[209] Meade, ii, 222.

[210] Tyler: Tyler, i, 220; and see vol. ii, 182-83, of this work.

[211] White: A Sketch of Chester Harding, Artist, 195-96.

[212] Lippincott's Magazine, ii, 624. Paulding makes this comment on Marshall: "In his hours of relaxation he was as full of fun and as natural as a child. He entered into the spirit of athletic exercises with the ardor of youth; and at sixty-odd years of age was one of the best quoit-players in Virginia." (Ib. 626.)

[213] American Turf Register and Sporting Magazine (1829), i, 41-42; and see Mordecai, 188-89.

[214] Recipe for the Quoit Club punch, Green Bag, viii, 482. This recipe was used for many years by the Richmond Light Infantry Blues.

[215] See vol. ii, 183, of this work.

[216] On these occasions Mrs. Marshall spent the nights at the house of her daughter or sister.

[217] For an extended description of Marshall's "lawyer dinners" see Terhune, 85-87.

[218] See vol. i, 44-45, 153-54, of this work.