161 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
161 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VI July, 1928 No.7
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LAFAYETTE
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by: Unknown
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Lafayette stands apart and alone. His spirit was unique, and his
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career without parallel. Although a man of another race and land,
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his life is a part of the heroic legend of our country and our Craft.
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His story is more like fiction than fact. He was the last of the old
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knights who, through all the foulness and folly of his time, kept a
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name without stain.
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In all history no man of one land has been more beloved in another.
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He came to the aid of America like a crusader, asking to serve at his
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own cost, and without reward. No man ever loved Liberty with a purer
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devotion, or served her with more self-spending zeal. A poet, a
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mystic, a great-hearted gentleman, he is linked in our minds with
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Joan of Arc.
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Even romance has few stories to match the life of Lafayette. The
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father of four revolutions, he is yet a figure of such grace and
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purity that he suggests only beautiful things. Blood and fire and
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terror fall away leaving only a shining spirit. Friend of America at
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nineteen, hero of French liberty at thirty, a tragic figure for the
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rest of his days, he cultivated roses and dreamed dreams in the
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perfumed gardens of La Grange.
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The life of Lafayette falls into five acts. First, his thrilling
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adventures of youth in America; second, his service in the French
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Revolution when, for a time, he held the fate of his country in his
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hands; third, in the revolution of 1839 when, again, he was Master of
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France; fourth, his long, lonely later years; and finally, fourscore
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years later, when his spirit seemed to rise from the grave and beckon
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America to aid France in the World-War.
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Yet, strangely enough, he was not a mind of the first rank. Nature
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had not given him ten talents; his power and charm lay in his heart.
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He had courage, energy, honesty, frankness, simplicity, loyalty and a
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flaming zeal for what he deemed high causes; a spirit so lovely, so
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fine, so unselfish that all who really knew him loved him with
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unwavering devotion. Withal, he had a generosity rare among men, and
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a power of admiration that knew no limit. No man was ever more
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beloved, and no man more richly deserved it.
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Lafayette was born in Auvergne, among sturdy, thrifty folk ever ready
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to take up hard tasks. Nobly born, he was far nearer the farmer than
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the courtier. His soldier father was killed at Minden when the child
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was only two, and he grew up, country-bred, woman-tended, a gay,
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truant, poet-boy, amid forests, fields and sparkling streams. For
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his own good, he lacked all the social graces, being shy, gawky, red-
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headed, a clumsy horseman and a bad dancer. Yet always in his heart
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there burned a desire to go all over the world in pursuit of fame.
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By an odd accident was he started on the road of romance and glory.
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The Duke of Gloucester, in disgrace with his Royal Brother George,
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was passing through Metz where, at a dinner, Lafayette met him. The
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Duke, with the independence known only to Englishmen, made no secret
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of his sympathy with the American Colonies in their struggle for
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liberty. The young nobleman listened, and the seed fell on ready
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soil. As he said to Jared Sparks long years afterward, his whole
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soul leaped in love of America. and he vowed to offer his life and
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fortune in the service of its cause.
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So, fitting out his ship, named "Victory," at his own expense, and
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gathering a few select souls like Baron de Kalb aboard, he set sail
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from an obscure port in Spain. Chased by the British fleet, he was
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as elusive as an eel, dodging all his enemies. They weighed anchor
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at Georgetown, South Carolina, got into a little boat and rowed up
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the river to a farm house that showed lights. Dogs began to bark;
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the family were frightened, thinking it a party of the enemy. De
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Kalb, who spoke English, explained who they were, and they received a
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hearty welcome.
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Nor was the welcome ever belied. Something in the sublime effrontery
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of "The Boy," as he came to be known, ready to do anything, no matter
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how difficult, and angry only when a risk was put out of his reach by
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ranking etiquette; won the hearts of our people. By horseback
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Lafayette went to Philadelphia, and presented himself to Congress.
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He asked that he might serve at his own expense, and as a volunteer.
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It was as if a being from another planet had suddenly alighted among
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grave, kindly, farmer-like men. Like all the rest, they surrendered
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to his charm, made him a Major General, and sent him to Washington.
