this permission was given before Lafayette left
-America. Congress arranged, as a compliment, that he should sail from
-Boston on the frigate _Alliance_, one of the best of the nation's
-war-vessels. Lafayette made his visits of ceremony, wrote his notes of
-farewell, and set out from Philadelphia in a cold rain one day late
-in October. Ordinarily he would not have minded such a storm. He had
-endured the life at Valley Forge and discomforts of the winter trip
-to Canada with apparent ease; but to a year of such campaigning had
-been added several months of work and worry in connection with the
-French fleet. The two together had told upon his strength, and the
-storm added the finishing touch. He became really ill, but, suffering
-with fever, rode on, unwilling to delay his journey for mere weather,
-and unwilling, too, to fail in courtesy to the inhabitants of the many
-towns on his way who wished to do him honor. He fortified himself for
-the receptions and functions they had planned by frequent draughts of
-tea and spirits, which made his condition worse instead of better.
-By the time he reached Fishkill, New York, he was unable to proceed
-farther. His fever raged for three weeks, and the news spread that he
-would not recover. The concern manifested showed what a firm hold he
-had made for himself in American affection. Civilians spoke of him
-lovingly and sorrowfully as "the Marquis," while in the army, where
-he was known as "the soldier's friend," grief was even more sincere.
-Washington sent Surgeon-General Cochran, who had cared for him in
-[Pg 121]Bethlehem, to take charge of the case, and rode himself almost
-daily the eight miles from headquarters to make inquiries, never
-entering the sick-room, and often turning away with tears in his eyes
-at the report given him. Lafayette, racked with fever and headache, was
-sure he would never live to reach France again. The idea of leaving
-the world at the early age of twenty-one did not trouble him; he felt
-that he would gladly compromise on three more months of life, provided
-he could see his family and be assured of the happy outcome of the
-American war.
-
-After the fever left him and he slowly regained his strength he spent a
-few happy days as Washington's guest before proceeding on his journey
-to Boston. The elder man's farewell was "very tender, very sad," and
-Lafayette rode away in company with the good Doctor Cochran, who had
-orders to watch him like a hawk until he was safely on the ship. After
-this parting the young man was more than ever convinced that Washington
-was a great man and his own very warm personal friend. He wondered how
-anybody could accuse him of being cold and unsympathetic.
-
-
-[Pg 122]XIV
-
-NEAR-MUTINY AND NEAR-IMPRISONMENT
-
-
-When he reached Boston the crew of the _Alliance_ had not been fully
-made up. The authorities offered to impress enough men to complete
-it, but Lafayette objected on principle to that way of obtaining
-sailors. They were finally secured by enlistment, but many of them
-were questionable characters, either English deserters or English
-prisoners of war. With such a crew the _Alliance_ put to sea on the
-11th of January, 1779, upon a voyage short for that time of year, but
-as tumultuous as it was brief. Excitement and discomfort began with a
-tempest off the Banks of Newfoundland which the frigate weathered with
-difficulty. Lafayette, who was always a poor sailor, longed for calm,
-even if it had to be found at the bottom of the sea; but that was only
-the beginning, the real excitement occurring about two hundred leagues
-off the French coast.
-
-Lafayette's own account explains that "by a rather immoral proclamation
-his Britannic Majesty encouraged revolt among crews," offering them the
-money value of ships captured and brought into English ports as "rebel"
-[Pg 123]vessels--"a result which could only be obtained by the massacre
-of officers and those who objected." A plot of this nature was entered
-into by the English deserters and prisoners among the sailors on the
-_Alliance_. A cry of "A sail!" was to bring officers and passengers
-hurrying upon deck and shots from four cannon, carefully trained and
-loaded beforehand, were to blow them to bits. The time was fixed for
-four o'clock in the morning, but, fortunately, it was postponed until
-the same time in the afternoon, and in the interval the plot was
-disclosed to an American sailor who was mistaken by the conspirators
-for an Irishman on account of the fine brogue he had acquired through
-much sailing "in those latitudes." They offered him command of the
-frigate. He pretended to accept, but was able to warn the captain and
-Lafayette only one short hour before the time fixed for the deed. That
-was quite enough, however. The officers and passengers appeared upon
-deck ahead of time, sword in hand, and gathering the loyal sailors
-about them, called up the rest one by one. Thirty-three were put in
-irons. Evidence pointed to an even greater number of guilty men, but
-it was taken for granted that the rest might be relied upon, though
-only the Americans and French were really trusted. A week later the
-_Alliance_ sailed happily into Brest floating the new American flag.
-
-The last word Lafayette had received from his family was already eight
-months old. He hurried toward Paris, but the news of his arrival
-traveled faster, and he found the city on tiptoe to see him. "On my
-[Pg 124]arrival," says the _Memoirs_, "I had the honor to be consulted
-by all the Ministers and, what was much better, embraced by all the
-ladies. The embraces ceased next day, but I enjoyed for a longer
-time the confidence of the Cabinet and favor at Versailles, and also
-celebrity in Paris." His father-in-law, who had been so very bitter
-at his departure, received him amiably, a friendliness which touched
-Lafayette. "I was well spoken of in all circles, even after the favor
-of the queen had secured for me command of the regiment of the King's
-Dragoons." This was no other than the old De Noailles Cavalry in which
-he had served as a boy.
-
-Merely as a matter of form, however, he had to submit to a week's
-imprisonment because he had left the country against the wishes of
-the king. Instead of being shut in the Bastille, his prison was
-the beautiful home of his father-in-law, where Adrienne and the
-baby awaited him; and during that week its rooms were filled with
-distinguished visitors, come ostensibly to see the Duc d'Ayen. But
-even this delightful travesty of imprisonment did not begin until the
-prodigal had gone to Versailles for his first interview with the king's
-chief advisers. After a few days he wrote to Louis XVI, "acknowledging
-my happy fault." The king summoned him to his presence to receive "a
-gentle reprimand" which ended in smiles and compliments, and he was
-restored to liberty with the hint that it would be well for a time to
-avoid crowded places where the common people of Paris, who so dearly
-loved a hero, "might consecrate his disobedience."
-
-[Pg 125]For the next few months he led a busy life, a favorite in
-society, an unofficial adviser of the government, called here and there
-to give first-hand testimony about men and motives in far-off America,
-making up lost months in as many short minutes with Adrienne, winning
-the heart of his new little daughter, assuming command of his "crack"
-regiment, so different in appearance from the ragged ranks he had
-commanded under Washington; and last, but by no means least in his own
-estimation, laying plans to accomplish by one bold stroke two military
-purposes dear to his heart--discomfiting the English and securing money
-for the American cause.
-
-He had seen such great results undertaken and accomplished in America
-with the slenderest means that the recklessness with which Europeans
-spent money for mere show seemed to him almost wicked. He used to
-tell himself that the cost of a single fête would equip an army in
-the United States. M. de Maurepas had once said that he was capable
-of stripping Versailles for the sake of his beloved Americans. It was
-much more in accordance with his will to seize the supplies for America
-from England herself. He planned a descent upon the English coast by
-two or three frigates under John Paul Jones and a land force of fifteen
-hundred men commanded by himself, to sail under the American flag, fall
-upon rich towns like Bristol and Liverpool, and levy tribute.
-
-Lafayette's brain worked in two distinct ways. His tropic imagination
-stopped at nothing, and completely ran away with his common sense when
-[Pg 126]once it got going, as, for instance, while he lay recovering
-from his wound at Bethlehem. Very different from this was the clever,
-quick wit with which he could take advantage of momentary chances in
-battle, as he had demonstrated when he and his little force dropped
-between the jaws of the trap closing upon them at Barren Hill.
-Fortunately in moments of danger it was usually his wit, not his
-imagination, that acted, and he took excellent care of the men under
-him; but when he had nothing in the way of hard facts to pin his mind
-to earth, and gave free rein to his desires, he was not practical. In
-this season of wild planning he not only invented the scheme for a
-bucaneering expedition in company with John Paul Jones; he mapped out
-an uprising in Ireland, but decided that the time was not yet ripe for
-that.
-
-While his plan for a descent upon the English coast came to nothing, it
-may be said to have led to much, for it interested the Ministry, and
-was abandoned only in favor of a more ambitious scheme of attacking
-England with the help of Spain. That, too, passed after it was
-found that England was on the alert; but it had given Lafayette his
-opportunity to talk about America in and out of season, and to urge the
-necessity for helping the United States win independence as a means of
-crippling England, if not for her own sake. As the most popular social
-lion of the moment his words carried far, and as the most earnest
-advocate of America in France he was indeed what he called himself, the
-link that bound the two countries together. The outcome was that after
-[Pg 127]the collapse of the project for an expedition against England
-nobody could see a better way of troubling his Britannic Majesty than
-by following Lafayette's advice; whereupon he redoubled his efforts and
-arguments.
-
-Indeed, he exceeded the wishes of the Americans themselves. He wanted
-to send ships and soldiers as well as money and supplies, but with the
-fiasco of the attack upon Newport fresh in their minds Congress and our
-country were chary of asking for more help of that kind. He assured M.
-de Vergennes that it was characteristic of Americans to believe that in
-three months they would no longer need help of any kind. He wrote to
-Washington that he was insisting upon money with such stress that the
-Director of Finances looked upon him as a fiend; but he argued also in
-France that the Americans would be glad enough to see a French army by
-the time it got there.
-
-A plan drawn up by him at the request of M. de Vergennes has been
-called the starting-point of the events that led to the surrender of
-Cornwallis, because without French help that event could not have
-occurred. In this view of the case, the work he did in Paris and at
-Versailles was his greatest contribution to the cause of American
-independence. Another general might easily have done all that he did in
-the way of winning battles on American soil, but no other man in France
-had his enthusiasm and his knowledge, or the persistence to fill men's
-ears and minds and hearts with thoughts of America as he did.
-
-[Pg 128]After it had been decided to send over another military force
-it was natural for him to hope that he might be given command of it,
-though nobody knew better than he that his rank did not entitle him
-to the honor since he was only a colonel in France, even if he did
-hold the commission of a major-general in the United States. Having
-become by this time really intimate with M. de Vergennes, he gave
-another proof of the sweet reasonableness of his disposition by frankly
-presenting the whole matter in writing to him. He worked out in detail
-two "suppositions," the first assuming that he was to be given command
-of the expedition, the second that he was not, stating in each case
-what he thought ought to be done. Quite frankly he announced his
-preference for the first supposition, but quite simply and unmistakably
-he made it plain that he would work just as earnestly for the success
-of the undertaking in one case as in the other.
-
-It was the second of these plans that the Ministry preferred and
-adopted practically as he prepared it. After this had been decided he
-found himself, early one spring day in 1780, standing before Louis
-XVI, in his American uniform, taking his leave. He was to go ahead of
-the expedition and announce its coming; to work up a welcome for it,
-if he found lingering traces of distrust; and to resume command of his
-American division and do all he could to secure effective co-operation;
-in short, to take up his work of liaison officer again on a scale
-greater than before.
-
-
-[Pg 129]XV
-
-HELP--AND DISAPPOINTMENT
-
-
-When Lafayette sailed westward this time he owned two valued
-possessions, partly French, partly American, which had not been his
-when he landed at Brest. One was a sword, the gift Congress directed
-Franklin to have made by the best workmen in Paris and presented
-to him in recognition of his services. It was a wonderful sword,
-with his motto "_Cur non?_" and no end of compliments worked into
-the decorations of its gold-mounted hilt and scabbard. The other
-possession was a brand-new baby. "Our next one absolutely must be a
-boy!" Lafayette had written Adrienne when assuring her of his joy over
-the birth of Anastasie; and obligingly the next one came a boy, born
-on Christmas Eve, 1779. He had been immediately christened, as was the
-custom, but he was given a name that no man of the house of Motier had
-borne in all the seven hundred years of the family's consequential
-existence. Even the young mother's tongue may have tripped a bit as she
-whispered "George Washington" to the baby cuddled against her breast.
-But no other name was possible for that child, and the day came, before
-[Pg 130]he was grown, when it served as a talisman to carry him out of
-danger.
-
-Sailing westward on the _Hermione_, the father of this Franco-American
-baby reached Boston late in April after an uneventful voyage, to
-receive the heartiest welcome the staid old town could give him. The
-docks were black with people and the streets lined with hurrahing
-crowds as he rode to the governor's house where he was to be a guest.
-
-Until the _Hermione_ came to anchor he did not know where Washington
-was to be found, but he had a letter ready written to despatch at once,
-begging him, if he chanced to be north of Philadelphia, to await his
-arrival, since he brought news of importance. It took a week for this
-message to reach Washington's headquarters at Morristown, and three
-days later Lafayette was there himself, greeting and being greeted
-by his chief with a heartiness which showed their genuine delight at
-being together again. Having been absent for more than a year, he had
-much to learn about the progress of the war; and what he learned was
-not reassuring. He knew in a general way how things had gone, but the
-details showed how weak the American forces really were.
-
-Most of the fighting had been in the South. Savannah had been taken
-before Lafayette sailed for France. The British had followed up this
-success by sending a large force to Georgia; Southern Tories had
-been roused, and civil war had spread throughout the entire region.
-At present the British were advancing upon Charleston. In the [Pg
-131]North the two armies still played their waiting game, the British
-actually in New York, and Washington in a position from which he could
-guard the Hudson, help Philadelphia in case of need, and occasionally
-do something to harass the enemy. Frequently the harassing was done
-by the other side, however. During the summer of 1779 the British had
-ravaged the Connecticut Valley. Washington refused to be tempted away
-from the Hudson, and the brightest spot in the annals of that year had
-been the capture of Stony Point while the British were thus engaged.
-Lafayette's acquaintance, "Mad Anthony" Wayne, had taken it in a most
-brilliant assault.
-
-But that was only one episode and the history of the year could be
-summed up in eight words--discouragement, an empty treasury, unpaid
-troops, dwindling numbers. Washington's own army was reduced to about
-six thousand men, with half of these scarcely fit for duty. They were
-only partly clothed, and had been only partly fed for a long time.
-Their commander said of them, sadly, but with pride, that during their
-terms of service they had subsisted upon "every kind of horse-food
-except hay." Lafayette expected to find the army weak, but this was a
-state of exhaustion of which he had not dreamed. It was very hard to
-have to report such things to Paris; in truth, for some time after his
-return he avoided reporting details as much as possible.
-
-His coming, with the news that ships and men and money were on the way,
-[Pg 132]must have seemed little less than a happy miracle. But would
-the help come in time? To make it effective the country must renew its
-enthusiasm and meet assistance half-way. Washington frankly told a
-committee of Congress that unless this could be done the coming of the
-French would be a disaster instead of a benefit. In other words, the
-country was so weak that the next effort was almost sure to be the last
-one. If it failed, it would be too exhausted to rally again.
-
-Lafayette left headquarters and went to Philadelphia to exert whatever
-personal influence he possessed upon Congress; but under the law
-Congress could raise neither men nor money. All it could do was to
-recommend such action to the thirteen different states. Their thirteen
-different legislatures had to deliberate and act, all of which took
-time when time was most urgent.
-
-In France the proposed military expedition had roused much enthusiasm.
-Young men flocked to enlist, as eager to fight for liberty in America
-as our boys of 1918 were eager to reach France on a similar errand.
-Every available spot on the transports was crowded. The commanding
-general regretfully left behind his two favorite war-horses because
-he knew that twenty men could go in the space they would occupy. Even
-after the ships had left the harbor recruits came to him on the cutter
-that brought the last despatches, begging to be taken aboard, but had
-to be sent back because there was literally not room for another man.
-
-Yet the numbers that came to America were, after all, disappointingly
-[Pg 133]small: far less than originally planned. That was because
-the English managed to blockade all except the first division in the
-harbor of Brest. This first division sailed on the 2d of May with
-Admiral Ternay in command of the ships, and the gallant, cool-headed
-Rochambeau, who was already fighting at the time Lafayette was born,
-in command of the soldiers. He had five thousand effective men crowded
-into the transports that left Brest with their convoy on a sunny day,
-the many white sails filling to a breeze described as _"joli frais."_
-But in spite of this auspicious beginning it was a tedious crossing,
-longer in point of time than the first voyage of Columbus. The weary
-soldiers soon came to call their transports "sabots" (wooden shoes),
-and indeed some of them were scarcely larger. As our coast was neared
-they crawled along at three knots an hour, with drums beating every
-fifteen minutes to keep the ships in touch and prevent their drifting
-away from each other in the heavy, persistent fog.
-
-Washington had hoped that before the arrival of the French he could
-gather sufficient force to justify him in attacking New York with their
-help, for he was convinced that one success here would end the war. His
-army was indeed "augmented more than one-half," as Lafayette wrote his
-wife, but before the ships made their slow way across the Atlantic the
-British had captured Charleston, and Clinton, who assisted Cornwallis
-in that undertaking, had returned to New York with a force that raised
-his strength there to twelve thousand regulars, in addition to Admiral
-[Pg 134]Arbuthnot's fleet and several thousand militia and refugees.
-Not all the earnestness of Washington, the efforts of Congress, nor the
-enthusiasm of Lafayette had been able to raise men enough to attack
-under these circumstances; and the signals displayed on Point Judith
-and "the island of Block House" to guide the French directed them to
-go to Newport as a convenient place from which the attack might yet be
-made if events favored the allies.
-
-Lafayette went to Newport to meet Rochambeau and plan co-operation. By
-the time he reached there the situation was still worse, for an English
-fleet which left home about the time Rochambeau sailed from France had
-appeared, giving the British superior force alike on sea and land.
-
-Admiral Ternay, who was not aggressive by nature, saw a repetition of
-D'Estaing's failure looming ahead of him, and sent word to France that
-the American cause was doomed. Rochambeau, being a better soldier, did
-what he could; landed his men, freeing them from the confinement of the
-"sabots;" and, upon a rumor that the British were advancing to attack,
-helped several thousand militia prepare for defense. The rumor had a
-foundation of truth. An expedition actually left New York, but was no
-sooner started than Washington began threatening the city, whereupon
-Clinton recalled his men, for there was no doubt that New York was the
-more important place.
-
-Having no knowledge of the country, and being thus hurried at the
-moment of landing, from the rôle of aggressor which he had expected
-[Pg 135]to play to one of defense, the situation seemed very serious
-to the French general. Even after the recall of Clinton's expedition
-he felt it most unwise to lose touch with his ships, and he had small
-patience with Lafayette, who seemed inclined to talk about "advances."
-Rochambeau was sure that his duty lay in waiting for the second
-division of the French force, keeping strict discipline, meanwhile, in
-a model camp, and paying liberally for supplies. This he did so well
-that not an apple disappeared from the orchards in which the French
-tents were pitched, not a cornstalk was bent in the fields near by,
-and, as Lafayette assured Washington, the pigs and chickens of patriots
-wandered at will through the French camp "without being deranged." The
-French and Americans fraternized enthusiastically. "You would have been
-amused the other day," Lafayette reported to his chief, "had you seen
-two hundred and fifty of our recruits, who came to Connecticut without
-provisions and without tents, mixing so well with the French troops
-that each Frenchman, officer or soldier, took an American with him and
-amicably gave him a share of his bed and supper."
-
-The French soldiers were anxious to get out of Newport and at the
-throats of the enemy, but Rochambeau was firm in his determination. He
-desired a personal interview with Washington and felt a little hurt,
-perhaps, that a youngster like Lafayette, who might easily have been
-his own son, was made the means of communication. There was some doubt
-whether Washington could enter into agreements with a representative
-[Pg 136]of a foreign power until explicit authority had been given him
-by Congress. It was one of those absurd technical questions of no real
-importance that may cause a deal of trouble, and it was better not
-to have it raised. Lafayette continued, therefore, to be occupied in
-Newport with parleys and conferences and incidentally with meeting old
-friends. His brother-in-law, De Noailles, was one of the officers who
-had come out with the expedition.
-
-Cross-purposes were bound to arise, and there were moments when
-Lafayette's optimism got decidedly upon the nerves of Rochambeau. The
-two came to the verge of quarrel, but both were too sensible to allow
-themselves to be pushed over the edge. The breach was soon healed by a
-letter of Rochambeau's in which he referred to himself as an old father
-and his "dear Marquis" as an affectionate son. In Lafayette's private
-account of this episode to his wife he wrote that "a slight excess of
-frankness got me into a little controversy with those generals. Seeing
-that I was not persuading them and that the public interest demanded we
-be good friends, I admitted at random that I had been mistaken and was
-to blame, and asked pardon in proper terms, which had such a magical
-effect that we are now better friends than ever." Lafayette's friends
-called him determined; his critics said that he was vain. Historians
-aver that he was never convinced by argument.
-
-August brought the unwelcome news that there was to be no second
-division of the French army that year. This was the more disappointing
-[Pg 137]because in addition to all else it meant the continued lack
-of arms and ammunition and of clothing for fifteen thousand American
-soldiers that Lafayette had caused to be manufactured in France, but
-which had been left behind to come with this second division. He
-confided to his cousin that the army was reduced to "a frugality, a
-poverty, and a nudity which will, I hope, be remembered in the next
-world, and counted, to our credit in purgatory." To his wife he wrote
-that the ladies of Philadelphia had started a subscription to aid the
-soldiers, and that he had put down her name for one hundred guineas;
-that he was very well; that the life of an American soldier was
-infinitely frugal; that "the fare of the general officers of the rebel
-army is very different from that of the French at Newport."
-
-The intelligence that no more French troops could be expected called
-manifestly for new plans of campaign, and a conference between the
-respective chiefs was finally arranged, which took place at Hartford
-with considerable ceremony on the 20th of September. Washington had
-with him General Knox and General Lafayette. The French general and
-admiral were accompanied by as many subordinate officers as could find
-plausible excuse to go along, for all were curious to meet the famous
-General Washington.
-
-At this conference the whole situation was discussed in detail, but no
-way of winning the war without outside help was discovered. Rochambeau
-sent his son, who had come to America with him, back to France with
-[Pg 138]a formal account of the proceedings; while Washington and
-Lafayette also sent letters to France by the son of that Mr. Laurens
-who had offered Lafayette the hospitality of his traveling-carriage
-after the battle of the Brandywine.
-
-One chance of help still remained, even if the Ministry should consider
-it impossible to despatch aid directly from France. The Comte de
-Guichen, who commanded a fleet then in the West Indies, might be
-persuaded to sail to the relief of the Americans if the letters could
-be made sufficiently persuasive. Washington wrote directly to him as
-well as to France, sending this letter through the French minister to
-the United States, in order that everything might be diplomatically
-correct and aboveboard.
-
-
-[Pg 139]XVI
-
-BLACK TREACHERY
-
-
-Washington returned from his conference with the French commanders by
-way of West Point to show Lafayette some improvements recently made in
-the works. Several little accidents delayed the journey and brought
-them to the house of the commander at a critical moment. We have
-Lafayette's account, part of it written the very next day to the French
-minister to the United States, part of it later to his wife.
-
-"When I left you yesterday, M. le Chevalier, to come here to take
-breakfast with General Arnold, we were very far from thinking of the
-event which I am about to announce to you. You will shudder at the
-danger we have run. You will be astonished at the miraculous chain
-of accidents and circumstances by which we were saved.... West Point
-was sold, and it was sold by Arnold! That same man who had covered
-himself with glory by rendering valuable services to his country had
-lately formed a horrid compact with the enemy. And but for the chance
-which brought us here at a certain time, but for the chance which by
-[Pg 140]a combination of accidents caused the adjutant-general of the
-English army to fall into the hands of some countrymen beyond the line
-of our own posts, West Point and the North River would probably be in
-possession of our enemies.
-
-"When we left Fishkill we were preceded by one of my aides-de-camp and
-General Knox's aide, who found General and Mrs. Arnold at table and sat
-down to breakfast with them. During that time two letters were brought
-to General Arnold giving him information of the capture of the spy. He
-ordered a horse to be saddled, went to his wife's room and told her
-he was lost, and directed one of his aides-de-camp to say to General
-Washington that he had gone to West Point and should return in an hour."
-
-Arnold had been gone only thirty minutes when Washington and Lafayette
-rode up.
-
-"We crossed the river and went to look at the works. Judge of our
-astonishment when, upon our return, we were informed that the captured
-spy was Major André, the adjutant-general of the English army, and that
-among the papers found upon him was a copy of a very important council
-of war, a statement of the strength of the garrison and of the works,
-and certain observations upon the methods of attack and defense, all
-in General Arnold's handwriting.... A search was made for Arnold, but
-he had escaped in a boat on board the sloop-of-war _Vulture_, and as
-nobody suspected his flight, no sentry could have thought of arresting
-him.... The first care of General Washington was to return to [Pg
-141]West Point the troops whom Arnold had dispersed under various
-pretexts. We remained here to insure the safety of a fort which the
-English would value less if they knew it better....
-
-"I cannot describe to you, M. le Chevalier, to what degree I am
-astounded by this piece of news.... That Arnold, a man who, although
-not so highly esteemed as has been supposed in Europe, had nevertheless
-given proof of talent, of patriotism, and especially of the most
-brilliant courage, should at once destroy his very existence and should
-sell his country to the tyrants whom he had fought against with glory,
-is an event, M. le Chevalier, which confounds and distresses me, and,
-if I must confess it, humiliates me to a degree that I cannot express.
-I would give anything in the world if Arnold had not shared our labors
-with us, and if this man whom it still pains me to call a scoundrel had
-not shed his blood for the American cause. My knowledge of his personal
-courage led me to expect that he would decide to blow his brains out.
-This was my first hope. At all events, it is probable that he will
-do so when he reaches New York, whither the English sloop proceeded
-immediately upon receiving Arnold on board....
-
- "I am not writing to M. le Comte de Rochambeau or to M. le Chevalier
- de Ternay. I beg you to communicate to them this incredible story....
- What will the officers of the French army say when they see a general
- abandon and basely sell his country after having defended it so
- well? You can bear witness, M. le Chevalier, that this is the first
- [Pg 142]atrocity that has been heard of in our army. But if, on the
- one hand, they hear of the infamy of Arnold, they are bound to admire
- the disinterestedness of a few countrymen who happened to meet Mr.
- André with a passport from General Arnold, and on the mere suspicion
- of his being a friend of England made him a prisoner, refusing at the
- same time his horse, his watch, and four hundred guineas which he
- offered them if they would allow him to continue upon his way....
-
- "I shall conclude my long letter, M. le Chevalier, by referring to a
- subject which must touch every human heart. The unhappy Mrs. Arnold
- did not know a word of this conspiracy. Her husband told her before
- going away that he was flying, never to come back, and he left her
- lying unconscious. When she came to herself she fell into frightful
- convulsions and completely lost her reason. We did everything we
- could to quiet her, but she looked upon us as the murderers of her
- husband.... The horror with which her husband's conduct has inspired
- her, and a thousand other feelings, make her the most unhappy of
- women.
-
- "P.S.--She has recovered her reason this morning, and, as you know
- I am upon very good terms with her, she sent for me to go up to her
- chamber. General Washington and every one else sympathize warmly with
- this estimable woman whose face and whose youthfulness make her so
- interesting. She is going to Philadelphia, and I implore you, when
- you return, to use your influence in her favor.... Your influence and
- [Pg 143]your opinion, emphatically expressed, may prevent her from
- being visited with a vengeance which she does not deserve. General
- Washington will protect her also. As for myself, you know that I
- have always been fond of her, and at this moment she interests me
- intensely. We are certain that she knew nothing of the plot."
-
-This letter expressed the hope that André would be hanged according to
-military law, because, being a man of high rank and influence, his fate
-would serve as a warning to spies of lesser degree. Lafayette was one
-of the court martial that tried and sentenced him; and we have no proof
-that he hesitated for an instant in the performance of his stem duty
-or that he ever regretted it. Yet from a letter to Madame Lafayette,
-written after André's death, we know that Lafayette felt his charm, as
-did every one else who knew the unfortunate young Englishman. "He was
-an interesting young man," Lafayette wrote. "He conducted himself in a
-manner so frank, so noble, and so delicate that I cannot help feeling
-for him infinite sorrow."
-
-Arnold, as everybody knows, did not blow out his brains, but, becoming
-literally a turncoat, donned the red of the British uniform, and took
-his unwelcome place among the gentlemen officers of King George. In
-the following spring he was doing work of destruction in Virginia; but
-he was not trusted by his new companions, and two British colonels
-supposed to be under his orders were secretly charged with the duty of
-keeping an eye on him. It was in Virginia that his path and Lafayette's
-crossed once more.
-
-[Pg 144]Lafayette meantime had been a prey to restlessness. Nothing
-happened in the North more interesting than camp routine and the
-exchange of official visits. During the summer he had been given
-command of a special corps of light infantry culled from all branches
-of the service, a body of men in which he took infinite pride. "Its
-position is always that of advance-guard," he wrote Adrienne. "It is
-independent of the main army, and it is far too fine for our present
-pacific situation." He lavished training and affection upon it and
-pampered it by sending to France for luxuries like sabers and banners
-and plumes. While less needed than coats and shoes, such things were
-easier to transport. But even in the matter of clothing this favored
-corps was better off than the rest of the army. A French officer who
-visited Lafayette's camp thought the uniforms of both men and officers
-smart. Each soldier wore a sort of helmet made of hard leather, with a
-crest of horsehair.
-
-Before the army went into winter quarters many Frenchmen came to "the
-camp of the marquis" twenty miles from New York, making the pilgrimage
-not so much from love of him or to sample the punch which, according
-to the custom of the time, he kept "stationary on the table" for
-the benefit of his guests, as out of curiosity to see Washington's
-headquarters, which were not far away. Most of them were impressed
-by the good horses owned by American generals and astonished at the
-simplicity of their other equipment. Some "who had made war as colonels
-[Pg 145]long before Lafayette left school" were the least bit jealous
-of his youth and influence. Several had entered into an agreement not
-to accept service under him; but all were flattered that a Frenchman
-held such high place in public esteem. One of them asserted with
-complacency that "private letters from him have frequently produced
-more effect upon some states than the strongest exhortations of
-Congress."
-
-When the army went into winter quarters again he had even more time
-upon his hands. He wrote many letters. One went almost every month
-to his powerful friend at court, Vergennes, urging speedy aid. The
-military needs of the country were never absent from his thoughts, even
-while he was taking his French friends, including De Noailles, on a
-personally conducted tour of near-by battle-fields and cities. He did
-not trust himself far from headquarters, for fear that his chief might
-need him or that he might miss some opportunity. When Colonel Laurens
-received his instructions before starting for Paris he took care to be
-on hand, to give expert advice on court customs and prejudices. He was
-a young man who well knew his influence upon two continents, and was
-so eager to use it that a man of less winning personality in similar
-circumstances might have got himself heartily disliked.
-
-His eagerness to do something was heightened by his belief that Europe
-misunderstood, and thought Americans either unready or unwilling to
-fight. His vivid imagination got to work again and juggled with facts
-and figures until he became convinced that a surprise attack upon New
-[Pg 146]York could do no possible harm and might capture the city. He
-detailed this plan to Washington, who saw the weakness of his reasoning
-and rejected it in a kind letter signed "sincerely and affectionately
-yours," reminding Lafayette that "we must consult our means rather than
-our wishes" and that "to endeavor to recover our reputation we should
-take care not to injure it the more."
-
-After this gentle snub he was torn between a desire to join General
-Greene in the South for the winter campaign and his wish to be near New
-York when a blow was struck there. With a curiosity that would have
-been unpardonable in a less intimate friend, he sought to find out his
-chief's plans on this score. Washington's answer was non-committal, but
-he pointed out that "your going to the Southern army, if you expect
-a command in this, will answer no valuable purpose"; and after this
-second gentle snub Lafayette gave up the idea of joining Greene. Then
-in February he was sent with a detachment of twelve hundred men to
-Virginia, where Arnold was destroying valuable supplies. His orders
-bade him travel fast, "not to suffer the detachment to be delayed
-for want of either provisions, forage, or wagons," and after he got
-to Virginia "to do no act whatever with Arnold that directly or by
-implication will screen him from the punishment due to his treason and
-desertion; which, if he should fall into your hands, you will execute
-in the most summary way." While in Virginia he was to co-operate with
-General von Steuben, who was in command of militia there; and if [Pg
-147]it should prove impossible to dislodge Arnold, Lafayette was to
-bring his men back to rejoin the main army.
-
-He had his force at the Head of Elk, that inlet at the head of
-Chesapeake Bay which the English had already used, three days ahead of
-schedule time. His campaign lasted about a month, but came to nothing,
-because he did not have the co-operation of ships, and in that tangle
-of land and water control of Chesapeake Bay was as necessary to success
-as ammunition or fodder. The French had been asked to help, and twice
-sent ships from Newport to Chesapeake Bay, but in neither case were
-they useful to him. He did the best he could from day to day without
-them, and even pushed down the bay in a small boat far ahead of his
-men, hoping to establish connections; but the ships he saw were British
-instead of French. Then he took his men back again to the Head of Elk.
-
-That his failure was not due to lack of persistence letters written
-by him to Gov. Thomas Jefferson, asking for transportation, for
-provisions, for boats, for wagons, for horses, and, if horses were not
-available, even for oxen to draw his guns, amply testify. That he had
-his usual resourcefulness at instant command was displayed at Annapolis
-on the northward journey when he found two small armed British vessels
-blocking his progress. He improvised a temporary navy of his own, armed
-two merchant sloops with cannon, manned them with volunteers, and drove
-the British away long enough to permit the rest of his force to go on.
-
-[Pg 148]Neither was his usual friendliness lacking. He snatched
-time to visit Mount Vernon and to call upon Washington's mother at
-Fredericksburg, but he made up for the time lost in these indulgences
-by riding at night to overtake his command.
-
-
-[Pg 149]XVII
-
-PREPARING FOR THE LAST ACT
-
-
-The British were beginning to be hard pressed in the South. The
-struggle had been long and disappointing, and burning and looting and
-the horrors of civil war had spread over a large area. Two Continental
-armies had been lost in rapid succession, and there had been months
-when one disaster seemed to follow upon another; but gradually the
-British were being driven away from their ships and bases of supply
-on the coast. The heat of summer had brought much sickness to their
-camps, and General Greene, next to Washington the most skilful of the
-Revolutionary generals, had perfected his "science of losing battles"
-to the point where his opponents might claim almost every engagement
-as a victory and yet the advantage remained with the Americans.
-Recently the British had lost a large part of their light troops. In
-March, 1781, Cornwallis decided to leave General Rawdon, with whom
-Lafayette had danced in London, to face Greene, while he himself went
-to Virginia, joined Benedict Arnold and General Phillips there, and
-returned with them to finish the conquest of the South. Washington [Pg
-150]learned of the plan and knew that if it succeeded General Greene
-might be crushed between two British forces. Arnold and Phillips must
-be kept busy in Virginia. Steuben was already on the ground; Anthony
-Wayne was ordered to hurry his Pennsylvanians to the rescue; and
-Lafayette, being near the point of danger, was turned back. He found
-new orders when he reached Head of Elk.
-
-The scene was being set in Virginia, not in New York, for the last act
-of the Revolutionary War; but neither he nor his men realized this,
-and if Lafayette was disappointed, the men were almost in a state
-of panic. They began deserting in large numbers. "They like better
-a hundred lashes than a journey to the southward," their commander
-wrote. "As long as they had an expedition in view they were very well
-satisfied; but the idea of remaining in the Southern states appears
-to them intolerable, and they are amazingly averse to the people and
-climate." Most of them were New England born. He hastened to put many
-rivers between them and the land of their desire; and also tried an
-appeal to their pride. In an order of the day he stated that his force
-had been chosen to fight an enemy superior in numbers and to encounter
-many dangers. No man need desert, for their commander would not compel
-one of them to accompany him against his will. Whoever chose to do so
-might apply for a pass and be sent back to rejoin his former regiment.
-They were part of his beloved light infantry of the previous year, with
-[Pg 151]all this implied of friendship and interest on both sides, and
-this appeal worked like a charm. Desertion went suddenly and completely
-out of fashion; nobody asked for a pass, and one poor fellow who was in
-danger of being sent back because he was lame hired a cart to be saved
-from this disgrace.
-
-Lafayette's men had once been better dressed than the average; but
-their present ragged clothing was entirely unsuited to the work ahead
-of them, being fit only for winter wear in the North. As usual, money
-and new garments were equally lacking, and as usual this general of
-twenty-three came to the rescue. When he reached Baltimore he let
-the merchants know that according to French law he was to come into
-full control of all his property on reaching the age of twenty-five,
-and he promised to pay two years hence for everything he ordered, if
-the government did not pay them earlier. On the strength of this he
-borrowed two thousand guineas with which to buy overalls, hats, and
-shoes; and he smiled upon the ladies of Baltimore, who gave a ball in
-his honor, told them confidentially of his plight, and so stirred their
-patriotism and sympathy that they set to work with their own fair hands
-and made up the linen he bought for shirts.
-
-Phillips and Arnold had joined forces near Norfolk, and, since the
-British were in control of Chesapeake Bay, could go where they chose.
-Lafayette believed they would soon move up the James River toward
-Norfolk to destroy supplies the Americans had collected. He resolved to
-get to Richmond before them, though he had twice the distance to [Pg
-152]travel. With this in view he set out from Baltimore on the 19th of
-April, moving with such haste that his artillery and even the tents for
-his men were left to follow at a slower pace. On the day before he left
-Baltimore the British, under General Phillips, who outranked Arnold,
-began the very march he had foreseen. Steuben's Virginia militia put up
-the best defense it could, but, being inferior in numbers and training,
-could only retire inch by inch, moving supplies to places of greater
-safety as it went. But it retired hopefully, knowing Lafayette to be on
-the way.
-
-Continuing to advance, partly by land and partly by water, the British
-reached Petersburg, only twenty-three miles from Richmond. They passed
-Petersburg and pressed on. On April 30th they reached Manchester on the
-south bank of the James, directly opposite Richmond. There, to General
-Phillips's amazement, he beheld more than the town he had come to take;
-drawn up on the hills above the river was Lafayette's force, which had
-arrived the night before. He had only about nine hundred Continentals
-in addition to his militia, and the British numbered twenty-three
-hundred, but Phillips did not choose to attack. He contented himself
-with swearing eloquently and giving orders to retire. Lafayette had the
-satisfaction of learning, through an officer who visited the British
-camp under flag of truce, that his enemy had been completely surprised.
-But the young Frenchman felt it necessary to explain to Washington just
-how he had been able to do it. "The leaving of my artillery appears a
-[Pg 153]strange whim, but had I waited for it Richmond was lost.... It
-was not without trouble I have made this rapid march."
-
-Lafayette was to be under General Greene and expected to find orders
-from him waiting at Richmond. Not finding them, he decided he could
-best serve the cause by keeping General Phillips uneasy, and followed
-him down the James; but, being too weak to attack except with great
-advantage of position, he prudently kept the river between them. The
-military journal kept by Colonel Simcoe, one of the British officers
-charged with the unpleasant duty of watching Arnold, admits that this
-was "good policy," though he longed to take advantage of what he called
-his French adversary's "gasconading disposition and military ignorance"
-and make some counter-move which his own superior officers failed to
-approve.
-
-This retreat of the British down the James, followed by Lafayette,
-was the beginning of that strange contra-dance which the two armies
-maintained for nine weeks. Sketched upon a map of Virginia, the
-route they took resembles nothing except the aimless markings of a
-little child. The zigzag lines extend as far west as the mountains
-at Charlottesville, as far south as Portsmouth, as far north as
-Fredericksburg and Culpeper, and end at Yorktown.
-
-Cornwallis had not approved of General Clinton's conduct of the
-war, believing the British commander-in-chief frittered away his
-opportunity. Cornwallis said he was "quite tired of marching about the
-[Pg 154]country in search of adventure." The experiences he was to have
-in Virginia must have greatly added to that weariness.
-
-He sent word to Phillips to join him at Petersburg. General Phillips
-turned his forces in that direction, but it proved to be his last
-order. He was already ill and soon lapsed into unconsciousness and
-died. His death placed Arnold again in command until Cornwallis should
-arrive. It was during this interval that Arnold took occasion to
-write Lafayette about prisoners of war. Mindful of his instructions
-to have nothing to do with Arnold except to punish him, Lafayette
-refused to receive the letter, saying to the messenger who brought
-it that he would gladly read a communication from any other British
-officer. Arnold had a keen interest in the treatment of prisoners--for
-very personal reasons. A story was current to the effect that one of
-Lafayette's command who was taken prisoner was questioned by Arnold
-himself and asked what the Americans would do to him in case he was
-captured. "Cut off the leg which was wounded in your country's service,
-and hang the rest of you!" was the prompt reply. The renegade general
-was not popular in either army. Soon after Cornwallis's arrival he was
-ordered elsewhere, and his name fades out of history.
-
-Lafayette counted the hours until Wayne should join him, but Cornwallis
-reached Virginia first, with troops enough to make Lafayette's
-situation decidedly grave. All the Americans could do was to follow the
-plan Steuben had adopted before Lafayette's arrival; retreat slowly,
-[Pg 155]removing stores to places of safety whenever possible. General
-Greene gave Lafayette permission to act independently, but, while
-this enabled him to make quick decisions, it increased his load of
-responsibility and did not in the least augment his strength.
-
-In the North he had longed for more to do; here it was different.
-He wrote Alexander Hamilton, "For the present, my dear friend, my
-complaint is quite of the opposite nature," and he went on with a
-half-humorous account of his duties, his situation, and the relative
-strength of the two armies. The British, he thought, had between four
-thousand and five thousand men. "We have nine hundred Continentals.
-Their infantry is near five to one, their cavalry ten to one. Our
-militia is not numerous, some without arms, and are not used to war."
-Wayne's men were necessary even to allow the Americans to be beaten
-"with some decency." "But," he added, "if the Pennsylvanians come, Lord
-Cornwallis shall pay something for his victory!" The Virginia militia
-showed symptoms of deserting as harvest-time approached and the call
-of home duties grew strong. Then there was the danger of contagious
-disease. "By the utmost care to avoid infected ground, we have hitherto
-got rid of the smallpox," Lafayette wrote in another letter. "I wish
-the harvest-time might be as easily got over."
-
-Cornwallis was fully aware of his superior numbers and had a simple
-plan. "I shall now proceed to dislodge Lafayette from Richmond,
-and with my light troops to destroy magazines or stores in the
-[Pg 156]neighborhood.... From thence I propose to move to the neck
-at Williamsburg, which is represented as healthy ... and keep myself
-unengaged from operations which might interfere with your plan for the
-campaign until I have the satisfaction of hearing from you," he wrote
-Clinton. He was very sure that the "aspiring boy," as he contemptuously
-called Lafayette, could not escape him. But the "boy" had no intention
-of being beaten--"indecently"--if he could hold out until Wayne
-arrived. He knew that one false move would be his ruin and there was
-no wild planning. "Independence has rendered me more cautious, as I
-know my warmth," he told Hamilton. He knew how to travel swiftly,
-and sometimes it was necessary to move as swiftly as possible. Even
-so the British advance might come up just as the last of his little
-force disappeared. If Cornwallis tried a short cut to head him off, he
-changed his direction; and more of those apparently aimless lines were
-traced upon the map.
-
-On the 10th of June Wayne joined him about thirty-five miles west of
-Fredericksburg. His force was smaller than Lafayette had hoped for,
-"less than a thousand men in all"; but from that time the Continental
-troops no longer fled. Indeed, Cornwallis no longer pursued them,
-but veered off, sending General Tarleton's famous cavalry on a raid
-toward Charlottesville, where it made prisoners of several members
-of the Virginia legislature and almost succeeded in capturing Gov.
-Thomas Jefferson. Another portion of his force turned its attention
-[Pg 157]upon Steuben where he was guarding supplies. But gradually
-pursuit became retreat and the general direction of the zigzag was
-back toward the sea. The chances were still uncertain enough to make
-the game exciting. There was one moment when Lafayette's flank was in
-imminent danger; his men, however, marched by night along a forgotten
-wood road and reached safety. Six hundred mounted men who came to join
-him from neighboring counties were warmly welcomed, for he sorely
-needed horses. At one time, to get his men forward more speedily for
-an attack--attacks were increasingly frequent--each horse was made to
-carry double. After he and General Steuben joined forces on the 19th of
-June the English and Americans each had about four thousand men, though
-in the American camp there were only fifteen hundred regulars and fifty
-dragoons.
-
-Weapons for cavalry were even scarcer than horses. Swords could not be
-bought in the state; but Lafayette was so intent upon mounted troops
-that he planned to provide some of them with spears, "which," he
-argued, "in the hands of a gentleman must be a formidable weapon." Thus
-reverting to type, as biologists say, this descendant of the Crusaders
-drove his enemy before him with Crusaders' weapons down the peninsula
-between the York and the James rivers.
-
-
-[Pg 158]XVIII
-
-YORKTOWN
-
-
-One of General Wayne's officers, Captain Davis of the First
-Pennsylvania, whose military skill, let us hope, exceeded his knowledge
-of spelling, kept a diary full of enthusiasm and superfluous capital
-letters. By this we learn that the Fourth of July, 1781, was a wet
-morning which cleared off in time for a "Feu-de-joy" in honor of
-the day. The Americans had by this time forced the British down the
-peninsula as far as Williamsburg, and were themselves camped about
-fifteen miles from that town. While the "Feu-de-joy" went up in smoke
-the British were busy; for Cornwallis had received letters which
-decided him to abandon Williamsburg, send a large part of his men
-north to reinforce Clinton, and consolidate the rest with the British
-garrison at Portsmouth, near Norfolk.
-
-The battle of Green Springs, the most serious encounter of Lafayette's
-Virginia campaign, took place on the 6th of July, near Jamestown, when
-the British, in carrying out this plan, crossed to the south side of
-the river James. Cornwallis was sure that Lafayette would attack, and
-[Pg 159]arranged an ambush, meaning to lure him with the belief that
-all except the British rear-guard had passed to the other bank. The
-ruse only half succeeded, for Lafayette observed that the British
-clung tenaciously to their position and replaced the officers American
-riflemen picked off one after the other. Riding out on a point of land,
-he saw the British soldiers waiting under protection of their guns
-and spurred back to warn General Wayne, but by that time the battle
-had opened. Wayne's men suffered most, being nearly surrounded. In a
-tight place Wayne always preferred "among a choice of difficulties, to
-advance and charge"; and this was exactly what he did, straight into
-the British lines. The unexpectedness of it brought success; and in the
-momentary confusion he fell back to a place of safety. Afterward he had
-a word to say about Lafayette's personal conduct. Reporting that no
-officers were killed, though most of them had horses shot or wounded
-under them, he added: "I will not condole with the Marquis for the loss
-of two of his, as he was frequently requested to keep at a greater
-distance. His native bravery rendered him deaf to the admonition."
-
-The British retained the battle-field and the Americans most of the
-glory, as was the case in so many fights of the Revolution. British
-military writers have contended that Lafayette was in mortal danger
-and that Cornwallis could have annihilated his whole force if he had
-attacked that night. What Cornwallis did was to cross the river next
-morning and proceed toward Portsmouth. The affair at Green Springs
-[Pg 160]added materially to Lafayette's reputation. Indeed, with the
-exception of burning a few American stores, increasing Lafayette's
-military reputation was about all the British accomplished in this
-campaign. An American officer with a taste for figures gleefully
-estimated that Cornwallis's "tour in Virginia" cost King George, one
-way and another, more than would have been needed to take all the
-British aristocracy on a trip around the world.
-
-Cornwallis got his soldiers safely upon their transports, but it was
-written in the stars that they were not to leave Virginia of their own
-free will. Orders came from Clinton telling him not to send them north,
-and giving him to understand that his recent acts were not approved.
-Clinton directed him to establish himself in a healthy spot on the
-peninsula between the York and James rivers and to gain control of
-a seaport to which British ships could come. He suggested Old Point
-Comfort, but Cornwallis's engineers decided that Yorktown, with the
-neck of land opposite called Gloucester, was the only place that would
-serve. Here Cornwallis brought his army on the 1st of August and began
-building defenses.
-
-Following the battle of Green Springs, Lafayette occupied Williamsburg
-and gave his men the rest they needed after their many weeks of
-marching. He sent out detachments on various errands, but this was a
-season of comparative quiet. Soon he began to long for excitement,
-and wrote to Washington that he did not know about anything that was
-happening in the world outside of Virginia, that he was homesick for
-[Pg 161]headquarters, and that if he could not be there to help in the
-defense of New York, at least he would like to know what was going on.
-The answer only whetted his curiosity. Washington bade him await a
-confidential letter explaining his plans.
-
-The military situation as Washington saw it was exceedingly
-interesting. Colonel Laurens's mission to the French court had turned
-out badly. Perhaps he had not taken sufficiently to heart Lafayette's
-advice; but young Rochambeau had not fared much better. In May it
-had been learned that there was never to be any second division of
-the French army; a blow that was softened by the assurance that
-considerable money was actually on the way and that a French fleet,
-which had sailed for the West Indies under command of Comte de Grasse,
-might visit the coast of the United States for a short time.
-
-It was the approach of this French fleet which caused Clinton
-uneasiness in New York and made Cornwallis embark part of his troops
-for the North. Washington took good care to let Clinton rest in the
-belief that New York was to be attacked, but it became increasingly
-evident to him that the greatest blow he could strike would be to
-capture Cornwallis's army. He arranged with Admiral de Grasse to sail
-to Chesapeake Bay instead of to New York, sent word to Lafayette to
-be on the lookout for the French fleet, moved Rochambeau's soldiers
-from Newport to the Hudson, left a sufficient number of them there and
-started south with all the rest of the army, moving with the greatest
-possible speed. Those of us who have read about this merely as long [Pg
-162]past history do not realize the risks involved in planning such
-far-reaching combinations in days before cables and telegraph lines.
-
-"To blockade Rhode Island, fool Clinton, shut him up in New York,
-and keep Cornwallis in Virginia," says a French writer, "it was
-necessary to send from the port of Brest and later from the Antilles
-to Chesapeake Bay a flotilla destined to take from the English all
-hope of retreat and embarkation at the exact instant that Washington,
-Rochambeau, and Lafayette should come and force the English in their
-last intrenchments. This grand project which decided the outcome of the
-war could be conceived only by men of superior talent." Lafayette's
-friend, De Ségur, said that "it required all the audacity of Admiral
-Comte de Grasse and the skill of Washington, sustained by the bravery
-of Lafayette, the wisdom of Rochambeau, the heroic intrepidity of our
-sailors and our troops, as well as the valor of the American militia."
-
-Fortunately the geography of the Atlantic coast helped Washington keep
-his secret even after he was well started. If De Grasse came to New
-York, Washington's logical goal was Staten Island, and the route of the
-Continental army would be the same in either case for a long distance.
-After Philadelphia had been left behind and Washington's plan became
-evident, it was too late for Clinton to stop him.
-
-Thus the net tightened about Cornwallis. French ships in the bay
-effectually cut off hope of reinforcement or escape by sea. Lafayette
-[Pg 163]stationed Wayne where he could interpose if the British
-attempted to go by land toward the Carolinas. He sent his faithful
-friend, De Gimat, down the bay to meet the French admiral and give him
-information, and disposed his own forces to cover the landing of any
-soldiers De Grasse might bring him.
-
-It must have been a fine sight when twenty-eight large ships of the
-line and four French frigates sailed up the James River on the 2d of
-September and landed three thousand soldiers, "all very tall men" in
-uniforms of white turned up with blue. Lafayette's Americans, drawn up
-not far from the battleground of Green Springs, donned their ragged
-best in their honor. "Our men had orders to wash and put on clean
-clothes," a diary informs us.
-
-With this addition to his force Lafayette approached Yorktown. General
-Saint-Simon, the commander of the three thousand very tall men, was
-much older than Lafayette, besides being a marshal of France, but he
-gallantly signified his willingness to serve under his junior; and
-officers and privates alike accepted cheerfully the scanty American
-fare, which was all Lafayette could get for his enlarged military
-family. He found difficulty in collecting even this and wrote
-Washington that his duties as quartermaster had brought on violent
-headache and fever, but that the indisposition would vanish with three
-hours' needed sleep.
-
-In spite of their politeness it was evident that the visitors were
-anxious to be through with their task and away. Admiral de Grasse had
-a rendezvous for a certain date in the West Indies and insisted from
-[Pg 164]the first that his stay in American waters must be short. The
-French were scarcely inclined to await the arrival of Washington; yet
-with all Washington's haste he had only reached Chester, Pennsylvania,
-on the way to Head of Elk when he heard of De Grasse's arrival. Those
-who were with him when the news came were more impressed by the way he
-received it than by the news itself. His reserve and dignity fell from
-him like a garment, and his face beamed like that of a delighted child
-as he stood on the river-bank waving his hat in the air and shouting
-the glad tidings to Rochambeau.
-
-When Washington reached Williamsburg on the 13th of September he
-found both Lafayette and General Wayne the worse for wear. Wayne,
-with characteristic impetuosity, had tried to pass one of Lafayette's
-sentries after dark and was nursing a slight wound in consequence.
-Lafayette's quartermaster headache had developed into an attack of
-ague; but that did not prevent his being present at the ceremonies
-which marked the official meeting of the allied commanders. There were
-all possible salutes and official visits, and, in addition, at a grand
-supper a band played a kind of music seldom heard in America in those
-days--the overture to a French opera "signifying the happiness of a
-family when blessed with the presence of their father."
-
-Washington's arrival of course put an end to Lafayette's independent
-command. With the Commander-in-chief present he became again what
-he had been the previous summer, merely the commander of a division
-[Pg 165]of light infantry, and as such took part in the siege of
-Yorktown, which progressed unfalteringly. The night of October 14th
-witnessed its most dramatic incident, the taking of two redoubts, one
-by French troops, the other by Americans under Lafayette. Among his
-officers were Gimat, John Laurens, and Alexander Hamilton. Six shells
-in rapid succession gave the signal to advance, and his four hundred
-men obeyed under fire without returning a shot, so rapidly that the
-place was taken at the point of the bayonet in a very few minutes.
-Lafayette's first care was to send an aide with his compliments and
-a message to Baron Viomenil, the French commander, whose troops were
-still attacking; the message being that the Americans had gained their
-redoubt and would gladly come to his assistance if he desired it. This
-was a bit of vainglory, for Viomenil had nettled Lafayette by doubting
-if his Americans could succeed. On the night of October 15th the
-British attempted a sortie which failed. After an equally unsuccessful
-attempt to escape by water, Cornwallis felt that there was no more
-hope, for his works were crumbling and, in addition to his loss in
-killed and wounded, many of his men were sick. He wrote a short note to
-Washington asking for an armistice to arrange terms of surrender.
-
-The time of surrender was fixed for two o'clock on the afternoon of
-October 19, 1781. Lafayette had suggested that Cornwallis's bands be
-required to play a British or a German air when the soldiers marched
-to lay down their arms. This was in courteous retaliation for the
-[Pg 166]treatment our own troops had received at British hands at the
-surrender of Charleston, when they had been forbidden to play such
-music. It was to the tune of "The World Turned Upside Down" that they
-chose to march with colors cased, between the long lines of French and
-Americans drawn up on the Hampton Road, to a field where a squadron
-of French had spread out to form a huge circle. The French on one
-side of the road under their flag with the golden fleur-de-lis were
-resplendent in uniforms of white turned up with blue. The Americans
-were less imposing. In the militia regiments toward the end of their
-line scarcely a uniform was to be seen, but at their head Washington
-and his officers, superbly mounted, stood opposite Rochambeau and the
-other French generals. Eye-witnesses thought that the British showed
-disdain of the ragged American soldiers and a marked preference for
-the French, but acts of discourtesy were few, and the higher officers
-conducted themselves as befitted gentlemen. Cornwallis did not appear
-to give up his sword, but sent General O'Hara to represent him, and it
-was received on Washington's part by General Lincoln, who had given up
-his sword to the British at Charleston.
-
-As each British regiment reached the field where the French waited it
-laid down its arms at the command of its colonel and marched back to
-Yorktown, prisoners of war. The cheeks of one colonel were wet with
-tears as he gave the order, and a corporal was heard to whisper to
-his musket as he laid it down, "May you never get so good a master!"
-[Pg 167]Care was taken not to add to the humiliation of the vanquished
-by admitting sightseers, and all agree that there was no cheering or
-exulting. "Universal silence was observed," says General "Lighthorse
-Harry" Lee, who was there. "The utmost decency prevailed, exhibiting
-in demeanor an awful sense of the vicissitudes of human life, mingled
-with commiseration for the unhappy." There was more than commiseration;
-there was real friendliness. Rochambeau, learning that Cornwallis was
-without money, lent him all he needed. Dinners were given at which
-British officers were the guests of honor; and we have Lafayette's word
-for it that "every sort of politeness" was shown.
-
-Washington's aide, Colonel Tilghman, rode at top speed to Philadelphia
-with news of the surrender, reaching there after midnight on the 24th.
-He met a watchman as he entered the city, and bade him show him the way
-to the house of the president of Congress. The watchman, of course,
-learned the great news, and while Tilghman roused the high official,
-the watchman, who was a patriot, though he had a strong German accent,
-continued his rounds, calling, happily:
-
-"Basht dree o'glock, und Corn-wal-lis isht da-a-ken!"
-
-
-[Pg 168]XIX
-
-"THE WINE OF HONOR"
-
-
-About the time that Colonel Tilghman rode into Philadelphia a large
-British fleet appeared just outside of Chesapeake Bay, thirty-one
-ships one day and twenty-five more the next; but they were too late.
-As a French officer remarked, "The chicken was already eaten," and two
-days later the last sail had disappeared. The surrender of Cornwallis
-cost England the war, but nobody could be quite sure of it at that
-time. Washington hoped the French admiral would still help him by
-taking American troops south, either to reinforce General Greene near
-Charleston or for operations against Wilmington, North Carolina. Two
-days after the fall of Yorktown, when Washington made a visit of thanks
-to De Grasse upon his flagship, Lafayette accompanied his chief; and
-after Washington took leave Lafayette stayed for further consultation,
-it being Washington's plan to give Lafayette command of this expedition
-against Wilmington in case it should be decided upon. The young general
-came ashore in high spirits, sure that two thousand American soldiers
-[Pg 169]could sail for North Carolina within the next ten days.
-Reflection, however, showed the admiral many obstacles, chief of them
-being that he had positive orders to meet a Spanish admiral in the West
-Indies on a certain day, now very near. Taking troops to Wilmington
-might delay him only a few hours, but on the other hand contrary winds
-might lengthen the time to two weeks, in which case he would have to
-sail off to the rendezvous, carrying the whole American expedition
-with him. After thinking it over, he politely but firmly refused.
-Reinforcements for General Greene were sent by land under command
-of another officer, the expedition to Wilmington was given up, and
-Lafayette rode away to Philadelphia to ask leave of Congress to spend
-the following winter in Paris. This was readily granted in resolutions
-which cannily combined anticipation of future favors with thanks for
-the service he had already rendered.
-
-Once more he sailed from Boston on the _Alliance_. This time the voyage
-was short and lacked the exciting features of his previous trip on
-her. Wishing to surprise his wife, he landed at Lorient and posted to
-Paris with such haste that he arrived quite unexpectedly on the 21st
-of January, to find an empty house, Adrienne being at the moment at
-the Hotel de Ville, attending festivities in honor of the unfortunate
-little Dauphin. When the news of her husband's return finally reached
-her on the breath of the crowd she was separated from her home by
-streets in such happy turmoil that she could not hope to reach the
-Hotel de Noailles for hours. Marie Antoinette hastened this journey's
-[Pg 170]end in a lovers' meeting in right queenly fashion by holding
-up a royal procession and sending Madame Lafayette home in her own
-carriage. Accounts written at the time tell how the husband heard his
-wife's voice and flew to the door, how she fell into his arms half
-fainting with emotion, and how he carried her inside and the great
-doors closed while the crowd in the street applauded. What happened
-after that we do not know, except that he found other members of his
-family strangely altered. "My daughter and your George have grown
-so much that I find myself older than I thought," the father wrote
-Washington.
-
-Paris set about celebrating his return with enthusiasm. A private
-letter which made much of the queen's graciousness to Madame Lafayette
-remarked as of lesser moment that a numerous and joyous band of
-"_poissards,_" which we may translate "the rabble," brought branches
-of laurel to the Hôtel de Noailles. A prima donna offered him the same
-tribute at the opera, but in view of later happenings this homage of
-the common people was quite as significant. In vaudeville they sang
-topical songs about him; pretty ladies frankly showed him their favor;
-the ancient order of Masons, of which he was a member, gave him the
-welcome reserved for heroes; and he was wined and dined to an extent
-that only a man blessed with his strong digestion could have withstood.
-One of these dinners was given by the dissolute old Maréchal de
-Richelieu, nephew of the famous cardinal, and to this were bidden "all
-[Pg 171]the _maréchals_ of France," who drank Washington's health with
-fervor and bade the guest of honor convey to him "their homage."
-
-It had been more than a century since France won a victory over
-England comparable to this capture of Cornwallis, and national pride
-and exultation were plainly apparent in the honors bestowed upon the
-returned soldier. "Your name is held in veneration," Vergennes assured
-him. "It required a great deal of skill to maintain yourself as you
-did, for so long a time, in spite of the disparity of your forces,
-before Lord Cornwallis, whose military talents are well known." And
-the new Minister of War, M. de Ségur, father of Lafayette's boyhood
-friend, informed him that as "a particular and flattering favor" the
-king had been pleased to make him a marshal of France, his commission
-dating from the 18th of October. This rank corresponded to that of
-major-general in the American army, and Lafayette was to assume it
-at the end of the American war. There were officers in the army who
-did not approve of this honor. They could not see that Lafayette had
-done anything to warrant making a French colonel into a major-general
-overnight and over the heads of officers of higher rank. They were
-quite sure they would have done as well had the opportunity come their
-way. Kings do not often reward subjects for services rendered a foreign
-nation; and the part that strikes us as odd is that Lafayette had been
-fighting against monarchy, the very form of government his own king
-represented. But Lafayette's life abounded in such contradictions.
-
-[Pg 172]His popularity was no nine days' affair. Franklin found it of
-very practical use. "He gains daily in public esteem and affection,
-and promises to be a great man in his own country," the American
-wrote, after Lafayette had been back for some weeks, adding, "he has
-been truly useful to me in my efforts to obtain increased assistance."
-Before the young hero arrived Franklin had found it difficult to
-arrange a new American loan, but with such enthusiasm sweeping Paris it
-was almost easy. The town went quite wild. John Ledyard, the American
-explorer, who was there at the time, wrote: "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 do we all, except
-some who worship." Then he added, "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."
-
-Envoys to discuss peace had already reached Paris, but it was not at
-all certain that England would give up the contest without one more
-campaign. To be on the safe side it was planned to send a combined
-fleet of French and Spanish ships convoying twenty-four thousand
-soldiers to the West Indies to attack the English island of Jamaica.
-Ships and men were to be under command of Admiral d'Estaing, who
-wished Lafayette to go with him as chief-of-staff. After the work was
-done in the West Indies D'Estaing would sail northward and detach six
-thousand troops to aid a revolution in Canada, a project Lafayette had
-never wholly abandoned. The expedition was to sail from Cadiz, and
-[Pg 173]Lafayette was already in Spain with part of the French force
-when he learned that the preliminary treaty of peace had been signed
-at Versailles on January 20, 1782. He longed to carry the news to
-America himself, but was told that he could do much in Spain to secure
-advantageous trade agreements between that country and the United
-States. So he contented himself with borrowing a vessel from the fleet
-that was now without a destination, and sending two letters by it.
-One, very dignified in tone, was addressed to Congress. The other, to
-Washington, was joyously personal. "If you were a mere man like Cæsar
-or the King of Prussia," he wrote, "I would almost regret, on your
-account, to see the end of the tragedy in which you have played so
-grand a role. But I rejoice with you, my dear General, in this peace
-which fulfils all my desires.... What sentiments of pride and joy I
-feel in thinking of the circumstances which led to my joining the
-American cause!... I foresee that my grandchildren will be envied when
-they celebrate and honor your name. To have had one of their ancestors
-among your soldiers, to know that he had the good fortune to be the
-friend of your heart, will be the eternal honor that shall glorify
-them; and I will bequeath to the eldest among them, so long as my
-posterity shall endure, the favor you have been pleased to bestow upon
-my son George."
-
-The ship on which these letters were sent was called, appropriately,
-_La Triomphe_; and, as he hoped, it did actually carry the news of
-peace to America, reaching port ahead of all others.
-
-[Pg 174]For himself, he remained in Spain, doing what he could for
-America. The things he witnessed there made him a better republican
-than ever. He wrote to his aunt that the grandees of the court looked
-rather small, "especially when I saw them upon their knees." Absolute
-power, exercised either by monarchs or subjects, was becoming more and
-more distasteful to him. The injustice of negro slavery, for example,
-wrung his heart. In the very letter to Washington announcing peace he
-wrote: "Now that you are to taste a little repose, permit me to propose
-to you a plan that may become vastly useful to the black portion of the
-human race. Let us unite in buying a little property where we can try
-to enfranchise the negroes and employ them merely as farm laborers."
-He did buy a plantation called Belle Gabrielle in Cayenne, French
-Guiana, and lavished money and thought upon it. It was an experiment
-in which his wife heartily joined, sending out teachers for the black
-tenantry and making their souls and morals her special care. The French
-Revolution put an end to this, as it did to so many enterprises; and
-it seems a bitter jest of fortune that when Lafayette's property was
-seized these poor creatures were sold back again into slavery--in the
-name of Freedom and Equality.
-
-In March, 1783, Lafayette took his wife to Chavaniac, possibly for the
-first time. One of the two aunts who made the old manor-house their
-home had just died, leaving the other desolate. While Adrienne won the
-affections of the lonely old lady, her husband set about improving
-the condition of the peasants on the estate. Bad harvests had brought
-[Pg 175]about great scarcity of food. His manager proudly showed his
-granaries full of wheat, remarking, "Monsieur le Marquis, now is the
-time to sell." The answer, "No, this is the time to give away," left
-the worthy steward breathless. Whether Lafayette's philanthropies
-would win the approval of social workers to-day we do not know. The
-list of enterprises sounds well. During the next few years he built
-roads, brought an expert from England to demonstrate new methods in
-agriculture, imported tools and superior breeds of animals, established
-a weekly market and an annual fair, started the weaving industry and a
-school to teach it, and established a resident physician to look after
-the health of his tenants. He was popular with them. On his arrival he
-was met in the town of Rion by a procession headed by musicians and the
-town officials, who ceremoniously presented "the wine of honor" and
-were followed by local judges in red robes who "made him compliments,"
-while the people cried, "Vive Lafayette!" and danced and embraced,
-"almost without knowing one another." A few weeks later the tenants
-from a neighboring manor came bringing him a draught of wine from their
-town, and expressing the wish that they might come under his rule. This
-he was able to gratify a few years later, when he bought the estate.
-
-In May, 1783, Lafayette realized the long-cherished dream of having
-a home of his own. The Hôtel de Noailles was very grand and very
-beautiful, and while he was away fighting it was by far the best place
-[Pg 176]for Adrienne and the children; but it belonged to her people,
-not to him. From camps he had written her about this home they were
-some day to have together; and now that he had returned to France
-to stay they bought a house in the rue de Bourbon and set up their
-domestic altar there. They had three children; for a daughter had
-been born to them in the previous September. Like George, she was as
-American as her father could make her. "I have taken the liberty of
-naming her Virginia," he wrote General Washington. Benjamin Franklin,
-to whom he also announced the new arrival, hoped he would have children
-enough to name one after each state of the Union.
-
-In May, also, something happened which must have pleased Lafayette
-deeply. He was given the Cross of Saint-Louis, the military decoration
-his father had worn; and the man who received him into the order was
-his father-in-law, the Duc d'Ayen, who had so bitterly opposed his
-going to America.
-
-With large estates in the country, a new house in town, a list of
-acquaintances which included everybody worth knowing in Paris and more
-notables in foreign countries than even he could write to or receive
-letters from, and a keen interest in the politics, philanthropy, and
-commerce of two hemispheres, he might have passed for a busy man.
-Yet he found time for an entirely new enthusiasm. A German doctor
-named Mesmer had made what he believed to be important discoveries
-in a new force and a new mode of healing, called animal magnetism.
-Lafayette enrolled himself as a pupil. "I know as much as ever a
-[Pg 177]sorcerer knew!" he wrote enthusiastically to Washington. On
-paying his initiation fee of a hundred golden louis he had signed a
-paper promising not to reveal these secrets to any prince, community,
-government, or individual without Mesmer's written consent, but
-the disciple was eager to impart his knowledge to his great friend
-and hoped to gain permission. Louis XVI was satirical. "What will
-Washington think when he learns that you have become first apothecary
-boy to Mesmer?" he asked.
-
-Lafayette was planning a visit to America and sent a message to Mrs.
-Washington that he hoped "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." He did indeed make the visit during the summer of 1784,
-though a few weeks later than June. Whether they had time during his
-ten days at Mount Vernon to talk about Mesmer history does not state.
-The hours must have been short for all the things clamoring to be
-said. Then Lafayette made a tour that carried him to Portsmouth, New
-Hampshire, as far west as Fort Schuyler, for another treaty-making
-powwow with his red brothers the Indians, and south to Yorktown.
-Everywhere bells pealed and balls and dinners were given. Before he
-turned his face toward France he had a few more quiet days at Mount
-Vernon with Washington, who accompanied him on his homeward way as far
-[Pg 178]as Annapolis. At parting the elder man gave him a tender letter
-for Adrienne, and on the way back to Mount Vernon wrote the words of
-farewell which proved prophetic: "I have often asked myself, since our
-carriages separated, whether that was the last sight I ever should have
-of you; and though I wished to say No, my fears answered Yes."
-
-Washington lived fourteen years longer; but in the mean time the storm
-of the French Revolution broke and everything that had seemed enduring
-in Lafayette's life was wrecked. Until that storm burst letters and
-invitations and presents flashed across the see as freely as though
-propelled by Mesmer's magic fluid. Mrs. Washington sent succulent
-Virginia hams to figure at dinners given by the Lafayettes in Paris.
-A picture of the household in the rue de Bourbon has come down to us
-written by a young officer to his mother:
-
-"I seemed to be in America rather than in Paris. Numbers of English and
-Americans were present, for he speaks English as he does French. He has
-an American Indian in native costume for a footman. This savage calls
-him only 'father.' Everything is simple in his home. Marmontel and the
-Abbé Morrolet were dinner guests. Even the little girls spoke English
-as well as French, though they are very small. They played in English,
-and laughed with the Americans. This would have made charming subjects
-for English engravings."
-
-Lafayette on his part sent many things to that house on the banks
-of the Potomac. He sent his friends, and a letter from him was an
-[Pg 179]infallible open sesame. He sent his own accounts of journeys
-and interviews. He sent animals and plants that he thought would
-interest Washington, the farmer. Asses, for example, which were hard to
-get in America, and rare varieties of seeds. In time he sent the key of
-the Bastille. But that, as romancers say, is "another story," and opens
-another chapter in Lafayette's life.
-
-
-[Pg 180]XX
-
-THE PASSING OF OLD FRANCE
-
-
-Lafayette took his business of being a soldier seriously, and in the
-summer of 1785 made another journey, this time in the interest of his
-military education. Frederick II, King of Prussia, was still living.
-Lafayette obtained permission to attend the maneuvers of his army,
-counting himself fortunate to receive lessons in strategy from this
-greatest warrior of his time. He was not surprised to find the old
-monarch bent and rheumatic, with fingers twisted with gout, and head
-pulled over on one side until it almost rested on his shoulder; or to
-see that his blue uniform with red facings was dirty and sprinkled with
-snuff. But he was astonished to discover that the eyes in Frederick's
-emaciated old face were strangely beautiful and lighted up his
-countenance at times with an expression of the utmost sweetness. It
-was not often that they transformed him thus from an untidy old man to
-an angel of benevolence. Usually they were keen, sometimes mockingly
-malicious.
-
-It was certainly not without malice that he seated the young French
-[Pg 181]general at his table between two other guests, Lord Cornwallis
-and the Duke of York; and in the course of long dinners amused himself
-by asking Lafayette questions about Washington and the American
-campaigns. Lafayette answered with his customary ardor, singing praises
-of his general and even venturing to praise republicanism in a manner
-that irritated the old monarch.
-
-"Monsieur!" Frederick interrupted him in such a flight. "I once knew
-a young man who visited countries where liberty and equality reigned.
-After he got home he took it into his head to establish them in his own
-country. Do you know what happened?"
-
-"No, Sire."
-
-"He was hanged!" the old man replied, with a sardonic grin. It was
-plain he liked Lafayette or he would not have troubled to give him the
-warning.
-
-Lafayette continued his journey to Prague and Vienna and Dresden,
-where he saw other soldiers put through their drill. Then he returned
-to Potsdam for the final grand maneuvers under the personal direction
-of Frederick, but a sudden acute attack of gout racked his kingly old
-bones, and the exercises which, in his clockwork military system, could
-no more be postponed than the movements of the planets, were carried
-out by the heir apparent, to Lafayette's great disappointment. He wrote
-Washington that the prince was "a good officer, an honest fellow, a man
-of sense," but that he would never have the talent of his two uncles.
-As for the Prussian army, it was a wonderful machine, but "if the
-resources of France, the vivacity of her soldiers, the intelligence
-[Pg 182]of her officers, the national ambition and moral delicacy were
-applied to a system worked out with equal skill, we would as far excel
-the Prussians as our army is now inferior to theirs--which is saying a
-great deal!"
-
-_Vive la France! Vivent_ moral distinctions! He may not have realized
-it, but Lafayette was all his life more interested in justice than in
-war.
-
-Almost from the hour of his last return from America the injustice with
-which French Protestants were treated filled him with indignation.
-Though not openly persecuted, they were entirely at the mercy of
-official caprice. Legally their marriages were not valid; they could
-not make wills; their rights as citizens were attacked on every side.
-To use Lafayette's expression, they were "stricken with civil death."
-He became their champion.
-
-Everybody knew that very radical theories had been applauded in France
-for many years, even by the men who condemned them officially. Dislike
-of liberal actions, however, was still strong, as Lafayette found when
-he attempted to help these people. His interest in them was treated as
-an amiable weakness which might be overlooked in view of his many good
-qualities, but should on no account be encouraged. "It is a work which
-requires time and is not without some inconvenience to me, because
-nobody is willing to give me one word of writing or to uphold me in any
-way. I must run my chance," he wrote Washington. He did, however, get
-permission from one of the king's ministers to go to Languedoc, where
-[Pg 183]Protestants were numerous, in order to study their condition
-and know just what it was he advocated. Evidence that he gathered thus
-at first hand he used officially two years later before the Assembly
-of Notables. So his championship of the French Protestants marks the
-beginning of this new chapter in Lafayette's life, his entrance into
-French politics.
-
-Outwardly the condition of the country remained much as it had been;
-but discontent had made rapid progress during the years of Lafayette's
-stay in America. An answer attributed to the old Maréchal de Richelieu
-sums up the change. The old reprobate had been ill and Louis XVI, with
-good intentions, but clumsy cruelty, congratulated him on his recovery.
-"For," said the king, "you are not young. You have seen three ages."
-"Rather," growled the duke, "three reigns!" "Well, what do you think of
-them?" "Sire, under Louis XIV nobody dared say a word; under Louis XV
-they spoke in whispers; under your Majesty they speak loudly."
-
-This education in discontent had proceeded under three teachers:
-extravagance, hunger, and the success of America's war of independence.
-Louis really desired to see his people happy and prosperous. He had
-made an attempt at reforms, early in his reign, but, having neither
-a strong will nor a strong mind, it speedily lapsed. Even under his
-own eyes at Versailles many abuses continued, merely because they
-had become part of the cumbersome court etiquette which Frederick II
-had condemned back in the days of Louis's grandfather. Many other
-[Pg 184]abuses had increased without even the pretense of reforming
-them. There was increased personal extravagance among the well-to-do;
-increased extortion elsewhere. Tax-collectors were still going about
-shutting their eyes to the wealth of men who had influence and judging
-the peasants as coldly as they would judge cattle. In one district they
-were fat; they must pay a heavier tax. Chicken feathers were blowing
-about on the ground? That meant the people had poultry to eat; the
-screw could be given another vigorous turn. Among all classes there
-seemed to be less and less money to spend. With the exception of a few
-bankers and merchants, everybody from the king down felt poor. The
-peasants felt hungry. The poor in cities actually were very hungry;
-almost all the nobles were deeply in debt. In short, the forces for
-good and ill which had already honeycombed the kingdom when Lafayette
-was a boy had continued their work, gnawing upward and downward and
-through the social fabric until only a very thin and brittle shell
-remained. And, as the Maréchal de Richelieu pointedly reminded his weak
-king, people were no longer afraid to talk aloud about these things.
-
-The success of the Revolution in America had done much to remove the
-ban of silence. Loans made by France had added to the scarcity of
-money; and it was these loans which had brought America success. The
-people across the ocean had wiped the slate clean and begun afresh.
-Why not follow their example? In the winter of 1782, when Paris was
-[Pg 185]suffering from the Russian influenza, a lady with a clever
-tongue and the eye of a prophet had said, "We are threatened with
-another malady which will come from America--the _Independenza!_"
-Thoughtful people were beginning to believe that a change was only a
-matter of time; but that it would come slowly and stretch over many
-years.
-
-Meanwhile the months passed and the glittering outer shell of the
-old order of things continued to glitter. Lafayette divided his time
-between Paris, the court, and Chavaniac. He made at least one journey
-in the brilliant retinue of the king. He dined and gave dinners. He did
-everything in his power to increase commerce with the United States.
-He took part in every public movement for reform, and instituted small
-private ones of his own. One of these was to ask the king to revoke
-a pension of seven hundred and eighty livres that had been granted
-him when he was a mere baby, and to divide it between a retired old
-infantry officer and a worthy widow of Auvergne. Incidentally people
-seemed to like him in spite of his republicanism. It was no secret
-to any one that he had come home from America a thorough believer in
-popular government.
-
-His fame was by no means confined to France and the lands lying to
-the west of it. Catherine II of Russia became curious to see this
-much-talked-of person and invited him to St. Petersburg. Learning
-that she was soon to start for the Crimea, he asked leave to pay his
-respects to her there; but that was a journey he never made. Before he
-could set out Louis XVI called a meeting of the Assembly of Notables,
-[Pg 186]to take place on February 22, 1787. This was in no true sense
-a parliament; only a body of one hundred and forty-four men who held
-no offices at court, selected arbitrarily by the king to discuss such
-subjects as he chose to set before it. The subject was to be taxation,
-how to raise money for government expenses, a burning question with
-every one.
-
-Deliberative assemblies were no new thing in France. Several times in
-long-past history a king had called together representative men of
-the nobles, the clergy, and even of the common people, to consider
-questions of state and help bring about needed reforms. Such gatherings
-were known as States General. But they had belonged to a time before
-the kings were quite sure of their power, and it was one hundred and
-seventy years since the last one had been called. Little by little, in
-the mean time, even the provincial parliaments, of which there were
-several in different parts of France, had been sapped of strength
-and vitality. There was a tendency now to revive them. Lafayette had
-stopped in Rennes on his way home from Brest after his last trip across
-the Atlantic, to attend such a gathering in Brittany, where he owned
-estates, his mother having been a Breton. Favoring representative
-government as he did, he was anxious to see such assemblages meet
-frequently at regular intervals.
