Графични страници
PDF файл
ePub

Haward, John Warrington. A Treatise on Orthopedic Surgery, Lon., 1881, Svo.

Hawarth, Ellen C. Poems, Newark, N.J., 1868, sq. 16mo.

Hawe, Joseph. Insula Sacra; or, Garlands from Sacred Bowers. [verse,] Dublin, 1859, p. 8vo.

Haweis, Rev. Hugh Reginald, M.A., b. 1838, at Egham, Surrey; graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1861; perpetual curate of St. James's, Marylebone, since 1866. He was musical critic and writer of leading articles on the staff of the Echo, and in 1868 became editor of Cassell's Magazine. 1. Music and Morals, Lon., 1871, p. 8vo; 13th ed., 1885.

"A somewhat heterogeneous and unequal book. It is full of pleasant reading, and contains many good criticisms and descriptions; but its theories are often very questionable, and its survey of facts omits much that is essential." -Spectator, xliv. 1467.

"Music and Morals' is a comprehensive term; and it is made here to convey an elaborate analysis of the connection of music with emotion, as well as some critical comments on its position with reference to individual morality, and to its influence and significance in society at large. We cannot commend too highly Mr. Haweis's general exposition of the theory of music as the most profound and subtle artistic instrument for expressing emotion."-Sat. Rev., xxxii. 726.

2. Thoughts for the Times, Lon., 1872, p. 8vo; 10th ed., 1877.

a Birthday Book of Proverbs, Lon., 1884, cr. 8vo. 8. Rus in Urbe; or, Flowers in London Gardens and Smoky Towns. Illust. Lon., 1886, sq. 16mo. 9. Tales from Chaucer: with Introduction. Edited by H. R. Haweis. Lon., 1887, 18mo.

Hawes, Mrs. Angelica H. The Grafted Bud: a Memoir of Angelica Irene Hawes, N. York, 1853, 12mo. Hawes, Capt. Arthur Briscoe. Rifle Ammunition: being Notes on the Manufactures connected therewith, as conducted in the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, Lon., 1859, 8vo.

Hawes, Granville P. The Law relating to General Voluntary Assignments for the Benefit of Creditors, N. York, 1876, 8vo.

Hawes, Rev. Herbert H., D.D. Baptism ModeStudies, Staunton, Va., 1887, 24mo.

Hawes, Horace. 1. Law respecting Parties to Actions, Legal and Equitable, San Fran., 1884, 16mo. 2. The Law relating to the Subject of Jurisdiction of Courts: the Means of Acquiring Jurisdiction, San Fran., 1886, 12mo.

Hawes, J. H. Manual of United States Surveying, Phila., 1868, 12mo.

Hawes, Jesse. Cahaba a Story of Captive Boys in Blue. Illust. N. York, 1888, 8vo.

Hawes, Rev. Joel, D.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1789-1867. 1. Reminiscences of Revivals of Religion in the First Church in Hartford, Hartford, 1865, 8vo. 2. Sermons, Experimental and Practical, N. York, 1866,

Svo.

Hawes, Stephen. 1. Synchronology of the Principal Events in Sacred and Profane History, Bost., 1870, torical Tabular View of the Gospels, Tables of the Para2. New Testament Text-Book: embracing a Hisbles, Discourses and Miracles of Christ, &c. Maps. Bost., 16mo.

Mr. Haweis writes not only fearlessly, but with remarkable freshness and vigour. He is occasionally eloquent, and even pathetic. In all that he says we perceive a transparent honesty and singleness of purpose. . . . Mr. Haweis 12mo. starts with the assertion that there ought to be no fixed dogmas in religion. Doctrine, faith, and morals are all to be progressive."-Sat. Rev., xxxiv. 478. 3. Unsectarian Family Prayers, Lon., 1874; 3d ed., 1880, 12mo. 4. Pet; or, Pastimes and Penalties. Illust. Lon., 1874, p. 8vo; new ed., 1886; new ed., with considerable alterations, entitled "The New Pet," Lon, 5. Ashes to Ashes: a Cremation Prelude, 1875, 16mo. Lon., 1874, p. 8vo. 6. Speech in Season, Lon., 1875, p. Svo; 5th ed., 1881.

"Unlike most extempore sermons, they are from beginning to end full of matter, and at the same time are always lively."-Spectator, xlviii. 921.

7. Current Coin, Lon., 1876, p. 8vo; 4th ed., 1881. 8. Arrows in the Air, Lon., 1878, p. 8vo; 4th ed., 1881. 9. Poets in the Pulpit, [addresses,] Lon., 1880, cr. 8vo; new ed., 1883. 10. American Humourists, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 11. Key of Doctrine and Practice, Lon., 1884, 16mo. 12. My Musical Life, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo.

"The actual details of the musical life of the writer constitute a comparatively small part of his work, which consists chiefly of two distinct elements,-a philosophical and a historical. Mr. Haweis's thoughts upon the whole rationale of music appeal to us as . . . entirely true."-Spectator, lvii. 617.

13. Winged Words; or, Truths Retold, [sermons,] Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 14. (Ed.) Select Poems, (World Library,) Lon., 1886, 18mo. 15. Travels of Dr. Livingstone, Lon., 1886, sq. 16mo. 16. (Ed.) Old Ballads, (World Library,) Lon., 1886, sq. 16mo. 17. (Ed.) Tales of E. A. Poe: Selected, Lon., 1886, sq. 16mo. 18. (Ed.) Essay Gems. By R. W. Emerson. Lon., 1886, sq. 16mo. 19. (Ed.) The Spectator: Selections, with an Introduction, Lon., 1886, sq. 16mo. 20. Christ and Christianity, Lon., 1886-87, 5 vols. p. 8vo. (Vol. i. was the last published. Each volume has a separate sub-title.) 21. Life of Queen Victoria, Lon., 1887, sq. 16mo.

Haweis, Mrs. Mary Eliza, daughter of Thomas Musgrove Joy, a well-known English artist; studied art with her father, and exhibited her first picture at the Royal Academy at the age of sixteen. In 1867 she married Rev. Hugh Reginald Haweis, supra. 1. Chaucer for Children: a Golden Key, Lon., 1876, 4to. 2. The Art of Beauty. Illust. Lon., 1877, 8vo.

and Limited Liability, Lon., 1854, 8vo.
Hawes, William. Observations on Unlimited

Hawke, William H. The Inland and Foreign
Telegraph Code, Lon., 1888, 32mo.

