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66. The Sea Lions; or the Lost Sealers. By the Author of The Crater, etc.
2 vols. New York: Stringer & Townsend, 1849.
67. The Ways of the Hour; a Tale. By the Author of The Spy, The Red Rover, etc., etc. 1 vol. New York: G. P. Putnam, 1850.
POSTHUMOUS PUBLICATIONS.
68. Old Ironsides.
In Putnam's Magazine, vol. i., No. v., May, 1853, pp. 473-487; and in No. vi., June, 1853, pp. 593-607.
This is a history of the United States frigate Const.i.tution.
69. Fragments from a Diary of James Fenimore Cooper.
In Putnam's Magazine, new series, vol. i., February, 1868, pp.
167-172; and June, 1868, pp. 730-737.
70. The Battle of Plattsburgh Bay.
In January, 1869, of Putnam's Magazine, vol. iii., new series, pp. 49-59.
A note to this article says that it was prepared as a lecture to be delivered before the New York Historical Society. The records of that Society, however, contain no reference to any lecture delivered by Cooper.
71. The Eclipse.
In Putnam's Magazine, new series, vol. iv., for September, 1869, pp. 352-359. Written about 1831, and gives an account of the eclipse of the sun in June, 1806.
Besides these there are numerous letters written to the newspapers, and in particular the letters written to the Paris journal, the "National,"
in 1833. During Cooper's life it was frequently said that he was engaged in preparing a work on the Middle States of the Union; but no (p. 299) trace of such a production was found among his papers. A work of his on "The Towns of Manhattan" was partly finished and in press at the time of his death; but the portion printed was entirely destroyed by fire. Part of the ma.n.u.script, however, was recovered. On the 4th of August, 1841, Cooper also delivered an address before the Literary Societies of Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y.; but this he himself burned on the day it was delivered.
A few works have been wrongly attributed to him. One of these is "The Cruise of the Somers; ill.u.s.trative of the Despotism of the Quarter Deck; and of the Unmanly Conduct of Commander Mackenzie." New York: 1844.
Another is "Elinor Wyllys; or the Young Folk of Longbridge."
Philadelphia: 1846. Of this novel Cooper was the nominal editor, and to it he contributed a short preface. A third work, which has been falsely attributed to him, is ent.i.tled "The Republic of the United States; its Duties to Itself, and its Responsible Relations to other Countries." New York: 1848.