-
-The call for the Assembly of Notables had come about in an unexpected
-way. Some years before, the Minister of Finance, Necker, had printed
-a sort of treasurer's report showing how public funds had been spent.
-[Pg 187]This was a great novelty, such questions having been shrouded
-in deepest mystery. Everybody who could read read Necker's report.
-It was seen on the dressing-tables of ladies and sticking out of the
-pockets of priests. Necker had meant it to pave the way for reforms,
-because he believed in cutting down expenses instead of imposing more
-taxes. It roused such a storm of discussion and criticism that he was
-driven from the Cabinet; after which his successor, M. Calonne, "a
-veritable Cagliostro of finance," managed to juggle for four years with
-facts and figures before the inevitable day of reckoning came. This
-left the country much worse off than it had been when he took office;
-so badly off, in fact, that the king called together the Assembly of
-Notables.
-
-By an odd coincidence it held its first meeting at Versailles on a date
-forever linked in American minds with ideas of popular liberty--the 22d
-of February. For practical work, it was divided into seven sections or
-committees, each one of which was presided over by a royal prince. If
-the intention had been to check liberal tendencies among its members,
-the effort was vain. The spirit of independence was in it, and it
-refused to solve the king's financial riddles for him.
-
-From the beginning Lafayette took an active and much more radical part
-than some of his friends wished. He worked in behalf of the French
-Protestants. He wanted to reform criminal law; to give France a jury
-system such as England had; and he advocated putting a stop to the
-abuses of _lettres de cachet_. He was very plain-spoken in favor of
-[Pg 188]cutting down expenses, particularly in the king's own military
-establishment, in pensions granted to members of the royal family, and
-in the matter of keeping up the palaces and pleasure-places that former
-monarchs had loved, but which Louis XVI never visited. He believed in
-taxing lands and property belonging to the clergy, which had not as yet
-been taxed at all. He wanted the nobility to pay their full share, too,
-and he thought a treasurer's report should be published every year.
-Indeed, he wanted reports printed about all departments of government
-except that of Foreign Affairs.
-
-This was worse than amiable weakness, it was rank republicanism; the
-more dangerous because, as one of the ministers said, "all his logic is
-in action." The queen, who had never more than half liked him, began
-to distrust him. Calonne, who was about to leave the treasury in such
-a muddle, declared that he ought to be shut up in the Bastille; and a
-remark that Lafayette was overheard to make one day when the education
-of the dauphin was under discussion did not add to his popularity with
-the court party. "I think," he said, "that the prince will do well to
-begin his study of French history with the year 1787."
-
-One day he had the hardihood to raise his voice and say, "I appeal
-to the king to convene a national assembly." There was a hush of
-astonishment and of something very like fear. "What!" cried a younger
-brother of the king, the Comte d'Artois, who presided over the section
-of which Lafayette was a member. "You demand the convocation of [Pg
-189]the States General?" "Yes, Sire." "You wish to go on record? To
-have me say to the king that M. de Lafayette has made a motion to
-convene the States General?" "Yes, Monseigneur--and better than that!"
-by which Lafayette meant he hoped such an assembly might be made more
-truly representative than ever before.
-
-That Lafayette realized the personal consequences of his plain speaking
-there is no doubt. He wrote to Washington, "The king and his family,
-as well as the notables who surround him, with the exception of a few
-friends, do not pardon the liberties I have taken or the success I have
-gained with other classes of society." If he cherished any illusions,
-they were dispelled a few months later when he received a request from
-the king to give up his commission as major-general.
-
-As for his appeal for a meeting of the States General, nobody
-possessed the hardihood to sign it with him, and it had no immediate
-consequences. Before the Assembly of Notables adjourned it advised
-the king to authorize legislative assemblies in the provinces, which
-he did, Lafayette being one of the five men named by the monarch to
-represent the nobility in his province of Auvergne. At the sessions of
-this provincial assembly he further displeased the members of his own
-class, but the common people crowded about and applauded him wherever
-he went. "He was the first hero they had seen, and they were never
-tired of looking at him," a local chronicler states, with disarming
-frankness.
-
-[Pg 190]The situation grew worse instead of better. The country's debt
-increased daily. The Assembly of Notables held another session; but
-it was only to arrange details for the meeting of the States General
-which the king had at last been forced to call. It was to meet in May,
-1789, and was to be made up, as the other had been, of nobles, clergy,
-and more humble folk, called the bourgeoisie, or the Third Estate. But
-there was one immense difference. Instead of being appointed by the
-king, these were to be real representatives, nobles elected by the
-nobles, clergy by the clergy, and the common people expressing their
-own choice. In addition, people of all classes were invited to draw up
-_cahiers_--that is, statements in writing showing the kind of reforms
-they desired.
-
-The nobles and clergy held small meetings and elected delegates from
-among their own number. The Third Estate elected men of the upper
-middle class, or nobles of liberal views. Lafayette found considerable
-opposition among the nobles of Auvergne, but the common people begged
-him to represent them, promising to give him their unanimous vote if he
-would do so. He preferred, however, to make the fight in his own order
-and was successful, taking his seat, when the States General convened,
-as a representative of the nobility of Auvergne.
-
-
-[Pg 191]XXI
-
-THE TRICOLOR
-
-When the representatives of the people of France, to the number of
-more than twelve hundred, came together in a great hall in the palace
-at Versailles on the 5th of May, 1789, the king opened the session,
-with the queen and royal princes beside him on a throne gorgeous with
-purple and gold. Immediately in front of him sat his ministers, and in
-other parts of the hall were the three orders in separate groups. The
-nobles were brilliant in ruffles and plumes. The Third Estate was sober
-enough in dress, but there were six hundred of them; twice as many in
-proportion as had ever been allowed in a similar gathering. Most of
-them were lawyers; only forty belonged to the farming class. In the
-group of clergy some wore the flaming scarlet robes of cardinals, some
-the plain cassocks of village priests; and events proved that these
-last were brothers in spirit with the six hundred. The galleries were
-crowded with ladies and courtiers and envoys from distant lands. Even
-roofs of neighboring houses were covered with spectators bent on seeing
-all they could.
-
-[Pg 192]The queen looked anxious. She had no fondness for reforms;
-but of the two upon the throne she had the stronger character and was
-therefore the better king. She was brave, quick to decide, and daring
-to execute. Unfortunately she was also narrow-minded and had little
-sympathy with the common people. Louis had already proved himself a
-complete failure as a ruler. He was a good husband, a lover of hunting,
-and a passable locksmith. It was a bit of tragic irony that his hobby
-should have been the making of little, smoothly turning locks. After
-his one attempt at reform he had not even tried to govern, but spent
-his days in meaningless detail, while the country drifted toward ruin.
-
-Necker, who was once more in charge of the treasury, meant to keep
-the States General very busy with the duty for which they had been
-convened, that of providing money. But if the Notables had been
-refractory, this assembly was downright rebellious. A quarrel developed
-at the very outset about the manner of voting. In previous States
-General the three orders had held their meetings separately, and in
-final decisions each order had cast only one vote. The nobles and
-clergy could be counted on to vote the same way, which gave them a safe
-majority of two to one. Expecting the rule to hold this time, very
-little objection had been raised to the proposal that the Third Estate
-elect six hundred representatives instead of three hundred. The people
-liked it and it meant nothing at all. Now that the six hundred had been
-elected, however, they contended that the three orders must sit in one
-[Pg 193]assembly and that each man's vote be counted separately, which
-made all the difference in the world. A few liberals among the nobles
-and more than a few of the clergy in simple cassocks appeared to agree
-with them. The quarrel continued for six weeks, and meanwhile neither
-party was able to do any work.
-
-At the end of that time the number favoring the new way of voting had
-increased. These declared themselves to be the National Assembly of
-France and that they meant to begin the work of "national regeneration"
-at once, whether the others joined them or not. Reforms were to be
-along lines indicated in the _cahiers_, or written statements of
-grievances, that voters had been urged to draw up at the time of the
-election. Tens of thousands of these had been received, some written
-in the polished phrases of courtiers, some in the earnest, ill-chosen
-words of peasants. All expressed loyalty to the king; and almost all
-demanded a constitution to define the rights of people and king alike.
-Among other things they asked that _lettres de cachet_ be abolished;
-that the people be allowed liberty of speech; that the States General
-meet at regular intervals; and that each of the three orders pay its
-just share of the taxes.
-
-Soon after the liberals declared their intention of going to work
-they found the great hall at Versailles closed and were told curtly
-that it was being prepared for a royal session. They retired to a
-near-by tennis-court, lifted the senior representative from Paris, an
-astronomer named Bailly, to a table, elected him president of their
-[Pg 194]National Assembly, and took an oath not to disband until they
-had given France a constitution. A few days later the king summoned all
-the members of the States General to the great hall, scolded them for
-their recent acts in a speech written by somebody else, commanded that
-each order meet in future by itself, and left the hall to the sound
-of trumpets and martial music. The clergy and the nobles obediently
-withdrew. The Third Estate and a few liberals from the other orders
-remained. The king's master of ceremonies, a very important personage
-indeed, came forward and repeated the king's order. Soldiers could be
-seen behind him. There was a moment's silence; then Mirabeau, a homely,
-brilliant nobleman from the south of France, who had been rejected by
-his own order, but elected by the Third Estate, advanced impetuously
-toward the master of ceremonies, crying, in a loud voice, "Go tell your
-master that we are here by the will of the people, and that we shall
-not leave except at the point of the bayonet." Next he turned to the
-Assembly and made a motion to the effect that persons laying hands upon
-any member of the Assembly would be considered "infamous and traitors
-to the nation--guilty of capital crime." The master of ceremonies
-withdrew and reported the scene to the king. Louis, weak as water,
-said: "They wish to remain? Let them." And they did remain, to his
-undoing.
-
-
-[Illustration: THE BASTILLE
-
-From a contemporary print]
-
-[Illustration: SIEGE OF THE BASTILLE]
-
-Lafayette was in an embarrassing position. He sympathized with the
-Third Estate, yet he had been elected to represent the nobles, and
-his commission bound him to vote according to their wishes. He [Pg
-195]considered resigning in order to appeal again to the voters of
-Auvergne; but before he came to a decision the king asked the nobles
-and clergy to give up their evidently futile opposition. Lafayette took
-his place with the others in the National Assembly, but refrained for a
-time from voting. The king and his ministers seemed to have no settled
-policy. One day they tried to please the Third Estate; on another it
-was learned that batteries were being placed where they could fire upon
-the Assembly and that regiments were being concentrated upon Paris. It
-was upon a motion of Mirabeau's for the removal of these threatening
-soldiers that Lafayette broke his silence and began to take part again
-in the proceedings of the Assembly.
-
-On the 11th of July, about a fortnight after the nobles and clergy had
-resumed their seats, he presented to the Assembly his Declaration of
-Rights, modeled upon the American Declaration of Independence, to be
-placed at the head of the French Constitution. Two days later he was
-elected vice-president of the Assembly "with acclamations." Toward
-evening of the 14th the Vicomte de Noailles came from Paris with the
-startling news that people had been fighting in the streets for hours;
-that they had gained possession of the Bastille, the gray old prison
-which stood in their eyes for all that was hateful in the old regime;
-that its commander and several of its defenders had been murdered; and
-that their heads were being carried aloft on pikes among the crowds.
-
-[Pg 196]On the 15th the king came with his brothers to the Assembly
-and made a conciliatory speech, after which Lafayette hurried away to
-Paris at the head of a delegation charged with the task of quieting the
-city. They were met at the Tuileries gate and escorted to the Hôtel de
-Ville, where the City Council of Paris, a parliament in miniature, held
-its meetings. Lafayette congratulated the city on the liberty it had
-won, delivered the king's message, and turned to go. As he was leaving
-the room somebody cried out saying that here was the man Paris wanted
-to command its National Guard, and that Bailly, who accompanied him,
-ought to be mayor. It was one of those sudden ideas that seem to spread
-like wildfire. Lafayette stopped, drew his sword, and, acting upon that
-first impulse which he was so apt to follow, swore then and there to
-defend the liberty of Paris with his life if need be. He sent a message
-to the National Assembly asking permission to assume the new office,
-and on the 25th took, with Bailly, a more formal oath. The force of
-militia which he organized and developed became the famous National
-Guard of Paris; while this governing body at the Hotel de Ville which
-had so informally elected him, enlarged and changing from time to time
-as the Revolution swept on, became the famous, and infamous, "Commune."
-Lafayette himself, not many days after he assumed the new office,
-ordered the destruction of the old Bastille. One of its keys he sent to
-Washington at Mount Vernon. Another was made into a sword and presented
-by his admirers to the man whose orders had reduced the old prison to a
-heap of stones.
-
-[Pg 197]The court party was aghast. The Comte d'Artois and two of his
-friends shook the dust of their native land from their feet and left
-France, the first of that long army of _émigrés_ whose flight still
-further sapped the waning power of the king. Louis was of one mind one
-day, another the next. Against the entreaties and tears of the queen he
-accepted an invitation to visit Paris and was received, as Lafayette
-had been, with cheers. He made a speech, ratifying and accepting all
-the changes that had taken place; and to celebrate this apparent
-reconciliation between the monarch and his subjects Lafayette added the
-white of the flag of the king to red and blue, the colors of the city
-of Paris, making the Tricolor. Up to that time the badge of revolution
-had been green, because Camille Desmoulins, one of its early orators,
-had given his followers chestnut leaves to pin upon their caps. But the
-livery of the Comte d'Artois, now so hated, was green, and the people
-threw away their green cockades and enthusiastically donned the red,
-white, and blue, echoing Lafayette's prediction that it would soon make
-the round of Europe.
-
-The passions which had moved the city of Paris spread outward through
-the provinces as waves spread when a stone is cast into a pool. One
-town after another set up a municipal government and established
-national guards of its own. Peasants in country districts began
-assaulting tax-collectors, hanging millers on the charge that they were
-raising the price of bread, and burning and looting châteaux in their
-[Pg 198]hunt for old records of debts and judgments against the common
-people. July closed in a veil of smoke ascending from such fires in all
-parts of the realm.
-
-All day long on the 4th of August the Assembly listened to reports of
-these events, a dismaying recital that went on and on until darkness
-fell and the candles were brought in. About eight o'clock, when the
-session seemed nearing its end, De Noailles mounted the platform and
-began to speak. He said that there was good reason for these fires
-and the hate they disclosed. The châteaux were symbols of that kind
-of unjust feudal government which was no longer to be tolerated. He
-moved that the Assembly abolish feudalism. His motion was seconded by
-the Duc d'Aiguillon, the greatest feudal noble in France, with the
-one exception of the king. The words of these two aristocrats kindled
-another sort of fire--an emotional fire like that of a great religious
-revival. Noble after noble seemed impelled to mount the platform and
-renounce his special privileges. Priests and prelates followed their
-example. So did representatives of towns and provinces. The hours of
-the day had passed in increasing gloom; the night went by in this
-crescendo of generosity. By morning thirty or more decrees had been
-passed and feudalism was dead, so far as law could kill it.
-
-The awakening from this orgy of feeling was like the awakening from any
-other form of emotional excess. With it came the knowledge that neither
-the world nor human nature can be changed overnight. When the news went
-[Pg 199]abroad there were many who interpreted as license what had been
-given them for liberty. Forests were cut down. Game-preserves were
-invaded and animals slaughtered. Artisans found themselves out of work
-and hungrier than ever because of the economy now necessarily practised
-by the nobility. Such mighty reforms required time and the readjustment
-of almost every detail of daily life. Even before experience made this
-manifest the delegates began to realize that towns and bishoprics
-and provinces might refuse to ratify the impulsive acts of their
-representatives; and some of the nobles who had spoken for themselves
-alone did not feel as unselfish in the cold light of day as they had
-believed themselves to be while the candles glowed during that strange
-night session. The final result was to bring out differences of opinion
-more sharply and to widen the gulf between conservatives who clung to
-everything which belonged to the past and liberals whose desire was to
-give the people all that had been gained and even more.
-
-
-[Pg 200]XXII
-
-THE SANS-CULOTTES
-
-
-Lafayette's position as commander of the National Guard of Paris was
-one of great importance. "He rendered the Revolution possible by giving
-it an army," says a writer of his own nation, who does not hesitate
-to criticize him, but who also assures us that from July, 1789, to
-July, 1790, he was perhaps the most popular man in France. Being a
-born optimist, he was sure that right would soon prevail. If he had
-too great belief in his own leadership it is not surprising, since
-every previous undertaking of his life had succeeded; and he certainly
-had more experience in revolution than any of his countrymen--an
-experience gained in America under the direct influence of Washington.
-He had gone to America a boy afire with enthusiasm for liberty. He
-returned to France a man, popular and successful, with his belief in
-himself and his principles greatly strengthened. He was impulsive and
-generous, he had a good mind, but he was not a deep thinker, and from
-the very nature of his mind it was impossible for him to foresee the
-full difficulty of applying in France the principles that had been
-[Pg 201]so successful in America. In France politics were much more
-complicated than in a new country where there were fewer abuses to
-correct. France was old and abuses had been multiplying for a thousand
-years. To borrow the surgeon's phrase, the wound made by revolution
-in America was a clean wound that healed quickly, "by the first
-intention." In France the wound was far more serious and horribly
-infected. It healed in time, but only after a desperate illness.
-
-It is interesting that three of Lafayette's most influential American
-friends, Washington, Jefferson, and Gouverneur Morris, had misgivings
-from the first about the situation in France, fearing that a revolution
-could not take place there without grave disorders and that Lafayette
-could not personally ride such a storm. Morris, who was then in Paris,
-urged caution upon him and advised him to keep the power in the hands
-of the nobility. When Lafayette asked him to read and criticize his
-draft of The Declaration of Rights before it was presented to the
-Assembly, Morris suggested several changes to make it more moderate;
-"for," said this American, "revolutions are not won by sonorous
-phrases."
-
-Although keen for reform and liking to dress it in sonorous phrases,
-Lafayette had no wish to be rid of the king. He did not expect to have
-a president in France or the exact kind of government that had been
-adopted in the United States. "Lafayette was neither republican nor
-royalist, but always held that view half-way between the two which
-theorists call a constitutional monarchy," says a French writer. "In
-[Pg 202]all his speeches from 1787 to 1792 he rarely used the word
-'liberty' without coupling it with some word expressing law and order."
-
-Events proved that he was too thoroughly a believer in order to please
-either side. One party accused him of favoring the aristocrats, the
-other of sacrificing everything for the applause of the mob. What he
-tried to do was to stand firm in the rush of events, which was at first
-so exhilarating and later changed to such an appalling sweep of the
-furies. If he had been less scrupulous and more selfish he might have
-played a greater role in the Revolution--have risen to grander heights
-or failed more abjectly--but for a time he would have really guided
-the stormy course of events. As it was, events overtook him, carried
-him with them, then tossed him aside and passed him by. Yet even so
-he managed for three years to dominate that tiger mob of Paris "more
-by persuasion than by force." This proves that he was no weakling.
-Jefferson called him "the Atlas of the Revolution."
-
-There was opposition to him from the first. Mirabeau and Lafayette
-could never work wholeheartedly together, which was a pity, for with
-Mirabeau's eloquence to carry the National Assembly and Lafayette's
-popularity with the National Guard they could have done much. The
-cafés, those people's institutes of his young days, speedily developed
-into political clubs of varying shades of opinion, most of which grew
-more radical hourly. Marie Antoinette continued to be resentful and
-bitter and did all in her power to thwart reform and to influence the
-[Pg 203]king. In addition to parties openly for and against the new
-order of things there were individuals, both in high and low places,
-who strove to spread disorder by underhand means and to use it for
-selfish ends. One was the powerful Duc d'Orléans, cousin of the king,
-very rich and very unprincipled, whose secret desire was to supplant
-Louis upon the throne. He used his fortune to spread discontent through
-the Paris mob during the long cold winter, when half the inhabitants of
-the town went hungry. His agents talked of famine, complained of delay
-in making the Constitution, and gave large sums to the poor in ways
-that fed their worst passions, while supplying their very real need for
-bread.
-
-Even after the lapse of one hundred and thirty years it is uncertain
-just how much of a part he played in the stormy happenings of the early
-days of October, 1789. On the night of the 2d of October the king and
-queen visited the hall at Versailles where the Garde du Corps, the
-royal bodyguard, was giving a banquet. The diners sprang to their feet
-and drank toasts more fervent than discreet. In the course of the next
-two days rumor spread to Paris that they had trampled upon the Tricolor
-and substituted the white of the Bourbons. Out of the garrets and slums
-of the city the mob boiled toward the Hôtel de Ville, crying that a
-counter-revolution had been started and that the people were betrayed.
-Lafayette talked and harangued. On the 5th he held the crowds in check
-from nine o'clock in the morning until four, when he learned that a
-[Pg 204]stream of malcontents, many of them women, had broken away and
-started for Versailles, muttering threats and dragging cannon with them.
-
-Lafayette had confessed to Gouverneur Morris only a few days before
-that his National Guard was not as well disciplined as he could wish.
-Whether this was the reason or because he felt it necessary to get
-express permission from the Hôtel de Ville, there was delay before
-he and his militia set out in pursuit. He had sworn to use the Guard
-only to execute the will of the people. For what followed he has been
-severely blamed, while other witnesses contend just as hotly that
-he did all any commander could do. That night he saved the lives of
-several of the Garde du Corps; posted his men in the places from
-which the palace guard had been withdrawn by order of the king; made
-each side swear to keep the peace; gave his personal word to Louis
-that there would be no violence; saw that everything was quiet in the
-streets near the palace where the mob still bivouacked; then, worn with
-twenty hours' incessant labor, went to the house of a friend for a
-little sleep.
-
-That sleep was the cause of more criticism than any act of his
-seventy-six years of life; for the mob, driven by an instinct for evil
-which seems strongest in crowds at dawn, hurled itself against the
-palace gates, killed the two men on guard before the queen's door, and
-forced its way into her bedchamber, from which she fled, half dressed,
-to take refuge with the king. Lafayette hurried back with all possible
-haste; made his way to the royal couple; addressed the crowd in the
-palace courtyard, telling them the king would show his trust by going
-[Pg 205]back with them voluntarily to take up his residence in Paris;
-and persuaded the queen to appear with him upon a balcony, where, in
-view of all the people, he knelt and kissed her hand. After that he
-led out one of the palace guard and presented him with a tricolored
-cockade; and, touched by these tableaux, the mob howled delight. That
-night, long after dark, the royal family entered the Tuileries, half
-monarchs, half prisoners. But discontent had been only partly appeased,
-and during the melancholy ride to the city Marie Antoinette gave the
-mob its watchword. Seeing a man in the dress of the very poor riding on
-the step of her coach she had remarked disdainfully that never before
-had a sans-culotte--a man without knee-breeches--occupied so honorable
-a position. The speech was overheard and taken up and shouted through
-the crowd until "sans-culotte" became a symbol of the Revolution.
-
-The events of that day proved that Lafayette had not the quality of a
-great leader of men. How much of his ill success was due to bad luck,
-how much to over-conscientiousness in fulfilling the letter of his
-oath, how much to physical weariness, we may never know. The royal
-family believed he had saved their lives, and the vilest accusations
-against him, including the one that he really wished Louis to fall
-a victim of the mob, appear to have been manufactured twenty-five
-years later in the bitterness of another political struggle. It is
-significant that very soon after the king came to Paris Lafayette held
-a stormy interview with the Duc d'Orléans, who forthwith left France.
-
-[Pg 206]Since that melancholy ride back to Paris the rulers of France
-have never lived at Versailles. Within ten days the National Assembly
-followed the king to town, and during the whole remaining period of
-the Revolution the mob had the machinery of government in its keeping.
-It invaded the legislative halls to listen to the making of the
-Constitution, it howled approval of speeches or drowned them in hisses,
-and called out from the windows reports to the crowds packing the
-streets below.
-
-Political clubs soon became the real censors of public opinion, taking
-an ever larger place in the life of the people, until, alas! they began
-to take part in the death of many of them. The most influential club
-of all was the Jacobins, known by that name because of the disused
-monastery where it held its meetings. It began as an exclusive club
-of well-to-do gentlemen of all parties, who paid large dues and met
-to discuss questions of interest. Then it completely changed its
-character, took into its organization other clubs in Paris and other
-cities, and by this means became a vast, nation-wide political machine
-of such iron discipline that it was said a decree of the Jacobins
-was better executed than any law passed by the National Assembly.
-When its decrees grew more radical its membership changed by the
-simple process of expelling conservative members, until Robespierre
-became its controlling spirit. Another club more radical still was
-the Cordelières, in which Marat and Danton, those stormy petrels of
-the Terror, held sway. This smaller organization influenced even the
-[Pg 207]Jacobins and through them every village in France. Several of
-the most radical leaders published newspapers of vast influence, like
-Marat's _Ami du Peuple_, which carried their opinions farther than the
-spoken word could do, out into peaceful country lanes. In the cities
-the great power of the theater was directed to the same violent ends.
-In vain the more conservative patriots started clubs of their own; the
-others had too great headway. The Feuillants, that Lafayette and Bailly
-were instrumental in founding, was called contemptuously the club of
-the monarchists. All these changes were gradual, but little by little,
-as time passed, the aims of the revolutionists altered. What had been
-at first a cry for justice became an appeal for liberty, then a demand
-for equality, and finally a mad howl for revenge.
-
-
-[Pg 208]XXIII
-
-POPULARITY AND PRISON
-
-
-So many local National Guards and revolutionary town governments had
-been formed that France was in danger of being split into a thousand
-self-governing fragments. Some of these came together in local
-federations for mutual benefit; and as the anniversary of the fall
-of the Bastile rolled around, Paris proposed a grand federation of
-all such organizations as a fitting way to celebrate the new national
-holiday. The idea caught popular fancy, and the city made ready for it
-with a feverish good will almost as strange as that of the memorable
-night when nobles and clergy in the National Assembly had vied with one
-another to give up their century-old privileges.
-
-The spot chosen for the ceremonies was the Champs de Mars, where the
-Eiffel Tower now stands. It is a deal nearer the center of Paris now
-than it was in 1790, when it was little more than a great field on the
-banks of the Seine, near the military academy. This was to be changed
-into an immense amphitheater three miles in circumference, a work
-[Pg 209]which required a vast amount of excavating and building and
-civil engineering. Men and women of all classes of society volunteered
-as laborers, and from dawn till dark a procession, armed with spades
-and every implement that could possibly be used, passed ceaselessly
-between the heart of the city and the scene of the coming festivity.
-Eye-witnesses tell us that on arriving each person threw down his coat,
-his cravat, and his watch, "abandoning them to the loyalty of the
-public" and fell to work. "A delicate duchess might be seen filling a
-barrow to be trundled away by a fishwife"; or a chevalier of the Order
-of Saint-Louis laboring with a hurried, flustered little school-boy;
-or a priest and an actor doing excellent team-work together. A hundred
-orchestras were playing; workers quitted their labors for a few turns
-in the dance, then abandoned that again for toil.
-
-Lafayette encouraged them by his enthusiastic presence, and filled and
-trundled a barrow with his own hands; and when the king appeared one
-day to view the strange scene he was greeted with extravagant joy.
-Though this went on for weeks, the undertaking was so vast and the best
-efforts of duchesses and school-boys so far from adequate, that a hurry
-call had to be sent out, in response to which it was estimated that
-during the last few days of preparation two hundred and fifty thousand
-people were busy there. Evil rumors were busy, too, under cover of the
-music, and whispers went through the crowd that no provisions were
-to be allowed to enter Paris during the entire week of festivities
-and that the field had been honeycombed with secret passages and laid
-[Pg 210]with mines to blow up the whole great throng. Such rumors
-were answered by a municipal proclamation which ended with the words,
-"Cowards may flee these imaginary dangers: the friends of Revolution
-will remain, well knowing that not a second time shall such a day be
-seen."
-
-The miracle was accomplished. By the 14th of July the whole Champs de
-Mars had been transformed into an amphitheater of terraced greensward,
-approached through a great triumphal arch. But on the day itself not a
-single green terrace was visible, so thick were the masses of people
-crowding the amphitheater and covering the hills on the other side
-of the river. Opposite the triumphal arch a central pavilion for the
-king, with covered galleries on each side, had been built against the
-walls of the military school. On the level green in the center of the
-great Champs de Mars stood an altar to "The Country," reached by a
-flight of fifty steps. One hundred cannon, two thousand musicians,
-and two hundred priests with the Tricolor added to their vestments,
-were present to take part in the ceremonies. A model of the destroyed
-Bastile lay at the foot of the altar. Upon the altar itself were
-inscriptions, one of which bade the spectators "Ponder the three sacred
-words that guarantee our decrees. The Nation, the Law, the King. You
-are the Nation, the Law is your will, the King is the head of the
-Nation and guardian of the Law."
-
-The multitude was treated first to the spectacle of a grand procession
-streaming through the three openings of the triumphal arch. Deputies
-from the provinces, members of the National Assembly, and [Pg
-211]representatives of the Paris Commune, with Mayor Bailly at their
-head, marched slowly and gravely to their places. After them came the
-visiting military delegations, the Paris guards, and regular troops
-who had been called to Paris from all parts of the kingdom, to the
-number of forty thousand or more, each with its distinctive banner.
-These marched around the altar and broke into strange dances and mock
-combats, undeterred by heavy showers. When the rain fell the ranks
-of spectators blossomed into a mass of red and green umbrellas, no
-longer the novelty they once had been. When a shower passed umbrellas
-were furled and the crowd took on another color. At three o'clock
-the queen appeared with the Dauphin beside her. Then the king, in
-magnificent robes of state, took his seat on a purple chair sown with
-fleurs-de-lis, which had been placed on an exact line and level with
-a similar chair upholstered in blue for the president of the National
-Assembly.
-
-The king had been named for that one day Supreme Commander of all the
-National Guards of France. He had delegated his powers, whatever they
-may have been, to Lafayette; and it was Lafayette on a white horse such
-as Washington rode who was here, there, and everywhere, the central
-figure of the pageant as he moved about fulfilling the duties of his
-office. General Thiébault wrote in his _Memoirs_ that the young buoyant
-figure on the shining horse, riding through that great mass of men,
-seemed to be commanding all France. "Look at him!" cried an enthusiast.
-"He is galloping through the centuries!" And it was upon Lafayette,
-[Pg 212]at the crowning moment of the ceremony, that all eyes rested.
-After the two hundred priests had solemnly marched to the altar and
-placed ahead of all other banners their sacred oriflamme of St.-Denis,
-Lafayette dismounted and approached the king to receive his orders.
-Then, slowly ascending the many steps to the altar, he laid his sword
-before it and, turning, faced the soldiers. Every arm was raised and
-every voice cried, "I swear!" as he led them in their oath of loyalty;
-and as if in answer to the mighty shout, the sun burst at that instant
-through the stormclouds. Music and artillery crashed in jubilant sound;
-other cannon at a distance took up the tale; and in this way news of
-the oath was borne to the utmost limits of France. The day ended with
-fireworks, dancing, and a great feast. Lafayette was the center of
-the cheers and adulation, admirers pressing upon him from all sides.
-He was even in danger of bodily harm from the embraces, "perfidious
-or sincere," of a group of unknown men who had to be forcibly driven
-away by his aides-de-camp. That night somebody hung his portrait upon
-the railing surrounding the statue of France's hero-king, Henri IV; an
-act of unwise enthusiasm or else of very clever malignity of which his
-critics made the most.
-
-After this, his enemies increased rapidly. The good will and harmony
-celebrated at the Feast of the Federation had been more apparent than
-real; a "delicious intoxication," as one of the participants called it,
-and the ill-temper that follows intoxication soon manifested itself.
-The Jacobins grew daily more radical. The club did not expel Lafayette;
-[Pg 213]he left it of his own accord in December, 1790; but that was
-almost as good for the purposes of his critics.
-
-The task he had set himself of steering a middle course between
-extremes became constantly more difficult. Mirabeau was president of
-the Jacobin Club after Lafayette left it, and their mutual distrust
-increased. Gouverneur Morris thought Lafayette able to hold his own
-and that "he was as shrewd as any one." He said that "Mirabeau has the
-greater talent, but his adversary the better reputation." In spite of
-being president of the Jacobins, Mirabeau was more of a royalist than
-Lafayette and did what he could to ruin Lafayette with the court party.
-The quarrel ended only with Mirabeau's sudden death in April, 1791.
-At the other extreme Marat attacked Lafayette for his devotion to the
-king, saying he had sold himself to that side. Newspapers circulated
-evil stories about his private life. Slanders and attacks, wax figures
-and cartoons, each a little worse than the last, flooded Paris at this
-time. Some coupled the queen's name with his, which increased her
-dislike of him, and in the end may have played its small part in her
-downfall.
-
-The king and queen were watched with lynxlike intensity by all parties,
-and about three months after Mirabeau's death they made matters much
-worse by betraying their fear, and what many thought their perfidy,
-in an attempt to escape in disguise, meaning to get help from outside
-countries and return to fight for their power. There had been rumors
-[Pg 214]that they contemplated something of this sort, and Lafayette
-had gone frankly to the king, urging him not to commit such folly. The
-king reassured him, and Lafayette had announced that he was willing to
-answer "with his head" that Louis would not leave Paris. One night,
-however, rumors were so persistent that Lafayette went himself to the
-Tuileries. He talked with a member of the royal family, and the queen
-saw him when she was actually on her way to join the king for their
-flight. Luck and his usual cleverness both failed Lafayette that night.
-He suspected nothing, yet next morning it was discovered that the royal
-beds had not been slept in and that the fugitives were already hours
-on their way. Lafayette issued orders for their arrest, but clamor was
-loud against him and Danton was for making him pay literally with his
-head for his mistake.
-
-Almost at the frontier the king and queen were recognized through the
-likeness of Louis to his portrait on the paper money that flooded the
-kingdom, and they were brought back to Paris, real prisoners this
-time. They passed on their way through silent crowds who eyed them
-with terrifying hostility. The queen, who was hysterical and bitter,
-insisted on treating Lafayette as her personal jailer. Louis, whatever
-his faults, had a sense of humor and smiled when Lafayette appeared "to
-receive the orders of the king," saying it was evident that orders were
-to come from the other side. It is strange that he was not dethroned at
-once, for he had left behind him a paper agreeing to repeal every law
-[Pg 215]that had been passed by the National Assembly. Dread of civil
-war was still strong, however, even among the radicals, and he was
-only kept a prisoner in the Tuileries until September, when the new
-Constitution was finished and ready for him to sign. After he swore to
-uphold it he was again accorded royal honors.
-
-But meantime there had been serious disturbances. Lafayette had felt it
-his duty to order the National Guard to fire upon the mob; and for that
-he was never forgiven. On that confused day an attempt was made upon
-his life. The culprit's gun missed fire, and when he was brought before
-Lafayette the latter promptly set him at liberty; but before midnight a
-mob surrounded Lafayette's house, crying that they had come to murder
-his wife and carry her head to the general. The garden wall had been
-scaled, and they were about to force an entrance when help arrived.
-
-After the Constitution became the law of the land, Lafayette followed
-Washington's example, resigned his military commission, and retired
-to live at Chavaniac. Several times before when criticism was very
-bitter he had offered to give up his sword to the Commune, but there
-had been no one either willing or able to take his place and he had
-been persuaded to remain. Now he felt that he could withdraw with
-dignity and a clear conscience. In accepting his resignation the
-Commune voted him a medal of gold. The National Guard presented him
-with a sword whose blade was made from locks of the old Bastille, and
-on his 360-mile journey to Chavaniac he received civic crowns enough to
-[Pg 216]fill his carriage. His reception at home was in keeping with
-all this. "Since you are superstitious," he wrote Washington, "I will
-tell you that I arrived here on the anniversary of the surrender of
-Cornwallis." But even in far-away Chavaniac there were ugly rumors and
-threats against his life. The local guard volunteered to keep a special
-watch; an offer he declined with thanks.
-
-Bailly retired as mayor of Paris soon after this, whereupon Lafayette's
-friends put up his name as a candidate. The election went against
-him two to one in favor of Pétion, a Jacobin, and from that time the
-clubs held undisputed sway. According to law the new Assembly had
-to be elected from men who had not served in the old one; this was
-unfortunate, since it deprived the new body of experienced legislators.
-The pronounced royalists in the Assembly had now dwindled to a scanty
-hundred.
-
-Neighboring powers showed signs of coming to the aid of Louis, and
-the country did not choose to wait until foreign soldiers crossed its
-frontiers. Nobody knew better than Lafayette how unprepared France was
-for war against a well-equipped enemy, but the marvels America had
-accomplished with scarcely any equipment were fresh in his memory, and
-he looked upon foreign war as a means of uniting quarreling factions
-at home--a dangerous sort of political back-fire, by no means new, but
-sometimes successful. Before December, 1791, three armies had been
-formed for protection. Lafayette was put in command of one of them,
-his friend Rochambeau of another, and the third was given to General
-[Pg 217]Luckner, a Bavarian who had served France faithfully since the
-Seven Years' War.
-
-Lafayette's new commission bore the signature of the king. He hurried
-to Paris, thanked his sovereign, paid his respects to the Assembly,
-and departed for Metz on Christmas Day in a semblance of his old
-popularity, escorted to the city barriers by a throng of people and a
-detachment of the National Guard. He entered on his military duties
-with enthusiasm, besieging the Assembly with reports of all the army
-lacked, consulting with his co-commanders, and putting his men through
-stiff drill.
-
-By May war had been declared against Sardinia, Bohemia, and Hungary,
-but the back-fire against anarchy did not work. Troubles at home
-increased. The Paris mob became more lawless, and on the 20th of June,
-1792, the Tuileries was invaded and the king was forced to don the
-red cap of Liberty; a serio-comic incident that might easily have
-become tragedy if Louis had possessed more spirit. Lafayette spoke the
-truth about this king when he said that he "desired only comfort and
-tranquillity--beginning with his own."
-
-Feeling that his monarch had been insulted, Lafayette hurried off
-to Paris to use his influence against the Jacobins. He went without
-specific leave, though without being forbidden by General Luckner, his
-superior officer, who knew his plan. To his intense chagrin he found
-that he no longer had an atom of influence in Paris. The court received
-him coldly, the Assembly was completely in the hands of the Jacobins,
-[Pg 218]timid people were too frightened to show their real feelings,
-and the National Guard, upon whose support Lafayette had confidently
-relied, was now in favor of doing away with kingship altogether.
-
-Lafayette could not succor people who refused to be helped, and he
-returned to the army, followed by loud accusations that he had been
-absent without leave and that he was "the greatest of criminals."
-"Strike Lafayette and the nation is saved!" Robespierre had shouted,
-even before he appeared on his fruitless mission. "Truly," wrote
-Gouverneur Morris, "I believe if Lafayette should come to Paris at
-this moment without his army he would be knifed. What, I pray you, is
-popularity?"
-
-In July Prussia joined the nations at war, threatening dire vengeance
-if Paris harmed even a hair of the king or queen. The mob clamorously
-paraded the streets, led by five hundred men from Marseilles, singing a
-new and strangely exciting song whose music and whose words, "To arms!
-To arms! Strike down the tyrant!" were alike incendiary. In spite of
-his recent rebuff, Lafayette made one more attempt to rescue the king,
-not for love of Louis or of monarchy, but because he believed that
-Louis now stood for sane government, having signed the Constitution.
-It is doubtful whether the plan could have succeeded; it was one of
-Lafayette's generous dreams, based on very slight foundation. He
-wanted to have himself and General Luckner called to Paris for the
-coming celebration of July 14th. At that time, making no secret of
-it, the king should go with his generals before the Assembly and [Pg
-219]announce his intention of spending a few days at Compiègne, as he
-had a perfect right to do. Once away from Paris and surrounded by the
-loyal troops the two generals would have taken care to bring with them,
-Louis could issue a proclamation forbidding his brothers and other
-_émigrés_ to continue their plans and could say that he was himself at
-the head of an army to resist foreign invasion; and, having taken the
-wind out of the sails of the Jacobins by this unexpected move, could
-return to Paris to be acclaimed by all moderate, peace-loving men.
-
-There were personal friends of the king who urged him to try this as
-the one remaining possibility of safety. Others thought it might save
-Louis, but could not save the monarchy. The queen quoted words of
-Mirabeau's about Lafayette's ambition to keep the king a prisoner in
-his tent. "Besides," she added, "it would be too humiliating to owe
-our lives a second time to that man." So Lafayette was thanked for his
-interest and his help was refused. On the 10th of August there was
-another invasion of the Tuileries, followed this time by the massacre
-of the Swiss Guard. The royal family, rescued from the palace, was kept
-for safety for three days in a little room behind the one in which
-the Assembly held its sessions; then it was lodged, under the cruel
-protection of the Commune, in the small medieval prison called the
-Temple, in the heart of Paris.
-
-With the Commune in full control, it was not long before an accusation
-was officially made against Lafayette. "Evidence" to bear it out was
-speedily found; and on August 19th, less than ten days after [Pg
-220]the imprisonment of the king, the Assembly, at the bidding of the
-Commune, declared Lafayette a traitor. He knew he had nothing to hope
-from his own troops, for only a few days before this his proposal that
-they renew their oath of fidelity to the Nation, the Law, and the
-King had met with murmurs of disapproval, until one young captain,
-making himself spokesman, had declared that Liberty, Equality, and
-the National Assembly were the only names to which the soldiers could
-pledge allegiance.
-
-Lafayette still had faith in the future, but the present offered
-only two alternatives--flight, or staying quietly where he was to be
-arrested and carried to Paris, where he would be put to death as surely
-as the sun rose in the east. This was what his Jacobin friends seemed
-to expect him to do, and they assailed him bitterly for taking the
-other course. He could not see that his death at this time and in this
-way would help the cause of civil liberty. He said that if he must die
-he preferred to perish at the hands of foreign tyrants rather than by
-those of his misguided fellow-countrymen. He placed his soldiers in the
-best position to offset any advantage the enemy might gain through his
-flight, and, with about a score of officers and friends, crossed the
-frontier into Liège on the night of August 20th, meaning to make his
-way to Holland and later to England. From England, in case he could not
-return and aid France, he meant to go to America.
-
-Instead of that, the party rode straight into the camp of an Austrian
-advance-guard.
-
-
-[Pg 221]XXIV
-
-SOUTH CAROLINA TO THE RESCUE!
-
-
-It was eight o'clock at night, a few leagues from the French border.
-Their horses were weary and spent. The road approached the village
-of Rochefort in such a way that they could see nothing of the town
-until almost upon it, and the gleam of this camp-fire was their first
-intimation of the presence of the Austrians. It would have availed
-nothing to turn back. If they went toward the left they would almost
-certainly fall in with French patrols, or those of the _émigrés_ who
-were at Liège. To the right a whole chain of Austrian posts stretched
-toward Namur. "On all sides there was an equality of inconvenience,"
-as Lafayette said. One of the party rode boldly forward to interview
-the commandant and ask permission to spend the night in the village
-and continue the journey next day. This was granted after it had been
-explained that they were neither _émigrés_ nor soldiers on their way to
-join either side, but officers forced to leave the French army, whose
-only desire was to reach a neutral country.
-
-[Pg 222]A guide was sent to conduct them to the village inn. Before
-they had been there many minutes Lafayette was recognized, and it was
-necessary to confess the whole truth. The local commander required a
-pass from the officer at Namur, and when that person learned the name
-of his chief prisoner he would hear nothing more about passports,
-but communicated in joyful haste with his superior officer, the Duc
-de Bourbon. At Namur Lafayette received a visit from Prince Charles
-of Lorraine, who sent word in advance that he wished "to talk about
-the condition in which Lafayette had left France." Lafayette replied
-that he did not suppose he was to be asked questions it might be
-inconvenient to answer, and when the high-born caller entered with his
-most affable manner he was received with distant coolness by all the
-prisoners.
-
-From Namur they were taken to Nivelles, where they were presented with
-a government order to give up all French treasure in their possession.
-Lafayette could not resist answering that he was quite sure their
-Royal Highnesses would have brought the treasure with them had they
-been in his place; and the amusement of the Frenchmen increased as the
-messenger learned, to his evident discomfiture, that the twenty-three
-of them combined did not have enough to keep them in comfort for two
-months. That same day the prisoners were divided into three groups.
-Those who had not served in the French National Guard were given
-their liberty and told to leave the country. Others were sent to
-the citadel at Antwerp and kept there for two months. Lafayette and
-[Pg 223]three companions who had served with him in the Assembly,
-Latour Maubourg, a lifelong friend, Alexander Lameth, and Bureaux de
-Pusy, were taken to Luxembourg. There was only time for a hurried
-leave-taking. Lafayette spent it with an aide who was to go to Antwerp.
-Feeling sure he was marked for death, he dictated to this officer a
-message to be published to the French people when he should be no more.
-
-Before leaving Rochefort he had found means of sending a letter to his
-wife, who was at Chavaniac overseeing repairs upon the old manor-house.
-It was from this letter that she learned what had befallen him, and
-she carried it in her bosom until she was arrested in her turn. The
-message to Adrienne began characteristically on a note of optimism.
-"Whatever the vicissitudes of fortune, dear heart, you know my soul
-is not of a temper to be cast down." He told of his misfortune in a
-gallant way, saying the Austrian officer thought it his duty to arrest
-him. He hurriedly reviewed the reasons that led up to his flight, said
-that he did not know how long his journey "might be retarded," and bade
-her join him in England with all the family. His closing words were: "I
-offer no excuses to my children or to you for having ruined my family.
-There is not one of you who would owe fortune to conduct contrary
-to my conscience. Come to me in England. Let us establish ourselves
-in America, where we shall find a liberty which no longer exists in
-France, and there my tenderness will endeavor to make up to you the
-joys you have lost."
-
-[Pg 224]His journey was "retarded" for five years, and for a large
-part of that time seemed likely to end only at the grave, possibly by
-way of the executioner's block. It is to be hoped that his sense of
-humor allowed him to enjoy one phase of his situation. He had been
-driven from France on the charge that he favored the king, yet he
-was no sooner across the border than he was arrested on exactly the
-opposite charge; that of being a dangerous revolutionist, an enemy to
-all monarchs. When he demanded a passport he received the sinister
-answer that he was to be kept safely until the French king regained
-his power and was in a position to sentence him himself. He was sent
-from prison to prison. First to Wezel, where he remained three months
-in a rat-infested dungeon, unable to communicate with any one, and
-watched over by an officer of the guard who was made to take a daily
-oath to give him no news. "One would think," said Lafayette, "that
-they had imprisoned the devil himself." He was so thoroughly isolated
-that Latour Maubourg, a few cells away, learned only through the
-indiscretion of a jailer that he was seriously ill. Maubourg asked
-permission, in case the illness proved fatal, to be with him at the
-last, but was told that no such privilege could be granted. But
-Lafayette did not die and even in the worst of his physical ills had
-the spirit to reply, "The King of Prussia is impertinent!" when a royal
-message came offering to soften the rigors of his captivity in return
-for information about France. The message was from that "honest prince"
-who in Lafayette's opinion "would never have the genius of his uncle."
-
-[Pg 225]Another answer, equally inconsiderate of royal feelings,
-resulted in the transfer of the prisoners to Magdebourg, where they
-were kept a year. On these journeys from place to place they served as
-a show to hundreds who pressed to see them. There were even attempts
-to injure them, but Lafayette believed he saw more pitying faces than
-hostile ones in the crowds. Once fate brought them to an inn at the
-same moment with the Comte d'Artois and his retinue, all of whom,
-with a single exception, proved blind to the presence of their former
-friends. We have details of the way in which Lafayette was lodged and
-treated at Magdebourg, from a letter he managed to send to his stanch
-friend, the Princesse d'Hénin in London.
-
-"Imagine an opening under the rampart of the citadel, surrounded by a
-high, strong palisade. It is through that, after opening successively
-four doors each guarded with chains and padlocks and bars of iron, that
-one reaches, not without some trouble and some noise, my dungeon, which
-is three paces wide and five and a half long. The side wall is covered
-with mold; that in front lets in light, but not the sun, through a
-small barred window. Add to this two sentinels who can look down into
-our subterranean chamber, but are outside the palisade so that we
-cannot speak to them.... The noisy opening of our four doors occurs
-every morning to allow my servant to enter; at dinner-time, that I may
-dine in presence of the commandant of the citadel and of the guard; and
-at night when my servant is taken away to his cell." The one ornament
-[Pg 226]on his prison wall was a French inscription, in which the
-dismal words _souffrir_ and _mourir_ were made to rhyme. The one break
-in the prison routine had been an execution, upon which, had he chosen,
-Lafayette could have looked from his window as from a box at the opera.
-
-After a year of this he was moved again and turned over to the
-Emperor of Prussia, his prison journeys ending finally at the gloomy
-fortress of Olmütz in the Carpathian Mountains. Something may be said
-in defense of the severity with which his captors guarded him. He
-steadfastly refused to give his parole, preferring, he said, to take
-his liberty instead of having it granted him. This undoubtedly added
-a zest to life in prison which would otherwise have been lacking, and
-very likely contributed not a little to his serenity and even to his
-physical well-being. It transformed the uncomfortable prison routine
-into a contest of wits, with the odds greatly against him, but which
-left him honorably free to seize any advantage that came his way. He
-foiled the refusal to allow him writing materials by writing letters as
-he wrote that one to Madame d'Hénin, with vinegar and lampblack in a
-book on a blank leaf which had escaped the vigilant eye of his guard.
-Knowing very little German, he dug out of his memory forgotten bits of
-school-day Latin to use upon his jailers. He took every bit of exercise
-allowed him in order to keep up his physical strength. He believed he
-might have need of it. He even lived his life with a certain gay zest,
-and took particular delight in celebrating the Fourth of July, 1793, in
-[Pg 227]his lonely cell by writing a letter to the American minister at
-London. He gave his vivid imagination free rein in concocting plans of
-escape.
-
-Friends on the outside were busy with plans, too; and though he got
-no definite news of them, his optimism was too great to permit him to
-doubt that they were doing everything possible for his release. At the
-very outset of his captivity he applied to be set free on the ground
-that he was an American citizen, though there was small chance of the
-request being granted. He was sure Washington would not forget him;
-he knew that Gouverneur Morris had deposited a sum of money with his
-captors upon which he might draw at need. Madame de Staël, the daughter
-of Necker, and the Princesse d'Hénin were in London, busy exercising
-feminine influence in his behalf. General Cornwallis and General
-Tarleton had interceded for him, and later he learned that Fitzpatrick,
-the young Englishman he had liked on their first meeting in London, the
-same who afterward carried letters for him from America, had spoken
-for him in Parliament. Fox and Sheridan and Wilberforce added their
-eloquence; but the cautious House of Commons decided it was none of its
-business and voted against the proposal to ask for Lafayette's release,
-in the same proportion that the citizens of Paris had rejected him for
-mayor.
-
-French voices also were raised in his behalf. One of the earliest
-and most courageous was that of Lally Tollendal, who as member of
-the French Assembly had quarreled with Lafayette for being so much
-[Pg 228]of a monarchist. But later he changed his mind and acted as
-go-between in the negotiations for Lafayette's final plan to remove the
-royal family to Compiègne. From his exile in London Lally Tollendal now
-addressed a memorial to Frederick William II, telling him the plain
-truth, that it was unjust to keep Lafayette in jail as an enemy of the
-French king, because it was an effort to save Louis which had proved
-his ruin. "Those who regard M. de Lafayette as the cause, or even one
-of the causes, of the French Revolution are entirely wrong," this
-friend asserted. "He has played a great role, but he was not the author
-of the piece.... He has not taken part in a single one of its evils
-which would not have happened without him, while the good he did was
-done by him alone."
-
-Then Lally Tollendal went on to tell how on the Sunday after Louis
-was arrested and brought back from Varennes Lafayette by one single
-emphatic statement had put an end, in a committee of the Assembly, to
-an ugly discussion about executing the king and proclaiming a republic.
-"I warn you," he had said, "that the day after you kill the king the
-National Guard and I will proclaim the prince royal." Lally Tollendal
-expatiated upon how evenly Lafayette had tried to deal out justice to
-royalists and revolutionists alike; how in the last days of his liberty
-he had said in so many words that the Jacobins must be destroyed; and
-that he had with difficulty been restrained from raising a flag bearing
-the words, "No Jacobins, no Coblenz," as a banner around which friends
-of the king and conservative republicans might rally. But the strict
-[Pg 229]impartiality this disclosed had little charm for a king of
-Prussia and the appeal bore no fruit.
-
-There were more thrilling efforts to aid him close at hand. "It is
-a whole romance, the attempt at rescuing Lafayette," says a French
-biographer. The opening scene of this romance harks back to the night
-when Lafayette made his first landing on American soil, piloted through
-the dark by Major Huger's slaves. The least noticed actor in that
-night's drama had been Major Huger's son, a very small boy, who hung
-upon the words of the unexpected guests and followed them with round,
-child eyes. Much had happened to change two hemispheres since, and even
-greater changes had occurred in the person of that small boy. He had
-grown up, he had resolved to be a surgeon, had finished his studies in
-London, and betaken himself to Vienna to pursue them further. There
-in the autumn of 1794 in a café he encountered a Doctor Bollman of
-Hanover. They fell into conversation, and before long Bollman confided
-to Huger that he had a secret mission. He had been charged by Lally
-Tollendal and American friends of Lafayette then in London to find out
-where the prisoner was and to plan for his escape. In his search he
-had traveled up and down Germany as a wealthy physician who took an
-interest in the unfortunate, particularly in prisoners, and treated
-them free of charge. For a long time he had found no clue, but at
-Olmütz, whose fortifications proved too strong in days past even for
-Frederick the Great, he had been invited to dinner by the prison doctor
-[Pg 230]and in turn had entertained him, plying him well with wine.
-They talked about prisoners of note. The prison doctor admitted that he
-had one now on his hands; and before the dinner was over Bollman had
-sent an innocent-sounding message to Lafayette. Later he was allowed to
-send him a book, with a few written lines purporting to be nothing more
-than the names of some friends then in London.
-
-When the book was returned Bollman lost no time in searching it for
-hidden writing. In this way he learned that Lafayette had lately
-been allowed to drive out on certain days a league or two from the
-prison for the benefit of his health, and that his guard on such
-occasions consisted of a stupid lieutenant and the corporal who drove
-the carriage. The latter was something of a coward. Lafayette would
-undertake to look after both of them himself if a rescuer and one
-trusty helper should appear. No weapons need be provided; he would
-take the officer's own sword away from him. All he wanted was an extra
-horse or two, with the assurance that his deliverers were ready. It
-was a bold plan, but only a bold plan could succeed. There were too
-many bolts and bars inside the prison to make any other kind feasible.
-Lameth had been set at liberty; his two other friends, Latour Maubourg
-and Bureaux de Pusy, were in full sympathy with the plan, and to make
-it easier had refrained from asking the privilege of driving out
-themselves. Bollman added that he could not manage the rescue alone
-and had come away to hunt for a trusty confederate. Huger had already
-[Pg 231]told of his unforgotten meeting with Lafayette, and there was
-no mistaking the eagerness with which he awaited Bollman's next word
-or the joy with which he accepted the invitation to take part in the
-rescue. He was moved by something deeper than mere love of adventure.
-"I simply considered myself the representative of the young men of
-America and acted accordingly," he said long after.
-
-The two men returned to Olmütz and put up at the inn where Bollman had
-stayed before. They managed to send a note to Lafayette. His answer
-told them he would leave the prison on November 8th for his next drive,
-how he would be dressed, and the signal by which they might know he was
-ready. It was a market day, with many persons on the road. They paid
-their score, sent their servants ahead with the traveling-carriage and
-luggage to await their arrival at a town called Hoff, while they came
-more slowly on horseback. Then they rode out of the gray old town.
-Neither its Gothic churches, its hoary university, nor the ingenious
-astronomical clock that had rung the hours from its tower for three
-hundred and seventy years; not even the fortifications or the prison
-itself, built on a plain so bare that all who left it were in full view
-of the sentinels at the city gates, interested these travelers as did
-the passers-by. Presently a small phæton containing an officer and a
-civilian was driven toward them, and as it went by the pale gentleman
-in a blue greatcoat raised his hand to pass a white handkerchief over
-his forehead. The riders bowed slightly and tried to look indifferent,
-but that was hard work. Turning as soon as they dared, they saw that
-[Pg 232]the carriage had stopped by the side of the road. Its two
-passengers alighted; the gentleman in blue handed a piece of money to
-the driver, who drove off as though going on an errand. Then leaning
-heavily upon the officer, seeming to find difficulty in walking, he
-drew him toward a footpath. But at the sound of approaching horsemen,
-he suddenly seized the officer's sword and attempted to wrench it from
-its scabbard. The officer grappled with him. Bollman and Huger flew to
-his assistance. In the act of dismounting Bollman drew his sword and
-his horse, startled by the flashing steel, plunged and bolted. Huger
-managed to keep hold of his own bridle, while he helped Bollman tear
-away the officer's hands that were closing about Lafayette's throat.
-The Austrian wrenched himself free and ran toward the town, shouting
-with all his might.
-
-Here were three men in desperate need of flight, the alarm already
-raised, and only two horses to carry them to safety--one of these
-running wild. Huger acted with Southern gallantry and American speed.
-He got Lafayette upon his own steed, shouted to him to "Go to Hoff!"
-and caught the other horse. Misunderstanding the injunction, Lafayette,
-who thought he had merely been told to "Go off," rode a few steps,
-then turned back to help his rescuers. They motioned him away and he
-disappeared, in the wrong direction. The remaining horse reared and
-plunged, refusing to carry double. Huger persuaded Bollman to mount
-him, since he could be of far greater use to Lafayette, and saw him
-[Pg 233]gallop away. By that time a detachment of soldiers was bearing
-down upon him, and between their guns he entered the prison Lafayette
-had so lately quitted.
-
-At the end of twenty miles Lafayette had to change horses. He appealed
-to an honest-looking peasant, who helped him to find another one, but
-also ran to warn the authorities. These became suspicious when they saw
-Lafayette's wounded hand, which had been bitten by the officer almost
-to the bone. They arrested him on general principles and he was carried
-back to a captivity more onerous than before. He was deprived of all
-rides, of course, of all news, even of the watch and shoe-buckles which
-up to this time he had been allowed to retain. Bollman reached Hoff and
-waited for Lafayette until nightfall, then made his way into Silesia.
-But he was captured and returned to Austria and finally to Olmütz.
-
-The treatment accorded Lafayette's would-be rescuers was barbarous in
-the extreme. Huger was chained hand and foot in an underground cell,
-where he listened to realistic descriptions of beheadings, and, worse
-still, of how prisoners were walled up and forgotten. Daily questions
-and threats of torture were tried to make him confess that the attempt
-was part of a wide-spread conspiracy. As his statements and his courage
-did not waver, the prison authorities came at last to believe him,
-and he was taken to a cell aboveground where it was possible to move
-three steps, though he was still chained. He found that Bollman was
-confined in the cell just above him. The latter let down a walnut [Pg
-234]shell containing a bit of ink and also a scrap of paper. With these
-Huger wrote a few lines to the American minister at London, telling of
-their plight and ending with the three eloquent words, "Don't forget
-us!"--doubly eloquent to one who knew those stories of walled-up
-prisoners underground. They bribed the guard to smuggle this out of the
-prison, and in time it reached its destination. The American minister
-did not forget them. Through his good offices they were released and
-told to leave the country. They waited for no second invitation, which
-was very wise, because the emperor repented his clemency. He sent an
-order for their rearrest, but it arrived, fortunately, just too late to
-prevent their escape across the border.
-
-
-[Pg 235]XXV
-
-VOLUNTEERS IN MISFORTUNE
-
-
-Lafayette, in his uncomfortable cell, was left in complete ignorance of
-the fate of Bollman and Huger, though given to understand that they had
-been executed or soon would be, perhaps under his own window. The long,
-dreary days wore on until more than a year had passed, with little to
-make one day different from another, though occasionally he was able
-to communicate with Pusy or Maubourg through the ingenuity of his
-"secretary," young Felix Pontonnier, a lad of sixteen, who had managed
-to cling to him with the devotion of a dog through all his misfortunes.
-Prison air was hard upon this boy and prison officials were harder
-still, but his spirits were invincible. He whistled like a bird, he
-made grotesque motions, he talked gibberish, and these antics were not
-without point. They were a language of his own devising, by means of
-which he conveyed to the prisoners such scraps of information as came
-to him from the outside world.
-
-His master had need of all Felix's cheer to help him bear up against
-the anxiety that grew with each bit of news from France, and grew
-greater still because of the absence of news from those he loved [Pg
-236]best. For the first seven months he heard not a word from wife and
-children, though soon after his capture he learned about the early days
-of September in Paris, when the barriers had been closed and houses
-were searched and prisons "purged" of those suspected of sympathy with
-the aristocracy. Since then he had heard from his wife; but he had
-also learned of the trial and death of the king; and rumors had come
-to him of the Terror. Adrienne's steadfastness had been demonstrated
-to him through all the years of their married life. Where principle
-was involved he knew she would not falter; and he had little hope that
-she could have escaped imprisonment or a worse fate. He had heard
-absolutely nothing from her now for eighteen months. His captivity has
-been called "a night five years long," and this was its darkest hour.
-
-Then one day, without the least previous warning, the bolts and bars
-of his cell creaked at an unusual hour; they were pushed back--and he
-looked into the faces of his wife and daughters. The authorities broke
-in upon the first instant of incredulous recognition to search their
-new charges; possessed themselves of their purses and the three silver
-forks in their modest luggage, and disappeared. The complaining bolts
-slid into place once more and a new prison routine began, difficult to
-bear in spite of the companionship, when he saw unnecessary hardships
-press cruelly upon these devoted women. Bit by bit he learned what had
-happened in the outside world: events of national importance of which
-[Pg 237]he had not heard in his dungeon, and also little incidents that
-touched only his personal history; for instance, the ceremonies with
-which the Commune publicly broke the mold for the Lafayette medal, and
-how the mob had howled around his Paris house, clamoring to tear it
-down and raise a "column of infamy" in its place. He forbore to ask
-questions at first, knowing how tragic the tale must be, and it was
-only after the girls had been led away that first night and locked into
-the cell where they were to sleep that he learned of the grief that had
-come to Adrienne about a week before the Terror came to an end--the
-execution on a single day of her mother, her grandmother, and her
-beloved sister Louise.
-
-In time he learned all the details of her own story: the months she
-had been under parole at Chavaniac, where through the kind offices of
-Gouverneur Morris she received at last the letter from her husband
-telling her that he was well. Her one desire had been to join him, but
-there was the old aunt to be provided for, and there were also pressing
-debts to settle; a difficult matter after Lafayette's property was
-confiscated and sold. Mr. Morris lent her the necessary money, assuring
-her that if she could not repay it Americans would willingly assume it
-as part of the far larger debt their country owed her husband.
-
-She asked to be released from her parole in order to go into Germany
-to share his prison. Instead she had been cast into prison on her
-own account. The children's tutor, M. de Frestel, who had been their
-father's tutor before them, conspired with the servants and sold their
-[Pg 238]bits of valuables that she might make the journey to prison
-in greater comfort. He contrived, too, that the mother might see her
-children before she was taken off to Paris, and she made them promise,
-in the event of her death, to make every effort to rejoin their father.
-In Paris she lived through many months of prison horror, confined part
-of the time in the old Collège Du Plessis where Lafayette had spent his
-boyhood, seeing every morning victims carried forth to their death and
-expecting every day to be ordered to mount into the tumbrels with them.
-Had she known it, she was inquired for every morning at the prison door
-by a faithful maidservant, who in this way kept her children informed
-of her fate. George was in England with his tutor. At Chavaniac the
-little girls were being fed by the peasants, as was the old aunt, for
-the manor-house had been sold and the old lady had been allowed to buy
-back literally nothing except her own bed.
-
-At last Robespierre himself died under the guillotine and toward the
-end of September, 1794, a less bloodthirsty committee visited the
-prisons to decide the fate of their inmates. Adrienne Lafayette was the
-last to be examined at Du Plessis. Her husband was so hated that no
-one dared speak her name. She pronounced it clearly and proudly as she
-had spoken and written it ever since misfortune came upon her. It was
-decided that the wife of so great a criminal must be judged by higher
-authority; meanwhile she was to be kept under lock and key. James
-Monroe, who was now American minister to Paris, interceded for her,
-but she was only transferred to another prison. Here a worthy priest,
-[Pg 239]disguised as a carpenter, came to her to tell her how on a day
-in July the three women dearest to her had been beheaded, and how he,
-running beside the tumbrel through the storm that drenched them on
-their way to execution, had been able, at no small risk to himself, to
-offer them secretly the consolations of religion.
-
-Finally in January, 1795, largely through the efforts of Mr. Monroe,
-she was released. Her first care was to make a visit of thanks to Mr.
-Monroe and to ask him to continue his kindness by obtaining a passport
-for herself and her girls so that they might seek out her husband.
-George was to be sent to America, for she felt sure that his father, if
-still alive, would desire him to be there for a time under the care of
-Washington, and, if he had perished in prison, would have wished his
-son to grow up an American citizen.
-
-Getting the passport proved a long and difficult undertaking. When
-issued it was to permit Madame Motier of Hartford, Connecticut, and
-her two daughters to return to America. It was necessary to begin the
-journey in accordance with this, and they embarked at Dunkirk on a
-small American vessel bound for Hamburg. There they left the ship and
-went to Vienna on another passport, but still as the American family
-named Motier. In Vienna the American family hid itself very effectively
-through the help of old friends, and Adrienne contrived to be received
-by the emperor himself, quite unknown to his ministers. His manner to
-her and her girls was so gracious that she came away "in an ecstasy of
-joy," though he told her he could not release the prisoner. She [Pg
-240]was so sure her husband was well treated and so jubilant over the
-emperor's permission to write directly to him if she had reason to
-complain, that she was not at all cast down by the warnings and evident
-unfriendliness of the prime minister and the minister of war with whom
-she next sought interviews.
-
-Leaving Vienna by carriage, she and her daughters traveled all one
-day and part of the next northward into the rugged Carpathian country
-before an interested postboy pointed out the steeples and towers of
-Olmütz. Once in the town, they drove straight to the house of the
-commandant, who took good care not to expose his heart to pity by
-seeing these women, but sent the officer in charge of the prison to
-open its doors and admit them to its cold welcome.
-
-The room in which they found Lafayette did well enough in point of
-size and of furnishings. It was a vaulted stone chamber facing south,
-twenty-four feet long, fifteen wide, and twelve high. Light entered
-by means of a fairly large window shut at the top with a padlock, but
-which could be opened at the bottom, where it was protected by a double
-iron grating. The furnishings consisted of a bed, a table, chairs, a
-chest of drawers, and a stove; and this room opened into another of
-equal size which served as an antechamber. The vileness consisted in
-the sights and smells outside the window and the dirt within.
-
-The routine that began when the door of this room opened so
-unexpectedly to admit Lafayette's wife and daughters continued for
-almost two years. Madame Lafayette described it in a letter to her [Pg
-241]aunt, Madame de Tessé, an exile in Holstein, with whom she and her
-girls spent a few days after leaving the ship at Hamburg. "At last,
-my dear aunt, I can write you secretly. Friends risk their liberty,
-their life, to transmit our letters and will charge themselves with
-this one for you.... Thanks to your good advice, dear aunt, I took the
-sole means of reaching here. If I had been announced I would never
-have succeeded in entering the domains of the emperor.... Do you wish
-details of our present life? They bring our breakfast at eight o'clock
-in the morning, after which I am locked with the girls until noon. We
-are reunited for dinner, and though our jailers enter twice to remove
-the dishes and bring in our supper, we remain together until they
-come at eight o'clock to take my daughters back to their cage. The
-keys are carried each time to the commandant and shut up with absurd
-precautions. They pay, with my money, the expenses of all three, and we
-have enough to eat, but it is inexpressibly dirty.
-
-"The physician, who does not understand a word of French, is brought
-to us by an officer when we have need of him. We like him. M. de
-Lafayette, in the presence of the officer, who understands Latin,
-speaks with him in that language and translates for us. When this
-officer, a huge corporal of a jailer, who does not dare to speak to
-us himself without witnesses, comes with his great trousseau of keys
-in his hand to unpadlock our doors, while the whole guard is drawn up
-outside in the corridor and the entrance to our rooms is half opened
-[Pg 242]by two sentinels, you would laugh to see our two girls, one
-blushing to her ears, the other with a manner now proud, now comic,
-passing under their crossed sabers; after which the doors of our cells
-at once close. What is not pleasant is that the little court on the
-same level with the corridor is the scene of frequent punishment of the
-soldiers, who are there beaten with whips, and we hear the horrible
-music. It is a great cause of thankfulness to us that our children up
-to the present time have borne up well under this unhealthy regime. As
-for myself, I admit that my health is not good."
-
-It was so far from good that she asked leave to go to Vienna for a
-week for expert medical advice, but was told, after waiting long for
-an answer of any kind, that she had voluntarily put herself under the
-conditions to which her husband was subject, and that if she left
-Olmütz she could not return. "You know already that the idea of leaving
-M. de Lafayette could not be entertained by any one of us. The good we
-do him is not confined to the mere pleasure of seeing us. His health
-has been really better since we arrived. You know the influence of
-moral affections upon him, and however strong his character, I cannot
-conceive that it could resist so many tortures. His excessive thinness
-and his wasting away have remained at the same point since our arrival,
-but his guardians and he assure me that it is nothing compared to the
-horrible state he was in a year ago. One cannot spend four years in
-such captivity without serious consequences. I have not been able to
-see Messrs. Maubourg and Pusy, or even to hear their voices. Judging
-[Pg 243]from the number of years with which their so-called guardians
-credit them, they must have aged frightfully. Their sufferings here
-are all the harder for us to bear because these two loyal and generous
-friends of M. de Lafayette have never for an instant permitted their
-case to be considered separately from his own. You will not be
-surprised that he has enjoined them never to speak for him, no matter
-what may be the occasion or the interest, except in a manner in harmony
-with his character and principles; and that he pushes to excess what
-you call 'the weakness of a grand passion.'"
-
-So, in mingled content and hardship, the days passed. The young girls
-brought a certain amount of gaiety into the gray cell, even of material
-well-being. After their arrival their father was supplied with his
-first new clothing since becoming a prisoner, garments of rough cloth,
-cut out "by guesswork," that his jailer rudely declared were good
-enough for him. Out of the discarded coat Anastasie contrived shoes
-to replace the pair that was fairly dropping off his feet; and one
-of the girls took revenge upon the jailer by drawing a caricature
-of him on a precious scrap of paper which was hidden and saved and
-had a proud place in their home many years later. Madame Lafayette,
-though more gravely ill than she allowed her family to know, devoted
-herself alternately to her husband and to the education of the girls;
-and in hours which she felt she had a right to call her own wrote
-with toothpick and lampblack upon the margins of a volume of Buffon
-[Pg 244]that biography of her mother, the unfortunate Madame d'Ayen,
-which is such a marvel of tender devotion. In the evenings, before
-his daughters were hurried away to their enforced early bedtime,
-Lafayette read aloud from some old book. New volumes were not allowed;
-"everything published since 1788 was proscribed," says a prison letter
-of La tour de Maubourg's, "even though it were an _Imitation of Jesus
-Christ_."
-
-Long after she was grown Virginia, the younger daughter, remembered
-with pleasure those half-hours with old books. From her account of
-their prison life we learn that it was the rector of the university
-who enabled her mother to send and receive letters unknown to their
-jailers. "We owe him the deepest gratitude. By his means some public
-news reached our ears.... In the interior of the prison we had
-established a correspondence with our companions in captivity. Even
-before our arrival our father's secretary could speak to him through
-the window by means of a Pan's pipe for which he had arranged a cipher
-known to M. de Maubourg's servant. But this mode of correspondence, the
-only one in use for a long time, did not allow great intercourse. We
-obtained an easier one with the help of the soldiers whom we bribed by
-the pleasure of a good meal. Of a night, through our double bars, we
-used to lower at the end of a string a parcel with part of our supper
-to the sentry on duty under our windows, who would pass the packet in
-the same manner to Messrs. Maubourg and Pusy, who occupied separate
-parts of the prison."
-
-[Pg 245]Though they could see no change from day to day, the prisoners
-were conscious, on looking back over several weeks or months, that
-they were being treated with greater consideration. After every
-vigorous expression in favor of Lafayette by Englishmen and Americans,
-especially after every military success gained by France, their jailers
-became a fraction more polite. When talk of peace between Austria
-and France began, Tourgot, the emperor's prime minister, preferred
-to have his master give up the prisoners of his own free will rather
-than under compulsion. In July, 1797, the Marquis de Chasteler, "a
-perfect gentleman, highly educated, and accomplished," came to Olmütz
-to inquire with much solicitude, on the emperor's behalf, how the
-prisoners had been treated, and to offer them freedom under certain
-conditions. One condition was that they should never set foot again on
-Austrian territory without special permission. Another stipulated that
-Lafayette should not even stay in Europe, but must sail forthwith for
-America. To this he replied that he did not wish to stay in Austria,
-even at the emperor's most earnest invitation, and that he had often
-declared his intention of emigrating to America; but that he did not
-propose to render account of his actions to Frederick William II or
-to make any promise which seemed to imply that that sovereign had any
-rights in the matter. Madame Lafayette and his two friends, Maubourg
-and Pusy, whom he saw for the first time in three years when they were
-brought to consult with him over this proposal, agreed fully with
-Lafayette's stand; and the result was that all of them stayed in prison.
-
-
-[Pg 246]XXVI
-
-EXILES
-
-But hope grew. On the very day of Chasteler's visit the prisoners
-learned that negotiations for peace, already begun, contained a
-clause which would set them free. These negotiations were being
-directed in part--a very important part--by a remarkable man who had
-been only an unknown second lieutenant when the troubles began in
-France, but whose name was now on everybody's lips and whose power was
-rapidly approaching that of a dictator. The elder De Ségur, father
-of Lafayette's friend, had started him on his spectacular career by
-placing him in the military academy. His name was Napoleon Bonaparte. A
-man even less sagacious than he would have seen the advantage of making
-friends rather than enemies of Lafayette's supporters in Europe and
-America.
-
-Thus it was partly because of repeated demands for his release coming
-from England and France and America, and largely because Napoleon
-willed it, that Lafayette was finally set free. Also there is little
-doubt that Austria was heartily tired of being his jailer. Tourgot
-[Pg 247]said that Lafayette would have been released much earlier if
-anybody had known what on earth to do with him, but that neither Italy
-nor France would tolerate him within its borders. Tourgot supposed the
-emperor would raise no objection to the arrangement he had concluded to
-turn over "all that caravan" to America as a means of getting rid of
-him; "of which I shall be very glad," he added. The American consul at
-Hamburg was to receive the prisoners, and he promised that they should
-be gone in ten days. This time Lafayette was not given a chance to say
-Yes or No.
-
-On September 18, 1797, five years and a month after he had been
-arrested, and two years lacking one month from the time Madame
-Lafayette and the girls joined him, the gates of Olmütz opened and
-he and his "caravan" went forth: Latour Maubourg, Bureaux de Pusy,
-the faithful Felix, and other humble members of their retinue who had
-shared imprisonment with them. Louis Romeuf, the aide-de-camp, who
-had taken down Lafayette's farewell words to France and who had been
-zealous in working for his relief, rode joyously to meet them, but so
-long as Austria had authority the military kept him at arm's-length.
-The party had one single glimpse of him, but it was not until they had
-reached Dresden that he was permitted to join them.
-
-Gradually sun and wind lost their feeling of strangeness on
-prison-blanched cheeks. Gradually the crowds that gathered to watch
-them pass dared show more interest. Lafayette's face was not unknown to
-all who saw him. An Austrian pressed forward to thank him for saving
-[Pg 248]his life in Paris on a day when Lafayette had set his wits
-against the fury of the mob. When the party reached Hamburg Gouverneur
-Morris and his host, who was an imperial minister, left a dinner-party
-to go through the form of receiving the prisoners from their Austrian
-guard, thus "completing their liberty." The short time spent in Hamburg
-was devoted to writing letters of thanks to Huger, to Fitzpatrick, and
-the others who had worked for their release.
-
-The one anxiety during this happy journey had been caused by the
-condition of Madame Lafayette, who showed, now that the strain was
-removed, how very much the prison months had cost her. She did her best
-to respond to the demands made upon her strength by the friendliness
-of the crowds; but it was evident that in her state of exhaustion a
-voyage to America was not to be thought of. From Hamburg, therefore,
-the Lafayettes went to the villa of Madame Tessé on the shores of Lake
-Ploën in Holstein. Here they remained several weeks in happy reunion
-with relatives and close friends; and it was here a few months later
-that Anastasie, Lafayette's elder daughter, was married to a younger
-brother of Latour de Maubourg, to the joy of every one, though to the
-mock consternation of the lively, white-haired Countess of Tessé,
-who declared that these young people, ruined by the Revolution, were
-setting up housekeeping in a state of poverty and innocence unequaled
-since the days of Adam and Eve.
-
-The Lafayettes and the Maubourgs took together a large castle at
-[Pg 249]Lhemkulen, not far from Madame de Tessé, where Lafayette
-settled himself to wait until he should be allowed to return to France.
-It was here that George rejoined his family. He had been a child when
-his father saw him last; he returned a man, older than Lafayette had
-been when he set out for America. Washington had been very kind to
-him, but his years in America had not been happy. Probably he felt
-instinctively the constraint in regard to him.
-
-Washington had been much distressed by Lafayette's misfortune and
-had taken every official step possible to secure his release. It
-was through the good offices of the American minister at London
-that Lafayette had learned that his wife and children still lived.
-Washington had sent Madame Lafayette not only sympathetic words, but
-a check for one thousand dollars, in the hope that it might relieve
-some of her pressing necessities. He even wrote the Austrian emperor
-a personal letter in Lafayette's behalf. When he heard that George
-was to be sent him he "desired to serve the father of this young man,
-and to become his best friend," but he did not find the godfatherly
-duty entirely easy. It threatened to conflict with his greater duty
-as father of his country, strange as it seems that kindness to one
-innocent, unhappy boy could have that effect. Washington was President
-of the United States at the time and it behooved the young nation to
-be very circumspect. Diplomacy is a strange game of many rules and
-pitfalls; and it might prove embarrassing and compromising to have
-as member of his family the son of a man who was looked upon by [Pg
-250]most of the governments of Europe as an arch criminal.
-
-Washington wrote to George in care of the Boston friend to whose house
-the youth would go on landing, advising him not to travel farther,
-but to enter Harvard and pursue his studies there. But M. Frestel
-also came to America, by another ship and under an assumed name, and
-George continued his education with him instead of entering college.
-He possessed little of his father's faculty for making friends, though
-the few who knew him esteemed him highly. The most impressionable
-years of his life had been passed amid tragic scenes, and his natural
-reserve and tendency to silence had been increased by anxiety about
-his father's fate. After a time he went to Mount Vernon and became
-part of the household there. One of Washington's visitors wrote: "I
-was particularly struck with the marks of affection which the general
-showed his pupil, his adopted son, son of the Marquis de Lafayette.
