BIBLIOGRAPHY 435 



attacked me through Audubon, through him I will continue to 



point my dart at you This mode of carrying on the 



warfare will answer well my ends. It will give me an oppor- 

 tunity of again bringing on the stage certain individuals with 

 whom I have not yet quite squared up accounts; and, at the 



same time, I trust it will be to you a kind of hint, 



a warning — ^lest you make another false step in your exertions 

 to sound again in the public ear, O Candour ! whither art thou 

 fled? Certainly not to Walton Hall. . . . Pray, sir, where 

 were your brains (whither had they fled? Certainly not to 

 Walton Hall) when you received, and approved of, a narrative 

 at once so preposterous and so palpably fictitious ?" Reprinted 

 in Essays on Natural History, edited by Norman Moore (Lon- 

 don, 1871). Citation from pamphlet in Library of British 

 Museum. 



134. Waterton, Chakles, Esquire, of Walton-Hall : 



"Second Letter to Robert Jameson, Esq." [with 

 same titles as in last]. Pp. 1-16. Wakefield, 1836. 

 Ridicules in particular Audubon's accounts of the Vulture, 

 the Passenger Pigeon, and a hurricane in North America. 

 Signed "Walton-Hall. March S'^'^-, 1836." 



135. Waterton, Charles : 



"Audubon's Plates of the Birds of America," Lovr 

 don's Magazine of Natural History, vol. viii, pp. 236- 

 238. London, 1835. 

 Accuses Audubon of misrepresentation in his statements of 

 the time required to produce his drawings. 



136. (Anon.): 



"Ornithological Biography, or an Account of the 

 Habits of the Birds of the United States of America. 



By J. J. Audubon, vol. ii &c. First Notice," 



AtheruBum, London, January 3, 1835, pp. 6-7. 

 The same: "Second Notice," Athenaum, January 17, pp. 

 43-^45. 



