[1068] Marshall to James M. Marshall, Feb. 28, 1800; MS.
[1069] Annals, 6th Cong., 1st Sess., 595-96.
[1070] Pickering to James Winchester, March 17, 1800; Pickering MSS., Mass. Hist. Soc. Also Binney, in Dillon, iii, 312.
[1071] See Moore: American Eloquence, ii, 20-23. The speech also appears in full in Annals, 6th Cong., 1st Sess., 596-619; in Benton: Abridgment of the Debates of Congress; in Bee's Reports, 266; and in the Appendix to Wharton: State Trials, 443.
[1072] Pickering to Hamilton, March 10, 1800; Pickering MSS., Mass. Hist. Soc.
[1073] Aurora, March 10, 1800.
[1074] Aurora, March 14, 1800.
[1075] Marshall's speech on the Robins case shows some study, but not so much as the florid encomium of Story indicates. The speeches of Bayard, Gallatin, Nicholas, and others display evidence of much more research than that of Marshall, who briefly refers to only two authorities.
[1076] Story, in Dillon, iii, 357-58.
[1077] Grigsby, i, 177; Adams: Gallatin, 232.