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Lafayette, Monticello, October 9, 1824
I have duly received, my dear friend and General, your letter
of the 1st from Philadelphia, giving us the welcome assurance that
you will visit the neighborhood which, during the march of our enemy
near it, was covered by your shield from his robberies and ravages.
In passing the line of your former march you will experience pleasing
recollections of the good you have done. My neighbors, too, of our
academical village, who well remember their obligations to you, have
expressed to you, in a letter from a committee appointed for that
purpose, their hope that you will accept manifestations of their
feelings, simple indeed, but as cordial as any you will have
received. It will be an additional honor to the University of the
State that you will have been its first guest. Gratify them, then,
by this assurance to their committee, if it has not been done. But
what recollections, dear friend, will this call up to you and me!
What a history have we to run over from the evening that yourself,
Meusnier, Bernau, and other patriots settled, in my house in Paris,
the outlines of the constitution you wished! And to trace it through
all the disastrous chapters of Robespierre, Barras, Bonaparte, and
the Bourbons! These things, however, are for our meeting. You
mention the return of Miss Wright to America, accompanied by her
sister; but do not say what her stay is to be, nor what her course.
Should it lead her to a visit of our University, which, in its
architecture only, is as yet an object, herself and her companion
will nowhere find a welcome more hearty than with Mrs. Randolph, and
all the inhabitants of Monticello. This Athenaeum of our country, in
embryo, is as yet but promise; and not in a state to recall the
recollections of Athens. But everything has its beginning, its
growth, and end; and who knows with what future delicious morsels of
philosophy, and by what future Miss Wright raked from its ruins, the
world may, some day, be gratified and instructed? Your son George we
shall be very happy indeed to see, and to renew in him the
recollections of your very dear family; and the revolutionary merit
of M. le Vasseur has that passport to the esteem of every American,
and, to me, the additional one of having been your friend and
co-operator, and he will, I hope, join you in making head-quarters
with us at Monticello. But all these things a revoir-- ; in the
meantime we are impatient that your ceremonies at York should be
over, and give you to the embraces of friendship.
P. S. Will you come by Mr. Madison's, or let him or me know on
what day he may meet you here, and join us in our greetings?
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