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sidy; or, The Cottage Gardener, Lon., 1845, 12mo. Anon.

2. The Confessor: a Jesuit Tale of the Times, founded

on Fact with a Preface by the Rev. C. B. Tayler,

M.A., Lon., 1854, 12mo. Anon.

Hardy, Ernest George, M.A., and Mann, J. S.,

M.A. (Trans.) The Antiquities of Greece-The State;

from the German of G. F. Schömann, Lon., 1880, 8vo.

Hardy, Frederic. 1. Ventriloquism Made Easy:

the Theory and Practice of the Art exhibited, Lon.,

1865, 18mo. 2. A B C of Billiards, Lon., 1866, 32mo.

3. Chess for Beginners, Lon., 1866, 32mo. 4. Cribbage

and Dominoes, Lon., 1867, 32mo. 5. Parlour Magic,

Lon., 1867, 32mo. With WARE, J. R., The Modern

Hoyle, Lon., 1870, 12mo.

Hardy, Horatio Nelson. The London Hospitals

and the Jubilee: being the Sturge Prize Essay on Hos-

pitals, Bristol, 1887, 8vo.

Hardy, Miss Iza Duffus, daughter of Sir Thomas

Duffus Hardy, infra. 1. Not Easily Jealous, Lon., 1872,

3 vols. p. 8vo. 2. Between Two Fires, Lon., 1873, 2 vols.

p. 8vo. 3. Glencairn, Lon., 1877, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 4. Only

a Love-Story, Lon., 1877, 3 vols. cr. 8vo; new ed., 1885.

5. For the Old Love's Sake: a Story, Lon., 1877, 12mo.

6. A Broken Faith, Lon., 1878, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 7. Friend

and Lover, Lon., 1880, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 8. Love, Honour,

and Obey, Lon., 1881, 3 vols. p. 8vo; new ed., 1884. 9.

Between Two Oceans; or, Sketches of American Travel,

Lon., 1884, 8vo. 10. The Love that he Passed By: a

Tale of Santana City, Lon., 1884, 3 vols. cr. 8vo. 11.

Hearts or Diamonds? a Novel, Lon., 1885, 2 vols. 12.

Oranges and Alligators: Sketches of South Florida Life,

Lon., 1886, p. 8vo. 13. The Westhorpe Mystery: a

Story, Lon., 1886, 12mo. 14. The Girl he did not

Marry, Lon., 1887, 3 vols. cr. 8vo. 15. Love in Idleness:

a Story of a Winter in Florida, Lon., 1887, 3 vols. cr.

8vo.

Causeway, Lon., 1861, fp. 8vo. 3. Dublin and Wicklow

Counties, Lon., 1861, fp. 8vo. 4. Galway, Connemara

and the Irish Highlands, Lon., 1861, fp. 8vo. 5. Th

Lakes of Killarney, Cork, &c., Lon., 1861, fp. 8vo.

(Ed.) The New Testament: Matthew and Romans

with Notes, Lon., 1868, 8vo.

Hardy, Rev. Robert Spence, [ante, vol. i., add.,

1803-1868; ordained minister in the Wesleyan Meth

odist Church in 1825; missionary in Ceylon for man

years; member of the Royal Asiatic Society. 1.

Manual of Buddhism in its Modern Development: trans

lated from Singhalese MSS., Lon., 1853, 8vo; 2d ed

1880. 2. William Grimshaw, Incumbent of Haworth

1742-63, Lon., 1860, fp. 8vo. 3. The Legends and The

ries of the Buddhists compared with History and Se

ence with Introductory Notices of the Life and Syster

of Gôtama Buddha, Lon., 1866, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1881.

Hardy, Robert William Hale. 1. Travels

the Interior of Mexico in 1825-28, Lon., 1829, 8vo.

Incidental Remarks on some Properties of Light: bein

Part V. of an Essay on Vision, Lon., 1856, 8vo. 3. Deit

as Creator, Sustainer, and User of Nature, Lon., 187

p. 8vo.

Hardy, Robina F. 1. Whin Bloom, [verse

Edin., 1879, p. 8vo. 2. Hester Glen's Holidays, Glasgow
1881, 16mo. 3. Jock Halliday, a Grassmarket Hero; o
Sketches of Life and Character in an Old City Paris
Edin., 1883, 12mo. 4. Tom Telfer's Shadow: a Story
Every-Day Life, Edin., 1883, 12mo. 5. Glenairlie; o
The Last of the Græmes, Edin., 1884, p. 8vo. 6. Archi
a Story of Changing Fortunes, and other Stories, Edin
1885, 12mo. 7. Within a Mile o' Edinburgh Town, Edin
1885, 4to. 8. Katie, an Edinburgh Lassie, Edin., 188
12mo. 9. Fickle Fortune, Edin., 1886, 12mo. I
Frieda's First Lesson, ("Way to Win" Ser.) Illus
Edin., 1887, 18mo. With SWAN, ANNIE S., and SAXB
JESSIE M. F., Vita Vinctis, Edin., 1887, p. 8vo. (Co

Hardy, Mrs. Janet, (Gordon.) 1. The Connells

of Castle Connell, Lon., 1868, 2 vols. p. 8vo. 2. Cham-tains stories in prose and poems.)

pions of the Reformation: the Stories of their Lives,

Edin., 1869, 12mo. 3. The Spanish Inquisition: its

Heroes and Martyrs, Lon., 1870, 12mo. 4. Jacqueline:

a Story of the Reformation in Holland,, Lon., 1872,

12mo. 5. The Story of a Noble Life: or, Zurich and its

Reformer, Ulrich Zwingle, Lon., 1874, 12mo. 6. Afloat

and Ashore with Sir Walter Raleigh, Lon., 1876, 12mo,

7. The Castaways' Home; or, The Sailing and the Sink-

ing of the Good Ship "Rose." Illust. Lon., 1877,

12mo. 8. Up North; or, Lost and Found in Russia and

the Arctic Wastes. Illust. Lon., 1878, 12mo. 9. Jacob

Jennings the Colonist; or, The Adventures of a Young

Scotchman in South Africa, Edin., 1884, 12mo.

