Authors: William Souder
251
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He went to a meeting and paid his dues
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 265.
251
  Â
George Ord, who had been conveniently abroad
“List of Visitors,” Royal Society Archives. Ord stopped by the society on June 18, 1829.
251
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He immediately directed Havell
Audubon,
The Birds of America.
251
  Â
A short while later, Dr. Harlan
Richard Harlan to Audubon, August 19, 1830 (Beinecke).
252
  Â
Havell sent Audubon a note updating him
Robert Havell Jr. to Audubon, June 2, 1830 (Houghton).
252
  Â
The paper itselfâheavy linen stock
Personal observation. Of the various original double elephant folios I've looked at, none appeared the worse for wear because of any frailty of the paper, which really is extraordinary. On many pages of most sets, the pressing together of the prints under the great weight of the bound volumes has caused the images to transfer faintly onto the backs of the adjacent prints. But the prints are sturdy. In fact, they appear to have held up in some cases to careless handling. One print I saw bore the smudged tracks of a house cat across its face.
252
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Worst of all was a scathing letter
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 269.
252
  Â
Enraged, Audubon wrote to Havell
Audubon to Robert Havell Jr., June 29, 1830 (Houghton).
252
  Â
Chagrined at not having caught
Ibid.
252
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He warned Havell that if
Ibid.
252
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Stung, Havell fired back
Robert Havell Jr. to Audubon, June 30, 1830 (Houghton).
253
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Swainson sent Audubon a sarcastic note
William Swainson to Audubon, May 1 [10?], 1830. Quoted in Herrick,
Audubon the Naturalist
, vol. II, pages 97â99.
253
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Ord had written to Alexander Lawson
George Ord to Alexander Lawson, circa 1830 (Houghton). Only a fragment of this biting and bitter letter survives. I wonder about the date, as it seems more likely to have been written during Ord's visit the year before.
253
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Lucy wrote about it to Victor and Johnny
Lucy Audubon to Victor and John Woodhouse Audubon, August 30, 1830 (Beinecke).
254
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In October they arrived in Edinburgh
Buchanan (ed.),
The Life and Adventures of John James Audubon
, page 171.
254
  Â
In addition to engraving, printselling, and publishing
Printed advertisement, circa 1830 (Ewell Sale Stewart Library and Archives).
254
  Â
Audubon asked Havell to display
Audubon to Robert Havell Jr., January 16, 1831 (Houghton).
254
  Â
My letter will be through necessity
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, October 11, 1829 (Beinecke).
255
  Â
Another factor in the decision
Fries,
The Double Elephant Folio
, page 47.
255
  Â
Audubon confided to Charles-Lucien Bonaparte
Audubon to Bonaparte, July 14, 1830. Quoted in Ford,
John James Audubon
, pages 269â70. Audubon had been telling this to Bonaparte since they had first met in Philadelphia six years earlier. In this letter, he put it bluntly, saying that he was “not a learned naturalist” but only a “practical one.”
255
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Audubon had thought initially of William Swainson
Audubon to William Swainson, August 22, 1830 (Linnaean Society Archives).
255
  Â
He told Audubon that their coming to stay with him
William Swainson to Audubon, between August 24 and August 28, 1830. Quoted in Herrick,
Audubon the Naturalist
, vol. II, pages 103â5.
256
  Â
One of the people he talked to was
Ralph,
William MacGillivray
, page 35.
256
  Â
Eleven years younger than Audubon
Ibid., pages 1â35. The physical description is from the frontispiece likeness of MacGillivray in Ralph's book.
256
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When Audubon met him
Ibid., pages 29â32.
256
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Toward the end of 1830
Ibid., page 35. A few months later, MacGillivray apparently regretted not asking for credit as a coauthor, and complained of it in a letterâWillliam MacGillivray to Audubon, May 7, 1831 (Beinecke).
256
  Â
Audubon, rising at dawn
Buchanan (ed.),
The Life and Adventures of John James Audubon
, page 172.
257
  Â
MacGillivray matched Audubon's manic pace
Ibid.
257
  Â
Prone to rheumatism, Lucy found Edinburgh
Lucy to Robert Havell Jr., December 2, 1830 (Houghton).
257
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Audubon, whom she observed
Ibid.
257
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It was so foggy in Edinburgh
Ibid.
257
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Anyone having business with Audubon
Ibid. Lucy's correspondence on behalf of Audubon commenced in Edinburgh and would continue, as needed when “Mr. Audubon” was “particularly engaged,” for many years.
257
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She told Mrs. Havell that they were far too busy
Lucy Audubon to Mrs. Havell, February 27, 1831 (Houghton).
257
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In a burst of headlong writing
Buchanan (ed.),
The Life and Adventures of John James Audubon
, page 172. Apparently the book was typeset as the copy was produced, as it was ready to ship within weeks of Audubon and MacGillivray completing their draft.
