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    Introduction by W. C. Bryant

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    Page 1 of 23
    W. C. Bryant's Discourse on the Life, Genius, and Writings of James
    Fenimore Cooper,

    Delivered at Metropolitan Hall, N.Y., February 25, 1852.

    It is now somewhat more than a year, since the friends of JAMES FENIMORE
    COOPER, in this city; were planning to give a public dinner to his honor.
    It was intended as an expression both of the regard they bore him
    personally, and of the pride they took in the glory his writings had
    reflected on the American name. We thought of what we should say in his
    hearing; in what terms, worthy of him and of us, we should speak of the
    esteem in which we held him, and of the interest we felt in a fame which
    had already penetrated to the remotest nook of the earth inhabited by
    civilized man.

    To-day we assemble for a sadder purpose: to pay to the dead some part of
    the honors then intended for the living. We bring our offering, but he is
    not here who should receive it; in his stead are vacancy and silence;
    there is no eye to brighten at our words, and no voice to answer. "It is
    an empty office that we perform," said Virgil, in his melodious verses,
    when commemorating the virtues of the young Marcellus, and bidding flowers
    be strewn, with full hands, over his early grave. We might apply the
    expression to the present occasion, but it would be true in part only. We
    can no longer do anything for him who is departed, but we may do what will
    not be without fruit to those who remain. It is good to occupy our
    thoughts with the example of great talents in conjunction with great
    virtues. His genius has passed away with him; but we may learn, from the
    history of his life, to employ the faculties we possess with useful
    activity and noble aims; we may copy his magnanimous frankness, his
    disdain of everything that wears the faintest semblance of deceit, his
    refusal to comply with current abuses, and the courage with which, on all
    occasions, he asserted what he deemed truth, and combated what he thought
    error.

    The circumstances of Cooper's early life were remarkably suited to confirm
    the natural hardihood and manliness of his character, and to call forth
    and exercise that extraordinary power of observation, which accumulated

    the materials afterwards wielded and shaped by his genius. His father,
    while an inhabitant of Burlington, in New Jersey, on the pleasant banks of
    the Delaware, was the owner of large possessions on the borders of the
    Otsego Lake in our own state, and here, in the newly-cleared fields, he
    built, in 1786, the first house in Cooperstown. To this home, Cooper, who
    was born in Burlington, in the year 1789, was conveyed in his infancy, and
    here, as he informs us in his preface to the _Pioneers_, his first
    impressions of the external world were obtained. Here
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