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deputy collector at Buckergunge, Bengal. The Peasantry | ogy. 1. Geology of the High Plateaus of Utah, Wash., of Bengal: being a View of their Condition under the Hindu. Mahomedan, and English Rule, Calcutta and Lon., 1874, 12mo.

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Dutt, Shoshee Chunder, Rái Báhádar, a native of Lower Bengal, and member of a family belonging to the Kayast, a well-known writer caste. The first three works in the following list (which is probably incomplete) were published under the pseudonyme of "J. A. G. Barton": 1. Bengal: an Account of the Country and the Effects of British Rule, Lon., 1874, 12mo. 2. The Ancient World, Lon., 1875, 12mo. 3. The Modern World, Lon., 1876, 12mo. 4. Historical Studies and Recreations, Lon., 1879, 2 vols. 8vo. (Contains the three works before mentioned, and two others of which parts only had appeared in two Indian magazines.)

"His own country he knows thoroughly well, and for what he says of it he may rightly lay claim to respectful attention."-Sat. Rev., xlvii. 781.

5. India, Past and Present: with Minor Essays on Cognate Subjects, Lon., 1880, 8vo.

"He writes sensibly and forcibly on matters with which his education and experience have made him competent 6. The Works of Shoshee Chunder Dutt, Lon., 1885,

to deal."-Sat. Rev., 1. 428.

6 vols.

Dutt, Toru, 1856-1877, youngest of the three daughters of Govin Chunder Dutt, a magistrate in his native province and a man of learning and cultivation, who survives them all. She made a very thorough study of the language and literature of France and of England, and in 1874 published a very full and learned essay on the writings of Leconte de Lisle, with translations into English verse. Having devoted herself to the study of Sanskrit, she translated the Vishnupurana into English blank verse. Meanwhile she was composing and translating poetry with extraordinary assiduity and apparently with equal ease in Hindustani, French, and English. She wrote also a romance in French, Le Journal de Mlle. d'Arvers, which was published in Paris, with a critical study by Mlle. Clarisse Bader, in 1879. She left some original poems in English, and other productions. 1. A Sheaf gleaned in French Fields, Bhowanipore, 1876; 2d ed., with a Prefatory Memoir by her Father, Lon., 1881, 8vo. (Contains English translations of about two hundred French poems, selected from the works of some of the least as well as the best known authors of the nineteenth century.)

"The 'Sheaf gleaned in French Fields' would have been an extraordinary feat had it been performed by an English lady of high education; from a Hindu girl it was little short of miraculous "-Sat. Rev., xlviii. 241. "Books like this are sure to be cherished for the pathetic sweetness there is in them, to say nothing of latent intellectual stimulation.'-Spectator, liv. 287.

2. Ancient Ballads and Legends of Hindustan: with an Introductory Memoir by Edmund W. Gosse, Lon., 1882, 12mo; new ed., 1885.

"Lovers of poetry will be grateful to Mr. Gosse for making them acquainted with her hitherto unpublished feats in English verse."-Sat. Rev., liii. 441.

Dutt, Udoy Chand. The Materia Medica of the Hindus: compiled from Sanscrit Medical Works: with a Glossary of Indian Plants by George King, M.B., F.L.S., Superintendent of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Calcutta, Calcutta, 1877, 8vo.

"This is the most interesting work on the Materia Medica of India which has yet been published, and will be welcomed by all students of the history of medicine." GEORGE BIRDWOOD: Acad., xii. 146.

Dutton, Amy. The Streets and Lanes of a City: being the Reminiscences of Amy Dutton: with a Preface by the Bishop of Salisbury, Lon., 1871, fp. 8vo.

1880, 4to, with atlas in fol. 2. Tertiary History of the Grand Cañon District: Monographs of the United States Geological Survey. Illust. Vol. ii., Wash., 1882, 4to, with atlas in fol.

Dutton, George. The Present Crisis; or, The Currency. By Bank Crash, Esq., [pseud.] Rochester, N.Y., 1857.