257
  Â
The typeset version ran to
Audubon,
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I.
258
  Â
I feel pleasure here in acknowledging
Ibid., pages xviiiâxix.
258
  Â
Audubon planned to sell
Fries,
The Double Elephant Folio
, page 50.
259
  Â
And so he interspersed the bird accounts
Audubon, title page,
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I.
259
  Â
In “Kentucky Barbicue”
Audubon, “Kentucky Barbicue on the Fourth of July,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. II, pages 576â79.
259
  Â
He wrote a devoted remembrance
Audubon, “A Wild Horse,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 270â74.
259
  Â
He wrote enthusiastically of
Audubon, “The Squatters of the Mississippi,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. II, pages 131â34.
259
  Â
There was a pioneer family's recollection
Audubon, “The Burning of the Forests,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. II, pages 397â402; and “The Lost One,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. II, pages 69â73.
259
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Then there was the ghastly
Audubon, “The Death of a Pirate,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. II, pages 185â89.
260
  Â
In “Pitting of Wolves,” Audubon told
Audubon, “Pitting of Wolves,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. III, pages 338â41.
260
  Â
After an entertaining discussion
Audubon, “Scipio and the Bear,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I, pages 479â82.
261
  Â
In “The Prairie,” Audubon recounted
Audubon, “The Prairie,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I, pages 81â84.
261
  Â
There was a similar dubious quality
Audubon, “The Runaway,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. II, pages 27â32.
262
  Â
In “The Earthquake” he told of riding
Audubon, “The Earthquake,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I, pages 239â41.
263
  Â
Audubon without question experienced
Walker,
Earthquake
, pages 112â13.
263
  Â
At the time of the initial quake
Lucy Audubon to Euphemia Gifford, January 5, 1812 (Princeton University Library).
264
  Â
“
Kentucky Sports” began with
Audubon, “Kentucky Sports,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I, pages 290â95.
265
  Â
Audubon gave a much fuller description
Audubon, “Colonel Boon,”
Ornithological Biography
, vol. I, pages 503â6.
265
  Â
The stature and general appearance of this wanderer
Ibid.
265
  Â
Daniel Boone left Kentucky
Faragher,
Daniel Boone
, pages 308â9.
266
  Â
Boone, who was by then almost eighty
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 88.
266
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Lucy wrote to Mrs. Havell to say that so much
Lucy Audubon to Mrs. Havell, February 27, 1831 (Houghton).
266
  Â
In the fall of 1831
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, November 23, 1831 (Beinecke).
267
  Â
Off to starboard the surf crashed
Personal observation. I have family in this part of the world, and have spent much time on the same beautiful and often wild stretch of ocean.
267
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On November 20 the
Agnes
made port
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, November 13, 1831, and November 23, 1831. The arrival date is derived from Audubon's plan to leave Charleston “the day after tomorrow” stated in his November 13 letter, and the duration of the passage, stated as five days in the letter of November 23 (Beinecke).
267
  Â
It reminded him of “an old French Village”
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, November 23, 1831 (Beinecke).
267
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Established in 1565 by the Spanish
Gannon,
The New History of Florida
, page 44.
267
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Audubon thought the people here were the laziest
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, November 29, 1831 (Beinecke).
267
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The weather, too, was awful
Ibid.
267
  Â
One day Audubon explored
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, November 23, 1831 (Beinecke).
267
  Â
He wrote a series of cheerful letters to Lucy
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, December 5, 1831 (Beinecke). Audubon said being once again in the wilds of America had made him feel “as young as ever.” Lucy, he advised, should be “gay” and “happy.”
268
  Â
He even devised a plan
Ibid.
268
  Â
But letters from Havell
Ibid.
268
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“Do not despond my Lucy”
Ibid.
268
  Â
The subscriber list seemed to have leveled off
Ford,
John James Audubon
, page 281.
268
  Â
On August 1, 1831
Audubon to Robert Havell Jr., July 31, 1831 (Houghton).
268
  Â
From New York they had gone to
Audubon to Robert Havell Jr., September 20, 1831 (Houghton). Although Audubon mentions only three subscribers in this letter, he got a fourthâthe Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphiaâas Lucy reported in a letter to Mrs. Havell twelve days laterâLucy Audubon to Mrs. Havell, October 2, 1831 (Houghton). A month after this Richard Harlan wrote to Audubon about the arrival and condition of the academy's copy of
The Birds of America.
268
  Â
Audubon declared, prematurely it turned out
Audubon to Robert Havell Jr., September 20, 1831 (Houghton).
268
  Â
Victor met his parents
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, October 9, 1831; October 13, 1831; and October 23, 1831 (Beinecke).
268
  Â
He was accompanied again
Audubon to Lucy Audubon, October 23, 1831 (Beinecke).