Hardy, Mrs. Samuel. The Soldier's Dream;

The Home of Mercy for Habitual Drunkards, Lor

1876, 8vo.

Hardy, Mary, Lady, daughter of C. Macdowell,

second wife of Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy, infra. After

the death of her husband she visited the United States

with her daughter. 1. War Notes from the Crimea,

Lon., 1855, 8vo. 2. The Artist's Family: an Historical

Romance, Lon., 1857, 12mo. 3. A Casual Acquaintance:

a Novel founded on Fact, Lon., 1866, 2 vols. p. 8vo.

4. A Hero's Work, Lon., 1867, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 5. Paul

Wynter's Sacrifice, Lon., 1869, 3 vols. p. 8vo; new ed.,

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"Desperate Remedies,' though in some respects an u

pleasant story, is undoubtedly a very powerful one.

cannot decide, satisfactorily to our own mind, on the s

of the author.. The chief blemish of the book will

If the author w

found in the occasional coarseness. . . .
not write novels only a little, if at all, inferior to the b
purge himself of this, . . . we see no reason why he shou
of the present generation."-Ath., No. 2266.

2. Under the Greenwood Tree: a Rural Painting

the Dutch School. By the Author of "Desperate Rem

dies." Lon., 1872, 2 vols. p. 8vo.

"A series of rural pictures full of life and genuine c

ouring, and drawn with a distinct minuteness remindi

one at times of some of the scenes in Hermann and Do

thea.'"-Sat. Rev., xxxiv. 417.

3. A Pair of Blue Eyes, Lon., 1873, 3 vols. p. 8v

new ed., 1877.

"Elfride Swancourt, a young lady,' has a very distin

if not a very substantial, character, and there is no lack
individuality about the people who surround her.
Hardy's feminine ideal is not lofty, though perilously
tractive, as the story shows."-Ath., No. 2383..

4. Far from the Madding Crowd, Lon., 1874, 2 v

p. Svo.

"Mr. Hardy has still much to learn, or, perhaps

ought to say, to unlearn, before he can be placed in
trouble, and is not in a hurry to work off his sketch
first order of modern English novelists.
They are imaginative, drawn from the inside, and hig

He ta

finished. They show power also of probing and analyzing | various aspects of the woodland in the midst of which the the deeper shades of character. . . . The English Boeotian story is laid, for example, are worked in with inimitable has never been so idealized before.. Under his hand skill."-Ath., No. 3100. Boeotians become Athenians in acuteness, Germans in ca

pacity for philosophic speculation, and Parisians in polish. .. We feel either that we have misjudged the unenfranchised agricultural classes, or that Mr. Hardy has put his own thoughts and words into their mouths. And this suspicion necessarily shakes our confidence in the truthful ness of many of the idyllic incidents of rustic life which are so plentifully scattered through these volumes.. But perhaps it does not very much matter (except to the student of the political capabilities of the agricultural labourer) whether either the conversations or the descriptions are true or false. They are in keeping with the general character of the novel to this extent, that they are worked up with unusual skill and care. Each scene is a study in itself, and, within its own limits, effective. And they all fit into the story like pieces of an elaborate puzzle, making, when they are so fitted in, an effective whole." Sat. Rev., xxxix. 57.

"By critics who prefer a grain of substance to a pound of shadow it will, we think, be pronounced a decidedly delusive performance; it has a fatal lack of magic. It is inordinately diffuse, and, as a piece of narrative, singularly inartistic."-Nation, xix. 423.

5. The Hand of Ethelberta: a Comedy in Chapters. Illust. Lon., 1876, 2 vols. p. 8vo.

"While the whole story is a most elaborate and lively satire on the social falsehoods of our fashionable world, on the vapidness of its life, the hollowness of its sentiment, and the chasms which yawn between it and the honest labour which builds the edifice of its luxury, we do not find much in it that impresses us as if it ever had happened or ever would happen, and are disposed to regard the whole story as a humorous fable illustrating the vices and weaknesses of the upper ten thousand, rather than as a picture of the most characteristic figures in the intellectual society of modern London."-Spectator, xlix. 530.

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"We cannot but think that The Hand of Ethelberta, amusing as it is, is hardly worthy of its author's powers." -Sat. Rev., xli. 592.

6. The Return of the Native, Lon., 1878, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

"We maintain that the primary object of a story is to amuse; and in the attempt to amuse us Mr. Hardy, in our opinion, breaks down.... He would seem to be steadily subordinating interest to the rules by which he regulates his art. . . . In the rugged and studied simplicity of its subject the story strikes us as intensely artificial. We need not say that Mr. Hardy's descriptions are always vivid and often most picturesque. But he weakens rather than increases their force by going out of his way for eccentric forms of expression which are far less suggestive of his meanings than the every-day words he carefully avoids."-Sat. Rev., xlvii. 23.

"A story of singular power and interest,-very original, very gloomy, very great in some respects, though these respects are not the highest.-and from beginning to end in the highest degree vivid."-Spectator, lii. 181.

12. Wessex Tales: Strange, Lively, and Commonplace, Lon., 1888, 2 vols. p. 8vo.

GENERAL CRITICISM:

"Mr. Hardy has rare qualities,-a keen observation of nature, a knowledge of country life and its ways that George Sand might envy, and ... a tragic force which few writers possess."-Sat. Rev., xli. 593.

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modern romantic.