Dutton, Isabella, (Mansfield,) sister of the first Baron Sandhurst; married, 1848, to Hon. Ralph Heneage Dutton, son of the second Baron Sherborne. Woman's Temptation: a Novel, Lon., 1860, 3 vols. p. 8vo. Dutton, Rev. Reginald George, M.A., graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1879; ordained 1880; curate, successively, of All Saints', South Lambeth, St. Mary's, Portsea, and St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, London, and assistant at St. James's, Westminster. Plain Words for Christ: being a Series of Readings for Working-Men, Lon., 1880, 12mo. 2. Spiritual Counsels; or, Helps and Hindrances to Holy Living, Lon., 1886, 12mo. 3. The Discipline of Life: being Last Words of Counsel with a Preface by the Rev. and Hon. Augustus Legge, Canon of Rochester, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.

1.

Dutton, Rev. William Elliott, F.R.H.S., educated at Balliol College, Oxford; ordained 1874; vicar of Menston-in-Wharfedale, Leeds, 1876. 1. History of the Crusades: with a Preface by William Denton, Lon., 1876, p. 8vo. 2. Stories of the Crusades, Lon., 1878. 3. (Ed.) Wesley's Eucharistic Manual; 2d ed., Lon., 1880.

Du Val, Charles, late of the carbineers, attaché to the staff of the garrison commandant, and editor of the News of the Camp during the investment of Pretoria. With a Show through Southern Africa, and Personal Reminiscences of the Transvaal War, Lon., 1882, 2 vols. 8vo; 2d ed., 1885.

"Mr. Mark Twain' has a great deal to answer for. Unlike Falstaff, though witty enough himself. (after the fashion of his country,) he has been the cause of very little wit in others. It is scarcely too much to say that had Mr. Du Val never read the New Pilgrim's Progress' he would have written a really interesting book of travels. the Boer campaign and the famous leagues of Pretoria, the second part, in the author's personal reminiscences of there is a great deal that is interesting, and not a little that is instructive."-Sat. Rev., lv. 473.

In

Duval, J. C. Adventures of Big-Foot Wallace, the Texan Ranger, Phila., 1870, 12mo; 3d ed., 1873. Duval, Philip Snaith. Notes on the Ten Commandments: with Illustrations from Scripture Biography, Lon., 1872, 8vo.

Duxbury, C. John Cotton; or, The Successful Factory-Lad, Manchester, 1873, 12mo.

Duyckinck, Evert Augustus, [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1816-1878, b. in New York City; graduated at Columbia College in 1835; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1837, but devoted himself to literature, chiefly as an editor and compiler. 1. (Ed.) Wit and Wisdom of Sydney Smith: with a Biographical Memoir, &c., 1858, 8vo. 2. Irvingiana: Memoranda of the Literary Career of Washington Irving, N. York, 1859, 4to. 3. History of the War for the Union: Civil, Military, and Naval, N. York, 1861-65, vols. 8vo. 4. Memorials of John Allan, N. York, 1864. 5. National Portrait-Gallery of Eminent Americans; from Original Full-Length Paintings by Alonzo Chappel, N. York, 1864, 2 vols. tion: with Memoirs of the Authors, N. York, 1865. 7. 4to. 6. (Ed.) Poems relating to the American RevoluSupplement to the Cyclopædia of American Literature, N. York, 1865, r. 8vo. 8. History of the World, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, 1870, 4 vols. 9.

Lives and Portraits of the Presidents of the United States, (1789-1872.) Illustrated by A. Chappel. N. York, 4to. 10. Portrait-Gallery of Eminent Men and Women of Europe and America: with Biographies, N. York, 1872-74, 2 vols 4to.

Duyckinck, George Long, 1823-1863, brother of E. A. Duyckinek, supra, b. in New York City; gradDutton, Major, Hon. Charles, b. 1842; son of uated at the University of New York in 1843; studied the third Baron Sherborne; was deputy assistant quarter-law and was admitted to the bar, but never practised. 1. master-general in Bengal 1877-78. Life in India, Lon., 1882, p. 8vo.