-Seated opposite to him, he looked at him with pleasure and listened
-to him with manifest interest." A note in Washington's business
-ledger shows that the great man was both generous and sympathetic in
-fulfilling his fatherly duties. It reads: "By Geo. W. Fayette, gave for
-the purpose of his getting himself such small articles of clothing as
-he might not choose to ask for, $100." It was at Mount Vernon that the
-news of his real father's release came to George. He rushed out into
-the fields away from everybody, to shout and cry and give vent to his
-emotion unseen by human eyes.
-
-[Pg 251]His father was pleased by the development he noted in him;
-pleased by the letter Washington sent by the hand of "your son, who
-is highly deserving of such parents as you and your estimable lady."
-Pleased, too, that George had the manners to stop in Paris on the
-way home long enough to pay his respects to Napoleon, and that, in
-the absence of the general, he had been kindly received by Madame
-Bonaparte. Natural courtesy as well as policy demanded that the
-Lafayettes fully acknowledge their debt to Napoleon. One of Lafayette's
-first acts on being set free had been to write him the following joint
-letter of thanks with Maubourg and Pusy:
-
- "CITIZEN GENERAL: The prisoners of Olmütz, happy in owing their
- deliverance to the good will of their country and to your
- irresistible arms, rejoiced during their captivity in the thought
- that their liberty and their lives depended upon the triumphs of
- the Republic and of your personal glory. It is with the utmost
- satisfaction that we now do homage to our liberator. We should have
- liked, Citizen General, to express these sentiments in person, to
- look with our own eyes upon the scenes of so many victories, the army
- which won them, and the general who has added our resurrection to the
- number of his miracles. But you are aware that the journey to Hamburg
- was not left to our choice. From the place where we parted with our
- jailers we address our thanks to their victor.
-
- "From our solitary retreat in the Danish territory of Holstein, where
-[Pg 252] we shall endeavor to re-establish the health you have saved
- to us, our patriotic prayers for the Republic will go out united with
- the most lively interest in the illustrious general to whom we are
- even more indebted for the services he has rendered liberty and our
- country than for the special obligation it is our glory to owe him,
- and which the deepest gratitude has engraved forever upon our hearts.
-
- "Greetings and respect.
-
- "LA FAYETTE,
-
- LATOUR MAUBOURG,
-
- BUREAUX DE PUSY."
-
-Lafayette could no more leave politics alone than he could keep
-from breathing; and even in its stilted phrases of thanks this
-letter managed to show how much more he valued the Republic than any
-individual. Perhaps even at that early date he mistrusted Napoleon's
-personal ambition.
-
-With the leisure of exile on his hands, and pens and paper once more
-within easy reach, he plunged into correspondence and into the project
-of writing a book with Maubourg and Pusy to set forth their views of
-government. Pens and paper seem to have been the greatest luxuries of
-his exile, for the family fortunes were at a low ebb. Two of Madame
-Lafayette's younger sisters joined her and the three pooled their
-ingenuity and their limited means to get the necessaries of life at
-the lowest possible cost. "The only resource of the mistress of the
-establishment was to make 'snow eggs' when she was called upon to
-[Pg 253]provide an extra dish for fifteen or sixteen persons all dying
-of hunger." This state of things continued after they had gone to live
-at Vianen near Utrecht in Holland, in order to be a little closer to
-France. Lafayette had asked permission of the Directory to return with
-the officers who had left France with him, but received no answer.
-
-Since Madame Lafayette's name was not on the list of suspected persons,
-she could come and go as she would, and she made several journeys, when
-health permitted, to attend to business connected with the inheritance
-coming to her from her mother's estate. She was in Paris in November,
-1799, when the Directory was overthrown and Napoleon became practically
-king of France for the term of ten years with the title of First
-Consul. She sent her husband a passport under an assumed name and bade
-him come at once without asking permission of any one and without
-any guaranty of personal safety beyond the general one that the new
-government promised justice to all. This was advice after his own heart
-and he suddenly appeared in Paris. Once there he wrote to Napoleon,
-announcing his arrival. Napoleon's ministers were scandalized and
-declared he must go back. Nobody had the courage to mention the subject
-to the First Consul, whose anger was already a matter of wholesome
-dread; but Madame Lafayette took the situation into her own hands. She
-went to see Napoleon as simply as if she were calling upon her lawyer,
-and just as if he were her lawyer she laid her husband's case before
-him. The calm and gentle effrontery filled him with delight. "Madame,
-[Pg 254]I am charmed to make your acquaintance!" he cried; "you are a
-woman of spirit--but you do not understand affairs."
-
-However, it was agreed that Lafayette might remain in France, provided
-he retired to the country and kept very quiet while necessary
-formalities were complied with. In March, 1800, his name and those of
-the companions of his flight were removed from the lists of _émigrés_.
-After this visit of Madame Lafayette to the First Consul the family
-took up its residence about forty miles from Paris at La Grange near
-Rozoy, a château dating from the twelfth century, which had belonged
-to Madame d'Ayen. But it was not as the holder of feudal dwellings and
-traditions that Lafayette installed himself in the place that was to be
-his home for the rest of his life. He had willingly given up his title
-when the Assembly abolished such things in 1790. Mirabeau mockingly
-called him "Grandison Lafayette" for voting for such a measure. It was
-as an up-to-date farmer that he began life all over again at the age
-of forty-two. He made Felix Pontonnier his manager, and they worked
-literally from the ground up, for the estate had been neglected and
-there was little money to devote to it. Gradually he accumulated
-plants and animals and machines from all parts of the world; writing
-voluminous letters about flocks and fruit-trees, and exchanging much
-advice and many seeds; pursuing agriculture, he said, himself, "with
-all the ardor he had given in youth to other callings." A decade later
-he announced with pride that "with a little theory and ten years of
-experience he had succeeded fairly well."
-
-[Pg 255]As soon as Napoleon's anger cooled he received Lafayette
-and Latour Maubourg, conversing affably, even jocularly about their
-imprisonment. "I don't know what the devil you did to the Austrians,"
-he said, "but it cost them a mighty effort to let you go." For a time
-Lafayette saw the First Consul frequently and was on excellent terms
-with other members of his family. Lucien Bonaparte is said to have
-cherished the belief that Lafayette would not have objected to him as
-a son-in-law. But in character and principle Lafayette and the First
-Consul were too far apart to be really friends. It was to the interest
-of each to secure the good will of the other, and both appear honestly
-to have tried. The two have been said to typify the beginning and the
-end of the French Revolution: Lafayette, the generous, impractical
-theories of its first months: Napoleon, the strong will and strong hand
-needed to pull the country out of the anarchy into which these theories
-had degenerated. Lafayette was too much of an optimist and idealist not
-to speak his mind freely to the First Consul, even when asking favors
-for old friends. Napoleon was too practical not to resent lectures
-from a man whose theories had signally failed of success; and far too
-much of an autocrat to enjoy having his personal favors refused. The
-grand cross of the Legion of Honor, a seat in the French Senate at a
-time when it depended on the will of Napoleon and not on an election of
-the people, and the post of minister to the United States were refused
-in turn. Lafayette said he was more interested in agriculture than in
-[Pg 256]embassies, and made it plain that an office to which he was
-elected was the only kind he cared to hold. If Napoleon hoped to gain
-his support by appealing to his ambition, he failed utterly.
-
-Gradually their relations became strained and the break occurred in
-1802 when Napoleon was declared Consul for life. Lafayette was now an
-elector for the Department of Seine and Marne, an office within the
-gift of the people, and as such had to vote on the proposal to make
-Bonaparte Consul for life.
-
-He cast his vote against it, inscribing on the register of his
-Commune: "I cannot vote for such a magistracy until public liberty
-is sufficiently guaranteed. Then I shall give my vote to Napoleon
-Bonaparte"; and he wrote him a letter carefully explaining that there
-was nothing personal in it. "That is quite true," says a French
-biographer. "A popular government, with Bonaparte at its head, would
-have suited Lafayette exactly."
-
-Napoleon as emperor and autocrat suited him not at all. He continued
-to live in retirement, busy with his farm, his correspondence, and
-his family, or when his duties as Deputy took him to Paris, attending
-strictly to those and avoiding intercourse with Napoleon's ministers.
-He made visits to Chavaniac to gladden the heart of the old aunt who
-was once more mistress of the manor-house, and he rejoiced in George's
-marriage to a very charming girl. In February, 1803, while in Paris, a
-fall upon the ice resulted in an injury that made him lame for life.
-The surgeon experimented with a new method of treatment whose only
-[Pg 257]result was extreme torture even for Lafayette, whose power of
-bearing pain almost equaled that of his blood brothers, the American
-Indians. It was during this season of agony that Virginia, his youngest
-child, was married in a neighboring room to Louis de Lasteyrie, by the
-same priest who had followed the brave De Noailles women to the foot of
-the scaffold. Instead of the profusion of plate and jewels which would
-have been hers before the Revolution, the family "assessed itself"
-to present to the bride and her husband a portfolio containing two
-thousand francs--about four hundred dollars.
-
-In 1807 the greatest grief of Lafayette's life came to him in the death
-of his wife, who had never recovered from the rigors of Olmütz. "It
-is not for having come to Olmütz that I wish to praise her here," the
-heartbroken husband wrote to Latour Maubourg soon after the Christmas
-Eve on which her gentle spirit passed to another life, "but that she
-did not come until she had taken the time to make every possible
-provision within her power to safeguard the welfare of my aunt and the
-rights of my creditors, and for having had the courage to send George
-to America." The gallant, loving lady was buried in the cemetery of
-Picpus, the secret place where the bodies of the victims to the Terror
-had been thrown. A poor working-girl had discovered the spot, and
-largely through the efforts of Madame Lafayette and her sister a chapel
-had been built and the cemetery put in order--which perhaps accounts
-for the simplicity of Virginia's wedding-gift.
-
-
-[Pg 258]XXVII
-
-A GRATEFUL REPUBLIC
-
-
-During the long, dark night of Lafayette's imprisonment he had
-dreamed of America as the land of dawn and hope, and planned to make
-a new home there, but when release came this had not seemed best.
-Madame Lafayette's health had been too frail, and La Grange, with its
-neglected acres, was too obviously awaiting a master. "Besides, we
-lack the first dollar to buy a farm. That, in addition to many other
-considerations, should prevent your tormenting yourself about it," he
-told Adrienne. One of these considerations was the beloved old aunt
-at Chavaniac, who lived to the age of ninety-two and never ceased to
-be the object of his special care. Also his young people, with their
-marriages and budding families, were too dear to permit him willingly
-to put three thousand miles of ocean between them and himself.
-
-But he had never lost touch with his adopted country. At the time he
-declined Napoleon's offer to make him minister to the United States
-he wrote a correspondent that he had by no means given up the hope of
-visiting it again as a private citizen; though, he added, humorously,
-[Pg 259]he fancied that if he landed in America in anything except a
-military uniform he would feel as embarrassed and as much out of place
-as a savage in knee-breeches. After Napoleon sold Louisiana to the
-United States, foreseeing he could not profitably keep it, Jefferson
-sounded Lafayette about coming to be governor of the newly acquired
-territory. That offer, too, he had seen fit to refuse; but his friends
-called him "the American enthusiast."
-
-Time went by until almost fifty years had passed since the "Bostonians"
-took their stand against the British king. To celebrate the
-semi-centennial, America decided to raise a monument to the heroes
-of Bunker Hill. Lafayette was asked to lay the corner-stone at the
-ceremonies which were to take place on the fiftieth anniversary of the
-battle. It became the pleasant duty of President James Monroe, who
-had served as a subaltern in the battle where Lafayette received his
-American wound, to send him the official invitation of Congress and
-to place a government frigate at his disposal for the trip. A turn of
-French elections in 1824 had left him temporarily "a statesman out of a
-job," without even the duty of representing his district in the Chamber
-of Deputies. There was really no reason why he should not accept and
-every reason why he might at last gratify his desire to see America and
-American friends again.
-
-He sailed on July 12, 1824, not, however, upon the United States
-frigate, but on the _Cadmus_, a regular packet-boat, preferring, he
-said, to come as a private individual. His son accompanied him, as did
-[Pg 260]Col. A. Lavasseur, who acted as his secretary. These, with his
-faithful valet, Bastien, made up his entire retinue, though he might
-easily have had a regiment of followers, so many were the applications
-of enthusiastic young men who seemed to look upon this as some new
-sort of military expedition. On the _Cadmus_ he asked fellow-travelers
-about American hotels and the cost of travel by stage and steamboat,
-and M. Lavasseur made careful note of the answers. He had no idea of
-the reception that awaited him. When the _Cadmus_ sailed into New York
-harbor and he saw every boat gay with bunting and realized that every
-man, woman, and child to whom coming was possible had come out to meet
-him, he was completely overcome. "It will burst!" he cried, pressing
-his hands to his heart, while tears rolled down his cheeks.
-
-Whether he wished or no, he found himself the nation's guest. The
-country not only stopped its work and its play to give him greeting;
-it stopped its politics--and beyond that Americans cannot go. It was
-a campaign summer, but men forgot for a time whether they were for
-Adams or Crawford, Clay or Jackson. Election Day was three months off,
-politics could wait; but nobody could wait to see this man who had come
-to them out of the past from the days of the Revolution, whose memory
-was their country's most glorious heritage. They gave him salutes and
-dinners and receptions. They elected him to all manner of societies.
-Mills and factories closed and the employees surged forth to shout
-[Pg 261]themselves hoarse as they jostled mayors and judges in the
-welcome. Dignified professors found themselves battling in a crowd of
-their own students to get near his carriage. Our whole hard-headed,
-practical nation burst into what it fondly believed to be poetry in
-honor of his coming. Even the inmates of New York's Debtors' Prison
-sent forth such an effusion of many stanzas. If these were not real
-poems, the authors never suspected it. There was truth in them, at any
-rate. "Again the hero comes to tread the sacred soil for which he bled"
-was the theme upon which they endlessly embroidered. Occasionally the
-law sidestepped in his honor. A deputy sheriff in New England pinned
-upon his door this remarkable "Notice. Arrests in civil suits postponed
-to-day, sacred to Freedom and Freedom's Friend."
-
-Lafayette arrived in August and remained until September of the
-following year, and during that time managed, to tread an astonishing
-amount of our sacred soil, considering that he came before the day
-of railroads. The country he had helped to create had tripled in
-population, and, instead of being merely a narrow strip along the
-Atlantic, now stretched westward a thousand miles. He visited all the
-states and all the principal towns. It was not only in towns that he
-was welcomed. At the loneliest crossroads a musket-shot or a bugle-call
-brought people magically together. The sick were carried out on
-mattresses and wrung his hand and thanked God. Babies were named for
-him. One bore through life the whole name Welcome Lafayette. Miles of
-[Pg 262]babies already named were held up for him to see--and perhaps
-to kiss. Old soldiers stretched out hands almost as feeble as those
-of babies in efforts to detain him and fight their battles o'er. With
-these he was very tender. Small boys drew "Lafayette fish" out of the
-brooks on summer days, and when he came to their neighborhood ran
-untold distances to get sight of him. Often he helped them to points
-of vantage from which they could see something more than forests of
-grown-up backs and legs during the ceremonies which took place before
-court-houses and state-houses. Here little girls, very much washed and
-curled, presented him with useless bouquets and lisped those artless
-odes of welcome. Sometimes they tried to crown him with laurel, a
-calamity he averted with a deft hand. Back of the little girls usually
-stood a phalanx of larger maidens in white, carrying banners, who were
-supposed to represent the states of the Union; and back of the maidens
-was sometimes a wonderful triumphal arch built of scantling and covered
-with painted muslin, the first achievement of its kind in local history.
-
-The country was really deeply moved by Lafayette's visit. It meant to
-honor him to the full, but it saw no reason to hide the fact that it
-had done something for him as well. "The Nation's Guest. France gave
-him birth; America gave him Immortality," was a statement that kept
-everybody, nations and individuals alike, in their proper places. In
-short, the welcome America gave Lafayette was hearty and sincere.
-Whether it appeared as brilliant to the guest of honor, accustomed from
-[Pg 263]youth to pageants at Versailles, as it did to his hosts we may
-doubt. It was occasionally hard for M. Lavasseur to appear impressed
-and not frankly astonished at the things he saw. Lafayette enjoyed it
-all thoroughly. The difficult rôle fell to his son George, who had
-neither the interest of novelty nor of personal triumph to sustain
-him. He already knew American ways, and it was equally impossible for
-him to join in the ovation or to acknowledge greetings not meant for
-himself. He made himself useful by taking possession of the countless
-invitations showered upon his father and arranging an itinerary to
-embrace as many of them as possible.
-
-[Illustration: MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE IN 1824
-
-From a painting by William Birch]
-
-[Illustration: MADAME DE LAFAYETTE
-
-After a miniature in the possession of the family]
-
-To those who have been wont to think of this American triumphal
-progress of Lafayette's as steady and slow, stopping only for
-demonstrations of welcome and rarely if ever doubling on its tracks,
-it is a relief to learn that Lafayette did occasionally rest. He
-made Washington, the capital of the country, his headquarters, and
-set out from there on longer or shorter journeys. The town had not
-existed, indeed had scarcely been dreamed of, for a decade after
-his first visit. What he thought of the straggling place, with its
-muddy, stump-infested avenues, we shall never know. He had abundant
-imagination--which was one reason the town existed; for without
-imagination he would never have crossed the ocean to fight for American
-liberty. Among the people he saw about him in Washington during the
-official ceremonies were many old friends and many younger faces
-mysteriously like them. To that striking sentence in Henry Clay's
-[Pg 264]address of welcome in the House of Representatives, "General,
-you find yourself here in the midst of posterity," he could answer,
-with truth and gallantry, "No, Mr. Speaker, posterity has not yet begun
-for me, for I find in these sons of my old friends the same political
-ideals and, I may add, the same warm sentiments toward myself that I
-have already had the happiness to enjoy in their fathers."
-
-His great friend Washington had gone to his rest; but there were
-memories of Washington at every turn. He made a visit to Mount Vernon
-and spent a long hour at his friend's tomb. He entered Yorktown
-following Washington's old campaign tent, a relic which was carried
-ahead of the Lafayette processions in that part of the country, in
-a spirit almost as reverent as that the Hebrews felt toward the Ark
-of the Covenant. At Yorktown the ceremonies were held near the Rock
-Redoubt which Lafayette's command had so gallantly taken. Zachary
-Taylor, who was to gain fame as a general himself and to be President
-of the United States, presented a laurel wreath, which Lafayette turned
-from a compliment to himself to a tribute to his men. "You know, sir,"
-he said, "that in this business of storming redoubts with unloaded
-arms and fixed bayonets, the merit of the deed lies in the soldiers
-who execute it," and he accepted the crown "in the name of the light
-infantry--those we have lost as well as those who survive."
-
-Farther south, at Camden, he laid the corner-stone of a monument to his
-friend De Kalb; and at Savannah performed the same labor of love for
-[Pg 265]one erected in honor of Nathanael Greene and of Pulaski. At
-Charleston, also, he met Achille Marat, come from his home in Florida
-to talk with Lafayette about his father, who met his death at the hands
-of Charlotte Corday during the French Revolution. There were many
-meetings in America to remind him of his life abroad. Francis Huger
-joined him for a large part of his journey; he saw Dubois Martin, now
-a jaunty old gentleman of eighty-three. It was he who had bought _La
-Victoire_ for Lafayette's runaway journey. In New Jersey he dined with
-Joseph Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon, who was living there quietly
-with his daughter and son-in-law.
-
-Both on the Western frontier and at the nation's capital he met Indian
-chiefs with garments more brilliant and manners quite as dignified
-as kings ever possessed. In a time of freshet in the West he became
-the guest of an Indian named Big Warrior and spent the night in his
-savage home. On another night he came near accepting unwillingly the
-hospitality of the Ohio River, for the steamboat upon which he was
-traveling caught fire, after the manner of river boats of that era,
-and "burned a hole in the night" and disappeared. He lost many of his
-belongings in consequence, including his hat, but not his serenity or
-even a fraction of his health, though the accident occurred in the
-pouring rain.
-
-Everywhere, particularly in the West, he came to towns and counties
-bearing his own name. In the East he revisited with his son spots made
-memorable in the Revolution. On the Hudson he rose early to point out
-[Pg 266]to George the place where André had been taken and the house
-to which he and Washington had come so soon after Arnold's precipitate
-flight. At West Point he reviewed the cadets, slim and straight and
-young, while General Scott and General Brown, both tall, handsome
-men, looking very smart indeed in their plumes and dress uniforms,
-stood beside their visitor, who was almost as tall and military in his
-bearing and quite as noticeable for the neatness and plainness of his
-civilian dress.
-
-Lafayette was broader of shoulder and distinctly heavier than he had
-been forty years before. Even in his youth he had not been handsome,
-though he possessed for Americans the magnetism his son so sadly
-lacked. His once fair complexion had turned brown and his once reddish
-hair had turned gray, but that was a secret concealed under a chestnut
-wig. He carried a cane and walked with a slight limp, which Americans
-attributed enthusiastically to his wound in their service, but which
-was really caused by that fall upon the ice in 1803. Despite his
-checkered fortunes his sixty-eight years had passed lightly over his
-head. Perhaps he did not altogether relish being addressed as Venerable
-Sir by mayors and town officials, any more than he liked to have laurel
-wreaths pulling his wig awry, but he knew that both were meant in
-exquisite politeness.
-
-And, true Frenchman that he was, he never allowed himself to be outdone
-in politeness. Everywhere incidents occurred, trivial enough, but very
-charming in spirit, that have been treasured in memory and handed down
-to this day. In New London two rival congregations besought him to [Pg
-267]come to their churches and listen to their pastors. He pleased
-them both. He led blind old ladies gallantly through the minuet. He
-held tiny girls in his arms and, kissing them, said they reminded him
-of his own little Virginia. He chatted delightfully with young men
-who accompanied him as governors' aides in turn through the different
-states; and if he extracted local information from these talks to use
-it again slyly, with telling effect, in reply to the very next address
-of welcome, that was a joke between themselves which they enjoyed
-hugely. "He spoke the English language well, but slower than a native
-American," one of these young aides tells us. He was seldom at a loss
-for a graceful speech, though this was a gift that came to him late in
-life. And his memory for faces seldom played him false. When William
-Magaw, who had been surgeon of the old First Pennsylvania, visited him
-and challenged him for recognition, Lafayette replied that he did not
-remember his name, but that he knew very well what he had done for
-him--he had dressed his wound after the battle of the Brandywine!
-
-The processions and celebrations in Lafayette's honor culminated in
-the ceremony for which he had crossed the Atlantic, the laying of the
-corner-stone at Bunker Hill. Pious people had said hopefully that
-the Lord could not let it rain on such a day; and their faith was
-justified, for the weather was perfect. We are told that on the 17th of
-June "everything that had wheels and everything that had legs" moved in
-the direction of the monument. Accounts tell of endless organizations
-[Pg 268]and of "miles of spectators," until there seemed to be not room
-for another person to sit or stand. The same chaplain who had lifted up
-his young voice in prayer in the darkness on Cambridge Common before
-the men marched off to battle was there in the sunlight to raise his
-old hands in blessing. Daniel Webster, who had not been born when the
-battle was fought, was there to make the oration. He could move his
-hearers as no other American has been able to do, playing upon their
-emotions as upon an instrument, and never was his skill greater than
-upon that day. He set the key of feeling in the words, "Venerable men,"
-addressed to the forty survivors of the battle, a gray-haired group,
-sitting together in the afternoon light. Lafayette had met this little
-company in a quiet room before the ceremonies began and had greeted
-each as if he were in truth a personal friend. After his part in the
-ceremony was over he elected to sit with them instead of in the place
-prepared for him. "I belong there," he said, and there he sat, his
-chestnut wig shining in the gray company.
-
-While Webster's eloquence worked its spell, and pride and joy and pain
-even to the point of tears swept over the thousands of upturned faces
-as cloud shadows sweep across a meadow, Lafayette must have remembered
-another scene, a still greater assembly, even more tense with feeling,
-in which he had been a central figure: that fête of the Federation on
-the Champs de Mars. Surely no other man in history has been allowed to
-feel himself so intimately a part of two nations in their moments of
-patriotic exaltation.
-
-
-[Pg 269]XXVIII
-
-LEAVE-TAKINGS
-
-
-Though the celebration at Bunker Hill was the crowning moment of
-Lafayette's stay in America, he remained three months longer, sailing
-home in September, 1825. The last weeks were spent in and near
-Washington. Here he had fitted so perfectly into the scheme of life
-that his comings and goings had ceased to cause remark, except as a
-pleasant detail of the daily routine. Perhaps this is the subtlest
-compliment Americans paid him. One of the mottoes in a hall decorated
-in his honor had read, "_Où peut-on être mieux qu'au sein de sa
-famille?_" "Where can a man feel more at home than in the bosom of his
-family?"--and this attitude of Washingtonians toward him showed how
-completely he had been adopted as one of themselves.
-
-He had made himself one in thought and spirit with the most
-aggressively American of them all. A witty speech of his proves this.
-A bill had been introduced in Congress to present him with two hundred
-thousand dollars in money and "twenty-four thousand acres of fertile
-land in Florida" to right a wrong unintentionally done him years
-[Pg 270]before. He had been entitled at the time of our Revolution to
-the pay of an officer of his rank and to a grant of public land to be
-located wherever he chose. He refused to accept either until after the
-Revolution in France had swept away his fortune. Then his agent in the
-United States chose for him a tract of land near New Orleans which
-Jefferson thought would be of great value. Congress was not informed
-and granted this same land to the city. Lafayette had a prior claim,
-but flatly refused to contest the matter, saying he could have no
-quarrel with the American people. Everybody wanted the bill concerning
-this reparation in the way of money and Florida land to pass, and it
-was certain to go through, but there were twenty-six members of the
-House and Senate who, for one reason and another, felt constrained
-to vote against it. Some voted consistently and persistently against
-unusual appropriations of any kind; some argued that it was an insult
-to translate Lafayette's services into terms of cold cash. The struggle
-between private friendship and public duty was so hard that some of
-them came to make a personal explanation. "My dear friends!" he cried,
-grasping their hands, "I assure you it would have been different had
-I been a member of Congress. There would not have been twenty-six
-objectors--there would have been twenty-seven! " During this American
-visit he renewed old ties with, or made the acquaintance of, nine
-men who had been or were to become Presidents of the United States:
-John Adams and his son John Quincy Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe,
-[Pg 271]William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, Zachary Taylor, and
-Franklin Pierce. Perhaps there were others. He broke the rules of the
-Puritan Sabbath by driving out to dine on that day with the venerable
-John Adams at his home near Boston; but there was only one white horse
-to draw his carriage instead of the customary four, and not a hurrah
-broke the orderly quiet. Had it been a week-day the crowds would have
-shouted themselves hoarse. Jefferson, ill and feeble, welcomed him
-on the lawn at Monticello, the estate so dear to him which had been
-ravaged by the British about the time Lafayette began his part in
-driving Cornwallis to Yorktown.
-
-As was quite fitting, Lafayette was the guest of President John Quincy
-Adams at the White House during the last days of his stay. One incident
-must be told, because it is so very American and so amusing from
-the foreign point of view. He expressed a desire to make a visit of
-farewell to his old friend James Monroe, who had been President the
-year before. He was now living on his estate of Oak Hill, thirty-seven
-miles away. President Adams offered to accompany him, and on an August
-day they set out by carriage after an early dinner. Mr. Adams, both
-Lafayettes, and a friend rode in the presidential carriage. Colonel
-Lavasseur and the son of the President followed in a "tilbury," a
-kind of uncovered gig fashionable then on both sides of the Atlantic.
-Servants and luggage brought up the rear.
-
-Lafayette had been passed free over thousands of miles of toll-road
-[Pg 272]since he landed in the United States, but when they reached the
-bridge across the Potomac the little procession halted and Mr. Adams
-paid toll like an ordinary mortal. Scarcely had his carriage started
-again when a plaintive, "Mr. President! Mr. President!" brought it to
-a standstill. The gatekeeper came running up with a coin in his hand.
-"Mr. President," he panted, "you've done made a mistake. I reckon yo'
-thought this was two bits, but it's only a levy. You owe me another
-twelve and a half cents." The President listened, gravely examined
-the coin, counted the noses of men and horses, and agreed that he was
-at fault. He was just reaching down into the presidential pocket when
-he was arrested by a new exclamation. The gatekeeper had recognized
-Lafayette and was thoroughly crestfallen. "I reckon the joke's on me,"
-he said, apologetically. "All the toll-roads has orders to pass the
-general free, so I owe you something instid of you owin' me money. I
-reckon I ought to pass you-all as the general's bodyguard." But to
-this Adams demurred. He was not anybody's bodyguard. He was President
-of the United States, and, though it was true that toll-roads passed
-the guest of the nation free, General Lafayette was riding that day in
-his private capacity, as a friend of Mr. Adams. There was no reason
-at all why the company should be cheated out of any of its toll. The
-gatekeeper considered this and acknowledged the superiority of Yankee
-logic. "That sounds fair," he admitted. "I reckon you-all do owe me
-twelve and a half cents." In the tilbury young Adams grinned and
-[Pg 273]Colonel Lavasseur chuckled his appreciation. "The one time
-General Lafayette does not pass free over your roads," he said, "is
-when he rides with the ruler of the country. In any other land he could
-not pay, for that very reason."
-
-When the day of farewell came Washington streets were filled with men
-and women come out to see the last of the nation's guest. Stores and
-public buildings were closed and surrounding regions poured their
-crowds into the city. Everybody was sad. The cavalry escort which for a
-year had gathered at unholy hours to speed Lafayette on his way or to
-meet him on his return, whenever he could be persuaded to take it into
-his confidence, met for the last time on such pleasant duty, taking its
-station near the White House, where as many citizens as possible had
-congregated. The hour set for departure was early afternoon. Officials
-had begun to gather before eleven o'clock. At noon the President
-appeared and took his place with them in a circle of chairs in the
-large vestibule, whose outside doors had been opened wide to permit all
-who could see to witness the public leave-taking.
-
-After a brief interval of silence an inner door opened and Lafayette
-came forward with the President's son and the marshal of the District.
-Mr. Adams rose and made a short address. Lafayette attempted to reply,
-but was overcome with feeling, and it was several moments before he
-regained control of his voice. At the end of his little speech he
-cried, "God bless you!" and opened his arms wide with a gesture that
-included everybody. Then the crowd pressed forward and surrounded him
-[Pg 274]until he retired to Mrs. Adams's sitting-room for the real
-farewell with the President's household. After that Mr. Adams and he
-appeared upon the portico. Lafayette stepped into a waiting carriage.
-Flags dipped, cannon boomed, and the procession took up its march to
-the wharf where a little steamer waited to carry the travelers down the
-Potomac to the new government frigate Brandywine, on which they were
-to sail. At the river's edge he reviewed the militia of the District
-of Columbia, standing with some relatives of Washington's during
-this final ceremony. It is said that a cheer that was like a cry of
-bereavement rose from the crowd and mingled with the last boom of the
-military salute as the boat swung out into the stream.
-
-The sun had dropped below the horizon when they neared Mount Vernon.
-The company was at dinner, everybody, even George Lafayette, working
-hard to overcome the sadness that threatened to engulf the company.
-The marshal came and bent over Lafayette, who pushed back his plate
-and bowed his head upon his breast. Then he rose and hurried to the
-deck for a parting look, at the home of his friend most of the company
-following him. The eyes of both father and son sought out the stately
-house set on a hill, which held so many associations for both of them.
-The younger man had found the beautiful place less well cared for than
-during the lifetime of its owner. Lafayette had returned to it only to
-visit a tomb.
-
-The trees near the mansion were already beginning to blur in the short
-[Pg 275]September twilight. Silently, with his head a little bent and a
-little turned to the right, as was his habit, he watched it as the boat
-slipped by. The afterglow behind the house had deepened to molten gold
-when a bend in the river blotted it from his sight. He turned like a
-man coming out of a dream and hurried to his cabin without a word.
-
-"Only then," says Lavasseur, "did he fully realize the sacrifice made
-to France in leaving America."
-
-
-[Pg 276]XXIX
-
-PRESIDENT--OR KING-MAKER?
-
-
-The ocean was no kinder than usual to Lafayette on his homeward voyage
-and the reception he met in Havre lacked enthusiasm. Louis XVIII, who
-was king when he went away, had died during his absence and another
-brother of the ill-fated Louis XVI had mounted the throne, with the
-title of Charles X. He was no other than the Comte d'Artois who had
-presided over Lafayette's section in the Assembly of Notables and
-had been blind to his presence when the two reached the same inn at
-the same moment in Austria. His ministers were no more friendly to
-liberals of Lafayette's way of thinking than those of his brothers had
-been; but the liberals of France showed a distinct desire to notice
-the home-coming of Lafayette. Police could and did disperse young men
-on horseback who gathered under his windows at the inn in Rouen for a
-serenade; but there were other ways of paying respect. One took the
-form of a contest of poets "to celebrate a voyage which history will
-place among the great events of the century." There were eighty-three
-[Pg 277]contestants, and Béranger, who had already paid his tribute,
-acted as a judge. In due time the victor was ceremoniously given a
-prize. Lafayette must have been reminded of the burst of rhyme in
-America quite as much by contrast as by similarity.
-
-His children came to meet him, which more than compensated for official
-neglect; and the welcome of several hundred neighbors when he reached
-La Grange convinced him that his local popularity was not impaired.
-On the whole he had reason to be well content. He brought home ruddy
-health, knowledge of the love in which he was held by twelve million
-warm-hearted Americans, and, a lesser consideration, doubtless, but one
-for which to be properly grateful, the prospect of speedily rebuilding
-the family fortunes. The grant of land voted by Congress was for
-thirty-six sections of six hundred and forty acres each, "east of and
-adjoining the city of Tallahassee in Leon County, Florida." So far
-as the writer has been able to learn, it never greatly benefited him
-or his heirs; but that fact was mercifully hidden in the future. In
-addition to the land there was a goodly sum of money to his credit in a
-Philadelphia bank.
-
-He had stood the fatigues of the trip wonderfully. His cousin who
-went to see him soon after his return marveled to find him "big, fat,
-fresh, and joyous," showing not the least ill effects from having "gone
-several months practically without sleep, in addition to talking,
-writing, traveling, and drinking for all he was worth (_pour tout de
-bon_) ten hours out of the twenty-four." And he brought home from
-[Pg 278]across the sea another gift: an ease in public speaking which
-astonished the friends who remembered the impatient scorn his silences
-roused in Marie Antoinette and how seldom he made speeches in the
-Assembly of Notables. During his command of the National Guard of Paris
-his utterances had of necessity been more frequent and more emphatic,
-but they betrayed none of the pleasure in addressing audiences that he
-now evidently felt. It was as though the friendliness of the American
-people had opened for him a new and delightful channel through which he
-could express his good will toward all the world. His voice lent itself
-well to public speaking; it could be soft or sonorous by turns, and
-he had the art of using plain and simple words. His physician, Doctor
-Cloquet, tells how some workmen were seen puzzling over a newspaper
-and criticizing it rather severely until they came to a speech by
-Lafayette. "Good!" said the reader, his face clearing. "At least we can
-understand what this man says. He speaks French."
-
-Delighting workmen was not a gift to ingratiate him with a Bourbon
-king whose government was growing less popular every day. Lafayette
-retired to La Grange among its vineyards and orchards in the flat
-region of La Brie and took up life there again; cultivating his estate;
-carrying on an immense correspondence in that small, well-formed script
-of his which is yet so difficult to read; rejoicing in his family
-and receiving many visitors. It was a cosmopolitan procession that
-made its way up the Rozoy road to the château whose Norman towers had
-[Pg 279]been old before the discovery of the New World. Some in that
-procession were old friends, members of the French nobility, who came
-in spite of Lafayette's politics; others were complete strangers drawn
-to him from distant parts of the earth by these same opinions. French,
-English, Americans, Austrians, Algerian sheiks, black men from the West
-Indies--all were welcome.
-
-In his study, an upper room in one of his five towers, he was literally
-in the center of his world. From a window overlooking the farm-yard he
-could direct the laborers by megaphone if he did not choose to go down
-among them. His "speaking-trumpet," as Charles Sumner called it, still
-lay on his desk when this American made his pious pilgrimage years
-after Lafayette's death. On the walls of the library and living-room
-hung relics that brought vividly to mind the history of two continents
-during momentous years. The American Declaration of Independence and
-the French Declaration of Rights hung side by side. A copy in bronze
-of Houdon's bust of Washington had the place of honor. A portrait
-of Bailly, a victim of the Revolution, hung over the fireplace in
-Lafayette's study. There were swords presented by French admirers and
-gifts from American cities and Indian chiefs. There was one room which
-was entered only by Lafayette and his children, and that but once a
-year, on the anniversary of his wife's death. It had been hers and was
-closed and kept just as she left it.
-
-Her death marked a distinct period in his life. There were those who
-said that when she died Lafayette lost more than a loved companion;
-[Pg 280]that he lost his conscience. In proof of this they pointed out
-how in the later years of his life, after her steadying influence was
-removed, he veered about in the troubled sea of French politics, like a
-ship without a rudder. It is true only in a superficial sense; but it
-is true that he was never quite the same after she died.
-
-For seven years immediately after this loss he took no active part in
-public affairs; partly because of his private sorrow, partly because
-of his opposition to the emperor. He had been disappointed in Napoleon
-and the latter distrusted him. "All the world is reformed," Napoleon
-grumbled, "with one exception. That is Lafayette. He has not receded
-from his position by so much as a hair's breadth. He is quiet now, but
-I tell you he is ready to begin all over again." George and Lafayette's
-son-in-law suffered from this displeasure in their army careers.
-"These Lafayettes cross my path everywhere!" Napoleon is said to have
-exclaimed when he found the names of the young men on an army list
-submitted for promotion, and promptly scratched them off.
-
-Then fortune began to go against the emperor and invading armies came
-marching into France. Lafayette offered his sword and his experience
-to his country, but the advice he gave appeared too dangerous and
-revolutionary. What he desired was to force the abdication of Napoleon
-at that time. He was in Paris on March 31, 1814, when foreign soldiers
-entered the city. Powerless to do anything except grieve, he shut
-himself up in his room. Napoleon retired to Elba and the brother of
-[Pg 281]Louis XVI was summoned to take the title of Louis XVIII.
-This was the prince Lafayette had intentionally offended when he was
-scarcely more than a boy.
-
-After he was made king, however, Lafayette wrote him a note of
-congratulation and appeared in uniform at his first royal audience
-wearing the white cockade. That certainly seemed like a change of
-front, but Lafayette thought it a necessity. "It had to be Napoleon
-or the Bourbons," he wrote Jefferson. "These are the only possible
-alternatives in a country where the idea of republican executive power
-is regarded as a synonym for excesses committed in its name." He
-accepted the government of Louis XVIII as more liberal than that of the
-emperor. Time and again after this he aided in the overthrow of one man
-or party, only to turn against the new power he had helped create. He
-even tried to work with Napoleon again after Louis XVIII fled to Ghent
-and Bonaparte returned from Elba to found his "new democratic empire,"
-known as the Hundred Days. Waterloo came at the end of it; then
-Lafayette voiced the demand for the emperor's abdication and pressed it
-hard.
-
-"What!" he cried in answer to Lucien Bonaparte's appeal to the Chamber
-of Deputies not to desert his brother, because that would be a
-violation of national honor, "you accuse us of failing in duty toward
-honor, toward Napoleon! Do you forget all we have done for him? The
-bones of our brothers and of our children cry aloud from the sands of
-Africa, from the banks of the Guadalquivir and the Tagus, from the
-[Pg 282]shores of the Vistula and the glacial deserts of Russia. During
-more than ten years three million Frenchmen have perished for this man
-who wants to-day to fight all Europe. We have done enough for him. Our
-duty now is to save our country!"
-
-Lafayette was one of the deputation sent by the Chamber to thank the
-ex-emperor after his abdication, and admired Napoleon's self-possession
-during that trying scene. He thought Napoleon "played grandly the role
-necessity forced upon him." Lafayette was also one of the commission
-sent to negotiate with the victorious allies. It was there that he gave
-his spirited answer to the demand that Napoleon be given up. "I am
-astonished you should choose a prisoner of Olmütz as the person to whom
-to make that shameful proposal."
-
-Louis XVIII returned to power and soon Lafayette was opposing him.
-So it went on for years. He said of himself that he was a man of
-institutions, not of dynasties; and that he valued first principles so
-much that he was very willing to compromise on matters of secondary
-importance. He cared nothing for apparent consistency and did whatever
-his erratic republican conscience dictated, without a thought of how
-it might look to others. He was a born optimist, but a poor judge of
-men; and in spite of repeated disappointments believed the promises
-of each new ruler who came along. Liberal representative government
-was of supreme importance in his eyes. If France was not yet ready
-for a president, she could have it under a king. Each administration
-[Pg 283]that promised a step in this direction received his support,
-each lapse from it his censure. That appears to be the key to the many
-shifting changes of his later life.
-
-His popularity among the people waxed and waned. Usually it kept him
-his seat in the Chamber of Deputies. From 1818 to 1824 he represented
-the Sarthe; from 1825 to the close of his life the district of Meaux.
-It was in the interval between that he made his visit to America. He
-returned to find Charles X king. As that monarch lost popularity his
-own influence gained. Charles's ministers thought their sovereign
-showed ill-placed confidence and esteem when he freely acknowledged
-that this liberal leader had rendered services to his family that no
-true man could forget. "I know him well," Charles said. "We were born
-in the same year. We learned to mount a horse together at the riding
-academy at Versailles. He was a member of my division in the Assembly
-of Notables. The fact is neither of us has changed--he no more than I."
-That was just the point. Neither had changed. Charles X was a Bourbon
-to the bone, and Lafayette had come back from America with renewed
-health, replenished means, and all the revolutionary impetuosity of
-youth. He had not one atom of that willingness to put up with "things
-as they are" which grows upon many reformers as their hair turns gray.
-John Quincy Adams divined this and advised Lafayette to have nothing
-more to do with revolutions. "He is sixty-eight years old, but there is
-fire beneath the cinders," the President of the United States confided
-to his diary in August, 1825.
-
-[Pg 284]The cinders glowed each time Charles X emphasized his
-Bourbonism; and caught fire again when the king made the Prince de
-Polignac prime minister in defiance of all liberal Frenchmen. That
-happened in 1829. Lafayette took occasion to visit Auvergne, the
-province of his birth, in company with his son, and was received with
-an enthusiasm rivaling his most popular days in America. The journey
-was prolonged farther than strict necessity required and did much
-to unite opposition to the king, for leaders of the liberal party
-profited by banquets and receptions in Lafayette's honor to spread
-their doctrines. More than one official who permitted such gatherings
-lost his job in consequence. Lafayette returned to La Grange; but in
-the following July, when the storm broke, he called for his horses
-and hurried to Paris. The Chamber of Deputies was not in session; he
-thought it ought to be; and he started as soon as he had read a copy
-of the Royal Ordinances which limited the freedom of the press and
-otherwise threatened the rights of the people.
-
-Before he reached Paris blood had been shed and barricades had been
-thrown across the streets. Alighting from his carriage, he told the
-guards his name, dragged his stiff leg over the obstructions, and
-joined the little group of legislators who were striving to give this
-revolt the sanction of law. Having had more experience in revolutions
-than they--this was his fourth--he became their leader, and on July
-29, 1830, found himself in the exact position he had occupied forty
-[Pg 285]years before, commander of the National Guard and practically
-dictator of France. An unwillingly admiring biographer says that he had
-learned no wisdom in the interval; that he "pursued the same course
-with the same want of success." This time he held the balance of power
-for only two days, but it was actual concentrated power while it
-lasted. It was he who sent back to Charles the stern answer that his
-offers of compromise came too late, that the royal family had ceased to
-reign. And it was he who had to choose the next form of government for
-France.
-
-It was a dramatic choice. He was frankly ambitious; and quite within
-his reach lay the honor he would have preferred above all others. The
-choice lay between becoming himself President of France or, making a
-new king. It was put to him fairly and squarely: "If we have a republic
-you will be president. If a monarchy, the Duc d'Orléans will be king.
-Will you take the responsibility of a republic?" A man with "a canine
-appetite for fame" and nothing more could have found but one answer,
-and that not the answer Lafayette gave. In his few hours of power he
-had talked with men from all parts of France. These confirmed his
-belief that the country was not yet ready for the change to a republic.
-It would be better to have a king for a while longer, provided he was a
-liberal king, pledged to support a constitution. The Duc d'Orléans gave
-promise of being just such a king. He was son of the duke Lafayette had
-banished from Paris after the mob attacked Versailles in 1789; but he
-[Pg 286]had fought on the liberal side. The people knew him as Philippe
-Égalité--"Equality Philip"--and during recent years he had given
-evidence of being far more democratic than any other member of his
-family. To choose him would please liberals and conservatives alike,
-because he was next in line of succession after the sons of the deposed
-king.
-
-Being by no means devoid of ambition, the duke was already in Paris,
-awaiting what might happen. The Deputies sent him an invitation to
-become lieutenant-general of the kingdom. Accounts vary as to the
-manner in which it was accepted. One has him walking with ostentatious
-humility through the streets to the Hôtel de Ville, preceded by a
-drummer to call attention to the fact that he was walking and that
-he wore a tricolored scarf. Another has him on horseback without the
-scarf. It matters little; they agree that he was not very well received
-and that shouts of "No more Bourbons!" betrayed the suspicion that the
-duke's liberality, like the scarf, if he wore one, could be put on for
-the occasion. Accounts agree, too, that it was Lafayette who swung
-popular feeling to his side. He met him at the foot of the stairs and
-ascended with him to the Chamber of Deputies; and in answer to the
-coolness with which he was greeted and the evident hostility of the
-crowd outside, thrust a banner into the duke's hand and drew him to a
-balcony, where he publicly embraced him. Paris was easily moved by such
-spectacles. Carried away by the sight of the two enveloped in the folds
-of the same flag, and that the Tricolor, which had been forbidden for
-[Pg 287]fifteen years, they burst into enthusiastic shouts of "Vive
-Lafayette!" "Long live the Duc d'Orléans!" Chateaubriand says that
-"Lafayette's republican kiss made a king," and adds, "Singular result
-of the whole life of the hero of two worlds!"
-
-[Illustration: MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE AND LOUIS PHILIPPE
-
-After the Revolution of 1830, it was Lafayette who swung popular
-feeling to the side of Louis Philippe]
-
-Louis Philippe, the new king, promised to approve certain very liberal
-measures known as the program of the Hôtel de Ville; Lafayette saw
-to that. The king even agreed in conversation with Lafayette that
-the United States had the best form of government on earth. He
-had spent some years in America and probably knew. He was called,
-enthusiastically or mockingly, as the case might be, the Bourgeois
-King; but the suspicion that his sympathies with the people were only
-assumed proved well founded. As time wore on it became manifest that he
-was as eager for arbitrary power as ever Louis XIV had been, without
-possessing Louis XIV's great ability. At first, however, everything was
-rose-colored. A few days after the new king had ascended the throne
-Lafayette wrote: "The choice of the king is good. I thought so, and I
-think so still more since I know him and his family. Things will not go
-in the best possible way, but liberty has made great progress and will
-make still more. Besides, I have done what my conscience dictated; and
-if I have made a mistake, it was made in good faith."
-
-That belief at least he could keep to the end. Two weeks after Louis
-Philippe became king Lafayette was appointed general in command of the
-National Guards of the kingdom, a position he held from August until
-Christmas. Then a new law abolished the office in effect but not in
-[Pg 288]appearance. Lafayette sent the king his resignation and refused
-to reconsider it or even to talk the matter over, as the king asked
-him to do. "No, my dear cousin, I understand my position," Lafayette
-wrote Philip de Ségur. "I know that I weigh like a nightmare on the
-Palais Royal; not on the king and his family, who are the best people
-in the world, and I love them tenderly, but on the people who surround
-them.... Without doubt I have been useful in his advancement. But if I
-sacrificed for him some of my personal convictions, it was only on the
-faith of the program of the Hôtel de Ville. I announced a king basing
-his reign on republican institutions. To that declaration, which the
-people seem to forget, I attach great importance; and it is that which
-the court does not forgive.... From all this the conclusion follows
-that I have become bothersome. I take my stand. I will retain the same
-friendliness for the royal family, but I have only one word of honor,
-and I cannot change my convictions."
-
-So once again, near the close of his life, he found himself in
-opposition to a government he had helped to create.
-
-
-[Pg 289]XXX
-
-SEVENTY-SIX YEARS YOUNG
-
-
-Although he had resigned the office to which the king had appointed
-him, Lafayette continued to hold his place in the Chamber of Deputies;
-the office to which the people had elected him. Here he worked in
-behalf of the oppressed of his own and other nations; the Irish, for
-example, and the Poles, in whose struggles for liberty he was deeply
-interested.
-
-When the Chamber of Deputies was in session he lived in Paris.
-Vacations were spent at La Grange, where he pursued the varied
-interests of his many-sided life, particularly enjoying, in his
-character of farmer, the triumph of his beasts and fruits in
-neighborhood fairs. In the winter of 1834 he was as usual in Paris, and
-on the 26th of January made the speech in behalf of Polish refugees
-then in France which proved to be his last public address. A few days
-later he attended the funeral of one of the Deputies, following the
-coffin on foot all the long distance from the house to the cemetery,
-as was the French custom, and standing on the damp ground through the
-[Pg 290]delivery of the funeral discourses. The exposure and fatigue
-were too much for even his hardy old body.
-
-He was confined to his room for many weeks, but carried on a life as
-normal as possible, having his children around him, receiving visits
-of intimate friends, reading journals and new books, and dictating
-letters. One of these was to Andrew Jackson about his fight with the
-United States Senate. The inactivity of the sick-chamber was very
-irksome to him, and by the 9th of May he was so far improved that
-his physicians allowed him to go for a drive. Unfortunately a storm
-came up, the weather turned suddenly cold, and he suffered a chill,
-after which his condition became alarming. When it was known that
-he was a very sick man, friends and political enemies--he had no
-personal enemies--hastened to make inquiries and to offer condolences.
-Occasionally George Lafayette was able to answer that his father
-seemed better; but the improvement was not real. On the 20th of May he
-appeared to wake and to search for something on his breast. His son put
-into his hands the miniature of Adrienne that he always wore. He had
-strength to raise it to his lips, then sank into unconsciousness from
-which he passed into the sleep of death.
-
-He was laid to rest in the cemetery of Picpus beside the wife who had
-awaited him there for more than a quarter of a century; but his grave
-was made in earth from an American battle-field that he had brought
-home with him after his last visit. Fifteen natives of Poland bore the
-coffin to the hearse. There were honorary pall-bearers representing the
-[Pg 291]Chamber of Deputies, the National Guard, the Army, the United
-States, Poland, and his own electoral district of Meaux. It was purely
-a military funeral. His party friends hotly declared that it was not a
-funeral at all, only a monster military parade. The government feared
-that his burial might be made the occasion for political demonstrations
-and ordered out such an immense number of troops that "the funeral car
-passed almost unseen in the midst of a battalion whose bayonets ...
-kept the people from rendering homage to their liberator." "He was
-there lifeless, but not without honor," wrote an indignant friend.
-"The French army surrounded him in his coffin as relentlessly as the
-Austrian army had held him a prisoner at Olmütz." Even the cemetery
-was guarded as if to withstand a siege. "Only the dead and his family
-might enter.... One would say that the government looked upon the
-mortal remains of this friend of liberty as a bit of prey which must
-not be allowed to escape." The liberals resented this fancied attitude
-of the government so bitterly that a cartoonist drew Louis Philippe
-rubbing his hands together with satisfaction as the procession passed
-and saying, gleefully, "Lafayette, you're caught, old man!" Only one
-incident occurred to justify so many precautions. In the Place Vendome
-a few score young men carrying a banner tried to break through the line
-of soldiers, but were repulsed. Elsewhere people looked on in silence.
-
-Lafayette's political friends complained that not one of the king's
-[Pg 292]ministers was to be seen in the procession. The ministers
-answered that politics were out of place at the funeral of such
-a distinguished man; and that the government rendered its homage
-regardless of party. While friends and foes wrangled thus over the
-coffin, Nature did her beautiful consoling best. Chateaubriand,
-standing in the silent crowd, saw the hearse stop a moment as it
-reached the top of a hill, and as it stopped a fugitive ray of sunlight
-came to rest upon it, then disappeared, gilding the guns and military
-trappings as it passed.
-
-In spite of all this recrimination Lafayette's death passed
-comparatively unnoticed in France, for it occurred during a season of
-political turmoil and he had retired several years before from active
-affairs. Three thousand miles away the news produced far greater
-effect. He was mourned in America with universal sorrow. All over the
-country flags floated at half-mast. The House and Senate of the United
-States passed resolutions which were sent to George Lafayette, while
-the members wore crape upon their arms for thirty days and the Senate
-Chamber and Hall of Representatives remained draped in black until the
-end of the session. Our army and navy wore a tribute of crape upon
-their sleeves also, and on a given day every city in the Union heard
-the mourning salute of twenty-four guns, and after that at half-hour
-intervals until sunset the booming of a single cannon. "Touching
-honors," says a French writer, "rendered by a great people to the
-memory of a stranger who had served them sixty years before."
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Pg 293]Lafayette lived to hold his great-grandchild in his arms, yet
-the period of his life seems very short if measured by the changes
-that came about while he walked the earth. It was a time when old
-men dreamed dreams and young men saw visions, and during Lafayette's
-seventy-six years some of the visions became realities, some of his
-dreams he saw well on the way to fulfilment.
-
-The French regard Lafayette's American career as only an episode in
-his life; while Americans are apt to forget that he had a career in
-France. He lived in three distinct periods of history, so different
-that they might have been centuries apart. He saw medieval Europe; the
-stormy period of change, and something very like the modern world we
-know to-day. Peasants knelt in the dust before the nobles, after he
-was a grown man; yet, in his old age, railroads and republicanism were
-established facts. "To have made for oneself a rôle in one or another
-of these periods suffices for a career," says his French biographer
-Donoil; "very few have had a career in all."
-
-Lafayette played an important part in all three. Not only that; it
-was his strange good fortune to hold familiar converse with two of
-the greatest figures in history--the two very greatest of his own
-age--Washington and Napoleon. That he seems even measurably great in
-such company shows his true stature. Washington was his friend, who
-loved him like a son. Napoleon appears to have been one of the very few
-men Lafayette could never quite bring himself to trust, though Napoleon
-[Pg 294]rendered him an immense service and did everything in his great
-power to win his support.
-
-If, as certain French historians say, Lafayette and Napoleon were
-dictators in turn, Lafayette's task was in a way the harder of the two;
-for Napoleon's turn came after the fury had spent itself and men were
-beginning to recover, sobered by their own excesses. It was in the
-mounting delirium of their fever that Lafayette's middle course brought
-upon him first distrust, then enmity from both sides.
-
-If an Austrian prison had not kept him from destruction he must have
-perished during the Revolution, for he was never swerved by fear of
-personal danger. One of his eulogists asserts that he was "too noble
-to be shrewd." Another says that he judged men by his own feelings and
-was "misled by illusions honorable to himself." After his experience in
-America he undoubtedly expected to play a great part in the uprising
-in France, and, not realizing the strength of selfishness and passion,
-helped to let loose forces too powerful to control. One of his critics
-has asserted that he never made a wise or a correct decision; but
-critics and eulogists alike agree that he was upright and brave. They
-are justified in saying he was vain. His vanity took the form of
-believing himself right.
-
-He was not self-seeking, and the lack of that quality caused him to
-be regarded with puzzled surprise by men who could not understand his
-willingness to step aside in favor of some one else, when he thought
-the cause demanded it. "It seemed so foolish," said Madame de Staël
-[Pg 295]in her sympathetic portrait, "to prefer one's country to
-oneself... to look upon the human race, not as cards to be played for
-one's own profit, but as an object of sacred devotion." Chateaubriand
-said that forty years had to pass after Lafayette's death before people
-were really convinced that he had been an idealist and not a fool. The
-fact was brought home to them, little by little, as records scattered
-to the four winds during the Revolution gradually saw the light of
-print; here a public document, there a private letter, there again a
-bit of personal reminiscence. Fitting together like a puzzle, they
-showed at last how one single idea had inspired all Lafayette's acts,
-even when they seemed most erratic. "Fortunately for him," says one
-of his French biographers, "it was the idea of the century--political
-liberty."
-
-In his lifetime he arranged his papers for publication and dictated
-occasional bits of comment; but these were only fragmentary, as many of
-his papers were lost. Besides, it was a task for which he had no great
-zest. He said it seemed ungracious to accuse men of persecuting him who
-afterward died for the very principles he upheld. He was sure history
-would accord to each his just deserts. Madame de Staël said that his
-belief in the final triumph of liberty was as strong as the belief of a
-pious man in a future life. He said himself that liberty was to him a
-love, a religion, a "geometric certainty."
-
-To his last day he pursued this ideal of his wherever it led him. His
-failure to learn worldly wisdom irritated many. It was incongruous,
-like the contrast between his polished old-time manners and the rash
-[Pg 296]utterances that fell from his lips. It must be confessed that
-in his latter years he was not always clear-sighted as to the means he
-employed. Once he descended to methods better suited to Italy in the
-Middle Ages than to political reformers in 1822. There were times, too,
-when he seemed bent on self-destruction. Those near him were convinced
-that he would like to lose his life provided he could thereby add to
-the luster of his reputation. "I have lived long," was his answer to
-intimate friends who gave him counsels of prudence. "It seems to me
-that it would be quite fitting to end my career upon the scaffold, a
-sacrifice to liberty."
-
-Napoleon's estimate of him was short and severe. "Lafayette was another
-of the fools; he was not cut out for the great rôle he wanted to play."
-When some one ventured to remind the ex-emperor of Lafayette's spirited
-refusal to give him up on the demand of the allied powers, Napoleon
-answered dryly that he was not attacking Lafayette's sentiments or
-his good intentions, but was merely complaining of the mess he made
-of things. Lafayette's estimate of the former emperor was even more
-severe. He thought Napoleon's really glorious title had been "Soldier
-of the Revolution" and that the crown was for him "a degradation."
-American history would have been the loser if either of these men
-had not lived. Lafayette helped win us our country. By selling us
-Louisiana, Napoleon almost doubled its extent. Napoleon's heart rarely
-led him into trouble; personal ambition seldom led Lafayette far
-[Pg 297]astray. The two can be contrasted, but not compared. There is
-food for thought in the fact that a statue of Lafayette, modeled by an
-American sculptor and given by five million American schoolchildren to
-France, should have been erected in the Louvre on the spot once set
-apart for a statue of the French emperor.
-
-Madame de Staël thought Lafayette more like the English and Americans
-than like the French, even in his personal appearance. Another French
-estimate, that he had "a cold manner, masking concentrated enthusiasm,"
-is quite in keeping with American character, as was his incorrigible
-dash of optimism. It was to America, a country of wide spaces and few
-inhabitants, that he followed his vision of liberty in early manhood,
-and there where the play and interplay of selfish interests was far
-less complicated than in France he saw it become a practical reality.
-Later he championed many noble causes in many parts of the world. Next
-to political freedom and as a necessary part of it, he had at heart
-the emancipation of the negroes. This he tried himself to put into
-practice. He was shocked when he returned to our country in 1824 to
-find how much race prejudice had increased. He remembered that black
-soldiers and white messed together during the American Revolution.
-
-Religious liberty for Protestants, civil rights for Jews and
-Protestants; suppression of the infamous _lettres de cachet_; trial
-by jury; a revision of French criminal law to allow the accused
-the privilege of counsel, of confronting witnesses, and of free
-[Pg 298]communication with his family--benefits, by the way, which were
-all enjoyed by the accused in the state trials which took place while
-Lafayette was in power; abolition of the death penalty and freedom of
-the press were some of the measures most ardently championed by this
-believer in liberty and law.
-
-He remained a man of visions to the end. After his death one of the
-men who wrote in praise of him said that if he had lived during the
-Middle Ages he would have been the founder of a great religious order,
-one which had a profound moral truth as its guiding principle. Another
-compared him to a Knight of the Round Table fighting for the lady of
-his adoration, whose name was Liberty. Possibly no knight-errant,
-ancient or modern, can seem altogether sane, much less prudent, to the
-average unimaginative dweller in this workaday world. Yet what would
-the workaday world be without its knights-errant of the past; the good
-their knight-errantry has already accomplished; the courage it inspires
-for to-day; the promise it gives us for the future?
-
-If we dwell on the few times that Lafayette did not choose wisely, the
-times when the warm impulses of his heart would have carried farther
-had his head taken a more masterful part in directing his acts, we are
-tempted to echo the criticism made upon the unfortunate Louis XVI,
-"What a pity his talents did not equal his virtues!" But when we think
-of the generous, optimistic spirit of Lafayette, and how that spirit
-remained unchanged through good fortune and ill from boyhood to old
-age; of his fearless devotion to right as he saw the right; of his
-[Pg 299]charm, and of the great debt our country owes him, his mistakes
-fade away altogether and we see only a very gallant, inspiring figure
-uniting the Old World with the New.
-
-There can be no better eulogy for this brave gentleman, beloved of
-Washington, than the few words he wrote in all simplicity after he had
-been called upon to make his great decision between Louis Philippe and
-himself:
-
-"I did as my conscience dictated. If I was mistaken, the mistake was
-made in good faith."
-
-[Pg 300]
-
-[Pg 301]INDEX
-
-A
-
-Adams, Charles Francis, 271, 272.
-Adams, John, 87, 270, 271.
-Adams, John Quincy, 260, 270, 271-274, 283.
-Adams, Mrs. John Quincy, 274.
-Aiguillon, Duc d', 198.
-André, Major John, 140-143, 265.
-Arbuthnot, Adm. Marriot, 133.
-Arnold, Gen. Benedict, 84, 139-143, 146, 147, 149, 151-154, 266.
-Arnold, Mrs. Benedict, 140-143.
-Ayen, Marshal de Noailles, Duc d', 15-17, 29, 44-46, 49, 50, 55,
-91, 124.
-Ayen, Duchesse d', 15-18, 21, 29, 45, 46, 80, 237, 239, 243, 244, 254.
-
-B
-
-Bailly, Jean Sylvain, 193, 196, 207, 211, 216, 279.
-Bedaulx, Captain de, 55.
-Béranger, Pierre Jean de, 276, 277.
-Big Warrior, 265.
-Bollman, Dr. Justis Eric, 229-235.
-Bonaparte, Joseph, 265.
-Bonaparte, Lucien, 255, 281.
-Bonaparte, Napoleon, 108, 246, 251, 252, 255, 256, 258, 259,
-265, 280-282, 293, 294, 296.
-Bourbon, Duc de, 222.
-Braddock, Gen. Edward, 70.
-Broglie, Comte de, 32, 35, 41, 48, 68.
-Brown, Gen. Jacob, 266.
-Buckle, Henry Thomas, 22.
-Buisson, Chevalier du, 62, 64, 65, 68.
-Burgoyne, Gen. John, 74, 77, 83, 84, 91, 101, 108.
-Byron, Adm. John, 114.
-
-C
-
-Cadwallader, Gen. John, 109.
-Calonne, Charles Alexandre de, 187, 188.
-Carmichael, William, 39, 42, 43, 55.
-Catherine II of Russia, 185.
-Charles, Prince of Lorraine, 222.
-Charles VII of France, 3.
-Charles X of France (Comte d'Artois), 188, 197, 225, 276, 283-285.
-Chasteler, Marquis de, 245, 246.
-Chateaubriand, François, 287, 292, 295.
-Clarence, Duke of, 2.
-Clay, Henry, 260, 263, 264.
-Clinton, Gen. Sir Henry, 44, 91, 104-107, 109, 114, 133-135, 153, 156, 160-162.
-Cloquet, Dr. Jules Germain, 278.
-Cochran, Surgeon-General John, 79, 120, 121.
-Conway Cabal, 84, 85, 91-99, 103, 111.
-Conway, Gen. Thomas, 85, 92, 95-97, 99, 103.
-Corday, Charlotte, 265.
-Cornwallis, Gen. Charles:
- Operations against Philadelphia, 78, 79, 85, 86.
- Capture of Charleston, 133.
- Virginia campaign, 149, 153-165, 271.
- Surrender, 127, 165-168, 171, 216.
- Guest of Frederick the Great, 181.
- Intercedes for Lafayette, 227.
-Coudray, Philip C. J. B. T. de, 66.
-Crawford, William Harris, 260.
-
-D
-
-Danton, Georges Jacques, 206.
-Davis, Capt. John, 158.
-Deane, Silas, 36, 37, 43, 55, 66-69, 87, 89, 114.
-Desmoulins, Camille Benoit, 197.
-Donoil, Henri, 293.
-Doria, Andrea, 2.
-
-E
-
-Estaing, Adm. Charles Hector, Comte d', 113-119, 134, 172.
-
-F
-
-Fénelon, Francois de Salignac, 10, 11.
-Feyon, Abbé, 8, 14, 81.
-Fitzpatrick, Mr., 89, 90, 227.
-Fox, Charles James, 227.
-Francis I of France, 2.
-Franklin, Benjamin, 39, 40, 42, 43, 67, 70, 89, 101, 129, 171, 172, 176.
-Frederick the Great, 12, 100, 173, 180, 181, 183, 229.
-Frederick William II of Prussia, 181, 224, 226, 228, 229, 239, 245, 249.
-Frestal, M. de, 237, 238.
-
-G
-
-Gage, Gen. Thomas, 73.
-Gates, Gen. Horatio, 84, 85, 92, 95, 98, 111.
-George III of England, 32, 44, 47, 80, 81, 99, 127, 143, 160, 259.
-Germain, Lord George, 44.
-Gimat, Major de, 79, 163, 165.
-Gloucester, William Henry, Duke of, 32, 33.
-Grasse, Adm. Francois J. P., Comte de, 161-163, 168, 169.
-Greene, Gen. Nathanael, 78, 85, 86, 108, 109, 116, 117, 146, 149,
-153, 155, 168, 169, 265.
-Guichen, Adm. Comte de, 138.
-
-H
-
-Hamilton, Alexander, 155, 156, 165.
-Harrison, Benjamin, 75.
-Harrison, William Henry, 270, 271.
-Hénin, Princesse d', 225-227.
-Henri IV of France, 31, 212.
-Howe, Adm. Richard, 106, 117.
-Howe, Gen. William, Viscount, 47, 73-77, 79, 80, 82, 83, 85, 89, 91, 94, 104-106.
-Huger, Maj. Benjamin, 59, 60, 62, 229.
-Huger, Francis Kinloch, 59, 229-235, 265.
-
-J
-
-Jackson, Andrew, 260, 271, 290.
-Jefferson, Thomas, 92, 147, 156, 201, 202, 270, 271.
-Joan of Arc, 3.
-Jones, John Paul, 125, 126.
-
-K
-
-Kalb, Johan, Baron de:
- Accompanies Lafayette to America, 35, 36, 41, 44, 48-51, 57, 58, 60, 62, 63.
- Treatment by Congress, 65, 68-70.
- Interest in Lafayette's wound, 80.
- With Lafayette at Albany, 96, 99.
- Monument, 264.
-Knox, Gen. Henry, 137, 140.
-Kosciuszko, Gen. Tadensz, 84.
-
-L
-
-Lafayette, Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert-Dumotier, Marquis de:
- Birth, 3, 4.
- Boyhood, 5-12.
- Marriage, 14-18.
- Life at Court, 19, 27-31.
- With his regiment, 20, 32-35.
- Smallpox, 21.
- Resolves to go to America, 34.
- Efforts to leave France, 35-47.
- Departure and voyage, 48-56.
- Lands: goes to Philadelphia, 57-63.
- Reception by Congress, 64-69.
- Enters American Army, 70-72, 74, 75.
- Battle of the Brandywine, 77-80.
- At Bethlehem: rejoins army, 80-83.
- Intrigues against, 84, 85, 91-98.
- Skirmish near Gloucester, 85-87.
- Conduct, in army, 88, 89, 94.
- Attends Indian council, 98, 99.
- Returns to Valley Forge, 99, 102.
- At Barren Hill, 104-107.
- Votes to attack Clinton, 109.
- Battle of Monmouth Court House, 109-111.
- Liaison officer, 113-116, 118.
- Joint command with General Greene, 116-117.
- Challenges Earl of Carlisle, 119.
- Granted leave of absence, 119.
- Illness and homeward voyage, 120-123.
- Winter in France, 124-128.
- Rejoins Washington, 130.
- Again liaison officer, 134-138.
- West Point, and André, 139-143.
- French officers' attitude toward, 144, 145.
- First campaign in Virginia, 146-148.
- Second campaign in Virginia, 150-165.
- At Yorktown, 165-169.
- Popularity in France, 169-172, 175, 176, 196, 200, 212, 283.
- In Spain, 172-174.
- Plan to free slaves, 174.
- Improvements at Chavaniac, 174, 175.
- Paris home, 175, 176, 178.
- Interest in Mesmer, 176, 177.
- Visit to America, 1784, 177, 178.
- Sends gifts to Washington, 179, 196.
- Visits Frederick the Great, 180-182.
- Champion of reforms, 182-183, 185, 187-190, 297.
- Member Assembly of Notables, 185-190.
- Vice-President National Assembly, 195.
- Commands Paris National Guard, 196-215, 284, 285, 298.
- Invents the Tricolor, 197.
- Neither Republican nor Royalist, 201, 202, 213.
- Blamed for attack on Versailles, 203, 205.
- At fête of Federation, 209-212.
- Slanders and attacks upon, 213.
- Arrests king and queen, 214.
- Defeated for mayor of Paris, 216.
- Commands army of defense, 216-220.
- Last effort to save Louis XVI, 218, 219.
- Flight and arrest, 219-221.
- Imprisonment, 222-247.
- Attempted escape, 229-233.
- Exile, 248-253.
- Returns to Paris, 253.
- Life at La Grange, 254, 278, 279, 289.
- Death of his wife, 257, 279, 280.
- Relations with Napoleon, 251, 255, 256, 280-282.
- Member, Chamber of Deputies, 256, 259, 283, 284, 286, 289.
- Revisits America, 259-275.
- Lays corner-stone at Bunker Hill, 267-269.
- Welcome in France, 276, 277.
- Relations with Louis XVIII, 280-282.
- Relations with Charles X, 283-285.
- Relations with Louis Philippe, 285-288.
- Illness and death, 289-290.
- Character, 10, 29, 30, 82, 86, 87, 92, 119, 125, 126, 136,
- 145, 159, 200, 254, 255, 282, 283, 294-296, 298, 299.
- Correspondence with:
- Bollman, 230.
- Mlle. de Chavaniac, 14.
- Congress, 66, 173.
- d'Estaing, 114, 115.
- Fitzpatrick, 248.
- French Minister, 139-143.
- Governor of Martinique, 82.
- Hamilton, 155, 156.
- Mme. d'Hénin, 225, 226.
- Huger, 248.
- Jefferson, 281.
- Louis XVI, 124.
- Maubourg, 257.
- Napoleon, 251, 252.
- Nelson, 155.
- Relatives, 137, 174.
- Vergennes, 145.
- Washington, 85, 86, 96, 97, 116, 117, 127, 135, 146, 150, 152,
- 153, 160, 161, 170, 173, 174, 176, 177, 181, 182, 189.
- His wife, 53-55, 59-63, 76, 80, 81, 88-90, 93, 102, 129, 133,
- 137, 143, 144, 223, 237, 258.
- Opinion of Washington, 71, 91.
- Opinion of the American Revolution, 108.
- Family of:
- Ancestors, 2-4, 33.
- Aunts, 4, 5, 7, 174, 238, 256, 257.
- Children:
- Anastasie, 92, 125, 129, 170, 175, 176, 178, 236, 238-244, 247, 248.
- George Washington, 129, 130, 170, 173, 175, 236, 238, 239, 249-251,
- 256, 259, 263, 265, 271, 274, 280, 284, 290, 292.
- Henriette, 29, 102.
- Virginia, 175, 176, 178, 236, 238-244, 247, 257, 267.
- Cousin, 277.
- Father, 3, 4, 33, 35.
- Granchildren, 258, 293.
- Mother, 3-9, 12.
- Uncles, 9, 14, 35.
- Wife:
- Marie Adrienne Françoise de Noailles.
- Marriage, 15-18.
- Before the French Revolution, 19, 29, 45, 46, 102, 129, 169, 170, 174-176, 178.
- Experiences during the Terror, 237, 238.
- At Olmütz, 236, 240-245.
- Release and exile, 247, 248.
- Visits Napoleon, 253, 254.
- Inherits La Grange, 254.
- Death, 257.
- Influence over her husband, 279, 280.
- Mentioned, 32, 53, 59-63, 67, 80, 81, 88, 93, 102, 103, 129, 133, 143,
- 144, 169, 178, 215, 223, 258, 290.
-Lally Tollendal, Trophime Gerard, Marquis de, 227, 228.
-Lameth, Alexandre, 223, 230.
-Lasteyrie, Louis du Saillant, Marquis de, 257.
-Laurens, Henry, 79, 80, 138.
-Laurens, Col. John, 138, 145, 161, 165.
-Ledyard, John, 172.
-Lee, Arthur, 39, 42, 43.
-Lee, Gen. Charles, 85, 108-111.
-Lee, Gen. "Lighthorse Harry," 167.
-Leszczynska, Marie, 9.
-Levasseur, Col. A., 260, 271-273, 275.
-Lincoln, Gen. Benjamin, 166.
-Louis XIV of France, 13, 183.
-Louis XV of France, 5, 6, 9, 12, 13, 19-22, 25, 30, 183.
-Louis XVI of France:
- Lacks confidence, 21, 30, 194.
- Orders Lafayette's arrest, 47.
- Receives American commissioners, 101.
- Letter to, from Congress, 119.
- Interviews with Lafayette, 124, 128, 177, 214.
- Makes Lafayette marshal of France, 171.
- Talk with Richelieu, 183.
- Convenes Assembly of Notables, 185.
- Opens States General, 191.
- Contests with National Assembly, 193-196.
- Cheered and attacked, 197, 203-205.
- Attempt to escape, 213, 214.
- Signs Constitution, 215.
- Last weeks of reign, 217-219.
- Death of, 236.
- Mentioned, 32, 34, 36, 39, 52, 188, 189, 198, 201-206, 216,
- 224, 228, 280-281.
-Louis XVIII of France, 30, 276, 280-282.
-Louis Philippe (Philippe Égalité), 285-288, 291.
-Lovell, James, 64-67.
-Luckner, General, 217.
-
-M
-
-Madison, James, 270.
-Magaw, William, 267.
-Marat, Achille, 265.
-Marat, Jean Paul, 206, 207, 213.
-Marie Antoinette:
- Character, 21, 192, 202, 278.
- Court of, 29, 30, 101, 169, 170, 191.
- Admires Franklin, 42.
- Opposes visit of Louis to Paris, 197.
- Attacked at Versailles, 203-205.
- At fête of Federation, 211.
- Name coupled with Lafayette's, 213.
- Refuses Lafayette's help, 219.
- Arrest of, 219.
-Marmontel, Jean Frangois, 178.
-Martin, Dubois, 41, 265.
-Maubourg, Charles Latour, 248.
-Maubourg, Latour, 223, 224, 230, 235, 242, 245, 247, 251, 252, 257.
-Maurepas, Jean F. P., Comte de, 30, 31, 50, 82, 125.
-Mauroy, Vicomte de, 51, 52, 65.
-Mesmer, Friedrich Anton, 176, 177.
-Mirabeau, Gabriel Honors Riquetti, Comte du, 194, 195, 202, 213, 219, 254.
-Monroe, James, 238, 259, 270, 271.
-Morgan, Gen. Daniel, 84.
-Morris, Gouverneur, 64, 201, 213, 218, 227, 237, 248.
-Morrolet, Abbé, 178.
-
-N
-
-Necker, Jacques, 186, 187, 227.
-Noailles, Louis de, 15-17, 29, 237, 239, 257.
-Noailles, Madame de, 237, 239, 257.
-Noailles, Marquis de, ambassador to England, 43, 47.
-Noailles, Vicomte de, 17, 29, 39, 40, 45, 136, 145, 195, 198.
-
-O
-
-O'Hara, Gen. James, 166.
-Orléans, Louis Philippe Joseph, Duc d', 203, 205.
-
-P
-
-Pétion, Jerôme, 216.
-Phillips, Gen. William, 149-154.
-Pierce, Franklin, 271.
-Polignac, Prince de, 284.
-Pontonnier, Félix, 235, 244, 247, 254.
-Pulaski, Count Casimir, 81, 265.
-Pusy, Bureaux de, 223, 230, 235, 242-244, 247, 251, 252.
-
-R
-
-Rawdon, Francis, Marquis of Hastings, 44, 149.
-Raynal, Abbé, 81.
-Richelieu, Cardinal, 3.
-Richelieu, Maréchal Louis F. A. du Plessis, Duc de, 170, 183, 184.
-Rivière, Comte de la, 9, 14.
-Robespierre, Maximilian, M. I., 218, 238.
-Rochambeau, Col. Donatien M. J. de V., Vicomte de, 137, 161.
-Rochambeau, Jean Baptiste D. de V., Comte de, 133-137, 141, 161, 162, 166, 167, 216.
-Romeuf, Louis, 223, 247.
-Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 11.
-
-S
-
-Saint-Germain, Claude Louis, Comte de, 101.
-Saint-Simon, Gen. Claude Henri, Comte de, 163.
-Schuyler, Gen. Philip, 84, 97, 98, 108.
-Scott, Gen. Winfield, 266.
-Ségur, Louis Philippe, Comte de, 27, 30, 32, 39, 40, 45, 162, 171, 288.
-Ségur, Philippe Henri, Marquis de, 171, 246.
-Sheridan, Richard Brinsley Butler, 227.
-Simcoe, Col. John G., 153.
-Staël, Madame de, 227, 294, 297.
-Sterling, Lord, 79.
-Steuben, Gen. Friedrich W. A. H. F., Baron von, 100, 101, 146, 152, 154, 157.
-Stormont, Lord, 36.
-Sullivan, Gen. John, 79, 115, 118, 119.
-Sumner, Charles, 279.
-
-T
-
-Tarleton, Gen. Sir Banastre, 156, 227.
-Taylor, Zachary, 264, 271.
-Temay, Admiral, 133, 134, 141.
-Tessé, Madame de, 241, 248, 249.
-Thiébault, General, 211.
-Tilghman, Col. Tench, 167, 168.
-Tourgot, Austrian Prime Minister, 245-247.
-
-V
-
-Vergennes, Charles Gravier, Comte de, 52, 127, 128, 145, 171.
-Viomenil, Baron Charles J. H. du H., 165.
-Voltaire, François Marie Arouet, 22, 25.
-
-W
-
-Washington, George:
- Friendship for Lafayette, 71, 75, 91, 97, 119-121, 146, 176-179.
- His military skill, 72-74.
- Battle of the Brandywine, 78, 79.
- Sends his surgeon to Lafayette, 79.
- Battle of Germantown, 82.
- Conway Cabal, 84, 85, 91, 92, 94-96.
- Recommends Lafayette to Congress, 87.
