Once Washington received young Lafayette, he displayed boundless generosity toward him. Discarding earlier caution, he informed Madison that if circumstances permitted, he would take the boy 'with his tutor into my family and, in the absence of his father, to superintend his education and morals.' The sight of the boy and the 'visible distress' on his face deeply moved Washington. After hearing his heartrending pleas on his father's behalf, Washington decided, strictly as a private person, to dispatch a handwritten letter to the Austrian emperor, requesting that Lafayette be released and allowed to come to America.
Washington: A Life by Ron Chernow, pg. 738. Georges had to suffer with the uncertainty of help from the very people who professed to care about his father. Poor bean.










