<h2><SPAN name="pref02"></SPAN>AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p>The author has often been asked if there were any foundation in real life for
the delineation of the principal character in this book. He can give no clearer
answer to the question than by laying before his readers a simple statement of
the facts connected with its original publication.</p>
<p>Many years since, the writer of this volume was at the residence of an
illustrious man, who had been employed in various situations of high trust
during the darkest days of the American Revolution. The discourse turned upon
the effects which great political excitement produces on character, and the
purifying consequences of a love of country, when that sentiment is powerfully
and generally awakened in a people. He who, from his years, his services, and
his knowledge of men, was best qualified to take the lead in such a
conversation, was the principal speaker. After dwelling on the marked manner in
which the great struggle of the nation, during the war of 1775, had given a new
and honorable direction to the thoughts and practices of multitudes whose time
had formerly been engrossed by the most vulgar concerns of life, he illustrated
his opinions by relating an anecdote, the truth of which he could attest as a
personal witness.</p>
<p>The dispute between England and the United States of America, though not
strictly a family quarrel, had many of the features of a civil war. The people
of the latter were never properly and constitutionally subject to the people of
the former, but the inhabitants of both countries owed allegiance to a common
king. The Americans, as a nation, disavowed this allegiance, and the English
choosing to support their sovereign in the attempt to regain his power, most of
the feelings of an internal struggle were involved in the conflict. A large
proportion of the emigrants from Europe, then established in the colonies, took
part with the crown; and there were many districts in which their influence,
united to that of the Americans who refused to lay aside their allegiance, gave
a decided preponderance to the royal cause. America was then too young, and too
much in need of every heart and hand, to regard these partial divisions, small
as they were in actual amount, with indifference. The evil was greatly
increased by the activity of the English in profiting by these internal
dissensions; and it became doubly serious when it was found that attempts were
made to raise various corps of provincial troops, who were to be banded with
those from Europe, to reduce the young republic to subjection. Congress named
an especial and a secret committee, therefore, for the express purpose of
defeating this object. Of this committee Mr.——, the narrator of the
anecdote, was chairman.</p>
<p>In the discharge of the novel duties which now devolved on him,
Mr.—— had occasion to employ an agent whose services differed but
little from those of a common spy. This man, as will easily be understood,
belonged to a condition in life which rendered him the least reluctant to
appear in so equivocal a character. He was poor, ignorant, so far as the usual
instruction was concerned; but cool, shrewd, and fearless by nature. It was his
office to learn in what part of the country the agents of the crown were making
their efforts to embody men, to repair to the place, enlist, appear zealous in
the cause he affected to serve, and otherwise to get possession of as many of
the secrets of the enemy as possible. The last he of course communicated to his
employers, who took all the means in their power to counteract the plans of the
English, and frequently with success.</p>
<p>It will readily be conceived that a service like this was attended with great
personal hazard. In addition to the danger of discovery, there was the daily
risk of falling into the hands of the Americans themselves, who invariably
visited sins of this nature more severely on the natives of the country than on
the Europeans who fell into their hands. In fact, the agent of Mr.
—— was several times arrested by the local authorities; and, in one
instance, he was actually condemned by his exasperated countrymen to the
gallows. Speedy and private orders to the jailer alone saved him from an
ignominious death. He was permitted to escape; and this seeming and indeed
actual peril was of great aid in supporting his assumed character among the
English. By the Americans, in his little sphere, he was denounced as a bold and
inveterate Tory. In this manner he continued to serve his country in secret
during the early years of the struggle, hourly environed by danger, and the
constant subject of unmerited opprobrium.</p>
<p>In the year ——, Mr. —— was named to a high and
honorable employment at a European court. Before vacating his seat in Congress,
he reported to that body an outline of the circumstances related, necessarily
suppressing the name of his agent, and demanding an appropriation in behalf of
a man who had been of so much use, at so great risk. A suitable sum was voted;
and its delivery was confided to the chairman of the secret committee.</p>
<p>Mr. —— took the necessary means to summon his agent to a personal
interview. They met in a wood at midnight. Here Mr. —— complimented
his companion on his fidelity and adroitness; explained the necessity of their
communications being closed; and finally tendered the money. The other drew
back, and declined receiving it. “The country has need of all its
means,” he said; “as for myself, I can work, or gain a livelihood
in various ways.” Persuasion was useless, for patriotism was uppermost in
the heart of this remarkable individual; and Mr. —— departed,
bearing with him the gold he had brought, and a deep respect for the man who
had so long hazarded his life, unrequited, for the cause they served in common.</p>
<p>The writer is under an impression that, at a later day, the agent of Mr.