- Orders cheers for King of France, 102.
- At Monmouth, 109-112.
- Intercourse with French allies, 114, 118, 135-138, 144.
- Meeting with Lafayette, 130.
- Threatens New York, 134.
- Visits West Point, 139-143.
- Letters to Lafayette, 146, 161, 251.
- Orders Lafayette back to Virginia, 149, 150.
- Takes his own army to Virginia, 161-164.
- Siege and surrender of Yorktown, 164-167.
- Visits French admiral, 168.
- Kindness to George Lafayette, 249-250.
- Mentioned: 33, 35, 42, 86, 100, 105, 114, 125, 127, 135, 137, 149,
- 160, 163-167, 170, 176-178, 181, 182, 200, 201, 227, 249-251, 264,
- 274, 279, 293.
-Washington, Martha, 177, 178.
-Washington, Mary, 148.
-Wayne, Gen. Anthony, 109, 131, 150, 154-156, 159, 162-164.
-Webster, Daniel, 268.
-Wilberforce, William, 227.
-Woodford, Gen. William, 83.
-
-Y
-
-York, Frederick Augustus, Duke of 181.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Boys' Life of Lafayette, by Helen Nicolay
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boys' Life of Lafayette, by Helen Nicolay
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Boys' Life of Lafayette
-
-Author: Helen Nicolay
-
-Release Date: October 16, 2015 [EBook #50232]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOYS' LIFE OF LAFAYETTE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Madeleine Fournier. Images from the Internet Archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="cover">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-<h1>THE BOYS' LIFE OF LAFAYETTE</h1>
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterp">
-
-<a name="img010" id="img010"></a>
-<img src="images/p010.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE From an engraving by Jones</p>
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<h1>The Boys' Life of
-LAFAYETTE</h1>
-
-<p class="author">by<br /><br />
-Helen Nicolay</p>
-
-<p class="edition">Illustrated</p>
-
-<p class="editor">Harper &amp; Brothers Publishers<br /><br />
-New York and London</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-
-<div class="toc">
-
-<ol class="oln">
-<li><a href="#Preface">Preface</a></li>
-</ol>
-<ol>
-<li><a href="#chap_I">Warriors and Wild Beasts</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_II">Educating a Marquis</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_III">A New King</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_IV">An Unruly Courtier</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_V">Leading a Double Life</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_VI">A Sea-turn</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_VII">An American Pilgrimage</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_VIII">An Astonishing Reception</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_IX">Proving Himself a Soldier</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_X">Letters</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XI">A Fool's Errand</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XII">Farce and Treachery</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XIII">A Liaison Officer</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XIV">Near-mutiny and near-imprisonment</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XV">Help&mdash;and Disappointment</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XVI">Black Treachery</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XVII">Preparing for the Last Act</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XVIII">Yorktown</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XIX">"The Wine of Honor"</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XX">The Passing of Old France</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXI">The Tricolor</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXII">The Sans-culottes</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXIII">Popularity and Prison</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXIV">South Carolina to the Rescue!</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXV">Volunteers in Misfortune</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXVI">Exiles</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXVII">A Grateful Republic</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXVIII">Leave-takings</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXIX">President&mdash;or King-maker</a></li>
-<li><a href="#chap_XXX">Seventy-six Years Young</a></li>
-</ol>
-<ol class="oln">
-<li><a href="#chap_INDEX">Index</a></li>
-</ol>
-
-
-<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-<br />
-
-<ol class="oln">
-
-<li><a href="#img010">MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img027">THE MANOR-HOUSE OF CHAVANIAC</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img065">FRANKLIN AT THE FRENCH COURT</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img119a">WASHINGTON AND THE COMMITTEE OF CONGRESS AT VALLEY FORGE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img119b">VALLEY FORGE—WASHINGTON AND LAFAYETTE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img137">THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img223a">THE BASTILLE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img223b">SIEGE OF THE BASTILLE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img293a">MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img293b">MADAME DE LAFAYETTE</a></li>
-<li><a href="#img319">MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE AND LOUIS-PHILIPPE</a></li>
-</ol>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></p>
-
-<h1><a name="Preface" id="Preface"></a>PREFACE</h1>
-
-<p>This is no work of fiction. It is sober history;
-yet if the bare facts it tells were set forth without
-the connecting links, its preface might be made to
-look like the plot of a dime novel.</p>
-
-<p>It is the story of a poor boy who inherited great
-wealth; who ran away from home to fight for liberty
-and glory; who became a major-general before he
-was twenty years old; who knew every nook and
-corner of the palace at Versailles, yet was the blood-brother
-of American Indians; who tried vainly to
-save the lives of his king and queen; who was in
-favor of law, yet remained a rebel to the end of his
-days; who suffered an unjust imprisonment which
-has well been called "a night five years long"; who
-was twice practically Dictator of France; and who,
-in his old age, was called upon to make a great
-decision.</p>
-
-<p>But it is no work of fiction. It is only the biography
-of a French gentleman named Lafayette.</p>
-
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></p>
-<h1>THE BOYS' LIFE OF
-LAFAYETTE</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2><a name="chap_I" id="chap_I"></a>I<br />
-
-WARRIORS AND WILD BEASTS</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>"The Lafayettes die young, but die fighting,"
-was a saying in that part of France where they
-had been people of consequence for seven hundred
-years before the most famous of them came into the
-world. The family name was Motier, but, after the
-custom of the time, they were better known by the
-name of their estate, La Fayette, in Auvergne, a
-region which had been called the French Siberia.
-Although situated in central southern France, fully
-three hundred and fifty miles from Paris, it is a
-high wind-swept country of plains and cone-shaped
-hills, among whose rugged summits storms break
-to send destruction rushing down into the valleys.
-Unexpected, fertile, sheltered spots are to be found
-among these same hills, but on the whole it is not
-a gentle nor a smiling land.</p>
-
-<p>The history of France during the Middle Ages
-bears not a little resemblance to this region of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>Auvergne, so full of sharp contrasts, often of disaster.
-Through all the turbulent centuries the men of the
-house of Lafayette bore their part, fighting gallantly
-for prince and king. Family tradition abounded in
-stories telling how they had taken part in every war
-since old Pons Motier de Lafayette, the Crusader,
-fought at Acre, in Palestine, in 1250. Jean fell at
-Poictiers in 1356. There was a Claude&mdash;exception
-to the rule that they died young&mdash;who took part in
-sixty-five sieges and no end of pitched battles.
-Though most of them fought on land, there was an
-occasional sailor to relieve the monotony; notably
-a vice-admiral of the reign of Francis First, who
-held joint command with Andrea Doria when that
-soldier of fortune went to the relief of Marseilles,
-and who sank or burned four Spanish galleons in
-the naval battle at the mouth of the Var.</p>
-
-<p>But the Lafayette who occupied most space in
-family tradition and written history was Gilbert,
-who was head of the family about the time Columbus
-discovered America. It was he who took for motto
-upon his coat of arms the words, "<i>Cur non?</i>" "Why
-not?" and by energetic deeds satisfactorily answered
-his own question. "Seneschal of the Bourbonnaise,"
-"Lieutenant-General," "Governor of Dauphigny,"
-and "Marshal of France" were a few of the titles
-and honors he gathered in the course of a long life,
-for he was another exception to the family rule.
-He was eighty-two before he passed away, ready to
-fight to the last. Although it is not true that he
-slew the English Duke of Clarence with his own
-hands at the battle of Baugé, it is true that he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>fought under the banner of Joan of Arc at Orléans,
-and that he had many adventures on many fields.
-When there was no foreign enemy to battle against,
-he worked hard to subdue the bandits who infested
-France and made travel on the highroads more exciting
-than agreeable to timid souls in the reign of
-Charles VII.</p>
-
-<p>In time the Motiers de Lafayette divided into two
-branches, the elder keeping the estate and name and
-most of the glory; the younger, known as the Motiers
-of Champetières, enjoying only local renown. The
-women of the family also made a place for themselves
-in history. One, who had beauty, had also
-courage and wit to oppose the great Cardinal Richelieu
-himself. Another, less known in politics than
-in literature, though she tried her hand at both,
-became famous as a novelist. It was her grand-daughter
-who inherited part of the property at a
-time when there were no more men of the elder
-branch to carry on the name. In order that it might
-not die out, she arranged to have the estates pass
-back to the younger branch, which in time inherited
-the title also.</p>
-
-<p>The Lafayettes went on fighting and losing their
-lives early in battle. Thus it happened that a baby
-born to a young widow in the grim old manor-house
-of Chavaniac on the 6th of September, 1757, was
-the last male representative of his race, a marquis
-from the hour of his birth. His father had been
-made Chevalier of the Order of Saint-Louis and
-Colonel of Grenadiers at the early age of twenty-two,
-and fell before he was twenty-five, leading his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>men in an obscure engagement of the Seven Years'
-War. This was about a month before his son was
-born. His family believed that the gallant colonel's
-life was sacrificed by the recklessness of his commanding
-officer.</p>
-
-<p>According to the old parish register, still preserved,
-"The very high and puissant gentleman, Monseigneur
-Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert Dumotier
-de Lafayette, the lawful son of the very high
-and 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," was baptized in the little parish church of
-Chavaniac twenty-four hours after his birth. Besides
-this terrifying name and the title, all the
-traditions and responsibilities of both branches of
-the family descended upon his infant shoulders.
-Being such a scrap of a baby, however, he was
-mercifully ignorant of responsibilities and ancient
-names. The one given him in baptism was shortened
-for daily use to Gilbert, the name of the
-old Marshal of France; but a time came when it was
-convenient to have a number, rightfully his, from
-which to choose. For his signature "La Fayette"
-covered the whole ground.</p>
-
-<p>His only near relatives were his young mother, his
-grandmother (a stately lady of strong character),
-and two aunts, sisters of his dead father, who came
-to live at Chavaniac. It was by this little group of
-aristocratic Frenchwomen that the champion of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>liberty was brought up during those early years
-when character is formed. That he did not become
-hopelessly spoiled speaks well for his disposition and
-their self-control. He was not a strong baby, and
-they must have spent many anxious hours bending
-over him as he lay asleep, however much they concealed
-their interest at other times for fear of doing
-him moral harm.</p>
-
-<p>Until he was eleven they all lived together in the
-gloomy old château where he was born. This has
-been described as "great and rather heavy." It
-had been fortified in the fourteenth century. Two
-round towers with steep, pointed roofs flanked it
-on the right and left. Across its front high French
-windows let in light to the upper floors. From them
-there was a far-reaching view over plain and river,
-and steep hills dotted with clumps of trees. But
-loopholes on each side of an inhospitable narrow
-doorway told of a time when its situation had been
-more prized for defense than for mere beauty of
-scenery. It had a dungeon and other grim conveniences
-of life in the Middle Ages, which must have
-stamped themselves deep on the mind of an impressionable
-child. The castles of Wissac and
-Saint-Romain, of which the boy was also lord, could
-be seen higher up among the hills. There were
-glimpses, too, of peasant homes, but these were
-neither neat nor prosperous. Bad laws, and abuse
-of law that had been going on for centuries, had
-brought France to a point where a few people were
-growing inordinately rich at the expense of all the
-rest. The king suffered from this as well as the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>peasants. The country was overrun by an army of
-tax-collectors, one for every one hundred and thirty
-souls in France, each of them bent on giving up
-as little as possible of the money he collected. To
-curry favor with the great nobles, who were more
-powerful than the king himself, their property was
-not taxed so heavily as it should have been, while
-poorer people, especially the peasants, were robbed
-to make up the difference. "The people of our country
-live in misery; they have neither furniture nor
-beds; during part of the year the most of them have
-no nourishment except bread made of oats and barley,
-and even this they must snatch from their own
-mouths and those of their children in order to pay
-the taxes." That was written about this very region
-of Auvergne a few years before Lafayette was born.
-In self-defense the peasants made their homes look
-even more wretched than they really were. On occasion,
-when convinced that the stranger knocking
-at their door was no spy, they could bring a wheaten
-loaf and a bottle of wine from their secret store and
-do the honors most hospitably.</p>
-
-<p>The La Fayettes were not rich, though they were
-the great people of their neighborhood. Only one
-Frenchman in a hundred belonged to the nobility,
-but that one received more consideration than all
-the other ninety-nine combined. When the boy
-marquis rode out with his mother, or that stately
-lady his grandmother, the peasants in the little village
-which had grown up around the walls of Chavaniac,
-clinging to it for protection, bowed down as
-though the child were a sovereign. Some of them
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>knelt in the dust as the coach passed by. Truly it
-was strange soil for the growth of democratic ideas.
-It was well for the boy's soul that in spite of lands
-and honor the household was of necessity a frugal
-one. The wide acres were unproductive. Men who
-had fought so often and so well for their princes
-had found little leisure to gather wealth for their
-children. Besides, it was thought out of the question
-for a nobleman to engage in gainful pursuits.
-The wealth such men enjoyed came through favor
-at court; and in this household of women there
-was no longer any one able to render the kind of
-service likely to be noticed and rewarded by a
-king.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-<a name="img027" id="img027"></a><img src="images/p027.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE MANOR-HOUSE OF CHAVANIAC<br />
-Birthplace of Lafayette</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>So the lad grew from babyhood in an atmosphere
-of much ceremony and very little luxury. On the
-whole, his was a happy childhood, though by no
-means gay. He loved the women who cherished
-him so devotedly. In his <i>Memoirs</i>, written late in
-life, he calls them "tender and venerated relatives."
-They looked forward to the day when in his turn
-he should become a soldier, dreading it, as women
-will, but accepting it, as such women do, in the
-spirit of <i>noblesse oblige</i>, believing it the one possible
-calling for a young man of his station. To
-prepare him for it he was trained in manly exercises,
-by means of which he outgrew the delicacy
-of his earliest years and became tall and strong for
-his age. He was trained also in horsemanship, to
-which he took kindly, for he loved all spirited animals.
-In books, to which he did not object, though
-he was never wholly a scholar, he followed such
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>studies as could be taught him by the kindly Abbé
-Feyon, his tutor.</p>
-
-<p>On his rides, when he met the ragged, threadbare
-people who lived among the hills, they saluted him
-and looked upon him almost with a sense of ownership.
-Was he not one of their Lafayettes who had
-been fighting and dying gallantly for hundreds of
-years? As for him, his friendly, boyish eyes looked
-a little deeper through their rags into their sterling
-peasant hearts than either he or they realized. In
-the old manor-house his day-dreams were all of
-"riding over the world in search of reputation,"
-he tells us; a reputation to be won by doing gallant
-deeds. "You ask me," we read in his <i>Memoirs</i>, "at
-what time I felt the earliest longings for glory and
-liberty. I cannot recall anything earlier than my
-enthusiasm for tales of heroism. At the age of
-eight my heart beat fast at thought of a hyena
-which had done some damage and made even more
-noise in the neighborhood. The hope of meeting
-that beast animated all my excursions." Had the
-encounter taken place, it might have been thrilling
-in the extreme. It might even have deprived history
-of a bright page; for it was nothing less than
-hunger which drove such beasts out of the woods
-in winter to make raids upon lonely farms&mdash;even to
-terrify villagers at the very gates of Chavaniac.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_II" id="chap_II"></a>II<br />
-
-EDUCATING A MARQUIS</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The first period of Gilbert's life came to an end
-when he was eleven years old. His mother was
-by no means ignorant of the ways of the world
-and she had powerful relatives at court. She realized
-how much they could do to advance her boy's
-career by speaking an occasional word in his behalf;
-and also how much truth there is in the old saying
-"Out of sight, out of mind." They might easily
-forget all about her and her boy if they remained
-hidden in the provinces. So they went up to Paris
-together, and she had herself presented at court
-and took up her residence in the French capital,
-while Gilbert became a student at the Collège Du
-Plessis, a favorite school for sons of French noblemen.
-His mother's uncle, the Comte de la Rivière,
-entered his name upon the army lists as member of
-a regiment of Black Mousquetaires, to secure him
-the benefit of early promotion. He was enrolled, too,
-among the pages of Marie Leszczynska, the Polish
-wife of King Louis XV, but his duties, as page and
-soldier, were merely nominal. He does not say a
-word about being page in his <i>Memoirs</i>. Of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>regiment he merely says that it served to get him
-excused from classes when there was to be a parade.</p>
-
-<p>He remained three years at Du Plessis. He found
-studying according to rule decidedly irksome, and
-very different from the solitary lessons at Chavaniac,
-where the few rules in force had been made
-for his benefit, if not for his convenience. He tells
-us that he was "distracted from study only by the
-desire to study without restraint," and that such
-success as he gained was "inspired by a desire for
-glory and troubled by the desire for liberty." Sometimes
-the latter triumphed. It amused him, when
-he was old, to recall how, being ordered to write an
-essay on "the perfect steed," he sacrificed a good
-mark and the praise of his teachers to the pleasure
-of describing a spirited horse that threw his rider at
-the very sight of a whip.</p>
-
-<p>The Collège Du Plessis must have been almost
-like a monastery. Each boy had a stuffy little cell
-into which he was locked at night. No member of
-a student's family might cross the threshold, and
-the many careful rules for health and diet were
-quite the opposite of those now practised. This
-period of Lafayette's school-days was a time when
-men's ideas on a variety of subjects were undergoing
-vast change. The old notion that learning was
-something to be jealously guarded and made as
-difficult and disagreeable as possible died hard. It
-is true that the good Fénelon, who believed in teaching
-children to read from books printed in French
-instead of in Latin, and who thought it could do
-them no harm if the books were "well bound and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>gilded on the edge," had gone to his reward half a
-century before; but he had been writing about the
-education of girls! When Lafayette was only five
-years old one Jean Jacques Rousseau had published
-a fantastic story called <i>Émile</i>, which was nothing in
-the world but a treatise on education in disguise.
-In this he objected to the doctrine of original sin,
-holding that children were not born bad; and he
-reasoned that they did not learn better nor more
-quickly for having knowledge beaten into them with
-rods. But this man Rousseau was looked upon as an
-infidel and a dangerous character. Probably at Du
-Plessis the discipline and course of study belonged
-to the old order of things, though there were concessions
-in the way of teaching the young gentlemen
-manners and poetry and polite letter-writing, which
-they would need later in their fashionable life at
-court. History as taught them was hopelessly tangled
-up in heraldry, being all about the coats of arms
-and the quarrels of nobles in France and neighboring
-countries. When something about justice and liberty
-and the rights of the people did creep into the
-history lesson the tall young student from Auvergne
-fell upon it with avidity. Perhaps it was because of
-such bits scattered through the pages of Roman
-authors that he learned considerable Latin, and
-learned it well enough to remember it forty years
-later, when he found it useful to piece out his ignorance
-of German in talking with his Austrian
-jailers.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of queer notions about hygiene, like those
-which bade him shut out fresh air from his room at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>night and avoid the risk of eating fresh fruit, he grew
-in body as well as in mind during the years at
-Du Plessis, and he had almost reached his man's
-height of five feet eleven inches, when one day in
-1770 a messenger came to the college, bringing the
-news that his mother had just died. A very few
-days later her death was followed by that of her
-father, who was wealthy and had made the boy
-his heir. Thus, almost within a week, he found himself
-infinitely poorer than he had ever been before,
-yet very rich, deprived of those dearest to him and
-in possession of a large fortune.</p>
-
-<p>People began to take a sudden lively interest in
-him. The son of a young widow studying in the
-Collège Du Plessis was of consequence only to himself
-and his mother. But the young Marquis de Lafayette,
-of such old and excellent family, such good
-disposition, such a record in his studies, such a very
-large income&mdash;above all, a generous young man with
-no near relatives to give meddling advice about how
-he should spend his money, became fair prey for all
-the fortune-hunters prowling around the corrupt
-court of old Louis XV.</p>
-
-<p>These were many. The king was bored as well
-as old. His days were filled with a succession of
-tiresome ceremonies. A crowd of bowing courtiers
-was admitted to his bedroom before he got up in
-the morning. Crowds attended him at every turn,
-even assisting in his toilet at night. Frederick the
-Great had said, "If I were king of France, the first
-thing I would do would be to appoint another king
-to hold court in my place"! But indolent old Louis
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>had not the energy even to break down customs which
-had come to him from the days of kings long dead.
-"He cared for nothing in this life except to hunt,
-and feared nothing in the life to come except hell."
-When not hunting, his one desire was to be let alone
-to pursue whatever evil fancy entered his brain.</p>
-
-<p>The people at court had two desires&mdash;to flatter the
-king and to get money. The first was the surest
-means to the second. Everybody, good and bad,
-seemed in need of money, for the few rich nobles had
-set a style of living which not even the king could
-afford to follow. It was all part of the same tangle,
-the result of accidents and crimes and carelessness
-extending through many reigns, which had brought
-about ever-increasing visits of the tax-collectors and
-reduced the peasants to starvation. One after another
-important concessions had been given away
-as a mark of royal favor, or else had been sold
-outright. A clever man in the reign of Louis XIV
-had remarked that whenever his Majesty created an
-office the Lord supplied a fool to buy it. In the
-reign of his grandson, Louis XV, things were even
-worse. A high-sounding official title, carrying with
-it a merely nominal duty and some privilege that
-might be turned into coin, was the elegant way of
-overcoming financial difficulty. Even the wax candles
-burned in the sconces at Versailles were sold for
-the benefit of the official who had charge of their
-lighting. He saw to it that plenty of candles were
-lighted, and that none of them burned too long before
-going to swell his income. What the great nobles did
-lesser ones imitated; and so on, down a long line.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>No wonder that young Lafayette, having inherited
-his fortune, became suddenly interesting.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, not everybody was corrupt, even at
-court. There were people who could not possibly be
-classed as fortune-hunters. Even to these the fact
-that the young heir was tall and silent and awkward,
-not especially popular at school, and not likely
-to shine in a society whose standards were those
-of dancing-school manners and lively wit, did not
-weigh for a moment against the solid attraction of his
-wealth. To fathers and mothers of marriageable
-daughters both his moral and material qualifications
-appealed. He was barely fourteen years old when
-proposals of marriage began to be made in the careful
-French way, which assumes that matrimony is an
-affair to be arranged between guardians, instead of
-being left to the haphazard whim of young people.
-An early letter of Lafayette's written about this
-time was partly upon this subject. It might have
-been penned by a world-wise man of thirty. The
-Comte de la Rivière appears to have been the person
-to whom these proposals were first addressed.
-He, and possibly the Abbé Feyon, discussed them
-with Lafayette in a business-like way; and the young
-man, not being in love, either with a maid or with
-the idea of matrimony, listened without enthusiasm,
-suggesting that better matches might be found among
-the beauties of Auvergne. New duties and surroundings
-engrossed him. He had left Du Plessis for the
-Military Academy at Versailles, where there was
-more army and less cloister in his training; where he
-spent part of his money upon fine horses and lent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>them generously to friends; and where, for amusement
-in his hours of leisure, he could watch the
-pageant of court life unrolling at the very gates of
-the academy. Matrimony could wait.</p>
-
-<p>Among those more interested in providing a wife
-for him than he was in finding one for himself was
-the lively Duc d'Ayen, a rich and important nobleman,
-the father of five daughters. The eldest of these
-was fully a year younger than Lafayette, while the
-others descended toward babyhood like a flight of
-steps. Even in that day of youthful marriages it
-seemed early to begin picking out husbands for them.
-But there were five, and the duke felt he could not
-begin better than by securing this long-limbed boy
-for a son-in-law. He suggested either his eldest
-daughter, Louise, or the second child, Adrienne, then
-barely twelve, as a future Marquise de Lafayette.
-He did not care which was chosen, but of course it
-must be one of the older girls, since the bridegroom
-would have to wait too long for the others to grow
-up. The match was entirely suitable, and was taken
-under favorable consideration by the bridegroom's
-family; but when it occurred to the duke to mention
-the matter to his wife, he found opposition where it
-was least expected. Madame d'Ayen absolutely refused
-her consent. These two were quite apt to hold
-different views. The husband liked the luxury of
-the court and chuckled over its shams. His wife,
-on the contrary, was of a most serious turn of mind
-and had very little sense of humor. The frivolities
-of court life really shocked her. She looked upon
-riches as a burden, and fulfilled the social duties of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>her position only under protest as part of that burden.
-The one real joy of her life lay in educating her daughters.
-She studied the needs of their differing natures.
-She talked with them much more freely than was
-then the custom, and did all in her power to make
-of them women who could live nobly at court and
-die bravely when and wherever their time came.</p>
-
-<p>She had no fault to find with young Lafayette.
-Her opposition was a matter of theory and just a
-little selfish, for her married life had not been happy
-enough to make her anxious to see her girls become
-wives of even the best young men. As for this
-Motier lad, she thought him particularly open to
-temptation because of his youth and loneliness and
-great wealth. He had lacked the benefit of a father's
-training. So, for that matter, had her own children.
-Their father was almost always away from home.</p>
-
-<p>The duke's airy manner hid a persistent spirit,
-and, in spite of his worldliness, he esteemed the good
-character of the boy. The discussion lasted almost
-a year and developed into the most serious quarrel
-of their married life. No wonder, under the circumstances,
-that the duke did not, as his daughter
-expressed it, "like his home." The little girls
-knew something was wrong, and shared their
-mother's unhappiness without guessing the cause.
-The duke's acquaintances, on the other hand, to
-whom the cause was no secret, looked upon the contest
-of wills as a comedy staged for their benefit.
-One of them said in his hearing that no woman of
-Madame d'Ayen's strength of character, who had
-gone so far in refusal, would ever consent to the marriage.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>At this the duke warmly rushed to the defense
-of his wife and answered that a woman of her
-character, once convinced that she was wrong, would
-give in completely and utterly.</p>
-
-<p>That was exactly what happened. After months
-of critical observation she found herself liking
-Lafayette better and better. The duke assured her
-that the marriage need not take place for two
-years, and that meantime the young man should
-continue his studies. She gave her consent and
-took the motherless boy from that moment into her
-heart; while the little girls, sensitive to the home
-atmosphere, felt the joy of reconciliation without
-even yet knowing how nearly it concerned them.</p>
-
-<p>It was decided among the elders that Adrienne,
-the second daughter, was to become Madame
-Lafayette, because the young Vicomte de Noailles,
-a cousin to whom Louise had been partial from
-babyhood, had made formal proposals for her hand.
-This cousin was a friend and schoolfellow of Lafayette's,
-and during the next few months the youths
-were given the opportunity of meeting their future
-wives apparently by chance while out walking, and
-even under the roof of the duke; but for a year
-nothing was said to the girls about marriage. Their
-mother did not wish to have their minds distracted
-from their lessons or from that important event in
-the lives of Catholic maidens, their first communion.</p>
-
-<p>Two months before her marriage actually took
-place Louise was told that she was to be the bride
-of Noailles; and at the time of that wedding Adrienne
-was informed of the fate in store for her. She found
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>nothing whatever to question in this. It seemed
-altogether delightful, and far simpler than deciding
-about the state of her own soul. The truth was that
-her heart had already begun to feel that love for
-Gilbert de Motier which was to grow and become
-the controlling factor of her life. Girl-like, her head
-was just a little turned by the momentous news of
-her engagement. Her mother tried to allay her excitement,
-but she also took care to let Adrienne
-know how much she liked the young man and to
-repeat to her all the good things she had found out
-about him. And to her joy, Adrienne found that
-Lafayette felt for the elder lady "that filial affection"
-which also grew as the years went on.</p>
-
-<p>How he felt about marriage as the day approached
-we do not know; neither do we know the details of
-the wedding which must have been celebrated with
-some splendor on the 11th of April, 1774. The
-bride was not yet fifteen, the groom was sixteen.
-He was given leave of absence from his regiment,
-and the newly wedded pair took up their residence
-in the wonderful Paris home of Adrienne's family,
-the Hotel de Noailles. Although not far from the
-Tuileries, in the very heart of the city, it possessed
-a garden so large that a small hunt could be carried
-on in it, with dogs and all. John Adams is authority
-for this. He visited the Lafayettes there some time
-later, and found it unbelievably vast and splendid.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_III" id="chap_III"></a>III<br />
-
-A NEW KING</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Less than a month after their marriage these young
-people were dressed in black, as was all the rest
-of fashionable Paris. The gay spring season had
-been brought to a premature and agitated end by
-the news that the king lay dead of smallpox, the
-loathsome disease he most dreaded.</p>
-
-<p>Smallpox was distressingly common in those days
-before vaccination had been discovered; but courageous
-people protected themselves against it even then
-by deliberately contracting the disease from a mild
-case and allowing it to run its course under the best
-possible conditions. It was found to be much
-less deadly in this way, though the patients often
-became very ill, and it required real courage to submit
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>The old king had never been at all brave. He
-feared discomfort in this life almost as much as he
-dreaded hell in the next; so he had fled the disease
-instead of courting it, and in time it came to have
-special terrors for him. He had been riding through
-the April woods with a hunting party and had come
-upon a sad little funeral procession&mdash;a very humble
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>one. Always curious, he stopped the bearers and
-asked who they were carrying to the grave. "A
-young girl, your Majesty." The king's watery old
-eyes gleamed. "Of what did she die?" "Smallpox,
-Sire." In terrified anger the monarch bade them
-begone and bury the corpse deep; then he dismissed
-the hunt and returned to the palace. Two days
-later he was stricken. The disease ran its course
-with amazing virulence, as though taking revenge
-for his misspent life. Some of the courtiers fled from
-Versailles. Others, to whom the king's displeasure
-seemed a worse menace than smallpox, remained.
-His favorites tried to keep the truth from the public.
-Daily bulletins announced that he was getting better.
-When it was learned that he might die the people
-crowded the church of Ste.-Geneviève, the patron
-saint of Paris, kissing the reliquary and raising sobs
-and prayers for his recovery. When he died, on the
-10th of May, his body was hastily covered with
-quicklime and conveyed, by a little handful of attendants
-who remained faithful, to St.-Denis, where
-the kings of France lie buried. It was done without
-ceremony in the dead of night. Forty days later
-his bones were laid in the tomb of his ancestors with
-all possible funeral pomp. There was decorous
-official mourning for the customary length of time;
-but the old king had never been an inspiring figure
-and most of his subjects were secretly glad he was
-out of the way.</p>
-
-<p>During July and August of that year Lafayette
-was "in service" with the Black Mousquetaires.
-In September, when his period of active duty was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>over and he could do as he chose, he had himself
-exposed to smallpox, and he and his wife and mother-in-law
-shut themselves up in a house at Chaillon,
-hired for the occasion, where during his illness and
-convalescence Madame d'Ayen devoted herself to
-her new son night and day.</p>
-
-<p>Even while the rafters of Ste.-Geneviève were
-echoing to sobs and prayers for the old king's
-recovery, people whispered under their breath what
-they really thought of him; and by the time Lafayette
-and his wife could take their places in the world
-again Louis XV had been systematically forgotten.
-His grandson, the new king, was a well-meaning
-young man, only three years older than Lafayette.
-One of the king's intimates said that the chief
-trouble with Louis XVI was that he lacked self-confidence.
-Marie Antoinette, his queen, was fond
-of pleasure, and for four long years, ever since their
-marriage, they had been obliged to fill the difficult
-position of heirs apparent, hampered by all the restraints
-of royalty while enjoying precious few of its
-privileges. Like every one else, they were anxious
-to get the period of mourning well over and to see
-the real beginning of their reign, which promised to
-be long and prosperous. Nobody realized that the
-time had come when the sins and abuses of previous
-reigns must be paid for, and that the country was
-on the verge of one of the greatest revolutions of
-history.</p>
-
-<p>To outward appearance it was a time of hope.
-Population was increasing rapidly; inventions and
-new discoveries were being made every day. "More
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>truths concerning the external world were discovered
-in France during the latter half of the eighteenth
-century than during all preceding periods together,"
-says Buckle. Even in the lifetime of the old king
-it had been impossible to stem the tide of progress:
-what more natural than to believe these blessings
-would continue, now that his evil influence was
-removed?</p>
-
-<p>Not only had discoveries been made; they had
-been brought within the reach of more people than
-ever before. About the time Lafayette was born the
-first volume of a great book called the <i>Encyclopedia</i>
-had made its appearance in the French language,
-modeled after one already produced in England.
-Priests had denounced it; laws had been made
-ordering severe penalties for its use. But it was too
-valuable to be given up and volume after volume
-continued to appear. Voltaire wrote an audacious
-imaginary account of the way it was used in the
-palace. The king's favorite did not know how to
-mix her rouge; the king's ministers wanted to learn
-about gunpowder. The forbidden book was sent
-for. A procession of lackeys staggered into the
-room, bending under the weight of twenty huge
-volumes, and everybody found the information
-desired. The bit of audacity hid a great truth.
-The <i>Encyclopedia</i> had brought knowledge to the
-people and all were anxious to profit by it.</p>
-
-<p>"The people," however, were not considered by
-nobles who lived in palaces. Indeed, they were
-only beginning to consider themselves&mdash;beginning
-dimly to comprehend that their day was dawning.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>Two decades would have to pass before they were
-fully awake, but the scene was already being set for
-their great drama. Paris, the largest city in France,
-had increased in size one-third during the past
-twenty-five years. The old theory had been that too
-large a town was a public menace, both to health and
-to government. Nine times already in its history
-the limits of Paris had been fixed and had been outgrown.
-It now held between seven hundred thousand
-and eight hundred thousand souls. When
-viewed from the tower of Notre Dame it spread out
-ten or twelve miles in circumference, round as an
-orange, and cut into two nearly equal parts by the
-river Seine.</p>
-
-<p>"One is a stranger to one's neighbor in this vast
-place," a man wrote soon after this. "Sometimes
-one learns of his death only by receiving the invitation
-to his funeral." "Two celebrated men may live
-in this city twenty-five years and never meet."
-"So many chimneys send forth warmth and smoke
-that the north wind is tempered in passing over the
-town." Streets were so narrow and houses so high
-that dwellers on the lower floors "lived in obscurity";
-while elsewhere there were palaces like the great
-house belonging to the De Noailles family with its
-garden large enough to stage a small hunt. Such
-gardens were carefully walled away from the public.
-These walled-in gardens and the high, evil-smelling
-houses in which people lived "three hundred years
-behind the times," crowded together and hungry
-from birth to death, were equally prophetic of the
-awakening to come; for the improvements celebrated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>by this writer in describing old Paris were
-either of a kind to let light in upon the people or to
-make conditions more intolerable for them.</p>
-
-<p>Advertising signs no longer creaked from iron
-gibbets, threatening to tumble and crush the passers-by.
-Spurs as big as cartwheels and the huge gloves
-and giant boots which formerly proclaimed the
-business carried on under them had been banished
-or were now screwed securely to the walls, which
-gave the streets a clean-shaven appearance. The
-candle lanterns that used to splutter and drip and
-go out, leaving Paris in darkness, were replaced, on
-nights when the moon was off duty, by lamps
-burning "tripe-oil" and fitted with reflectors. By
-means of this brilliant improvement fashionable
-quarters were almost safe after nightfall, whereas in
-former years there had been danger of attack and
-robbery, even within pistol-shot of the grand home
-where Lafayette went to live after his marriage. In
-addition to the lights glowing steadily under their
-reflectors&mdash;one light to every seventy or one hundred
-inhabitants&mdash;there were many professional lantern-bearers
-whose business in life was escorting wayfarers
-to and from their homes. Paris after nightfall
-was atwinkle, for "to live by candle-light is a
-sign of opulence."</p>
-
-<p>There was a fire department, newly installed,
-ready to come on call, and, strange to say, "it cost
-absolutely nothing to be rescued." That, however,
-was the only cheap thing in Paris. "The poorer one
-is the more it costs to live!" was a cry that rose then,
-as now, in all its bitterness. With money anything
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>could be bought. Voltaire declared that a Roman
-general on the day of his triumph never approached
-the luxury to be found here. Wares came to the
-city from the ends of the earth, and Parisians
-invented new wares of their own. Somebody had
-contrived umbrellas like those used in the Orient,
-except that these folded up when not in use. Somebody
-else had invented the business of renting them
-at a charge of two liards to gallants crossing the
-Pont Neuf who wished to shield their complexions.
-There were little stations at each end of the bridge
-where the money could be paid or the umbrella
-given up. Even seasons of the year set no limit to
-extravagance in Paris. "A bouquet of violets in
-the dead of winter costs two louis (about nine
-dollars), and some women wear them!"</p>
-
-<p>Water was delivered daily to the tall houses, from
-carts, by a force of twenty thousand men, who carried
-it as high as the seventh floor for a trifle more than
-it cost to cross the Pont Neuf under the shade of an
-umbrella. Drivers sent their water-carts skidding
-over the slime, for the narrow, cobble-paved streets
-were black with slippery mud. Coaches and other
-vehicles swung around corners and dashed along at
-incredible speed, while pedestrians fled in every
-direction. There were no sidewalks and no zones of
-safety. The confusion was so great that dignified
-travel by sedan-chair had become well-nigh impossible.
-King Louis XV once said, "If I were chief
-of police I would forbid coaches"; but, being only
-King Louis, he had done nothing. Pedestrians were
-often run down; then there would be even greater
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>confusion for a few moments, but only the shortest
-possible halt to traffic. "When on the pavements
-of Paris it is easy to see that the people do not make
-the laws," said one who had suffered.</p>
-
-<p>These people who suffered in Paris at every turn
-were now beginning to find a cyclopedia of their own
-in another invention of comparatively recent date&mdash;the
-cafés, warmed and lighted, where even men who
-had not sous enough to satisfy their hunger might
-cheat their stomachs with a thimbleful of sour wine
-or a morsel of food, and sit for hours listening and
-pondering the talk of others who came and went.
-There was much talk, and in one part of Paris or
-another it touched upon every known subject.
-Each café had its specialty; politics in one, philosophy
-in another, science in a third. Men of the
-same cast of mind gravitated toward the same spot.
-Cafés had already become schools. Soon they
-were to become political clubs. It was a wonderful
-way to spread new ideas.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the cafés were very humble, some very
-expensive, but none were strictly fashionable. To
-be seen dining in such a place indicated that a man
-had no invitations to dinner, so the eighteen or
-twenty thousand fops who, curled and perfumed,
-went from house to house cared little for cafés.
-They ate like grasshoppers, through the welcome of
-one host on Monday and another on Tuesday, and
-so down the week, "knowing neither the price of
-meat nor of bread, and consuming not one-quarter
-of that which was set before them," while thousands
-went hungry&mdash;which is the reason that after a time
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>the men in the cafés rose and took a terrible revenge.
-Paris was by no means all France, but whatever
-Paris did and felt the other towns were doing also;
-and slowly but surely the passions animating them
-would make their way to the loneliest peasant hut
-on the remotest edge of the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, while the nobles in their gardens still
-dreamed pleasantly of the power that was passing
-from them, the people were slowly rousing from
-torpor to resentment. It is well to linger over these
-conditions in order to understand fully all that
-Lafayette's acts meant in the society in which he
-moved. He was not one of the twenty thousand
-fops, but he belonged to the fortunate class to whom
-every door seemed open during the early years of
-the new reign. His military duties were agreeable
-and light, he had plenty of money, a charming wife,
-powerful family connections, and he was admitted
-to the inmost circle at court. If he had longings to
-experiment with the democratic theories set forth
-by radical authors like Rousseau, even that was not
-forbidden him. Their writings had attracted much
-attention and had already brought about increased
-liberality of manners. While the court at Versailles
-and the city of Paris were very distinct, Paris
-being only a huge town near at hand, the distance
-between them was but fourteen miles, and it was
-quite possible for young men like Lafayette to go
-visiting, so to speak, in circles not their own. Lafayette's
-friend, the Comte de Ségur, has left a picture
-of life as the young men of their circle knew it.</p>
-
-<p>"Devoting all our time to society, <i>fêtes</i>, and pleasure,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>... we enjoyed at one and the same time all the
-advantages we had inherited from our ancient institutions,
-and all the liberty permitted by new fashions.
-The one ministered to our vanity, the other to our
-love of pleasure. In our castles, among our peasants,
-our guards, and our bailiffs, we still exercised
-some vestiges of our ancient feudal power. At
-court and in the city we enjoyed all the distinctions
-of birth. In camp our illustrious names alone were
-enough to raise us to superior command, while at
-the same time we were at perfect liberty to mix
-unhindered and without ostentation with all our
-co-citizens and thus to taste the pleasures of plebeian
-equality. The short years of our springtime of life
-rolled by in a series of illusions&mdash;a kind of well-being
-which could have been ours, I think, at no
-other age of the world."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_IV" id="chap_IV"></a>IV<br />
-
-AN UNRULY COURTIER</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>During the winter after Adrienne's marriage the
-Duchesse d'Ayen took her two daughters regularly
-to the balls given each week by the queen, and
-after the balls invited the friends of her sons-in-law
-to supper, in a pathetically conscientious effort to
-make the home of the De Noailles a more agreeable
-place for the husbands of her children than it had
-been for her own. Adrienne inherited much of her
-mother's seriousness, but she was young enough to
-enjoy dancing, and, feeling that duty as well as inclination
-smiled upon this life, she was very happy.
-In December of that year her first child was born, a
-daughter who was named Henriette.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette tells us in his <i>Memoirs</i> that he did not
-feel thoroughly at ease in the gay society Marie
-Antoinette drew about her. Nor did the queen
-altogether approve of him, because of his silence and
-an awkwardness which did not measure up to the
-standards of deportment she had set for this circle
-of intimate friends. "I was silent," he says, "because
-I did not hear anything which seemed worth
-repeating; and I certainly had no thoughts of my
-own worthy of being put into words." Some of his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>friends, who knew him better than the queen,
-realized that there was plenty of fire in him, in spite
-of his cold manner and slow speech. De Ségur was
-one of these, for at some period of his youth Lafayette,
-smitten with sudden and mistaken jealousy,
-had spent nearly an entire night trying to persuade
-De Ségur to fight a duel with him about a beauty
-for whom De Ségur did not care at all.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne's family, wishing to do their best by him,
-tried to secure a place for him in the household of
-the prince who afterward became Louis XVIII.
-Lafayette did not want to hurt their feelings; neither
-did he fancy himself in the rôle they had chosen for
-him, where he believed he would be forced to govern
-his actions by another man's opinions. He kept his
-own counsel,but, "in order to save his independence,"
-managed to have the prince overhear a remark
-which he made with the deliberate purpose of angering
-him. The office was of course given to some one
-else, and another bit of ill will went to swell the
-breezes blowing over the terraces at Versailles.</p>
-
-<p>There were bitter court factions. Friends of
-Louis XV had not relished seeing power slip out of
-their hands. The queen was an Austrian who
-never fully understood nor sympathized with the
-French. Neither her critics nor her partizans ever
-allowed themselves to forget her foreign birth.
-King Louis, not having confidence in himself, chose
-for his premier M. de Maurepas, who was over
-eighty, and should therefore have been a mine of
-wisdom and experience. Unfortunately, he was the
-wrong man; he was not universally respected, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>his white hairs crowned a pate that was not proof
-against the frivolities of society. The younger men
-were displeased. It was not customary to give
-young men positions of importance, but they were
-sure they could do quite as well as he. They had
-their café club also, a place called the Wooden
-Sword, where they discussed the most extravagant
-theories of new philosophy, reviled old customs,
-calling them "Gothic," their favorite term of reproach,
-and concocted schemes to amuse themselves
-and tease their elders. Having nothing serious to
-occupy them, they turned their attention to setting
-new fashions. A series of pageants and dances
-gave them excellent opportunity. The admiration
-they felt for themselves and one another in the romantic
-dress of the time of Henri IV made them
-resolve to adopt it and force it upon others for daily
-wear. That the capes and plumes and love-knots
-which became their slender figures so well made older
-and stouter men look ridiculous was perhaps part of
-their malicious intent.</p>
-
-<p>Age made common cause against them, and the
-youngsters went too far when they held a mock
-session of Parliament, one of those grave assemblages
-which had taken place in far-off days in
-France, but had been almost forgotten since. There
-was an increasing demand that the custom be revived,
-which was not relished by M. de Maurepas
-and his kind. When the old premier learned that a
-prince of the blood had played the role of President
-in this travesty, while Lafayette had been attorney-general
-and other sprigs of high family figured as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>counsel, barristers, and advocates, it was evident
-that a storm was brewing. De Ségur went straight
-to the king and told him the story in a way that
-made him laugh. This saved the participants from
-serious consequences, but it was agreed that such
-trifling must stop; and most of them were packed
-off to join their regiments.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's regiment was stationed at Metz, and
-he took his way there feeling much as he had felt
-when he wrote his school-boy essay on the "perfect
-steed." It was the most fortunate journey of his
-life, for at the end of it he met his great opportunity.
-The Duke of Gloucester, brother of the King of
-England, was traveling abroad. He came to Metz,
-and the military commander of the place, Comte de
-Broglie, gave a dinner in his honor to which he
-invited the chief officers of the garrison. It was
-not the only time that a dinner played an important
-part in Lafayette's career. Neither Lafayette's age
-nor his military rank quite entitled him to such an invitation;
-but the count had a kindly spot in his
-heart for young men. Besides, Adrienne Lafayette
-was a kinswoman of his, and he remembered that
-the father of this tall, silent lad had served under
-him in the Seven Years' War.</p>
-
-<p>The guest of honor was not the kind of loyal subject
-and brother who could speak no ill of his sovereign.
-In fact, he and King George were not on
-good terms. He had his own views about the
-troubles in America, and thought the king quite
-wrong in his attitude toward the Colonists. He had
-lately received letters, and at this dinner discussed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>them with the utmost frankness, explaining the point
-of view of the "insurgents" and expressing his belief
-that they would give England serious trouble. Possibly
-Lafayette had never heard of George Washington
-until that moment. Certainly he had never
-considered the continent of North America except
-as a vague and distant part of the earth's surface
-with which he could have no personal concern. Yet
-twice already the names of his family and of America
-had been linked. The old marshal who took <i>Cur
-non?</i> for his motto had lived when the voyage of
-Columbus had set the world ringing; and Gilbert
-de Motier, Lafayette's own father, had lost his life
-in the Seven Years' War, by which England won
-from France practically all the land she held in the
-New World.</p>
-
-<p>Slight and remote as these connections were, who
-can say that they did not unconsciously influence a
-spirit inclined toward liberty? The conversation of
-the Duke of Gloucester seemed to bring America
-from a great distance to within actual reach of
-Lafayette's hand. He hung upon every word. The
-prince may not have been altogether prudent in his
-remarks. It was an after-dinner conversation and
-in that day the English drank hard. Even so, the
-duke's indiscretions made the talk more interesting
-and, to Lafayette, more convincing. Every word
-spoken strengthened the belief that these American
-Colonists were brave men, well within their rights,
-fighting for a principle which would make the world
-better and happier. He realized with a thrill that
-men three thousand miles away were not content
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>with mere words, but were risking their lives at that
-very moment for the theories which philosophers
-had been preaching for a thousand years; the same
-theories that orators in six hundred Paris cafés had
-lately begun to declaim.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward he got permission to ask some of the
-questions with which his brain teemed; but long
-before the candles of that feast had burned down in
-their sockets his great resolution was made to "go
-to America and offer his services to a people struggling
-to be free." From that time on he could
-think of little else; but, as so often happens with
-quick and generous resolutions, the more he thought
-about it the more difficult it seemed to carry out.
-He had exulted at first that he was his own master
-with a fortune to dispose of as he chose. Then he
-remembered his wife and her family. He knew he
-could count upon her loyalty; but he was equally
-certain that he would meet determined opposition
-from the Duc d'Ayen and all his powerful connection,
-who had done their worldly best to make him
-a member of a prince's household.</p>
-
-<p>And disapproval of "the family" in France was
-not to be lightly regarded. No serious step could
-be undertaken by young people without their elders
-feeling it their solemn duty to give advice. Very
-likely the king and his ministers would also have
-something to say. "However," he wrote in his
-<i>Memoirs</i>, "I had confidence in myself, and dared
-adopt as device for my coat of arms the words <i>Cur
-non?</i> that they might serve me on occasion for
-encouragement, or by way of answer."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>He knew almost nothing about America, and, as
-soon as military duties permitted, asked leave to go
-to Paris to make further inquiries, opening his heart
-very frankly to the Comte de Broglie. It happened
-that the count had vivid dreams of his own about
-America&mdash;dreams which centered on nothing less
-than the hope that with proper hints and encouragement
-the rebellious colonies might call him (the
-Comte de Broglie, of wide military experience) to
-take supreme command of their armies and lead
-them to victory, instead of trusting them to the
-doubtful guidance of local talent in the person of this
-obscure Col. George Washington. But De Broglie
-was not minded to confide such things to the red-haired
-stripling who looked at him so pleadingly. He
-conscientiously tried to dissuade him. "My boy,"
-he said, "I saw your uncle die in the Italian wars.
-I witnessed your father's death.... I will not be
-accessory to the ruin of the only remaining branch
-of your family." But finding arguments made no
-impression, he gave him the coveted permission and
-also an introduction to a middle-aged Bavarian
-officer known as the Baron de Kalb. This man had
-made a voyage to America in the secret employment
-of the French government some years before, and he
-was even now acting as De Broglie's agent.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived in Paris, Lafayette found the town full of
-enthusiasm for the insurgents, or the Bostonians, as
-they were called. Already English whist had been
-abandoned for another game of cards known as <i>le
-Boston</i>, and soon the authorities might feel it
-necessary to forbid the wearing of a certain style of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>head-dress called "<i>aux insurgents</i>" and to prohibit
-talk about American rebels in the cafés. Secretly the
-ministers of Louis wished the audacious rebels well,
-being convinced that whatever vexed England served
-to advance the interests of France, but officially
-they were strictly neutral. When Lord Stormont,
-the British ambassador, complained that agents of
-the American government were shipping supplies
-from French ports, they made a great show of activity,
-asked American vessels to leave, and forbade trade
-in contraband articles; but they obligingly shut
-their eyes to the presence of Silas Deane, the American
-envoy, in Paris. Diplomatically speaking, he
-did not exist, since Louis had not yet received him;
-but everybody knew that people of distinction in all
-walks of life went secretly to his lodgings.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette knew not one word of English. Silas
-Deane knew little, if any, French, and it was De
-Kalb who acted as interpreter when the young
-nobleman went to call upon him. Liberty, like
-misery, brings about strange companionships. Three
-men more unlike could scarcely have been found.
-Although known as "Baron," Johann Kalb was a
-man of mystery who had in truth begun life as a
-butler and had won his place in the army through
-sheer merit. He was middle-aged, handsome, and
-grave. Silas Deane, the lawyer-merchant from Connecticut,
-was not only imperfectly equipped with
-French, his manners were so unpolished as to appear
-little short of repulsive. Lafayette's usual quiet
-was shaken by his new enthusiasm. His bearing,
-which seemed awkward at Versailles, was more
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>graceful than the Yankee envoy thought quite
-moral, or than the grave soldier of fortune had been
-able to achieve. And he was ridiculously young.
-Even he realized that. "In presenting my nineteen-year-old
-face to Mr. Deane," says the <i>Memoirs</i>, "I
-dwelt more on my zeal than on my experience; but
-I did make him comprehend that my departure
-would cause some little excitement and might influence
-others to take a similar step." He could
-make the family opposition count for something on
-his side!</p>
-
-<p>Whatever Silas Deane may have lacked in manner,
-his wits were not slow. He instantly saw the advantage
-of gaining such a convert to his cause. The
-two signed an agreement which was a rather remarkable
-document. On his part Silas Deane promised
-Lafayette the rank of major-general in the Continental
-Army. But hardened as Deane was to
-making lavish promises in the name of the Continental
-Congress, he knew that a major-general
-only nineteen years of age, who had never heard the
-sound of a hostile gun, would be received with
-question rather than with joy in America, so he
-added a few words explaining that Lafayette's
-"high birth, his connections, the great dignities held
-by his family at the 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." One would think Lafayette had been
-haggling, whereas quite the reverse appears to have
-been the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette wrote: "To the above conditions I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>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 for private salary,
-reserving to myself only the right to return to France
-whenever my family or the king shall recall me,"
-and signed his name. After which he left the house
-of the American commissioner feeling that nothing
-short of all the king's horses and all the king's men
-could turn him from his purpose.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_V" id="chap_V"></a>V<br />
-LEADING A DOUBLE LIFE</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette found his brother-in-law De Noailles
-and De Ségur in Paris, and, certain of being
-thoroughly understood by these two friends, confided
-his plan to them. As he expected, both
-expressed a wish to accompany him. The wish
-may not have been entirely unselfish. Many young
-officers in the French army were chafing at the inaction
-which ten years of peace had forced upon them,
-and this chance to distinguish themselves in war
-may have appealed to them at first even more
-strongly than the justice of the American cause. It
-certainly added to the appeal of justice in Lafayette's
-own case; but meetings with Silas Deane and
-his associates, Arthur Lee and Mr. Carmichael,
-above all, with Benjamin Franklin, who came to
-Paris about this time, soon altered interest to a
-warmer and less selfish feeling.</p>
-
-<p>These Americans, with their unfashionable clothes,
-their straightforward speech, and their simple bearing,
-with plenty of pride in it, presented the greatest
-possible contrast to the curled and powdered flatterers
-surrounding Louis XVI. To meet them was
-like being met by a breath of fresh, wholesome air.
-The young men who came under their influence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>fancied that Franklin might almost be a friend of
-Plato himself. "What added to our esteem, our
-confidence, and our admiration," wrote De Ségur,
-"were the good faith and simplicity with which the
-envoys, disdaining all diplomacy, told us of the frequent
-and oft-repeated reverses sustained by their
-militia, inexperienced as yet in the art of war."
-Merely as a sporting proposition it was a fine thing
-that they and their army were doing.</p>
-
-<p>De Ségur and De Noailles quietly entered into an
-agreement with the Americans, as Lafayette had
-done. So did others; and it became impossible to
-keep their plans secret. When the families of our
-three friends learned of their quixotic plan it was
-clear they would never consent. De Noailles played
-a bold card by applying directly to the War Office
-for permission to serve as a French officer in the
-American army, hoping in this way to match family
-opposition with official sanction, but the War Office
-refused. After that there was nothing to do but to
-submit, since they were not men of independent
-means like Lafayette, though both were older than
-he and held higher military rank. They were dependent
-upon allowances made them by their
-respective families, who thus had a very effective
-way of expressing disapproval. All they could do
-was to assure Lafayette of their sympathy and keep
-his secret, for they knew that the opposition which
-blocked them would only make him the more determined.
-The better to carry out his plan, however,
-he also pretended to listen to reason and to give up
-all thoughts of crossing the Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>De Kalb, meanwhile, almost succeeded in leaving
-France. But the French government decided that
-it would be a breach of neutrality to allow its officers
-to fight against England, and he was obliged to turn
-back. Knowing more about the secret hopes and
-plans of the Comte de Broglie than Lafayette knew,
-he proposed that they go together to consult him,
-and they spent several days at the count's country
-home. How much Lafayette learned about his
-host's American dreams is uncertain, nor does it
-make much difference in Lafayette's own story.
-The two elder men were quite willing to use his enthusiasm
-to further their own ends; but he had great
-need of their help. It was agreed that the voyage
-to America must on no account be given up, and
-that the best way would be for Lafayette to purchase
-and fit out a ship. This, however, was easier said
-than done. One cannot buy a ship as casually as a
-new pair of gloves.</p>
-
-<p>Not only was his family genuinely opposed and
-his government officially opposed to his going;
-England had spies in Paris. It was jestingly said
-that all the world passed at least once a day over the
-Pont Neuf, and men were supposed to be on watch
-there, to ascertain who had and who had not left
-the city. England, moreover, had agents at every
-seaport in northern France. But Bordeaux in the
-south seemed very far away in days of stage-coach
-travel, and consequently was not so well guarded.
-As luck would have it, the Comte de Broglie's secretary
-had a brother who knew all about ships and
-merchants in Bordeaux. He found a vessel which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>would do, though she was not very good. Her name
-could not be improved upon, for she was called <i>La
-Victoire</i>. Perhaps, like her new owner, she was able
-to choose one to fit the occasion. She was to cost
-112,000 francs, one-quarter down, and the rest
-within fifteen months of the date of delivery, which
-was fixed for the middle of March, 1777.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks before this time arrived very bad news had
-come from America. The report ran that Washington
-had lost practically everything. He had been
-defeated in the battles of Long Island and White
-Plains; New York was burned, and he and his troops,
-reduced now to a ragged mob of two or, at most,
-three thousand men, were in full retreat across New
-Jersey, pursued by thirty thousand British. It was
-well known that England was the most powerful
-military nation of Europe and that, not content with
-her own forces, she was hiring regiments of Hessians
-to send overseas. Clearly the triumph of such numbers
-must come speedily. All society, from Marie
-Antoinette down, admired the sturdy, independent
-Franklin, with his baggy coat and his homely wit.
-Portraits of him in his coonskin cap were to be seen
-in every home. He was a wizard who had done
-things with lightning no other mortal had done
-before, but even he could not bring success to a
-hopeless cause.</p>
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-<a name="img065" id="img065"></a>
-<img src="images/p065.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">FRANKLIN AT THE FRENCH COURT<br />
-All society, from Marie Antoinette down, admired the sturdy, independent Franklin, who was always a welcome guest at court</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>The prospect must have appeared black indeed to
-the envoys themselves. Honorable men that they
-were, they felt in duty bound to explain the changed
-conditions to Lafayette, and not to allow him to
-ruin his whole future because of a promise enthusiastically
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>given. They sent him a message asking
-him to come and see them. He knew he was watched
-and dared not meet Franklin openly, but he went at
-once to Silas Deane and listened to all he had to tell
-him. When he finished the young Frenchman
-thanked him for his very frank statement of a bad
-situation and then made a very frank statement in
-return. "Heretofore," he said, "I have been able
-to show you only my willingness to aid you in your
-struggle. The time has now come when that willingness
-can be put to effective use, for I am going to
-buy a ship and take your officers out in it. Let us
-not give up our hope yet; it is precisely in the time
-of danger that I wish to share whatever fortune
-may have in store for you." After that it would
-have required superhuman unselfishness on the part
-of the Americans to dissuade him.</p>
-
-<p>How transactions which covered three months of
-time, two-thirds of the length of France, and involved
-so many individuals remained undiscovered
-is a mystery unless we assume that the opposition
-of the government was more feigned than real.
-Officials appear to have closed their eyes most
-obligingly whenever possible.</p>
-
-<p>To divert suspicion from himself, Lafayette occupied
-several weeks in a visit to England which had
-been arranged long before. Franklin and Deane
-were most anxious to have him carry out this plan
-to visit the French ambassador in London. So
-Lafayette crossed the Channel and spent three weeks
-in the smoky city, where he received many social
-courtesies. He appears to have enjoyed this season
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>of gaiety much better than similar occasions at home.
-The necessity for hiding his plans gave zest to
-meetings and conversations that would otherwise
-have been commonplace enough, while the necessity
-for remaining true to his ideals of conduct&mdash;of continuing
-to be a guest and not a spy in an enemy
-country&mdash;exercised his conscience as well as his wit.
-It became a humorous adventure to dance at Lord
-Germain's in the same set with Lord Rawdon, just
-back from New York, and to encounter between
-acts at the opera General Clinton, against whom he
-was soon to fight at Monmouth. When presented
-to his Majesty George III he replied to that monarch's
-gracious hope that he intended to make a
-long stay in London, with an answer at once guarded
-and misleading. The king inquired what errand
-called him away, and Lafayette answered, with an
-inward chuckle, that if his Majesty knew he would
-not wish him to remain! Although taking good
-care not to betray his plans, he made no secret of
-his interest in the Colonists or his belief in the justice
-of their cause; and he avoided visiting seaport
-towns where expeditions were being fitted out
-against them, and declined all invitations likely to
-put him in a position to obtain information to
-which, under the circumstances, he felt he had no
-right.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving London he wrote a long letter to
-his father-in-law, to be delivered only when he was
-safely on his way to Bordeaux. Then he crossed to
-France, but instead of going to his own home took
-refuge with De Kalb at Chaillot, a suburb of Paris.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>Here he remained three days, making final preparations.
-On one of these days he appeared very early
-before the sleepy, astonished eyes of his friend De
-Ségur, sent away the servant, closed the door of the
-bedroom with great care, and hurled the bombshell
-of his news: "I am going to America. Nobody
-knows it, but I am too fond of you to leave without
-telling you my secret." Then he gave him the outline
-of his plan, including the port from which he
-was to sail and the names of the dozen French
-officers who were to accompany him. "Lucky dog!
-I wish I were going with you!" was the substance of
-De Ségur's answer, but it had not the usual ring of
-sincerity. De Ségur was about to marry a young
-aunt of Adrienne Lafayette's and his wedding-day
-was drawing very near.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette managed to impart his secret to De
-Noailles also, but he left Paris without a farewell to
-Adrienne. The one hard thing in this hurried departure
-was that he did not dare to see or even to
-write directly to her. She was not well; and,
-besides the risk of arrest involved in visiting her, the
-interview could only be unnerving and distressing
-on both sides. The letter he wrote from London to
-her father appears to have been the nearest to a
-direct message, and that, it must be confessed, contained
-no mention of her name and no word exclusively
-for her. It was her mother, the upright
-Madame d'Ayen, who broke the news of his departure,
-tempering the seeming cruelty of his
-conduct with words of praise for his pluck and for
-the motive which prompted him to act as he did.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>Madame d'Ayen was the only one of the immediate
-family who had a good word for the runaway. The
-young wife clung to her, appalled at the anger of
-her father. The duke was furious, and once more
-the worthy pair came to the verge of quarrel over
-this well-meaning young man. The count could
-see only madcap folly in exchanging an assured
-position at the French court for the doubtful honor
-of helping a lot of English farmers rebel against their
-king. For a few days the town buzzed with excitement.
-Lafayette's acquaintances were frankly astonished
-that the cold and indifferent young marquis
-had roused himself to such action, and thought it
-exceedingly "chic" that he should "go over to be
-hanged with the poor rebels." They were indignant
-at the bitterness of the duke's denunciation. One
-lady with a sharp tongue said that if he treated
-Lafayette so, he did not deserve to find husbands for
-the rest of his daughters.</p>
-
-<p>The runaway was safely out of Paris, but by no
-means out of danger. The Duc d'Ayen, who
-honestly felt that he was bringing disgrace upon the
-family, bestirred himself to prevent his sailing, and
-had a <i>lettre de cachet</i> sent after him. A <i>lettre de
-cachet</i> was an official document whose use and
-abuse during the last hundred years had done much
-to bring France to its present state of suppressed
-political excitement. It was an order for arrest&mdash;a
-perfectly suitable and necessary document when
-properly used. But men who had power, and also
-had private ends to gain, had been able to secure
-such papers by the hundreds with spaces left blank
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>wherein they could write whatever names they
-chose. It was a safe and deadly and underhand
-way of satisfying grudges. In Lafayette's case its
-use was quite lawful, because he was captain in a
-French regiment, leaving the country in disobedience
-to the wish of his sovereign, to fight against a
-nation with whom France was on friendly terms.
-Technically he was little better than a deserter.
-When such conduct was brought to official notice,
-only one course was possible. The <i>lettre de cachet</i>
-was sent, a general order was issued forbidding
-French officers to take service in the American colonies,
-and directing that if any of them, "especially
-the Marquis de Lafayette," reached the French
-West Indies on such an errand he should forthwith
-return to France. Word was also sent to French
-seaports to keep a close watch upon vessels and to
-prevent the shipment of war materials to North
-America. Lafayette's friends became alarmed at all
-this activity and feared that it might have serious
-consequences not only for him, but for themselves.
-Officials began to receive letters from them calculated
-to shift the blame from their own shoulders, as
-well as to shield the young man. The French ambassador
-to England, whose guest he had been in
-London, was particularly disturbed, but felt somewhat
-comforted when he learned that a high official
-in the French army had asked King George for permission
-to fight as a volunteer under General Howe.
-This in a manner offset Lafayette's act, and England
-could not accuse France of partiality if her officers
-were to be found engaged on both sides.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_VI" id="chap_VI"></a>VI<br />
-
-A SEA-TURN</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette, meanwhile, was traveling southward
-with De Kalb. The government does not appear
-to have interested itself in De Kalb, who had
-a two years' furlough, obtained probably through
-the influence of the Comte de Broglie. At the end
-of three days they reached Bordeaux. Here they
-learned about the commotion Lafayette's departure
-had caused and that the king's order for his arrest
-was on the way. That it did not travel as speedily
-as the rumor seems to prove that Lafayette's friends
-were using all possible official delay to give him
-ample warning. He made good use of the time and
-succeeded in getting <i>La Victoire</i> out of Bordeaux
-to the Spanish harbor of Los Pasajes in the Bay of
-Biscay, just across the French frontier.</p>
-
-<p>It was in leaving Bordeaux that Lafayette found a
-use for his many names. Each passenger leaving a
-French port was required to carry with him a paper
-stating his name, the place of his birth, his age, and
-general appearance. The one made out by a port
-official not over-particular in spelling described him
-as "Sr. Gilbert du Mottie, Chevalier de Chaviallac&mdash;age
-twenty years, tall, and blond." This was all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>true except that his age was made a little stronger
-and the color of his hair a little weaker than facts
-warranted. His age was nineteen years and six
-months and his hair was almost red. He was the
-Chevalier de Chavaniac, though it is doubtful if one
-acquaintance in a hundred had ever heard the title.</p>
-
-<p>When he stepped ashore at Los Pasajes he was
-confronted by two officers who had followed from
-Bordeaux by land with the <i>lettre de cachet</i>. Letters
-from his family and from government officials also
-awaited him: "terrible letters," he called them.
-Those from his family upbraided him bitterly; the
-Ministry accused him of being false to his oath of
-allegiance. The <i>lettre de cachet</i> peremptorily ordered
-him to Marseilles to await further instructions. He
-knew that this meant to await the arrival of his
-father-in-law, who was about to make a long journey
-into Italy and would insist upon Lafayette accompanying
-him, that he might keep an eye upon his
-movements.</p>
-
-<p>He was now in Spain, quite beyond the reach of
-French law, but he could not bring himself to actual
-disobedience while there was the remotest chance of
-having these commands modified; so he went back
-with the messengers to Bordeaux, and from there
-sent letters by courier to Paris, asking permission
-to return and present his case in person. De Kalb
-remained with the ship at Los Pasajes, impatient
-and not a little vexed. He foresaw a long delay, if
-indeed the expedition ever started. <i>La Victoire</i>
-could not sail without its owner, or at least without
-the owner's consent. De Kalb thought Lafayette
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>had acted very foolishly; he should either have given
-up entirely or gone ahead regardless of the summons,
-Also he felt that the young man had not been quite
-frank; that in talking with him he had underestimated
-the family opposition. "Had he told me in
-Paris all that he has admitted since," De Kalb wrote
-to his wife, "I would have remonstrated most
-earnestly against the whole scheme. As it is, the
-affair will cost him some money." Then, having
-freed his mind of his accumulated impatience, he
-added, "But if it be said that he has done a foolish
-thing, it may be answered that he acted from the
-most honorable motives and that he can hold up
-his head before all high-minded men."</p>
-
-<p>In Bordeaux Lafayette had presented himself
-before the commandant and made declaration that
-he alone would be answerable for the consequences
-of his acts; then he had set himself, with all
-the patience he could muster, to wait the return
-of his messenger. To his formal request he
-received no reply. From private letters he learned
-that he had only the Duc d'Ayen to thank for
-the <i>lettre de cachet</i>. Officials had been heard to
-say that they would have taken no notice of his
-departure had it not been for the duke's complaint.
-This convinced him that there was nothing to be
-gained by waiting; so he wrote to M. de Maurepas
-that he interpreted his silence to be consent, "and
-with this pleasantry," as he says in the <i>Memoirs</i>,
-disappeared from Bordeaux. He informed the commandant
-that he was going to Marseilles in obedience
-to orders, and sent the same message to De Kalb,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>adding the significant hint, however, that he had
-not given up hope, and the request that De Kalb
-look after his interests. He, indeed, set out by
-post-chaise on the road to Marseilles in company
-with the Vicomte de Mauroy, a young officer who
-like himself held one of Silas Deane's commissions.
-They left that road, however, at the first convenient
-opportunity and turned their horses directly toward
-Spain. They also made slight changes in their
-traveling arrangements, after which De Mauroy sat
-in the chaise alone, while Lafayette, dressed like a
-postilion, rode one of the horses. The commandant,
-having his own suspicions, sent some officers riding
-after them.</p>
-
-<p>At a little town near the frontier, called Saint-Jean-de-Luz,
-it was necessary to change horses.
-The masquerading post-boy threw himself down to
-rest in the stable while the gentleman in the chaise
-attended to the essential business. It was here
-that an inquisitive daughter of the innkeeper, who
-evidently knew a good deal about postilions, recognized
-in the youth stretched upon the straw the
-young gentleman she had seen riding in state in the
-other direction only a few days before. Her eyes
-and mouth opened in wonder, but a sign from Lafayette
-checked the exclamation upon her lips, and
-when the officers rode up a very demure but very
-positive young woman set them on the wrong trail.</p>
-
-<p>On the 17th of April Lafayette rejoined De Kalb
-at Los Pasajes, and on Sunday, April 20, 1777, <i>La
-Victoire</i> set sail for America. In addition to the
-captain and crew, De Kalb, the owner of the vessel,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>and De Mauroy, she had on board about a dozen
-officers of various grades, all of whom were anxious
-to serve in the Continental Army. The French
-government took no further measures to interfere.
-Grave matters of state nearer home claimed its attention;
-and, since signs of coming war with England
-grew plainer every day, it may have been well
-content to see this band of officers already enlisted
-against her. M. de Vergennes, the Minister of
-Foreign Affairs, was quoted as saying that the young
-man had run away again, and he would take good
-care this time not to mention the matter to the king.</p>
-
-<p>After six months of effort Lafayette was at last
-under way. The ship's papers had been made out
-for the West Indies; but inconvenient orders might
-be awaiting him there, so he ordered the captain to
-sail directly for the mainland. The captain demurred,
-explaining that an English cruiser could
-take them prisoners and confiscate their cargo if
-their course and their papers did not agree. As
-owner of the vessel Lafayette repeated his orders;
-he even threatened to depose the captain and put
-the second officer in command. But the captain's
-unwillingness appeared so extraordinary that he was
-moved to investigate farther, and found that the
-thrifty man had smuggled merchandise aboard to the
-value of $8,000 which he hoped to sell at a profit.
-Lafayette felt that it was not a time to be over-particular.
-He promised to make good whatever loss
-the captain might sustain, whereupon nervousness
-about English cruisers left him and he steered as
-directed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>It proved a long voyage. <i>La Victoire</i> was at sea
-fifty-five dreary days, and Lafayette speedily fell a
-victim to the rollers of the Atlantic; but he wrote
-to his wife he "had the consolation vouchsafed to
-the wicked of suffering in company with many
-others." When he recovered he began to study
-English, in which he made considerable progress.
-He also studied military science as something about
-which it might be convenient for a major-general to
-know; and he wrote interminable pages to Adrienne,
-full of love, of ennui, and of whimsical arguments
-to prove that he had done the wisest thing, not only
-for his career, but for his health and safety, in offering
-his sword to the Continental Army.</p>
-
-<p>"I have been ever since my last letter to you in
-the most dismal of countries," he wrote after he had
-been out a month. "The sea is so wearisome, and
-I believe we have the same doleful influence upon
-each other, it and I." "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." "I ought to have landed before
-this, but the winds have cruelly opposed me. I
-shall not see Charleston for eight or ten days longer.
-Once I am there, I have every hope of getting news
-from France. I shall learn then so many interesting
-details, not only of what I am going to find before
-me, but above all of what I left behind me with such
-regret. Provided I find that you are well, and that
-you still love me, and that a certain number of our
-friends are in the same condition, I shall accept
-philosophically whatever else may be." "How did
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>you take my second departure? Did you love me
-the less? Have you forgiven me? Have you
-thought that in any event we should have been
-separated, I in Italy dragging along a life with no
-chance to distinguish myself and surrounded by
-people most hostile to my projects and my views?"
-"Consider the difference.... As the defender of that
-liberty which I adore, free myself beyond all others,
-coming as a friend to offer my services to this most
-interesting republic, I bring ... no selfish interests
-to serve. If I am striving for my own glory I am
-at the same time laboring for its welfare. I trust
-that for my sake you will become a good American;
-it is a sentiment made for virtuous hearts." "Do
-not allow yourself to feel anxiety because I am
-running great danger in the occupation that is before
-me. The post of major-general has always been a
-warrant of long life&mdash;so different from the service I
-should have had in France as colonel, for instance.
-With my present rank I shall only have to attend
-councils of war. Ask any of the French generals,
-of which there are so many because, having attained
-that rank, they run no further risk.... In order to
-show that I am not trying to deceive you I will
-admit that we are in danger at this moment, because
-we are likely at any time to be attacked by an English
-vessel, and we are not strong enough to defend
-ourselves. But as soon as I land I shall be in perfect
-safety. You see that I tell you everything in
-order that you may feel at ease and not allow yourself
-to be anxious without cause.... But now let us
-talk of more important things," and he goes on to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>write about their baby daughter, Henrietta, and
-about the new baby, the announcement of whose
-birth he expected to receive very soon after landing.
-"Do not lose a moment in sending me the joyful
-news," he commands. "Mr. Deane and my friend
-Carmichael will aid you in this, and I am sure they
-would neglect no opportunity to make me happy as
-quickly as possible.... Adieu. Night coming on
-obliges me to stop, for I have lately forbidden the
-use of lights aboard the ship. See how careful I am!"
-He could afford to dwell on perils of the voyage,
-since these would be safely over before the missive
-could start on its way back to France. The danger
-was by no means imaginary. One of the letters
-written at the time Lafayette's departure was the
-talk of Paris, by a man who knew whereof he spoke,
-had said, "His age may justify his escapade, but I
-am truly sorry, not only for the interest you and the
-Duc d'Ayen have in the matter, but because I am
-afraid he may fall in with some English man-of-war,
-and, not being distinguished from the mass of adventurers
-who come into their hands, may be treated
-with a harshness not unknown to that nation."</p>
-
-<p><i>La Victoire</i> was a clumsy boat armed with only
-"two old cannon and a few muskets" and stood
-small chance if attacked. Lafayette was perfectly
-aware of this, and had no intention of being taken
-alive. He entered into an agreement with one of
-the company, a brave Dutchman named Bedaulx,
-to blow up the vessel as a last resort, the pleasant
-alternative in any case being hanging. So, with
-a sailor pledged to ignite a few powder-kegs and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>captain steering the ship by constraint rather than
-by desire, the long voyage was not devoid of thrills.
-These increased as they neared land. At forty
-leagues from shore <i>La Victoire</i> was overhauled by a
-little vessel. "The captain grew pale," Lafayette
-tells us; but the crew was loyal and the officers were
-numerous and they put up a show of defense. She
-proved to be an American and so much the faster
-boat that she was soon out of sight, though <i>La Victoire</i>
-tried hard to keep up with her. Scarcely was
-she gone when the lookout sighted two English
-frigates. With these they played a game of hide-and-seek
-until they were saved by a providential gale
-which blew the enemy out of his course long enough
-to enable <i>La Victoire</i> to run into shelter near Georgetown,
-South Carolina.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_VII" id="chap_VII"></a>VII<br />
-
-AN AMERICAN PILGRIMAGE</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The bit of land to which that unneutral north
-wind had wafted the travelers was an island
-about fifteen miles from Georgetown, South Carolina.
-Nobody on <i>La Victoire</i> knew the coast, so it
-was prudently decided to reconnoiter in a small
-boat. Lafayette, with De Kalb and two or three
-other officers and a few sailors, started off about two
-o'clock on the afternoon of June 13th, in the ship's
-yawl, and rowed until sunset without encountering
-a soul. After the sun went down they continued to
-row on and on, still in complete solitude, until about
-ten o'clock, when they came upon some negroes
-dredging for oysters.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the first human beings that Lafayette encountered
-in the land of the free were slaves; and
-it was not the least picturesque coincidence of his
-picturesque career that these ignorant creatures
-rendered him a service, instead of his helping them.
-Also it is rather amusing that this knight errant of
-noble lineage, who had come so far to fight for freedom,
-should have made his entry into America in
-the dead of night, in an evil-smelling oyster-boat,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>instead of with pomp and ceremony from the ship
-his wealth had provided.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Frenchmen nor slaves could understand
-the speech of the others except in a vague way. The
-Frenchmen thought the slaves said there was a pilot
-somewhere on the island. They seemed to be offering
-to take them to the house of their master, an
-American officer; and as the tide had fallen and it
-was impossible to proceed farther in the yawl, they
-transferred themselves to the oyster-boat and gave
-themselves up to these mysterious guides. For two
-hours the blacks ferried them through the darkness.
-About midnight they saw a light, and soon were put
-ashore to make their way toward it. It was evident
-that their approach caused excitement. Dogs began
-to bark and the inmates of the large house from
-which the light shone appeared to be making preparations
-for a siege. A sharp challenge rang out, which
-indicated that they were mistaken for marauders
-from some British ship. De Kalb replied in his most
-polite English, explaining that they were French
-officers come to offer their swords to the Continental
-Army. Then, with the swiftness of a
-transformation in a fairy play, they found themselves
-in a glow of light, the center of warm interest,
-and being welcomed with true Southern hospitality.
-No wonder that ever after Lafayette had the kindest
-possible feelings for African slaves.</p>
-
-<p>Mid-June in Carolina is very beautiful; and it
-must have seemed a wonderful world upon which he
-opened his eyes next morning. Outside his window
-was the green freshness of early summer; inside the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>immaculate luxury of a gentleman's bedchamber&mdash;both
-doubly delightful after seven cramped weeks
-at sea. That the smiling blacks who came to minister
-to his wants were bondmen, absolutely at the
-mercy of their masters, and that the filmy gauze
-curtains enveloping his bed had been put there to
-prevent his being eaten alive by those "gnats which
-cover you with large blisters," about which he afterward
-wrote Adrienne, were drawbacks and inconsistencies
-he hardly realized in that first blissful
-awakening. He was always more inclined to enthusiasm
-than to faultfinding, and nothing that ever
-happened to him in America effaced the joy of his
-first impression.</p>
-
-<p>His host proved to be Major Benjamin Huger, of
-French Huguenot descent, so he had fallen among
-people of his own nation. Had Major Huger been
-one of his own relatives he could not have been
-kinder or his family more sympathetic; and it was a
-sympathy that lasted long, for in the group around
-the French officers was a little lad of five who took
-small part in the proceedings at the moment, but
-lost his heart to the tall Frenchman then and there,
-and made a quixotic journey in Lafayette's behalf
-after he was grown.</p>
-
-<p>The water was too shallow to permit <i>La Victoire</i>
-to enter the harbor at Georgetown, so a pilot was
-sent to take her to Charleston while Lafayette and
-his companions went by land. The reports he received
-about vigilant English cruisers made him
-send his captain orders to land officers and crew and
-burn the ship if occasion arose and he had time; but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>another unneutral wind brought <i>La Victoire</i> into
-Charleston Harbor in broad daylight without encountering
-friend or foe.</p>
-
-<p>Major Huger furnished Lafayette and De Kalb
-with horses for the ninety miles and more of bad
-roads that lay between his plantation and Charleston.