Dutton, Captain Clarence Edward, b. 1841, at Wallingford. Conn.; graduated at Yale College in 1860; served in the civil war as an officer in the volunteer army, and in 1863 received a commission in the ariny of the United States. He has been employed in several geological surveys under the government, and in 1887 was put in charge of the division of volcanic geol

Life of Bishop Ken, 1855, 18mo. 2. Life of George Herbert, N. York, 18.8, 18mo. 3. Life of Jeremy Taylor, 1860, 18mo. 4. Life of Latimer, 1861, 8vo. 5. (Ed.) Fireside Shakespeare. Illust. Phila., 1876, 8vo.

Dvārakānātha Raya. Cholera and its Preventive and Curative Treatment: with an Introduction by T. F. Allen, N. York, 1884, 8vo.

Dwight, Rev. Benjamin Woodbridge, Ph.D., a grandson of Timothy Dwight, (q. v., ante, vol. i.,) b.

Dwyer, Charles P. 1. The Economy of Church, Parsonage, and School Architecture, N. York, 1856, 8vo. 2. The Immigrant Builder; or, Practical Hints to Handy Men. Illust. Phila., 1872, 8vo.

at New Haven, Conn., in 1816; graduated at Hamilton | American Opinions on the "Alabama" and other PolitiCollege, Clinton, N.Y., in 1835, and at the theological cal Questions, N. York, 1870. school of Yale College in 1838; became a Congregational minister, but in 1844 gave up pastoral work and devoted himself to teaching, chiefly in New York City; in 1867 settled in Clinton, N.Y. 1. Modern Philology: its Discoveries, History, and Influence, N. York, 1859, 8vo; 3d ed., 1864, 2 vols.; new ed., 1877. 2. The Higher Christian Education, N. York, 1860, 12mo. 3. History of the Strong Family, Albany, 1871, 2 vols. 8vo. The History of the Descendants of J. Dwight, of Dedham, Mass., N. York, 1874, 2 vols. 8vo.

4.

Dwight, Mrs. Elizabeth Amelia, (White.) Life and Letters of Col. Wilder Dwight. By his Mother. Bost., 1868, 8vo.

Dwight, Henry E. 1. (Ed.) Life and Writings of Hon. V. L. Bradford, Phila., 1885, 8vo. Printed for private distribution. 2. The Life and Character of Edwin Gilliam Booth, a Prominent Lawyer, Legislator, and Philanthropist, Phila., 1886, 8vo.

Dwight, Henry O. Turkish Life in War Time, N. York, 1881, p. 8vo.

"Mr. Dwight was in Constantinople from 1876 to 1879, and from there wrote letters as correspondent to the New York Tribune.' Despite its fragmentary style, this book is the most vivid and faithful sketch of Turkish character that we have ever seen."-Nation, xxxii. 338. Dwight, James. Lawn Tennis, Bost., 1886, 12mo. Dwight, John Sullivan, [ante, vol. i., add.,] b. 1813, in Boston, Mass.; graduated at Harvard 1832; editor of the Journal of Music, 1852-1881. (Trans.) Guide to Musical Composition, by H. Wohlfahrt, Bost., 1859, 12mo.

Dwight, Miss Mary Ann, [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1806-1858, b. at Northampton, Mass. 1. Lecture on Art: introductory to a Course on the Art of Design, Phila., 1851, 8vo. 2. Introduction to the Study of Art, N. York, 1856, 8vo. 3. Art as a Branch of Education, Bost., 1857, 8vo.

Dwight, Theodore, [see DWIGHT, THEODORE, Jr., ante, vol. i., add.,] 1796-1866, a nephew of Timothy Dwight, (q. v., ante, vol. i.,) b. at Hartford, Conn.; graduated at Yale College in 1814; removed to Brooklyn, N.Y., in 1833, and became a journalist, chiefly in connection with religious papers and magazines. 1. The Roman Republic of 1849: with Accounts of the Inquisition, &c., N. York, 1851, 12mo. 2. The Kansas War; or, The Exploits of Chivalry in the Nineteenth Century, N. York, 1859, 12mo. 3. Life of Garibaldi: translated from his Private Papers, N. York, 1882, 12mo.