Mr. Hardy seems, after a preliminary trial cf several kinds, to have finally chosen as his branch of fiction that which, for want of a better name, may be called the That is, he takes the present for his time, and such people as move among us at the present for his characters; but he makes his characters do things, and puts them into positions, which, if not impossible, would at least be thought very remarkable, and worthy of a leading article in every daily paper, if they had really been reported by a living witness. This must be called the second order of fiction, as it is distinctly inferior, in an artistic point of view, to that which produces its effects solely with the materials of every-day life; but in the hands of a master, who is capable of seeing how people might probably act and speak in improbable circumstances, it is by no means unsatisfactory."-Ath., No. 2529.

"While Mr. Hardy has enough superficial knowledge of human nature to give an air of plausibility and life to all he paints, he has not enough-or, at least, seldom shows enough-to engrave individual figures on our mind as figures which take leave to live in our memories, and which positively enlarge the sphere of our expectations." -Spectator, xlix. 530.

"He has a telling instinct for the value of sex: his heroines are profoundly feminine, his heroes thoroughly, and at times comically, masculine.. He never misses the comic aspect of a situation or episode, and yet he never enforces it by a coarse or unsympathetic touch: the light falls gently and sweetly upon it, and passes on. A great many modern novelists would never be humorous if there were not so great a demand for humour nowadays;... but Mr. Hardy is humorous inevitably and inadvertently. On the other hand, genius of Mr. Hardy's order is not capable of the loftier and more powerful efforts of tragedy; its furthest range in this direction should be limited by the pathetic, and this involves never altogether losing sight of the humorous. Now, in true pathos Mr. Hardy has no living superior, but his attempts in the way of tragedy have not been satisfactory.. When Othello kills Desdemona, the act only makes him more Othello than he was before; but when Eustacia drowns herself on Egdon Heath, she leaves the Eustacia that we believe in safe on the bank."-Spectator, liii. 1627.

"He has never risen much above nor sunk much below

the level of his Under the Greenwood Tree.' In all his succeeding novels we have had the same delicacy of observation, the same curious combination of felicity with infelicity of expression, the same success in getting what may be roughly called tone, without much faithfulness in other equally important matters."-Nation, xxxii. 16. Hardy, Sir Thomas Duffus, [ante, vol. i., add.,]

7. The Trumpet-Major: a Tale, Lon., 1880, 3 vols. p. 1804-1878, b. in Jamaica; was appointed in 1819 a

8vo.

"Mr. Hardy in his latest novel has produced perhaps a finer study of character in a certain sense than he has before given to his readers. . . . This central character is surrounded by others, drawn for the most part with the truth and insight which have raised Mr. Hardy to the high he occupies among novelists of our time."-Sa'. Rev., 588. "The present story is not Mr. Hardy's best, but it has some of his best work in it."-Spectator, liii. 1627.

Place

8. A Laodicean; or, The Castle of the De Stancys: a Story of To-Day, Lon., 1881, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

"The book has undoubted interest both because Mr. Hardy has written it and because it is in many ways so unlike anything else that he has written. Whether he has made his new departure in the right direction is another question."-Sat. Rev., liii. 53.

"In previous works... Mr. Hardy has shown a talent for depicting heroines the reverse of commonplace, and belonging to a class of their own. In the work before us this talent is displayed in the picture of Paula Power.... The study of this curious, uncommon, but by no means inconceivable middle-class young lady is very interesting." -Spectator, lv. 296.

9. Two on a Tower: a Romance, Lon., 1882, 3 vols. p.

8vo.

"There is not, from beginning to end, a single gleam of probability in the plot, and what good can be served by violating all natural motives in order to produce such unpleasant results we are at a loss to see."-Spectator, lvi. 154. 10. The Mayor of Casterbridge: the Life and Death of a Man of Character, Lon., 1886, 2 vols. p. 8vo. "Mr. Hardy has not given us any more powerful study

than that of Michael Henchard. We cannot express too warmly our admiration for the art with which that stalwart and wayward nature has been delineated and all the apparently self-contradictory subtleties of his mood have been portrayed."-Spectator, lix. 752.

11. The Woodlanders, Lon., 1887, 3 vols. p. 8vo. "Every incident contributes to the development of the story; every touch helps to put the reader in the frame of mind in which the author would have him be. The V.-48

junior clerk in the Record Office, and in 1869 succeeded
Sir Francis Palgrave as deputy keeper of the Public
Records. He was knighted in 1870. 1. A Review of
the Present State of the Shakspearian Controversy, Lon.,
2. Descriptive Catalogue of Materials re-
1860, 8vo.
lating to the History of Great Britain and Ireland to
the End of the Reign of Henry VII., Lon., 1862, r. 8vo.
Public Libraries of Venice, Lon., 1866, r. 8vo.
3. Report upon the Documents in the Archives and
4. (Ed.)
Syllabus, in English, of Rymer's Foedera, (1066–1654,)
(Record Office Pub..) Lon., 1869-85, 3 vols. 5. The Atha-
nasian Creed in Connection with the Utrecht Psalter:
being a Report to the Right Honourable Lord Romilly,
Master of the Rolls, on a Manuscript in the University
of Utrecht, Lon., 1872, 4to. 6. (Ed.) Year-Books Edward
I., Years 20-21. Lon., 1873, r. 8vo. 7. Further Report
on the Utrecht Psalter: in Answer to the Eight Reports
made to the Trustees of the British Museum and edited
by the Dean of Westminster, Lon., 1874, 4to.
Utrecht Psalter, Sir T. D. Hardy contending that the
question discussed in these reports is the date of the
MS. belongs to the sixth century, while his opponents
assign it respectively to the seventh, the eighth, the
ninth, and the tenth century.)