-The others, for whom no mounts could be
-found, made the distance on foot, arriving ragged and
-worn. But as soon as the city knew why they had
-come, its inhabitants vied with one another in showering
-attentions upon them. One of his companions
-wrote that the marquis had been received with all
-the honors due to a marshal of France. Lafayette,
-who sent a letter to his wife by every ship he found
-ready to sail, was eloquent in praise of Charleston
-and its citizens. It reminded him of England, he
-said, but it was neater, and manners were simpler.
-"The richest man and the poorest are upon the
-same social level," he wrote, "and although there
-are some great fortunes in this country, I defy any
-one to discover the least difference in the bearing of
-one man to another." He thought the women
-beautiful, and Charlestonians the most agreeable
-people he had ever met. He felt as much at ease
-with them as though he had known them for twenty
-years; and he described a grand dinner at which the
-governor and American generals had been present,
-which lasted five hours. "We drank many healths
-and spoke very bad English, which language I am beginning
-to use a little. To-morrow I shall take the
-gentlemen who accompany me to call upon the governor,
-and then I shall make preparations to leave."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>He hoped to provide funds for the journey to
-Philadelphia by selling certain goods he had brought
-on <i>La Victoire</i>. It would have been easy to do this
-had not his trustful nature and ignorance of business
-played him a sorry turn. He found that his unwilling
-friend, the captain, held a note which he had
-signed in a hurry of departure without realizing what
-it contained. It provided that the vessel and cargo
-must be taken back to Bordeaux and sold there.
-This was most embarrassing, because, in spite of his
-large possessions in France, he was a stranger in
-America and had no other way of providing for the
-immediate wants of himself and his companions.
-It proved even more embarrassing than at first
-seemed likely, for the ship never reached Bordeaux.
-She was wrecked on the Charleston bar at the very
-outset of her homeward voyage.</p>
-
-<p>In his enthusiasm Lafayette had written Adrienne,
-"What delights me most is that all citizens are
-brothers." Here unexpectedly was a chance to put
-the brotherly quality to the test. He carried his
-dilemma to his new-found friends. They were polite
-and sympathetic, but ready money was scarce,
-they told him, and even before <i>La Victoire</i> came to
-her inglorious end he experienced "considerable
-difficulty" in arranging a loan. Whatever temporary
-jolt this gave his theories, his natural optimism
-triumphed both in securing money to equip his
-expedition and in preserving intact his good will
-toward the American people.</p>
-
-<p>By the 25th of June everything was ready and his
-company set out, traveling in three different parties,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>in order not to overcrowd the inns of that sparsely
-settled region. The gentlemen who had been entertained
-by Major Huger traveled together. One of
-them, the Chevalier du Buisson, wrote an account
-of the journey which explains the order in which
-they set forth. "The aide-de-camp of the marquis
-undertook to be our guide, although he had no
-possible idea of the country.... The procession was
-headed by one of the marquis's people in huzzar
-uniform. The marquis's carriage was a sort of
-uncovered sofa on four springs, with a fore-carriage.
-At the side of his carriage he had one of his servants
-on horseback who acted as his squire. The Baron
-de Kalb was in the same carriage. The two colonels,
-Lafayette's counselors, followed in a second carriage
-with two wheels. The third was for the aides-de-camp,
-the fourth for the luggage, and the rear was
-brought up by a negro on horseback."</p>
-
-<p>According to Lafayette's reckoning, they traveled
-nearly nine hundred miles through the two Carolinas,
-Virginia, and the states of Maryland and
-Delaware. But only a small part of the progress
-was made in such elegance. Roads were rough and
-the weather was very hot, which was bad for men
-and horses alike. Some of the company fell ill;
-some of the horses went lame; some of the luggage
-was stolen; some of it had to be left behind. Extra
-horses had to be bought, and this used up most of
-the money. On the 17th of July Lafayette wrote to
-Adrienne from Petersburg: "I am at present about
-eight days' journey from Philadelphia in the beautiful
-land of Virginia.... You have learned of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>beginning of my journey and how brilliantly I set
-out in a carriage.... At present we are all on horseback,
-after having broken up the wagons in my
-usual praiseworthy fashion; and I expect to write
-you in a few days that we have arrived on foot."
-He admitted that there had been some fatigue, but
-as for himself he had scarcely noticed it, so interested
-had he been in the great new country with
-its vast forests and large rivers; "everything, indeed,
-to give nature an appearance of youth and of
-majesty." "The farther north I proceed the better
-I like this country and its people."</p>
-
-<p>There was no regularity about sending mail across
-the Atlantic, and as yet he had not heard from home.
-Doubtless the hope of finding letters spurred on his
-desire to reach Philadelphia. From Annapolis he
-and De Kalb alone were able to proceed without a
-halt, leaving the rest of the party behind for needed
-repose. They reached Philadelphia on July 27th.
-Even with this final burst of speed they had consumed
-a whole month in a journey that can now
-be made in less than twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_VIII" id="chap_VIII"></a>VIII<br />
-
-AN ASTONISHING RECEPTION</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>All Lafayette's company had been looking forward
-to their reception by Congress as full
-recompense for sufferings by the way. Knowing
-that they had come to offer help, and having already
-experienced the hospitality of Charleston, they
-dreamed of a similar welcome increased and made
-more effective by official authority. They hastened
-to present their letters of introduction and their
-credentials; and it was a great blow to find that
-they were met, not with enthusiasm, but with coldness.
-Lafayette said their reception was "more
-like a dismissal." We are indebted to the Chevalier
-du Buisson for an account of this unexpected rebuff.
-"After having brushed ourselves up a little we went
-to see the President of Congress, to whom we presented
-our letters of recommendation and also our
-contracts. He sent us to Mr. Moose [Morris?], a
-member of Congress, who made an appointment to
-meet us on the following day at the door of Congress,
-and in the mean time our papers were to be read and
-examined." Next day they were very punctual, but
-were made to wait a long time before "Mr. Moose"
-appeared with a Mr. Lovell and told them all communication
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>must be made through him. Still
-standing in the street, Mr. Lovell talked with them
-and finally walked away and left them, "after having
-treated us in excellent French, like a set of adventurers....
-This was our first reception by Congress,
-and it would have been impossible for any
-one to be more stupefied than we were. Would it
-have been possible for M. de Lafayette, M. de Kalb,
-and M. de Mauroy with ten officers recommended
-as we had been, and secretly approved, if not openly
-avowed by the government of France, to expect such
-a reception as this?"</p>
-
-<p>One can imagine the varying degrees of resentment
-and disgust with which they watched Mr. Lovell disappear.
-If <i>La Victoire</i> had been there, ready provisioned
-for a voyage, very likely not one of them
-would have remained an hour longer in America.
-But <i>La Victoire</i> was not at hand and Lafayette's
-sunny optimism was on the spot to serve them well.
-"We determined," says Du Buisson, "to wait and
-to discover the cause of this affront, if possible,
-before making any complaint."</p>
-
-<p>They discovered that they had come at the worst
-possible time. A number of foreign adventurers had
-hurried from the West Indies and Europe and
-offered their services at the beginning of the war.
-Being desperately in need of trained officers, Congress
-had given some of them commissions, though
-their demands for rank and privilege were beyond
-all reason. This, coupled with their bad behavior
-after entering the army, had incensed officers of
-American birth, who threatened to resign if any
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>more Europeans were taken into the army with
-rank superior to their own. The protest had
-reached almost the proportions of a strike. At that
-very moment a French artillery officer named De
-Coudray was giving Congress no end of trouble, and
-indeed continued to do so until, "by a happy accident,"
-as Franklin cynically put it, he was drowned
-in the Schuylkill River a few weeks later.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing to prove that Lafayette and
-his friends differed from the rest. Like them they
-were foreigners with high-sounding titles in front
-of their names and requests for major-generalships
-tripping speedily after their offers of help. As for
-Silas Deane's contracts&mdash;Deane had commissioned
-some of the very worst of these men. Congress had
-reached the point where it proposed to end the
-trouble by refusing to honor any more of his agreements.
-Mr. Lovell told Lafayette and his companions
-smartly that French officers had a great
-fancy for entering the American army uninvited,
-that America no longer needed them, having plenty
-of experienced men of her own now; and walked
-away, leaving them standing there in the street.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette, not being like the others, determined
-to make Congress aware of the fact. He wrote a
-letter to that august body, stating why and how he
-had come to America, and adding: "After the sacrifices
-that I have made in this cause I have the right
-to ask two favors at your hands. The one is to
-serve without pay, and the other that I be allowed to
-serve first as a volunteer." Congress immediately
-sat up and took notice of the young man, the more
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>readily because of two letters which arrived from
-Paris showing that he was of importance in his own
-country. The first was signed by Silas Deane and
-by Benjamin Franklin, and read:</p>
-
-<p>"The Marquis de Lafayette, a young nobleman of
-great family connection here and great wealth, is
-gone to America on a ship of his own, accompanied
-by some officers of distinction, in order to serve in
-our armies. He is exceedingly beloved, and everybody's
-good wishes attend him. We cannot but
-hope he may meet with such a reception as will make
-the country and his expedition agreeable to him.
-Those who censure it as imprudent in him do, nevertheless,
-applaud his spirit; and we are satisfied that
-the civilities and respect that may be shown him will
-be serviceable to our affairs here, as pleasing not
-only to his powerful relations, and to the court, but
-to the whole French nation. He leaves a beautiful
-young wife ... and for her sake particularly we hope
-that his bravery and ardent desire to distinguish himself
-will be a little restrained by the general's prudence,
-so as not to permit his being hazarded much,
-but on some important occasion." The other was
-a communication from the French government requesting
-the Congress of the United States not to
-give employment to the Marquis de Lafayette.
-But Congress took the hint contained in Franklin's
-letter and regarded this for just what it was&mdash;a bit
-of official routine.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Lovell hastened to call upon Lafayette in
-company with another gentleman who had better
-manners, and made an attempt at apology. This
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>interview led to a more private talk in which he was
-offered a commission of major-general without pay
-and without promise of a command, to date from that
-time, and to have no connection whatever with Silas
-Deane's former promises. To this Lafayette agreed.</p>
-
-<p>Some of his friends did not fare so well, but even
-these felt that he did everything in his power to
-further their interests. "If he had had his way,"
-says Du Buisson, "De Kalb would have been a major-general,
-and we should all have had places."
-The situation was particularly trying to De Kalb,
-who was so much older and had seen so much actual
-military service. On board <i>La Victoire</i> he had been
-only Lafayette's guest, though the guest of honor
-and, next to the owner, the most important person
-aboard. Under such conditions, good manners
-forced him to play a subordinate part; and if it be
-true that he and De Broglie were using Lafayette's
-generosity to further their own ends, that was another
-reason for circumspect behavior. But after landing
-it must have been galling to see this young captain
-of twenty made a major-general "on demand," while
-his thirty-four years of experience were completely
-ignored. On the day after Lafayette's appointment
-De Kalb wrote Congress a letter in his turn,
-complaining bitterly and asking either that he be
-made a major-general, "with the seniority I have a
-right to expect," or that he and the other officers
-who had come with Lafayette be refunded the money
-they had spent on the journey. He said he was very
-glad Congress had granted Lafayette's wishes. "He
-is a worthy young man, and no one will outdo him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>in enthusiasm in your cause of liberty and independence.
-My wish will always be that his success
-as a major-general will equal his zeal and your expectation."
-But De Kalb plainly had his doubts;
-and he did not hesitate to "confess, sir, that this
-distinction between him and myself is painful and
-very displeasing to me. We came on the same
-errand, with the same promises, and as military men
-and for military purposes. I flatter myself that if
-there was to be any preference, it would be due to
-me." He hinted that he might sue Mr. Deane for
-damages, and he added: "I do not think that either
-my name, my services, or my person are proper
-objects to be trifled with or laughed at. I cannot
-tell you, sir, how deeply I feel the injury done to me,
-or how ridiculous it seems to me to make people
-leave their homes, families, and affairs, to cross the
-sea under a thousand different dangers, to be received
-and to be looked at with contempt by those
-from whom you were to expect but warm welcome."</p>
-
-<p>Congress could have answered with perfect justice
-that it had not "made" these gentlemen travel
-one foot toward America or brave a single danger.
-But on the basis of Deane's contract it was clearly
-in the wrong and it had no wish to insult France,
-though it could not afford to anger the American
-generals. It therefore decided to thank the French
-officers for their zeal in coming to America and to
-pay their expenses home again. Most of them did
-return, some by way of Boston, others from Southern
-ports. De Kalb meant to accompany the latter
-group, but a fever detained him for several weeks in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>Philadelphia; and just as he was leaving a messenger
-brought him word that he had been made major-general
-through the influence of several members of
-Congress who had made his personal acquaintance
-and were more impressed by the man himself than
-by his petulant letter. At first he was inclined to
-refuse, fearing the other French officers might feel
-he had deserted them, but on reflection he accepted,
-and, as every one knows, rendered great service to
-the United States.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette wrote Congress a letter of thanks in
-English&mdash;an excellent letter, considering the short
-time he had been using the language, but neither in
-wording nor in spelling exactly as a native would
-have written it. In this letter he expressed the hope
-that he might be allowed to "serve near the person of
-General Washington till such time as he may think
-proper to intrust me with a division of the army."</p>
-
-<p>General Washington's previous experience with
-the French had been unfortunate. He had met
-them as enemies in the neighborhood of Fort Duquesne
-before Lafayette was born. They had taken
-part in the defeat of General Braddock, and during
-the present war their actions had not been of a kind
-to endear them to him. Probably even after reading
-Franklin's letter he did not look forward with the
-least pleasure to meeting this young sprig of the
-French nobility. Still, Washington was a just man
-and the first to admit that every man has the right
-to be judged on his own merits.</p>
-
-<p>It was at a dinner, one of the lucky dinners in
-Lafayette's career, that the two met for the first
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>time. The company was a large one, made up of the
-most distinguished men in Philadelphia; but from
-the moment Washington entered the room Lafayette
-was sure he was the greatest in the company. "The
-majesty of his countenance and his figure made it
-impossible not to recognize him," while his manners
-seemed to Lafayette as affable and kindly as they
-were dignified. Washington on his part observed
-the slim young Frenchman throughout the evening,
-and was also favorably impressed. Before the party
-broke up he drew him aside for a short conversation
-and invited him to become a member of his military
-family, saying with a smile that he could not offer the
-luxuries of a court or even the conveniences to which
-Lafayette had been accustomed, but that he was now
-an American soldier and would of course accommodate
-himself to the privations of a republican camp.</p>
-
-<p>Pleased and elated as a boy, Lafayette accepted,
-sent his horses and luggage to camp, and took up his
-residence at Washington's headquarters. "Thus
-simply," he wrote in his <i>Memoirs</i>, "came about the
-union of two friends whose attachment and confidence
-were cemented by the greatest of interests."
-In truth this sudden flowering of friendship between
-the middle-aged Washington, who appeared so cool,
-though in fact he had an ardent nature, and the enthusiastic
-Frenchman twenty-five years his junior,
-is one of the pleasantest glimpses we have into the
-kindly human heart of each. It took neither of
-them one instant to recognize the worth of the other,
-and the mutual regard thus established lasted as
-long as life itself.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_IX" id="chap_IX"></a>IX<br />
-
-PROVING HIMSELF A SOLDIER</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The American army as Lafayette first saw it
-must have seemed a strange body of men to
-eyes accustomed to holiday parades in Paris. The
-memory of it remained with him years afterward
-when he wrote that it consisted of "about eleven
-thousand men, rather poorly armed, and much
-worse clad." There was a great variety in the
-clothing, some unmistakable nakedness, and the
-best garments were only loose hunting-shirts of gray
-linen, of a cut with which he had already become
-familiar in Carolina. The soldiers were drawn up
-in two lines, the smaller ones in front, "but with this
-exception there was no distinction made as to size."
-It was while reviewing these troops that Washington
-said, "it is somewhat embarrassing to us to show
-ourselves to an officer who has just come from the
-army of France," to which Lafayette made the
-answer that won the hearts of all, "I am here to
-learn, not to teach." He speedily learned that in
-spite of their appearance and their way of marching
-and maneuvering, which seemed to him childishly
-simple, they were "fine soldiers led by zealous
-officers," in whom "bravery took the place of
-science."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>Judging by what they had accomplished, they
-were indeed wonders. It was now August, 1777.
-Lexington had been fought in April, 1775, and in
-that space of more than two years England had
-been unable to make real headway against the insurrection
-which General Gage had at first thought
-could be thoroughly crushed by four British regiments.
-That mistake had soon become apparent.
-Large reinforcements had been sent from England
-with new generals. At present there were two
-British armies in the field. Time and again the
-ragged Continentals had been beaten, yet in a
-bewildering fashion they continued to grow in
-importance in the eyes of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The first part of the struggle had all taken place
-in the neighborhood of Boston; hence the name
-"Bostonians" by which the Americans had been
-applauded in Paris. But after General Howe was
-held for a whole winter in Boston in a state of siege
-he sailed away for Halifax in March, 1776, with all
-his troops and all the Tories who refused to stay
-without him. This was nothing less than an admission
-that he was unable to cope with the Americans.
-He sent word to England that it would require
-at least 50,000 men to do it&mdash;10,000 in New
-England, 20,000 in the Middle States, 10,000 in the
-South, and 10,000 to beat General Washington, who
-had developed such an uncanny power of losing
-battles, yet gaining prestige.</p>
-
-<p>The War Office in London refused to believe
-General Howe. It reasoned that New England was,
-after all, only a small section of country which could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>be dealt with later; so it let it severely alone and
-concentrated attention upon New York with a view
-to getting command of the Hudson River. The
-Hudson would afford a direct route up to the Canadian
-border, and Canada was already British territory.
-It ought not to be difficult to gain control of
-one Atlantic seaport and one river. That accomplished,
-the rebellion would be cut in two as neatly
-as though severed with a knife, and it would be easy
-enough to dispose of New England and of the South
-in turn.</p>
-
-<p>So General Howe was ordered back to carry out
-this plan. He appeared off Staten Island with
-twenty-five thousand men on the day after the
-Declaration of Independence was signed. In the
-thirteen months that elapsed between his coming
-and the day Lafayette first reviewed the American
-army General Washington had been able to keep
-Howe and all his forces at bay. He had marched
-and retreated and maneuvered. He had lost battles
-and men. Lost New York, as had been reported in
-Paris; had indeed lost most of his army, as the American
-commissioners admitted to Lafayette; yet in
-some mysterious way he continued to fight. By
-brilliant strategy he had gained enough victory to
-rekindle hope after hope seemed dead; and never,
-even when the outlook was darkest, had the British
-been able to get full control of the Hudson River.</p>
-
-<p>The British government, annoyed by Howe's delay,
-sent over another army under General Burgoyne
-in the spring of 1777, with orders to go down from
-Canada and end the matter. When last heard from,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>this army had taken Ticonderoga and was pursuing
-General Schuyler through eastern New York. General
-Howe, meanwhile, appeared to have dropped
-off the map. He was no longer in force near New
-York, nor had Washington any definite news of his
-whereabouts. This was the situation when Lafayette
-became a member of Washington's military
-family; a major-general without pay, experience, or
-a command.</p>
-
-<p>He took his commission seriously enough to cause
-his general some misgiving; for, after all, Washington
-knew nothing about his ability, only that he liked
-him personally. Lafayette frankly admitted his
-youth and inexperience, but always accompanied
-such admissions with a hint that he was ready to
-assume command as soon as the general saw fit to
-intrust him with it. On the 19th of August Washington
-wrote to Benjamin Harrison, a member of
-Congress, telling him his perplexity and asking him
-to find out how matters really stood. If Lafayette's
-commission had been merely honorary, as Washington
-supposed, the young man ought to be made fully
-aware of his mistake; if not, Washington would like
-to know what was expected of him. The answer
-returned was that Washington must use his own
-judgment; and for a time matters drifted. Lafayette
-meanwhile took gallant advantage of every small
-opportunity that came his way, both for assuming
-responsibility and for doing a kindness. He proved
-himself ready to bear a little more than his full
-share of hardship, and, by constant cheerfulness and
-willingness to accept whatever duty was assigned
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>him, came to be regarded as by far the best foreigner
-in the army&mdash;though of course hopelessly and forever
-a foreigner. In his letters home he often
-touched upon the discontent of other men of European
-birth "who complain, detest, and are detested
-in turn. They do not understand why I alone am
-liked.... For my part I cannot understand why
-they are so heartily detested.... I am happy in
-being loved by everybody, foreign and American. I
-like them all, hope to merit their esteem, and we
-are well content with each other."</p>
-
-<p>It was on the 21st of August, two days after
-Washington's letter to Mr. Harrison, that Lafayette
-was called to attend the first council of war&mdash;that
-duty about which he had playfully written to his
-wife. The question was what to do next, for General
-Howe and his army had not been seen or heard of
-for weeks. That meant that he was planning some
-surprise; but from which direction would it come?</p>
-
-<p>The truth was that General Howe had allowed
-himself to be lured away from the Hudson by his
-ambition to capture Philadelphia, knowing what a
-blow it would be to the Americans to lose their chief
-town where Congress was sitting. As soon as this
-was accomplished he meant to return to his former
-duty. To the American officers gathered around
-the map on the council table his whereabouts was
-a great mystery, for they thought ample time had
-elapsed for him to appear in Chesapeake Bay if
-Philadelphia was indeed his objective. Presumably
-he meant to attack some other place, and
-Charleston seemed to be the only other place of sufficient
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>importance to merit his attention. As it was
-manifestly impossible to get Washington's army that
-far south in time to be of assistance, it was determined
-to leave Charleston to its fate and to move
-nearer to New York to guard the Hudson. With
-Burgoyne descending from the north and Howe in
-hiding, it was quite possible that the river might
-soon be menaced from two directions. The battle
-of Bennington, a severe check for Burgoyne, had in
-fact occurred three days before, but it is probable
-they had not yet heard of it.</p>
-
-<p>The day after the council, ships carrying Howe's
-army were sighted in Chesapeake Bay, which proved
-without doubt that Philadelphia was his goal.
-Washington faced his men about, and, in order to
-cheer Philadelphians and give his soldiers a realization
-of what they were defending, marched the
-army through the city "down Front Street to Chestnut,
-and up Chestnut to Elm," riding, himself, at
-the head of his troops, a very handsome figure on
-his white horse, Lafayette conspicuous among the
-staff-officers, and the privates wearing sprigs of
-green in their hats as they marched to a lively air.
-They were joined as they went along by Pennsylvania
-militia and by other volunteers who hastened
-forward, American fashion, at prospect of a battle.
-Thus Washington's force was increased to about
-fifteen thousand by the time he neared the enemy.
-Most of these new arrivals were, however, worse off
-for clothing and arms&mdash;and discipline&mdash;than the
-original army, so his force by no means matched
-either in numbers or equipment the eighteen thousand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>British soldiers, thoroughly supplied according
-to the best standards of the day, which were disembarked
-by Cornwallis "at the Head of Elk," the
-inlet of Chesapeake Bay nearest to the city.</p>
-
-<p>There were several preliminary skirmishes, during
-which Lafayette learned that Washington could be
-as personally reckless as the youngest lieutenant.
-On the day the British landed he exposed himself
-in a reconnaissance and was forced to remain through
-a night of storm, with Lafayette and Gen. Nathanael
-Greene, in a farm-house very near the enemy lines.</p>
-
-<p>The main battle for the defense of Philadelphia
-occurred on the 11th of September, on the banks of
-a little stream called the Brandywine, about twenty-five
-miles from the city. Washington intrenched
-his force upon the hilly ground of its east bank, but,
-owing to woods which made it hard to observe the
-enemy, to the ease with which the stream could be
-forded, and to the superior numbers of the British,
-this position was turned and his army forced back
-toward Chester. It was Lafayette's first battle,
-and the zeal with which he threw himself into the
-unequal contest, the quickness of his perceptions,
-and the courage he showed in following up his instinct
-of the thing to do with the act of doing it, won
-the admiration of all who saw him. After that day
-the army forgot he was a foreigner and looked upon
-him as one of themselves. "Never," he says, "was
-adoption more complete."</p>
-
-<p>During the hottest of the fight he had leaped from
-his horse down among the men, striving by voice and
-example to rally them to make a stand against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>Cornwallis's fast-approaching column. Lord Sterling
-and General Sullivan had come to his aid and the
-three had held their ground until the British were
-only twenty yards away, when they took refuge in a
-wood. Lafayette's left leg had been struck by a
-musket-ball, but he was unconscious of this until
-another officer called attention to the blood running
-from his boot. With the help of his French aide-de-camp,
-Major de Gimat, who had come with him on
-<i>La Victoire</i>, he remounted his horse, but remained
-with the troops and was borne along in the general
-retreat toward Chester, which became very like a
-rout as night approached; men and guns hurrying
-on in ever-increasing confusion. Near Chester
-there was a bridge, and here, though Lafayette was
-weak from loss of blood, he placed guards and,
-halting the fugitives as they came up, managed to
-bring something like order into the chaos. It was
-only after Washington and other generals reached
-the spot that he consented to have his wound
-properly dressed. Washington's midnight report
-to Congress mentioned the gallantry of the young
-Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's injury was not at all dangerous, but it
-was quite serious enough to keep him in bed for a
-month or more. He was taken to Philadelphia, and
-Washington sent his most skilful surgeon to attend
-him, with orders to care for him as he would for his
-own son. Later, when Howe's continued approach
-made it certain the city must pass into British hands,
-he was sent by water to Bristol on the Delaware
-River, and from that point Mr. Henry Laurens, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>new President of Congress, on the way to join his
-fleeing fellow-members, who were to resume their
-sessions at York, gave him a lift in his traveling-carriage
-as far as Bethlehem, where the Moravians
-nursed him back to health.</p>
-
-<p>De Kalb and other military friends took a real, if
-humorously expressed, interest in his "little wound,"
-and on his part he declared that he valued it at
-more than five hundred guineas. He had hastened
-to write his wife all about it, not too seriously, "for
-fear that General Howe, who sends his royal master
-rather exaggerated details of his exploits in America,
-may report that I am not only wounded, but dead.
-It would cost him no more." Reports of Lafayette's
-death were indeed circulated in France, but Madame
-d'Ayen managed to keep them from her daughter.
-Lafayette assured his wife that his injury was "only
-a flesh wound, touching neither bone nor nerves.
-The surgeons are astonished at the rapidity with
-which it heals, and fall into ecstasies every time it is
-dressed, pretending it is the loveliest thing in the
-world. For myself, I find it very dirty, very much
-of a bore, and quite painful enough; but in truth, if
-a man wanted a wound merely for diversion's sake
-he could not do better than come and examine mine,
-with a view to copying it. There, dear heart, is the
-true history of this thing that I give myself airs
-about and pompously call 'my wound' in order to
-appear interesting."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_X" id="chap_X"></a>X<br />
-
-LETTERS</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette had plenty of time for thought as
-he lay in his neat room, waited upon by the wife
-of the chief farmer of the Bethlehem Society and her
-daughter, Lissel. Much of the time was spent in
-wondering about Adrienne, of whom as yet he had
-received news only once. As this was brought him
-by Count Pulaski, who left Paris before the birth
-of the expected child, Lafayette did not know
-whether his new baby was a boy or a girl, whether
-it had been born alive or dead, or how his wife had
-come through the ordeal. He could only send her
-long letters at every opportunity, well knowing
-"that King George might receive some of them
-instead." In these he sent messages to many
-French friends, not forgetting his old tutor, the Abbé
-Feyon, but he did not enlarge upon all phases of his
-American Life. "At present I am in the solitude of
-Bethlehem, about which the Abbé Raynal has so
-much to say," he told her. "This community is
-really touching and very interesting. We will talk
-about it after I return, when I mean to bore every
-one I love, you, consequently, most of all, with stories
-of my travels." He did not think it wise to refer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>in letters to one amusing phase of the situation in
-which he found himself at Bethlehem&mdash;the visits
-paid him by influential members of the Moravian
-brotherhood, who took a deep interest in his spiritual
-welfare and tried their best to convert him from a
-warrior into a pacifist.</p>
-
-<p>It was while listening, or appearing to listen, politely
-to their sermons upon peace that his mind
-darted over the earth, here and there, even to far-distant
-Asia, planning warlike expeditions for the aid
-of his American friends. When his peaceful hosts
-departed he wrote letters embodying these plans.
-As he says in his <i>Memoirs</i>, he could "do nothing
-except write letters." One, which he addressed to
-the French governor of Martinique, proposed an
-attack on the British West Indies, to be carried out
-under the American flag. He had also the temerity
-to write to M. de Maurepas, proposing a descent
-upon the British in India. The boldness of the
-idea, and the impudence of Lafayette in suggesting
-it while he was still under the ban of the French
-government, caused the old man to chuckle. "Once
-that boy got an idea in his head there was no stopping
-him," he said. "Some day he would strip Versailles
-of its furniture for the sake of his Americans,"
-and thereafter he showed a marked partiality for
-"that boy."</p>
-
-<p>Matters had gone badly for the Americans since
-the battle of the Brandywine. General Howe
-occupied Philadelphia on September 26th; on
-October 4th Washington lost the battle of Germantown.
-Since then the army had been moving from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>camp to camp, seeking a spot not too exposed, yet
-from which it could give General Howe all possible
-annoyance. Clearly this was no time to be lying in
-tidy, sunlit rooms listening to sermons on non-resistance.
-Before he was able to bear the weight
-of his military boot Lafayette rejoined the army.
-An entry in the diary of the Bethlehem Congregation,
-dated October 16, 1777, reads: "The French
-Marquis, whom we have found to be a very intelligent
-and pleasant young man, came to bid us adieu,
-and requested to be shown through the Sisters'
-House, which we were pleased to grant. He was
-accompanied by his adjutant, and expressed his
-admiration of the institution. While recovering
-from his wound he spent much of his time in reading."
-Under date of October 18th is another entry, "The
-French Marquis and General Woodford left for the
-army to-day."</p>
-
-<p>On the day between Lafayette's visit of farewell
-and his actual departure Gen. John Burgoyne, who
-had set out confidently from Canada to open the
-Hudson River, ended by surrendering his entire
-army. He had thought he was pursuing ragged
-Continental soldiers when in truth they were luring
-him through the autumn woods to his ruin. He
-awoke to find his communications cut and his army
-compelled to fight a battle or starve. It gallantly
-fought two battles near Saratoga, one on September
-19th, the other on October 7th; but both went
-against him and ten days later he gave up his sword
-and nearly six thousand British soldiers to "mere"
-Americans.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>Up to that time a puzzled world had been unable
-to understand how the American cause continued to
-gain. The capture of a whole British army, however,
-was something tangible that Europe could
-fully comprehend, and respect for the Revolution
-measurably increased. The victory had even greater
-effect in Europe than in America, though at home
-there was much rejoicing and a marked gain in the
-value of those "promises to pay" which Congress
-issued as a means of getting money for current
-expenses.</p>
-
-<p>But Burgoyne's surrender threatened to have very
-serious effects upon the personal fortunes of General
-Washington, and in lesser degree upon those of
-Lafayette. People began contrasting the results of
-the summer's campaign. Washington, in command
-of the main army, had lost Philadelphia, while
-farther north General Gates, with fewer men, had
-not only captured Burgoyne, but cleared the whole
-region of enemy troops. There were those who did
-not hesitate to say that Washington ought to be
-deposed and Gates put in his place.</p>
-
-<p>In reality Gates had almost nothing to do with the
-surrender of Burgoyne. The strategy which led up
-to the battles of Saratoga was the work of General
-Schuyler, who was forced out of command by intrigue
-and superseded by Gates just before the
-crowning triumph. The battles themselves had not
-been fought under the personal orders of the new
-commander, but under Benedict Arnold and Gen.
-Daniel Morgan, with the help of the Polish General
-Kosciuszko in planning defenses. It was pure luck,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>therefore, which brought Gates the fame; but, being
-a man of more ambition than good judgment, with
-an excellent opinion of himself, he was the last
-person in the world to discourage praise of his
-ability.</p>
-
-<p>Discontent against Washington was fanned by
-born intriguers like the Irish General Conway and
-by the more despicable Gen. Charles Lee, a traitor
-at heart. Lafayette became involved quite innocently,
-in the plot against him, known to history as
-the Conway Cabal. Two things, good in themselves,
-were responsible for it. One was his optimistic
-belief in human nature; the other, his increasing
-military renown. The latter was the result of a
-very small engagement in which he took a very large
-part shortly after rejoining the army. The main
-camp was then about fifteen miles from Philadelphia,
-but General Greene had taken his division over
-into New Jersey, where he was endeavoring to make
-life uncomfortable for General Howe. Lafayette
-obtained permission to join him as a volunteer, and
-on the 25th of November went out with about three
-hundred men to reconnoiter a position held by the
-British at Gloucester, opposite Philadelphia. He
-could clearly see them carrying across the river the
-provisions they had gathered in a raid in New Jersey,
-and they might easily have killed or captured him
-had they been on the lookout. Some of his men
-advanced to within two miles and a half of Gloucester,
-where they came upon a post of three hundred
-and fifty Hessians with field-pieces. What followed
-is told briefly in his own words. "As my little
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>reconnoitering party was all in fine spirits, I supported
-them. We pushed the Hessians more than
-half a mile from the place where their main body
-was, and we made them run very fast." The vigor,
-of his attack made Cornwallis believe General
-Greene's entire division was upon him, and he hurried
-to the relief of his Hessians. This was more
-than Lafayette bargained for, and he drew off in the
-gathering darkness with the loss of only one man
-killed and five wounded, carrying with him fourteen
-Hessian prisoners, while twice that number, including
-an officer, remained on the field.</p>
-
-<p>General Greene had described Lafayette to his
-wife as "one of the sweetest-tempered young gentlemen."
-Now his soldierly qualities impressed him.
-"The marquis is determined to be in the way of
-danger," was the comment he appended to his own
-account of the affair; and he ordered Lafayette to
-make his report directly to Washington, which the
-young man did in the boyishly jubilant epistle
-written in quaint French English which told how
-the Hessians "ran very fast." The letter fairly
-bubbled with pride over the behavior of his militia
-and his rifle corps; and, not content with expressing
-this to his Commander-in-chief, he lined them up
-next morning and made them a little speech, telling
-them exactly how he felt about it. An Englishman
-or an American could scarcely have done it with
-grace, but it was manifestly spontaneous on his part&mdash;one
-of those little acts which so endeared Lafayette
-to his American friends both in and out of the
-army.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>Washington sent on the news to Congress with the
-intimation that his young friend had now proved his
-ability and might be trusted with the command he
-so longed for. "He possesses uncommon military
-talents," Washington wrote, "is of a quick and
-sound judgment, persevering and enterprising without
-rashness, and, besides these, he is of conciliating
-temper and perfectly sober&mdash;which are qualities that
-rarely combine in the same person." At that moment
-of bickering in the army and of popular criticism
-of himself they must have seemed exceptionally
-rare to Washington. Congress expressed its willingness,
-and we learn from a long letter written by
-Lafayette to his father-in-law and carried across the
-ocean by no less a personage than John Adams, when
-he went to replace Silas Deane at Paris, that Washington
-offered him the choice of several different
-divisions.</p>
-
-<p>He chose one made up entirely of Virginians,
-though it was weak "even in proportion to the
-weakness of the entire army," and very sadly in need
-of clothing. "I am given hope of cloth out of which
-I must make coats and recruits out of which I must
-make soldiers in almost the same space of time.
-Alas! the one is harder than the other, even for men
-more skilled than I," he wrote, just before the army
-went into its melancholy winter quarters at Valley
-Forge. "We shall be in huts there all winter,"
-Lafayette explained. "It is there that the American
-army will try to clothe itself, because it is naked
-with an entire nakedness; to form itself, because it
-is in need of instruction; and to recruit its numbers,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>because it is very weak. But the thirteen states
-are going to exert themselves and send us men," he
-added, cheerfully. "I hope my division will be one
-of the strongest, and I shall do all in my power to
-make it one of the best."</p>
-
-<p>He was striving to make the most of his opportunity.
-"I read, I study, I examine, I listen, I
-reflect, and upon the result of all this I endeavor to
-form my opinion and to put into it as much common
-sense as I can. I am cautious about talking too
-much, lest I should say some foolish thing; and still
-more cautious in my actions lest I should do some
-foolish thing; for I do not want to disappoint the
-confidence the Americans have so kindly placed
-in me."</p>
-
-<p>There was not much to do after the army went into
-winter quarters; and France seemed very far away.
-"What is the use of writing news in a letter destined
-to travel for years and to reach you finally in tatters?"
-he wrote Adrienne on November 6th. "You
-may receive this letter, dear heart, in the course of
-five or six years, for I write by a crooked chance, of
-which I have no great opinion. See the route it will
-take. An officer of the army carries it to Fort Pitt,
-three hundred miles toward the back of the continent.
-There it will embark on the Ohio and float
-through a region inhabited by savages. When it
-reaches New Orleans a little boat will transport it
-to the Spanish Isles, from which a vessel of that
-nation will take it (Lord knows when!) when it
-returns to Europe. But it will still be far from you,
-and only after having passed through all the grimy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>hands of Spanish postal officials will it be allowed to
-cross the Pyrenees. It may be unsealed and resealed
-five or six times before reaching you. So it
-will be proof that I neglect not a single chance, even
-the remotest, to send you news of me and to repeat
-how much I love you.... It is cruel to think ...
-that my true happiness is two hundred leagues
-distant, across an immense ocean infested by
-scoundrelly English vessels. They make me very
-unhappy, those villainous ships. Only one letter
-from you, one single letter, dear heart, has
-reached me as yet. The others are lost, captured,
-lying at the bottom of the sea, to all
-appearances. I can only blame our enemies for
-this horrible privation; for you surely would
-not neglect to write me from every port and by
-every packet sent out by Doctor Franklin and Mr.
-Deane."</p>
-
-<p>On his part, he neglected not a single opportunity.
-On one occasion he even sent her a letter by the hand
-of an English officer, a Mr. Fitzpatrick, with whom
-he had begun a friendship during his visit to London.
-This gentleman had come to Philadelphia with
-General Howe, and Lafayette learned in some way
-that he was about to return to England. "I could
-not resist the desire to embrace him before his
-departure. We arranged a rendezvous in this town
-(Germantown). It is the first time that we have
-met without arms in our hands, and it pleases us
-both much better than the enemy airs we have heretofore
-given ourselves ... there is no news of interest.
-Besides, it would not do for Mr. Fitzpatrick to transport
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>political news written by a hand at present
-engaged against his army."</p>
-
-<p>It was this friendly enemy, Mr. Fitzpatrick, who
-lifted his voice in the British House of Commons in
-Lafayette's behalf, when the latter was a prisoner
-in Germany.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_XI" id="chap_XI"></a>XI<br />
-
-A FOOL'S ERRAND</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The more Lafayette studied Washington the more
-he was confirmed in his first swift impression.
-"Our general is a man really created for this Revolution,
-which could not succeed without him," he wrote
-the Duc d'Ayen. "I see him more intimately than
-any one else in the world, and I see him worthy the
-adoration of his country.... His name will be
-revered in future ages by all lovers of liberty and
-humanity."</p>
-
-<p>Such admiration seemed unlikely ground upon
-which to work for Washington's undoing, but this
-was what his enemies attempted. Part of their
-plan was to win away Washington's trusted friends,
-and Lafayette's good will would be particularly
-valuable, because he was looked upon in a way as
-representing France. The winter proved unusually
-severe, and when the sufferings of the soldiers at
-Valley Forge began to be noised abroad criticism of
-Washington increased. It was pointed out that
-Burgoyne's captured army was being fed at American
-expense, that General Clinton's forces were
-comfortably housed in New York, while General
-Howe and his officers were enjoying a brilliant social
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>season at Philadelphia; but at Valley Forge there
-was only misery. General Conway was there himself,
-working up his plot.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette was so kindly disposed that it was hard
-for him to believe others evil-minded. Also he was
-frankly ambitious. Thomas Jefferson once said of
-him that he had "a canine appetite" for fame.
-Conway played skilfully on both these traits, professing
-great friendship for Lafayette and throwing
-out hints of glory to be gained in service under
-General Gates, to whom he knew Lafayette had
-written a polite note of congratulation after Saratoga.
-Lafayette appears to have taken it all at its
-face value until an incriminating letter from Conway
-to Gates fell into hands for which it was never
-intended. Then Lafayette went directly to Washington,
-meaning to unburden his heart, but the
-general was engaged and could not see him. He
-returned to his quarters and wrote him a long letter,
-breathing solicitude in every line. Washington
-answered with his usual calm dignity, but in a way
-to show that the young man's devotion was balm to
-his spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Conway had played upon Lafayette's homesickness
-also. Family news came to him very slowly.
-It was not until Christmas was being celebrated at
-Valley Forge with such sorry festivities as the camp
-could afford that he learned of the birth of his little
-daughter, Anastasie, which had occurred in the
-previous July. All the camp rejoiced with him, but
-the news increased his desire to be with his wife
-and children, if only for a short time. If he had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>really contemplated a journey across the sea, however,
-he gave up the idea at once, believing that
-loyalty to his friend now made it his duty to "stand
-by."</p>
-
-<p>"The bearer of this letter will describe to you the
-attractive surroundings of the place I have chosen to
-stay in rather than to enjoy the happiness of being
-with you," he wrote Adrienne. "After you know in
-detail all the circumstances of my present position
-... you will approve of my course. I almost
-dare to say you will applaud me.... Besides the
-reason that I have given you, I have still another
-which I should not mention to everybody, because it
-might appear that I was assuming an air of ridiculous
-importance. My presence is more necessary
-to the American cause at this moment than you may
-imagine. Many foreigners who have failed to obtain
-commissions, or whose ambitious schemes after
-having obtained them could not be countenanced,
-have entered into powerful conspiracies; they have
-used every artifice to turn me against this Revolution
-and against him who is its leader; and they have
-taken every opportunity to spread the report that I
-am about to leave the continent. The British have
-openly declared this to be so. I cannot with good
-conscience play into the hands of these people. If
-I were to go, many Frenchmen who are useful here
-would follow my example."</p>
-
-<p>So he stayed at Valley Forge, which was indeed a
-place of icy torment. The men suffered horribly for
-lack of coats and caps and shoes. Their feet froze
-until they were black. Sometimes they had to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>amputated. There was not enough food. Even
-colonels rarely had more than two meals a day, often
-only one, while the rank and file frequently went for
-several days without a distribution of rations.
-Enlistments ceased, and desertion was very easy
-with a wide-open country back of the camp and
-Howe's sleek, well-fed army only two marches away
-down the Lancaster Pike. It was small wonder that
-Washington's numbers dwindled until he could count
-only five or six thousand. Lafayette called the
-endurance of the wretched little army that held on
-"a miracle which every day served to renew." It
-was a miracle explained by the character of the
-Commander-in-chief, and of the remarkable group
-of officers he had gathered around him. As for
-Lafayette, he strove to live as frugally and be as
-self-denying as any of them. More than forty
-years later some of his American friends had proof
-of how well he succeeded; for an old soldier came
-up and reminded him how one snowy night at
-Valley Forge he had taken a gun from a shivering
-sentry and stood guard himself while he sent the
-man to his own quarters for a pair of stockings and
-his only blanket; and when these things were
-brought how he had cut the blanket in two and
-given him half. Though there was cruel suffering
-in that winter camp, there was much of such high-spirited
-gallantry to meet it; and there were also
-pleasant hours, for several of the officers had been
-joined by their wives, who did everything in their
-power to make the dull days brighter.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-<a name="img119a" id="img119a"></a>
-<img src="images/p119a.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">WASHINGTON AND THE COMMITTEE OF CONGRESS AT VALLEY FORGE</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-<a name="img119b" id="img119b"></a>
-<img src="images/p119b.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">VALLEY FORGE&mdash;WASHINGTON AND LAFAYETTE</p>
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>Washington's enemies, not yet having exhausted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>their wiles, hit upon a clever plan to remove Lafayette
-from his side. They succeeded in getting Congress
-to appoint a new War Board with General
-Gates at its head. This body exercised authority,
-though Washington remained Commander-in-chief.
-Without consulting him, the board decided, or pretended
-to decide, to send a winter expedition into
-Canada, with Lafayette at its head and Conway
-second in command. Conway had offered his
-resignation at the time his letter was discovered,
-but it had not been accepted. To emphasize the
-slight put upon Washington, Lafayette's new commission
-was inclosed in a letter to the Commander-in-chief,
-with the request that he hand it to the
-younger man. This Washington did with admirable
-self-control, saying, as he gave Lafayette the
-paper, "I would rather they had selected you for
-this than any other man."</p>
-
-<p>It is not often that such important duty falls to a
-soldier of twenty-one. Naturally enough, he was
-elated, and this duty was particularly tempting
-because it offered him, a Frenchman, the chance to
-go into a French province to reconquer a region
-which had been taken from his own people by Britain
-in the Seven Years' War. But he also was capable
-of exercising self-control, and he answered that he
-could accept it only on the understanding that he
-remained subordinate to Washington, as an officer
-of his army detailed for special duty, with the privilege
-of making reports directly to him and of
-sending duplicates to Congress. A committee of
-Congress happened to be visiting Valley Forge that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>day, and he went impetuously before them and
-declared that he would rather serve as a mere aide
-under Washington than accept any separate command
-the War Board could give him. His conditions
-being agreed to, he departed happily enough for
-York, Pennsylvania, where Congress was still holding
-its sittings, in order to receive his instructions.</p>
-
-<p>There, in General Gates's own house, at another
-dinner memorable in his personal history, he got
-his first intimation of the kind of campaign the
-War Board wished him to carry on. Toast after
-toast was drunk&mdash;to the success of the northern
-expedition&mdash;to Lafayette and his brilliant prospects&mdash;and
-on through a long list, to which he listened in
-growing amazement, for he missed the most important
-of them all. "Gentlemen!" he cried, finally,
-springing to his feet, "I propose the health of General
-Washington!" and the others drank it in silence.</p>
-
-<p>He refused to have Conway for his second in command,
-and asked that De Kalb be detailed to accompany
-him instead. He proved so intractable, in
-short, that even before he set out for Albany, where
-he was to assume command, the conspirators saw it
-was useless to continue the farce; but they allowed
-him to depart on his cold journey as the easiest way
-of letting the matter end. The four hundred miles
-occupied two weeks by sleigh and horseback, a most
-discouraging sample of what he must expect farther
-north. "Lake Champlain is too cold for producing
-the least bit of laurel," he wrote Washington. "I
-go very slowly, sometimes drenched by rain, sometimes
-covered by snow, and not entertaining many
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>handsome thoughts about the projected incursion
-into Canada."</p>
-
-<p>At Albany he found creature comforts, a bed, for
-one thing, with a supply of quilts and blankets that
-made it entirely possible to sleep without lying down
-in his clothes, which was a luxury he had scarcely
-enjoyed since leaving Bethlehem; but of preparations
-for invading Canada he found not one. The
-plans and orders that looked so well on paper, and
-which he had been assured were well under way, had
-not been heard of in Albany, or else had not been
-executed, for the best of reasons; because they
-could not be. General Conway was there ahead of
-him to represent the War Board, and told him
-curtly that the expedition was not to be thought of.
-Astounded, the young general refused to believe
-him until interviews with General Schuyler and
-others experienced in northern campaigning convinced
-him that this at least was not treachery, but
-cold, hard fact.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery was a great blow to Lafayette's
-pride. Members of Congress had urged him to
-write about the expedition to his friends in France.
-He was frankly afraid that he would be laughed at
-"unless Congress offers the means of mending this
-ugly business by some glorious operation." But he
-was in no mood to ask favors of Congress. "For
-you, dear General," he wrote Washington, "I know
-very well that you will do everything to procure me
-the one thing I am ambitious of&mdash;glory. I think
-your Excellency will approve of my staying on here
-until further orders."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>March found him still at Albany, awaiting the
-orders which the War Board was in no haste to send,
-having already accomplished its purpose. He tried
-to retrieve something out of the hopeless situation,
-but with fewer men than he had been promised, and
-these clamoring for pay long overdue, he had little
-success. "Everybody is after me for monney," he
-wrote General Gates, "and monney will be spoken of
-by me till I will be enabled to pay our poor soldiers.
-Not only justice and humanity, but even prudence
-obliges us to satisfy them soon." As he had already
-done, and would do again, he drew upon his private
-credit to meet the most pressing public needs; but
-he could work against the enemy only in an indirect
-way by sending supplies to Fort Schuyler, where
-they were sorely needed.</p>
-
-<p>One interesting experience, unusual for a French
-nobleman, came to him during this tedious waiting.
-The Indians on the frontier became restless, and
-General Schuyler called a council of many tribes to
-meet "at Johnson Town" in the Mohawk Valley.
-He invited Lafayette to attend, hoping by his presence
-to reawaken the Indians' old partiality for
-the French. Five hundred men, women, and children
-attended this council, and very picturesque
-they must have looked with their tents and their
-trappings against the snowy winter landscape. The
-warriors were as gorgeous as macaws in their feathered
-war-bonnets, nose-jewels, and brilliant paint,
-but Lafayette noted that they talked politics with
-the skill of veterans, as the pipe passed from hand
-to hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>He appears to have exercised his usual personal
-charm for Americans upon these original children of
-the soil as he had already exercised it upon the whites
-who came to supplant them. But he says of it only
-that they "showed an equal regard for his words and
-his necklaces." Before the council was over he was
-adopted into one of the tribes, and returned to
-Albany the richer by another name to add to his
-long collection&mdash;"Kayewla," which had belonged to
-a respected chief of a bygone day. The new Kayewla
-was so well liked that a band of Iroquois followed him
-south and became part of his military division.</p>
-
-<p>On his return to Albany an unexpected duty
-awaited him. A new form of oath of office, forever
-forswearing allegiance to George III and acknowledging
-the sovereignty and independence of the United
-States, had come, with the order that all must subscribe
-to it. So, to use the picturesque phrase of
-the Middle Ages, it was "between" his French hands
-that the officers of the northern military department
-swore fealty to the new United States of America.</p>
-
-<p>As spring advanced the influence of Gates and
-Conway waned and Washington regained his old
-place in public esteem. Conway himself left the
-country. Lafayette and De Kalb were ordered
-back to the main army; and in doing this Congress
-took pains to express by resolution its belief that the
-young general was in no way to blame for the failure
-of the winter expedition to Canada. When he
-reached Washington's headquarters in April he
-found Valley Forge much less melancholy than
-when he left it; a change due not only to the more
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>cheerful season of the year, but to wonders in the
-way of improved discipline that General von Steuben
-had brought about in a few short weeks. This
-officer of much experience had been trained under
-Frederick the Great, and, having served as his aide,
-was equipped in fullest measure with the knowledge
-and skill in military routine that Washington's
-volunteers so lacked. When he took up his duties
-he found a confusion almost unbelievable to one of
-his orderly military mind. Military terms meant
-nothing. A regiment might contain only thirty
-men, or it might be larger than another officer's
-brigade. It might be formed of three platoons or of
-twenty-one. There was one company that consisted
-of only a single corporal. Each colonel drilled
-his men after a system of his own; and the arms in
-the hands of these go-as-you-please soldiers "were
-in a horrible condition&mdash;covered with rust, half of
-them without bayonets," while there were many
-from which not a single shot could be fired. Yet
-this was the main army of the revolutionists who
-had set out to oppose England! Fortunately Baron
-von Steuben was no mere drillmaster. He had the
-invaluable gift of inspiring confidence and imparting
-knowledge. Between March, when he began his
-"intensive" training, and the opening of the summer
-campaign, he made of that band of lean and tattered
-patriots a real army, though it still lacked much of
-having a holiday appearance. The men's coats gave
-no indication of their rank, or indeed that they were
-in the army at all. They were of many colors, including
-red, and it was not impossible to see an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>officer mounting guard at grand parade clad "in a
-sort of dressing-gown made of an old blanket or
-woolen bedcover." But the man inside the coat
-was competent for his job.</p>
-
-<p>It was a compatriot of Lafayette's, the French
-Minister of War, St.-Germain, who had persuaded
-General Steuben to go to America; so to France is
-due part of our gratitude for the services of this
-efficient German. Perhaps, going back farther, the
-real person we should thank is General Burgoyne,
-since it was his surrender which undoubtedly quickened
-the interest of the French in the efficiency of
-our ragamuffin army. French official machinery,
-which had been strangely clogged before, began to
-revolve when news of Burgoyne's surrender reached
-Paris early in December, 1777. The king, who had
-not found it convenient to receive the American
-commissioners up to that time, sent them word that
-he had been friendly all along; and as soon as
-diplomatic formality permitted, a treaty of amity
-and commerce was signed between France and
-America. That meant that France was now formally
-an ally, and that the United States might count
-upon her influence and even upon her military help.
-It was a great point gained, but Franklin refused to
-allow his old eyes to be dazzled by mere glitter when
-he "and all the Americans in Paris" were received
-by the king and queen at Versailles in honor of the
-event. He was less impressed by the splendor of the
-palace than by the fact that it would be the better
-for a thorough cleaning. After the royal audience
-was over he and the other commissioners hastened
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>to pay a visit of ceremony to young Madame Lafayette
-in order to testify to the part her husband had
-played in bringing about this happy occurrence.</p>
-
-<p>When news of the signing of this treaty reached
-America about the 1st of May, 1778, Lafayette embraced
-his grave general in the exuberance of his
-joy, and even kissed him in French fashion. There
-was an official celebration in camp on the 7th of May,
-with much burning of gunpowder, reviewing of
-troops, "suitable" discoursing by chaplains, and
-many hearty cheers. Washington's orders prescribed
-in great detail just when and how each part
-of the celebration was to be carried out, and this
-is probably the only time in history that an
-American army <i>en masse</i> was ordered to cry, "Long
-live the king of France!"</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette, with a white sash across his breast,
-commanded the left; but it was a heavy heart that
-he carried under his badge that gala-day. Letters
-which came to him immediately after news of the
-treaty had brought sad tidings. He learned of the
-death of a favorite nephew, loved by him like a son,
-and also that his oldest child, the little Henriette, to
-whom he had been sending messages in every letter,
-had died in the previous October. "My heart is full
-of my own grief, and of yours which I was not with
-you to share," he wrote Adrienne. "The distance
-from Europe to America never seemed so immense to
-me as it does now.... The news came to me immediately
-after that of the treaty, and while bowed
-down with grief I had to receive congratulations and
-take part in the public rejoicing." Had the letters
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>come through without delay they would have arrived
-at the beginning of winter, at the moment
-when General Conway was fanning the flame of his
-homesickness. The desire to comfort his wife
-might have turned the scale and sent Lafayette
-across the sea instead of to Albany. Now, though
-he longed to go to her, he felt bound to remain for
-the campaign which was about to open.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_XII" id="chap_XII"></a>XII<br />
-
-FARCE AND TREACHERY</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Much as the French treaty had done for the
-Americans, it had by no means ended the war.
-There were as many British soldiers as ever on
-American soil, and General Howe at Philadelphia
-and General Clinton at New York could be trusted
-to make excellent use of them. Signs of British
-activity were already apparent. A large number
-of transports had sailed from Philadelphia, but
-whether they had gone to bring reinforcements or
-whether it meant that Philadelphia was being
-abandoned and that the Hudson was again to be the
-main point of attack Washington did not know.
-Lafayette was ordered to take some of the best
-troops at Valley Forge and find out.</p>
-
-<p>He left camp on the 18th of May with about
-twenty-two hundred men, among them six hundred
-Pennsylvania militia and half a hundred Iroquois
-Indians. Crossing the Schuylkill, he established himself
-on high ground between that river and the
-Delaware, twelve miles from the city, at a hamlet
-called Barren Hill, whose chief ornament was a
-church with a graveyard. It was an excellent spot
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>for purposes of observation; for roads ran in various
-directions, while the abrupt fall of the land toward
-the Schuylkill protected his right, and there were
-substantial stone buildings in a wood in front which
-could be used as forts in case of need. He guarded
-against surprise on his left, the direction from which
-any considerable body of British was likely to approach,
-by placing there his large detachment of
-Pennsylvania militia. He planted his five cannon
-in good positions, sent out his Indian scouts, who
-wormed themselves several miles nearer the city, had
-interviews with promising individuals who were to
-act as spies, and was well pleased with himself.</p>
-
-<p>The British were also exceedingly well pleased
-when their spies brought in full information of
-Lafayette's position and numbers. They saw that
-he had separated himself from the American army
-and virtually placed himself in their hands; and
-short of Washington himself there was no officer
-they would so enjoy capturing. His prominence at
-home and his popularity in America made him a
-shining mark; moreover, he had fooled them in
-London before coming to America. It would be a
-great satisfaction to take him prisoner gently, without
-hurting him, treat him with mock courtesy, and
-send him back to England, a laughing-stock.</p>
-
-<p>They had force enough to make his capture practically
-certain, and set out in great glee, so sure of
-the result that before leaving town Generals Howe
-and Clinton, both of whom were in Philadelphia,
-sent out invitations to a reception for the following
-day "to meet the Marquis de Lafayette." Although
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>it was looked upon as something of a lark, the expedition
-was deemed sufficiently important for
-General Clinton to lead it in person, while General
-Howe accompanied him, and the admiral, General
-Howe's sailor brother, went along as a volunteer.
-Taking four men to Lafayette's one, and marching
-by night, they approached Barren Hill in a way to
-cut off the fords across the Schuylkill and also to
-intercept any assistance which might be sent from
-Valley Forge.</p>
-
-<p>Unconscious that he was in danger, Lafayette was
-talking, early on the morning of May 20th, with a
-young woman who was going into the city as a spy,
-when word was brought him that dragoons in red
-coats had been seen on the Whitemarsh road.
-This did not disturb him, for he knew that among
-the coats of many colors worn by his Pennsylvania
-militia some were red; but he sent out to verify the
-information, merely as a matter of routine. Soon
-the truth was learned&mdash;and exaggerated&mdash;and his
-men set up a cry that they were surrounded by the
-British.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately Lafayette had a head which grew
-steadier in a crisis. Sending his aides flying in all
-directions, he found that while the way to Valley
-Forge was indeed cut off, one ford still remained
-open, though the British were rapidly advancing
-upon it. He quickly placed a small number of his
-men near the church, where the stone wall of the
-graveyard would serve as breastworks, stationed a
-few more near the woods as if they were heads of
-columns just appearing, and ordered all the rest to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>drop quietly down the steep side of the hill until
-they were out of sight, and then hurry to the ford.
-The attention of the enemy was held long enough
-by the decoy troops to enable the others to reach the
-ford or swim across, their heads dotting the water
-"like the corks of a floating seine," and Lafayette,
-who had stayed behind, brought the last of his men
-to safety just as two columns of the British, marching
-up two sides of Barren Hill, met each other, face to
-face, at the top. Lafayette, on the opposite bank of
-the river, prepared for defense, but the British were
-too disgusted to follow.</p>
-
-<p>The real encounter of the serio-comic affair took
-place between the most gaudily dressed bands of
-fighters in the whole Revolution, Lafayette's Iroquois
-in their war regalia and Clinton's advance-guard
-of Hessian cavalry. As the latter advanced,
-the Indians rose from their hiding-places uttering
-their piercing war-whoops. The horses of the troopers
-were terrified by the brilliant, shrieking creatures,
-and bolted. But terror was not all upon one side.
-The Indians had never seen men like these Hessians,
-with their huge bearskin shakos and fierce dyed
-mustaches. They in their turn were seized with
-panic and rushed away, fleeing incontinently from
-"bad medicine."</p>
-
-<p>Absurd as the affair proved, with little harm done
-to anything except the feelings of the British, its
-consequences might easily have been serious, both
-to the Revolution and to Lafayette. The loss of
-two thousand of his best men would have dangerously
-crippled Washington's little army; while the capture
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>of Lafayette, on the very first occasion he was intrusted
-with a command of any size, must almost of
-necessity have ended his military usefulness forever.
-As it was, Barren Hill demonstrated that he
-was quick and resourceful in time of danger; and
-these were very valuable qualities in a war like the
-American Revolution, which was won largely through
-the skill of its generals in losing battles. To realize
-the truth of this and how well it was carried out,
-we have only to recall Washington's masterly work
-in the winter campaign in New Jersey, when he maneuvered
-and marched and gave way until the right
-moment came to stand; how General Schuyler lured
-Burgoyne to disaster; and how, in a later campaign
-in the South, General Greene was said to have "reduced
-the art of losing battles to a science." Years
-afterward, in talking with Napoleon, Lafayette
-called our Revolution "the grandest of contests,
-won by the skirmishes of sentinels and outposts."
-About a month after this affair at Barren Hill the
-English evacuated Philadelphia and moved slowly
-northward with a force of seventeen thousand men
-and a baggage-train nearly twelve miles long. The
-length of this train indicated that it was moving-day
-for the British army, which wanted to be nearer
-the Hudson, but certain other indications pointed
-to the opening of an active campaign in New Jersey.
-A majority of the American officers, including Gen.
-Charles Lee, who was second in command, argued
-against an attack because both in numbers and organization
-the British force was superior to their
-own. General Lee went so far as to say that, instead
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>of trying to interfere with General Clinton's
-retreat, it ought to be aided in every possible way,
-"even with a bridge of gold." Subsequent developments
-proved that it was not fear of a British victory,
-but sympathy with British plans, which prompted
-this view. Several other officers, however, Washington
-himself, Gen. Anthony Wayne, who was
-always ready to fight, General Greene, General
-Cadwallader, and Lafayette, were in favor of following
-and attacking at the earliest opportunity.
-It was this course that Washington chose, in spite
-of the majority of votes against it. It seemed to
-him that the difficulty Clinton must experience in
-maneuvering his army over the roads of that region,
-and the fact that almost half of his force would need
-to be employed in guarding the unwieldy baggage-train,
-justified the expectation of success. His plan
-was to throw out a strong detachment ahead of the
-main army to harass the British flanks and rear and
-to follow this up so closely that the main army
-would be ready to go to its support in case Clinton
-turned to fight.</p>
-
-<p>The command of the advanced detachment was
-the post of honor, and to this Lee was entitled because
-of his rank. He refused it and Washington
-offered it to Lafayette, who accepted joyously. He
-had already begun his march when Lee reconsidered
-and sent Washington word that he desired
-the command, after all, appealing at the same time
-to Lafayette with the words, "I place my fortune
-and my honor in your hands; you are too generous
-to destroy both the one and the other." Lee was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>one of the few men Lafayette did not like, though he
-had no suspicion of his loyalty. He thought him
-ugly in face and in spirit, full of avarice and ambition.
-But Lee was his superior officer, and Lafayette
-was a soldier as well as a gentleman. He
-relinquished the command at once and offered to
-serve under Lee as a volunteer.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been better had he found it in his
-heart and in the military regulations to refuse, for
-on that sultry unhappy 28th of June when the two
-armies met and the battle of Monmouth Court
-House was fought, General Lee's indecision and confusion
-of orders, to give his conduct no harsher
-name, turned the advance of the Americans, who
-were in the best of spirits and eager to fight, into
-what their generals admitted was "a disgraceful
-rout." Officer after officer came to Lee beseeching
-him to let them carry out their original instructions
-and not to give orders to fall back; but he did everything
-to hinder success, answering stubbornly, "I
-know my business."</p>
-
-<p>At Lafayette's first intimation that things were
-going wrong, he sent a message to Washington, who
-was with the main army, some miles in the rear.
-Whether he learned the news first from this messenger
-or from a very scared fifer running down the
-road, Washington could not believe his eyes or his
-ears. Hurrying forward, he found Lee in the midst
-of the retreating troops and a brief but terrible
-scene took place between them; Washington in a
-white heat of anger, though outwardly calm, Lee
-stammering and stuttering and finally bursting out
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>with the statement that the whole movement had
-been made contrary to his advice. Washington's
-short and scorching answer ended Lee's military
-career. Then, turning away from him as though
-from a creature unworthy of further notice, the
-Commander-in-chief took up the serious task at
-hand. The soldiers responded to his presence
-instantly. With those on the field he and Lafayette
-were able to make a stand until reserves came up
-and a drawn battle was fought which lasted until
-nightfall. The conditions had been unusually trying,
-for the heat was so oppressive that men died of
-that alone, without receiving a wound. Both
-armies camped upon the field, Washington meaning
-to renew the contest next morning; but during the
-night the enemy retired to continue the march
-toward New York.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-<a name="img137" id="img137"></a>
-<img src="images/p137.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH, JUNE 28, 1778</p>
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>Lee was tried by court martial and suspended
-from any command in the armies of the United
-States for the period of one year. Afterward Congress
-dismissed him altogether. The judgment of
-history is that he deserved severer punishment and
-that his sympathies were undoubtedly with the
-British. He was of English birth, and from the
-beginning of his service in the American army he
-tried to thwart Washington. Lafayette was convinced
-that, though his name does not appear
-prominently in the doings of the Conway cabal, it
-was he and not General Gates who would have
-profited by the success of that plot.</p>
-
-<p>Since the British were able to continue their march
-as planned, they claimed Monmouth as a victory.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>Washington also continued northward and, crossing
-the Hudson, established himself near White Plains,
-which brought the British and American forces once
-more into the relative positions they had occupied
-two years earlier, after the battle of Long Island.</p>
-
-<p>Monmouth proved to be the last engagement of
-consequence fought that year, and the last large
-battle of the Revolution to be fought in the Northern
-states. Very soon after this the British gave up
-their attempt to cut the rebellion in two by opening
-the Hudson, and substituted for it the plan of capturing
-the Southern states one by one, beginning
-with Georgia and working northward. They continued
-to keep a large force near New York, however,
-and that necessitated having an American army
-close by. These two forces were not idle; some
-of the most dramatic incidents of the whole war
-occurred here, though the main contest raged elsewhere,
-and in a larger sense, these armies were only
-marking time.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_XIII" id="chap_XIII"></a>XIII<br />
-
-A LIAISON OFFICER</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette's influence and duties took on a
-new character about the middle of July, 1778,
-when a fleet of twenty-six French frigates and ships
-of the line arrived, commanded by Admiral d'Estaing.</p>
-
-<p>These ships had sailed in such secrecy that even
-their captains did not know whither they were
-bound until they had been at sea some days. Then,
-while a solemn Mass was being sung aboard the
-flagship, the signal was hoisted to break the seals
-upon their orders. When the full meaning of these
-orders dawned upon the sailors and the thousand
-soldiers who accompanied the expedition shouts of
-joy and cries of <i>"Vive le Roi!"</i> spread from ship to
-ship. But it was an expedition fated to ill luck.
-Storms and contrary winds delayed them five weeks
-in the Mediterranean, and seven more in crossing
-the Atlantic. Food and water were almost gone
-when they reached Delaware Bay, where the disappointing
-news awaited their commander that the
-British, fearing his blockade, had withdrawn to New
-York, taking the available food-supplies of the
-neighborhood with them. That was the explanation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>of Clinton's long wagon-train. He left little
-behind for hungry sailors.</p>
-
-<p>D'Estaing landed Silas Deane, and the first minister
-sent from France to the United States, who had come
-over with; him sent messages announcing his arrival
-to Congress and to Washington, and proceeded up
-the coast. For eleven days he remained outside the
-bar at Sandy Hook in a position bad for his ships
-and worse for his temper; for inside the bar he could
-see many masts flying the British flag. But pilots
-were hard to find, most of them being in the service
-of his enemies; and without pilots he could not
-enter. When at last they were obtained it was only
-to tell him that the largest of his vessels drew too
-much water to enter without removing part of their
-guns, and this he could not afford to do with English
-ships lying inside. D'Estaing would not believe it
-until he himself had made soundings. "It is terrible
-to be within sight of your object and yet unable to
-attain it," he wrote. To add to his unhappiness he
-heard that an English fleet under Admiral Byron
-had sailed for American waters, and he knew that
-its arrival would raise the number of British ships and
-guns to a figure far exceeding his own. He put to
-sea again, his destination this time being Newport,
-where the British had a few ships and about six
-thousand men. Washington had suggested a combined
-attack here in case it was found impossible
-to accomplish anything at New York.</p>
-
-<p>Admiral d'Estaing came from Auvergne, as did
-Lafayette. Indeed, their families were related by
-marriage, and to his first official communication
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>Lafayette had added, at Washington's request, a
-long postscript giving personal and family details
-that the British could not possibly know, doing this
-to prove to the admiral that the proposed plans
-were genuine and not an invention of the enemy.
-The correspondence thus begun had continued with
-pleasure on both sides, and, after the fleet reached
-Newport, Lafayette spent a happy day on the flagship
-as the admiral's honored guest, though he was
-technically still a deserter, subject to arrest and
-deportation.</p>
-
-<p>The American part of the combined attack on
-Newport was to be made by a detachment of Washington's
-army co-operating with state troops and
-militia raised by General Sullivan, near by. The
-command of the Continentals was offered to Lafayette,
-who wrote to D'Estaing in boyish glee: "Never
-have I realized the charm of my profession, M. le
-Comte, as I do now that I am to be allowed to practise
-it in company with Frenchmen. I have never
-wished so much for the ability that I have not, or
-for the experience that I shall obtain in the next
-twenty years if God spares my life and allows us to
-have war. No doubt it is amusing to you to see me
-presented as a general officer; I confess that I am
-forced myself to smile sometimes at the idea, even in
-this country where people do not smile so readily as
-we do at home."</p>
-
-<p>Although scurvy had broken out with considerable
-violence on his ships, the French admiral held himself
-ready to carry out his part of a speedy attack.
-It was General Sullivan who had to ask a delay because
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>so few of the militia responded to his summons.
-While expressing polite disappointment that so
-large a part of the American army was "still at
-home," D'Estaing tried to emphasize the need of
-haste. He believed in striking sudden, unexpected
-blows; and he had ever in mind the approach of that
-fleet of Admiral Byron's. Nine precious days passed,
-which the British commander at Newport utilized in
-preparing for defense and in sending messengers to
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Lafayette returned to camp and
-started with his detachment for Newport. On the
-march he received a letter from Washington which
-must have caused him keen disappointment, since it
-took away half his authority. General Greene was
-a native of Rhode Island, with special knowledge of
-the region where the fighting was to take place, and
-because of this it had been decided at the last moment
-to combine the Continental troops with the
-militia and to give General Greene joint command
-with Lafayette. The young man's answer was a
-model of cheerful acquiescence. "Dear General:
-I have received your Excellency's favor by General
-Greene, and have been much pleased with the arrival
-of a gentleman who, not only on account of his
-merit and the justness of his views, but also by his
-knowledge of the country and his popularity in this
-state, may be very serviceable to the expedition.
-I willingly part with half of my detachment, though
-I had a great dependence upon them, as you find it
-convenient for the good of the service. Anything,
-my dear General, you will order, or even wish, shall
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>always be infinitely agreeable to me; and I will
-always feel happy in doing anything which may
-please you or forward the public good. I am of the
-same opinion as your Excellency that dividing our
-Continental troops among the militia will have a
-better effect than if we were to keep them together
-in one wing." Only a single sentence, near the end,
-in which he referred to himself as being with the
-expedition as "a man of war of the third class"
-betrayed his regret. Washington appears to have
-been much pleased and relieved by this reply, for he
-realized that he was drawing heavily upon Lafayette's
-store of patience.</p>
-
-<p>As it turned out, neither Greene nor Lafayette had
-authority enough to quarrel over or any glory in the
-enterprise, for on the 10th of August, at the moment
-when the combined attack was about to begin, the
-relief expedition of Admiral Howe's ships loomed suddenly
-out of the fog. The French vessels had been
-placed only with a view to an attack upon land, and
-most of the sailors had been disembarked to take part
-in it. D'Estaing had to get them hurriedly back
-again and to prepare for a sea-fight. Before this
-was over a wind-storm of great fury arose. It
-separated the combatants, but left D'Estaing so
-crippled that he was obliged to put into Boston for
-repairs.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these events were of a character no human
-foresight could prevent. All of them held possibilities
-of misunderstanding, and these misunderstandings
-were increased tenfold by differences in
-nationality, in temper, and in language. Some of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>the French thought General Sullivan deliberately
-and jealously tried to block success. He reproached
-the French admiral for going to Boston after the
-storm instead of returning to his aid. Lafayette's
-very eagerness subjected him to criticism, yet he
-was the one man involved who understood the
-temperament of both the French and the Americans.
-The burden of explaining, of soothing, of trying to
-arrange the thousand prickly details of the situation
-fell upon him. Twice he rode to Boston and back
-for conferences with D'Estaing, making the journey
-of seventy miles once by night in six and a half
-hours&mdash;unexampled speed for those days. Such
-work now would be called the work of a liaison officer.
-He had need of all his tact, and even his sweet temper
-grew acid under the strain. He was strongly moved
-to fight a duel with General Sullivan; and both
-Washington and Congress had to intervene before
-the French admiral was completely assured of
-America's belief in his "zeal and attachment," and
-before Lafayette could be thoroughly appeased.</p>
-
-<p>Fond as he was of America, Lafayette was a
-Frenchman first of all. He had assured D'Estaing
-that he would rather fight as a common soldier
-under the French flag than as a general officer anywhere
-else. The coming of the French fleet had
-been to all intents a declaration of war by his country
-against England; and when the autumn was far
-enough advanced to make it certain there would be
-no more military activity in America before the
-next spring, he asked permission to return to France
-and offer his sword to his king.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>Washington, who had more sympathy with the
-impulses of youth than we are apt to give him credit
-for, saw that after the trying experiences of the past
-few weeks a leave of absence would be the best thing
-for Lafayette and also for his American friends.
-The young man's nerves were completely on edge.
-He had not only wanted to fight General Sullivan
-and controlled the desire; he had actually sent a
-challenge, against the advice of Washington and
-Admiral d'Estaing, to the Earl of Carlisle, an Englishman
-in America on official business, because of
-some words the latter had used which Lafayette regarded
-as an insult to the French. Besides these
-grievances, his imagination was working overtime on
-a grand new scheme for the conquest of Canada
-which Washington could no more indorse than he
-could approve the desire to shed blood in private
-quarrels. The young man's friendship was too valuable
-to make it politic continually to thwart him.
-Undoubtedly this was a case where absence would
-make the heart grow fonder. Very possibly also
-the wise general foresaw how much good Lafayette
-might do in Paris as an advocate of American
-interests during the next few months.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette did not wish to sever his relations with
-the Continental army. All he asked was a leave of
-absence, and this Congress readily granted in a set
-of complimentary resolutions, adding for good measure
-a letter "To our great, faithful, and beloved
-friend and ally, Louis the Sixteenth, King of France
-and Navarre," telling what a very wise and gallant
-and patient and excellent young man he was. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>it was weeks after this permission was given before
-Lafayette left America. Congress arranged, as a
-compliment, that he should sail from Boston on the
-frigate <i>Alliance</i>, one of the best of the nation's war-vessels.
-Lafayette made his visits of ceremony,
-wrote his notes of farewell, and set out from Philadelphia
-in a cold rain one day late in October.
-Ordinarily he would not have minded such a storm.
-He had endured the life at Valley Forge and discomforts
-of the winter trip to Canada with apparent
-ease; but to a year of such campaigning had been
-added several months of work and worry in connection
-with the French fleet. The two together
-had told upon his strength, and the storm added the
-finishing touch. He became really ill, but, suffering
-with fever, rode on, unwilling to delay his journey
-for mere weather, and unwilling, too, to fail in
-courtesy to the inhabitants of the many towns on
-his way who wished to do him honor. He fortified
-himself for the receptions and functions they had
-planned by frequent draughts of tea and spirits,
-which made his condition worse instead of better.
-By the time he reached Fishkill, New York, he was
-unable to proceed farther. His fever raged for
-three weeks, and the news spread that he would not
-recover. The concern manifested showed what a
-firm hold he had made for himself in American affection.
-Civilians spoke of him lovingly and sorrowfully
-as "the Marquis," while in the army, where
-he was known as "the soldier's friend," grief was
-even more sincere. Washington sent Surgeon-General
-Cochran, who had cared for him in Bethlehem,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>to take charge of the case, and rode himself almost
-daily the eight miles from headquarters to make
-inquiries, never entering the sick-room, and often
-turning away with tears in his eyes at the report
-given him. Lafayette, racked with fever and headache,
-was sure he would never live to reach France
-again. The idea of leaving the world at the early
-age of twenty-one did not trouble him; he felt that
-he would gladly compromise on three more months
-of life, provided he could see his family and be
-assured of the happy outcome of the American war.</p>
-
-<p>After the fever left him and he slowly regained his
-strength he spent a few happy days as Washington's
-guest before proceeding on his journey to Boston.
-The elder man's farewell was "very tender, very
-sad," and Lafayette rode away in company with the
-good Doctor Cochran, who had orders to watch him
-like a hawk until he was safely on the ship. After
-this parting the young man was more than ever
-convinced that Washington was a great man and
-his own very warm personal friend. He wondered
-how anybody could accuse him of being cold and
-unsympathetic.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_XIV" id="chap_XIV"></a>XIV<br />
-
-NEAR-MUTINY AND NEAR-IMPRISONMENT</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>When he reached Boston the crew of the <i>Alliance</i>
-had not been fully made up. The
-authorities offered to impress enough men to complete
-it, but Lafayette objected on principle to that
-way of obtaining sailors. They were finally secured
-by enlistment, but many of them were questionable
-characters, either English deserters or English prisoners
-of war. With such a crew the <i>Alliance</i> put to
-sea on the 11th of January, 1779, upon a voyage
-short for that time of year, but as tumultuous as it
-was brief. Excitement and discomfort began with
-a tempest off the Banks of Newfoundland which the
-frigate weathered with difficulty. Lafayette, who
-was always a poor sailor, longed for calm, even if it
-had to be found at the bottom of the sea; but that
-was only the beginning, the real excitement occurring
-about two hundred leagues off the French coast.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's own account explains that "by a
-rather immoral proclamation his Britannic Majesty
-encouraged revolt among crews," offering them the
-money value of ships captured and brought into
-English ports as "rebel" vessels&mdash;"a result which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>could only be obtained by the massacre of officers
-and those who objected." A plot of this nature was
-entered into by the English deserters and prisoners
-among the sailors on the <i>Alliance</i>. A cry of "A
-sail!" was to bring officers and passengers hurrying
-upon deck and shots from four cannon, carefully
-trained and loaded beforehand, were to blow them
-to bits. The time was fixed for four o'clock in the
-morning, but, fortunately, it was postponed until the
-same time in the afternoon, and in the interval the
-plot was disclosed to an American sailor who was
-mistaken by the conspirators for an Irishman on account
-of the fine brogue he had acquired through
-much sailing "in those latitudes." They offered
-him command of the frigate. He pretended to
-accept, but was able to warn the captain and Lafayette
-only one short hour before the time fixed for the
-deed. That was quite enough, however. The
-officers and passengers appeared upon deck ahead
-of time, sword in hand, and gathering the loyal
-sailors about them, called up the rest one by one.
-Thirty-three were put in irons. Evidence pointed to
-an even greater number of guilty men, but it was
-taken for granted that the rest might be relied upon,
-though only the Americans and French were really
-trusted. A week later the <i>Alliance</i> sailed happily
-into Brest floating the new American flag.</p>
-
-<p>The last word Lafayette had received from his
-family was already eight months old. He hurried
-toward Paris, but the news of his arrival traveled
-faster, and he found the city on tiptoe to see him.