Hawker, Charles, of the Ordnance Office. A History of Sammy's Bed, not Down, nor a Turn-Down, though it turned out down at last. Drawn by Himself. Lon., 1857, 8vo. Anon.

Hawker, Edward. My Life; or, Advice to the Consumptive, Lon., 1860, 18mo.

Hawker, Rev. John, M.A., graduated at Balliol College, Oxford, 1843; ordained 1845; rector of Catleigh, Devonshire, since 1882. 1. Bible Thoughts on the Book of Genesis, Lon., 1873, p. 8vo. 2. Bible Thoughts on the Epistle to the Galatians, Lon., 1874, p. 8vo. 3. The Work of the Holy Ghost in the Present Dispensation, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 4. Unpolished Gems of Scripture, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. Also, single sermons, &c.

Hawker, Rev. Robert Stephen, M.A., 18031875, b. at Stoke Damerel, Devonshire; educated at Pembroke College and Magdalen Hall, Oxford, where he gained the Newdigate prize in 1827 by a poem on Pompeii, and graduated in 1828; ordained 1829; vicar of Morwenstow, Cornwall, from 1884. He contributed to Notes and Queries, All the Year Round, and other periodicals, and many of his poems appeared first in local papers. His "Song of the Western Men," with its stirring refrain, "And shall Trelawney die?" was received by Scott and Macaulay as a genuine old Cornish ballad. For biog., see GOULD, S. BARING-, supra, and LEE, F. G., infra. 1. Tendrils. By Reuben. [Verse.] Cheltenham, 1821, 12mo. 2. Pompeii, Oxf., 1827, 8vo. 3. Records of the Western Shore, [verse,] Oxf., 1832, 12mo. 4. Poems: containing the Second Series of Records of the Western Shore, First Edition; the First Series, Second Edition; and Pompeii, Stratton, 1836, 12mo. 5. Ecclesia: a Volume of Poems, Oxf., 1840, p. 8vo; Lon, 1841. 6 Reeds Shaken with the Wind, Lon., 1843, 16mo. 7. Reeds Shaken with the Wind: the Second Cluster, Lon., 1844, 12mo. 8. Rural Synods. By the Vicar of Morwenstow. Lon., 1844, p. 8vo. 9. Echoes from Old Cornwall, [verse,] Lon., 1846, 8vo. 10. A Voice from the Place of S. Morwenna, in the Rocky Land, uttered to the Sisters of Mercy, at the Tamar Mouth; and to Lydia, their Lady in the Faith, Lon., 1849, 16mo. 11. A Letter to a Friend: containing 3. The Art of Dress. Illust. Lon., 1879, 12mo. 4. some Matters relating to the Church. By a Cornish Chaucer for Schools, Lon., 1880, 8vo. 5. The Art of Vicar. Lon., 1857. 12. Aishah Shoechinab, 1860, 8vo. Decoration. Illust. Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 6. Beautiful Privately printed. 13. The Quest of the Sangraal: a Houses: being a Description of Certain Well-Known Poem. Chant the First. Exeter, 1864, 4to. Privately Artistic Houses, Lon., 1882, 12mo. 7. Chaucer's Beads: printed. (No more published.) 14. The Cornish Bal

"Women whose aim in life soars a little above that of

attracting public admiration and enchaining lovers will
hesitate to profit by Mrs. Haweis's advice to lavish the
same care on the fascinations of their personal adornments
as they now do upon higher things."-Sat. Rev., xliv. 722.
"Though compelled to differ in some things from the
contents of this volume, we heartily rejoice in its publica-
tion, and congratulate its accomplished authoress on being
one of the first to inaugurate something like an artistic
study of things in themselves so important, so educating,
and which enter so largely into the daily life of us all."
Spectator, li. 637.

lads, and other Poems: including a Second Edition of "The Quest of the Sangraal," Lon., 1869, fp. 8vo; new ed., 1884.

"Contemplation of nature, and an ear alive to legend and tradition, have apparently fitted him to be the balladist of Cornwall.... Had his name and all local data been wanting.. ... we should have known the author for one who dwelt where rock and river, bosky combe, and rude, wild ocean are not far apart, in a land full of ancient towers and shrines, cairns, holy wells, and the like, the nurses of poetic fancy."-Sat. Rev., xxvii. 628.

15. Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall, Lon., 1870, p. 8vo. 16. Poetical Works: now first Collected and Arranged, with a Prefatory Notice, by J. G. Godwin, Lon., 1879, p. 8vo.

"Welcome as a presentation of much remarkable work which was formerly only to be got together with considerable pains and trouble."-Ath., No. 2683. Hawkes, George. The Publican's Guide for reducing Spirits from Five to One Hundred Gallons, Lon., 1868, 8vo.

Hawkes, Rev. Henry. 1. The Passover Moon; 2d ed., Lon., 1878, 12mo. 2. A Service for commemorating the Anniversary of Our Saviour's Instituting the Lord's Supper, Lon., 1880, p. 8vo. 3. An Evening Service for solemnizing the Lord's Supper, Lon., 1882, cr. 8vo. 4. Recollections of John Pounds, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. Hawkes, John. 1. A Steam Trip to the Tropics; or, A Description of a Visit to the West Indies: including Part of Central and South America, Lon., 1864, p. Svo. 2. On the General Management of Public Lunatic Asylums in England and Wales, Lon., 1871, 8vo. Hawkes, Mervyn L. A Primrose Dame: the Story of the Election, Bristol, 1886, 12mo.

Hawkey, C. The Shakespeare Tapestry woven in English Verse, Edin., 1880, cr. 8vo; new ed., 1881. Hawkings, James. The Tradesman's Guide to Superficial Measurement, Lon., 1854, 12mo; 3d ed., 1884. Hawkins, A. E. Poems, Lon., 1869, 12mo.

