456 APPENDICES 



formed to preserve the history of the United States, and espe- 

 cially the history of the City of New York. If Audubon's 

 wonderful drawings of the birds of America are not United 

 States history and New York City history rolled into one, then 

 what, in the name of Herodotus, Father of History, is?" 



234. Townsend, Charles W. : 



"In Audubon's Labrador," The Auk, vol. xxxiv, pp. 

 133-146, illust. Cambridge, 1917. 



235. Neal, John: 



"Audubon, the Ornithologist," New England 

 Galaxy, Boston, January 3, 1935 ; continued February 

 7, 1935, and with "The Birds of America," April 18, 

 1935. 



236. Audubon, John James: 



"Myself," written about 1835. For further refer- 

 ence, see No. 40. 



237. Audubon, John James: 



"Audubon," The New World, New York, vol. vii, 

 July 15, 1842. 

 Letter to Dr. Gideon B. Smith, dated "Missouri River, May 

 24, 1843." 



238. Speed, John Gilmer: 



The Poems of John Keats with Annotations of Lord 



Houghton and a Memoir by Speed. New York, 1883. 



Reproduces letters of John Keats to his brother, George, 



with charges against Audubon. Letters from George Keats, to 



which these were in reply, are not given. 



239. Haycraft, Samuel: 



"Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and its Surroundings," 

 Elizabethtown News, 1869. Republished 1889-90. 

 States that Audubon and Rozier were merchants in Eliza- 

 bethtown at an early date. Probably an error, but quoted by 



