[68] Ibid., p. 65.
[69] Lettre à Madame de Lafayette, 5 Août, 1799: Mémoires, Tom. V. p. 71.
[70] Mémoires, Tom. I. p. 259.
[71] Ibid., p. 261, note.
[72] Rives’s Life and Times of James Madison, Vol. I. p. 294, note.
[73] Letter to Judge Pendleton, November 13, 1781: Ibid., p. 289, note.
[74] Rives’s Life and Times of James Madison, Vol. I. pp. 289, 290, note.
[75] Ibid. An American citizen, who, after enjoying the honors of the nation as Senator and as Minister to France, could become a Proslavery Rebel, was incompetent to sit in judgment on Lafayette. In declaring “the comparative nullity” of his career at home, “contrasted with the unquestionable splendor of his American services and deeds,” he writes as a Slave-Master, whose standard of merit excludes what is done for Liberty and Equality.
[76] Mémoires, Tom. II. p. 4.
[77] Mémoires, Tom. II. p. 58.