(The

"There can, we think, be no reasonable doubt that the handwriting is actually that of the sixth century; or, if not, that it is a copy of a later period, imitating the style of the sixth century."-NICHOLAS POCOCK: Acad., vi. 113. Hardy, W. Auchterlonie. perance Tale, Lon., 1876, p. 8vo.

Fearndale: a Tem

Hardy, Sir William, F.S.A., 1807-1887: entered the branch Record Office in the Tower of London with his brother Sir T. D. Hardy, supra, and became successively keeper of the Records of the Duchy of Lancaster, assistant keeper of the Public Records, and deputy keeper, an office from which he retired in 1886. (Trans.

765

and ed.) The Charters of the Duchy of Lancaster. | inspired, in the majority of instances, by a personal and Lon., 1845, 8vo. With HARDY, EDWARD, L.C.P., F.S.A.: even intimate acquaintance with the localities described. 1. (Trans.) A Collection of the Chronicles and Ancient at all elsewhere, or, at least, to be collected with difficulty." He gives us information and guidance not to be obtained Histories of Great Britain, now called England, by John-Spectator, xlix. 1285. de Wavrin: vols. i.-ii., Lon., 1884-87, r. 8vo. 2. (Ed.) Recueil des Chroniques et anchiennes Istories de la Grant Bretaigne: a present nomme Engleterre. Par Jehan de Waurin. (Record Office Pub.) Lon., 1884, 4

vols 8vo.

Hardy, William, of Harrogate. Life and Electricity in Health and Disease: being a Guide to the Use of Electricity in Disease, Harrogate, 1862-65, 2 parts, 8vo.

Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert, [ante, vol. i., add.,] b. 1834, at the Villa Strozzi at Rome; son of Francis George Hare, and nephew of Augustus William Hare and Julius Charles Hare, (q. v., ante, vol. i.,) and adopted by Mrs. Maria Hare, infra. He was educated at Harrow, and at University College, Oxford, and formerly resided at the family home of Hurstmonceaux, but afterwards removed to Holmhurst, near Hastings. 1. Epitaphs for Country Churchyards, Collected and Arranged, Oxf., 1856, 8vo. 2. Winter at Mentone, Lon., 1862, 12mo. 3. Walks in Rome, Lon., 1871, 2 vols. p. 8vo; 12th ed., 1887.

"He has supplied in a pleasanter and more intellectual form-but with the practical drawback of filling two somewhat bulky volumes-an enlarged Murray for Rome."Sat. Rev., xxxii. 156.

4. Memorials of a Quiet Life, Lon., 1872, 2 vols. p. 8vo: 18th ed., 1884.

"Francis. Augustus, Julius, and Marcus Hare, 'the most brotherly of brothers,' as Landor called them, are prominent figures here; but the central character of the book is Mrs. Augustus Hare, of whose life we have minute particulars from childhood to old age, and from whose diary copious extracts are given."-Spectator, xlv. 1592.

Two very thick volumes expended on the quiet life of a clergyman's widow unknown to fame might test even a steady reader's powers to the utmost. . . . Impatient turning of the leaves produces only discouragement; but begin at the beginning, and the well-principled effort is rewarded by forming acquaintance with a really highminded, unworldly, and intellectual group of people presenting a picture of aims, pursuits, and habits which raise them sufficiently above ordinary folks and their doings to make them well worth knowing."-Sat. Rev., xxxv. 21.

5. Wanderings in Spain. Illust. Lon., 1873, p. 8vo;

3d ed., 1876.

"Here is the ideal book of travel in Spain; the book

which exactly anticipates the requirements of everybody who is fortunate enough to be going to that enchanted land; the book which ably consoles those who are not so happy, by supplying the imagination from the daintiest and most delicious of its stores. . . . The book seizes upon one's mind with a fascination like that of the Far East, with its mingled delight in grand nature, and its subtle, distant human sympathy with a past and a present quite unlike the past and present of our own race and country." -Spectator, xlvi. 111.

"One of the charms of his volume is the number of legends and anecdotes that the traveller will seek in vain in the guide-books. . . . It is a book that will bear reading repeatedly when one is moving among the scenes it describes."-Sat. Rev., xxxv. 154.

6. Days near Rome. Illust. Lon., 1875, 2 vols. cr. 8vo; 3d ed., 1884.

"It treats specially of Rome's surroundings, and of the quite endless excursions which may be undertaken with large profit of refreshment and information by any one possessed of moderate health, moderate means, and a moderate spirit of adventure."-Spectator, xlviii. 437.

7. Memorials of a Quiet Life: Supplementary Volume. With Fifty-Seven Photographs. Lon., 1876, p. 8vo.

This volume is given in accordance with the earnest request from many distant quarters for the actual and accurate representation of the places and of the persons mentioned in Memorials of a Quiet Life.' The additional letter press given consists of further selections from the unpublished letters and journal of Mrs. Augustus Hare, and a few of the letters of Archdeacon Hare."-Ath., No. 2548.

The last volume which he has given to his peculiar audience is chiefly made up of copies of the portraits of all the Hares and all their connections and all the houses in which they ever lived, notwithstanding that there is nothing at all remarkable either in the faces or the houses of this alarmingly well-known family."-Spectator, xlix.

866.

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"His accounts of scenery and travelling are obviously

9. Walks in London, Lon., 1878, 2 vols. p. 8vo; 5th ed., rev., 1883.

"So much of late years has been written about London that a new work on the subject is not likely to contain much original matter; but the author has gone over the ground himself, in addition to a careful study of authorities, and personal observation has enabled him to use his book-knowledge effectively. book for perusal as well as for reference."-Spectator, li.

155.

