T 11 E French in Our Revolution THR MAROUIS LAFAYFTTF ^ JOHN S. TUCKER, The French in Our Revolution. THE MARUUIS LAFAYETTE IN the summer of 1776 a young French officer was stationed at Met^., then one of the most important of the frontier fortresses of France. The Duke of (Gloucester, brother to the King of England, was at the same time visiting the Continent, and stoi)i)ed at Metz in the course of his travels. A dinner was given in his honor by the Due de Broglie, then com- manding that post, and our young officer, who was of noble descent and tlistinguished connections, was invited to be i)resent. The Duke had recently received dispatches from England containing, among other matters, the latest news from the war then waging between (Ireat Britain and her American Colonies. The conversation at the dinner table very naturally turned on this topic, and the Duke gave his hearers all the information in his |)jssession upjn the subject. He recounted the various stei)s of the rebellion, the discontent of the Americans, the passage of the Stamp Act, the refusal of the colonies to sub- mit to its enforcement, the measures adopted by the British Ministry to compel submission, the subsequent hostilities, and the preparations making by the mother country to enforce her au- thority. The young officer listened attentively, asked many ([uestions of his highness, and l)y his manner showed that he had been aroused to a deep inierest in the subject.* * Sparks' Writiuys of Waslilugton. Tlial young otfiix-r was Marie Paul /t>siph koch Yih's Gilliert Moticr, .]/ar//t/is dc Lafayette, born at ('ha\aniac, in Auvcrgnu, ihe 6th of September, 1757, and at that time nineteen years of age. The generous nature of Lafayette was stirred by the recital of the wrongs of .\merii:a, even as jialhate*! b)- the natural l(.)yalty (jf a British oflicer, l.)rotlK'r (jf the reigning sovereign ; and before he left the tal>le " the impulse was strong within his breast to go to America and offer his services to a i)eoiile who were struggling for freedom and indei)endence." "From that hour he could think of nothing but this chiv- alrous enterprise. He resolved to go to Paris and make further inquiries." Such was the origin of that devotion to .\merica and American liberties wliicli made the name of Lafayette famous throughout the world as the champion of the United States. THE t'AAULV OF I,.\I' AYETTE. Lafayette was born of a warlike family. His uncle was killetl in the wars of Italy. His father, Michel Louis Chris- tophe Roch (lilbert de Mortier, ALirquis de I,afayette, Colonel of the Grenadiers and Chevalier de St. Louis, was one of the most distinguished officers of the French Army. Lie was killed at the battle of INIinden by a cannond)all, before he had reached the age of twenty-five, but not before he had gi\en proofs of great military talents and e.xaltecl courage. The mother of the young INLiniuis was Marie L(.)uise Julie de la Riviere, daughter of Joseph Yves Thibauld Hyacinthe, ALu-(iuis de la Riviere. She was a kind, wise and \ irtuous woman, of whom her son in after years ever spoke most tenderly, and whose loss he tleeply felt at the early age oi twelve years. His maternal grandfather dying a tew days after liis mother, Lafiyette in- herited from him a large fi)rtune, yielding him an annual rev- enue of nearly 540,000. 5 At the age of sixteen tlie young nolileman was married, on the nth of April, 1774, to Marie Adrienne Francoise, daugh- ter of lean Paul Franeoise de Noailles, Duke tl'Ayen, a lovely girl of hfteen years, who afterwards, by her devotion to her husband in his long years of 'adversity and imprisonment, gave the added lustre of woman's self-sacrifice to the name of La- fayette. HIS PREPAliATlONS FOR AMERICA. The story of Lafayette's departure for America can best be told in his own words. In his "Memoirs written by My- self"* he thus relates it: When I lirst learned the subject of the ciuarrel my heart espoused warmly the cause of liberty, and I thought of nothing but of adding also the aid of my banner. Some circumstances, which it would be needless to relate, had taught me to expect nothing but ojiijosititni from my family. I depended therefore solely on myself, and I ventured to adopt, for a device on my arms, these words, cuk non ?— that they might serve both as an encouragement to myself and an answer to others. Silas Deane was then the representative of America at I'aris. When I presented to Mr. Deane my boyish flice (for I was scarcely nineteen years of age) I spoke more of my zeal m the cause than of my experience, but I dwelt much u])on the effect my dei)arture would produce in France, and he signed our mutual agreement. The secresy witn which this negotia- tion and my subsequent preparations were made api)ears al- most a miracle. Family, friends, ministers, French spies and English spies, all were kept completely in the dark as to my intentions. if * * * * * * * * I'reparations were making to send a vessel to .America when very bad tidings arrived from there. New York, Long Island, ' Publisliod by his I'amily, and oditcd by his sou, George Washiugtou Lafayette. 6 While I'lains, Fort Washington, and the Jerseys had successively wit- nessed the destruction of the American forces by thirty tliousand Enghshmen and (lermans. Three thousand Americans alone re- mained in arms, anil these were closely pursued by (ieneral Howe. From that moment all the credit of the insurgents vanished; to obtain a vessel for them was impossible; the en- voys themselves thought it right to express to me their own discouragement, and persuaded me to abandon my project. I calle