Tuesday, September 17, 2019
A Trace of James Fenimore Cooper :: Biography Biographies Essays
 A Trace of James Fenimore Cooper     Ã       Ã  In 1828 James Fenimore Cooper spent three      months in England,  chiefly to conduct business with his British publisher,      Richard Bentley, and for most of that time he lived in  London at 33 St. James      Place. This is the way he described it in Gleanings in  Europe:  England:            Ã   We finally took a small house in St. James's Place, a narrow inlet  that      Ã   communicates with the street of the same name, and which is quite near  the      Ã   palace and the parks. We had a tiny drawing-room, quite plainly  furnished, a      Ã   dining-room, and three bed-rooms, with the use of the offices, &c.  for a      Ã   guinea a-day. The people of the house cooked for us, went to market,  and      Ã   attended to the rooms, while our own man and maid did the personal  service. I      Ã   paid a shilling extra for each fire, and as we kept three, it came to  another      Ã   guinea weekly. (20)     Ã       As Donald Ringe and Kenneth Skaggs point out in their "Historical  Introduction"      to England,  St. James Place represented  "a most desirable location" (xvii). It      is close to the centers of political power in  England--St. James  Palace,      Buckingham  Palace, and  #10 Downing Street are not  far away. Cooper's neighbors      on the street included William Wilberforce and Samuel Rogers, a genial and       well-connected writer; Lord Spencer and Sir James Mackintosh lived nearby as       well.      Ã       The 33 St. James Place of  Cooper's time no longer exists, but I wanted to visit      the site anyway, to try to get a feel for what it meant for him to live  there.      If you walk from Trafalger  Square to St. James  Street, you can go along The Mall      or Pall Mall, wide streets flanked by the gigantic  architecture of Imperial      Britain.  St. James Place opens across  St. James Street from the  Pall Mall;      Christie's, the famous auction house, is on the corner opposite. At the south       end of St. James Street  stands St. James  Palace, an imposing brick castle with      					    
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