-"On my arrival," says the <i>Memoirs</i>, "I had the honor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>to be consulted by all the Ministers and, what was
-much better, embraced by all the ladies. The embraces
-ceased next day, but I enjoyed for a longer
-time the confidence of the Cabinet and favor at Versailles,
-and also celebrity in Paris." His father-in-law,
-who had been so very bitter at his departure,
-received him amiably, a friendliness which touched
-Lafayette. "I was well spoken of in all circles, even
-after the favor of the queen had secured for me command
-of the regiment of the King's Dragoons."
-This was no other than the old De Noailles Cavalry
-in which he had served as a boy.</p>
-
-<p>Merely as a matter of form, however, he had to
-submit to a week's imprisonment because he had
-left the country against the wishes of the king.
-Instead of being shut in the Bastille, his prison was
-the beautiful home of his father-in-law, where
-Adrienne and the baby awaited him; and during
-that week its rooms were filled with distinguished
-visitors, come ostensibly to see the Duc d'Ayen.
-But even this delightful travesty of imprisonment
-did not begin until the prodigal had gone to Versailles
-for his first interview with the king's chief
-advisers. After a few days he wrote to Louis XVI,
-"acknowledging my happy fault." The king summoned
-him to his presence to receive "a gentle
-reprimand" which ended in smiles and compliments,
-and he was restored to liberty with the hint that it
-would be well for a time to avoid crowded places
-where the common people of Paris, who so dearly
-loved a hero, "might consecrate his disobedience."</p>
-
-<p>For the next few months he led a busy life, a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>favorite in society, an unofficial adviser of the
-government, called here and there to give first-hand
-testimony about men and motives in far-off America,
-making up lost months in as many short minutes
-with Adrienne, winning the heart of his new little
-daughter, assuming command of his "crack" regiment,
-so different in appearance from the ragged
-ranks he had commanded under Washington; and
-last, but by no means least in his own estimation,
-laying plans to accomplish by one bold stroke two
-military purposes dear to his heart&mdash;discomfiting the
-English and securing money for the American cause.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen such great results undertaken and
-accomplished in America with the slenderest means
-that the recklessness with which Europeans spent
-money for mere show seemed to him almost wicked.
-He used to tell himself that the cost of a single fête
-would equip an army in the United States. M. de
-Maurepas had once said that he was capable of
-stripping Versailles for the sake of his beloved
-Americans. It was much more in accordance with
-his will to seize the supplies for America from England
-herself. He planned a descent upon the
-English coast by two or three frigates under John
-Paul Jones and a land force of fifteen hundred men
-commanded by himself, to sail under the American
-flag, fall upon rich towns like Bristol and Liverpool,
-and levy tribute.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's brain worked in two distinct ways.
-His tropic imagination stopped at nothing, and
-completely ran away with his common sense when
-once it got going, as, for instance, while he lay
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>recovering from his wound at Bethlehem. Very
-different from this was the clever, quick wit with
-which he could take advantage of momentary chances
-in battle, as he had demonstrated when he and his
-little force dropped between the jaws of the trap
-closing upon them at Barren Hill. Fortunately in
-moments of danger it was usually his wit, not his
-imagination, that acted, and he took excellent care
-of the men under him; but when he had nothing in
-the way of hard facts to pin his mind to earth, and
-gave free rein to his desires, he was not practical.
-In this season of wild planning he not only invented
-the scheme for a bucaneering expedition in company
-with John Paul Jones; he mapped out an uprising
-in Ireland, but decided that the time was not yet
-ripe for that.</p>
-
-<p>While his plan for a descent upon the English
-coast came to nothing, it may be said to have led
-to much, for it interested the Ministry, and was
-abandoned only in favor of a more ambitious scheme
-of attacking England with the help of Spain. That,
-too, passed after it was found that England was on
-the alert; but it had given Lafayette his opportunity
-to talk about America in and out of season,
-and to urge the necessity for helping the United
-States win independence as a means of crippling
-England, if not for her own sake. As the most
-popular social lion of the moment his words carried
-far, and as the most earnest advocate of America in
-France he was indeed what he called himself, the
-link that bound the two countries together. The
-outcome was that after the collapse of the project
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>for an expedition against England nobody could see
-a better way of troubling his Britannic Majesty
-than by following Lafayette's advice; whereupon he
-redoubled his efforts and arguments.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, he exceeded the wishes of the Americans
-themselves. He wanted to send ships and soldiers
-as well as money and supplies, but with the fiasco
-of the attack upon Newport fresh in their minds Congress
-and our country were chary of asking for more
-help of that kind. He assured M. de Vergennes
-that it was characteristic of Americans to believe
-that in three months they would no longer need help
-of any kind. He wrote to Washington that he was
-insisting upon money with such stress that the
-Director of Finances looked upon him as a fiend;
-but he argued also in France that the Americans
-would be glad enough to see a French army by the
-time it got there.</p>
-
-<p>A plan drawn up by him at the request of M. de
-Vergennes has been called the starting-point of the
-events that led to the surrender of Cornwallis, because
-without French help that event could not
-have occurred. In this view of the case, the work
-he did in Paris and at Versailles was his greatest
-contribution to the cause of American independence.
-Another general might easily have done all that he
-did in the way of winning battles on American soil,
-but no other man in France had his enthusiasm and
-his knowledge, or the persistence to fill men's ears
-and minds and hearts with thoughts of America as
-he did.</p>
-
-<p>After it had been decided to send over another
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>military force it was natural for him to hope that he
-might be given command of it, though nobody knew
-better than he that his rank did not entitle him to
-the honor since he was only a colonel in France,
-even if he did hold the commission of a major-general
-in the United States. Having become by
-this time really intimate with M. de Vergennes, he
-gave another proof of the sweet reasonableness of
-his disposition by frankly presenting the whole
-matter in writing to him. He worked out in detail
-two "suppositions," the first assuming that he was to
-be given command of the expedition, the second that
-he was not, stating in each case what he thought
-ought to be done. Quite frankly he announced his
-preference for the first supposition, but quite simply
-and unmistakably he made it plain that he would
-work just as earnestly for the success of the undertaking
-in one case as in the other.</p>
-
-<p>It was the second of these plans that the Ministry
-preferred and adopted practically as he prepared it.
-After this had been decided he found himself, early
-one spring day in 1780, standing before Louis XVI,
-in his American uniform, taking his leave. He was
-to go ahead of the expedition and announce its
-coming; to work up a welcome for it, if he found
-lingering traces of distrust; and to resume command
-of his American division and do all he could to secure
-effective co-operation; in short, to take up his work
-of liaison officer again on a scale greater than before.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_XV" id="chap_XV"></a>XV<br />
-
-HELP&mdash;AND DISAPPOINTMENT</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>When Lafayette sailed westward this time he
-owned two valued possessions, partly French,
-partly American, which had not been his when he
-landed at Brest. One was a sword, the gift Congress
-directed Franklin to have made by the best workmen
-in Paris and presented to him in recognition of his
-services. It was a wonderful sword, with his motto
-"<i>Cur non?</i>" and no end of compliments worked into
-the decorations of its gold-mounted hilt and scabbard.
-The other possession was a brand-new baby.
-"Our next one absolutely must be a boy!" Lafayette
-had written Adrienne when assuring her of his joy
-over the birth of Anastasie; and obligingly the next
-one came a boy, born on Christmas Eve, 1779. He
-had been immediately christened, as was the custom,
-but he was given a name that no man of the house
-of Motier had borne in all the seven hundred years
-of the family's consequential existence. Even the
-young mother's tongue may have tripped a bit as
-she whispered "George Washington" to the baby
-cuddled against her breast. But no other name was
-possible for that child, and the day came, before he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>was grown, when it served as a talisman to carry
-him out of danger.</p>
-
-<p>Sailing westward on the <i>Hermione</i>, the father of
-this Franco-American baby reached Boston late in
-April after an uneventful voyage, to receive the
-heartiest welcome the staid old town could give him.
-The docks were black with people and the streets
-lined with hurrahing crowds as he rode to the governor's
-house where he was to be a guest.</p>
-
-<p>Until the <i>Hermione</i> came to anchor he did not
-know where Washington was to be found, but he
-had a letter ready written to despatch at once,
-begging him, if he chanced to be north of Philadelphia,
-to await his arrival, since he brought news of
-importance. It took a week for this message to
-reach Washington's headquarters at Morristown,
-and three days later Lafayette was there himself,
-greeting and being greeted by his chief with a heartiness
-which showed their genuine delight at being
-together again. Having been absent for more than
-a year, he had much to learn about the progress of
-the war; and what he learned was not reassuring.
-He knew in a general way how things had gone, but
-the details showed how weak the American forces
-really were.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the fighting had been in the South.
-Savannah had been taken before Lafayette sailed
-for France. The British had followed up this success
-by sending a large force to Georgia; Southern
-Tories had been roused, and civil war had spread
-throughout the entire region. At present the
-British were advancing upon Charleston. In the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>North the two armies still played their waiting
-game, the British actually in New York, and Washington
-in a position from which he could guard the
-Hudson, help Philadelphia in case of need, and occasionally
-do something to harass the enemy.
-Frequently the harassing was done by the other side,
-however. During the summer of 1779 the British
-had ravaged the Connecticut Valley. Washington
-refused to be tempted away from the Hudson, and
-the brightest spot in the annals of that year had been
-the capture of Stony Point while the British were
-thus engaged. Lafayette's acquaintance, "Mad
-Anthony" Wayne, had taken it in a most brilliant
-assault.</p>
-
-<p>But that was only one episode and the history of
-the year could be summed up in eight words&mdash;discouragement,
-an empty treasury, unpaid troops,
-dwindling numbers. Washington's own army was
-reduced to about six thousand men, with half of
-these scarcely fit for duty. They were only partly
-clothed, and had been only partly fed for a long
-time. Their commander said of them, sadly, but
-with pride, that during their terms of service they
-had subsisted upon "every kind of horse-food except
-hay." Lafayette expected to find the army weak,
-but this was a state of exhaustion of which he had
-not dreamed. It was very hard to have to report
-such things to Paris; in truth, for some time after
-his return he avoided reporting details as much as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>His coming, with the news that ships and men and
-money were on the way, must have seemed little less
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>than a happy miracle. But would the help come in
-time? To make it effective the country must renew
-its enthusiasm and meet assistance half-way. Washington
-frankly told a committee of Congress that
-unless this could be done the coming of the French
-would be a disaster instead of a benefit. In other
-words, the country was so weak that the next effort
-was almost sure to be the last one. If it failed, it
-would be too exhausted to rally again.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette left headquarters and went to Philadelphia
-to exert whatever personal influence he possessed
-upon Congress; but under the law Congress
-could raise neither men nor money. All it could do
-was to recommend such action to the thirteen different
-states. Their thirteen different legislatures had
-to deliberate and act, all of which took time when
-time was most urgent.</p>
-
-<p>In France the proposed military expedition had
-roused much enthusiasm. Young men flocked to
-enlist, as eager to fight for liberty in America as our
-boys of 1918 were eager to reach France on a similar
-errand. Every available spot on the transports
-was crowded. The commanding general regretfully
-left behind his two favorite war-horses because he
-knew that twenty men could go in the space they
-would occupy. Even after the ships had left the
-harbor recruits came to him on the cutter that
-brought the last despatches, begging to be taken
-aboard, but had to be sent back because there was
-literally not room for another man.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the numbers that came to America were,
-after all, disappointingly small: far less than originally
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>planned. That was because the English managed
-to blockade all except the first division in the
-harbor of Brest. This first division sailed on the 2d
-of May with Admiral Ternay in command of the
-ships, and the gallant, cool-headed Rochambeau,
-who was already fighting at the time Lafayette was
-born, in command of the soldiers. He had five
-thousand effective men crowded into the transports
-that left Brest with their convoy on a sunny day, the
-many white sails filling to a breeze described as
-<i>"joli frais."</i> But in spite of this auspicious beginning
-it was a tedious crossing, longer in point of
-time than the first voyage of Columbus. The weary
-soldiers soon came to call their transports "sabots"
-(wooden shoes), and indeed some of them were
-scarcely larger. As our coast was neared they
-crawled along at three knots an hour, with drums
-beating every fifteen minutes to keep the ships in
-touch and prevent their drifting away from each
-other in the heavy, persistent fog.</p>
-
-<p>Washington had hoped that before the arrival of
-the French he could gather sufficient force to justify
-him in attacking New York with their help, for he
-was convinced that one success here would end the
-war. His army was indeed "augmented more than
-one-half," as Lafayette wrote his wife, but before
-the ships made their slow way across the Atlantic
-the British had captured Charleston, and Clinton,
-who assisted Cornwallis in that undertaking, had
-returned to New York with a force that raised his
-strength there to twelve thousand regulars, in addition
-to Admiral Arbuthnot's fleet and several thousand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>militia and refugees. Not all the earnestness
-of Washington, the efforts of Congress, nor the
-enthusiasm of Lafayette had been able to raise men
-enough to attack under these circumstances; and
-the signals displayed on Point Judith and "the
-island of Block House" to guide the French directed
-them to go to Newport as a convenient place from
-which the attack might yet be made if events
-favored the allies.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette went to Newport to meet Rochambeau
-and plan co-operation. By the time he reached
-there the situation was still worse, for an English
-fleet which left home about the time Rochambeau
-sailed from France had appeared, giving the British
-superior force alike on sea and land.</p>
-
-<p>Admiral Ternay, who was not aggressive by nature,
-saw a repetition of D'Estaing's failure looming ahead
-of him, and sent word to France that the American
-cause was doomed. Rochambeau, being a better
-soldier, did what he could; landed his men, freeing
-them from the confinement of the "sabots;" and,
-upon a rumor that the British were advancing to
-attack, helped several thousand militia prepare for
-defense. The rumor had a foundation of truth.
-An expedition actually left New York, but was no
-sooner started than Washington began threatening
-the city, whereupon Clinton recalled his men, for
-there was no doubt that New York was the more
-important place.</p>
-
-<p>Having no knowledge of the country, and being
-thus hurried at the moment of landing, from the rôle
-of aggressor which he had expected to play to one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>of defense, the situation seemed very serious to the
-French general. Even after the recall of Clinton's
-expedition he felt it most unwise to lose touch with
-his ships, and he had small patience with Lafayette,
-who seemed inclined to talk about "advances."
-Rochambeau was sure that his duty lay in waiting
-for the second division of the French force, keeping
-strict discipline, meanwhile, in a model camp, and
-paying liberally for supplies. This he did so well
-that not an apple disappeared from the orchards in
-which the French tents were pitched, not a cornstalk
-was bent in the fields near by, and, as Lafayette
-assured Washington, the pigs and chickens of
-patriots wandered at will through the French camp
-"without being deranged." The French and Americans
-fraternized enthusiastically. "You would have
-been amused the other day," Lafayette reported to
-his chief, "had you seen two hundred and fifty of our
-recruits, who came to Connecticut without provisions
-and without tents, mixing so well with the
-French troops that each Frenchman, officer or soldier,
-took an American with him and amicably gave
-him a share of his bed and supper."</p>
-
-<p>The French soldiers were anxious to get out of
-Newport and at the throats of the enemy, but
-Rochambeau was firm in his determination. He desired
-a personal interview with Washington and felt
-a little hurt, perhaps, that a youngster like Lafayette,
-who might easily have been his own son, was made
-the means of communication. There was some
-doubt whether Washington could enter into agreements
-with a representative of a foreign power until
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>explicit authority had been given him by Congress.
-It was one of those absurd technical questions of no
-real importance that may cause a deal of trouble,
-and it was better not to have it raised. Lafayette
-continued, therefore, to be occupied in Newport
-with parleys and conferences and incidentally with
-meeting old friends. His brother-in-law, De Noailles,
-was one of the officers who had come out with
-the expedition.</p>
-
-<p>Cross-purposes were bound to arise, and there
-were moments when Lafayette's optimism got decidedly
-upon the nerves of Rochambeau. The two
-came to the verge of quarrel, but both were too
-sensible to allow themselves to be pushed over the
-edge. The breach was soon healed by a letter of
-Rochambeau's in which he referred to himself as an
-old father and his "dear Marquis" as an affectionate
-son. In Lafayette's private account of this episode
-to his wife he wrote that "a slight excess of frankness
-got me into a little controversy with those generals.
-Seeing that I was not persuading them and that the
-public interest demanded we be good friends, I
-admitted at random that I had been mistaken and
-was to blame, and asked pardon in proper terms,
-which had such a magical effect that we are now
-better friends than ever." Lafayette's friends called
-him determined; his critics said that he was vain.
-Historians aver that he was never convinced by
-argument.</p>
-
-<p>August brought the unwelcome news that there
-was to be no second division of the French army that
-year. This was the more disappointing because in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>addition to all else it meant the continued lack of
-arms and ammunition and of clothing for fifteen
-thousand American soldiers that Lafayette had
-caused to be manufactured in France, but which
-had been left behind to come with this second
-division. He confided to his cousin that the army
-was reduced to "a frugality, a poverty, and a nudity
-which will, I hope, be remembered in the next world,
-and counted, to our credit in purgatory." To his
-wife he wrote that the ladies of Philadelphia had
-started a subscription to aid the soldiers, and that
-he had put down her name for one hundred guineas;
-that he was very well; that the life of an American
-soldier was infinitely frugal; that "the fare of the
-general officers of the rebel army is very different
-from that of the French at Newport."</p>
-
-<p>The intelligence that no more French troops could
-be expected called manifestly for new plans of campaign,
-and a conference between the respective
-chiefs was finally arranged, which took place at
-Hartford with considerable ceremony on the 20th
-of September. Washington had with him General
-Knox and General Lafayette. The French general
-and admiral were accompanied by as many subordinate
-officers as could find plausible excuse to go
-along, for all were curious to meet the famous
-General Washington.</p>
-
-<p>At this conference the whole situation was discussed
-in detail, but no way of winning the war without
-outside help was discovered. Rochambeau
-sent his son, who had come to America with him, back
-to France with a formal account of the proceedings;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>while Washington and Lafayette also sent letters to
-France by the son of that Mr. Laurens who had
-offered Lafayette the hospitality of his traveling-carriage
-after the battle of the Brandywine.</p>
-
-<p>One chance of help still remained, even if the
-Ministry should consider it impossible to despatch
-aid directly from France. The Comte de Guichen,
-who commanded a fleet then in the West Indies,
-might be persuaded to sail to the relief of the Americans
-if the letters could be made sufficiently persuasive.
-Washington wrote directly to him as
-well as to France, sending this letter through the
-French minister to the United States, in order
-that everything might be diplomatically correct
-and aboveboard.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XVI" id="chap_XVI"></a>XVI<br />
-
-BLACK TREACHERY</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Washington returned from his conference
-with the French commanders by way of West
-Point to show Lafayette some improvements recently
-made in the works. Several little accidents
-delayed the journey and brought them to the house
-of the commander at a critical moment. We have
-Lafayette's account, part of it written the very next
-day to the French minister to the United States,
-part of it later to his wife.</p>
-
-<p>"When I left you yesterday, M. le Chevalier, to
-come here to take breakfast with General Arnold,
-we were very far from thinking of the event which I
-am about to announce to you. You will shudder at
-the danger we have run. You will be astonished at
-the miraculous chain of accidents and circumstances
-by which we were saved.... West Point
-was sold, and it was sold by Arnold! That same
-man who had covered himself with glory by rendering
-valuable services to his country had lately formed a
-horrid compact with the enemy. And but for the
-chance which brought us here at a certain time, but
-for the chance which by a combination of accidents
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>caused the adjutant-general of the English army to
-fall into the hands of some countrymen beyond the
-line of our own posts, West Point and the North
-River would probably be in possession of our
-enemies.</p>
-
-<p>"When we left Fishkill we were preceded by one
-of my aides-de-camp and General Knox's aide, who
-found General and Mrs. Arnold at table and sat down
-to breakfast with them. During that time two
-letters were brought to General Arnold giving him
-information of the capture of the spy. He ordered
-a horse to be saddled, went to his wife's room and
-told her he was lost, and directed one of his aides-de-camp
-to say to General Washington that he
-had gone to West Point and should return in an
-hour."</p>
-
-<p>Arnold had been gone only thirty minutes when
-Washington and Lafayette rode up.</p>
-
-<p>"We crossed the river and went to look at the
-works. Judge of our astonishment when, upon our
-return, we were informed that the captured spy was
-Major André, the adjutant-general of the English
-army, and that among the papers found upon him
-was a copy of a very important council of war, a
-statement of the strength of the garrison and of the
-works, and certain observations upon the methods of
-attack and defense, all in General Arnold's handwriting....
-A search was made for Arnold, but he
-had escaped in a boat on board the sloop-of-war
-<i>Vulture</i>, and as nobody suspected his flight, no sentry
-could have thought of arresting him.... The
-first care of General Washington was to return to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>West Point the troops whom Arnold had dispersed
-under various pretexts. We remained here to insure
-the safety of a fort which the English would value
-less if they knew it better....</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot describe to you, M. le Chevalier, to
-what degree I am astounded by this piece of news....
-That Arnold, a man who, although not so highly
-esteemed as has been supposed in Europe, had
-nevertheless given proof of talent, of patriotism, and
-especially of the most brilliant courage, should at
-once destroy his very existence and should sell his
-country to the tyrants whom he had fought against
-with glory, is an event, M. le Chevalier, which confounds
-and distresses me, and, if I must confess it,
-humiliates me to a degree that I cannot express. I
-would give anything in the world if Arnold had not
-shared our labors with us, and if this man whom it
-still pains me to call a scoundrel had not shed his
-blood for the American cause. My knowledge of
-his personal courage led me to expect that he would
-decide to blow his brains out. This was my first
-hope. At all events, it is probable that he will do
-so when he reaches New York, whither the English
-sloop proceeded immediately upon receiving Arnold
-on board....</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"I am not writing to M. le Comte de Rochambeau
-or to M. le Chevalier de Ternay. I beg you to communicate
-to them this incredible story.... What
-will the officers of the French army say when they
-see a general abandon and basely sell his country
-after having defended it so well? You can bear
-witness, M. le Chevalier, that this is the first atrocity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>that has been heard of in our army. But if, on the
-one hand, they hear of the infamy of Arnold, they
-are bound to admire the disinterestedness of a few
-countrymen who happened to meet Mr. André
-with a passport from General Arnold, and on the
-mere suspicion of his being a friend of England
-made him a prisoner, refusing at the same time his
-horse, his watch, and four hundred guineas which
-he offered them if they would allow him to continue
-upon his way....</p>
-
-<p>"I shall conclude my long letter, M. le Chevalier,
-by referring to a subject which must touch every
-human heart. The unhappy Mrs. Arnold did not
-know a word of this conspiracy. Her husband told
-her before going away that he was flying, never to
-come back, and he left her lying unconscious. When
-she came to herself she fell into frightful convulsions
-and completely lost her reason. We did everything
-we could to quiet her, but she looked upon us as the
-murderers of her husband.... The horror with which
-her husband's conduct has inspired her, and a thousand
-other feelings, make her the most unhappy of
-women.</p>
-
-<p>"P.S.&mdash;She has recovered her reason this morning,
-and, as you know I am upon very good terms with
-her, she sent for me to go up to her chamber. General
-Washington and every one else sympathize
-warmly with this estimable woman whose face and
-whose youthfulness make her so interesting. She is
-going to Philadelphia, and I implore you, when you
-return, to use your influence in her favor.... Your
-influence and your opinion, emphatically expressed,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>may prevent her from being visited with a vengeance
-which she does not deserve. General Washington
-will protect her also. As for myself, you know that
-I have always been fond of her, and at this moment
-she interests me intensely. We are certain that she
-knew nothing of the plot."</p></div>
-
-<p>This letter expressed the hope that André would
-be hanged according to military law, because, being
-a man of high rank and influence, his fate would
-serve as a warning to spies of lesser degree. Lafayette
-was one of the court martial that tried and sentenced
-him; and we have no proof that he hesitated
-for an instant in the performance of his stem duty
-or that he ever regretted it. Yet from a letter to
-Madame Lafayette, written after André's death, we
-know that Lafayette felt his charm, as did every one
-else who knew the unfortunate young Englishman.
-"He was an interesting young man," Lafayette
-wrote. "He conducted himself in a manner so
-frank, so noble, and so delicate that I cannot help
-feeling for him infinite sorrow."</p>
-
-<p>Arnold, as everybody knows, did not blow out his
-brains, but, becoming literally a turncoat, donned
-the red of the British uniform, and took his unwelcome
-place among the gentlemen officers of King
-George. In the following spring he was doing work
-of destruction in Virginia; but he was not trusted
-by his new companions, and two British colonels
-supposed to be under his orders were secretly charged
-with the duty of keeping an eye on him. It was in
-Virginia that his path and Lafayette's crossed
-once more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>Lafayette meantime had been a prey to restlessness.
-Nothing happened in the North more interesting
-than camp routine and the exchange of
-official visits. During the summer he had been
-given command of a special corps of light infantry
-culled from all branches of the service, a body of
-men in which he took infinite pride. "Its position
-is always that of advance-guard," he wrote Adrienne.
-"It is independent of the main army, and it is far
-too fine for our present pacific situation." He
-lavished training and affection upon it and pampered
-it by sending to France for luxuries like sabers and
-banners and plumes. While less needed than coats
-and shoes, such things were easier to transport.
-But even in the matter of clothing this favored corps
-was better off than the rest of the army. A French
-officer who visited Lafayette's camp thought the uniforms
-of both men and officers smart. Each soldier
-wore a sort of helmet made of hard leather, with a
-crest of horsehair.</p>
-
-<p>Before the army went into winter quarters many
-Frenchmen came to "the camp of the marquis"
-twenty miles from New York, making the pilgrimage
-not so much from love of him or to sample the punch
-which, according to the custom of the time, he kept
-"stationary on the table" for the benefit of his
-guests, as out of curiosity to see Washington's headquarters,
-which were not far away. Most of them
-were impressed by the good horses owned by American
-generals and astonished at the simplicity of their
-other equipment. Some "who had made war as
-colonels long before Lafayette left school" were the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>least bit jealous of his youth and influence. Several
-had entered into an agreement not to accept service
-under him; but all were flattered that a Frenchman
-held such high place in public esteem. One of them
-asserted with complacency that "private letters
-from him have frequently produced more effect upon
-some states than the strongest exhortations of
-Congress."</p>
-
-<p>When the army went into winter quarters again
-he had even more time upon his hands. He wrote
-many letters. One went almost every month to his
-powerful friend at court, Vergennes, urging speedy
-aid. The military needs of the country were never
-absent from his thoughts, even while he was taking
-his French friends, including De Noailles, on a personally
-conducted tour of near-by battle-fields and
-cities. He did not trust himself far from headquarters,
-for fear that his chief might need him or that
-he might miss some opportunity. When Colonel
-Laurens received his instructions before starting for
-Paris he took care to be on hand, to give expert advice
-on court customs and prejudices. He was a
-young man who well knew his influence upon two
-continents, and was so eager to use it that a man
-of less winning personality in similar circumstances
-might have got himself heartily disliked.</p>
-
-<p>His eagerness to do something was heightened by
-his belief that Europe misunderstood, and thought
-Americans either unready or unwilling to fight. His
-vivid imagination got to work again and juggled
-with facts and figures until he became convinced
-that a surprise attack upon New York could do no
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>possible harm and might capture the city. He detailed
-this plan to Washington, who saw the weakness
-of his reasoning and rejected it in a kind letter
-signed "sincerely and affectionately yours," reminding
-Lafayette that "we must consult our means
-rather than our wishes" and that "to endeavor to
-recover our reputation we should take care not to
-injure it the more."</p>
-
-<p>After this gentle snub he was torn between a desire
-to join General Greene in the South for the
-winter campaign and his wish to be near New York
-when a blow was struck there. With a curiosity
-that would have been unpardonable in a less intimate
-friend, he sought to find out his chief's plans
-on this score. Washington's answer was non-committal,
-but he pointed out that "your going to the
-Southern army, if you expect a command in this, will
-answer no valuable purpose"; and after this second
-gentle snub Lafayette gave up the idea of joining
-Greene. Then in February he was sent with a
-detachment of twelve hundred men to Virginia,
-where Arnold was destroying valuable supplies.
-His orders bade him travel fast, "not to suffer the
-detachment to be delayed for want of either provisions,
-forage, or wagons," and after he got to Virginia
-"to do no act whatever with Arnold that
-directly or by implication will screen him from
-the punishment due to his treason and desertion;
-which, if he should fall into your hands, you will
-execute in the most summary way." While in Virginia
-he was to co-operate with General von Steuben,
-who was in command of militia there; and if
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>it should prove impossible to dislodge Arnold, Lafayette
-was to bring his men back to rejoin the
-main army.</p>
-
-<p>He had his force at the Head of Elk, that inlet at
-the head of Chesapeake Bay which the English had
-already used, three days ahead of schedule time.
-His campaign lasted about a month, but came to
-nothing, because he did not have the co-operation of
-ships, and in that tangle of land and water control
-of Chesapeake Bay was as necessary to success as
-ammunition or fodder. The French had been
-asked to help, and twice sent ships from Newport to
-Chesapeake Bay, but in neither case were they useful
-to him. He did the best he could from day to
-day without them, and even pushed down the bay
-in a small boat far ahead of his men, hoping to
-establish connections; but the ships he saw were
-British instead of French. Then he took his men
-back again to the Head of Elk.</p>
-
-<p>That his failure was not due to lack of persistence
-letters written by him to Gov. Thomas Jefferson,
-asking for transportation, for provisions, for boats,
-for wagons, for horses, and, if horses were not available,
-even for oxen to draw his guns, amply testify.
-That he had his usual resourcefulness at instant
-command was displayed at Annapolis on the northward
-journey when he found two small armed
-British vessels blocking his progress. He improvised
-a temporary navy of his own, armed two
-merchant sloops with cannon, manned them with
-volunteers, and drove the British away long enough
-to permit the rest of his force to go on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>Neither was his usual friendliness lacking. He
-snatched time to visit Mount Vernon and to call
-upon Washington's mother at Fredericksburg, but
-he made up for the time lost in these indulgences by
-riding at night to overtake his command.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_XVII" id="chap_XVII"></a>XVII<br />
-
-PREPARING FOR THE LAST ACT</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The British were beginning to be hard pressed in
-the South. The struggle had been long and
-disappointing, and burning and looting and the horrors
-of civil war had spread over a large area. Two
-Continental armies had been lost in rapid succession,
-and there had been months when one disaster seemed
-to follow upon another; but gradually the British
-were being driven away from their ships and bases
-of supply on the coast. The heat of summer had
-brought much sickness to their camps, and General
-Greene, next to Washington the most skilful of the
-Revolutionary generals, had perfected his "science
-of losing battles" to the point where his opponents
-might claim almost every engagement as a victory
-and yet the advantage remained with the Americans.
-Recently the British had lost a large part of their
-light troops. In March, 1781, Cornwallis decided
-to leave General Rawdon, with whom Lafayette
-had danced in London, to face Greene, while he himself
-went to Virginia, joined Benedict Arnold and
-General Phillips there, and returned with them to
-finish the conquest of the South. Washington
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>learned of the plan and knew that if it succeeded
-General Greene might be crushed between two
-British forces. Arnold and Phillips must be kept
-busy in Virginia. Steuben was already on the
-ground; Anthony Wayne was ordered to hurry
-his Pennsylvanians to the rescue; and Lafayette,
-being near the point of danger, was turned back.
-He found new orders when he reached Head
-of Elk.</p>
-
-<p>The scene was being set in Virginia, not in New
-York, for the last act of the Revolutionary War; but
-neither he nor his men realized this, and if Lafayette
-was disappointed, the men were almost in a state of
-panic. They began deserting in large numbers.
-"They like better a hundred lashes than a journey
-to the southward," their commander wrote. "As
-long as they had an expedition in view they were
-very well satisfied; but the idea of remaining in the
-Southern states appears to them intolerable, and
-they are amazingly averse to the people and climate."
-Most of them were New England born. He hastened
-to put many rivers between them and the
-land of their desire; and also tried an appeal to their
-pride. In an order of the day he stated that his
-force had been chosen to fight an enemy superior
-in numbers and to encounter many dangers. No
-man need desert, for their commander would not
-compel one of them to accompany him against his
-will. Whoever chose to do so might apply for a pass
-and be sent back to rejoin his former regiment.
-They were part of his beloved light infantry of the
-previous year, with all this implied of friendship and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>interest on both sides, and this appeal worked like
-a charm. Desertion went suddenly and completely
-out of fashion; nobody asked for a pass, and one poor
-fellow who was in danger of being sent back because
-he was lame hired a cart to be saved from this
-disgrace.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's men had once been better dressed than
-the average; but their present ragged clothing was
-entirely unsuited to the work ahead of them, being
-fit only for winter wear in the North. As usual,
-money and new garments were equally lacking, and
-as usual this general of twenty-three came to the
-rescue. When he reached Baltimore he let the
-merchants know that according to French law he
-was to come into full control of all his property on
-reaching the age of twenty-five, and he promised
-to pay two years hence for everything he ordered, if
-the government did not pay them earlier. On the
-strength of this he borrowed two thousand guineas
-with which to buy overalls, hats, and shoes; and he
-smiled upon the ladies of Baltimore, who gave a ball
-in his honor, told them confidentially of his plight,
-and so stirred their patriotism and sympathy that
-they set to work with their own fair hands and made
-up the linen he bought for shirts.</p>
-
-<p>Phillips and Arnold had joined forces near Norfolk,
-and, since the British were in control of Chesapeake
-Bay, could go where they chose. Lafayette
-believed they would soon move up the James River
-toward Norfolk to destroy supplies the Americans
-had collected. He resolved to get to Richmond
-before them, though he had twice the distance to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>travel. With this in view he set out from Baltimore
-on the 19th of April, moving with such haste that
-his artillery and even the tents for his men were left
-to follow at a slower pace. On the day before he
-left Baltimore the British, under General Phillips,
-who outranked Arnold, began the very march he
-had foreseen. Steuben's Virginia militia put up the
-best defense it could, but, being inferior in numbers
-and training, could only retire inch by inch, moving
-supplies to places of greater safety as it went. But
-it retired hopefully, knowing Lafayette to be on the
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing to advance, partly by land and partly
-by water, the British reached Petersburg, only
-twenty-three miles from Richmond. They passed
-Petersburg and pressed on. On April 30th they
-reached Manchester on the south bank of the James,
-directly opposite Richmond. There, to General
-Phillips's amazement, he beheld more than the town
-he had come to take; drawn up on the hills above
-the river was Lafayette's force, which had arrived
-the night before. He had only about nine hundred
-Continentals in addition to his militia, and the
-British numbered twenty-three hundred, but Phillips
-did not choose to attack. He contented himself
-with swearing eloquently and giving orders to retire.
-Lafayette had the satisfaction of learning, through
-an officer who visited the British camp under flag of
-truce, that his enemy had been completely surprised.
-But the young Frenchman felt it necessary to explain
-to Washington just how he had been able to do it.
-"The leaving of my artillery appears a strange whim,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>but had I waited for it Richmond was lost.... It
-was not without trouble I have made this rapid
-march."</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette was to be under General Greene and
-expected to find orders from him waiting at Richmond.
-Not finding them, he decided he could best
-serve the cause by keeping General Phillips uneasy,
-and followed him down the James; but, being too
-weak to attack except with great advantage of position,
-he prudently kept the river between them.
-The military journal kept by Colonel Simcoe, one
-of the British officers charged with the unpleasant
-duty of watching Arnold, admits that this was "good
-policy," though he longed to take advantage of
-what he called his French adversary's "gasconading
-disposition and military ignorance" and make some
-counter-move which his own superior officers failed
-to approve.</p>
-
-<p>This retreat of the British down the James, followed
-by Lafayette, was the beginning of that strange
-contra-dance which the two armies maintained for
-nine weeks. Sketched upon a map of Virginia, the
-route they took resembles nothing except the aimless
-markings of a little child. The zigzag lines extend
-as far west as the mountains at Charlottesville, as
-far south as Portsmouth, as far north as Fredericksburg
-and Culpeper, and end at Yorktown.</p>
-
-<p>Cornwallis had not approved of General Clinton's
-conduct of the war, believing the British commander-in-chief
-frittered away his opportunity. Cornwallis
-said he was "quite tired of marching about the
-country in search of adventure." The experiences
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>he was to have in Virginia must have greatly
-added to that weariness.</p>
-
-<p>He sent word to Phillips to join him at Petersburg.
-General Phillips turned his forces in that direction,
-but it proved to be his last order. He was already
-ill and soon lapsed into unconsciousness and died.
-His death placed Arnold again in command until
-Cornwallis should arrive. It was during this interval
-that Arnold took occasion to write Lafayette
-about prisoners of war. Mindful of his instructions
-to have nothing to do with Arnold except to
-punish him, Lafayette refused to receive the letter,
-saying to the messenger who brought it that
-he would gladly read a communication from any
-other British officer. Arnold had a keen interest in
-the treatment of prisoners&mdash;for very personal reasons.
-A story was current to the effect that one of
-Lafayette's command who was taken prisoner was
-questioned by Arnold himself and asked what the
-Americans would do to him in case he was captured.
-"Cut off the leg which was wounded in your country's
-service, and hang the rest of you!" was the
-prompt reply. The renegade general was not popular
-in either army. Soon after Cornwallis's arrival
-he was ordered elsewhere, and his name fades out of
-history.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette counted the hours until Wayne should
-join him, but Cornwallis reached Virginia first, with
-troops enough to make Lafayette's situation decidedly
-grave. All the Americans could do was to
-follow the plan Steuben had adopted before Lafayette's
-arrival; retreat slowly, removing stores to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>places of safety whenever possible. General Greene
-gave Lafayette permission to act independently, but,
-while this enabled him to make quick decisions, it
-increased his load of responsibility and did not in
-the least augment his strength.</p>
-
-<p>In the North he had longed for more to do; here
-it was different. He wrote Alexander Hamilton,
-"For the present, my dear friend, my complaint is
-quite of the opposite nature," and he went on with a
-half-humorous account of his duties, his situation,
-and the relative strength of the two armies. The
-British, he thought, had between four thousand and
-five thousand men. "We have nine hundred Continentals.
-Their infantry is near five to one, their
-cavalry ten to one. Our militia is not numerous,
-some without arms, and are not used to war."
-Wayne's men were necessary even to allow the
-Americans to be beaten "with some decency."
-"But," he added, "if the Pennsylvanians come, Lord
-Cornwallis shall pay something for his victory!"
-The Virginia militia showed symptoms of deserting
-as harvest-time approached and the call of home
-duties grew strong. Then there was the danger of
-contagious disease. "By the utmost care to avoid
-infected ground, we have hitherto got rid of the
-smallpox," Lafayette wrote in another letter. "I
-wish the harvest-time might be as easily got over."</p>
-
-<p>Cornwallis was fully aware of his superior numbers
-and had a simple plan. "I shall now proceed to dislodge
-Lafayette from Richmond, and with my light
-troops to destroy magazines or stores in the neighborhood....
-From thence I propose to move to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>neck at Williamsburg, which is represented as
-healthy ... and keep myself unengaged from operations
-which might interfere with your plan for the
-campaign until I have the satisfaction of hearing
-from you," he wrote Clinton. He was very sure
-that the "aspiring boy," as he contemptuously
-called Lafayette, could not escape him. But the
-"boy" had no intention of being beaten&mdash;"indecently"&mdash;if
-he could hold out until Wayne arrived.
-He knew that one false move would be his
-ruin and there was no wild planning. "Independence
-has rendered me more cautious, as I know my
-warmth," he told Hamilton. He knew how to
-travel swiftly, and sometimes it was necessary to
-move as swiftly as possible. Even so the British
-advance might come up just as the last of his little
-force disappeared. If Cornwallis tried a short cut to
-head him off, he changed his direction; and more of
-those apparently aimless lines were traced upon the
-map.</p>
-
-<p>On the 10th of June Wayne joined him about
-thirty-five miles west of Fredericksburg. His force
-was smaller than Lafayette had hoped for, "less
-than a thousand men in all"; but from that time the
-Continental troops no longer fled. Indeed, Cornwallis
-no longer pursued them, but veered off, sending
-General Tarleton's famous cavalry on a raid toward
-Charlottesville, where it made prisoners of several
-members of the Virginia legislature and almost succeeded
-in capturing Gov. Thomas Jefferson. Another
-portion of his force turned its attention upon
-Steuben where he was guarding supplies. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>gradually pursuit became retreat and the general
-direction of the zigzag was back toward the sea.
-The chances were still uncertain enough to make the
-game exciting. There was one moment when Lafayette's
-flank was in imminent danger; his men, however,
-marched by night along a forgotten wood
-road and reached safety. Six hundred mounted men
-who came to join him from neighboring counties
-were warmly welcomed, for he sorely needed horses.
-At one time, to get his men forward more speedily
-for an attack&mdash;attacks were increasingly frequent&mdash;each
-horse was made to carry double. After he and
-General Steuben joined forces on the 19th of June
-the English and Americans each had about four
-thousand men, though in the American camp there
-were only fifteen hundred regulars and fifty dragoons.</p>
-
-<p>Weapons for cavalry were even scarcer than
-horses. Swords could not be bought in the state;
-but Lafayette was so intent upon mounted troops
-that he planned to provide some of them with
-spears, "which," he argued, "in the hands of a
-gentleman must be a formidable weapon." Thus
-reverting to type, as biologists say, this descendant
-of the Crusaders drove his enemy before him with
-Crusaders' weapons down the peninsula between the
-York and the James rivers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XVIII" id="chap_XVIII"></a>XVIII<br />
-
-YORKTOWN</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>One of General Wayne's officers, Captain Davis
-of the First Pennsylvania, whose military skill,
-let us hope, exceeded his knowledge of spelling, kept
-a diary full of enthusiasm and superfluous capital
-letters. By this we learn that the Fourth of July,
-1781, was a wet morning which cleared off in time
-for a "Feu-de-joy" in honor of the day. The Americans
-had by this time forced the British down the
-peninsula as far as Williamsburg, and were themselves
-camped about fifteen miles from that town.
-While the "Feu-de-joy" went up in smoke the
-British were busy; for Cornwallis had received
-letters which decided him to abandon Williamsburg,
-send a large part of his men north to reinforce
-Clinton, and consolidate the rest with the British
-garrison at Portsmouth, near Norfolk.</p>
-
-<p>The battle of Green Springs, the most serious encounter
-of Lafayette's Virginia campaign, took
-place on the 6th of July, near Jamestown, when the
-British, in carrying out this plan, crossed to the
-south side of the river James. Cornwallis was sure
-that Lafayette would attack, and arranged an ambush,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>meaning to lure him with the belief that all
-except the British rear-guard had passed to the
-other bank. The ruse only half succeeded, for Lafayette
-observed that the British clung tenaciously to
-their position and replaced the officers American
-riflemen picked off one after the other. Riding out
-on a point of land, he saw the British soldiers waiting
-under protection of their guns and spurred back to
-warn General Wayne, but by that time the battle
-had opened. Wayne's men suffered most, being
-nearly surrounded. In a tight place Wayne always
-preferred "among a choice of difficulties, to advance
-and charge"; and this was exactly what he did,
-straight into the British lines. The unexpectedness
-of it brought success; and in the momentary confusion
-he fell back to a place of safety. Afterward
-he had a word to say about Lafayette's personal
-conduct. Reporting that no officers were killed,
-though most of them had horses shot or wounded
-under them, he added: "I will not condole with the
-Marquis for the loss of two of his, as he was frequently
-requested to keep at a greater distance. His
-native bravery rendered him deaf to the admonition."</p>
-
-<p>The British retained the battle-field and the Americans
-most of the glory, as was the case in so many
-fights of the Revolution. British military writers
-have contended that Lafayette was in mortal
-danger and that Cornwallis could have annihilated
-his whole force if he had attacked that night. What
-Cornwallis did was to cross the river next morning
-and proceed toward Portsmouth. The affair at
-Green Springs added materially to Lafayette's reputation.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>Indeed, with the exception of burning a
-few American stores, increasing Lafayette's military
-reputation was about all the British accomplished
-in this campaign. An American officer with a taste
-for figures gleefully estimated that Cornwallis's "tour
-in Virginia" cost King George, one way and another,
-more than would have been needed to take all the
-British aristocracy on a trip around the world.</p>
-
-<p>Cornwallis got his soldiers safely upon their
-transports, but it was written in the stars that they
-were not to leave Virginia of their own free will.
-Orders came from Clinton telling him not to send
-them north, and giving him to understand that his
-recent acts were not approved. Clinton directed
-him to establish himself in a healthy spot on the
-peninsula between the York and James rivers and
-to gain control of a seaport to which British ships
-could come. He suggested Old Point Comfort, but
-Cornwallis's engineers decided that Yorktown, with
-the neck of land opposite called Gloucester, was the
-only place that would serve. Here Cornwallis
-brought his army on the 1st of August and began
-building defenses.</p>
-
-<p>Following the battle of Green Springs, Lafayette
-occupied Williamsburg and gave his men the rest
-they needed after their many weeks of marching.
-He sent out detachments on various errands, but
-this was a season of comparative quiet. Soon he
-began to long for excitement, and wrote to Washington
-that he did not know about anything that was
-happening in the world outside of Virginia, that he
-was homesick for headquarters, and that if he could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>not be there to help in the defense of New York, at
-least he would like to know what was going on.
-The answer only whetted his curiosity. Washington
-bade him await a confidential letter explaining
-his plans.</p>
-
-<p>The military situation as Washington saw it was
-exceedingly interesting. Colonel Laurens's mission
-to the French court had turned out badly. Perhaps
-he had not taken sufficiently to heart Lafayette's
-advice; but young Rochambeau had not fared much
-better. In May it had been learned that there was
-never to be any second division of the French army;
-a blow that was softened by the assurance that considerable
-money was actually on the way and that
-a French fleet, which had sailed for the West Indies
-under command of Comte de Grasse, might visit the
-coast of the United States for a short time.</p>
-
-<p>It was the approach of this French fleet which
-caused Clinton uneasiness in New York and made
-Cornwallis embark part of his troops for the North.
-Washington took good care to let Clinton rest in the
-belief that New York was to be attacked, but it
-became increasingly evident to him that the greatest
-blow he could strike would be to capture Cornwallis's
-army. He arranged with Admiral de Grasse
-to sail to Chesapeake Bay instead of to New York,
-sent word to Lafayette to be on the lookout for the
-French fleet, moved Rochambeau's soldiers from
-Newport to the Hudson, left a sufficient number of
-them there and started south with all the rest of the
-army, moving with the greatest possible speed.
-Those of us who have read about this merely as long
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>past history do not realize the risks involved in
-planning such far-reaching combinations in days
-before cables and telegraph lines.</p>
-
-<p>"To blockade Rhode Island, fool Clinton, shut
-him up in New York, and keep Cornwallis in Virginia,"
-says a French writer, "it was necessary to
-send from the port of Brest and later from the
-Antilles to Chesapeake Bay a flotilla destined to
-take from the English all hope of retreat and embarkation
-at the exact instant that Washington,
-Rochambeau, and Lafayette should come and force
-the English in their last intrenchments. This grand
-project which decided the outcome of the war could
-be conceived only by men of superior talent."
-Lafayette's friend, De Ségur, said that "it required
-all the audacity of Admiral Comte de Grasse and
-the skill of Washington, sustained by the bravery
-of Lafayette, the wisdom of Rochambeau, the heroic
-intrepidity of our sailors and our troops, as well as
-the valor of the American militia."</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately the geography of the Atlantic coast
-helped Washington keep his secret even after he was
-well started. If De Grasse came to New York,
-Washington's logical goal was Staten Island, and
-the route of the Continental army would be the
-same in either case for a long distance. After Philadelphia
-had been left behind and Washington's plan
-became evident, it was too late for Clinton to stop
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the net tightened about Cornwallis. French
-ships in the bay effectually cut off hope of reinforcement
-or escape by sea. Lafayette stationed Wayne
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>where he could interpose if the British attempted to
-go by land toward the Carolinas. He sent his
-faithful friend, De Gimat, down the bay to meet
-the French admiral and give him information, and
-disposed his own forces to cover the landing of any
-soldiers De Grasse might bring him.</p>
-
-<p>It must have been a fine sight when twenty-eight
-large ships of the line and four French frigates sailed
-up the James River on the 2d of September and
-landed three thousand soldiers, "all very tall men"
-in uniforms of white turned up with blue. Lafayette's
-Americans, drawn up not far from the battleground
-of Green Springs, donned their ragged best
-in their honor. "Our men had orders to wash and
-put on clean clothes," a diary informs us.</p>
-
-<p>With this addition to his force Lafayette approached
-Yorktown. General Saint-Simon, the commander
-of the three thousand very tall men, was
-much older than Lafayette, besides being a marshal
-of France, but he gallantly signified his willingness to
-serve under his junior; and officers and privates alike
-accepted cheerfully the scanty American fare, which
-was all Lafayette could get for his enlarged military
-family. He found difficulty in collecting even this
-and wrote Washington that his duties as quartermaster
-had brought on violent headache and fever,
-but that the indisposition would vanish with three
-hours' needed sleep.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of their politeness it was evident that the
-visitors were anxious to be through with their task
-and away. Admiral de Grasse had a rendezvous for
-a certain date in the West Indies and insisted from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>the first that his stay in American waters must be
-short. The French were scarcely inclined to await
-the arrival of Washington; yet with all Washington's
-haste he had only reached Chester, Pennsylvania, on
-the way to Head of Elk when he heard of De Grasse's
-arrival. Those who were with him when the news
-came were more impressed by the way he received
-it than by the news itself. His reserve and dignity
-fell from him like a garment, and his face beamed
-like that of a delighted child as he stood on the
-river-bank waving his hat in the air and shouting
-the glad tidings to Rochambeau.</p>
-
-<p>When Washington reached Williamsburg on the
-13th of September he found both Lafayette and
-General Wayne the worse for wear. Wayne, with
-characteristic impetuosity, had tried to pass one of
-Lafayette's sentries after dark and was nursing a
-slight wound in consequence. Lafayette's quartermaster
-headache had developed into an attack of
-ague; but that did not prevent his being present at
-the ceremonies which marked the official meeting of
-the allied commanders. There were all possible
-salutes and official visits, and, in addition, at a grand
-supper a band played a kind of music seldom heard
-in America in those days&mdash;the overture to a French
-opera "signifying the happiness of a family when
-blessed with the presence of their father."</p>
-
-<p>Washington's arrival of course put an end to
-Lafayette's independent command. With the Commander-in-chief
-present he became again what he had
-been the previous summer, merely the commander of
-a division of light infantry, and as such took part in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>the siege of Yorktown, which progressed unfalteringly.
-The night of October 14th witnessed its
-most dramatic incident, the taking of two redoubts,
-one by French troops, the other by Americans
-under Lafayette. Among his officers were
-Gimat, John Laurens, and Alexander Hamilton.
-Six shells in rapid succession gave the signal to advance,
-and his four hundred men obeyed under fire
-without returning a shot, so rapidly that the place
-was taken at the point of the bayonet in a very
-few minutes. Lafayette's first care was to send an
-aide with his compliments and a message to Baron
-Viomenil, the French commander, whose troops
-were still attacking; the message being that the
-Americans had gained their redoubt and would
-gladly come to his assistance if he desired it. This
-was a bit of vainglory, for Viomenil had nettled
-Lafayette by doubting if his Americans could succeed.
-On the night of October 15th the British
-attempted a sortie which failed. After an equally
-unsuccessful attempt to escape by water, Cornwallis
-felt that there was no more hope, for his works were
-crumbling and, in addition to his loss in killed and
-wounded, many of his men were sick. He wrote a
-short note to Washington asking for an armistice to
-arrange terms of surrender.</p>
-
-<p>The time of surrender was fixed for two o'clock on
-the afternoon of October 19, 1781. Lafayette had
-suggested that Cornwallis's bands be required to
-play a British or a German air when the soldiers
-marched to lay down their arms. This was in
-courteous retaliation for the treatment our own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>troops had received at British hands at the surrender
-of Charleston, when they had been forbidden to play
-such music. It was to the tune of "The World
-Turned Upside Down" that they chose to march
-with colors cased, between the long lines of French
-and Americans drawn up on the Hampton Road, to
-a field where a squadron of French had spread out
-to form a huge circle. The French on one side of
-the road under their flag with the golden fleur-de-lis
-were resplendent in uniforms of white turned up
-with blue. The Americans were less imposing. In
-the militia regiments toward the end of their line
-scarcely a uniform was to be seen, but at their head
-Washington and his officers, superbly mounted,
-stood opposite Rochambeau and the other French
-generals. Eye-witnesses thought that the British
-showed disdain of the ragged American soldiers and
-a marked preference for the French, but acts of discourtesy
-were few, and the higher officers conducted
-themselves as befitted gentlemen. Cornwallis did
-not appear to give up his sword, but sent General
-O'Hara to represent him, and it was received on
-Washington's part by General Lincoln, who had
-given up his sword to the British at Charleston.</p>
-
-<p>As each British regiment reached the field where
-the French waited it laid down its arms at the command
-of its colonel and marched back to Yorktown,
-prisoners of war. The cheeks of one colonel were
-wet with tears as he gave the order, and a corporal
-was heard to whisper to his musket as he laid it
-down, "May you never get so good a master!"
-Care was taken not to add to the humiliation of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>vanquished by admitting sightseers, and all agree
-that there was no cheering or exulting. "Universal
-silence was observed," says General "Lighthorse
-Harry" Lee, who was there. "The utmost decency
-prevailed, exhibiting in demeanor an awful sense of
-the vicissitudes of human life, mingled with commiseration
-for the unhappy." There was more
-than commiseration; there was real friendliness.
-Rochambeau, learning that Cornwallis was without
-money, lent him all he needed. Dinners were given
-at which British officers were the guests of honor;
-and we have Lafayette's word for it that "every sort
-of politeness" was shown.</p>
-
-<p>Washington's aide, Colonel Tilghman, rode at top
-speed to Philadelphia with news of the surrender,
-reaching there after midnight on the 24th. He
-met a watchman as he entered the city, and bade
-him show him the way to the house of the president
-of Congress. The watchman, of course, learned the
-great news, and while Tilghman roused the high
-official, the watchman, who was a patriot, though he
-had a strong German accent, continued his rounds,
-calling, happily:</p>
-
-<p>"Basht dree o'glock, und Corn-wal-lis isht
-da-a-ken!"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XIX" id="chap_XIX"></a>XIX<br />
-
-"THE WINE OF HONOR"</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>About the time that Colonel Tilghman rode into
-Philadelphia a large British fleet appeared just
-outside of Chesapeake Bay, thirty-one ships one day
-and twenty-five more the next; but they were too
-late. As a French officer remarked, "The chicken
-was already eaten," and two days later the last sail
-had disappeared. The surrender of Cornwallis cost
-England the war, but nobody could be quite sure of
-it at that time. Washington hoped the French
-admiral would still help him by taking American
-troops south, either to reinforce General Greene
-near Charleston or for operations against Wilmington,
-North Carolina. Two days after the fall of
-Yorktown, when Washington made a visit of thanks
-to De Grasse upon his flagship, Lafayette accompanied
-his chief; and after Washington took leave
-Lafayette stayed for further consultation, it being
-Washington's plan to give Lafayette command of
-this expedition against Wilmington in case it should
-be decided upon. The young general came ashore
-in high spirits, sure that two thousand American
-soldiers could sail for North Carolina within the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>next ten days. Reflection, however, showed the
-admiral many obstacles, chief of them being that he
-had positive orders to meet a Spanish admiral in the
-West Indies on a certain day, now very near. Taking
-troops to Wilmington might delay him only a few
-hours, but on the other hand contrary winds might
-lengthen the time to two weeks, in which case he
-would have to sail off to the rendezvous, carrying the
-whole American expedition with him. After thinking
-it over, he politely but firmly refused. Reinforcements
-for General Greene were sent by land under
-command of another officer, the expedition to Wilmington
-was given up, and Lafayette rode away to
-Philadelphia to ask leave of Congress to spend the
-following winter in Paris. This was readily granted
-in resolutions which cannily combined anticipation
-of future favors with thanks for the service he had
-already rendered.</p>
-
-<p>Once more he sailed from Boston on the <i>Alliance</i>.
-This time the voyage was short and lacked the exciting
-features of his previous trip on her. Wishing
-to surprise his wife, he landed at Lorient and posted
-to Paris with such haste that he arrived quite unexpectedly
-on the 21st of January, to find an empty
-house, Adrienne being at the moment at the Hotel
-de Ville, attending festivities in honor of the unfortunate
-little Dauphin. When the news of her husband's
-return finally reached her on the breath of
-the crowd she was separated from her home by
-streets in such happy turmoil that she could not
-hope to reach the Hotel de Noailles for hours.
-Marie Antoinette hastened this journey's end in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>a lovers' meeting in right queenly fashion by holding
-up a royal procession and sending Madame
-Lafayette home in her own carriage. Accounts
-written at the time tell how the husband heard his
-wife's voice and flew to the door, how she fell into
-his arms half fainting with emotion, and how he
-carried her inside and the great doors closed while the
-crowd in the street applauded. What happened
-after that we do not know, except that he found
-other members of his family strangely altered.
-"My daughter and your George have grown so
-much that I find myself older than I thought," the
-father wrote Washington.</p>
-
-<p>Paris set about celebrating his return with enthusiasm.
-A private letter which made much of the
-queen's graciousness to Madame Lafayette remarked
-as of lesser moment that a numerous and joyous
-band of "<i>poissards,</i>" which we may translate "the
-rabble," brought branches of laurel to the Hôtel de
-Noailles. A prima donna offered him the same
-tribute at the opera, but in view of later happenings
-this homage of the common people was quite as
-significant. In vaudeville they sang topical songs
-about him; pretty ladies frankly showed him their
-favor; the ancient order of Masons, of which he was
-a member, gave him the welcome reserved for heroes;
-and he was wined and dined to an extent that only a
-man blessed with his strong digestion could have
-withstood. One of these dinners was given by the
-dissolute old Maréchal de Richelieu, nephew of the
-famous cardinal, and to this were bidden "all the
-<i>maréchals</i> of France," who drank Washington's health
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>with fervor and bade the guest of honor convey to
-him "their homage."</p>
-
-<p>It had been more than a century since France
-won a victory over England comparable to this capture
-of Cornwallis, and national pride and exultation
-were plainly apparent in the honors bestowed upon
-the returned soldier. "Your name is held in veneration,"
-Vergennes assured him. "It required a great
-deal of skill to maintain yourself as you did, for so
-long a time, in spite of the disparity of your forces,
-before Lord Cornwallis, whose military talents are
-well known." And the new Minister of War, M. de
-Ségur, father of Lafayette's boyhood friend, informed
-him that as "a particular and flattering
-favor" the king had been pleased to make him a
-marshal of France, his commission dating from the
-18th of October. This rank corresponded to that of
-major-general in the American army, and Lafayette
-was to assume it at the end of the American war.
-There were officers in the army who did not approve
-of this honor. They could not see that Lafayette
-had done anything to warrant making a French
-colonel into a major-general overnight and over the
-heads of officers of higher rank. They were quite
-sure they would have done as well had the opportunity
-come their way. Kings do not often reward
-subjects for services rendered a foreign nation; and
-the part that strikes us as odd is that Lafayette had
-been fighting against monarchy, the very form of
-government his own king represented. But Lafayette's
-life abounded in such contradictions.</p>
-
-<p>His popularity was no nine days' affair. Franklin
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>found it of very practical use. "He gains daily
-in public esteem and affection, and promises to be
-a great man in his own country," the American
-wrote, after Lafayette had been back for some weeks,
-adding, "he has been truly useful to me in my
-efforts to obtain increased assistance." Before the
-young hero arrived Franklin had found it difficult
-to arrange a new American loan, but with such enthusiasm
-sweeping Paris it was almost easy. The
-town went quite wild. John Ledyard, the American
-explorer, who was there at the time, wrote: "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 do we all,
-except some who worship." Then he added, "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>Envoys to discuss peace had already reached Paris,
-but it was not at all certain that England would give
-up the contest without one more campaign. To be
-on the safe side it was planned to send a combined
-fleet of French and Spanish ships convoying twenty-four
-thousand soldiers to the West Indies to attack
-the English island of Jamaica. Ships and men were
-to be under command of Admiral d'Estaing, who
-wished Lafayette to go with him as chief-of-staff.
-After the work was done in the West Indies D'Estaing
-would sail northward and detach six thousand troops
-to aid a revolution in Canada, a project Lafayette
-had never wholly abandoned. The expedition was
-to sail from Cadiz, and Lafayette was already in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>Spain with part of the French force when he learned
-that the preliminary treaty of peace had been signed
-at Versailles on January 20, 1782. He longed to
-carry the news to America himself, but was told that
-he could do much in Spain to secure advantageous
-trade agreements between that country and the
-United States. So he contented himself with borrowing
-a vessel from the fleet that was now without
-a destination, and sending two letters by it. One,
-very dignified in tone, was addressed to Congress.
-The other, to Washington, was joyously personal.
-"If you were a mere man like Cæsar or the King of
-Prussia," he wrote, "I would almost regret, on your
-account, to see the end of the tragedy in which you
-have played so grand a role. But I rejoice with
-you, my dear General, in this peace which fulfils all
-my desires.... What sentiments of pride and joy I
-feel in thinking of the circumstances which led to
-my joining the American cause!... I foresee that
-my grandchildren will be envied when they celebrate
-and honor your name. To have had one of their
-ancestors among your soldiers, to know that he had
-the good fortune to be the friend of your heart, will
-be the eternal honor that shall glorify them; and I
-will bequeath to the eldest among them, so long as
-my posterity shall endure, the favor you have been
-pleased to bestow upon my son George."</p>
-
-<p>The ship on which these letters were sent was
-called, appropriately, <i>La Triomphe</i>; and, as he
-hoped, it did actually carry the news of peace to
-America, reaching port ahead of all others.</p>
-
-<p>For himself, he remained in Spain, doing what he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>could for America. The things he witnessed there
-made him a better republican than ever. He wrote
-to his aunt that the grandees of the court looked
-rather small, "especially when I saw them upon their
-knees." Absolute power, exercised either by monarchs
-or subjects, was becoming more and more
-distasteful to him. The injustice of negro slavery,
-for example, wrung his heart. In the very letter
-to Washington announcing peace he wrote: "Now
-that you are to taste a little repose, permit me to
-propose to you a plan that may become vastly useful
-to the black portion of the human race. Let us
-unite in buying a little property where we can try
-to enfranchise the negroes and employ them merely
-as farm laborers." He did buy a plantation called
-Belle Gabrielle in Cayenne, French Guiana, and
-lavished money and thought upon it. It was an
-experiment in which his wife heartily joined, sending
-out teachers for the black tenantry and making
-their souls and morals her special care. The French
-Revolution put an end to this, as it did to so many
-enterprises; and it seems a bitter jest of fortune
-that when Lafayette's property was seized these
-poor creatures were sold back again into slavery&mdash;in
-the name of Freedom and Equality.</p>
-
-<p>In March, 1783, Lafayette took his wife to Chavaniac,
-possibly for the first time. One of the two
-aunts who made the old manor-house their home
-had just died, leaving the other desolate. While
-Adrienne won the affections of the lonely old lady,
-her husband set about improving the condition of the
-peasants on the estate. Bad harvests had brought
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>about great scarcity of food. His manager proudly
-showed his granaries full of wheat, remarking, "Monsieur
-le Marquis, now is the time to sell." The
-answer, "No, this is the time to give away," left the
-worthy steward breathless. Whether Lafayette's
-philanthropies would win the approval of social
-workers to-day we do not know. The list of enterprises
-sounds well. During the next few years he
-built roads, brought an expert from England to
-demonstrate new methods in agriculture, imported
-tools and superior breeds of animals, established a
-weekly market and an annual fair, started the weaving
-industry and a school to teach it, and established
-a resident physician to look after the health of his
-tenants. He was popular with them. On his
-arrival he was met in the town of Rion by a procession
-headed by musicians and the town officials,
-who ceremoniously presented "the wine of honor"
-and were followed by local judges in red robes who
-"made him compliments," while the people cried,
-"Vive Lafayette!" and danced and embraced, "almost
-without knowing one another." A few weeks
-later the tenants from a neighboring manor came
-bringing him a draught of wine from their town, and
-expressing the wish that they might come under his
-rule. This he was able to gratify a few years later,
-when he bought the estate.</p>
-
-<p>In May, 1783, Lafayette realized the long-cherished
-dream of having a home of his own. The
-Hôtel de Noailles was very grand and very beautiful,
-and while he was away fighting it was by far the
-best place for Adrienne and the children; but it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>belonged to her people, not to him. From camps he
-had written her about this home they were some day
-to have together; and now that he had returned to
-France to stay they bought a house in the rue de
-Bourbon and set up their domestic altar there.
-They had three children; for a daughter had been
-born to them in the previous September. Like
-George, she was as American as her father could
-make her. "I have taken the liberty of naming her
-Virginia," he wrote General Washington. Benjamin
-Franklin, to whom he also announced the new arrival,
-hoped he would have children enough to name
-one after each state of the Union.</p>
-
-<p>In May, also, something happened which must
-have pleased Lafayette deeply. He was given the
-Cross of Saint-Louis, the military decoration his father
-had worn; and the man who received him into
-the order was his father-in-law, the Duc d'Ayen, who
-had so bitterly opposed his going to America.</p>
-
-<p>With large estates in the country, a new house in
-town, a list of acquaintances which included everybody
-worth knowing in Paris and more notables in
-foreign countries than even he could write to or
-receive letters from, and a keen interest in the politics,
-philanthropy, and commerce of two hemispheres,
-he might have passed for a busy man. Yet
-he found time for an entirely new enthusiasm. A
-German doctor named Mesmer had made what he
-believed to be important discoveries in a new force
-and a new mode of healing, called animal magnetism.
-Lafayette enrolled himself as a pupil. "I
-know as much as ever a sorcerer knew!" he wrote
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>enthusiastically to Washington. On paying his initiation
-fee of a hundred golden louis he had signed
-a paper promising not to reveal these secrets to any
-prince, community, government, or individual without
-Mesmer's written consent, but the disciple was
-eager to impart his knowledge to his great friend
-and hoped to gain permission. Louis XVI was
-satirical. "What will Washington think when he
-learns that you have become first apothecary boy to
-Mesmer?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette was planning a visit to America and
-sent a message to Mrs. Washington that he hoped
-"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." He did indeed make the
-visit during the summer of 1784, though a few weeks
-later than June. Whether they had time during his
-ten days at Mount Vernon to talk about Mesmer
-history does not state. The hours must have been
-short for all the things clamoring to be said. Then
-Lafayette made a tour that carried him to Portsmouth,
-New Hampshire, as far west as Fort Schuyler,
-for another treaty-making powwow with his red
-brothers the Indians, and south to Yorktown.
-Everywhere bells pealed and balls and dinners were
-given. Before he turned his face toward France he
-had a few more quiet days at Mount Vernon with
-Washington, who accompanied him on his homeward
-way as far as Annapolis. At parting the elder man
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>gave him a tender letter for Adrienne, and on the
-way back to Mount Vernon wrote the words of farewell
-which proved prophetic: "I have often asked
-myself, since our carriages separated, whether that
-was the last sight I ever should have of you; and
-though I wished to say No, my fears answered
-Yes."</p>
-
-<p>Washington lived fourteen years longer; but in the
-mean time the storm of the French Revolution broke
-and everything that had seemed enduring in Lafayette's
-life was wrecked. Until that storm burst
-letters and invitations and presents flashed across the
-see as freely as though propelled by Mesmer's magic
-fluid. Mrs. Washington sent succulent Virginia
-hams to figure at dinners given by the Lafayettes in
-Paris. A picture of the household in the rue de
-Bourbon has come down to us written by a young
-officer to his mother:</p>
-
-<p>"I seemed to be in America rather than in Paris.
-Numbers of English and Americans were present,
-for he speaks English as he does French. He has
-an American Indian in native costume for a footman.
-This savage calls him only 'father.' Everything is
-simple in his home. Marmontel and the Abbé
-Morrolet were dinner guests. Even the little girls
-spoke English as well as French, though they are
-very small. They played in English, and laughed
-with the Americans. This would have made charming
-subjects for English engravings."</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette on his part sent many things to that
-house on the banks of the Potomac. He sent his
-friends, and a letter from him was an infallible open
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>sesame. He sent his own accounts of journeys and
-interviews. He sent animals and plants that he
-thought would interest Washington, the farmer.
-Asses, for example, which were hard to get in America,
-and rare varieties of seeds. In time he sent
-the key of the Bastille. But that, as romancers
-say, is "another story," and opens another chapter
-in Lafayette's life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XX" id="chap_XX"></a>XX<br />
-
-THE PASSING OF OLD FRANCE</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette took his business of being a soldier
-seriously, and in the summer of 1785 made
-another journey, this time in the interest of his
-military education. Frederick II, King of Prussia,
-was still living. Lafayette obtained permission to
-attend the maneuvers of his army, counting himself
-fortunate to receive lessons in strategy from this
-greatest warrior of his time. He was not surprised
-to find the old monarch bent and rheumatic, with
-fingers twisted with gout, and head pulled over on
-one side until it almost rested on his shoulder; or to
-see that his blue uniform with red facings was dirty
-and sprinkled with snuff. But he was astonished
-to discover that the eyes in Frederick's emaciated
-old face were strangely beautiful and lighted up his
-countenance at times with an expression of the utmost
-sweetness. It was not often that they transformed
-him thus from an untidy old man to an angel
-of benevolence. Usually they were keen, sometimes
-mockingly malicious.</p>
-
-<p>It was certainly not without malice that he seated
-the young French general at his table between two
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>other guests, Lord Cornwallis and the Duke of
-York; and in the course of long dinners amused
-himself by asking Lafayette questions about Washington
-and the American campaigns. Lafayette
-answered with his customary ardor, singing praises
-of his general and even venturing to praise republicanism
-in a manner that irritated the old monarch.</p>
-
-<p>"Monsieur!" Frederick interrupted him in such a
-flight. "I once knew a young man who visited
-countries where liberty and equality reigned. After
-he got home he took it into his head to establish
-them in his own country. Do you know what
-happened?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, Sire."</p>
-
-<p>"He was hanged!" the old man replied, with a
-sardonic grin. It was plain he liked Lafayette or
-he would not have troubled to give him the warning.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette continued his journey to Prague and
-Vienna and Dresden, where he saw other soldiers put
-through their drill. Then he returned to Potsdam
-for the final grand maneuvers under the personal
-direction of Frederick, but a sudden acute attack of
-gout racked his kingly old bones, and the exercises
-which, in his clockwork military system, could no
-more be postponed than the movements of the planets,
-were carried out by the heir apparent, to Lafayette's
-great disappointment. He wrote Washington
-that the prince was "a good officer, an honest fellow,
-a man of sense," but that he would never have the
-talent of his two uncles. As for the Prussian army,
-it was a wonderful machine, but "if the resources of
-France, the vivacity of her soldiers, the intelligence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>of her officers, the national ambition and moral
-delicacy were applied to a system worked out with
-equal skill, we would as far excel the Prussians as our
-army is now inferior to theirs&mdash;which is saying a
-great deal!"</p>
-
-<p><i>Vive la France! Vivent</i> moral distinctions! He
-may not have realized it, but Lafayette was all his
-life more interested in justice than in war.</p>
-
-<p>Almost from the hour of his last return from
-America the injustice with which French Protestants
-were treated filled him with indignation. Though
-not openly persecuted, they were entirely at the
-mercy of official caprice. Legally their marriages
-were not valid; they could not make wills; their
-rights as citizens were attacked on every side. To
-use Lafayette's expression, they were "stricken with
-civil death." He became their champion.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody knew that very radical theories had
-been applauded in France for many years, even by
-the men who condemned them officially. Dislike of
-liberal actions, however, was still strong, as Lafayette
-found when he attempted to help these people.
-His interest in them was treated as an amiable
-weakness which might be overlooked in view of his
-many good qualities, but should on no account be
-encouraged. "It is a work which requires time and
-is not without some inconvenience to me, because
-nobody is willing to give me one word of writing or
-to uphold me in any way. I must run my chance,"
-he wrote Washington. He did, however, get permission
-from one of the king's ministers to go to
-Languedoc, where Protestants were numerous, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>order to study their condition and know just what
-it was he advocated. Evidence that he gathered
-thus at first hand he used officially two years later
-before the Assembly of Notables. So his championship
-of the French Protestants marks the beginning
-of this new chapter in Lafayette's life, his entrance
-into French politics.</p>
-
-<p>Outwardly the condition of the country remained
-much as it had been; but discontent had made
-rapid progress during the years of Lafayette's stay
-in America. An answer attributed to the old
-Maréchal de Richelieu sums up the change. The
-old reprobate had been ill and Louis XVI, with good
-intentions, but clumsy cruelty, congratulated him on
-his recovery. "For," said the king, "you are not
-young. You have seen three ages." "Rather,"
-growled the duke, "three reigns!" "Well, what do
-you think of them?" "Sire, under Louis XIV
-nobody dared say a word; under Louis XV they
-spoke in whispers; under your Majesty they speak
-loudly."</p>
-
-<p>This education in discontent had proceeded under
-three teachers: extravagance, hunger, and the success
-of America's war of independence. Louis really
-desired to see his people happy and prosperous. He
-had made an attempt at reforms, early in his reign,
-but, having neither a strong will nor a strong mind,
-it speedily lapsed. Even under his own eyes at
-Versailles many abuses continued, merely because
-they had become part of the cumbersome court
-etiquette which Frederick II had condemned back
-in the days of Louis's grandfather. Many other
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>abuses had increased without even the pretense
-of reforming them. There was increased personal
-extravagance among the well-to-do; increased extortion
-elsewhere. Tax-collectors were still going
-about shutting their eyes to the wealth of men who
-had influence and judging the peasants as coldly as
-they would judge cattle. In one district they were
-fat; they must pay a heavier tax. Chicken feathers
-were blowing about on the ground? That meant
-the people had poultry to eat; the screw could be
-given another vigorous turn. Among all classes
-there seemed to be less and less money to spend.
-With the exception of a few bankers and merchants,
-everybody from the king down felt poor. The
-peasants felt hungry. The poor in cities actually
-were very hungry; almost all the nobles were
-deeply in debt. In short, the forces for good and
-ill which had already honeycombed the kingdom
-when Lafayette was a boy had continued their work,
-gnawing upward and downward and through the
-social fabric until only a very thin and brittle shell
-remained. And, as the Maréchal de Richelieu
-pointedly reminded his weak king, people were no
-longer afraid to talk aloud about these things.</p>
-
-<p>The success of the Revolution in America had done
-much to remove the ban of silence. Loans made by
-France had added to the scarcity of money; and it
-was these loans which had brought America success.
-The people across the ocean had wiped the slate
-clean and begun afresh. Why not follow their
-example? In the winter of 1782, when Paris was
-suffering from the Russian influenza, a lady with a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>clever tongue and the eye of a prophet had said, "We
-are threatened with another malady which will
-come from America&mdash;the <i>Independenza!</i>" Thoughtful
-people were beginning to believe that a change
-was only a matter of time; but that it would come
-slowly and stretch over many years.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the months passed and the glittering
-outer shell of the old order of things continued to
-glitter. Lafayette divided his time between Paris,
-the court, and Chavaniac. He made at least one
-journey in the brilliant retinue of the king. He
-dined and gave dinners. He did everything in his
-power to increase commerce with the United States.
-He took part in every public movement for reform,
-and instituted small private ones of his own. One of
-these was to ask the king to revoke a pension of
-seven hundred and eighty livres that had been
-granted him when he was a mere baby, and to divide
-it between a retired old infantry officer and a worthy
-widow of Auvergne. Incidentally people seemed to
-like him in spite of his republicanism. It was no
-secret to any one that he had come home from
-America a thorough believer in popular government.</p>
-
-<p>His fame was by no means confined to France and
-the lands lying to the west of it. Catherine II of
-Russia became curious to see this much-talked-of
-person and invited him to St. Petersburg. Learning
-that she was soon to start for the Crimea, he asked
-leave to pay his respects to her there; but that was
-a journey he never made. Before he could set out
-Louis XVI called a meeting of the Assembly of
-Notables, to take place on February 22, 1787.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>This was in no true sense a parliament; only a body
-of one hundred and forty-four men who held no
-offices at court, selected arbitrarily by the king to
-discuss such subjects as he chose to set before it.
-The subject was to be taxation, how to raise money
-for government expenses, a burning question with
-every one.</p>
-
-<p>Deliberative assemblies were no new thing in
-France. Several times in long-past history a king
-had called together representative men of the nobles,
-the clergy, and even of the common people, to consider
-questions of state and help bring about needed
-reforms. Such gatherings were known as States
-General. But they had belonged to a time before
-the kings were quite sure of their power, and it was
-one hundred and seventy years since the last one had
-been called. Little by little, in the mean time, even
-the provincial parliaments, of which there were
-several in different parts of France, had been sapped
-of strength and vitality. There was a tendency now
-to revive them. Lafayette had stopped in Rennes
-on his way home from Brest after his last trip across
-the Atlantic, to attend such a gathering in Brittany,
-where he owned estates, his mother having been a
-Breton. Favoring representative government as he
-did, he was anxious to see such assemblages meet
-frequently at regular intervals.</p>
-
-<p>The call for the Assembly of Notables had come
-about in an unexpected way. Some years before, the
-Minister of Finance, Necker, had printed a sort of
-treasurer's report showing how public funds had
-been spent. This was a great novelty, such questions
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>having been shrouded in deepest mystery.
-Everybody who could read read Necker's report.
-It was seen on the dressing-tables of ladies and
-sticking out of the pockets of priests. Necker had
-meant it to pave the way for reforms, because he
-believed in cutting down expenses instead of imposing
-more taxes. It roused such a storm of discussion
-and criticism that he was driven from the Cabinet;
-after which his successor, M. Calonne, "a veritable
-Cagliostro of finance," managed to juggle for four
-years with facts and figures before the inevitable
-day of reckoning came. This left the country much
-worse off than it had been when he took office; so
-badly off, in fact, that the king called together the
-Assembly of Notables.</p>
-
-<p>By an odd coincidence it held its first meeting at
-Versailles on a date forever linked in American
-minds with ideas of popular liberty&mdash;the 22d of
-February. For practical work, it was divided into
-seven sections or committees, each one of which was
-presided over by a royal prince. If the intention
-had been to check liberal tendencies among its
-members, the effort was vain. The spirit of independence
-was in it, and it refused to solve the king's
-financial riddles for him.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning Lafayette took an active and
-much more radical part than some of his friends
-wished. He worked in behalf of the French Protestants.
-He wanted to reform criminal law; to give
-France a jury system such as England had; and he
-advocated putting a stop to the abuses of <i>lettres de
-cachet</i>. He was very plain-spoken in favor of cutting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>down expenses, particularly in the king's own military
-establishment, in pensions granted to members
-of the royal family, and in the matter of keeping up
-the palaces and pleasure-places that former monarchs
-had loved, but which Louis XVI never visited.