Hawkins, Benjamin Waterhouse, F.L.S., F.G.S., b. 1807, in London; was a pupil in art of the late W. Behnes, the English sculptor, but has devoted himself to natural history, and especially to geology and paleontology. In 1852 he was appointed by the Crystal Palace Company to make the life-size models of extinct animals, many of them of colossal proportions, exhibited at that institution. In 1868 he visited New York and lectured on scientific subjects at the Cooper Union. He was afterwards employed in that city in making models of extinct animals for Central Park.

Hawkins, Edward, F.R.S., F.S.A., F.L.S., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1780-1867, b. at Macclesfield, Eng.; keeper of antiquities in the British Museum 1826-60. Medallic Illustrations of the History of Great Britain and Ireland to the Death of George II. Compiled by the Late Edward Hawkins, F.R.S., and edited by Augustus W. Franks, F.R.S., and Herbert A. Grueber. Printed by Order of the Trustees of the British Museum. Lon., 1885, 2 vols. 8vo.

"We have heartily to commend this work-which is obviously destined to be a standard one-to the attention of numismatists and historical students."-Ath., No. 3017. Hawkins, Rev. Edward, D.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1789-1882, b. at Bath; graduated, double first class, at St. John's College, Oxford, 1811; vicar of St. Mary's, Oxford, 1823-28; provost of Oriel College, rector of Purleigh, and canon of Rochester, from 1828; Ireland tion, Academical and Clerical, Oxf., 1864, 8vo. 2. Adprofessor of exegesis 1847-61. 1. Notes upon SubscripConsiderations upon the Athanasian Creed and the Proditional Notes on Subscription, Oxf., 1866, 8vo. Appendix, Lon., 1874, 8vo. posed Synodical Declaration: with a Supplement and 4. Notes on Church and State, Lon., 1874, 8vo. 5. Additional Notes on Church and State, Lon., 1877, 8vo. Also, single sermons, &c. Christi College, Cambridge, 1848; ordained 1850; vicar Hawkins, Rev. Edward, graduated at Corpus Greek Testament, 1851. of Walton, diocese of Carlisle, from 1875. Notes on the

3.

Hawkins, Rev. Edwards Comerford, M.A., graduated at Exeter College, Oxford, 1849; ordained 1854; head-master of St. John's Foundation School, Leatherhead, 1861-83; vicar of St. Bride's, London, since 1883. Spirit and Form: Sermons preached at Leatherhead, Lon., 1881, p. 8vo.

Hawkins, Rev. Ernest, B.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1802-1868, b. at Lawrence End, Hertfordshire; graduated at Balliol College, Oxford, 1824; secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel 1843-64, and from then canon of Westminster. 1. The Book of Psalms: with Notes, Lon., 1857, 12mo; new ed., 1868. 2. SickBed Services, compiled from the Holy Scriptures and the Book of Common Prayer: with a Selection of Hymns, Lon., 1867, 8vo; new ed., 1885.

Hawkins, Francis Vaughan, M.A., b. 1833; educated at Trinity College, Cambridge; called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn 1856. 1. A Concise Treatise on the Construction of Wills, Lon., 1863, 8vo. 1. The Science of 2. Optional MoLand Transfer, Lon., 1869, Svo. bilization of Land: a Scheme for Simplifying Title and

Drawing Simplified, Lon., 1843, 8vo. 2. A Comparative
View of the Human and Animal Frame, Lon., 1860, fol.
3. The Artistic Anatomy of the Horse. Illust.
Lon.,
1865, 8vo. 4. The Artistic Anatomy of Cattle and
Sheep. Illust. Lon., 1867, 12mo. 5. The Artistic
Anatomy of the Dog and Deer, Lon., 1876, 12mo.
Comparative Anatomy, as applied to Purposes of Artists,
Lon., 1883, 12mo.

6.

of

Hawkins, Cæsar Henry, M.R.C.S., F.R.S., 1798 -1884, b. at Bisley, Gloucestershire; surgeon to St. George's Hospital 1829-61; sergeant-surgeon to the queen from 1862; president of the Royal College Surgeons 1852 and 1861. 1. The Hunterian Oration, Lon., 1849, Svo. 2. The Hunterian Oration, Presidential Addresses, and Pathological and Surgical Writings, Lon., 1874, 2 vols. Svo. Printed for private circulation.

Hawkins, Rev. Charles Halford, M.A., graduated at St. John's College, Cambridge, 1861; ordained 1862; assistant master and chaplain in Winchester College. (Ed.) Noctes Shaksperiana: a Series of Papers, Winchester, 1887, 8vo. (Contains thirteen essays by members of the Winchester College Shakspere Society.) "The reader will find in all the papers facts and suggestions that will well repay him for his labour."-Spectator, Ixi. 206.

Hawkins, Frederick W., b. 1849; a London journalist; editor in 1877-79 of The Theatre, and member of the editorial staff of the London Times. 1. The Life of Edmund Kean; from Published and Original Sources, Lon., 1869, 2 vols. 8vo.

"Our hopes have been completely disappointed by Mr. Hawkins's volumes. With the exception of a few particu lars of Kean's last illness, . . the 810 pages we have waded through have told us nothing that we knew not before we read them; have generally marred a curious tale in the telling,' have thrust improbabilities upon us, have perverted facts, have exhibited ignorant prejudices to an amount we had fondly believed impossible."-Sat. Rev.,

xxvii. 782.

2. Annals of the French Stage, from its Origin to the Death of Racine, Lon., 1884, 3 vols. 8vo; new ed., 1885, 2 vols. 3. The French Stage in the Eighteenth Century: with Portraits, Lon., 1888, 2 vols. 8vo.

"His book is trustworthy, readable, and entertaining. Beaumarchais include some late discoveries with regard Highly interesting chapters upon Voltaire and upon

to those authors."-Ath., No. 3172.

Hawkins, Rev. Henry, M.A., graduated at Exeter College, Oxford, 1848; ordained 1849; chaplain of Middlesex County Asylum, Colney-Hatch, from 1867. 1. "Work in the Wards," by Asylum Attendants, Lon., 1874, Svo. 2. A Friendly Talk with a New Patient, Lon., 1878, 8vo. 3. "Time tryeth Troth;"" A Friend and Companion never meet amiss;" "Visiting Day at the Asylum," Lon., 1878, 8vo.

Hawkins, I. (Trans.) On the Teeth of Wheels, by M. Camus; 3d ed., Lon., 1868, 8vo.