Walks in London' is a

10. The Life and Letters of Frances, Baroness Bunsen, Lon., 1878, 2 vols. 8vo; 3d ed., 1882.

"Mr. Hare has, on the whole, exercised a wise discretion with advantage have curtailed a little both at the beginin allowing the letters to tell their own story, but he might ning and the end of the book."-Ath., No. 2672.

11. Cities of Southern Italy and Sicily, Lon., 1883, cr. 8vo.

"It is pleasant to have set before us, by means of Mr. Hare's excellent word-painting, the many classic and mediæval buildings with which these districts abound, esthen agreeably enlivened by sketches of romantic scenery pecially as these antiquarian subjects are every now and and curious aspects of ancient and modern life."-Spectator, Ivii. 417.

12. Cities of Central Italy, Lon., 1884, 2 vols. p. 8vo. 13. Venice, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 14. Florence, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1887. 15. Sketches in Holland and Scandinavia, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo.

"The author says truly that these Sketches are slight; but they are vivid and picturesque, and convey a more distinct impression of Holland and Scandinavia than many larger works."-Spectator, lviii. 1009.

16. Studies in Russia. Illust. Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. "A volume which may be read with pleasure, and may prove useful to travellers who intend to visit the scenes has described. Regarded as a hand-book, his work deserves to be commended."-Ath., No. 3000.

17. Paris, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo. 18. Days near Paris, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo.

"Hare, Mrs. Emily," (Pseud.) See JOHNSON, MRS. LAURA W., infra.

Hare, F. A. C.

1. Life Assurance Made Easy; or, The Calculation of Nett Rates explained by Simple Arithmetical Demonstration, Lon., 1870, 8vo. 2.

Bonuses: an Aid to the Selection of a Life Office, Lon., 1883, 8vo. 3. William Farr, Lon., 1883, 8vo. 4. LifeInsurance Manual, Lon., 1886, 8vo.

Hare, Hobart Amory, M.D., clinical professor of diseases of children in the University of Pennsylvania. 1. The Physiological and Pathological Effects of the Use of Tobacco, Phila., 1885, 8vo. 2. Questions and Answers on the Essentials of Physiology, prepared especially for Students of Medicine. Illust. Phila., 1888, 12mo.

Hare, John Middleton. 1. Familiar Colloquies between a Father and his Children, Lon., 1862, 12mo. 2. The Ministry and Character of R. H. Hare, Lon., 1874, p. 8vo.

Hare, Maria, (Leycester,) d. 1870, wife of Rev. Augustus William Hare, (ante, vol. i.) For biog., see Lon., 1862, 16mo. HARE, A. J. C., supra. A True and Sad Story of 1862,

Hare, Thomas, M.A., [ante, vol. i., add.,] b. 1806; educated at Queen's College, Cambridge; called to the bar at the Inner Temple 1833; an inspector of charities since 1853. 1. A Treatise on the Election of Representatives, Parliamentary and Municipal, Lon., 1859, 8vo; 4th ed., 1873. 2. The Development of the Wealth of India: with Notes, Lon., 1861, Svo. Thoughts on the Dwellings of the People, Charitable 3. Usque ad Coelum: Estates, Improvement, and Local Government in the Metropolis, Lon., 1862, 8vo.

Hare, W. R. On the Search for a Dinner, [translated from the French.] Lon., 1857, 12mo.

Hare, Capt. William Aldworth Home, R.E. 1. (Trans.) The Armed Strength of Italy; from the German, Lon., 1875, p. 8vo. 2. (Trans.) The Duties of the General Staff, by Major-Gen. Bronsart von Schellen dorf, Lon., 1877-80, 2 vols. 8vo.

Harford, Rev. Frederick Kill, graduated at New Inn Hall, Oxford, 1855; minor canon of Westminster since 1861. The Martyrs of Lyons and Vienne, [verse,] Lon., 1859, 12mo.

vol. i., add..] 1785-1866, b. at Bristol; educated privately Harford, John Scandrett, D.C.L., F.R.S., [ante, and at Christ's College, Cambridge, but took no degree; resided at Blaise Castle, near Bristol, and was a magis

trate and deputy lieutenant for Gloucestershire and Car- | terial Review and Parting Exhortations, 1858. 2. True diganshire. He was intimate with W. Wilberforce and Wisdom Triumphant, 1858. 3. Christian Responsibility, with Hannah More, and was the hero of "Coelebs in Search 1859. 4. Five Lectures on the Second Advent of Our of a Wife." 1. Memoir of the Rev. Richard Chapple Lord Jesus Christ: with Two Sermons on Important Whalley Illustrated by Select Letters and Sermons, Subjects, Worcester, 1863, 8vo. Lon., 1846, 16mo. 2. The Life of Michael Angelo Buonarroti: with Translations of Many of his Poems and Letters; also, Memoirs of Savonarola, Raphael, and Vittoria Colonna, Lon., 1857, 2 vols. 8vo; 2d ed., 1858. 3. Recollections of William Wilberforce during nearly Thirty Years: with Brief Notices of some of his Personal Friends and Contemporaries, Lon., 1864, 8vo; 2d ed., 1865.

Hargis, Robert B. S. Yellow Fever: its Ship Origin and Prevention, Phila., 1881, 8vo.

Hargreave, Charles James, LL.D., F.R.S., 1820-1866, b. at Wortley, near Leeds; educated at University College, London; called to the bar at the Inner Temple 1844; appointed a commissioner under the Incumbered Estates Act (Ireland) 1849. He contributed numerous mathematical papers to the Philosophical Transactions. An Essay on the Resolution of Algebraic Equations, Dublin, 1866, 8vo. Privately printed. Hargreaves, Charles. Divine Providence Considered and Illustrated, Lon., 1851, 12mo.

Hargreaves, H. London a Warning Voice, Lon., 1887, 8vo.