-He believed in taxing lands and property belonging
-to the clergy, which had not as yet been taxed at all.
-He wanted the nobility to pay their full share, too,
-and he thought a treasurer's report should be published
-every year. Indeed, he wanted reports
-printed about all departments of government except
-that of Foreign Affairs.</p>
-
-<p>This was worse than amiable weakness, it was
-rank republicanism; the more dangerous because, as
-one of the ministers said, "all his logic is in action."
-The queen, who had never more than half liked him,
-began to distrust him. Calonne, who was about to
-leave the treasury in such a muddle, declared that he
-ought to be shut up in the Bastille; and a remark
-that Lafayette was overheard to make one day when
-the education of the dauphin was under discussion
-did not add to his popularity with the court party.
-"I think," he said, "that the prince will do well to
-begin his study of French history with the year
-1787."</p>
-
-<p>One day he had the hardihood to raise his voice
-and say, "I appeal to the king to convene a national
-assembly." There was a hush of astonishment and
-of something very like fear. "What!" cried a
-younger brother of the king, the Comte d'Artois,
-who presided over the section of which Lafayette
-was a member. "You demand the convocation of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>the States General?" "Yes, Sire." "You wish to go
-on record? To have me say to the king that M. de
-Lafayette has made a motion to convene the States
-General?" "Yes, Monseigneur&mdash;and better than
-that!" by which Lafayette meant he hoped such an
-assembly might be made more truly representative
-than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>That Lafayette realized the personal consequences
-of his plain speaking there is no doubt. He wrote to
-Washington, "The king and his family, as well as
-the notables who surround him, with the exception
-of a few friends, do not pardon the liberties I have
-taken or the success I have gained with other classes
-of society." If he cherished any illusions, they
-were dispelled a few months later when he received
-a request from the king to give up his commission
-as major-general.</p>
-
-<p>As for his appeal for a meeting of the States General,
-nobody possessed the hardihood to sign it with
-him, and it had no immediate consequences. Before
-the Assembly of Notables adjourned it advised the
-king to authorize legislative assemblies in the
-provinces, which he did, Lafayette being one of the
-five men named by the monarch to represent the
-nobility in his province of Auvergne. At the sessions
-of this provincial assembly he further displeased
-the members of his own class, but the common people
-crowded about and applauded him wherever he went.
-"He was the first hero they had seen, and they were
-never tired of looking at him," a local chronicler
-states, with disarming frankness.</p>
-
-<p>The situation grew worse instead of better. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>country's debt increased daily. The Assembly of
-Notables held another session; but it was only to
-arrange details for the meeting of the States General
-which the king had at last been forced to call. It
-was to meet in May, 1789, and was to be made up,
-as the other had been, of nobles, clergy, and more
-humble folk, called the bourgeoisie, or the Third
-Estate. But there was one immense difference.
-Instead of being appointed by the king, these were
-to be real representatives, nobles elected by the
-nobles, clergy by the clergy, and the common people
-expressing their own choice. In addition, people of
-all classes were invited to draw up <i>cahiers</i>&mdash;that is,
-statements in writing showing the kind of reforms
-they desired.</p>
-
-<p>The nobles and clergy held small meetings and
-elected delegates from among their own number.
-The Third Estate elected men of the upper middle
-class, or nobles of liberal views. Lafayette found
-considerable opposition among the nobles of Auvergne,
-but the common people begged him to represent
-them, promising to give him their unanimous
-vote if he would do so. He preferred, however, to
-make the fight in his own order and was successful,
-taking his seat, when the States General convened,
-as a representative of the nobility of Auvergne.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXI" id="chap_XXI"></a>XXI<br />
-
-THE TRICOLOR</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>When the representatives of the people of
-France, to the number of more than twelve
-hundred, came together in a great hall in the
-palace at Versailles on the 5th of May, 1789, the king
-opened the session, with the queen and royal princes
-beside him on a throne gorgeous with purple and
-gold. Immediately in front of him sat his ministers,
-and in other parts of the hall were the three orders
-in separate groups. The nobles were brilliant in
-ruffles and plumes. The Third Estate was sober
-enough in dress, but there were six hundred of them;
-twice as many in proportion as had ever been allowed
-in a similar gathering. Most of them were lawyers;
-only forty belonged to the farming class. In the
-group of clergy some wore the flaming scarlet robes
-of cardinals, some the plain cassocks of village
-priests; and events proved that these last were
-brothers in spirit with the six hundred. The galleries
-were crowded with ladies and courtiers and
-envoys from distant lands. Even roofs of neighboring
-houses were covered with spectators bent on
-seeing all they could.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>The queen looked anxious. She had no fondness
-for reforms; but of the two upon the throne she had
-the stronger character and was therefore the better
-king. She was brave, quick to decide, and daring to
-execute. Unfortunately she was also narrow-minded
-and had little sympathy with the common people.
-Louis had already proved himself a complete failure
-as a ruler. He was a good husband, a lover of hunting,
-and a passable locksmith. It was a bit of tragic
-irony that his hobby should have been the making
-of little, smoothly turning locks. After his one
-attempt at reform he had not even tried to govern,
-but spent his days in meaningless detail, while the
-country drifted toward ruin.</p>
-
-<p>Necker, who was once more in charge of the treasury,
-meant to keep the States General very busy with
-the duty for which they had been convened, that of
-providing money. But if the Notables had been
-refractory, this assembly was downright rebellious.
-A quarrel developed at the very outset about the
-manner of voting. In previous States General the
-three orders had held their meetings separately, and
-in final decisions each order had cast only one vote.
-The nobles and clergy could be counted on to vote
-the same way, which gave them a safe majority of
-two to one. Expecting the rule to hold this time,
-very little objection had been raised to the proposal
-that the Third Estate elect six hundred representatives
-instead of three hundred. The people liked it
-and it meant nothing at all. Now that the six
-hundred had been elected, however, they contended
-that the three orders must sit in one assembly and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>that each man's vote be counted separately, which
-made all the difference in the world. A few liberals
-among the nobles and more than a few of the clergy
-in simple cassocks appeared to agree with them.
-The quarrel continued for six weeks, and meanwhile
-neither party was able to do any work.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of that time the number favoring the
-new way of voting had increased. These declared
-themselves to be the National Assembly of France
-and that they meant to begin the work of "national
-regeneration" at once, whether the others joined
-them or not. Reforms were to be along lines indicated
-in the <i>cahiers</i>, or written statements of grievances,
-that voters had been urged to draw up at the
-time of the election. Tens of thousands of these had
-been received, some written in the polished phrases
-of courtiers, some in the earnest, ill-chosen words of
-peasants. All expressed loyalty to the king; and
-almost all demanded a constitution to define the
-rights of people and king alike. Among other things
-they asked that <i>lettres de cachet</i> be abolished; that
-the people be allowed liberty of speech; that the
-States General meet at regular intervals; and that
-each of the three orders pay its just share of the
-taxes.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after the liberals declared their intention of
-going to work they found the great hall at Versailles
-closed and were told curtly that it was being prepared
-for a royal session. They retired to a near-by
-tennis-court, lifted the senior representative from
-Paris, an astronomer named Bailly, to a table,
-elected him president of their National Assembly,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>and took an oath not to disband until they had given
-France a constitution. A few days later the king
-summoned all the members of the States General to
-the great hall, scolded them for their recent acts in
-a speech written by somebody else, commanded that
-each order meet in future by itself, and left the hall
-to the sound of trumpets and martial music. The
-clergy and the nobles obediently withdrew. The
-Third Estate and a few liberals from the other orders
-remained. The king's master of ceremonies, a very
-important personage indeed, came forward and repeated
-the king's order. Soldiers could be seen
-behind him. There was a moment's silence; then
-Mirabeau, a homely, brilliant nobleman from the
-south of France, who had been rejected by his own
-order, but elected by the Third Estate, advanced
-impetuously toward the master of ceremonies, crying,
-in a loud voice, "Go tell your master that we
-are here by the will of the people, and that we shall
-not leave except at the point of the bayonet." Next
-he turned to the Assembly and made a motion to the
-effect that persons laying hands upon any member of
-the Assembly would be considered "infamous and
-traitors to the nation&mdash;guilty of capital crime." The
-master of ceremonies withdrew and reported the
-scene to the king. Louis, weak as water, said:
-"They wish to remain? Let them." And they did
-remain, to his undoing.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-<a name="img223a" id="img223a"></a>
-<img src="images/p223a.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE BASTILLE<br />
-From a contemporary print</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterl">
-
-<a name="img223b" id="img223b"></a>
-<img src="images/p223b.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">SIEGE OF THE BASTILLE</p>
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>Lafayette was in an embarrassing position. He
-sympathized with the Third Estate, yet he had been
-elected to represent the nobles, and his commission
-bound him to vote according to their wishes. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>considered resigning in order to appeal again to the
-voters of Auvergne; but before he came to a decision
-the king asked the nobles and clergy to give
-up their evidently futile opposition. Lafayette took
-his place with the others in the National Assembly,
-but refrained for a time from voting. The king and
-his ministers seemed to have no settled policy. One
-day they tried to please the Third Estate; on another
-it was learned that batteries were being placed where
-they could fire upon the Assembly and that regiments
-were being concentrated upon Paris. It was
-upon a motion of Mirabeau's for the removal of
-these threatening soldiers that Lafayette broke his
-silence and began to take part again in the proceedings
-of the Assembly.</p>
-
-<p>On the 11th of July, about a fortnight after the
-nobles and clergy had resumed their seats, he presented
-to the Assembly his Declaration of Rights,
-modeled upon the American Declaration of Independence,
-to be placed at the head of the French
-Constitution. Two days later he was elected vice-president
-of the Assembly "with acclamations."
-Toward evening of the 14th the Vicomte de Noailles
-came from Paris with the startling news that people
-had been fighting in the streets for hours; that they
-had gained possession of the Bastille, the gray old
-prison which stood in their eyes for all that was hateful
-in the old regime; that its commander and
-several of its defenders had been murdered; and that
-their heads were being carried aloft on pikes among
-the crowds.</p>
-
-<p>On the 15th the king came with his brothers to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>Assembly and made a conciliatory speech, after
-which Lafayette hurried away to Paris at the head
-of a delegation charged with the task of quieting the
-city. They were met at the Tuileries gate and
-escorted to the Hôtel de Ville, where the City Council
-of Paris, a parliament in miniature, held its meetings.
-Lafayette congratulated the city on the liberty it
-had won, delivered the king's message, and turned
-to go. As he was leaving the room somebody cried
-out saying that here was the man Paris wanted to
-command its National Guard, and that Bailly, who
-accompanied him, ought to be mayor. It was one
-of those sudden ideas that seem to spread like
-wildfire. Lafayette stopped, drew his sword, and,
-acting upon that first impulse which he was so
-apt to follow, swore then and there to defend the
-liberty of Paris with his life if need be. He sent a
-message to the National Assembly asking permission
-to assume the new office, and on the 25th took,
-with Bailly, a more formal oath. The force of
-militia which he organized and developed became the
-famous National Guard of Paris; while this governing
-body at the Hotel de Ville which had so informally
-elected him, enlarged and changing from time to time
-as the Revolution swept on, became the famous,
-and infamous, "Commune." Lafayette himself, not
-many days after he assumed the new office, ordered
-the destruction of the old Bastille. One of its keys
-he sent to Washington at Mount Vernon. Another
-was made into a sword and presented by his admirers
-to the man whose orders had reduced the old prison
-to a heap of stones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>The court party was aghast. The Comte d'Artois
-and two of his friends shook the dust of their native
-land from their feet and left France, the first of that
-long army of <i>émigrés</i> whose flight still further sapped
-the waning power of the king. Louis was of one
-mind one day, another the next. Against the
-entreaties and tears of the queen he accepted an
-invitation to visit Paris and was received, as Lafayette
-had been, with cheers. He made a speech,
-ratifying and accepting all the changes that had
-taken place; and to celebrate this apparent reconciliation
-between the monarch and his subjects
-Lafayette added the white of the flag of the king to
-red and blue, the colors of the city of Paris, making
-the Tricolor. Up to that time the badge of revolution
-had been green, because Camille Desmoulins,
-one of its early orators, had given his followers
-chestnut leaves to pin upon their caps. But the
-livery of the Comte d'Artois, now so hated, was
-green, and the people threw away their green
-cockades and enthusiastically donned the red, white,
-and blue, echoing Lafayette's prediction that it
-would soon make the round of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The passions which had moved the city of Paris
-spread outward through the provinces as waves
-spread when a stone is cast into a pool. One town
-after another set up a municipal government and
-established national guards of its own. Peasants in
-country districts began assaulting tax-collectors,
-hanging millers on the charge that they were raising
-the price of bread, and burning and looting châteaux
-in their hunt for old records of debts and judgments
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>against the common people. July closed in a veil
-of smoke ascending from such fires in all parts of the
-realm.</p>
-
-<p>All day long on the 4th of August the Assembly
-listened to reports of these events, a dismaying
-recital that went on and on until darkness fell and
-the candles were brought in. About eight o'clock,
-when the session seemed nearing its end, De Noailles
-mounted the platform and began to speak. He
-said that there was good reason for these fires and
-the hate they disclosed. The châteaux were symbols
-of that kind of unjust feudal government which
-was no longer to be tolerated. He moved that the
-Assembly abolish feudalism. His motion was seconded
-by the Duc d'Aiguillon, the greatest feudal
-noble in France, with the one exception of the king.
-The words of these two aristocrats kindled another
-sort of fire&mdash;an emotional fire like that of a great
-religious revival. Noble after noble seemed impelled
-to mount the platform and renounce his special
-privileges. Priests and prelates followed their example.
-So did representatives of towns and provinces.
-The hours of the day had passed in increasing
-gloom; the night went by in this crescendo of generosity.
-By morning thirty or more decrees had been
-passed and feudalism was dead, so far as law could
-kill it.</p>
-
-<p>The awakening from this orgy of feeling was like
-the awakening from any other form of emotional
-excess. With it came the knowledge that neither
-the world nor human nature can be changed overnight.
-When the news went abroad there were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>many who interpreted as license what had been
-given them for liberty. Forests were cut down.
-Game-preserves were invaded and animals slaughtered.
-Artisans found themselves out of work and
-hungrier than ever because of the economy now
-necessarily practised by the nobility. Such mighty
-reforms required time and the readjustment of almost
-every detail of daily life. Even before experience
-made this manifest the delegates began to realize
-that towns and bishoprics and provinces might
-refuse to ratify the impulsive acts of their representatives;
-and some of the nobles who had spoken for
-themselves alone did not feel as unselfish in the cold
-light of day as they had believed themselves to be
-while the candles glowed during that strange night
-session. The final result was to bring out differences
-of opinion more sharply and to widen the gulf between
-conservatives who clung to everything which
-belonged to the past and liberals whose desire was
-to give the people all that had been gained and
-even more.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXII" id="chap_XXII"></a>XXII<br />
-
-THE SANS-CULOTTES</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette's position as commander of the National
-Guard of Paris was one of great importance.
-"He rendered the Revolution possible by
-giving it an army," says a writer of his own nation,
-who does not hesitate to criticize him, but who also
-assures us that from July, 1789, to July, 1790, he was
-perhaps the most popular man in France. Being a
-born optimist, he was sure that right would soon prevail.
-If he had too great belief in his own leadership
-it is not surprising, since every previous undertaking
-of his life had succeeded; and he certainly had more
-experience in revolution than any of his countrymen&mdash;an
-experience gained in America under the direct
-influence of Washington. He had gone to America
-a boy afire with enthusiasm for liberty. He returned
-to France a man, popular and successful, with his
-belief in himself and his principles greatly strengthened.
-He was impulsive and generous, he had a
-good mind, but he was not a deep thinker, and from
-the very nature of his mind it was impossible for him
-to foresee the full difficulty of applying in France the
-principles that had been so successful in America.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>In France politics were much more complicated
-than in a new country where there were fewer
-abuses to correct. France was old and abuses had
-been multiplying for a thousand years. To borrow
-the surgeon's phrase, the wound made by revolution
-in America was a clean wound that healed quickly,
-"by the first intention." In France the wound was
-far more serious and horribly infected. It healed in
-time, but only after a desperate illness.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting that three of Lafayette's most influential
-American friends, Washington, Jefferson,
-and Gouverneur Morris, had misgivings from the
-first about the situation in France, fearing that a
-revolution could not take place there without grave
-disorders and that Lafayette could not personally
-ride such a storm. Morris, who was then in Paris,
-urged caution upon him and advised him to keep the
-power in the hands of the nobility. When Lafayette
-asked him to read and criticize his draft of The
-Declaration of Rights before it was presented to the
-Assembly, Morris suggested several changes to
-make it more moderate; "for," said this American,
-"revolutions are not won by sonorous phrases."</p>
-
-<p>Although keen for reform and liking to dress it in
-sonorous phrases, Lafayette had no wish to be rid
-of the king. He did not expect to have a president
-in France or the exact kind of government that had
-been adopted in the United States. "Lafayette
-was neither republican nor royalist, but always held
-that view half-way between the two which theorists
-call a constitutional monarchy," says a French
-writer. "In all his speeches from 1787 to 1792 he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>rarely used the word 'liberty' without coupling it
-with some word expressing law and order."</p>
-
-<p>Events proved that he was too thoroughly a
-believer in order to please either side. One party
-accused him of favoring the aristocrats, the other of
-sacrificing everything for the applause of the mob.
-What he tried to do was to stand firm in the rush of
-events, which was at first so exhilarating and later
-changed to such an appalling sweep of the furies.
-If he had been less scrupulous and more selfish he
-might have played a greater role in the Revolution&mdash;have
-risen to grander heights or failed more
-abjectly&mdash;but for a time he would have really guided
-the stormy course of events. As it was, events
-overtook him, carried him with them, then tossed
-him aside and passed him by. Yet even so he managed
-for three years to dominate that tiger mob of
-Paris "more by persuasion than by force." This
-proves that he was no weakling. Jefferson called
-him "the Atlas of the Revolution."</p>
-
-<p>There was opposition to him from the first. Mirabeau
-and Lafayette could never work wholeheartedly
-together, which was a pity, for with Mirabeau's
-eloquence to carry the National Assembly
-and Lafayette's popularity with the National Guard
-they could have done much. The cafés, those
-people's institutes of his young days, speedily developed
-into political clubs of varying shades of
-opinion, most of which grew more radical hourly.
-Marie Antoinette continued to be resentful and
-bitter and did all in her power to thwart reform and
-to influence the king. In addition to parties openly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>for and against the new order of things there were
-individuals, both in high and low places, who strove
-to spread disorder by underhand means and to
-use it for selfish ends. One was the powerful Duc
-d'Orléans, cousin of the king, very rich and very
-unprincipled, whose secret desire was to supplant
-Louis upon the throne. He used his fortune to
-spread discontent through the Paris mob during the
-long cold winter, when half the inhabitants of the
-town went hungry. His agents talked of famine,
-complained of delay in making the Constitution,
-and gave large sums to the poor in ways that fed
-their worst passions, while supplying their very real
-need for bread.</p>
-
-<p>Even after the lapse of one hundred and thirty
-years it is uncertain just how much of a part he
-played in the stormy happenings of the early days of
-October, 1789. On the night of the 2d of October
-the king and queen visited the hall at Versailles
-where the Garde du Corps, the royal bodyguard,
-was giving a banquet. The diners sprang to their
-feet and drank toasts more fervent than discreet.
-In the course of the next two days rumor spread to
-Paris that they had trampled upon the Tricolor and
-substituted the white of the Bourbons. Out of the
-garrets and slums of the city the mob boiled toward
-the Hôtel de Ville, crying that a counter-revolution
-had been started and that the people were betrayed.
-Lafayette talked and harangued. On the 5th he
-held the crowds in check from nine o'clock in the
-morning until four, when he learned that a stream
-of malcontents, many of them women, had broken
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>away and started for Versailles, muttering threats
-and dragging cannon with them.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette had confessed to Gouverneur Morris
-only a few days before that his National Guard was
-not as well disciplined as he could wish. Whether
-this was the reason or because he felt it necessary to
-get express permission from the Hôtel de Ville, there
-was delay before he and his militia set out in pursuit.
-He had sworn to use the Guard only to execute the
-will of the people. For what followed he has been
-severely blamed, while other witnesses contend just
-as hotly that he did all any commander could do.
-That night he saved the lives of several of the Garde
-du Corps; posted his men in the places from which
-the palace guard had been withdrawn by order of
-the king; made each side swear to keep the peace;
-gave his personal word to Louis that there would be
-no violence; saw that everything was quiet in the
-streets near the palace where the mob still bivouacked;
-then, worn with twenty hours' incessant
-labor, went to the house of a friend for a little sleep.</p>
-
-<p>That sleep was the cause of more criticism than
-any act of his seventy-six years of life; for the mob,
-driven by an instinct for evil which seems strongest
-in crowds at dawn, hurled itself against the palace
-gates, killed the two men on guard before the queen's
-door, and forced its way into her bedchamber,
-from which she fled, half dressed, to take refuge with
-the king. Lafayette hurried back with all possible
-haste; made his way to the royal couple; addressed
-the crowd in the palace courtyard, telling them the
-king would show his trust by going back with them
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>voluntarily to take up his residence in Paris; and
-persuaded the queen to appear with him upon a balcony,
-where, in view of all the people, he knelt and
-kissed her hand. After that he led out one of the
-palace guard and presented him with a tricolored
-cockade; and, touched by these tableaux, the mob
-howled delight. That night, long after dark, the
-royal family entered the Tuileries, half monarchs,
-half prisoners. But discontent had been only partly
-appeased, and during the melancholy ride to the
-city Marie Antoinette gave the mob its watchword.
-Seeing a man in the dress of the very poor riding on
-the step of her coach she had remarked disdainfully
-that never before had a sans-culotte&mdash;a man without
-knee-breeches&mdash;occupied so honorable a position.
-The speech was overheard and taken up and shouted
-through the crowd until "sans-culotte" became a
-symbol of the Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>The events of that day proved that Lafayette had
-not the quality of a great leader of men. How much
-of his ill success was due to bad luck, how much to
-over-conscientiousness in fulfilling the letter of his
-oath, how much to physical weariness, we may never
-know. The royal family believed he had saved their
-lives, and the vilest accusations against him, including
-the one that he really wished Louis to fall a victim
-of the mob, appear to have been manufactured
-twenty-five years later in the bitterness of another
-political struggle. It is significant that very soon
-after the king came to Paris Lafayette held a
-stormy interview with the Duc d'Orléans, who
-forthwith left France.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>Since that melancholy ride back to Paris the rulers
-of France have never lived at Versailles. Within
-ten days the National Assembly followed the king
-to town, and during the whole remaining period of
-the Revolution the mob had the machinery of
-government in its keeping. It invaded the legislative
-halls to listen to the making of the Constitution,
-it howled approval of speeches or drowned them in
-hisses, and called out from the windows reports to
-the crowds packing the streets below.</p>
-
-<p>Political clubs soon became the real censors of
-public opinion, taking an ever larger place in the life
-of the people, until, alas! they began to take part in
-the death of many of them. The most influential
-club of all was the Jacobins, known by that name
-because of the disused monastery where it held its
-meetings. It began as an exclusive club of well-to-do
-gentlemen of all parties, who paid large dues and
-met to discuss questions of interest. Then it completely
-changed its character, took into its organization
-other clubs in Paris and other cities, and by this
-means became a vast, nation-wide political machine
-of such iron discipline that it was said a decree of the
-Jacobins was better executed than any law passed
-by the National Assembly. When its decrees grew
-more radical its membership changed by the simple
-process of expelling conservative members, until
-Robespierre became its controlling spirit. Another
-club more radical still was the Cordelières, in which
-Marat and Danton, those stormy petrels of the
-Terror, held sway. This smaller organization influenced
-even the Jacobins and through them every
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>village in France. Several of the most radical
-leaders published newspapers of vast influence, like
-Marat's <i>Ami du Peuple</i>, which carried their opinions
-farther than the spoken word could do, out into
-peaceful country lanes. In the cities the great
-power of the theater was directed to the same violent
-ends. In vain the more conservative patriots
-started clubs of their own; the others had too great
-headway. The Feuillants, that Lafayette and Bailly
-were instrumental in founding, was called contemptuously
-the club of the monarchists. All these changes
-were gradual, but little by little, as time passed, the
-aims of the revolutionists altered. What had been
-at first a cry for justice became an appeal for liberty,
-then a demand for equality, and finally a mad howl
-for revenge.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXIII" id="chap_XXIII"></a>XXIII<br />
-
-POPULARITY AND PRISON</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>So many local National Guards and revolutionary
-town governments had been formed that
-France was in danger of being split into a thousand
-self-governing fragments. Some of these came together
-in local federations for mutual benefit; and
-as the anniversary of the fall of the Bastile rolled
-around, Paris proposed a grand federation of all
-such organizations as a fitting way to celebrate the
-new national holiday. The idea caught popular
-fancy, and the city made ready for it with a feverish
-good will almost as strange as that of the memorable
-night when nobles and clergy in the National Assembly
-had vied with one another to give up their
-century-old privileges.</p>
-
-<p>The spot chosen for the ceremonies was the
-Champs de Mars, where the Eiffel Tower now stands.
-It is a deal nearer the center of Paris now than it was
-in 1790, when it was little more than a great field on
-the banks of the Seine, near the military academy.
-This was to be changed into an immense amphitheater
-three miles in circumference, a work which
-required a vast amount of excavating and building
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>and civil engineering. Men and women of all classes
-of society volunteered as laborers, and from dawn
-till dark a procession, armed with spades and
-every implement that could possibly be used, passed
-ceaselessly between the heart of the city and the
-scene of the coming festivity. Eye-witnesses tell us
-that on arriving each person threw down his coat,
-his cravat, and his watch, "abandoning them to the
-loyalty of the public" and fell to work. "A delicate
-duchess might be seen filling a barrow to be trundled
-away by a fishwife"; or a chevalier of the Order of
-Saint-Louis laboring with a hurried, flustered little
-school-boy; or a priest and an actor doing excellent
-team-work together. A hundred orchestras were
-playing; workers quitted their labors for a few turns
-in the dance, then abandoned that again for toil.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette encouraged them by his enthusiastic
-presence, and filled and trundled a barrow with his
-own hands; and when the king appeared one day to
-view the strange scene he was greeted with extravagant
-joy. Though this went on for weeks, the
-undertaking was so vast and the best efforts of
-duchesses and school-boys so far from adequate,
-that a hurry call had to be sent out, in response to
-which it was estimated that during the last few days
-of preparation two hundred and fifty thousand
-people were busy there. Evil rumors were busy,
-too, under cover of the music, and whispers went
-through the crowd that no provisions were to be
-allowed to enter Paris during the entire week of
-festivities and that the field had been honeycombed
-with secret passages and laid with mines to blow up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>the whole great throng. Such rumors were answered
-by a municipal proclamation which ended with the
-words, "Cowards may flee these imaginary dangers:
-the friends of Revolution will remain, well knowing
-that not a second time shall such a day be seen."</p>
-
-<p>The miracle was accomplished. By the 14th of
-July the whole Champs de Mars had been transformed
-into an amphitheater of terraced greensward,
-approached through a great triumphal arch. But on
-the day itself not a single green terrace was visible, so
-thick were the masses of people crowding the amphitheater
-and covering the hills on the other side of
-the river. Opposite the triumphal arch a central
-pavilion for the king, with covered galleries on each
-side, had been built against the walls of the military
-school. On the level green in the center of the great
-Champs de Mars stood an altar to "The Country,"
-reached by a flight of fifty steps. One hundred
-cannon, two thousand musicians, and two hundred
-priests with the Tricolor added to their vestments,
-were present to take part in the ceremonies. A
-model of the destroyed Bastile lay at the foot of the
-altar. Upon the altar itself were inscriptions, one
-of which bade the spectators "Ponder the three
-sacred words that guarantee our decrees. The
-Nation, the Law, the King. You are the Nation,
-the Law is your will, the King is the head of the
-Nation and guardian of the Law."</p>
-
-<p>The multitude was treated first to the spectacle of
-a grand procession streaming through the three
-openings of the triumphal arch. Deputies from the
-provinces, members of the National Assembly, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>representatives of the Paris Commune, with Mayor
-Bailly at their head, marched slowly and gravely to
-their places. After them came the visiting military
-delegations, the Paris guards, and regular troops who
-had been called to Paris from all parts of the kingdom,
-to the number of forty thousand or more, each
-with its distinctive banner. These marched around
-the altar and broke into strange dances and mock
-combats, undeterred by heavy showers. When the
-rain fell the ranks of spectators blossomed into a
-mass of red and green umbrellas, no longer the
-novelty they once had been. When a shower passed
-umbrellas were furled and the crowd took on another
-color. At three o'clock the queen appeared with
-the Dauphin beside her. Then the king, in magnificent
-robes of state, took his seat on a purple chair
-sown with fleurs-de-lis, which had been placed on an
-exact line and level with a similar chair upholstered
-in blue for the president of the National Assembly.</p>
-
-<p>The king had been named for that one day Supreme
-Commander of all the National Guards of
-France. He had delegated his powers, whatever
-they may have been, to Lafayette; and it was Lafayette
-on a white horse such as Washington rode who
-was here, there, and everywhere, the central figure of
-the pageant as he moved about fulfilling the duties
-of his office. General Thiébault wrote in his <i>Memoirs</i>
-that the young buoyant figure on the shining
-horse, riding through that great mass of men, seemed
-to be commanding all France. "Look at him!"
-cried an enthusiast. "He is galloping through the
-centuries!" And it was upon Lafayette, at the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>crowning moment of the ceremony, that all eyes
-rested. After the two hundred priests had solemnly
-marched to the altar and placed ahead of all other
-banners their sacred oriflamme of St.-Denis, Lafayette
-dismounted and approached the king to receive
-his orders. Then, slowly ascending the many steps
-to the altar, he laid his sword before it and, turning,
-faced the soldiers. Every arm was raised and every
-voice cried, "I swear!" as he led them in their oath
-of loyalty; and as if in answer to the mighty shout,
-the sun burst at that instant through the stormclouds.
-Music and artillery crashed in jubilant
-sound; other cannon at a distance took up the tale;
-and in this way news of the oath was borne to the
-utmost limits of France. The day ended with fireworks,
-dancing, and a great feast. Lafayette was
-the center of the cheers and adulation, admirers
-pressing upon him from all sides. He was even in
-danger of bodily harm from the embraces, "perfidious
-or sincere," of a group of unknown men who had to
-be forcibly driven away by his aides-de-camp. That
-night somebody hung his portrait upon the railing
-surrounding the statue of France's hero-king, Henri
-IV; an act of unwise enthusiasm or else of very
-clever malignity of which his critics made the most.</p>
-
-<p>After this, his enemies increased rapidly. The
-good will and harmony celebrated at the Feast of
-the Federation had been more apparent than real;
-a "delicious intoxication," as one of the participants
-called it, and the ill-temper that follows intoxication
-soon manifested itself. The Jacobins grew daily
-more radical. The club did not expel Lafayette;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>he left it of his own accord in December, 1790; but
-that was almost as good for the purposes of his
-critics.</p>
-
-<p>The task he had set himself of steering a middle
-course between extremes became constantly more
-difficult. Mirabeau was president of the Jacobin
-Club after Lafayette left it, and their mutual distrust
-increased. Gouverneur Morris thought Lafayette
-able to hold his own and that "he was as shrewd
-as any one." He said that "Mirabeau has the
-greater talent, but his adversary the better reputation."
-In spite of being president of the Jacobins,
-Mirabeau was more of a royalist than Lafayette and
-did what he could to ruin Lafayette with the court
-party. The quarrel ended only with Mirabeau's
-sudden death in April, 1791. At the other extreme
-Marat attacked Lafayette for his devotion to the
-king, saying he had sold himself to that side.
-Newspapers circulated evil stories about his private
-life. Slanders and attacks, wax figures and cartoons,
-each a little worse than the last, flooded Paris at this
-time. Some coupled the queen's name with his,
-which increased her dislike of him, and in the end
-may have played its small part in her downfall.</p>
-
-<p>The king and queen were watched with lynxlike
-intensity by all parties, and about three months
-after Mirabeau's death they made matters much
-worse by betraying their fear, and what many
-thought their perfidy, in an attempt to escape in
-disguise, meaning to get help from outside countries
-and return to fight for their power. There had been
-rumors that they contemplated something of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>sort, and Lafayette had gone frankly to the king,
-urging him not to commit such folly. The king
-reassured him, and Lafayette had announced that
-he was willing to answer "with his head" that Louis
-would not leave Paris. One night, however, rumors
-were so persistent that Lafayette went himself to the
-Tuileries. He talked with a member of the royal
-family, and the queen saw him when she was actually
-on her way to join the king for their flight. Luck
-and his usual cleverness both failed Lafayette that
-night. He suspected nothing, yet next morning it
-was discovered that the royal beds had not been slept
-in and that the fugitives were already hours on
-their way. Lafayette issued orders for their arrest,
-but clamor was loud against him and Danton was
-for making him pay literally with his head for
-his mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Almost at the frontier the king and queen were
-recognized through the likeness of Louis to his portrait
-on the paper money that flooded the kingdom,
-and they were brought back to Paris, real prisoners
-this time. They passed on their way through silent
-crowds who eyed them with terrifying hostility. The
-queen, who was hysterical and bitter, insisted on
-treating Lafayette as her personal jailer. Louis,
-whatever his faults, had a sense of humor and smiled
-when Lafayette appeared "to receive the orders of
-the king," saying it was evident that orders were to
-come from the other side. It is strange that he
-was not dethroned at once, for he had left behind
-him a paper agreeing to repeal every law that had
-been passed by the National Assembly. Dread of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>civil war was still strong, however, even among the
-radicals, and he was only kept a prisoner in the
-Tuileries until September, when the new Constitution
-was finished and ready for him to sign. After
-he swore to uphold it he was again accorded royal
-honors.</p>
-
-<p>But meantime there had been serious disturbances.
-Lafayette had felt it his duty to order the National
-Guard to fire upon the mob; and for that he was
-never forgiven. On that confused day an attempt
-was made upon his life. The culprit's gun missed
-fire, and when he was brought before Lafayette the
-latter promptly set him at liberty; but before midnight
-a mob surrounded Lafayette's house, crying
-that they had come to murder his wife and carry
-her head to the general. The garden wall had been
-scaled, and they were about to force an entrance
-when help arrived.</p>
-
-<p>After the Constitution became the law of the land,
-Lafayette followed Washington's example, resigned
-his military commission, and retired to live at
-Chavaniac. Several times before when criticism was
-very bitter he had offered to give up his sword to
-the Commune, but there had been no one either
-willing or able to take his place and he had been
-persuaded to remain. Now he felt that he could
-withdraw with dignity and a clear conscience. In
-accepting his resignation the Commune voted him a
-medal of gold. The National Guard presented him
-with a sword whose blade was made from locks of
-the old Bastille, and on his 360-mile journey to
-Chavaniac he received civic crowns enough to fill his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>carriage. His reception at home was in keeping
-with all this. "Since you are superstitious," he
-wrote Washington, "I will tell you that I arrived
-here on the anniversary of the surrender of Cornwallis."
-But even in far-away Chavaniac there were
-ugly rumors and threats against his life. The local
-guard volunteered to keep a special watch; an offer
-he declined with thanks.</p>
-
-<p>Bailly retired as mayor of Paris soon after this,
-whereupon Lafayette's friends put up his name as a
-candidate. The election went against him two to
-one in favor of Pétion, a Jacobin, and from that time
-the clubs held undisputed sway. According to law
-the new Assembly had to be elected from men who
-had not served in the old one; this was unfortunate,
-since it deprived the new body of experienced legislators.
-The pronounced royalists in the Assembly
-had now dwindled to a scanty hundred.</p>
-
-<p>Neighboring powers showed signs of coming to
-the aid of Louis, and the country did not choose to
-wait until foreign soldiers crossed its frontiers. Nobody
-knew better than Lafayette how unprepared
-France was for war against a well-equipped enemy,
-but the marvels America had accomplished with
-scarcely any equipment were fresh in his memory,
-and he looked upon foreign war as a means of uniting
-quarreling factions at home&mdash;a dangerous sort of
-political back-fire, by no means new, but sometimes
-successful. Before December, 1791, three armies
-had been formed for protection. Lafayette was put
-in command of one of them, his friend Rochambeau
-of another, and the third was given to General
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>Luckner, a Bavarian who had served France faithfully
-since the Seven Years' War.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's new commission bore the signature of
-the king. He hurried to Paris, thanked his sovereign,
-paid his respects to the Assembly, and departed for
-Metz on Christmas Day in a semblance of his old
-popularity, escorted to the city barriers by a throng
-of people and a detachment of the National Guard.
-He entered on his military duties with enthusiasm,
-besieging the Assembly with reports of all the army
-lacked, consulting with his co-commanders, and
-putting his men through stiff drill.</p>
-
-<p>By May war had been declared against Sardinia,
-Bohemia, and Hungary, but the back-fire against
-anarchy did not work. Troubles at home increased.
-The Paris mob became more lawless, and on the
-20th of June, 1792, the Tuileries was invaded and
-the king was forced to don the red cap of Liberty; a
-serio-comic incident that might easily have become
-tragedy if Louis had possessed more spirit. Lafayette
-spoke the truth about this king when he said
-that he "desired only comfort and tranquillity&mdash;beginning
-with his own."</p>
-
-<p>Feeling that his monarch had been insulted, Lafayette
-hurried off to Paris to use his influence
-against the Jacobins. He went without specific
-leave, though without being forbidden by General
-Luckner, his superior officer, who knew his plan.
-To his intense chagrin he found that he no longer
-had an atom of influence in Paris. The court
-received him coldly, the Assembly was completely
-in the hands of the Jacobins, timid people were too
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>frightened to show their real feelings, and the National
-Guard, upon whose support Lafayette had confidently
-relied, was now in favor of doing away with
-kingship altogether.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette could not succor people who refused to
-be helped, and he returned to the army, followed by
-loud accusations that he had been absent without
-leave and that he was "the greatest of criminals."
-"Strike Lafayette and the nation is saved!" Robespierre
-had shouted, even before he appeared on his
-fruitless mission. "Truly," wrote Gouverneur Morris,
-"I believe if Lafayette should come to Paris at
-this moment without his army he would be knifed.
-What, I pray you, is popularity?"</p>
-
-<p>In July Prussia joined the nations at war, threatening
-dire vengeance if Paris harmed even a hair of
-the king or queen. The mob clamorously paraded
-the streets, led by five hundred men from Marseilles,
-singing a new and strangely exciting song whose
-music and whose words, "To arms! To arms!
-Strike down the tyrant!" were alike incendiary.
-In spite of his recent rebuff, Lafayette made one
-more attempt to rescue the king, not for love of
-Louis or of monarchy, but because he believed that
-Louis now stood for sane government, having signed
-the Constitution. It is doubtful whether the plan
-could have succeeded; it was one of Lafayette's
-generous dreams, based on very slight foundation.
-He wanted to have himself and General Luckner
-called to Paris for the coming celebration of July
-14th. At that time, making no secret of it, the king
-should go with his generals before the Assembly and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>announce his intention of spending a few days at
-Compiègne, as he had a perfect right to do. Once
-away from Paris and surrounded by the loyal troops
-the two generals would have taken care to bring
-with them, Louis could issue a proclamation forbidding
-his brothers and other <i>émigrés</i> to continue
-their plans and could say that he was himself at the
-head of an army to resist foreign invasion; and,
-having taken the wind out of the sails of the Jacobins
-by this unexpected move, could return to Paris to
-be acclaimed by all moderate, peace-loving men.</p>
-
-<p>There were personal friends of the king who urged
-him to try this as the one remaining possibility of
-safety. Others thought it might save Louis, but
-could not save the monarchy. The queen quoted
-words of Mirabeau's about Lafayette's ambition to
-keep the king a prisoner in his tent. "Besides," she
-added, "it would be too humiliating to owe our lives
-a second time to that man." So Lafayette was
-thanked for his interest and his help was refused.
-On the 10th of August there was another invasion of
-the Tuileries, followed this time by the massacre of
-the Swiss Guard. The royal family, rescued from
-the palace, was kept for safety for three days in a
-little room behind the one in which the Assembly
-held its sessions; then it was lodged, under the
-cruel protection of the Commune, in the small medieval
-prison called the Temple, in the heart of Paris.</p>
-
-<p>With the Commune in full control, it was not long
-before an accusation was officially made against
-Lafayette. "Evidence" to bear it out was speedily
-found; and on August 19th, less than ten days after
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>the imprisonment of the king, the Assembly, at the
-bidding of the Commune, declared Lafayette a
-traitor. He knew he had nothing to hope from his
-own troops, for only a few days before this his proposal
-that they renew their oath of fidelity to the
-Nation, the Law, and the King had met with murmurs
-of disapproval, until one young captain,
-making himself spokesman, had declared that
-Liberty, Equality, and the National Assembly were
-the only names to which the soldiers could pledge
-allegiance.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette still had faith in the future, but the
-present offered only two alternatives&mdash;flight, or
-staying quietly where he was to be arrested and carried
-to Paris, where he would be put to death as
-surely as the sun rose in the east. This was what his
-Jacobin friends seemed to expect him to do, and they
-assailed him bitterly for taking the other course.
-He could not see that his death at this time and in
-this way would help the cause of civil liberty. He
-said that if he must die he preferred to perish at the
-hands of foreign tyrants rather than by those of his
-misguided fellow-countrymen. He placed his soldiers
-in the best position to offset any advantage the enemy
-might gain through his flight, and, with about a score
-of officers and friends, crossed the frontier into Liège
-on the night of August 20th, meaning to make his
-way to Holland and later to England. From England,
-in case he could not return and aid France, he
-meant to go to America.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of that, the party rode straight into the
-camp of an Austrian advance-guard.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXIV" id="chap_XXIV"></a>XXIV<br />
-
-SOUTH CAROLINA TO THE RESCUE!</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>It was eight o'clock at night, a few leagues from
-the French border. Their horses were weary and
-spent. The road approached the village of Rochefort
-in such a way that they could see nothing of the
-town until almost upon it, and the gleam of this
-camp-fire was their first intimation of the presence
-of the Austrians. It would have availed nothing to
-turn back. If they went toward the left they would
-almost certainly fall in with French patrols, or those
-of the <i>émigrés</i> who were at Liège. To the right a
-whole chain of Austrian posts stretched toward
-Namur. "On all sides there was an equality of
-inconvenience," as Lafayette said. One of the
-party rode boldly forward to interview the commandant
-and ask permission to spend the night in
-the village and continue the journey next day. This
-was granted after it had been explained that they
-were neither <i>émigrés</i> nor soldiers on their way to
-join either side, but officers forced to leave the
-French army, whose only desire was to reach a neutral
-country.</p>
-
-<p>A guide was sent to conduct them to the village
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>inn. Before they had been there many minutes
-Lafayette was recognized, and it was necessary
-to confess the whole truth. The local commander
-required a pass from the officer at Namur, and
-when that person learned the name of his chief
-prisoner he would hear nothing more about passports,
-but communicated in joyful haste with his
-superior officer, the Duc de Bourbon. At Namur
-Lafayette received a visit from Prince Charles of
-Lorraine, who sent word in advance that he wished
-"to talk about the condition in which Lafayette had
-left France." Lafayette replied that he did not
-suppose he was to be asked questions it might be
-inconvenient to answer, and when the high-born
-caller entered with his most affable manner he was
-received with distant coolness by all the prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>From Namur they were taken to Nivelles, where
-they were presented with a government order to
-give up all French treasure in their possession.
-Lafayette could not resist answering that he was
-quite sure their Royal Highnesses would have brought
-the treasure with them had they been in his place;
-and the amusement of the Frenchmen increased as
-the messenger learned, to his evident discomfiture,
-that the twenty-three of them combined did not
-have enough to keep them in comfort for two months.
-That same day the prisoners were divided into
-three groups. Those who had not served in the
-French National Guard were given their liberty and
-told to leave the country. Others were sent to the
-citadel at Antwerp and kept there for two months.
-Lafayette and three companions who had served
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>with him in the Assembly, Latour Maubourg, a lifelong
-friend, Alexander Lameth, and Bureaux de
-Pusy, were taken to Luxembourg. There was only
-time for a hurried leave-taking. Lafayette spent it
-with an aide who was to go to Antwerp. Feeling
-sure he was marked for death, he dictated to this
-officer a message to be published to the French
-people when he should be no more.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving Rochefort he had found means of
-sending a letter to his wife, who was at Chavaniac
-overseeing repairs upon the old manor-house. It
-was from this letter that she learned what had befallen
-him, and she carried it in her bosom until she
-was arrested in her turn. The message to Adrienne
-began characteristically on a note of optimism.
-"Whatever the vicissitudes of fortune, dear heart,
-you know my soul is not of a temper to be cast
-down." He told of his misfortune in a gallant way,
-saying the Austrian officer thought it his duty to
-arrest him. He hurriedly reviewed the reasons that
-led up to his flight, said that he did not know how
-long his journey "might be retarded," and bade her
-join him in England with all the family. His closing
-words were: "I offer no excuses to my children or
-to you for having ruined my family. There is not
-one of you who would owe fortune to conduct contrary
-to my conscience. Come to me in England.
-Let us establish ourselves in America, where we shall
-find a liberty which no longer exists in France, and
-there my tenderness will endeavor to make up to
-you the joys you have lost."</p>
-
-<p>His journey was "retarded" for five years, and for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>a large part of that time seemed likely to end only
-at the grave, possibly by way of the executioner's
-block. It is to be hoped that his sense of humor
-allowed him to enjoy one phase of his situation.
-He had been driven from France on the charge that
-he favored the king, yet he was no sooner across the
-border than he was arrested on exactly the opposite
-charge; that of being a dangerous revolutionist, an
-enemy to all monarchs. When he demanded a passport
-he received the sinister answer that he was to
-be kept safely until the French king regained his
-power and was in a position to sentence him himself.
-He was sent from prison to prison. First to Wezel,
-where he remained three months in a rat-infested
-dungeon, unable to communicate with any one, and
-watched over by an officer of the guard who was
-made to take a daily oath to give him no news.
-"One would think," said Lafayette, "that they had
-imprisoned the devil himself." He was so thoroughly
-isolated that Latour Maubourg, a few cells
-away, learned only through the indiscretion of a
-jailer that he was seriously ill. Maubourg asked
-permission, in case the illness proved fatal, to be
-with him at the last, but was told that no such
-privilege could be granted. But Lafayette did not
-die and even in the worst of his physical ills had the
-spirit to reply, "The King of Prussia is impertinent!"
-when a royal message came offering to soften the
-rigors of his captivity in return for information
-about France. The message was from that "honest
-prince" who in Lafayette's opinion "would never
-have the genius of his uncle."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>Another answer, equally inconsiderate of royal
-feelings, resulted in the transfer of the prisoners to
-Magdebourg, where they were kept a year. On
-these journeys from place to place they served as a
-show to hundreds who pressed to see them. There
-were even attempts to injure them, but Lafayette
-believed he saw more pitying faces than hostile ones
-in the crowds. Once fate brought them to an inn
-at the same moment with the Comte d'Artois and
-his retinue, all of whom, with a single exception,
-proved blind to the presence of their former friends.
-We have details of the way in which Lafayette was
-lodged and treated at Magdebourg, from a letter he
-managed to send to his stanch friend, the Princesse
-d'Hénin in London.</p>
-
-<p>"Imagine an opening under the rampart of the
-citadel, surrounded by a high, strong palisade. It
-is through that, after opening successively four doors
-each guarded with chains and padlocks and bars of
-iron, that one reaches, not without some trouble and
-some noise, my dungeon, which is three paces wide
-and five and a half long. The side wall is covered
-with mold; that in front lets in light, but not the
-sun, through a small barred window. Add to this
-two sentinels who can look down into our subterranean
-chamber, but are outside the palisade so
-that we cannot speak to them.... The noisy opening
-of our four doors occurs every morning to allow my
-servant to enter; at dinner-time, that I may dine in
-presence of the commandant of the citadel and of
-the guard; and at night when my servant is taken
-away to his cell." The one ornament on his prison
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>wall was a French inscription, in which the dismal
-words <i>souffrir</i> and <i>mourir</i> were made to rhyme. The
-one break in the prison routine had been an execution,
-upon which, had he chosen, Lafayette could
-have looked from his window as from a box at the
-opera.</p>
-
-<p>After a year of this he was moved again and turned
-over to the Emperor of Prussia, his prison journeys
-ending finally at the gloomy fortress of Olmütz in
-the Carpathian Mountains. Something may be
-said in defense of the severity with which his captors
-guarded him. He steadfastly refused to give his
-parole, preferring, he said, to take his liberty instead
-of having it granted him. This undoubtedly added
-a zest to life in prison which would otherwise have
-been lacking, and very likely contributed not a little
-to his serenity and even to his physical well-being.
-It transformed the uncomfortable prison routine
-into a contest of wits, with the odds greatly against
-him, but which left him honorably free to seize any
-advantage that came his way. He foiled the refusal
-to allow him writing materials by writing letters as
-he wrote that one to Madame d'Hénin, with vinegar
-and lampblack in a book on a blank leaf which had
-escaped the vigilant eye of his guard. Knowing
-very little German, he dug out of his memory forgotten
-bits of school-day Latin to use upon his
-jailers. He took every bit of exercise allowed him
-in order to keep up his physical strength. He
-believed he might have need of it. He even lived
-his life with a certain gay zest, and took particular
-delight in celebrating the Fourth of July, 1793, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>his lonely cell by writing a letter to the American
-minister at London. He gave his vivid imagination
-free rein in concocting plans of escape.</p>
-
-<p>Friends on the outside were busy with plans, too;
-and though he got no definite news of them, his optimism
-was too great to permit him to doubt that they
-were doing everything possible for his release. At
-the very outset of his captivity he applied to be set
-free on the ground that he was an American citizen,
-though there was small chance of the request being
-granted. He was sure Washington would not forget
-him; he knew that Gouverneur Morris had deposited
-a sum of money with his captors upon which he
-might draw at need. Madame de Staël, the daughter
-of Necker, and the Princesse d'Hénin were in
-London, busy exercising feminine influence in his
-behalf. General Cornwallis and General Tarleton
-had interceded for him, and later he learned that
-Fitzpatrick, the young Englishman he had liked on
-their first meeting in London, the same who afterward
-carried letters for him from America, had
-spoken for him in Parliament. Fox and Sheridan
-and Wilberforce added their eloquence; but the
-cautious House of Commons decided it was none of
-its business and voted against the proposal to ask
-for Lafayette's release, in the same proportion that
-the citizens of Paris had rejected him for mayor.</p>
-
-<p>French voices also were raised in his behalf. One
-of the earliest and most courageous was that of
-Lally Tollendal, who as member of the French
-Assembly had quarreled with Lafayette for being so
-much of a monarchist. But later he changed his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>mind and acted as go-between in the negotiations
-for Lafayette's final plan to remove the royal family
-to Compiègne. From his exile in London Lally
-Tollendal now addressed a memorial to Frederick
-William II, telling him the plain truth, that it was
-unjust to keep Lafayette in jail as an enemy of the
-French king, because it was an effort to save Louis
-which had proved his ruin. "Those who regard M.
-de Lafayette as the cause, or even one of the causes,
-of the French Revolution are entirely wrong," this
-friend asserted. "He has played a great role, but
-he was not the author of the piece.... He has not
-taken part in a single one of its evils which would
-not have happened without him, while the good he
-did was done by him alone."</p>
-
-<p>Then Lally Tollendal went on to tell how on the
-Sunday after Louis was arrested and brought back
-from Varennes Lafayette by one single emphatic
-statement had put an end, in a committee of the
-Assembly, to an ugly discussion about executing the
-king and proclaiming a republic. "I warn you," he
-had said, "that the day after you kill the king the
-National Guard and I will proclaim the prince royal."
-Lally Tollendal expatiated upon how evenly Lafayette
-had tried to deal out justice to royalists and revolutionists
-alike; how in the last days of his liberty he
-had said in so many words that the Jacobins must
-be destroyed; and that he had with difficulty been
-restrained from raising a flag bearing the words,
-"No Jacobins, no Coblenz," as a banner around
-which friends of the king and conservative republicans
-might rally. But the strict impartiality this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>disclosed had little charm for a king of Prussia and
-the appeal bore no fruit.</p>
-
-<p>There were more thrilling efforts to aid him close
-at hand. "It is a whole romance, the attempt at
-rescuing Lafayette," says a French biographer. The
-opening scene of this romance harks back to the
-night when Lafayette made his first landing on
-American soil, piloted through the dark by Major
-Huger's slaves. The least noticed actor in that
-night's drama had been Major Huger's son, a very
-small boy, who hung upon the words of the unexpected
-guests and followed them with round, child
-eyes. Much had happened to change two hemispheres
-since, and even greater changes had occurred
-in the person of that small boy. He had grown up,
-he had resolved to be a surgeon, had finished his
-studies in London, and betaken himself to Vienna
-to pursue them further. There in the autumn of
-1794 in a café he encountered a Doctor Bollman of
-Hanover. They fell into conversation, and before
-long Bollman confided to Huger that he had a secret
-mission. He had been charged by Lally Tollendal
-and American friends of Lafayette then in London
-to find out where the prisoner was and to plan for
-his escape. In his search he had traveled up and
-down Germany as a wealthy physician who took an
-interest in the unfortunate, particularly in prisoners,
-and treated them free of charge. For a long time
-he had found no clue, but at Olmütz, whose fortifications
-proved too strong in days past even for
-Frederick the Great, he had been invited to dinner
-by the prison doctor and in turn had entertained
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>him, plying him well with wine. They talked about
-prisoners of note. The prison doctor admitted that
-he had one now on his hands; and before the dinner
-was over Bollman had sent an innocent-sounding
-message to Lafayette. Later he was allowed to send
-him a book, with a few written lines purporting to
-be nothing more than the names of some friends then
-in London.</p>
-
-<p>When the book was returned Bollman lost no time
-in searching it for hidden writing. In this way he
-learned that Lafayette had lately been allowed to
-drive out on certain days a league or two from the
-prison for the benefit of his health, and that his guard
-on such occasions consisted of a stupid lieutenant and
-the corporal who drove the carriage. The latter
-was something of a coward. Lafayette would undertake
-to look after both of them himself if a rescuer
-and one trusty helper should appear. No weapons
-need be provided; he would take the officer's own
-sword away from him. All he wanted was an extra
-horse or two, with the assurance that his deliverers
-were ready. It was a bold plan, but only a bold
-plan could succeed. There were too many bolts
-and bars inside the prison to make any other kind
-feasible. Lameth had been set at liberty; his two
-other friends, Latour Maubourg and Bureaux de
-Pusy, were in full sympathy with the plan, and to
-make it easier had refrained from asking the privilege
-of driving out themselves. Bollman added that he
-could not manage the rescue alone and had come
-away to hunt for a trusty confederate. Huger had
-already told of his unforgotten meeting with Lafayette,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>and there was no mistaking the eagerness with
-which he awaited Bollman's next word or the joy
-with which he accepted the invitation to take part
-in the rescue. He was moved by something deeper
-than mere love of adventure. "I simply considered
-myself the representative of the young men of
-America and acted accordingly," he said long after.</p>
-
-<p>The two men returned to Olmütz and put up at the
-inn where Bollman had stayed before. They managed
-to send a note to Lafayette. His answer told
-them he would leave the prison on November 8th
-for his next drive, how he would be dressed, and the
-signal by which they might know he was ready. It
-was a market day, with many persons on the road.
-They paid their score, sent their servants ahead
-with the traveling-carriage and luggage to await
-their arrival at a town called Hoff, while they came
-more slowly on horseback. Then they rode out of
-the gray old town. Neither its Gothic churches, its
-hoary university, nor the ingenious astronomical
-clock that had rung the hours from its tower for
-three hundred and seventy years; not even the fortifications
-or the prison itself, built on a plain so bare
-that all who left it were in full view of the sentinels
-at the city gates, interested these travelers as did
-the passers-by. Presently a small phæton containing
-an officer and a civilian was driven toward
-them, and as it went by the pale gentleman in a blue
-greatcoat raised his hand to pass a white handkerchief
-over his forehead. The riders bowed slightly
-and tried to look indifferent, but that was hard work.
-Turning as soon as they dared, they saw that the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>carriage had stopped by the side of the road. Its
-two passengers alighted; the gentleman in blue
-handed a piece of money to the driver, who drove off
-as though going on an errand. Then leaning heavily
-upon the officer, seeming to find difficulty in walking,
-he drew him toward a footpath. But at the sound
-of approaching horsemen, he suddenly seized the
-officer's sword and attempted to wrench it from its
-scabbard. The officer grappled with him. Bollman
-and Huger flew to his assistance. In the act of
-dismounting Bollman drew his sword and his horse,
-startled by the flashing steel, plunged and bolted.
-Huger managed to keep hold of his own bridle,
-while he helped Bollman tear away the officer's
-hands that were closing about Lafayette's throat.
-The Austrian wrenched himself free and ran toward
-the town, shouting with all his might.</p>
-
-<p>Here were three men in desperate need of flight,
-the alarm already raised, and only two horses to
-carry them to safety&mdash;one of these running wild.
-Huger acted with Southern gallantry and American
-speed. He got Lafayette upon his own steed,
-shouted to him to "Go to Hoff!" and caught the
-other horse. Misunderstanding the injunction, Lafayette,
-who thought he had merely been told to
-"Go off," rode a few steps, then turned back to help
-his rescuers. They motioned him away and he disappeared,
-in the wrong direction. The remaining
-horse reared and plunged, refusing to carry double.
-Huger persuaded Bollman to mount him, since he
-could be of far greater use to Lafayette, and saw him
-gallop away. By that time a detachment of soldiers
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>was bearing down upon him, and between their
-guns he entered the prison Lafayette had so lately
-quitted.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of twenty miles Lafayette had to change
-horses. He appealed to an honest-looking peasant,
-who helped him to find another one, but also ran to
-warn the authorities. These became suspicious
-when they saw Lafayette's wounded hand, which
-had been bitten by the officer almost to the bone.
-They arrested him on general principles and he was
-carried back to a captivity more onerous than before.
-He was deprived of all rides, of course, of all news,
-even of the watch and shoe-buckles which up to this
-time he had been allowed to retain. Bollman
-reached Hoff and waited for Lafayette until nightfall,
-then made his way into Silesia. But he was
-captured and returned to Austria and finally to
-Olmütz.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment accorded Lafayette's would-be
-rescuers was barbarous in the extreme. Huger was
-chained hand and foot in an underground cell,
-where he listened to realistic descriptions of beheadings,
-and, worse still, of how prisoners were walled
-up and forgotten. Daily questions and threats of
-torture were tried to make him confess that the
-attempt was part of a wide-spread conspiracy. As
-his statements and his courage did not waver, the
-prison authorities came at last to believe him, and
-he was taken to a cell aboveground where it was
-possible to move three steps, though he was still
-chained. He found that Bollman was confined in the
-cell just above him. The latter let down a walnut
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>shell containing a bit of ink and also a scrap of paper.
-With these Huger wrote a few lines to the American
-minister at London, telling of their plight and ending
-with the three eloquent words, "Don't forget us!"&mdash;doubly
-eloquent to one who knew those stories of
-walled-up prisoners underground. They bribed the
-guard to smuggle this out of the prison, and in time it
-reached its destination. The American minister did
-not forget them. Through his good offices they were
-released and told to leave the country. They waited
-for no second invitation, which was very wise, because
-the emperor repented his clemency. He sent
-an order for their rearrest, but it arrived, fortunately,
-just too late to prevent their escape across the
-border.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXV" id="chap_XXV"></a>XXV<br />
-
-VOLUNTEERS IN MISFORTUNE</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Lafayette, in his uncomfortable cell, was left
-in complete ignorance of the fate of Bollman and
-Huger, though given to understand that they had
-been executed or soon would be, perhaps under his
-own window. The long, dreary days wore on until
-more than a year had passed, with little to make
-one day different from another, though occasionally
-he was able to communicate with Pusy or Maubourg
-through the ingenuity of his "secretary," young
-Felix Pontonnier, a lad of sixteen, who had managed
-to cling to him with the devotion of a dog through
-all his misfortunes. Prison air was hard upon this
-boy and prison officials were harder still, but his
-spirits were invincible. He whistled like a bird, he
-made grotesque motions, he talked gibberish, and
-these antics were not without point. They were a
-language of his own devising, by means of which he
-conveyed to the prisoners such scraps of information
-as came to him from the outside world.</p>
-
-<p>His master had need of all Felix's cheer to help
-him bear up against the anxiety that grew with
-each bit of news from France, and grew greater still
-because of the absence of news from those he loved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>best. For the first seven months he heard not a
-word from wife and children, though soon after his
-capture he learned about the early days of September
-in Paris, when the barriers had been closed
-and houses were searched and prisons "purged" of
-those suspected of sympathy with the aristocracy.
-Since then he had heard from his wife; but he had
-also learned of the trial and death of the king; and
-rumors had come to him of the Terror. Adrienne's
-steadfastness had been demonstrated to him through
-all the years of their married life. Where principle
-was involved he knew she would not falter; and he
-had little hope that she could have escaped imprisonment
-or a worse fate. He had heard absolutely
-nothing from her now for eighteen months. His
-captivity has been called "a night five years long,"
-and this was its darkest hour.</p>
-
-<p>Then one day, without the least previous
-warning, the bolts and bars of his cell creaked
-at an unusual hour; they were pushed back&mdash;and
-he looked into the faces of his wife and daughters.
-The authorities broke in upon the first instant of
-incredulous recognition to search their new charges;
-possessed themselves of their purses and the three
-silver forks in their modest luggage, and disappeared.
-The complaining bolts slid into place once more and
-a new prison routine began, difficult to bear in spite
-of the companionship, when he saw unnecessary
-hardships press cruelly upon these devoted women.
-Bit by bit he learned what had happened in the outside
-world: events of national importance of which
-he had not heard in his dungeon, and also little incidents
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>that touched only his personal history; for
-instance, the ceremonies with which the Commune
-publicly broke the mold for the Lafayette medal,
-and how the mob had howled around his Paris
-house, clamoring to tear it down and raise a "column
-of infamy" in its place. He forbore to ask questions
-at first, knowing how tragic the tale must be,
-and it was only after the girls had been led away that
-first night and locked into the cell where they were
-to sleep that he learned of the grief that had come to
-Adrienne about a week before the Terror came to
-an end&mdash;the execution on a single day of her
-mother, her grandmother, and her beloved sister
-Louise.</p>
-
-<p>In time he learned all the details of her own story:
-the months she had been under parole at Chavaniac,
-where through the kind offices of Gouverneur Morris
-she received at last the letter from her husband
-telling her that he was well. Her one desire had been
-to join him, but there was the old aunt to be provided
-for, and there were also pressing debts to settle; a
-difficult matter after Lafayette's property was confiscated
-and sold. Mr. Morris lent her the necessary
-money, assuring her that if she could not repay it
-Americans would willingly assume it as part of the
-far larger debt their country owed her husband.</p>
-
-<p>She asked to be released from her parole in order
-to go into Germany to share his prison. Instead she
-had been cast into prison on her own account. The
-children's tutor, M. de Frestel, who had been their
-father's tutor before them, conspired with the servants
-and sold their bits of valuables that she might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>make the journey to prison in greater comfort. He
-contrived, too, that the mother might see her children
-before she was taken off to Paris, and she made them
-promise, in the event of her death, to make every
-effort to rejoin their father. In Paris she lived
-through many months of prison horror, confined part
-of the time in the old Collège Du Plessis where Lafayette
-had spent his boyhood, seeing every morning
-victims carried forth to their death and expecting
-every day to be ordered to mount into the tumbrels
-with them. Had she known it, she was inquired for
-every morning at the prison door by a faithful maidservant,
-who in this way kept her children informed
-of her fate. George was in England with his tutor.
-At Chavaniac the little girls were being fed by the
-peasants, as was the old aunt, for the manor-house
-had been sold and the old lady had been allowed to
-buy back literally nothing except her own bed.</p>
-
-<p>At last Robespierre himself died under the guillotine
-and toward the end of September, 1794, a less
-bloodthirsty committee visited the prisons to decide
-the fate of their inmates. Adrienne Lafayette was
-the last to be examined at Du Plessis. Her husband
-was so hated that no one dared speak her name. She
-pronounced it clearly and proudly as she had spoken
-and written it ever since misfortune came upon her.
-It was decided that the wife of so great a criminal
-must be judged by higher authority; meanwhile she
-was to be kept under lock and key. James Monroe,
-who was now American minister to Paris, interceded
-for her, but she was only transferred to another
-prison. Here a worthy priest, disguised as a carpenter,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>came to her to tell her how on a day in July
-the three women dearest to her had been beheaded,
-and how he, running beside the tumbrel through the
-storm that drenched them on their way to execution,
-had been able, at no small risk to himself, to
-offer them secretly the consolations of religion.</p>
-
-<p>Finally in January, 1795, largely through the
-efforts of Mr. Monroe, she was released. Her first
-care was to make a visit of thanks to Mr. Monroe
-and to ask him to continue his kindness by obtaining
-a passport for herself and her girls so that they might
-seek out her husband. George was to be sent to
-America, for she felt sure that his father, if still alive,
-would desire him to be there for a time under the
-care of Washington, and, if he had perished in
-prison, would have wished his son to grow up an
-American citizen.</p>
-
-<p>Getting the passport proved a long and difficult
-undertaking. When issued it was to permit Madame
-Motier of Hartford, Connecticut, and her two daughters
-to return to America. It was necessary to begin
-the journey in accordance with this, and they embarked
-at Dunkirk on a small American vessel bound
-for Hamburg. There they left the ship and went to
-Vienna on another passport, but still as the American
-family named Motier. In Vienna the American
-family hid itself very effectively through the help of
-old friends, and Adrienne contrived to be received
-by the emperor himself, quite unknown to his ministers.
-His manner to her and her girls was so gracious
-that she came away "in an ecstasy of joy," though
-he told her he could not release the prisoner. She
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>was so sure her husband was well treated and so
-jubilant over the emperor's permission to write directly
-to him if she had reason to complain, that she
-was not at all cast down by the warnings and evident
-unfriendliness of the prime minister and the minister
-of war with whom she next sought interviews.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Vienna by carriage, she and her daughters
-traveled all one day and part of the next northward
-into the rugged Carpathian country before an interested
-postboy pointed out the steeples and towers
-of Olmütz. Once in the town, they drove straight
-to the house of the commandant, who took good care
-not to expose his heart to pity by seeing these
-women, but sent the officer in charge of the prison
-to open its doors and admit them to its cold welcome.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which they found Lafayette did well
-enough in point of size and of furnishings. It was a
-vaulted stone chamber facing south, twenty-four
-feet long, fifteen wide, and twelve high. Light
-entered by means of a fairly large window shut at
-the top with a padlock, but which could be opened
-at the bottom, where it was protected by a double
-iron grating. The furnishings consisted of a bed,
-a table, chairs, a chest of drawers, and a stove; and
-this room opened into another of equal size which
-served as an antechamber. The vileness consisted
-in the sights and smells outside the window and the
-dirt within.</p>
-
-<p>The routine that began when the door of this
-room opened so unexpectedly to admit Lafayette's
-wife and daughters continued for almost two years.
-Madame Lafayette described it in a letter to her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>aunt, Madame de Tessé, an exile in Holstein, with
-whom she and her girls spent a few days after leaving
-the ship at Hamburg. "At last, my dear aunt, I
-can write you secretly. Friends risk their liberty,
-their life, to transmit our letters and will charge
-themselves with this one for you.... Thanks to your
-good advice, dear aunt, I took the sole means of
-reaching here. If I had been announced I would
-never have succeeded in entering the domains of the
-emperor.... Do you wish details of our present life?
-They bring our breakfast at eight o'clock in the morning,
-after which I am locked with the girls until
-noon. We are reunited for dinner, and though our
-jailers enter twice to remove the dishes and bring in
-our supper, we remain together until they come at
-eight o'clock to take my daughters back to their
-cage. The keys are carried each time to the commandant
-and shut up with absurd precautions.
-They pay, with my money, the expenses of all three,
-and we have enough to eat, but it is inexpressibly
-dirty.</p>
-
-<p>"The physician, who does not understand a word
-of French, is brought to us by an officer when we
-have need of him. We like him. M. de Lafayette,
-in the presence of the officer, who understands Latin,
-speaks with him in that language and translates for
-us. When this officer, a huge corporal of a jailer,
-who does not dare to speak to us himself without witnesses,
-comes with his great trousseau of keys in his
-hand to unpadlock our doors, while the whole guard
-is drawn up outside in the corridor and the entrance
-to our rooms is half opened by two sentinels, you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>would laugh to see our two girls, one blushing to her
-ears, the other with a manner now proud, now comic,
-passing under their crossed sabers; after which the
-doors of our cells at once close. What is not pleasant
-is that the little court on the same level with the
-corridor is the scene of frequent punishment of the
-soldiers, who are there beaten with whips, and we hear
-the horrible music. It is a great cause of thankfulness
-to us that our children up to the present time
-have borne up well under this unhealthy regime. As
-for myself, I admit that my health is not good."</p>
-
-<p>It was so far from good that she asked leave to go
-to Vienna for a week for expert medical advice, but
-was told, after waiting long for an answer of any
-kind, that she had voluntarily put herself under the
-conditions to which her husband was subject, and
-that if she left Olmütz she could not return. "You
-know already that the idea of leaving M. de Lafayette
-could not be entertained by any one of us.
-The good we do him is not confined to the mere
-pleasure of seeing us. His health has been really
-better since we arrived. You know the influence of
-moral affections upon him, and however strong his
-character, I cannot conceive that it could resist so
-many tortures. His excessive thinness and his
-wasting away have remained at the same point since
-our arrival, but his guardians and he assure me that
-it is nothing compared to the horrible state he was in
-a year ago. One cannot spend four years in such
-captivity without serious consequences. I have not
-been able to see Messrs. Maubourg and Pusy, or
-even to hear their voices. Judging from the number
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>of years with which their so-called guardians credit
-them, they must have aged frightfully. Their sufferings
-here are all the harder for us to bear because
-these two loyal and generous friends of M. de
-Lafayette have never for an instant permitted their
-case to be considered separately from his own. You
-will not be surprised that he has enjoined them never
-to speak for him, no matter what may be the occasion
-or the interest, except in a manner in harmony
-with his character and principles; and that he pushes
-to excess what you call 'the weakness of a grand
-passion.'"</p>
-
-<p>So, in mingled content and hardship, the days
-passed. The young girls brought a certain amount
-of gaiety into the gray cell, even of material well-being.
-After their arrival their father was supplied
-with his first new clothing since becoming a prisoner,
-garments of rough cloth, cut out "by guesswork,"
-that his jailer rudely declared were good enough for
-him. Out of the discarded coat Anastasie contrived
-shoes to replace the pair that was fairly dropping
-off his feet; and one of the girls took revenge upon
-the jailer by drawing a caricature of him on a precious
-scrap of paper which was hidden and saved and had
-a proud place in their home many years later.
-Madame Lafayette, though more gravely ill than she
-allowed her family to know, devoted herself alternately
-to her husband and to the education of the
-girls; and in hours which she felt she had a right to
-call her own wrote with toothpick and lampblack
-upon the margins of a volume of Buffon that biography
-of her mother, the unfortunate Madame
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>d'Ayen, which is such a marvel of tender devotion.
-In the evenings, before his daughters were hurried
-away to their enforced early bedtime, Lafayette
-read aloud from some old book. New volumes were
-not allowed; "everything published since 1788 was
-proscribed," says a prison letter of La tour de Maubourg's,
-"even though it were an <i>Imitation of Jesus
-Christ</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Long after she was grown Virginia, the younger
-daughter, remembered with pleasure those half-hours
-with old books. From her account of their
-prison life we learn that it was the rector of the university
-who enabled her mother to send and receive
-letters unknown to their jailers. "We owe him the
-deepest gratitude. By his means some public news
-reached our ears.... In the interior of the prison we
-had established a correspondence with our companions
-in captivity. Even before our arrival our
-father's secretary could speak to him through the
-window by means of a Pan's pipe for which he had
-arranged a cipher known to M. de Maubourg's
-servant. But this mode of correspondence, the only
-one in use for a long time, did not allow great intercourse.
-We obtained an easier one with the help
-of the soldiers whom we bribed by the pleasure of a
-good meal. Of a night, through our double bars,
-we used to lower at the end of a string a parcel with
-part of our supper to the sentry on duty under our
-windows, who would pass the packet in the same
-manner to Messrs. Maubourg and Pusy, who occupied
-separate parts of the prison."</p>
-
-<p>Though they could see no change from day to day,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>the prisoners were conscious, on looking back over
-several weeks or months, that they were being treated
-with greater consideration. After every vigorous
-expression in favor of Lafayette by Englishmen and
-Americans, especially after every military success
-gained by France, their jailers became a fraction
-more polite. When talk of peace between Austria
-and France began, Tourgot, the emperor's prime
-minister, preferred to have his master give up the
-prisoners of his own free will rather than under compulsion.
-In July, 1797, the Marquis de Chasteler,
-"a perfect gentleman, highly educated, and accomplished,"
-came to Olmütz to inquire with much
-solicitude, on the emperor's behalf, how the prisoners
-had been treated, and to offer them freedom under
-certain conditions. One condition was that they
-should never set foot again on Austrian territory
-without special permission. Another stipulated that
-Lafayette should not even stay in Europe, but must
-sail forthwith for America. To this he replied that
-he did not wish to stay in Austria, even at the emperor's
-most earnest invitation, and that he had often
-declared his intention of emigrating to America; but
-that he did not propose to render account of his
-actions to Frederick William II or to make any
-promise which seemed to imply that that sovereign
-had any rights in the matter. Madame Lafayette
-and his two friends, Maubourg and Pusy, whom he
-saw for the first time in three years when they were
-brought to consult with him over this proposal,
-agreed fully with Lafayette's stand; and the result
-was that all of them stayed in prison.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXVI" id="chap_XXVI"></a>XXVI<br />
-
-EXILES</h2>
-
-<p>But hope grew. On the very day of Chasteler's
-visit the prisoners learned that negotiations for
-peace, already begun, contained a clause which would
-set them free. These negotiations were being directed
-in part&mdash;a very important part&mdash;by a remarkable
-man who had been only an unknown second
-lieutenant when the troubles began in France, but
-whose name was now on everybody's lips and whose
-power was rapidly approaching that of a dictator.
-The elder De Ségur, father of Lafayette's friend, had
-started him on his spectacular career by placing him
-in the military academy. His name was Napoleon
-Bonaparte. A man even less sagacious than he
-would have seen the advantage of making friends
-rather than enemies of Lafayette's supporters in
-Europe and America.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was partly because of repeated demands
-for his release coming from England and France and
-America, and largely because Napoleon willed it,
-that Lafayette was finally set free. Also there is
-little doubt that Austria was heartily tired of being
-his jailer. Tourgot said that Lafayette would have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>been released much earlier if anybody had known
-what on earth to do with him, but that neither Italy
-nor France would tolerate him within its borders.
-Tourgot supposed the emperor would raise no objection
-to the arrangement he had concluded to turn
-over "all that caravan" to America as a means of
-getting rid of him; "of which I shall be very glad,"
-he added. The American consul at Hamburg was
-to receive the prisoners, and he promised that they
-should be gone in ten days. This time Lafayette
-was not given a chance to say Yes or No.</p>
-
-<p>On September 18, 1797, five years and a month
-after he had been arrested, and two years lacking one
-month from the time Madame Lafayette and the
-girls joined him, the gates of Olmütz opened and he
-and his "caravan" went forth: Latour Maubourg,
-Bureaux de Pusy, the faithful Felix, and other
-humble members of their retinue who had shared
-imprisonment with them. Louis Romeuf, the aide-de-camp,
-who had taken down Lafayette's farewell
-words to France and who had been zealous in working
-for his relief, rode joyously to meet them, but so
-long as Austria had authority the military kept him
-at arm's-length. The party had one single glimpse
-of him, but it was not until they had reached Dresden
-that he was permitted to join them.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually sun and wind lost their feeling of
-strangeness on prison-blanched cheeks. Gradually
-the crowds that gathered to watch them pass dared
-show more interest. Lafayette's face was not unknown
-to all who saw him. An Austrian pressed
-forward to thank him for saving his life in Paris on a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>day when Lafayette had set his wits against the fury
-of the mob. When the party reached Hamburg
-Gouverneur Morris and his host, who was an imperial
-minister, left a dinner-party to go through the
-form of receiving the prisoners from their Austrian
-guard, thus "completing their liberty." The short
-time spent in Hamburg was devoted to writing
-letters of thanks to Huger, to Fitzpatrick, and the
-others who had worked for their release.</p>
-
-<p>The one anxiety during this happy journey had
-been caused by the condition of Madame Lafayette,
-who showed, now that the strain was removed, how
-very much the prison months had cost her. She
-did her best to respond to the demands made upon
-her strength by the friendliness of the crowds; but
-it was evident that in her state of exhaustion a
-voyage to America was not to be thought of. From
-Hamburg, therefore, the Lafayettes went to the
-villa of Madame Tessé on the shores of Lake Ploën
-in Holstein. Here they remained several weeks in
-happy reunion with relatives and close friends; and
-it was here a few months later that Anastasie, Lafayette's
-elder daughter, was married to a younger
-brother of Latour de Maubourg, to the joy of every
-one, though to the mock consternation of the lively,
-white-haired Countess of Tessé, who declared that
-these young people, ruined by the Revolution, were
-setting up housekeeping in a state of poverty and
-innocence unequaled since the days of Adam and
-Eve.</p>
-
-<p>The Lafayettes and the Maubourgs took together
-a large castle at Lhemkulen, not far from Madame
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>de Tessé, where Lafayette settled himself to wait
-until he should be allowed to return to France. It
-was here that George rejoined his family. He had
-been a child when his father saw him last; he returned
-a man, older than Lafayette had been when
-he set out for America. Washington had been very
-kind to him, but his years in America had not been
-happy. Probably he felt instinctively the constraint
-in regard to him.</p>
-
-<p>Washington had been much distressed by Lafayette's
-misfortune and had taken every official step
-possible to secure his release. It was through the
-good offices of the American minister at London that
-Lafayette had learned that his wife and children
-still lived. Washington had sent Madame Lafayette
-not only sympathetic words, but a check for
-one thousand dollars, in the hope that it might relieve
-some of her pressing necessities. He even wrote
-the Austrian emperor a personal letter in Lafayette's
-behalf. When he heard that George was to be sent
-him he "desired to serve the father of this young
-man, and to become his best friend," but he did not
-find the godfatherly duty entirely easy. It threatened
-to conflict with his greater duty as father of his
-country, strange as it seems that kindness to one
-innocent, unhappy boy could have that effect.