Hawkins, Daisy Waterhouss. Old Point-Lace: how to copy and imitate it. Illust. Lon., 1878, p. 8vo. Hawkins, Dexter Arnold, 1825-1886, b. at Camden, Me.; graduated at Bowdoin in 1848; studied law at Harvard, and at the Ecole des Droits, Paris, France; travelled for two years under a commission from the. governor of Maine, to examine European methods of instruction, and in 1854 began the practice of law in New York City. 1. Traditions of Overlook Mountain, 1873. 2. Education the Need of the South: an Address, 1875. 3. Archbishop Purcell Outdone! The Roman Hawkins, James. 1. The Physical, Moral, and Catholic Church in New York City, and Public Land Intellectual Constitution of the Deaf and Dumb: with and Public Money, N. York, 1880, 8vo. Also, numerous some Practical Remarks concerning their Education, addresses, &c. | Lon., 1863, p. Svo. 2. On the Desirability of National

790

Hawkins, J. Louisiana Supreme Court Reports, vols. xix.-xxiv., (1867-72.) Pub. by the State. 186872, 6 vols. 8vo.

Hawksley, Thomas, M.D. Matter,-its Ministry to Life in Health and Disease, and Earth,-as a Natural Link between Organic and Inorganic Matter, Lon., 1867.

Education for the Deaf and Dumb Poor, Lon., 1868, 8vo. | the East to my Bible-Class. Illust. Lon., 1885, cr. 3. Are the Beneficent Uses of Public Institutions ade- 8vo. quately supported by their Present Organization? a Social Question, Lon., 1872, 8vo. 4. Phases of Modern Doctrine in Relation to the Intellectual and Active Powers of Nature and Man, Lon., 1878, p. 8vo. Hawkins, Rev. James. Short Sketches on Important Subjects, Lon., 1878, 8vo.

man.

3.

Hawkins, James E., editor of The Gospel Watch1. "Time Enough Yet;" or, The Danger of Delay, Lon., 1874, 32mo. 2. Cleansed, Clothed, and Crowned; or, What is Conversion? By J. E. H., Author of "The Blood of the Lamb," &c. 2d ed., Lon., 1874, 32mo. Short Papers on Prophecy, Lon., 1878, 12mo. 4. Nothing to Do. By J. E. H. Lon., 1878, 32mo. 5. Lectures on the Tabernacle of Israel, Lon., 1883, 12mo. Hawkins, Rush Christopher, b. 1831, at Pomfret, Conn.; a lawyer; colonel of a regiment of zouaves during the civil war. He made a collection of books from the first fifteenth-century presses, which was sold at auction in New York in 1887. Titles of the First Books from the Earliest Presses established in Europe before the End of the Fifteenth Century: with Brief Notes upon their Printers, N. York and Lon., 1884, 4to.

"The real merits of Mr. Hawkins's book are, in my opinion, concentrated in the admirable photo-lithographs which he has given of twenty-five first books of early fifteenth-century presses."-J. H. HESSELS: Acad., xxvi. 56. (This article is mainly taken up with a defence of Mr. Hessels's work on Gutenberg against the strictures of Mr. Hawkins.)

Hawkins, Thomas, F.R.G.S., 1810-1889, b. at Glastonbury, Eng.; studied anatomy at Guy's Hospital under Sir Astley Cooper, but devoted himself chiefly to geology. 1. Memoirs of Ichthyosauri and Plesiosauri, Extinct Monsters of the Ancient Earth. Illust. Lon,, 1834, fol. 2. The Book of the Great Sea-Dragons. Illust. Lon., 1840, fol. 3. The Lost Angel and the History of the Old Adamites: a Poem, Lon., 1840, 4to. 4. One Centenary of Sonnets, Lon., 1841, p. 8vo. 5. The Wars of Jehovah in Heaven, Earth, and Hell, [verse.] Illust. Lon., 1844, 8vo. 6. Victorian Verses, Lon., 1848, fol. 7. Prometheus: a Lyrical Drama, Lon., 1850, 8vo. 8. The Christiad, [verse,] Lon., 1853, 8vo. 9. My Life and Works, Lon., 1887, 8vo.

Hawkins, W. M. Key to the Tithe Question: a Hand-Book on Tithes; 2d ed., Lon., 1887, 8vo.

Hawkins, William Bentinck Lethem, [ante, vol. 1., HAWKINS, W. B., add.] The Limits of Religious Belief: Suggestions addressed to the Student in Divine Things, Lon., 1862, 12mo.

Hawkins, Rev. William George, b. 1823, at Baltimore, Md., and educated at Wesleyan University and the Protestant Episcopal Seminary in Alexandria, Va.; has held rectorships in various States, edited the National Freedman 1863-66, and has been engaged in domestic missions. 1. Life of John H. W. Hawkins, Bost., 1860, 12mo. 2. Lunsford Lane; or, Another Helper from North Carolina, Bost., 1863, 12mo. 3. History of the New York National Freedmen's Association, N. York, 1868.

Hawks, E. R. Guide to Obtaining Civil Employment, for Soldiers. Lon., 1887, sq. 16mo.

Hawks, Rev. Francis Lister, D.D., LL.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] d. 1866. 1. History of North Carolina: with Maps and Illustrations: vol. ii., Embracing the Period of the Proprietary Government, from 1663 to 1729, Fayetteville, N.C., 1860, 8vo. 2. The American Forest. By Uncle Philip. N. York, 1862. 3. "Is not this a Brand plucked out of the Fire?" The Story of a Penitent: Lola Montez, N. York, 1867, 16mo. With PERRY, WILLIAM STEVENS: 1. (Ed.) Journals of the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America: with Notes, &c.: vol. i., 1861, 8vo. (No more published.) 2. Documentary History of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, N. York, 1863-64, 2 vols. 8vo. Hawksford, C. M. Adela a Jersey Romance, Lon., 1883, 3 vols. cr. 8vo.

Hawkshaw, Mrs. Ann. 1. Dionysius the Areopagite: with other Poems, Lon., 1842, p. 8vo. 2. Poems for my Children, 1847. 3. Aunt Effie's Rhymes for Little Children, Lon., 1852, 4to. Anon. 4. Aunt Effie's Gift to the Nursery, Lon., 1854, 12mo. Anon. 5. Sonnets on Anglo-Saxon History, Lon., 1854, 12mo.