Hargreaves, John George. The Blunders of Vice and Folly, and their Selt-Acting Chastisements, Lon., 1870, p. 8vo.

Hargreaves, Mark Kippax. A Practical Manual of Venereal Disease, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo. Hargreaves, Thomas, F.A.S. A Voyage round Great Britain: with Short Views of Aberdeen, Balmoral, Fécamp, Havre, and Paris, Lon., 1883, cr. 8vo.

Hargreaves, William. 1. Revelations from Printing-House Square: Is the Anonymous System a Security for the Purity and Independence of the Press? Lon., 1864, 8vo; 2d ed. same year. 2. Our Wasted Resources: the Missing Link in the Temperance Reform, N. York, 1875, 8vo. 3. Alcohol and Science; or, Alcohol, what it is, and what it does, Lon., 1882, 8vo.

Hargrove, Charles. 1. Reasons for Retiring from the Established Church; 2d ed., Lon., 1838, 12mo. 2. Notes on the Book of Genesis: with some Essays and Addresses. Collected and Edited by J. Hargrove. Lon., 1870, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

Hargrove, Tazewell L. North Carolina Law Reports, vols. lxviii.-lxxv., Raleigh, 1873-77, 8vo.

Harington, Rev. Charles Sumner, M.A., graduated at Oriel College, Oxford, 1855; ordained 1858; curate of Little Hinton 1858-59; missionary at Calcutta since 1879. 1. Changes upon Church Bells. By C. S. H. Lon., 1868, 16mo. 2. Gonzalez and his Waking Dreams. By C. S. H. Lon., 1868, 16mo. 3. Lupicine; or, The Hermit of St. Loup: founded on the French of Charles Chatelanat. By C. S. H. Lon., 1873, 18mo.

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Harington, John R. S. 1. An Apology for the Adoption of Pædobaptism: with an Appendix concerning the Possibility of Union between the Congregational and Baptist Denominations," Lon., 1864, 8vo. Lynton Grange: a Novel, Lon., 1866, p. 8vo.

2.

Harington, Sir Richard, Bart., B.C.L., b. 1835; educated at Christ Church College, Oxford; called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn 1858; judge of county courts since 1872. The Existing System of County Courts considered, with a View to a Reform in the Local Courts of Justice, Lon., 1876, 8vo.

Harison, Rev. Francis, S.T.D., rector of St. Paul's Church, Troy, N.Y. Words from the Cross: Six Lent Lectures, N. York, 1886, 16mo.

Hark, Rev. J. Max. 1. (Trans.) Extempore on a Wagon: a Metrical Narrative of a Journey from Bethlehem, Pa., to the Indian Town of Goshen, O., in the Autumn of 1803, by G. H. Loskiel, Lancaster, Pa., 1887, 12mo. 2. The Unity of Truth in Christianity and Evolution, N. York, 1888, 12mo.

Harker, Bailey J. Philip Neville of Garriton: a Yorkshire Tale, Lon., 1876, p. 8vo.

Harker, W. The English Standard of Weight, Capacity, and Coin, based on a Natural Unit of Length, and compared with the French Metric System, Lon., 1863, 8vo.

Harker, Rev. William, M.A., graduated at St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, 1839; ordained 1839; vicar of Milton-next-Sittingbourne 1869-81. 1. Minis

Harkey, Simeon Walcher, D.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] professor of theology in the University of Illinois 1850-66. 1. Value of an Evangelical Ministry, 1853. 2. Justification by Faith as taught by Lutherans; or, The Lutheran Doctrine of the Inner Life, Phila., 1875, 12mo.

Harkin, Dr. Alexander. The Nature and Treatment of Sporadic and Epidemic Cholera, Lon., 1885, 8vo. Harkness, Albert, Ph.D., LL.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] b. 1822, at Mendon, Mass.; professor of the Greek language and literature in Brown University since 1855. 1. A Grammar of the Latin Language, for Schools and Colleges, Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 2. A Complete Latin Course for the First Year, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. Also, other schoolbooks.

Harkness, Rev. Henry Law, M.A., graduated at St. John's College, Cambridge, 1849; ordained 1852; rector of St. Swithin's, Worcester, since 1879. 1. Salvation and Service. 2. Important Truths, Lon., 1868, 18mo. 3. Tour in Egypt and Palestine. 4. Preparation, Lon., 1871, 8vo. 5. Remember; or, Counsels to the Young, Lon., 1871, 12mo. 6. Zeal, Lon., 1871, 12mo. 7. Soul Prosperity, Lon., 1872, 16mo. 8. Daily Prayer Union; 2d ed., Lon., 1878, 16mo.

Harkness, Margaret Elise.

1. Assyrian Life and History: with Introduction by R. S. Poole, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 2. Egyptian Life and History according to the Monuments, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo.

Harkness, Thomas, and Nicholson, Henry Alleyne. On the Coniston Group; from the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, Lon., 1868, 8vo.

Harkness, William, M.D., LL.D., b. 1837, at Ecclefechan, Scotland; son of Rev. James Harkness, (ante, vol. i. ;) educated at Lafayette College, Pa., and Rochester University, N.Y.; served in the civil war as naval surgeon. In 1863 he was appointed professor of matheinatics in the U.S. navy, and from 1868 to 1874 was connected with the naval observatory. Magnetic Observations on the "Monadnock," Wash., 1872, 4to. Also, various government reports, &c.

Harlan, Caleb. 1. Elflora of the Susquehanna: a Poem, Phila., 1879, 8vo; 2d ed., 1883. 2. Farming with Green Manures on Plumgrove Farm; 2d ed., enl., Phila., 1880, 16mo. 3. The Fate of Marcel, Phila., 1883, 12mo. 4. Mental Power, Sound Health, and Long Life: how obtained by Diet, Wilmington, Del., 1886, 16mo.