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The meeting of the two men, under a tent, is a scene for a painter.
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One forty-five, tall, erect, calm, direct, fifty-per-cent will,
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forty-nine-per-cent reason, one-per-cent chance; the other slight,
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poetic, eloquent and twenty. They came out of the tent arm in arm.
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It was the beginning of one of the great friendships of history. No
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two men were ever more unlike. Each had what the other lacked. They
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belonged together, virile power blending with fresh ardor. When
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Lafayette was wounded at Brandywine, shot in the leg, Washington said
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to the physician: "Look after him as after my son." Fidelity and
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tenderness united in a devotion unmarred by time, and unbroken by
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death.
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Besides, we do not forget that they were Brothers in the Lodge.
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Where and when Lafayette was made a Mason is a matter of dispute.
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Some say it was at the great meeting of Military Lodges in
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Morristown, New Jersey, when the proposal was made to form a General
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Grand Lodge, of which Washington was to be the Supreme Grand Master.
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Yet, Lafayette more than one spoke as if he had been made a Mason
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before he arrived in America. The exact fact is hard to find, but we
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do know that he was a man of our Craft.
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At Valley Forge, under rain and frost, amid scurvy and fever, when
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men ate acorns and died haphazard, "The Boy" rolled a big snow ball.
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Slowly, at the touch of his dreaming fingers, it took the shape of a
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woman. When finished, he engraved on her breast the magic word -
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"Liberty!" He enchanted the army, kept up its morale, and brought
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good luck. Spring came, the Alliance with France was celebrated, and
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the Army went on to Monmouth and Yorktown. When the whole British
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Army became prisoners of war, Lafayette wrote to his wife: "The Play
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is ended. The British are in the Soup!"
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The years following, amid upheavals in France, need not detain us.
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It was a wild and stormy time. Twice, at least, Lafayette held the
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destiny of his country in his hands. The Queen hated him. As
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Napoleon said: "I could not have believed that hatred could go so
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far." Marat thirsted for his blood. "He was always quoting
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Washington," says Brissot. Time tossed him right to the height of
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fame, then to the depth of a dungeon, and finally aside.
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Fifty years passed, and a thin old man, bent and spent, landed
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stiffly at New York, wondering whether he could "get a hack to take
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him to the hotel." No man, except Lindberg, ever received such a
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welcome on our shores. Rockets soared. Bonfires reddened the sky.
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Militia marched. Arches crossed the road. His tour was an ovation.
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He was a link with our heroic past, a living legend. Walking slowly
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over the ground where he had galloped and waved his sword fifty years
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before, he was a symbol.
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To this day the name of Lafayette is a magic word among us. He came
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to our country - a friend, a knight errant - in an hour of its
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struggle as black as the night on which he landed. He was young, he
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was romantic, with bright airs and graces. He dazzled, charmed, and
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captivated our nation. Enthusiasm shone in his eyes. He wanted
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nothing - except to fight for Liberty, the goddess of his idolatry.
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He was as one following a vision, in quest of a Holy Grail - the
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triumph of the rights of man. He went away, and when he returned it
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was as if our own heroic past had returned to bless and purify us.
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Liberty was the religion of Lafayette, and his faith remained
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undivided an unshaken. With all his grace of soul, he was well nigh
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a fanatic in its service. When he said that the happiest day of his
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life would be when he mounted the scaffold for his faith, he did not
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exaggerate. A soldier of the order of poets, his life had a purity
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as amazing as its unity. Ardent and serious, yet gay and gallant, he
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is of such stuff as legends are made of.
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If men see after death what passes here below, what must have been
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the feelings of Lafayette when, fourscore and three years after his
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bodily death, he looked down from his home in the celestial
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habitations and saw France again in dire danger, sorely pressed by
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foreign foes, fighting for her life, and a general in an American
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uniform standing by his grave in the cemetery of Picpus, and heard
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him say:
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"Lafayette, we are here!"
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SO MOTE IT BE
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