96 JOHN JAMES AUDUBON 
tles,’’? ‘‘Death of a Pirate,’ and other 
sketches. Stopping at Charleston, South 
Carolina, on this southern trip, he made 
the acquaintance of the Reverend John 
Bachman, and a friendship between 
these two men was formed that lasted 
as long as they both lived. Subse- 
quently, Audubon’s sons, Victor and 
John, married Dr. Bachman’s two eld- 
est daughters. 
In the summer of 1832, Audubon, 
accompanied by his wife and two sons, 
made a trip to Maine and New Bruns- 
wick, going very leisurely by private 
conveyance through these countries, 
studying the birds, the people, the 
,scenery, and gathering new material 
for his work. His diaries give minute 
accounts of these journeyings. He was 
impressed by the sobriety of the people 
of Maine; they seem to have had a 
‘(Maine law’? at that early date ; ‘‘ for on 
asking for brandy, rum, or whiskey, not 
a drop could I obtain.’? He saw much 