Harlan, George Cuvier, M.D., b. 1835, in Philadelphia; son of Richard Harlan, M.D., (ante, vol. i. ;) educated at Delaware College and at the University of Pennsylvania; served as surgeon during the civil war; professor of diseases of the eye in the Philadelphia Polyclinic since 1887. Eyesight, and How to Care for it, ("American Health Primers.") Illust. Phila., 1879, 16mo.

Harlan, Mary B. Ellen; or, The Chained Mother, and Pictures of Kentucky Slavery, Cin., 1853, 12mo.

Harland, Henry, ("Sidney Luska," pseud.,) b. 1861, in New York City; studied in the College of the City of New York and at Harvard, but did not graduate. From 1883 to 1886 he was employed in the office of the surrogate in New York. 1. As it was Written: a Jewish Musician's Story, N. York, 1885, p. 8vo. 2. Mrs. Peixada, N. York, 1886, 16mo. 3. The Land of Love, N. York, 1887, 16mo. 4. The Yoke of the Thorah, N. York, 1887, 16mo. 5. My Uncle Florimond. Illust. Bost., 1888, 12mo.

Harland, John, F.S.A., 1806-1868, b. at Hull, Eng.; was apprenticed to a printer, but, having made himself an expert short-hand writer, obtained a position on the staff of the Manchester Guardian, with which paper he retained his connection during the rest of his life. He was an ardent and accurate antiquary, and contributed to numerous periodicals. 1. Stray Leaves, Manchester, 1843, 8vo. 2. (Ed.) Ancient Charters and other Muniments of the Borough of Clithero with Translation and Notes, Manchester, 1851, 4to. 3. Historical Account of the Cistercian Abbey of Salley, in Craven, Yorkshire, founded 1147, Lon., 1853, r. 8vo. 4. Ten Days in Paris, 1854, 8vo. 5. (Ed.) The House and Farm Accounts of the Shuttleworths of Gawthorpe Hall, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1856-58, 4 vols. (Ed.) Autobiography of William Stout of Lancaster,

6.

(1665-1732,) Manchester, 1857, 8vo. 7. (Ed.) The Lan- | cashire Lieutenancy under the Tudors and Stuarts: the Civil and Military Government of the Country, as Illustrated by a Series of Royal and other Letters, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1859, 2 parts, 4to. 8. (Ed.) Mamecestre: being Chapters from the Early Recorded History of the Barony; the Lordship or Manor; the Vill, Borough, or Town of Manchester, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1861-62, 3 vols. 8vo. 9. (Ed.) A Volume of Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester in the Sixteenth Century, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1861, 4to. 10. (Ed.) Continuation of the Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester, A.D. 1586-1602, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1865, 4to. 11. The Songs of the Wilsons, with a Memoir of the Family, 1865, 8vo. 12. (Ed.) Ballads and Songs of Lancashire, chiefly older than the Nineteenth Century, Lon., 1865, 12mo; large paper, 4to; 2d ed., corrected and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson, 1875, 8vo.

"There seems to be no reason to doubt that this is a very complete collection of the songs of Lancashire. . The editors are rather insatiable, and all seems to be grist that is brought to their song and ballad mill. It is so with the songs of the Cotton Famine. Nevertheless it is in these and the other ballads and songs in the dialect of the country that the true force and pathos of the volume lie." -Spectator, xlviii. 373.

13. (Ed.) Lancashire Lyrics: Modern Songs and Ballads of the County Palatine, Lon., 1866, 4to. 14. (Ed.) Collectanea relating to Manchester and its Neighbourhood at Various Periods, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1866-67, 2 parts, 4to. 15. (Ed.) Gregson's Portfolio of Fragments relative to the History and Antiquities of Lancashire; 3d ed., 1868, fol. 16. (Ed.) Three Lancashire Documents of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, (Chetham Soc.,) Manchester, 1868, 4to. 17. A Glossary of Words used in Swaledale, Yorkshire, (Eng. Dialect Soc.,) Lon., 1873, 8vo. 18. Genealogy of the Pilkingtons of Lancashire, (Pilkington, Rivington, Durham, Sharples, Preston, St. Helens, and Sutton.) Edited by W. E. A. Axon. Manchester, 1875, 4to. With WILKINSON, T. T., F.R.A.S.: 1. Lancashire Folk-Lore: Illustrative of the Superstitious Beliefs and Practices, Local Customs of the People of the County Palatine, Lon., 1867, 12mo; new ed., 1882, p. 8vo. 2. Lancashire Legends, Traditions, Pageants, Sports, &c., Lon., 1873, p. 8vo. With HERFORD, REV. BROOKE, (ed.) Baines' History of Lancashire, 1867-70, 2 vols. "Harland, Marion," (Pseud.) See TERHUNE, MRS. MARY V., infra.

Harle, William Lockey. 1. A Career in the Commons; or, Letters to a Young Member of Parliament on the Conduct and Principles necessary to constitute him an Enlightened and Efficient Representative, Lon., 1850, p. 8vo. 2. An Argument on the Inutility of the Distinction between Barrister and Attorney, Lon., 1851, 8vo.

1882, 8vo. 10. Inflammations of the Liver and th Sequelæ, Lon., 1886, p. 8vo.

Harley, John, M.D. The Old Vegetable Neuroti Hemlock, Opium, Belladonna, and Henbane: their Phy iological Action and Therapeutic Use: being the G stonian Lectures for 1868, extended, Lon., 1869, Svo. Harley, Rev. Timothy. 1. Christian Poen 2d ed., enl., Lon., 1867, 8vo. 2. The Pleasures of Lo [verse,] Lon., 1882, 8vo. 3. Moon-Lore, Lon., 1885, 8 4. Lunar Science, Ancient and Modern, Lon., 1886, 8 5. Southward Ho! Notes of a Tour to and through State of Georgia in the Winter of 1885-86, Lon., 18 12mo.