Hawksley, Cordelia J. 1. G. F.S.: What does it mean? Lon., 1882, p. 8vo. 2. Eleven Letters from

Svo.

Hawksworth, Rev. John, perpetual curate of Woore, Salop. The Glorious Gospel of the Blessed God: a Series of Twelve Parochial Lectures, Lon., 1854, p. Hawley, Rev. Bostwick, D.D., b. 1814, at Camillus, N.Y.; graduated at Wesleyan University in 1838, and has held numerous pastorates in New York State. 1. Manual of Instruction for Baptized Children in the Methodist Episcopal Church, N. York, 1865, 24mo. 2. Manual of Methodism: The Doctrines, General Rules, and Usages of the Methodist Episcopal Church: with Scripture Proofs and Explanations, N. York, 1868, 16mo. 3. Beauties of Rev. George Herbert, A.M., N. York, 1877, 12mo. 4. Dancing as an Amusement considered in the Light of the Scriptures, of Christian Experience, and of Good Taste, N. York, 1877, 16mo. 5. The Shield of Faith; or, Articles of Religion, General Rules, Baptismal and Church Covenants, of Methodist Episcopacy: 6. The with Scripture Proofs, N. York, 1880, 16mo. Sunday, Cin., 1882, 16mo. Also, single sermons, &c. Lenten Season: including Whit Sunday and Trinity

Hawley, C. The Drapery Trade before the Public: showing the Extortionate Profits made by many Retail Drapers, Lon., 1878, 8vo.

Hawley, Rev. Charles, D.D., 1819-1885, b. at Catskill, N.Y.; graduated at Williams College 1840, and at Union Theological Seminary 1844; pastor of a Presbyterian Church in Auburn, N.Y., 1858-85. 1. History of the First Presbyterian Church of Auburn, Auburn, N.Y., 1876. 2. Early Chapters of Cayuga History: Jesuit Missions in Goi-o-gouen, 1656-1684; also, An Account of the Sulpitian Mission among the Cayugas about Quinte Bay, 1668. Introduction by J. G. Shea. Auburn, N. Y., 1879, 8vo. 3. Sanitary Reforms, 1880. 4. Early Chapters of Seneca History, 1881. 5. Memorial Discourses, 1884.

Hawley, Frederick. The Royal Family of England containing Remarks on the Principles of the Royal Succession: with a Genealogical Account of the Royal Family, Lon, 1851, 12mo.

Hawley, Frederick B. Capital and Population : a Study of the Economic Effects of their Relations to each other, N. York, 1882, 12mo.

Hawley, Giles P. (Ed.) Wit, Wisdom, and Philosophy of J. P. F. Richter, 1884, 8vo.

Hawley, John G. American Criminal Reports: The Latest and Most Important Criminal Cases determined in the Federal and State Courts: with Notes, &c., Chic., 1878-82, 3 vols. 8vo.

Hawley, John Hugh. 1. A Complete Course of English Composition, Lon., 1868, p. 8vo. 2. Ode to Her Majesty Queen Victoria on her Sixtieth Birthday, Lon., 1879, 4to. 3. In Memoriam Louis Eugène Napoléon, [verse,] Lon., 1880, 8vo. 4. Dates Made Easy: a Mnemonic Synopsis of the History of England, Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo.

Hawley, Richard. An Essay on Free Trade, ("Economic Monographs,") N. York, 1878, 12mo.

Hawley, Thomas P. Digest of Nevada Reports, and Sawyer's Circuit Court Reports: with a Table of Cases, &c., San Fran., 1878, 8vo.

Haworth, Euphrasia Fanny. 1. St. Sylvester's Day, and other Poems. Illust. Lon., 1847, p. 8vo. 2. Stories for Idle Afternoons. Lon., 1875, p. 8vo.

Haworth, Martin E. 1. The Silver Greyhound, Lon., 1880, p. Svo. (Contains incidents of travel.) 2. Road Scrapings, Coaches, and Coaching, Lon., 1881, 8vo. Hawtayne, G. H. West Indian Illustrations of Shakespeare, 1887.

"Hawthorn, J. R. H.," (Pseud.) See HOULDING. JOHN RICHARD, infra.

Hawthorne, Alice. Stories of Remarkable Birds, Phila., 1854, 16mo.

"Hawthorne, Emily," (Pseud.) See CHARLES, EMILY T., supra.

Hawthorne, George Stuart, M.D. 1. A New Mode of Ventilating Hospitals, &c., Belfast, 1830, 12mo. 2. The True Pathological Nature of Cholera, and an Infallible Method of treating it, Lon., 1848, 8vo. 3. The Doctrine of the Trinity a Doctrine not of Divine Origin, and the Duty of Christian Men in Relation thereto, Lon., 1851, 8vo.

Hawthorne, Julian, b. 1846, in Boston, Mass.; son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, infra; went to Europe with his parents in 1853, and after their return entered Harvard in 1863, but did not graduate. He began the study of civil engineering at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard, and was a student in Dresden, Germany, in 1868-70. From 1870 to 1872 he was employed as a hydrographic engineer in the department of docks in New York. In 1872 he went abroad, spent two years in Dresden, and from 1874 till 1881 resided in London, where he was for two years on the staff of the Spectator and contributed to reviews and magazines. In 1882 he returned to New York. 1. Bressant: a Romance, Lon., 1873, 2 vols. р 8vo.

"We are glad to find that Mr. Julian Hawthorne's first work has a sufficient character of its own to mark it off from the writings of that most original of American authors, his father. . . . While we freely concede great merit to Bressant,' we must at the same time admit that its faults are still greater. The admirable promise of the first volume is not fulfilled in the second."-Sal. Rev., xxxv. 854.

2. Idolatry: a Romance, Lon., 1874, 2 vols. p. 8vo. "That the younger Hawthorne is gifted with a power which, judged by the standard of ordinary novels, is great, cannot be doubted. Nor can it be doubted that he has misused that power."-Sat. Rev., xxxviii. 540.

3. Saxon Studies, Lon, 1876, p. 8vo. "Saxon Studies' are just one string of impertinences, four hundred pages long, against the people who, with greater kindness than wisdom, allowed the author to live among them for some years."-Sat. Rev., xli. 780.

