James Fenimore Cooper eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 204 pages of information about James Fenimore Cooper.

James Fenimore Cooper eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 204 pages of information about James Fenimore Cooper.
“Chronicles of Cooperstown.”  Then there was James Allen,—­a Scotch master-mason,—­who came his way from the “Land o’ Cakes” in 1801, and found, as an employee of Judge Cooper, an opening for his trade, and soon became a great favorite with the Cooper boys.  This master-mason took great pride in exact work, with which no trifling was permitted.  No stone could be moved but his true eye would detect it in a flash, and wild was the fury with which his fiery trowel flew for the culprit, and with such convincing force that it was wise to avoid further meddling with the “gude mon’s” work.  Of “Jamie Allen,” master-mason and staunch auld kirke mon, many an amusing story is told in Fenimore Cooper’s “Wyandotte, or the Hutted Knoll,” written in 1843.  These men among others marked the unusual in Cooper’s vacations from Dr. Ellison’s school-rule at Albany.  Later in life he wrote a lively memory-sketch of his tutor, the rector of St. Peter’s Church.  But the death in 1802 of this accomplished gentleman sent his pupil—­then a stripling of thirteen—­to Yale.  He entered the freshman 1802-3 January-term class, and, “excepting the poet Hillhouse, two weeks his junior, James Cooper was the youngest student in college.”  There “his progress in his studies is said to have been honorable to his talents.”  And “in the ancient languages he had no superior in his class.”

[Illustration:  “NEAR SHORES” OF NEW HAVEN.]

Cooper owned to having learned little at college.  When left to his own bent, his early love for out-of-door life drew him to roam the hills and explore near shores, and to his first view of the grand old ocean, which later claimed his tribute of service.  For a boyish frolic in his junior year the lad left Yale, and this incident ended his college career.  It is of record that Judge Cooper took the boy’s part against the faculty version and brought his son home.  Yet something from his books James Cooper must have gleaned, for there is a story of a young sailor who, in some public place in the streets of an English port, attracted the curiosity of the crowd by explaining to his companions the meaning of a Latin motto.

[Illustration:  DR. TIMOTHY DWIGHT.]

[Illustration:  YALE COLLEGE, 1806.]

[Illustration:  WILLIAM JAY IN YOUTH.]

The Albany, school-boy days of William Jay and James Cooper were renewed at Yale where was welded their strong life-friendship.  On the college roll of their time appear amongst other names that of John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, and the scholarly poet Hillhouse of New Haven.  In the Dodd, Mead & Company’s 1892 issue of “William Jay and the Constitutional Movement for the Abolition of Slavery,” by Bayard Tuckerman, with a preface, by John Jay, appears a letter dating 1852, written by Judge William Jay to his grandson.  This letter gives graphic glimpses of Yale College life during the student days there of its writer and James Cooper:  “The resident

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James Fenimore Cooper from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.