-Washington was President of the United States at
-the time and it behooved the young nation to be
-very circumspect. Diplomacy is a strange game of
-many rules and pitfalls; and it might prove embarrassing
-and compromising to have as member of his
-family the son of a man who was looked upon by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>most of the governments of Europe as an arch
-criminal.</p>
-
-<p>Washington wrote to George in care of the Boston
-friend to whose house the youth would go on landing,
-advising him not to travel farther, but to enter Harvard
-and pursue his studies there. But M. Frestel
-also came to America, by another ship and under an
-assumed name, and George continued his education
-with him instead of entering college. He possessed
-little of his father's faculty for making friends,
-though the few who knew him esteemed him highly.
-The most impressionable years of his life had been
-passed amid tragic scenes, and his natural reserve
-and tendency to silence had been increased by
-anxiety about his father's fate. After a time he
-went to Mount Vernon and became part of the household
-there. One of Washington's visitors wrote:
-"I was particularly struck with the marks of affection
-which the general showed his pupil, his adopted
-son, son of the Marquis de Lafayette. Seated opposite
-to him, he looked at him with pleasure and
-listened to him with manifest interest." A note in
-Washington's business ledger shows that the great
-man was both generous and sympathetic in fulfilling
-his fatherly duties. It reads: "By Geo. W. Fayette,
-gave for the purpose of his getting himself such
-small articles of clothing as he might not choose to
-ask for, $100." It was at Mount Vernon that the
-news of his real father's release came to George. He
-rushed out into the fields away from everybody, to
-shout and cry and give vent to his emotion unseen
-by human eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>His father was pleased by the development he
-noted in him; pleased by the letter Washington sent
-by the hand of "your son, who is highly deserving
-of such parents as you and your estimable lady."
-Pleased, too, that George had the manners to stop
-in Paris on the way home long enough to pay his
-respects to Napoleon, and that, in the absence of the
-general, he had been kindly received by Madame
-Bonaparte. Natural courtesy as well as policy demanded
-that the Lafayettes fully acknowledge their
-debt to Napoleon. One of Lafayette's first acts on
-being set free had been to write him the following
-joint letter of thanks with Maubourg and Pusy:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Citizen General</span>: The prisoners of Olmütz,
-happy in owing their deliverance to the good will of
-their country and to your irresistible arms, rejoiced
-during their captivity in the thought that their
-liberty and their lives depended upon the triumphs
-of the Republic and of your personal glory. It is
-with the utmost satisfaction that we now do homage
-to our liberator. We should have liked, Citizen
-General, to express these sentiments in person, to
-look with our own eyes upon the scenes of so many
-victories, the army which won them, and the general
-who has added our resurrection to the number of
-his miracles. But you are aware that the journey
-to Hamburg was not left to our choice. From the
-place where we parted with our jailers we address our
-thanks to their victor.</p>
-
-<p>"From our solitary retreat in the Danish territory
-of Holstein, where we shall endeavor to re-establish
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>the health you have saved to us, our patriotic
-prayers for the Republic will go out united with the
-most lively interest in the illustrious general to
-whom we are even more indebted for the services
-he has rendered liberty and our country than for the
-special obligation it is our glory to owe him, and
-which the deepest gratitude has engraved forever
-upon our hearts.</p>
-
-<p>"Greetings and respect.</p>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">La Fayette</span>,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Latour Maubourg</span>,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bureaux de Pusy</span>."</p></div>
-
-<p>Lafayette could no more leave politics alone than
-he could keep from breathing; and even in its stilted
-phrases of thanks this letter managed to show how
-much more he valued the Republic than any individual.
-Perhaps even at that early date he mistrusted
-Napoleon's personal ambition.</p>
-
-<p>With the leisure of exile on his hands, and pens
-and paper once more within easy reach, he plunged
-into correspondence and into the project of writing
-a book with Maubourg and Pusy to set forth their
-views of government. Pens and paper seem to have
-been the greatest luxuries of his exile, for the family
-fortunes were at a low ebb. Two of Madame
-Lafayette's younger sisters joined her and the three
-pooled their ingenuity and their limited means to
-get the necessaries of life at the lowest possible cost.
-"The only resource of the mistress of the establishment
-was to make 'snow eggs' when she was called
-upon to provide an extra dish for fifteen or sixteen
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>persons all dying of hunger." This state of things
-continued after they had gone to live at Vianen near
-Utrecht in Holland, in order to be a little closer to
-France. Lafayette had asked permission of the
-Directory to return with the officers who had left
-France with him, but received no answer.</p>
-
-<p>Since Madame Lafayette's name was not on the
-list of suspected persons, she could come and go as
-she would, and she made several journeys, when
-health permitted, to attend to business connected
-with the inheritance coming to her from her mother's
-estate. She was in Paris in November, 1799, when
-the Directory was overthrown and Napoleon became
-practically king of France for the term of ten years
-with the title of First Consul. She sent her husband
-a passport under an assumed name and bade him
-come at once without asking permission of any one
-and without any guaranty of personal safety beyond
-the general one that the new government promised
-justice to all. This was advice after his own heart
-and he suddenly appeared in Paris. Once there he
-wrote to Napoleon, announcing his arrival. Napoleon's
-ministers were scandalized and declared he
-must go back. Nobody had the courage to mention
-the subject to the First Consul, whose anger was
-already a matter of wholesome dread; but Madame
-Lafayette took the situation into her own hands.
-She went to see Napoleon as simply as if she were
-calling upon her lawyer, and just as if he were her
-lawyer she laid her husband's case before him. The
-calm and gentle effrontery filled him with delight.
-"Madame, I am charmed to make your acquaintance!"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>he cried; "you are a woman of spirit&mdash;but
-you do not understand affairs."</p>
-
-<p>However, it was agreed that Lafayette might remain
-in France, provided he retired to the country
-and kept very quiet while necessary formalities were
-complied with. In March, 1800, his name and
-those of the companions of his flight were removed
-from the lists of <i>émigrés</i>. After this visit of Madame
-Lafayette to the First Consul the family took up its
-residence about forty miles from Paris at La Grange
-near Rozoy, a château dating from the twelfth century,
-which had belonged to Madame d'Ayen. But
-it was not as the holder of feudal dwellings and traditions
-that Lafayette installed himself in the place
-that was to be his home for the rest of his life. He
-had willingly given up his title when the Assembly
-abolished such things in 1790. Mirabeau mockingly
-called him "Grandison Lafayette" for voting for such
-a measure. It was as an up-to-date farmer that he
-began life all over again at the age of forty-two. He
-made Felix Pontonnier his manager, and they worked
-literally from the ground up, for the estate had been
-neglected and there was little money to devote to it.
-Gradually he accumulated plants and animals and
-machines from all parts of the world; writing voluminous
-letters about flocks and fruit-trees, and
-exchanging much advice and many seeds; pursuing
-agriculture, he said, himself, "with all the ardor he
-had given in youth to other callings." A decade
-later he announced with pride that "with a little
-theory and ten years of experience he had succeeded
-fairly well."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>As soon as Napoleon's anger cooled he received
-Lafayette and Latour Maubourg, conversing affably,
-even jocularly about their imprisonment. "I don't
-know what the devil you did to the Austrians," he
-said, "but it cost them a mighty effort to let you
-go." For a time Lafayette saw the First Consul
-frequently and was on excellent terms with other
-members of his family. Lucien Bonaparte is said to
-have cherished the belief that Lafayette would not
-have objected to him as a son-in-law. But in
-character and principle Lafayette and the First
-Consul were too far apart to be really friends. It
-was to the interest of each to secure the good will
-of the other, and both appear honestly to have tried.
-The two have been said to typify the beginning and
-the end of the French Revolution: Lafayette, the
-generous, impractical theories of its first months:
-Napoleon, the strong will and strong hand needed
-to pull the country out of the anarchy into which
-these theories had degenerated. Lafayette was too
-much of an optimist and idealist not to speak his
-mind freely to the First Consul, even when asking
-favors for old friends. Napoleon was too practical
-not to resent lectures from a man whose theories had
-signally failed of success; and far too much of an
-autocrat to enjoy having his personal favors refused.
-The grand cross of the Legion of Honor, a seat in the
-French Senate at a time when it depended on the
-will of Napoleon and not on an election of the people,
-and the post of minister to the United States were
-refused in turn. Lafayette said he was more interested
-in agriculture than in embassies, and made
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>it plain that an office to which he was elected was
-the only kind he cared to hold. If Napoleon hoped
-to gain his support by appealing to his ambition,
-he failed utterly.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually their relations became strained and the
-break occurred in 1802 when Napoleon was declared
-Consul for life. Lafayette was now an elector for
-the Department of Seine and Marne, an office within
-the gift of the people, and as such had to vote on the
-proposal to make Bonaparte Consul for life.</p>
-
-<p>He cast his vote against it, inscribing on the
-register of his Commune: "I cannot vote for such a
-magistracy until public liberty is sufficiently guaranteed.
-Then I shall give my vote to Napoleon Bonaparte";
-and he wrote him a letter carefully explaining
-that there was nothing personal in it. "That is
-quite true," says a French biographer. "A popular
-government, with Bonaparte at its head, would have
-suited Lafayette exactly."</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon as emperor and autocrat suited him
-not at all. He continued to live in retirement, busy
-with his farm, his correspondence, and his family,
-or when his duties as Deputy took him to Paris,
-attending strictly to those and avoiding intercourse
-with Napoleon's ministers. He made visits to
-Chavaniac to gladden the heart of the old aunt who
-was once more mistress of the manor-house, and he
-rejoiced in George's marriage to a very charming
-girl. In February, 1803, while in Paris, a fall upon
-the ice resulted in an injury that made him lame for
-life. The surgeon experimented with a new method
-of treatment whose only result was extreme torture
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>even for Lafayette, whose power of bearing pain
-almost equaled that of his blood brothers, the American
-Indians. It was during this season of agony
-that Virginia, his youngest child, was married in a
-neighboring room to Louis de Lasteyrie, by the
-same priest who had followed the brave De Noailles
-women to the foot of the scaffold. Instead of the
-profusion of plate and jewels which would have been
-hers before the Revolution, the family "assessed itself"
-to present to the bride and her husband a
-portfolio containing two thousand francs&mdash;about
-four hundred dollars.</p>
-
-<p>In 1807 the greatest grief of Lafayette's life came
-to him in the death of his wife, who had never recovered
-from the rigors of Olmütz. "It is not for
-having come to Olmütz that I wish to praise her
-here," the heartbroken husband wrote to Latour
-Maubourg soon after the Christmas Eve on which
-her gentle spirit passed to another life, "but that she
-did not come until she had taken the time to make
-every possible provision within her power to safeguard
-the welfare of my aunt and the rights of my
-creditors, and for having had the courage to send
-George to America." The gallant, loving lady was
-buried in the cemetery of Picpus, the secret place
-where the bodies of the victims to the Terror had
-been thrown. A poor working-girl had discovered
-the spot, and largely through the efforts of Madame
-Lafayette and her sister a chapel had been built and
-the cemetery put in order&mdash;which perhaps accounts
-for the simplicity of Virginia's wedding-gift.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXVII" id="chap_XXVII"></a>XXVII<br />
-
-A GRATEFUL REPUBLIC</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>During the long, dark night of Lafayette's
-imprisonment he had dreamed of America as
-the land of dawn and hope, and planned to make a
-new home there, but when release came this had not
-seemed best. Madame Lafayette's health had been
-too frail, and La Grange, with its neglected acres,
-was too obviously awaiting a master. "Besides, we
-lack the first dollar to buy a farm. That, in addition
-to many other considerations, should prevent your
-tormenting yourself about it," he told Adrienne.
-One of these considerations was the beloved old aunt
-at Chavaniac, who lived to the age of ninety-two
-and never ceased to be the object of his special care.
-Also his young people, with their marriages and
-budding families, were too dear to permit him
-willingly to put three thousand miles of ocean
-between them and himself.</p>
-
-<p>But he had never lost touch with his adopted
-country. At the time he declined Napoleon's offer
-to make him minister to the United States he wrote
-a correspondent that he had by no means given up
-the hope of visiting it again as a private citizen;
-though, he added, humorously, he fancied that if he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>landed in America in anything except a military
-uniform he would feel as embarrassed and as much
-out of place as a savage in knee-breeches. After
-Napoleon sold Louisiana to the United States, foreseeing
-he could not profitably keep it, Jefferson
-sounded Lafayette about coming to be governor of
-the newly acquired territory. That offer, too, he had
-seen fit to refuse; but his friends called him "the
-American enthusiast."</p>
-
-<p>Time went by until almost fifty years had passed
-since the "Bostonians" took their stand against the
-British king. To celebrate the semi-centennial,
-America decided to raise a monument to the heroes
-of Bunker Hill. Lafayette was asked to lay the
-corner-stone at the ceremonies which were to take
-place on the fiftieth anniversary of the battle. It
-became the pleasant duty of President James
-Monroe, who had served as a subaltern in the battle
-where Lafayette received his American wound, to
-send him the official invitation of Congress and to
-place a government frigate at his disposal for the
-trip. A turn of French elections in 1824 had left
-him temporarily "a statesman out of a job," without
-even the duty of representing his district in the
-Chamber of Deputies. There was really no reason
-why he should not accept and every reason why he
-might at last gratify his desire to see America and
-American friends again.</p>
-
-<p>He sailed on July 12, 1824, not, however, upon the
-United States frigate, but on the <i>Cadmus</i>, a regular
-packet-boat, preferring, he said, to come as a private
-individual. His son accompanied him, as did Col.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>A. Lavasseur, who acted as his secretary. These,
-with his faithful valet, Bastien, made up his entire
-retinue, though he might easily have had a regiment
-of followers, so many were the applications of enthusiastic
-young men who seemed to look upon this
-as some new sort of military expedition. On the
-<i>Cadmus</i> he asked fellow-travelers about American
-hotels and the cost of travel by stage and steamboat,
-and M. Lavasseur made careful note of the answers.
-He had no idea of the reception that awaited him.
-When the <i>Cadmus</i> sailed into New York harbor and
-he saw every boat gay with bunting and realized
-that every man, woman, and child to whom coming
-was possible had come out to meet him, he was completely
-overcome. "It will burst!" he cried, pressing
-his hands to his heart, while tears rolled down his
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>Whether he wished or no, he found himself the
-nation's guest. The country not only stopped its
-work and its play to give him greeting; it stopped
-its politics&mdash;and beyond that Americans cannot go.
-It was a campaign summer, but men forgot for a
-time whether they were for Adams or Crawford,
-Clay or Jackson. Election Day was three months
-off, politics could wait; but nobody could wait to see
-this man who had come to them out of the past from
-the days of the Revolution, whose memory was
-their country's most glorious heritage. They gave
-him salutes and dinners and receptions. They
-elected him to all manner of societies. Mills and
-factories closed and the employees surged forth to
-shout themselves hoarse as they jostled mayors and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>judges in the welcome. Dignified professors found
-themselves battling in a crowd of their own students
-to get near his carriage. Our whole hard-headed,
-practical nation burst into what it fondly believed
-to be poetry in honor of his coming. Even the inmates
-of New York's Debtors' Prison sent forth
-such an effusion of many stanzas. If these were not
-real poems, the authors never suspected it. There
-was truth in them, at any rate. "Again the hero
-comes to tread the sacred soil for which he bled"
-was the theme upon which they endlessly embroidered.
-Occasionally the law sidestepped in his
-honor. A deputy sheriff in New England pinned
-upon his door this remarkable "Notice. Arrests in
-civil suits postponed to-day, sacred to Freedom and
-Freedom's Friend."</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette arrived in August and remained until
-September of the following year, and during that
-time managed, to tread an astonishing amount of our
-sacred soil, considering that he came before the day
-of railroads. The country he had helped to create
-had tripled in population, and, instead of being
-merely a narrow strip along the Atlantic, now
-stretched westward a thousand miles. He visited
-all the states and all the principal towns. It was
-not only in towns that he was welcomed. At the
-loneliest crossroads a musket-shot or a bugle-call
-brought people magically together. The sick were
-carried out on mattresses and wrung his hand and
-thanked God. Babies were named for him. One
-bore through life the whole name Welcome Lafayette.
-Miles of babies already named were held up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>for him to see&mdash;and perhaps to kiss. Old soldiers
-stretched out hands almost as feeble as those of
-babies in efforts to detain him and fight their battles
-o'er. With these he was very tender. Small boys
-drew "Lafayette fish" out of the brooks on summer
-days, and when he came to their neighborhood ran
-untold distances to get sight of him. Often he
-helped them to points of vantage from which they
-could see something more than forests of grown-up
-backs and legs during the ceremonies which took
-place before court-houses and state-houses. Here
-little girls, very much washed and curled, presented
-him with useless bouquets and lisped those artless
-odes of welcome. Sometimes they tried to crown
-him with laurel, a calamity he averted with a deft
-hand. Back of the little girls usually stood a phalanx
-of larger maidens in white, carrying banners, who
-were supposed to represent the states of the Union;
-and back of the maidens was sometimes a wonderful
-triumphal arch built of scantling and covered with
-painted muslin, the first achievement of its kind in
-local history.</p>
-
-<p>The country was really deeply moved by Lafayette's
-visit. It meant to honor him to the full, but
-it saw no reason to hide the fact that it had done
-something for him as well. "The Nation's Guest.
-France gave him birth; America gave him Immortality,"
-was a statement that kept everybody,
-nations and individuals alike, in their proper places.
-In short, the welcome America gave Lafayette was
-hearty and sincere. Whether it appeared as brilliant
-to the guest of honor, accustomed from youth to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>pageants at Versailles, as it did to his hosts we may
-doubt. It was occasionally hard for M. Lavasseur
-to appear impressed and not frankly astonished at
-the things he saw. Lafayette enjoyed it all thoroughly.
-The difficult rôle fell to his son George,
-who had neither the interest of novelty nor of personal
-triumph to sustain him. He already knew
-American ways, and it was equally impossible for
-him to join in the ovation or to acknowledge greetings
-not meant for himself. He made himself useful by
-taking possession of the countless invitations showered
-upon his father and arranging an itinerary to
-embrace as many of them as possible.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="img293a" id="img293a"></a>
-<img src="images/p293a.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE IN 1824<br />
-From a painting by William Birch</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="img293b" id="img293b"></a>
-<img src="images/p293b.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">MADAME DE LAFAYETTE<br />
-After a miniature in the possession of the family</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>To those who have been wont to think of this
-American triumphal progress of Lafayette's as steady
-and slow, stopping only for demonstrations of welcome
-and rarely if ever doubling on its tracks, it is a
-relief to learn that Lafayette did occasionally rest.
-He made Washington, the capital of the country, his
-headquarters, and set out from there on longer or
-shorter journeys. The town had not existed, indeed
-had scarcely been dreamed of, for a decade after his
-first visit. What he thought of the straggling place,
-with its muddy, stump-infested avenues, we shall
-never know. He had abundant imagination&mdash;which
-was one reason the town existed; for without imagination
-he would never have crossed the ocean to fight
-for American liberty. Among the people he saw
-about him in Washington during the official ceremonies
-were many old friends and many younger
-faces mysteriously like them. To that striking
-sentence in Henry Clay's address of welcome in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>House of Representatives, "General, you find yourself
-here in the midst of posterity," he could answer,
-with truth and gallantry, "No, Mr. Speaker, posterity
-has not yet begun for me, for I find in these
-sons of my old friends the same political ideals and,
-I may add, the same warm sentiments toward myself
-that I have already had the happiness to enjoy in
-their fathers."</p>
-
-<p>His great friend Washington had gone to his rest;
-but there were memories of Washington at every
-turn. He made a visit to Mount Vernon and spent
-a long hour at his friend's tomb. He entered Yorktown
-following Washington's old campaign tent, a
-relic which was carried ahead of the Lafayette processions
-in that part of the country, in a spirit almost
-as reverent as that the Hebrews felt toward the Ark
-of the Covenant. At Yorktown the ceremonies were
-held near the Rock Redoubt which Lafayette's command
-had so gallantly taken. Zachary Taylor,
-who was to gain fame as a general himself and to be
-President of the United States, presented a laurel
-wreath, which Lafayette turned from a compliment
-to himself to a tribute to his men. "You know,
-sir," he said, "that in this business of storming redoubts
-with unloaded arms and fixed bayonets, the
-merit of the deed lies in the soldiers who execute it,"
-and he accepted the crown "in the name of the
-light infantry&mdash;those we have lost as well as those
-who survive."</p>
-
-<p>Farther south, at Camden, he laid the corner-stone
-of a monument to his friend De Kalb; and at
-Savannah performed the same labor of love for one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>erected in honor of Nathanael Greene and of Pulaski.
-At Charleston, also, he met Achille Marat, come
-from his home in Florida to talk with Lafayette
-about his father, who met his death at the hands of
-Charlotte Corday during the French Revolution.
-There were many meetings in America to remind
-him of his life abroad. Francis Huger joined him
-for a large part of his journey; he saw Dubois
-Martin, now a jaunty old gentleman of eighty-three.
-It was he who had bought <i>La Victoire</i> for Lafayette's
-runaway journey. In New Jersey he dined with
-Joseph Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon, who was
-living there quietly with his daughter and son-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>Both on the Western frontier and at the nation's
-capital he met Indian chiefs with garments more
-brilliant and manners quite as dignified as kings ever
-possessed. In a time of freshet in the West he became
-the guest of an Indian named Big Warrior and
-spent the night in his savage home. On another
-night he came near accepting unwillingly the hospitality
-of the Ohio River, for the steamboat upon
-which he was traveling caught fire, after the manner
-of river boats of that era, and "burned a hole in the
-night" and disappeared. He lost many of his belongings
-in consequence, including his hat, but not
-his serenity or even a fraction of his health, though
-the accident occurred in the pouring rain.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere, particularly in the West, he came to
-towns and counties bearing his own name. In the
-East he revisited with his son spots made memorable
-in the Revolution. On the Hudson he rose early to
-point out to George the place where André had been
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>taken and the house to which he and Washington
-had come so soon after Arnold's precipitate flight.
-At West Point he reviewed the cadets, slim and
-straight and young, while General Scott and General
-Brown, both tall, handsome men, looking very smart
-indeed in their plumes and dress uniforms, stood
-beside their visitor, who was almost as tall and
-military in his bearing and quite as noticeable for
-the neatness and plainness of his civilian dress.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette was broader of shoulder and distinctly
-heavier than he had been forty years before. Even
-in his youth he had not been handsome, though he
-possessed for Americans the magnetism his son so
-sadly lacked. His once fair complexion had turned
-brown and his once reddish hair had turned gray,
-but that was a secret concealed under a chestnut wig.
-He carried a cane and walked with a slight limp,
-which Americans attributed enthusiastically to his
-wound in their service, but which was really caused
-by that fall upon the ice in 1803. Despite his
-checkered fortunes his sixty-eight years had passed
-lightly over his head. Perhaps he did not altogether
-relish being addressed as Venerable Sir by mayors
-and town officials, any more than he liked to have
-laurel wreaths pulling his wig awry, but he knew
-that both were meant in exquisite politeness.</p>
-
-<p>And, true Frenchman that he was, he never allowed
-himself to be outdone in politeness. Everywhere
-incidents occurred, trivial enough, but very
-charming in spirit, that have been treasured in
-memory and handed down to this day. In New
-London two rival congregations besought him to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>come to their churches and listen to their pastors.
-He pleased them both. He led blind old ladies gallantly
-through the minuet. He held tiny girls in
-his arms and, kissing them, said they reminded him
-of his own little Virginia. He chatted delightfully
-with young men who accompanied him as governors'
-aides in turn through the different states; and if he
-extracted local information from these talks to use
-it again slyly, with telling effect, in reply to the very
-next address of welcome, that was a joke between
-themselves which they enjoyed hugely. "He spoke
-the English language well, but slower than a native
-American," one of these young aides tells us. He
-was seldom at a loss for a graceful speech, though
-this was a gift that came to him late in life. And his
-memory for faces seldom played him false. When
-William Magaw, who had been surgeon of the old
-First Pennsylvania, visited him and challenged him
-for recognition, Lafayette replied that he did not
-remember his name, but that he knew very well what
-he had done for him&mdash;he had dressed his wound after
-the battle of the Brandywine!</p>
-
-<p>The processions and celebrations in Lafayette's
-honor culminated in the ceremony for which he had
-crossed the Atlantic, the laying of the corner-stone
-at Bunker Hill. Pious people had said hopefully
-that the Lord could not let it rain on such a day;
-and their faith was justified, for the weather was
-perfect. We are told that on the 17th of June
-"everything that had wheels and everything that
-had legs" moved in the direction of the monument.
-Accounts tell of endless organizations and of "miles
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>of spectators," until there seemed to be not room
-for another person to sit or stand. The same chaplain
-who had lifted up his young voice in prayer in
-the darkness on Cambridge Common before the
-men marched off to battle was there in the sunlight
-to raise his old hands in blessing. Daniel Webster,
-who had not been born when the battle was fought,
-was there to make the oration. He could move his
-hearers as no other American has been able to do,
-playing upon their emotions as upon an instrument,
-and never was his skill greater than upon that day.
-He set the key of feeling in the words, "Venerable
-men," addressed to the forty survivors of the battle,
-a gray-haired group, sitting together in the afternoon
-light. Lafayette had met this little company in a
-quiet room before the ceremonies began and had
-greeted each as if he were in truth a personal friend.
-After his part in the ceremony was over he elected
-to sit with them instead of in the place prepared for
-him. "I belong there," he said, and there he sat,
-his chestnut wig shining in the gray company.</p>
-
-<p>While Webster's eloquence worked its spell, and
-pride and joy and pain even to the point of tears
-swept over the thousands of upturned faces as
-cloud shadows sweep across a meadow, Lafayette
-must have remembered another scene, a still greater
-assembly, even more tense with feeling, in which he
-had been a central figure: that fête of the Federation
-on the Champs de Mars. Surely no other man
-in history has been allowed to feel himself so intimately
-a part of two nations in their moments of
-patriotic exaltation.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXVIII" id="chap_XXVIII"></a>XXVIII<br />
-
-LEAVE-TAKINGS</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Though the celebration at Bunker Hill was the
-crowning moment of Lafayette's stay in America,
-he remained three months longer, sailing home in
-September, 1825. The last weeks were spent in and
-near Washington. Here he had fitted so perfectly
-into the scheme of life that his comings and goings
-had ceased to cause remark, except as a pleasant
-detail of the daily routine. Perhaps this is the
-subtlest compliment Americans paid him. One of
-the mottoes in a hall decorated in his honor had
-read, "<i>Où peut-on être mieux qu'au sein de sa famille?</i>"
-"Where can a man feel more at home than in the
-bosom of his family?"&mdash;and this attitude of Washingtonians
-toward him showed how completely he
-had been adopted as one of themselves.</p>
-
-<p>He had made himself one in thought and spirit
-with the most aggressively American of them all.
-A witty speech of his proves this. A bill had been
-introduced in Congress to present him with two
-hundred thousand dollars in money and "twenty-four
-thousand acres of fertile land in Florida" to
-right a wrong unintentionally done him years before.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>He had been entitled at the time of our Revolution
-to the pay of an officer of his rank and to a grant of
-public land to be located wherever he chose. He
-refused to accept either until after the Revolution
-in France had swept away his fortune. Then his
-agent in the United States chose for him a tract of
-land near New Orleans which Jefferson thought
-would be of great value. Congress was not informed
-and granted this same land to the city.
-Lafayette had a prior claim, but flatly refused to
-contest the matter, saying he could have no quarrel
-with the American people. Everybody wanted the
-bill concerning this reparation in the way of money
-and Florida land to pass, and it was certain to go
-through, but there were twenty-six members of the
-House and Senate who, for one reason and another,
-felt constrained to vote against it. Some voted consistently
-and persistently against unusual appropriations
-of any kind; some argued that it was an
-insult to translate Lafayette's services into terms of
-cold cash. The struggle between private friendship
-and public duty was so hard that some of them came
-to make a personal explanation. "My dear friends!"
-he cried, grasping their hands, "I assure you it
-would have been different had I been a member of
-Congress. There would not have been twenty-six
-objectors&mdash;there would have been twenty-seven! "
-During this American visit he renewed old ties
-with, or made the acquaintance of, nine men who
-had been or were to become Presidents of the
-United States: John Adams and his son John
-Quincy Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, William
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, Zachary
-Taylor, and Franklin Pierce. Perhaps there were
-others. He broke the rules of the Puritan Sabbath
-by driving out to dine on that day with the venerable
-John Adams at his home near Boston; but there was
-only one white horse to draw his carriage instead of
-the customary four, and not a hurrah broke the
-orderly quiet. Had it been a week-day the crowds
-would have shouted themselves hoarse. Jefferson,
-ill and feeble, welcomed him on the lawn at Monticello,
-the estate so dear to him which had been
-ravaged by the British about the time Lafayette
-began his part in driving Cornwallis to Yorktown.</p>
-
-<p>As was quite fitting, Lafayette was the guest of
-President John Quincy Adams at the White House
-during the last days of his stay. One incident must
-be told, because it is so very American and so
-amusing from the foreign point of view. He expressed
-a desire to make a visit of farewell to his old
-friend James Monroe, who had been President the
-year before. He was now living on his estate of
-Oak Hill, thirty-seven miles away. President Adams
-offered to accompany him, and on an August day
-they set out by carriage after an early dinner.
-Mr. Adams, both Lafayettes, and a friend rode in the
-presidential carriage. Colonel Lavasseur and the
-son of the President followed in a "tilbury," a kind
-of uncovered gig fashionable then on both sides of
-the Atlantic. Servants and luggage brought up the
-rear.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette had been passed free over thousands of
-miles of toll-road since he landed in the United
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>States, but when they reached the bridge across the
-Potomac the little procession halted and Mr. Adams
-paid toll like an ordinary mortal. Scarcely had his
-carriage started again when a plaintive, "Mr. President!
-Mr. President!" brought it to a standstill.
-The gatekeeper came running up with a coin in his
-hand. "Mr. President," he panted, "you've done
-made a mistake. I reckon yo' thought this was two
-bits, but it's only a levy. You owe me another
-twelve and a half cents." The President listened,
-gravely examined the coin, counted the noses of men
-and horses, and agreed that he was at fault. He was
-just reaching down into the presidential pocket when
-he was arrested by a new exclamation. The gatekeeper
-had recognized Lafayette and was thoroughly
-crestfallen. "I reckon the joke's on me," he said,
-apologetically. "All the toll-roads has orders to
-pass the general free, so I owe you something instid
-of you owin' me money. I reckon I ought to pass
-you-all as the general's bodyguard." But to this
-Adams demurred. He was not anybody's bodyguard.
-He was President of the United States, and,
-though it was true that toll-roads passed the guest
-of the nation free, General Lafayette was riding that
-day in his private capacity, as a friend of Mr.
-Adams. There was no reason at all why the company
-should be cheated out of any of its toll. The
-gatekeeper considered this and acknowledged the
-superiority of Yankee logic. "That sounds fair,"
-he admitted. "I reckon you-all do owe me twelve
-and a half cents." In the tilbury young Adams
-grinned and Colonel Lavasseur chuckled his appreciation.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>"The one time General Lafayette does not
-pass free over your roads," he said, "is when he
-rides with the ruler of the country. In any other
-land he could not pay, for that very reason."</p>
-
-<p>When the day of farewell came Washington
-streets were filled with men and women come out to
-see the last of the nation's guest. Stores and public
-buildings were closed and surrounding regions poured
-their crowds into the city. Everybody was sad.
-The cavalry escort which for a year had gathered at
-unholy hours to speed Lafayette on his way or to
-meet him on his return, whenever he could be persuaded
-to take it into his confidence, met for the
-last time on such pleasant duty, taking its station
-near the White House, where as many citizens as
-possible had congregated. The hour set for departure
-was early afternoon. Officials had begun to
-gather before eleven o'clock. At noon the President
-appeared and took his place with them in a circle of
-chairs in the large vestibule, whose outside doors
-had been opened wide to permit all who could see to
-witness the public leave-taking.</p>
-
-<p>After a brief interval of silence an inner door
-opened and Lafayette came forward with the President's
-son and the marshal of the District. Mr.
-Adams rose and made a short address. Lafayette
-attempted to reply, but was overcome with feeling,
-and it was several moments before he regained control
-of his voice. At the end of his little speech he
-cried, "God bless you!" and opened his arms wide
-with a gesture that included everybody. Then the
-crowd pressed forward and surrounded him until he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>retired to Mrs. Adams's sitting-room for the real
-farewell with the President's household. After that
-Mr. Adams and he appeared upon the portico.
-Lafayette stepped into a waiting carriage. Flags
-dipped, cannon boomed, and the procession took up
-its march to the wharf where a little steamer waited
-to carry the travelers down the Potomac to the new
-government frigate Brandywine, on which they were
-to sail. At the river's edge he reviewed the militia
-of the District of Columbia, standing with some
-relatives of Washington's during this final ceremony.
-It is said that a cheer that was like a cry of bereavement
-rose from the crowd and mingled with the last
-boom of the military salute as the boat swung out
-into the stream.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had dropped below the horizon when
-they neared Mount Vernon. The company was at
-dinner, everybody, even George Lafayette, working
-hard to overcome the sadness that threatened to
-engulf the company. The marshal came and bent
-over Lafayette, who pushed back his plate and
-bowed his head upon his breast. Then he rose and
-hurried to the deck for a parting look, at the home
-of his friend most of the company following him.
-The eyes of both father and son sought out the
-stately house set on a hill, which held so many
-associations for both of them. The younger man
-had found the beautiful place less well cared for than
-during the lifetime of its owner. Lafayette had
-returned to it only to visit a tomb.</p>
-
-<p>The trees near the mansion were already beginning
-to blur in the short September twilight. Silently,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>with his head a little bent and a little turned to the
-right, as was his habit, he watched it as the boat
-slipped by. The afterglow behind the house had
-deepened to molten gold when a bend in the river
-blotted it from his sight. He turned like a man
-coming out of a dream and hurried to his cabin
-without a word.</p>
-
-<p>"Only then," says Lavasseur, "did he fully
-realize the sacrifice made to France in leaving
-America."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXIX" id="chap_XXIX"></a>XXIX<br />
-
-PRESIDENT&mdash;OR KING-MAKER?</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>The ocean was no kinder than usual to Lafayette
-on his homeward voyage and the reception he
-met in Havre lacked enthusiasm. Louis XVIII, who
-was king when he went away, had died during his
-absence and another brother of the ill-fated Louis
-XVI had mounted the throne, with the title of
-Charles X. He was no other than the Comte d'Artois
-who had presided over Lafayette's section in
-the Assembly of Notables and had been blind to his
-presence when the two reached the same inn at the
-same moment in Austria. His ministers were no
-more friendly to liberals of Lafayette's way of
-thinking than those of his brothers had been; but the
-liberals of France showed a distinct desire to notice
-the home-coming of Lafayette. Police could and
-did disperse young men on horseback who gathered
-under his windows at the inn in Rouen for a serenade;
-but there were other ways of paying respect. One
-took the form of a contest of poets "to celebrate a
-voyage which history will place among the great
-events of the century." There were eighty-three
-contestants, and Béranger, who had already paid his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>tribute, acted as a judge. In due time the victor
-was ceremoniously given a prize. Lafayette must
-have been reminded of the burst of rhyme in America
-quite as much by contrast as by similarity.</p>
-
-<p>His children came to meet him, which more than
-compensated for official neglect; and the welcome of
-several hundred neighbors when he reached La
-Grange convinced him that his local popularity was
-not impaired. On the whole he had reason to be
-well content. He brought home ruddy health,
-knowledge of the love in which he was held by twelve
-million warm-hearted Americans, and, a lesser consideration,
-doubtless, but one for which to be properly
-grateful, the prospect of speedily rebuilding the
-family fortunes. The grant of land voted by Congress
-was for thirty-six sections of six hundred and
-forty acres each, "east of and adjoining the city of
-Tallahassee in Leon County, Florida." So far as
-the writer has been able to learn, it never greatly
-benefited him or his heirs; but that fact was mercifully
-hidden in the future. In addition to the land
-there was a goodly sum of money to his credit in a
-Philadelphia bank.</p>
-
-<p>He had stood the fatigues of the trip wonderfully.
-His cousin who went to see him soon after his return
-marveled to find him "big, fat, fresh, and joyous,"
-showing not the least ill effects from having "gone
-several months practically without sleep, in addition
-to talking, writing, traveling, and drinking for all
-he was worth (<i>pour tout de bon</i>) ten hours out of the
-twenty-four." And he brought home from across
-the sea another gift: an ease in public speaking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>which astonished the friends who remembered the
-impatient scorn his silences roused in Marie Antoinette
-and how seldom he made speeches in the Assembly
-of Notables. During his command of the
-National Guard of Paris his utterances had of necessity
-been more frequent and more emphatic, but
-they betrayed none of the pleasure in addressing
-audiences that he now evidently felt. It was as
-though the friendliness of the American people had
-opened for him a new and delightful channel through
-which he could express his good will toward all the
-world. His voice lent itself well to public speaking;
-it could be soft or sonorous by turns, and he had the
-art of using plain and simple words. His physician,
-Doctor Cloquet, tells how some workmen were seen
-puzzling over a newspaper and criticizing it rather
-severely until they came to a speech by Lafayette.
-"Good!" said the reader, his face clearing. "At
-least we can understand what this man says. He
-speaks French."</p>
-
-<p>Delighting workmen was not a gift to ingratiate
-him with a Bourbon king whose government was
-growing less popular every day. Lafayette retired
-to La Grange among its vineyards and orchards in
-the flat region of La Brie and took up life there
-again; cultivating his estate; carrying on an immense
-correspondence in that small, well-formed script of
-his which is yet so difficult to read; rejoicing in his
-family and receiving many visitors. It was a cosmopolitan
-procession that made its way up the
-Rozoy road to the château whose Norman towers
-had been old before the discovery of the New World.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>Some in that procession were old friends, members
-of the French nobility, who came in spite of Lafayette's
-politics; others were complete strangers
-drawn to him from distant parts of the earth by
-these same opinions. French, English, Americans,
-Austrians, Algerian sheiks, black men from the
-West Indies&mdash;all were welcome.</p>
-
-<p>In his study, an upper room in one of his five
-towers, he was literally in the center of his world.
-From a window overlooking the farm-yard he could
-direct the laborers by megaphone if he did not choose
-to go down among them. His "speaking-trumpet,"
-as Charles Sumner called it, still lay on his desk when
-this American made his pious pilgrimage years after
-Lafayette's death. On the walls of the library and
-living-room hung relics that brought vividly to mind
-the history of two continents during momentous
-years. The American Declaration of Independence
-and the French Declaration of Rights hung side by
-side. A copy in bronze of Houdon's bust of Washington
-had the place of honor. A portrait of Bailly,
-a victim of the Revolution, hung over the fireplace in
-Lafayette's study. There were swords presented by
-French admirers and gifts from American cities and
-Indian chiefs. There was one room which was
-entered only by Lafayette and his children, and that
-but once a year, on the anniversary of his wife's
-death. It had been hers and was closed and kept
-just as she left it.</p>
-
-<p>Her death marked a distinct period in his life.
-There were those who said that when she died
-Lafayette lost more than a loved companion; that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>he lost his conscience. In proof of this they pointed
-out how in the later years of his life, after her steadying
-influence was removed, he veered about in the
-troubled sea of French politics, like a ship without a
-rudder. It is true only in a superficial sense; but it is
-true that he was never quite the same after she died.</p>
-
-<p>For seven years immediately after this loss he
-took no active part in public affairs; partly because
-of his private sorrow, partly because of his opposition
-to the emperor. He had been disappointed in
-Napoleon and the latter distrusted him. "All the
-world is reformed," Napoleon grumbled, "with one
-exception. That is Lafayette. He has not receded
-from his position by so much as a hair's breadth.
-He is quiet now, but I tell you he is ready to begin
-all over again." George and Lafayette's son-in-law
-suffered from this displeasure in their army
-careers. "These Lafayettes cross my path everywhere!"
-Napoleon is said to have exclaimed when
-he found the names of the young men on an army
-list submitted for promotion, and promptly scratched
-them off.</p>
-
-<p>Then fortune began to go against the emperor
-and invading armies came marching into France.
-Lafayette offered his sword and his experience to
-his country, but the advice he gave appeared too
-dangerous and revolutionary. What he desired was
-to force the abdication of Napoleon at that time.
-He was in Paris on March 31, 1814, when foreign
-soldiers entered the city. Powerless to do anything
-except grieve, he shut himself up in his room.
-Napoleon retired to Elba and the brother of Louis
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>XVI was summoned to take the title of Louis XVIII.
-This was the prince Lafayette had intentionally
-offended when he was scarcely more than a boy.</p>
-
-<p>After he was made king, however, Lafayette wrote
-him a note of congratulation and appeared in uniform
-at his first royal audience wearing the white cockade.
-That certainly seemed like a change of front, but
-Lafayette thought it a necessity. "It had to be Napoleon
-or the Bourbons," he wrote Jefferson. "These
-are the only possible alternatives in a country where
-the idea of republican executive power is regarded as
-a synonym for excesses committed in its name."
-He accepted the government of Louis XVIII as more
-liberal than that of the emperor. Time and again
-after this he aided in the overthrow of one man or
-party, only to turn against the new power he had
-helped create. He even tried to work with Napoleon
-again after Louis XVIII fled to Ghent and
-Bonaparte returned from Elba to found his "new
-democratic empire," known as the Hundred Days.
-Waterloo came at the end of it; then Lafayette
-voiced the demand for the emperor's abdication and
-pressed it hard.</p>
-
-<p>"What!" he cried in answer to Lucien Bonaparte's
-appeal to the Chamber of Deputies not to desert
-his brother, because that would be a violation of
-national honor, "you accuse us of failing in duty
-toward honor, toward Napoleon! Do you forget all
-we have done for him? The bones of our brothers
-and of our children cry aloud from the sands of
-Africa, from the banks of the Guadalquivir and the
-Tagus, from the shores of the Vistula and the glacial
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>deserts of Russia. During more than ten years
-three million Frenchmen have perished for this man
-who wants to-day to fight all Europe. We have
-done enough for him. Our duty now is to save our
-country!"</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette was one of the deputation sent by the
-Chamber to thank the ex-emperor after his abdication,
-and admired Napoleon's self-possession during
-that trying scene. He thought Napoleon "played
-grandly the role necessity forced upon him." Lafayette
-was also one of the commission sent to negotiate
-with the victorious allies. It was there that he gave
-his spirited answer to the demand that Napoleon be
-given up. "I am astonished you should choose a
-prisoner of Olmütz as the person to whom to make
-that shameful proposal."</p>
-
-<p>Louis XVIII returned to power and soon Lafayette
-was opposing him. So it went on for years. He said
-of himself that he was a man of institutions, not of
-dynasties; and that he valued first principles so much
-that he was very willing to compromise on matters
-of secondary importance. He cared nothing for
-apparent consistency and did whatever his erratic
-republican conscience dictated, without a thought of
-how it might look to others. He was a born optimist,
-but a poor judge of men; and in spite of repeated
-disappointments believed the promises of
-each new ruler who came along. Liberal representative
-government was of supreme importance in his
-eyes. If France was not yet ready for a president,
-she could have it under a king. Each administration
-that promised a step in this direction received
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>his support, each lapse from it his censure. That
-appears to be the key to the many shifting changes of
-his later life.</p>
-
-<p>His popularity among the people waxed and
-waned. Usually it kept him his seat in the Chamber
-of Deputies. From 1818 to 1824 he represented the
-Sarthe; from 1825 to the close of his life the district
-of Meaux. It was in the interval between that he
-made his visit to America. He returned to find
-Charles X king. As that monarch lost popularity his
-own influence gained. Charles's ministers thought
-their sovereign showed ill-placed confidence and
-esteem when he freely acknowledged that this liberal
-leader had rendered services to his family that no
-true man could forget. "I know him well," Charles
-said. "We were born in the same year. We
-learned to mount a horse together at the riding
-academy at Versailles. He was a member of my
-division in the Assembly of Notables. The fact is
-neither of us has changed&mdash;he no more than I."
-That was just the point. Neither had changed.
-Charles X was a Bourbon to the bone, and Lafayette
-had come back from America with renewed health,
-replenished means, and all the revolutionary impetuosity
-of youth. He had not one atom of that willingness
-to put up with "things as they are" which grows
-upon many reformers as their hair turns gray. John
-Quincy Adams divined this and advised Lafayette
-to have nothing more to do with revolutions. "He
-is sixty-eight years old, but there is fire beneath the
-cinders," the President of the United States confided
-to his diary in August, 1825.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>The cinders glowed each time Charles X emphasized
-his Bourbonism; and caught fire again when
-the king made the Prince de Polignac prime minister
-in defiance of all liberal Frenchmen. That happened
-in 1829. Lafayette took occasion to visit
-Auvergne, the province of his birth, in company
-with his son, and was received with an enthusiasm
-rivaling his most popular days in America. The
-journey was prolonged farther than strict necessity
-required and did much to unite opposition to the
-king, for leaders of the liberal party profited by
-banquets and receptions in Lafayette's honor to
-spread their doctrines. More than one official who
-permitted such gatherings lost his job in consequence.
-Lafayette returned to La Grange; but in the following
-July, when the storm broke, he called for his
-horses and hurried to Paris. The Chamber of
-Deputies was not in session; he thought it ought to
-be; and he started as soon as he had read a copy
-of the Royal Ordinances which limited the freedom
-of the press and otherwise threatened the rights of
-the people.</p>
-
-<p>Before he reached Paris blood had been shed and
-barricades had been thrown across the streets.
-Alighting from his carriage, he told the guards his
-name, dragged his stiff leg over the obstructions, and
-joined the little group of legislators who were striving
-to give this revolt the sanction of law. Having had
-more experience in revolutions than they&mdash;this was
-his fourth&mdash;he became their leader, and on July 29,
-1830, found himself in the exact position he had occupied
-forty years before, commander of the National
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>Guard and practically dictator of France. An unwillingly
-admiring biographer says that he had
-learned no wisdom in the interval; that he "pursued
-the same course with the same want of success."
-This time he held the balance of power for only two
-days, but it was actual concentrated power while it
-lasted. It was he who sent back to Charles the
-stern answer that his offers of compromise came too
-late, that the royal family had ceased to reign. And
-it was he who had to choose the next form of government
-for France.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dramatic choice. He was frankly ambitious;
-and quite within his reach lay the honor he
-would have preferred above all others. The choice
-lay between becoming himself President of France
-or, making a new king. It was put to him fairly
-and squarely: "If we have a republic you will be
-president. If a monarchy, the Duc d'Orléans will
-be king. Will you take the responsibility of a republic?"
-A man with "a canine appetite for fame"
-and nothing more could have found but one answer,
-and that not the answer Lafayette gave. In his few
-hours of power he had talked with men from all parts
-of France. These confirmed his belief that the
-country was not yet ready for the change to a republic.
-It would be better to have a king for a
-while longer, provided he was a liberal king, pledged
-to support a constitution. The Duc d'Orléans gave
-promise of being just such a king. He was son of
-the duke Lafayette had banished from Paris after
-the mob attacked Versailles in 1789; but he had
-fought on the liberal side. The people knew him as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>Philippe Égalité&mdash;"Equality Philip"&mdash;and during
-recent years he had given evidence of being far more
-democratic than any other member of his family.
-To choose him would please liberals and conservatives
-alike, because he was next in line of succession
-after the sons of the deposed king.</p>
-
-<p>Being by no means devoid of ambition, the duke
-was already in Paris, awaiting what might happen.
-The Deputies sent him an invitation to become lieutenant-general
-of the kingdom. Accounts vary as to
-the manner in which it was accepted. One has him
-walking with ostentatious humility through the
-streets to the Hôtel de Ville, preceded by a drummer
-to call attention to the fact that he was walking and
-that he wore a tricolored scarf. Another has him
-on horseback without the scarf. It matters little;
-they agree that he was not very well received and
-that shouts of "No more Bourbons!" betrayed the
-suspicion that the duke's liberality, like the scarf, if
-he wore one, could be put on for the occasion.
-Accounts agree, too, that it was Lafayette who
-swung popular feeling to his side. He met him at
-the foot of the stairs and ascended with him to the
-Chamber of Deputies; and in answer to the coolness
-with which he was greeted and the evident hostility
-of the crowd outside, thrust a banner into the duke's
-hand and drew him to a balcony, where he publicly
-embraced him. Paris was easily moved by such
-spectacles. Carried away by the sight of the two
-enveloped in the folds of the same flag, and that
-the Tricolor, which had been forbidden for fifteen
-years, they burst into enthusiastic shouts of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>"Vive Lafayette!" "Long live the Duc d'Orléans!"
-Chateaubriand says that "Lafayette's republican
-kiss made a king," and adds, "Singular result of the
-whole life of the hero of two worlds!"</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<div class="figcenterp">
-<a name="img319" id="img319"></a>
-<img src="images/p319.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="caption">MARQUIS DE LAFAYETTE AND LOUIS PHILIPPE<br />
-After the Revolution of 1830, it was Lafayette who swung popular feeling
-to the side of Louis Philippe</p>
-
-<hr class="r5"/>
-
-<p>Louis Philippe, the new king, promised to approve
-certain very liberal measures known as the program
-of the Hôtel de Ville; Lafayette saw to that. The
-king even agreed in conversation with Lafayette that
-the United States had the best form of government
-on earth. He had spent some years in America and
-probably knew. He was called, enthusiastically or
-mockingly, as the case might be, the Bourgeois King;
-but the suspicion that his sympathies with the people
-were only assumed proved well founded. As time
-wore on it became manifest that he was as eager for
-arbitrary power as ever Louis XIV had been, without
-possessing Louis XIV's great ability. At first,
-however, everything was rose-colored. A few days
-after the new king had ascended the throne Lafayette
-wrote: "The choice of the king is good. I thought
-so, and I think so still more since I know him and
-his family. Things will not go in the best possible
-way, but liberty has made great progress and will
-make still more. Besides, I have done what my conscience
-dictated; and if I have made a mistake, it
-was made in good faith."</p>
-
-<p>That belief at least he could keep to the end.
-Two weeks after Louis Philippe became king Lafayette
-was appointed general in command of the National
-Guards of the kingdom, a position he held
-from August until Christmas. Then a new law
-abolished the office in effect but not in appearance.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>Lafayette sent the king his resignation and refused
-to reconsider it or even to talk the matter over, as
-the king asked him to do. "No, my dear cousin,
-I understand my position," Lafayette wrote Philip
-de Ségur. "I know that I weigh like a nightmare
-on the Palais Royal; not on the king and his family,
-who are the best people in the world, and I love them
-tenderly, but on the people who surround them....
-Without doubt I have been useful in his advancement.
-But if I sacrificed for him some of my personal
-convictions, it was only on the faith of the
-program of the Hôtel de Ville. I announced a king
-basing his reign on republican institutions. To that
-declaration, which the people seem to forget, I attach
-great importance; and it is that which the court
-does not forgive.... From all this the conclusion
-follows that I have become bothersome. I take my
-stand. I will retain the same friendliness for the
-royal family, but I have only one word of honor, and
-I cannot change my convictions."</p>
-
-<p>So once again, near the close of his life, he found
-himself in opposition to a government he had
-helped to create.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="chap_XXX" id="chap_XXX"></a>XXX<br />
-
-SEVENTY-SIX YEARS YOUNG</h2>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p>Although he had resigned the office to which
-the king had appointed him, Lafayette continued
-to hold his place in the Chamber of Deputies;
-the office to which the people had elected
-him. Here he worked in behalf of the oppressed of
-his own and other nations; the Irish, for example,
-and the Poles, in whose struggles for liberty he was
-deeply interested.</p>
-
-<p>When the Chamber of Deputies was in session he
-lived in Paris. Vacations were spent at La Grange,
-where he pursued the varied interests of his many-sided
-life, particularly enjoying, in his character of
-farmer, the triumph of his beasts and fruits in
-neighborhood fairs. In the winter of 1834 he was
-as usual in Paris, and on the 26th of January made
-the speech in behalf of Polish refugees then in
-France which proved to be his last public address.
-A few days later he attended the funeral of one of
-the Deputies, following the coffin on foot all the long
-distance from the house to the cemetery, as was the
-French custom, and standing on the damp ground
-through the delivery of the funeral discourses. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>exposure and fatigue were too much for even his
-hardy old body.</p>
-
-<p>He was confined to his room for many weeks, but
-carried on a life as normal as possible, having his
-children around him, receiving visits of intimate
-friends, reading journals and new books, and dictating
-letters. One of these was to Andrew Jackson
-about his fight with the United States Senate. The
-inactivity of the sick-chamber was very irksome to
-him, and by the 9th of May he was so far improved
-that his physicians allowed him to go for a drive.
-Unfortunately a storm came up, the weather turned
-suddenly cold, and he suffered a chill, after which his
-condition became alarming. When it was known
-that he was a very sick man, friends and political
-enemies&mdash;he had no personal enemies&mdash;hastened to
-make inquiries and to offer condolences. Occasionally
-George Lafayette was able to answer that his
-father seemed better; but the improvement was not
-real. On the 20th of May he appeared to wake and
-to search for something on his breast. His son put
-into his hands the miniature of Adrienne that he
-always wore. He had strength to raise it to his
-lips, then sank into unconsciousness from which he
-passed into the sleep of death.</p>
-
-<p>He was laid to rest in the cemetery of Picpus beside
-the wife who had awaited him there for more than
-a quarter of a century; but his grave was made in
-earth from an American battle-field that he had
-brought home with him after his last visit. Fifteen
-natives of Poland bore the coffin to the hearse.
-There were honorary pall-bearers representing the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>Chamber of Deputies, the National Guard, the Army,
-the United States, Poland, and his own electoral district
-of Meaux. It was purely a military funeral.
-His party friends hotly declared that it was not a
-funeral at all, only a monster military parade. The
-government feared that his burial might be made
-the occasion for political demonstrations and ordered
-out such an immense number of troops that "the
-funeral car passed almost unseen in the midst of a
-battalion whose bayonets ... kept the people from
-rendering homage to their liberator." "He was
-there lifeless, but not without honor," wrote an
-indignant friend. "The French army surrounded
-him in his coffin as relentlessly as the Austrian army
-had held him a prisoner at Olmütz." Even the
-cemetery was guarded as if to withstand a siege.
-"Only the dead and his family might enter....
-One would say that the government looked upon the
-mortal remains of this friend of liberty as a bit of
-prey which must not be allowed to escape." The
-liberals resented this fancied attitude of the government
-so bitterly that a cartoonist drew Louis
-Philippe rubbing his hands together with satisfaction
-as the procession passed and saying, gleefully,
-"Lafayette, you're caught, old man!" Only one
-incident occurred to justify so many precautions.
-In the Place Vendome a few score young men carrying
-a banner tried to break through the line of soldiers,
-but were repulsed. Elsewhere people looked
-on in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette's political friends complained that not
-one of the king's ministers was to be seen in the procession.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>The ministers answered that politics were
-out of place at the funeral of such a distinguished
-man; and that the government rendered its homage
-regardless of party. While friends and foes wrangled
-thus over the coffin, Nature did her beautiful consoling
-best. Chateaubriand, standing in the silent
-crowd, saw the hearse stop a moment as it reached
-the top of a hill, and as it stopped a fugitive
-ray of sunlight came to rest upon it, then disappeared,
-gilding the guns and military trappings as
-it passed.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all this recrimination Lafayette's death
-passed comparatively unnoticed in France, for it occurred
-during a season of political turmoil and he had
-retired several years before from active affairs.
-Three thousand miles away the news produced far
-greater effect. He was mourned in America with
-universal sorrow. All over the country flags floated
-at half-mast. The House and Senate of the United
-States passed resolutions which were sent to George
-Lafayette, while the members wore crape upon their
-arms for thirty days and the Senate Chamber and
-Hall of Representatives remained draped in black
-until the end of the session. Our army and navy
-wore a tribute of crape upon their sleeves also, and
-on a given day every city in the Union heard the
-mourning salute of twenty-four guns, and after that
-at half-hour intervals until sunset the booming of a
-single cannon. "Touching honors," says a French
-writer, "rendered by a great people to the memory of
-a stranger who had served them sixty years before."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>Lafayette lived to hold his great-grandchild in
-his arms, yet the period of his life seems very short
-if measured by the changes that came about while
-he walked the earth. It was a time when old men
-dreamed dreams and young men saw visions, and
-during Lafayette's seventy-six years some of the
-visions became realities, some of his dreams he saw
-well on the way to fulfilment.</p>
-
-<p>The French regard Lafayette's American career as
-only an episode in his life; while Americans are apt
-to forget that he had a career in France. He lived
-in three distinct periods of history, so different that
-they might have been centuries apart. He saw
-medieval Europe; the stormy period of change, and
-something very like the modern world we know to-day.
-Peasants knelt in the dust before the nobles,
-after he was a grown man; yet, in his old age, railroads
-and republicanism were established facts.
-"To have made for oneself a rôle in one or another
-of these periods suffices for a career," says his French
-biographer Donoil; "very few have had a career
-in all."</p>
-
-<p>Lafayette played an important part in all three.
-Not only that; it was his strange good fortune to
-hold familiar converse with two of the greatest
-figures in history&mdash;the two very greatest of his own
-age&mdash;Washington and Napoleon. That he seems
-even measurably great in such company shows his
-true stature. Washington was his friend, who
-loved him like a son. Napoleon appears to have
-been one of the very few men Lafayette could never
-quite bring himself to trust, though Napoleon rendered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>him an immense service and did everything
-in his great power to win his support.</p>
-
-<p>If, as certain French historians say, Lafayette and
-Napoleon were dictators in turn, Lafayette's task
-was in a way the harder of the two; for Napoleon's
-turn came after the fury had spent itself and men
-were beginning to recover, sobered by their own excesses.
-It was in the mounting delirium of their
-fever that Lafayette's middle course brought upon
-him first distrust, then enmity from both sides.</p>
-
-<p>If an Austrian prison had not kept him from
-destruction he must have perished during the Revolution,
-for he was never swerved by fear of personal
-danger. One of his eulogists asserts that he was
-"too noble to be shrewd." Another says that he
-judged men by his own feelings and was "misled
-by illusions honorable to himself." After his experience
-in America he undoubtedly expected to play a
-great part in the uprising in France, and, not realizing
-the strength of selfishness and passion, helped to let
-loose forces too powerful to control. One of his
-critics has asserted that he never made a wise or a
-correct decision; but critics and eulogists alike agree
-that he was upright and brave. They are justified
-in saying he was vain. His vanity took the form of
-believing himself right.</p>
-
-<p>He was not self-seeking, and the lack of that
-quality caused him to be regarded with puzzled surprise
-by men who could not understand his willingness
-to step aside in favor of some one else, when he
-thought the cause demanded it. "It seemed so
-foolish," said Madame de Staël in her sympathetic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>portrait, "to prefer one's country to oneself... to
-look upon the human race, not as cards to be played
-for one's own profit, but as an object of sacred devotion."
-Chateaubriand said that forty years had to
-pass after Lafayette's death before people were really
-convinced that he had been an idealist and not a fool.
-The fact was brought home to them, little by little,
-as records scattered to the four winds during the
-Revolution gradually saw the light of print; here a
-public document, there a private letter, there again a
-bit of personal reminiscence. Fitting together like
-a puzzle, they showed at last how one single idea
-had inspired all Lafayette's acts, even when they
-seemed most erratic. "Fortunately for him," says
-one of his French biographers, "it was the idea of
-the century&mdash;political liberty."</p>
-
-<p>In his lifetime he arranged his papers for publication
-and dictated occasional bits of comment; but
-these were only fragmentary, as many of his papers
-were lost. Besides, it was a task for which he had
-no great zest. He said it seemed ungracious to
-accuse men of persecuting him who afterward died
-for the very principles he upheld. He was sure history
-would accord to each his just deserts. Madame
-de Staël said that his belief in the final triumph of
-liberty was as strong as the belief of a pious man in
-a future life. He said himself that liberty was to
-him a love, a religion, a "geometric certainty."</p>
-
-<p>To his last day he pursued this ideal of his wherever
-it led him. His failure to learn worldly wisdom irritated
-many. It was incongruous, like the contrast
-between his polished old-time manners and the rash
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>utterances that fell from his lips. It must be confessed
-that in his latter years he was not always
-clear-sighted as to the means he employed. Once
-he descended to methods better suited to Italy in the
-Middle Ages than to political reformers in 1822.
-There were times, too, when he seemed bent on self-destruction.
-Those near him were convinced that
-he would like to lose his life provided he could thereby
-add to the luster of his reputation. "I have lived
-long," was his answer to intimate friends who gave
-him counsels of prudence. "It seems to me that it
-would be quite fitting to end my career upon the
-scaffold, a sacrifice to liberty."</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon's estimate of him was short and severe.
-"Lafayette was another of the fools; he was not
-cut out for the great rôle he wanted to play." When
-some one ventured to remind the ex-emperor of
-Lafayette's spirited refusal to give him up on the
-demand of the allied powers, Napoleon answered
-dryly that he was not attacking Lafayette's sentiments
-or his good intentions, but was merely complaining
-of the mess he made of things. Lafayette's
-estimate of the former emperor was even more
-severe. He thought Napoleon's really glorious title
-had been "Soldier of the Revolution" and that the
-crown was for him "a degradation." American history
-would have been the loser if either of these men
-had not lived. Lafayette helped win us our country.
-By selling us Louisiana, Napoleon almost doubled
-its extent. Napoleon's heart rarely led him into
-trouble; personal ambition seldom led Lafayette
-far astray. The two can be contrasted, but not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>compared. There is food for thought in the fact
-that a statue of Lafayette, modeled by an American
-sculptor and given by five million American schoolchildren
-to France, should have been erected in the
-Louvre on the spot once set apart for a statue of the
-French emperor.</p>
-
-<p>Madame de Staël thought Lafayette more like the
-English and Americans than like the French, even
-in his personal appearance. Another French estimate,
-that he had "a cold manner, masking concentrated
-enthusiasm," is quite in keeping with American
-character, as was his incorrigible dash of optimism.
-It was to America, a country of wide spaces
-and few inhabitants, that he followed his vision of
-liberty in early manhood, and there where the play
-and interplay of selfish interests was far less complicated
-than in France he saw it become a practical
-reality. Later he championed many noble causes in
-many parts of the world. Next to political freedom
-and as a necessary part of it, he had at heart the
-emancipation of the negroes. This he tried himself
-to put into practice. He was shocked when he
-returned to our country in 1824 to find how much
-race prejudice had increased. He remembered that
-black soldiers and white messed together during the
-American Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>Religious liberty for Protestants, civil rights for
-Jews and Protestants; suppression of the infamous
-<i>lettres de cachet</i>; trial by jury; a revision of French
-criminal law to allow the accused the privilege of
-counsel, of confronting witnesses, and of free communication
-with his family&mdash;benefits, by the way,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>which were all enjoyed by the accused in the state
-trials which took place while Lafayette was in power;
-abolition of the death penalty and freedom of the
-press were some of the measures most ardently
-championed by this believer in liberty and law.</p>
-
-<p>He remained a man of visions to the end. After
-his death one of the men who wrote in praise of him
-said that if he had lived during the Middle Ages he
-would have been the founder of a great religious
-order, one which had a profound moral truth as its
-guiding principle. Another compared him to a
-Knight of the Round Table fighting for the lady
-of his adoration, whose name was Liberty. Possibly
-no knight-errant, ancient or modern, can
-seem altogether sane, much less prudent, to the
-average unimaginative dweller in this workaday
-world. Yet what would the workaday world be
-without its knights-errant of the past; the good
-their knight-errantry has already accomplished; the
-courage it inspires for to-day; the promise it gives
-us for the future?</p>
-
-<p>If we dwell on the few times that Lafayette did not
-choose wisely, the times when the warm impulses of
-his heart would have carried farther had his head
-taken a more masterful part in directing his acts,
-we are tempted to echo the criticism made upon the
-unfortunate Louis XVI, "What a pity his talents
-did not equal his virtues!" But when we think of
-the generous, optimistic spirit of Lafayette, and how
-that spirit remained unchanged through good fortune
-and ill from boyhood to old age; of his fearless
-devotion to right as he saw the right; of his charm,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>and of the great debt our country owes him, his
-mistakes fade away altogether and we see only a
-very gallant, inspiring figure uniting the Old World
-with the New.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no better eulogy for this brave
-gentleman, beloved of Washington, than the few
-words he wrote in all simplicity after he had been
-called upon to make his great decision between Louis
-Philippe and himself:</p>
-
-<p>"I did as my conscience dictated. If I was mistaken,
-the mistake was made in good faith."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span></p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="ix">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span></p>
-<h2><a name="chap_INDEX" id="chap_INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
-
-<p><a href="#ix_A">A</a> - <a href="#ix_B">B</a> - <a href="#ix_C">C</a> - <a href="#ix_D">D</a> - <a href="#ix_E">E</a> - <a href="#ix_F">F</a> - <a href="#ix_G">G</a> - <a href="#ix_H">H</a> - <a href="#ix_J">J</a> - <a href="#ix_K">K</a> - <a href="#ix_L">L</a> - <a href="#ix_M">M</a> - <a href="#ix_N">N</a> - <a href="#ix_O">O</a> - <a href="#ix_P">P</a> - <a href="#ix_R">R</a> - <a href="#ix_S">S</a> - <a href="#ix_T">T</a> - <a href="#ix_V">V</a> - <a href="#ix_W">W</a> - <a href="#ix_Y">Y</a></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_A">A</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Adams, Charles Francis, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.<br />
-Adams, John, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
-Adams, John Quincy, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>-<a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.<br />
-Adams, Mrs. John Quincy, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.<br />
-Aiguillon, Duc d', <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-André, Major John, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Arbuthnot, Adm. Marriot, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.<br />
-Arnold, Gen. Benedict, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>-<a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.<br />
-Arnold, Mrs. Benedict, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>.<br />
-Ayen, Marshal de Noailles, Duc d', <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>-<a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>,
-<a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<br />
-Ayen, Duchesse d', <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_B">B</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Bailly, Jean Sylvain, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.<br />
-Bedaulx, Captain de, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.<br />
-Béranger, Pierre Jean de, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.<br />
-Big Warrior, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Bollman, Dr. Justis Eric, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>-<a href="#Page_235">235</a>.<br />
-Bonaparte, Joseph, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Bonaparte, Lucien, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-Bonaparte, Napoleon, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>,
-<a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.<br />
-Bourbon, Duc de, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.<br />
-Braddock, Gen. Edward, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.<br />
-Broglie, Comte de, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.<br />
-Brown, Gen. Jacob, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.<br />
-Buckle, Henry Thomas, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.<br />
-Buisson, Chevalier du, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.<br />
-Burgoyne, Gen. John, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.<br />
-Byron, Adm. John, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_C">C</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Cadwallader, Gen. John, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.<br />
-Calonne, Charles Alexandre de, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.<br />
-Carmichael, William, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.<br />
-Catherine II of Russia, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br />
-Charles, Prince of Lorraine, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.<br />
-Charles VII of France, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Charles X of France (Comte d'Artois), <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>-<a href="#Page_285">285</a>.<br />
-Chasteler, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.<br />
-Chateaubriand, François, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.<br />
-Clarence, Duke of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-Clay, Henry, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.<br />
-Clinton, Gen. Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>-<a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>-<a href="#Page_162">162</a>.<br />
-Cloquet, Dr. Jules Germain, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.<br />
-Cochran, Surgeon-General John, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.<br />
-Conway Cabal, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br />
-Conway, Gen. Thomas, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>-<a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.<br />
-Corday, Charlotte, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Cornwallis, Gen. Charles:<br />
-<span class="ixb">Operations against Philadelphia, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Capture of Charleston, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Virginia campaign, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Surrender, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>-<a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Guest of Frederick the Great, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Intercedes for Lafayette, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</span><br />
-Coudray, Philip C. J. B. T. de, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.<br />
-Crawford, William Harris, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_D">D</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Danton, Georges Jacques, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.<br />
-Davis, Capt. John, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.<br />
-Deane, Silas, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.<br />
-Desmoulins, Camille Benoit, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.<br />
-Donoil, Henri, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.<br />
-Doria, Andrea, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_E">E</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Estaing, Adm. Charles Hector, Comte d', <a href="#Page_113">113</a>-<a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_F">F</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Fénelon, Francois de Salignac, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-Feyon, Abbé, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.<br />
-Fitzpatrick, Mr., <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Fox, Charles James, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Francis I of France, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-Franklin, Benjamin, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.<br />
-Frederick the Great, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.<br />
-Frederick William II of Prussia, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br />
-Frestal, M. de, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_G">G</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Gage, Gen. Thomas, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.<br />
-Gates, Gen. Horatio, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br />
-George III of England, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-Germain, Lord George, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.<br />
-Gimat, Major de, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-Gloucester, William Henry, Duke of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.<br />
-Grasse, Adm. Francois J. P., Comte de, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-<a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.<br />
-Greene, Gen. Nathanael, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>,
-<a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Guichen, Adm. Comte de, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_H">H</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Hamilton, Alexander, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-Harrison, Benjamin, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.<br />
-Harrison, William Henry, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
-Hénin, Princesse d', <a href="#Page_225">225</a>-<a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Henri IV of France, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.<br />
-Howe, Adm. Richard, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.<br />
-Howe, Gen. William, Viscount, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-Huger, Maj. Benjamin, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.<br />
-Huger, Francis Kinloch, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>-<a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_J">J</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Jackson, Andrew, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.<br />
-Jefferson, Thomas, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
-Joan of Arc, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Jones, John Paul, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_K">K</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Kalb, Johan, Baron de:<br />
-<span class="ixb">Accompanies Lafayette to America, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Treatment by Congress, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>-<a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Interest in Lafayette's wound, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">With Lafayette at Albany, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Monument, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</span><br />
-Knox, Gen. Henry, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.<br />
-Kosciuszko, Gen. Tadensz, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_L">L</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Lafayette, Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert-Dumotier, Marquis de:<br />
-<span class="ixb">Birth, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Boyhood, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Marriage, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Life at Court, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-<a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">With his regiment, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>-<a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Smallpox, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Resolves to go to America, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Efforts to leave France, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Departure and voyage, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>-<a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Lands: goes to Philadelphia, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>-<a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Reception by Congress, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>-<a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Enters American Army, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Battle of the Brandywine, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>-<a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">At Bethlehem: rejoins army, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>-<a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Intrigues against, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>-<a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Skirmish near Gloucester, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>-<a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Conduct, in army, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Attends Indian council, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Returns to Valley Forge, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">At Barren Hill, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>-<a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Votes to attack Clinton, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Battle of Monmouth Court House, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>-<a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Liaison officer, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>-<a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Joint command with General Greene, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>-<a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Challenges Earl of Carlisle, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Granted leave of absence, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Illness and homeward voyage, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Winter in France, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>-<a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Rejoins Washington, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Again liaison officer, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-<a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">West Point, and André, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">French officers' attitude toward, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">First campaign in Virginia, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>-<a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Second campaign in Virginia, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>-<a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">At Yorktown, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>-<a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Popularity in France, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">In Spain, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-<a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Plan to free slaves, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Improvements at Chavaniac, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Paris home, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Interest in Mesmer, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Visit to America, 1784, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Sends gifts to Washington, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Visits Frederick the Great, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>-<a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Champion of reforms, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>-<a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Member Assembly of Notables, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>-<a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Vice-President National Assembly, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Commands Paris National Guard, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>-<a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Invents the Tricolor, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Neither Republican nor Royalist, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Blamed for attack on Versailles, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">At fête of Federation, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-<a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Slanders and attacks upon, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Arrests king and queen, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Defeated for mayor of Paris, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Commands army of defense, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>-<a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Last effort to save Louis XVI, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Flight and arrest, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>-<a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Imprisonment, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>-<a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Attempted escape, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>-<a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Exile, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>-<a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Returns to Paris, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Life at La Grange, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Death of his wife, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Relations with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Member, Chamber of Deputies, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Revisits America, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-<a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Lays corner-stone at Bunker Hill, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>-<a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Welcome in France, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Relations with Louis XVIII, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Relations with Charles X, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>-<a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Relations with Louis Philippe, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>-<a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Illness and death, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>-<a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Character, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>,
-<a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>-<a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Correspondence with:</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Bollman, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Mlle. de Chavaniac, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Congress, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">d'Estaing, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Fitzpatrick, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">French Minister, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Governor of Martinique, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Hamilton, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Mme. d'Hénin, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Huger, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Jefferson, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Louis XVI, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Maubourg, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Napoleon, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Nelson, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Relatives, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Vergennes, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Washington, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>,
-<a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">His wife, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>-<a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-<a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>-<a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>,
-<a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Opinion of Washington, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Opinion of the American Revolution, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Family of:</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Ancestors, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-<a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Aunts, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Children:</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Anastasie, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>-<a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">George Washington, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_251">251</a>,</span><br />
-<span class="ixd"><a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Henriette, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Virginia, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>-<a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Cousin, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Father, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Granchildren, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Mother, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-<a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Uncles, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixc">Wife:</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Marie Adrienne Françoise de Noailles.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Marriage, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Before the French Revolution, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-<a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Experiences during the Terror, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">At Olmütz, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-<a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Release and exile, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Visits Napoleon, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Inherits La Grange, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Death, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Influence over her husband, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixd">Mentioned, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>-<a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>,</span><br />
-<span class="ixd"><a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</span><br />
-Lally Tollendal, Trophime Gerard, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.<br />
-Lameth, Alexandre, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.<br />
-Lasteyrie, Louis du Saillant, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-Laurens, Henry, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.<br />
-Laurens, Col. John, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-Ledyard, John, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.<br />
-Lee, Arthur, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.<br />
-Lee, Gen. Charles, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>-<a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br />
-Lee, Gen. "Lighthorse Harry," <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.<br />
-Leszczynska, Marie, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-Levasseur, Col. A., <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>-<a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.<br />
-Lincoln, Gen. Benjamin, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-Louis XIV of France, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.<br />
-Louis XV of France, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.<br />
-Louis XVI of France:<br />
-<span class="ixb">Lacks confidence, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Orders Lafayette's arrest, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Receives American commissioners, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Letter to, from Congress, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Interviews with Lafayette, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Makes Lafayette marshal of France, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Talk with Richelieu, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Convenes Assembly of Notables, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Opens States General, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Contests with National Assembly, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-<a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Cheered and attacked, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Attempt to escape, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Signs Constitution, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Last weeks of reign, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>-<a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Death of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Mentioned, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>-<a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>,
-<a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</span><br />
-Louis XVIII of France, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-<a href="#Page_282">282</a>.<br />
-Louis Philippe (Philippe Égalité), <a href="#Page_285">285</a>-<a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.<br />
-Lovell, James, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>-<a href="#Page_67">67</a>.<br />
-Luckner, General, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_M">M</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Madison, James, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.<br />
-Magaw, William, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-Marat, Achille, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Marat, Jean Paul, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.<br />
-Marie Antoinette:<br />
-<span class="ixb">Character, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Court of, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Admires Franklin, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Opposes visit of Louis to Paris, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Attacked at Versailles, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>-<a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">At fête of Federation, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Name coupled with Lafayette's, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Refuses Lafayette's help, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Arrest of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br />
-Marmontel, Jean Frangois, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<br />
-Martin, Dubois, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Maubourg, Charles Latour, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.<br />
-Maubourg, Latour, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-Maurepas, Jean F. P., Comte de, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.<br />
-Mauroy, Vicomte de, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.<br />
-Mesmer, Friedrich Anton, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.<br />
-Mirabeau, Gabriel Honors Riquetti, Comte du, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.<br />
-Monroe, James, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
-Morgan, Gen. Daniel, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.<br />
-Morris, Gouverneur, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.<br />
-Morrolet, Abbé, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_N">N</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Necker, Jacques, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Noailles, Louis de, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>-<a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-Noailles, Madame de, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-Noailles, Marquis de, ambassador to England, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.<br />
-Noailles, Vicomte de, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_O">O</a></span><br />
-<br />
-O'Hara, Gen. James, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-Orléans, Louis Philippe Joseph, Duc d', <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_P">P</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Pétion, Jerôme, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.<br />
-Phillips, Gen. William, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>-<a href="#Page_154">154</a>.<br />
-Pierce, Franklin, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
-Polignac, Prince de, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.<br />
-Pontonnier, Félix, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.<br />
-Pulaski, Count Casimir, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.<br />
-Pusy, Bureaux de, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>-<a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_R">R</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Rawdon, Francis, Marquis of Hastings, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.<br />
-Raynal, Abbé, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.<br />
-Richelieu, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Richelieu, Maréchal Louis F. A. du Plessis, Duc de, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.<br />
-Rivière, Comte de la, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.<br />
-Robespierre, Maximilian, M. I., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.<br />
-Rochambeau, Col. Donatien M. J. de V., Vicomte de, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.<br />
-Rochambeau, Jean Baptiste D. de V., Comte de, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.<br />
-Romeuf, Louis, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br />
-Rousseau, Jean Jacques, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_S">S</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Saint-Germain, Claude Louis, Comte de, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.<br />
-Saint-Simon, Gen. Claude Henri, Comte de, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.<br />
-Schuyler, Gen. Philip, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.<br />
-Scott, Gen. Winfield, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.<br />
-Ségur, Louis Philippe, Comte de, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.<br />
-Ségur, Philippe Henri, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.<br />
-Sheridan, Richard Brinsley Butler, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Simcoe, Col. John G., <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-Staël, Madame de, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.<br />
-Sterling, Lord, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.<br />
-Steuben, Gen. Friedrich W. A. H. F., Baron von, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.<br />
-Stormont, Lord, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.<br />
-Sullivan, Gen. John, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.<br />
-Sumner, Charles, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_T">T</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Tarleton, Gen. Sir Banastre, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Taylor, Zachary, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br />
-Temay, Admiral, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.<br />
-Tessé, Madame de, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br />
-Thiébault, General, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.<br />
-Tilghman, Col. Tench, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.<br />
-Tourgot, Austrian Prime Minister, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>-<a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_V">V</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Vergennes, Charles Gravier, Comte de, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.<br />
-Viomenil, Baron Charles J. H. du H., <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-Voltaire, François Marie Arouet, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_W">W</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Washington, George:<br />
-<span class="ixb">Friendship for Lafayette, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>-<a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-<a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">His military skill, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-<a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Battle of the Brandywine, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Sends his surgeon to Lafayette, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Battle of Germantown, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Conway Cabal, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-<a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Recommends Lafayette to Congress, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Orders cheers for King of France, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">At Monmouth, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Intercourse with French allies, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-<a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Meeting with Lafayette, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Threatens New York, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Visits West Point, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Letters to Lafayette, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Orders Lafayette back to Virginia, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Takes his own army to Virginia, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>-<a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Siege and surrender of Yorktown, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-<a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Visits French admiral, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Kindness to George Lafayette, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="ixb">Mentioned: <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>,</span><br />
-<span class="ixb"><a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>-<a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>-<a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>,</span><br />
-<span class="ixb"><a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</span><br />
-Washington, Martha, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<br />
-Washington, Mary, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.<br />
-Wayne, Gen. Anthony, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>-<a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-<a href="#Page_164">164</a>.<br />
-Webster, Daniel, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.<br />
-Wilberforce, William, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br />
-Woodford, Gen. William, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="letter"><a name="ix_Y">Y</a></span><br />
-<br />
-York, Frederick Augustus, Duke of <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>THE END</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
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