"It is hardly to be wondered at that Saxon Studies' have caused great offence in Dresden, but they might be entitled Siberian Studies' for any likeness they bear to the people therein described."-M. BETHAM-EDWARDS: Acad., ix. 505. 4. Garth: a Novel, Lon., 1877, 3 vols. p. 8vo. "Garth' strikes us as a decided improvement upon 'Bressant' and Idolatry:' it is a very much riper and wiser work. We must add that we use these terms in a strictly relative sense; for Mr. Hawthorne's standing fault seems to be a certain incurable immaturity and crudity."-Nation,

xxiv. 369.

5. Mrs. Gainsborough's Diamonds: a Story, N. York, 1878, 16mo. 6. Sebastian Strome: a Novel, Lon., 1879,

3 vols. p. 8vo.

"Find what fault with the story we may, and it is unquestionably a story of very fitful and uneven power, there is a force of passion and genius in the book which it is impossible to ignore."-Spectator, lii. 1476.

7. The Laughing Mill, and other Stories, Lon., 1879, p. 8vo. S. Archibald Malmaison, Lon., 1879, p. 8vo. "Strong as the telling may be, it is so bluntly, boldly worked out as to be only horrible."-Nation, xxxviii. 449. 9. Ellice Quentin, and other Stories, Lon., 1880, 2 vols. p. Svo. 10. Yellow Cap, and other Fairy Stories for Children, Lon., 1880, p. 8vo. 11. Prince Saroni's Wife, and other Stories, Lon., 1882, 2 vols. p. Svo. 12. Beatrix Randolph: a Novel, Lon., 1883, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 13. Dust: a Novel. Illust. N. York, 1883, 12mo. 14. Fortune's Fool, Lon., 1883, 3 vols. 8vo. 15. Nathaniel Hawthorne and his Wife: a Biography, Bost., 1884, 2

vols. 8vo.

By the help of his father's very copious notes of the sayings and doings and looks of the children, and with his own recollections of boyhood to draw upon besides for the later period, he has taken us into the intimacy of the household, and confided the charm and dignity and wisdom of Hawthorne's fatherhood. . . . The biography is like Mr. James's Hawthorne' in that it fails to give any history of that immortal part of the man in which the world takes interest."-Nation, xxxix. 525.

16. Love-or a Name, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 17. Miss Cadogna: a Romance, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 18. Noble Blood, N. York, 1885, 12mo. 19. John Parmelee's Curse. N. York, 1886, 16mo. 20. The Trial of Gideon, and Countess Almara's Murderer, N. York, 1886, 12mo. 21. Confessions and Criticisms, Bost., 1886, 8vo.

"He confesses. . . the vital principles of his intellectual life. his æsthetic. religious, and philosophical creed. His criticisms, in themselves, are a slight matter, though there are brilliant and incisive remarks sown through them."— Nation, xliii. 507.

22. A Tragic Mystery; from the Diary of Inspector Byrnes, N. York, 1887, 16mo. 23. An American Penman; from the Diary of Inspector Byrnes, Lon. and N. York, 1887, p. 8vo. 24. The Great Bank-Robbery; from the Diary of Inspector Byrnes, Lon. and N. York, 1887, p. Svo. 25. Another's Crime; from the Diary of Inspector Byrnes, N. York, 1888, 16mo. 26. David Poindexter's Disappearance, and other Tales, N. York, 1888, 16mo. 27. A Dream and a Forgetting: a Novel, N. York and Chic., 1888, 12mo. 28. The Professor's Sister: a Romance, N. York and Chic., 1888, 12mo. 29. Section 558; or, The Fatal Letter; from the Diary of Inspector

Byrnes, N. York, 1888, 16mo. 30. Sinfire; [also] Douglas Duane, by Edgar Fawcett, Phila., 1888, 12mo. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1804-1864. In 1857, after retiring from the consulship at Liverpool, Hawthorne travelled on the Continent, making a long stay in Italy. He returned to England in 1859, and in 1861 (1860?) to America, where he again took up his residence at Concord. He died at Plymouth, N.H., while on a trip to the White Mountains with exPresident Pierce. For biog., see HAWTHORNE, JULIAN, supra, and JAMES, HENRY, infra. 1. The Marble Faun, Bost., 1860, 12mo; Eng. ed., entitled Transformation; or, The Romance of Monte Beni," Lon., 1860, 3 vols. "It has a great deal of beauty, of interest and grace; but it has, to my sense, a slighter value than its companions, and I am far from regarding it as the masterpiece of the author, a position to which we sometimes hear it assigned. The subject is admirable, and so are many of the details; but the whole thing is less simple and complete than either of the three tales of American life."-HENRY JAMES: Hawthorne, ("English Men of Letters,") Amer. ed., p. 160.

[ocr errors]

2. Our Old Home, Bost., 1863, 16mo. 3. Pansie: a Fragment: the Last Literary Effort of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lon., 1864, 12mo. 4. Passages from the American Note-Books of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Bost. and Lon., 1868, 2 vols. 8vo. 5. Passages from the English NoteBooks of Nathaniel Hawthorne. [Edited by his Widow.] Bost., 1870, 2 vols. 12mo.

"There remains to be noted the occasional shrewdness of observation; some anecdotes of men like Buchanan, Thackeray, Jerrold, and Lord Houghton; a few good descriptions of show-places in England and Scotland, and, finally, the general readableness, in virtue of the writer's celebrity, as well as of the skill with which he does the work in hand, and the intrinsic interest of the things he writes about."-Nation, xi. 59.

6. Passages from the French and Italian Note-Books of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lon., 1871, 2 vols. 8vo.

"His journals throw but very little light on his personal feelings, and even less on his genius per se.... They deepen our sense of that genius, while they singularly diminish our impression of his general intellectual power. These volumes of Italian notes, charming as they are, England. The theme in this case is evidently less congeare on the whole less rich and substantial than those of

nial. ... We seem to see him strolling through churches and galleries as the last pure American, attesting by his shy responses to dark canvas and cold marble his loyalty to a simpler and less encumbered civilization."-H. JAMES, JR.: Nation, xiv. 172.

