AUDUBON—THE HUNTER-NATURALIST. 97 
while he lived, and amidst the many and wearisome vicissi- 
tudes which have befallen since, I have retained fresh and 
unimpaired the memory of that journey through the moun- 
tains, as one of the green places of the past, where the sun- 
light always lives. 
Thus it was I came first to meet him, laurelled and grey, 
my highest ideal of the Hunter-Naturalist,—the old Audubon! 
Ah, the grandeur of that man’s life! though it had filled my 
own with poetic yearnings in my youth, yet they have lost 
nothing in fire and earnest upward through my maturer 
age! Now that he is dead, and I can look upon his career with 
sobered vision, undazzled by the prestige of presence, un- 
biassed by personal affection, and from the stand-point of 
wide experience and comparison with other men, still I can 
speak of as a reality what was once more hke the thought of a 
boy’s daydream,—that in all the world’s history of wonderful 
men, there is not to my mind one story of life so filled with 
beautiful romance as this of J. J. Audubon, considered in the 
mere deatils of its facts. Take them in his own simple words 
as furnished by himself incidentally, in the text of his great 
work, and what a wondrous tale it is! 
We will hear then from his own lips something of how 
the greatest of the Hunter-Naturalists was developed, catch 
glimpses of the boy-Audubon, artlessly conveyed through his 
own memories and impressions of early scenes, yearnings 
and impressions, up to the period of manly achievement; of 
doubts, of failure, and finally of gloriously consummated tri- 
umph! In his charming preface to the Biography of Birds, 
written the March of 1831, he says of himself :— 
I received life and light in the New World. When I had 
hardly yet learned to walk, and to articulate those first words 
always so endearing to parents, the productions of Nature 
that lay spread all around, were constantly pointed out to 
me. They soon became my playmates; and before my ideas 
were sufficiently formed to enable me to estimate the differ- 