—— consented to receive a remuneration for what he had done; but it
was not until his country was entirely in a condition to bestow it.</p>
<p>It is scarcely necessary to add, that an anecdote like this, simply but
forcibly told by one of its principal actors, made a deep impression on all who
heard it. Many years later, circumstances, which it is unnecessary to relate,
and of an entirely adventitious nature, induced the writer to publish a novel,
which proved to be, what he little foresaw at the time, the first of a
tolerably long series. The same adventitious causes which gave birth to the
book determined its scene and its general character. The former was laid in a
foreign country; and the latter embraced a crude effort to describe foreign
manners. When this tale was published, it became matter of reproach among the
author’s friends, that he, an American in heart as in birth, should give
to the world a work which aided perhaps, in some slight degree, to feed the
imaginations of the young and unpracticed among his own countrymen, by pictures
drawn from a state of society so different from that to which he belonged. The
writer, while he knew how much of what he had done was purely accidental, felt
the reproach to be one that, in a measure, was just. As the only atonement in
his power, he determined to inflict a second book, whose subject should admit
of no cavil, not only on the world, but on himself. He chose patriotism for his
theme; and to those who read this introduction and the book itself, it is
scarcely necessary to add, that he took the hero of the anecdote just related
as the best illustration of his subject.</p>
<p>Since the original publication of <i>The Spy</i>, there have appeared several
accounts of different persons who are supposed to have been in the
author’s mind while writing the book. As Mr. —— did not
mention the name of his agent, the writer never knew any more of his identity
with this or that individual, than has been here explained. Both Washington and
Sir Henry Clinton had an unusual number of secret emissaries; in a war that
partook so much of a domestic character, and in which the contending parties
were people of the same blood and language, it could scarcely be otherwise.</p>
<p>The style of the book has been revised by the author in this edition. In this
respect, he has endeavored to make it more worthy of the favor with which it
has been received; though he is compelled to admit there are faults so
interwoven with the structure of the tale that, as in the case of a decayed
edifice, it would cost perhaps less to reconstruct than to repair.
Five-and-twenty years have been as ages with most things connected with
America. Among other advantages, that of her literature has not been the least.
So little was expected from the publication of an original work of this
description, at the time it was written, that the first volume of <i>The
Spy</i> was actually printed several months, before the author felt a
sufficient inducement to write a line of the second. The efforts expended on a
hopeless task are rarely worthy of him who makes them, however low it may be
necessary to rate the standard of his general merit.</p>
<p>One other anecdote connected with the history of this book may give the reader
some idea of the hopes of an American author, in the first quarter of the
present century. As the second volume was slowly printing, from manuscript that
was barely dry when it went into the compositor’s hands, the publisher
intimated that the work might grow to a length that would consume the profits.
To set his mind at rest, the last chapter was actually written, printed, and
paged, several weeks before the chapters which precede it were even thought of.
This circumstance, while it cannot excuse, may serve to explain the manner in
which the actors are hurried off the scene.</p>
<p>A great change has come over the country since this book was originally
written. The nation is passing from the gristle into the bone, and the common
mind is beginning to keep even pace with the growth of the body politic. The
march from Vera Cruz to Mexico was made under the orders of that gallant
soldier who, a quarter of a century before, was mentioned with honor, in the
last chapter of this very book. Glorious as was that march, and brilliant as
were its results in a military point of view, a stride was then made by the
nation, in a moral sense, that has hastened it by an age, in its progress
toward real independence and high political influence. The guns that filled the
valley of the Aztecs with their thunder, have been heard in echoes on the other
side of the Atlantic, producing equally hope or apprehension.</p>
<p>There is now no enemy to fear, but the one that resides within. By accustoming
ourselves to regard even the people as erring beings, and by using the
restraints that wisdom has adduced from experience, there is much reason to
hope that the same Providence which has so well aided us in our infancy, may
continue to smile on our manhood.</p>
<p>COOPERSTOWN, <i>March</i> 29, 1849.</p>
<p>[Illustration: MAP TO ILLUSTRATE THE STORY OF THE SPY]</p>
<p>[The footnotes throughout are Cooper’s own.]</p>
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