7. Septimius Felton; or, The Elixir of Life, Bost., mance," Lon., 1872. 1872, 12mo. Eng. ed., entitled "Septimius: a Ro(This was edited by Una Haw

thorne.)

"Of course it cannot take rank with Hawthorne's finished works, but no other author of our time could have written it."-Ath., No. 2330.

"After making allowance for the incomplete state of the story, we must confess that to our taste Hawthorne appears to have in this case ventured rather too far into the dim dreamland of the grotesque and unnatural. The story, however, is powerful and interesting as it stands. The art is admirable, but we can hardly call it healthy. It will commend itself, however, to the lover of the rarer literary essences, though it may probably remain caviare to the vulgar."-Sat. Rev., xxxiv. 89.

8. Tales of the White Hills, Bost., 1877, 16mo. 9. A Virtuoso's Collection, and other Tales, Bost., 1877, 16mo. 10. The Works of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Bost., 1879, 24 vols. 16mo. 11. The Complete Works of Nathaniel Hawthorne with Introductory Notes by G. P. Lathrop. Illust. Bost., 1883, 12 vols. 8vo. 12. Sketches and Studies, Bost., 1883, 16mo. 13. Dr. Grimshawe's Secret: a Romance. Edited, with Preface and Notes, by Julian Hawthorne. Bost. and Lon, 1883, p. 8vo. (A fragment.)

"The publication of Dr. Grimshawe's Secret,' though it contains detached passages which are full of Hawthorne's thought and style, cannot add to Hawthorne's reputation." -Sat. Rev., lv. 25.

of Hawthorne's best writing, it is as a whole crude and raw. "While it abounds in passages marked by all the beauties

The lover of Hawthorne will be glad to find in the fact that the book required editing a justification for demore precisely what the limits of the editor's labors clining to become interested in it, at least until he knows were."-Nation, xxxv. 66. Hawthorne, Rainey. 1. The Ruling Passion, Lon., 1857, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 2. The Rich Husband: a Novel of Real Life, Lon., 1858, 3 vols. 12mo. Hawthorne, Robert, Ph.D., professor in Argyll College, Panchgani, India. The Student's Manual of Indian History, Lon., 1885, 8vo.

Hawthorne, Sophia, (Peabody,) 1810-1871, b. at Salem, Mass.: married, 1842, to Nathaniel Hawthorne, supra. Notes in England and Italy, N. York, 1868, 12mo.

Hawtrey, Mrs. 1. The Alphabet of Fruits, for Good Children. Illust. Lon., 1866, 16mo. 2. My Sunday Companion: Hymns and Poems, Lon., 1869, 16mo. 3. Village Songs. Illust. Lon., 1876, 16mo.

Hawtrey, Miss Edith. Talent in Tatters; or, Some Vicissitudes in the Life of an English Boy. By Hope Wraythe, [pseud.] Illust. Lon., 1878, p. 8vo. Hawtrey, Edward M. Corydalis: a Story of the Sicilian Expedition. [verse,] Lon., 1880, sm. 8vo. Hawtrey, Louisa. Castle Cornet; or, The Island's Troubles in the Troublous Times, Lon., 1872, p. 8vo. Hawtrey, Rev. Montagu John Gregg, M.A., graduated, senior optime, at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1829; ordained 1833; rector of Rimpton 1841. 1. Sponsors for the Poor, 1840. 2. Earnest Address to New Zealand Colonists with Reference to their Intercourse with the Native Inhabitants, 1840. 3. Justice to New Zealand, Honour to England, Lon., 1861, 8vo.

Hawtrey, Rev. Stephen Thomas, M.A., d. 1886, aged 78; graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1832; mathematical master of Eton College 1851-71; warden of St. Mark's School 1871. 1. The Story of a Week spent by St. Mark's School, Windsor, on Board a Man-of-War, Windsor, 1859, 12mo. Privately printed. 2. St. Mark's School by the Sea-Side in the Summer of 1861, Lon., 1861, 8vo. 3. Reminiscences of a French Eton, Lon., 1867, 8vo. Privately printed. 4. A Narrative Essay on a Liberal Education, Lon., 1868, 8vo. 5. The Aims, Duties, and Rewards of a School-Master, Lon., 1870. 6. An Introduction to Euclid. Part I. Lon., 1874, 12mo; new ed., 1884.

Hay, Sir Alexander. Estimate of the Scottish Nobility during the Minority of James the Sixth, (Grampian Club Pub.,) Lon., 1873, 8vo.

Hay, Arthur, ninth Marquis of Tweeddale, 1824-1878, b. at Yester; educated at Leipsic and Geneva; served in the army 1841-66, retiring with the rank of colonel; succeeded to the title 1876. He contributed many papers on ornithology to Ibis, the Transactions of the Royal Zoological Society, and other scientific periodicals, which were collected after his death. Ornithological Works. Edited and revised by Capt. R. E. W. Ramsay, F.L.S., &c.: together with a Biographical Sketch by W. H. Russell, LL.D., Lon., 1881, 8vo. Printed for private circulation.

Hay, C. A., and Jacobs, H. E. (Trans.) Doctrinal Theology of the Lutheran Church exhibited and verified from Original Sources, by Heinrich Schmid, Phila., 1875, 8vo.

Hay, David. 1. Domestic Servants: their Interests and Duties, Lon., 1852, 24mo. 2. Home; or, The Way to make Home happy, Lon., 1854, 18mo; 9th ed., 1876. 3. A Father's Religious Counsels, addressed to his Son at School; new ed., Lon., 1860, 18mo. 4. "All for Christ:" a Brief Memorial of the Late J. Edge, Lon., 1865, 8vo. 5. G. Whitefield; or, Consecrated Eloquence, Lon., 1867, 8vo.

Hay, Ebenezer Story, of New Zealand, died young, leaving poems considered among the finest produced in Australasia. Some Characteristics of Wordsworth's Poetry, and their Lesson for us: an Essay; and some Poems by Fleta, Dunedin, N.Z., 1881. “Hay, Elzey," (Pseud.) See ANDREWS, FANNY,

supra.

Hay, James. New and Easy Method of Finding the Time at Sea, Edin., 1865, 8vo.

