[680] Same to same, Sept. 20, 1806, Wayne MSS. loc. cit. This letter is written from Augusta, Georgia. Among other books ordered in it, Weems names twelve copies each of "Sallust, Corderius, Eutropius, Nepos, Caesar's Commentaries, Virgil Delph., Horace Delphini, Cicero D, Ovid D"; and nine copies each of "Greek Grammar, D Testament, Lucian, Xenophon."

[681] Marshall, iii, 28-42.

[682] See vol. i, 93-98, 102, of this work.

[683] Marshall, iii, chaps. iii and iv.

[684] See vol. i, 98-101, of this work.

[685] Marshall, iii, 43-48, 52.

[686] Ib. 319, 330, 341-50; and see vol. i, 110-32, of this work.

[687] Marshall, iii, 345, 347-49.

[688] Ib. 50-53, 62.

[689] Marshall, iii, 59. "No species of licentiousness was unpracticed. The plunder and destruction of property was among the least offensive of the injuries sustained." The result "could not fail to equal the most sanguine hopes of the friends of the revolution. A sense of personal wrongs produced a temper, which national considerations had been found too weak to excite.... The great body of the people flew to arms."