Elliott Coues on Audubon n 



being great, had a certain largeness about him. He liked largeness in a 

 ph3'sical, mechanical sense, as he strove for greatness in a moral, intel- 

 lectual sense. He almost always used folio sheets of this character. 

 This manuscript is almost complete, and quite in its original proportions, 

 although sheets have been given to friends, and the family insisted upon 

 my taking a few for myself; but, ladies and gentlemen, fellow members. 



C_d?-e-<-fi-:^ 



(From a group photograph of the members attending the thirteenth congress of the American Ornithologists' 

 Union in Washington, D. C, November, 1895.) 



you have before you the original manuscript of Audubon's first ornitho- 

 logical work. [Applause.] 



''Here rises an interesting question, a remarkable question: Where 

 did Audubon obtain the technical parts of his work? We know that 

 he was slightly unsuited for this part of his undertaking, for he was an 

 American woodsman; he needed assistance in the technicalities of his 