Hay, Rev. James, minister of the parish of Kirn. Johnson his Characteristics and Aphorisms; 2d ed., Lon., 1884, p. 8vo.

Hay, James William. 1. Catalogue of the Collection of Egyptian Antiquities belonging to the Late R. Hay, Lon., 1869, 16mo. 2. Mysie's Pardon, Edin., 1873, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

Hay, Jane Eleanor. The Three Boys: a Child's Story. Illust. Lon., 1855, 16mo.

Hay, Lieut. John, R.N. Pilotage of the British Channel, from Scilly to the Downs, Lon., 1850, sq. 8vo. Hay, John, rector of Musselburgh Grammar-School. The Self-Testing Arithmetic, on a New Plan, Glasgow, 1863, cr. 8vo.

Hay, John, h. 1838, at Salem, Ind.; graduated at Brown University 1858; studied law in Springfield, Ill., and was admitted to the bar in 1861, in which year he went to Washington as assistant secretary to President Lincoln, remaining with him till his death. He also acted as Lincoln's adjutant and aide-de-camp, served for several months under Gens. Hunter and Gillmore, and was brevetted colonel. He was first secretary of legation at Paris 1865-67, chargé d'affaires at Vienna 1867-68, and secretary of legation at Madrid 1868-70; assistant secretary of state 1879-81. He was an editorial writer on the New York Tribune between 1870 and 1875, and is joint-author with J. G. Nicolay of an elaborate Life of Abraham Lincoln, published as a serial in the Century Magazine, 1887, &c. I. Castilian Days, Bost., 1871, 12mo.

"In spite of some interferences with the reader's pleas ure, Castilian Days' is a very readable book, so trustworthy is Mr. Hay's sense of what will agreeably engage the attention of the general reader without jading it, so interesting is the nation which he describes, so good were his opportunities of close observation of the political leaders who have been of especial interest of late, and so much more clear and lively than is common is his way of expressing himself."-Nation, xiv. 93.

2. Pike County Ballads, and other Pieces, Bost., 1871, 12mo; new ed., Lon., 1886.

"It cannot be denied that there is quaint vigour in Mr. Hay's manner of telling these anecdotes, but there is nothing in the ballads to warrant the praise bestowed upon them by the American press."-Ath., No. 2291.

Full of sharp, graphic touches, which bring the vividest scenery, physical and moral, before your eyes."-Spectator, xliv. 918.

3. Little Breeches, and other Pieces, Humorous, Descriptive, and Pathetic, Lon., 1871, 12mo.

Hay, Sir John Charles Dalrymple, Bart., C.B., F.R.S., b. 1821, and educated at Rugby; entered the British navy; served in China, the Crimea, and elseHe has where, and retired as rear-admiral in 1870. been several times returned to Parliament from different boroughs. 1. The Reward of Loyalty, Edin., 1862, 8vo. 2. Remarks on the Loss of H.M.S. "Captain," Lon., 1871, 8vo. 3. Ashanti and the Gold Coast, and what we know of it: a Sketch, Lon., 1873, p. 8vo.

IIay, Martyn. Madeline Heathcote, Edin., 1873, p. 8vo.

Hay, Mary Cecil, 1840 ?-1886, daughter of T. W. Hay, a watchmaker at Shrewsbury; spent her latter years at East Preston, Sussex. 1. Hidden Perils, Lon., 1873, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 2. Old Myddleton's Money, Lon., 1874, Hay, Rt. Rev. George, D.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 3 vols. p. 8vo. 3. Victor and Vanquished, Lon., 1874, Bishop of Danlis. 8vo. 1. The Scripture Doctrine of Mira-3 vols. p. 4. Brenda Yorke, and other Tales, Lon., cles Displayed, Lon., 1853, 12mo. 2. Works. Edited by 1875, 3 vols. p. 8vo. 5. The Squire's Legacy, Lon., 1875, Bishop Strain. Edin., 1871-73, 7 vols. p. 8vo. 8vo. p. 6. Nora's Love-Test, Lon., 1876, 3 vols. Hay, George, of Arbroath. 1. History of Ar- 8vo. 7. The Arundel Motto: a Novel, Lon., 1877, 12mo. broath to the Present Time: with Notices of the Neigh- 8. Under the Will, and other Tales, Lon., 1877, 3 vols. p. bouring District, Arbroath, 1876, cr. 4to. 2. (Ed.) 8vo. 9 For her Dear Sake, Lon., 1880, 3 vols. cr. 8vo.

Round about the Round O with its Poets. Illust. Arbroath, 1883, 4to; new ed., 1885, 8vo.

"The letter-press of the volume is mostly composed of verse with a local colour, written by persons connected with the town."-Ath., No. 2910.

Hay, Helen Selina, Countess of Gifford, 1807-1867, daughter of Thomas Sheridan; married, first, to the fourth Lord Dufferin, and secondly, in 1862, to George, Earl of Gifford, (by courtesy,) son of the eighth marquis of Tweeddale. Lispings from Low Latitudes; or, Extracts from the Journal of the Hon. Impulsia Gushington. [Edited by Lord Dufferin.] Lon., 1863, obl. 8vo.

Hay, J. Marley. 1. The Scenery of the Dee, with Pen and Pencil. Illust. Aberdeen, 1884. 2. The Lady of St. Arven, [verse,] Lon., 1884, 8vo.

3 vols.

10. Missing, and other Tales, Lon., 1881, 3 vols. p. 8vo; new ed., 1883. 11. A Sister's Sacrifice, &c., Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 12. Dorothy's Venture, Lon., 1882, 3 vols. cr. 8vo. 13. Bid Me Discourse, and other Tales, Lon., 1883, 3 vols. p. 8vo; new ed., 1884. 14. Lester's Secret, Lon., 1885, 3 vols. cr. 8vo. 15. A Wicked Girl, and other Tales, Lon., 1886, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

Hay, Matthew. An Experimental Investigation of the Physiological Action of Saline Cathartics, Edin., 1884, 8vo.

Hay, Robert. Redstan: a Tale of the Welsh Border, and other Sketches, Biographical and Descriptive. Lon., 1865, 8vo.

Hay, Thomas. History of a Case of Recurring Sarcomatous Tumor of the Orbit in a Child. Plates. Phila., 1877, 8vo.

« ПредишнаНапред »