Harlow, B. F. (Ed.) Delinquent and Forfei Lands: Acts of the Legislatures of Virginia and W Virginia, &c., Lewisburg, W. Va., 1877, 8vo. Harlow, Miss Lizzie K. Christmas Mince-1 with Shakespearean Spice. Illust. Bost., 1888. Harman, F. E. The Agricultural Position Mysore prior to the Famine of 1876-77, Madras, 18

8vo.

Harman, Henry M. 1. A Journey to Egypt the Holy Land in 1869-1870, Phila., 1873, cr. 8vo. An Introduction to the Study of the Holy Scriptures York. 1879, 8vo.

Harman, Thomas T. 1. Langley Grange Romance of the Time of Charles the First: Noted f Old Documents of the Period, Oldbury, 1885, 8vo. Showell's Dictionary of Birmingham: a History Guide, alphabetically arranged, Birmingham, 1885,

Harmon, Henry C. A Manual of the Pen Laws of the United States of America: embracing the Laws under which Pensions and Bounties are granted, Wash., 1867, 8vo.

Harney, George E. Barns, Out- Buildings, G and Fences: with Plans, &c., N. York, 1870, r. 4to. Harney, George Julian, an Englishman birth; was editor of the Jersey Independent, the D cratic Review, &c.; afterwards removed to the U States. 1. Feudalism in Jersey, Jersey, 1857. 2. Anti-Turkish Crusade: a Review of a Recent Agita with Reflections on the Eastern Question, Bost., 1876, Harney, Rev. Gilbert L. The Lives of B min Harrison and Levi P. Morton, Providence, 1887, 12mo.

Harney, Richard J. History of Winne County, Wisconsin, and Early History of the North Oshkosh, 1880, 4to.

Harold, John. Farming and Railroad Int in America, Lon., 1880, 8vo.

Harpel, Oscar Henry. 1. (Ed.) Poets Poetry of Printerdom: a Collection of Original, Sel and Fugitive Lyrics written by Persons connected Printing. Illust. Lockland, O., 1875, 8vo. 2. I Pictures and Random Rhymes, Lockland, O., 16mo.

Harper, Edward. 1. Protestantism on its being a Series of Letters to the Bishop of London Lon., 1860, 8vo. 2. Rome, Antichrist, and the Pa being a Series of Letters addressed to Dr. Man with Appendix, Notes, &c., Lon.. 1862, 8vo.

Harper, Mrs. Frances Ellen Watkins, ( Afton," pseud.) Eventide: a Series of Tales and Bost., 1854.

Harper, Francis B. The Revelation of St. Expounded, Lon., 1861, 2 vols. 8vo.

Harley, Dr. A. J. The Young Crusoe; or, Adventures of a Shipwrecked Boy. Illust. Bost., 1864, 12mo. Harley, George, M.D., F.R.S., b. 1829, at Haddington. East Lothian, Scotland; graduated M.D. at the University of Edinburgh 1850, and studied scientific medicine for five years in French and German universities. In 1855 he was appointed lecturer on practical physiology and histology in University College, London, where he became professor of medical jurisprudence in 1859. He is a member of scientific and medical societies, English and Continental; was president of the Parisian Medical Society in 1853, and in 1861 received the triennial prize of the Royal College of Surgeons for an essay on the suprarenal bodies. 1. Jaundice: its Pathology and Treatment: with the Application of Physiological Chemistry to the Detection and Treatment of Diseases of the Liver and Pancreas, Lon., 1863, 8vo. 2. Diabetes its Various Forms and Different Treatments, Lon., 1866, p. 8vo. 3. Albuminuria with and without Dropsy its Different Forms, Pathology, and Treatment, 8vo. : Lon., 1866, p. 8vo. 4. Histological Demonstrations: a Guide to the Microscopical Examination of the Animal Tissues in Health and Disease. Edited by George T. Brown. Lon., 1866, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1877. 5. The Urine and its Derangements, Lon., 1872, p. 8vo. 6. The Simplification of English Spelling, Lon., 1877, 8vo. 7. Rational Spelling: a Conservative Scheme for Reform, Lon., 1878, 8vo. 8. The Auld Kirk o' Haddington, the Lucerna, the Lampas Laudoniæ of History: a Critique on an Article on the "Ecclesiastical Buildings in Haddington," Haddington, 1878, 8vo. 9. A Treatise on Diseases of the Liver, with and without Jaundice, Lon.,

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Harper, Rev. Francis Whaley, M.A., uated at St. John's College, Cambridge, 1837; or 1844; vicar of Selby, Yorkshire, since 1850; can York and prebendary of Barnby since 1869. Power of the Greek Tenses, and other Papers, bridge, 1841, 8vo. 2. Sermons preached befo University of Cambridge, 1847. 3. Dialogues o tional Church and National Church Rate, Lon.. 4. Church Teaching for the Church's Ch Lon., 1877, 18mo. 5. The Parson and the Pul Two Sermons, Lon., 1877, 8vo.

Harper, Rev. Frederick, M.A., gradua Queen's College, Oxford, 1874; ordained 1875; of Hinton-Waldrist since 1880. 1. Addresses f People: Four Series, Lon., 1870-75, p. 8vo. 2. A from Oxford; or, Some Words for Christ and Truth 1872, p. 8vo. 3. The Sinner's Welcome, and Papers, Lon., 1876, 12mo. 4. Echoes from Church, Lon., 1880, 12mo; new and enl. series, 1 Harper, Harry. File No. 115; or, A M Steel, N. York, 1886, 12mo.

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