Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER II LAFAYETTE ONE night, in 1776, the old Marshal de Broglie, Commander of the forces at Strassburg, was giving a dinner party in honour of the Duke of Gloucester. This light- hearted Duke had just married the Countess Waldegrave, and being in deep disgrace with his royal brother, George III., he took this compulsory occasion for a trip abroad. He was maliciously regaling the table, at the King's expense, by a humorous account of America's affront to England and the scene with the tea- chests in Boston Harbour. His sympathy was all with the rebels, and he dwelt on their need of recruits. This was the first that France had heard of American Independence. Amongst his numerous audienceofficers in blue and silver, Strassburg grandees in gold lace and velvet, exclaiming, laughing, gesticulatingwas one silent, solemn-faced young soldier. He was lean, red-haired, hook-nosed, very awkward. He might have seemed insignificant, had it not been for his eager eyes ; and indifferent, had he not kept them intent on the speaker's face. Nobody noticed him. After dinner he strode across the room to the Duke and opened his lips for the first time. His manner was calm, almost cold. " I will join the AmericansI will helpthem fight for Freedom!" he cried, and as he spoke his face was illuminated"Tell me how to set about it." This was the Marquis de Lafayette, now nineteen years old (he was born in 1757), the adoring husband of a lady who returned his attachment; already the father of one child, and now expecting another. The anecdote is an epitome of the man. He was ruled by two passionsthe one for his wife, the other for Freedom; and the latter was the stronger of the two. In his amorous pursuit of Liberty under all her Protean formsa pursuit sometimes stern, always sanguine, and m...