Dwight, Theodore William, grandson of Timothy Dwight, (ante, vol. i.,) and brother of B. W. Dwight, supra, b. 1822, at Catskill, N.Y.; graduated at Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y., 1840; became tutor and professor at Hamilton College, and in 1858 professor of municipal law at Columbia College, N.Y. 1. Argument in the Court of Appeals in the Rose Will Case, N. York, 1864, 8vo. 2. Cases extracted from the Report of the Commissioners of Charities in England, and the Disposition of Property for Charitable and Public Uses, N. York, 1864, 8vo.

Dwyer, Edward, LL.D., b. 1821; graduated at Trinity College, Dublin, 1845; called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn 1857; puisne judge at the Cape of Good Hope since 1868. A Compendium of the Principal Laws and Regulations relating to the Militia of Great Britain and Ireland, Lon., 1858, 12mo.

service. On Seats and Saddles, Bits and Bitting, and Dwyer, Francis, major of hussars in the Austrian the Prevention and Cure of Restiveness in Horses, Lon., 1868, cr. 8vo; 3d ed., 1879. And see BORBSTAEDT, A.,

supra.

Dwyer, Rev. John. 1. Christian Work for Gentle Hands, Lon., 1863, 18mo; 3d ed., 1873. 2. Daily Help in the Way of Holiness, Lon., 1870, 32mo; new ed., 1881. 3. Christian Thoroughness: a Memorial Sketch of T. A. Shillington, Lon., 1875, 8vo.

Dyall, Charles. A Fair Apparition; or, A Night with the Muses, and other Sketches in Rhyme and Prose, Liverpool, 1877, 4to.

“Dyce, Gilbert," (Pseud.) See FITZGERALD, PERCY H., infra.

Dyce, W. C. The Sailmaker's Place-Book; or, The Practical Construction of Jibs, Lon., 1876, 12mo. Dychard, James. (Ed.) Queer Things of the Service, Lon., 1872, 12mo.

Dye, Deacon. Life and Public Services of General U. S. Grant, Phila., 1868, 8vo. Dye, F. 1. Hot-Water Supply: a Practical Treatise upon the Fitting of Hot-Water Apparatus, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo. 2. The Cooking-Range and its Remedies, Lon., 1888, 12mo. 3. Hot-Water and Steam-Cooking Apparatus: a Guide for Builders, Lon., 1888, 18mo.

Dye, J. H., M.D. Painless Childbirth; 3d ed.,. Buffalo, 1885, 12mo.

Dye, John Smith. The Adders' Den; or, Secrets of the Great Conspiracy to overthrow Liberty in America, N. York, 1864, 8vo; new ed., with additions and changed title, 1866.

Dye, William McE., b. in Pennsylvania; graduated at the U.S. Military Academy 1853; served in the civil war, attaining the rank of major and brevet colonel; retired 1870; served in the Egyptian army, 1873, as assistant to chief of staff. Moslem Egypt and Christian Abyssinia; or, Military Service under the Khedive, in his Provinces and beyond their Borders, as experienced by the American Staff, N. York, 1880, 8vo. "Colonel Dye's book is full of valuable material, but it is not very well digested."--Nation, xxxii. 77.

Dyer, Alfred Stace. The European Slave-Trade in English Girls: a Narrative of Facts, Lon., 1880, Svo; 9th ed., 1885.

Dyer, Rev. Alfred Saunders, M.A., graduated at Clare College, Cambridge, 1876; ordained 1876; chaplain at Kidderpore, and curate of St. Paul's Cathedral, Calcutta, since 1884; editor of the Indian Church Quarterly Review since 1887. 1. A Hero from the Forge: a Biographical Sketch of Elihu Burritt, Lon., 1877, 8vo. Dwight, Thomas, M.D., b. 1843, in Boston, Mass.; 2. C. H. Spurgeon, the Great Metropolitan Preacher, graduated at the Harvard Medical School 1867; was in- Lon., 1877, 8vo. 3. Christian Liberia the Hope of the structor in comparative anatomy at Harvard 1872-73; Dark Continent: with Special Reference to the Work lecturer and professor of anatomy at Bowdoin College and Mission of E. S. Morris, of Philadelphia, Lon., 1879, 1872-76; instructor in histology at Harvard 1874-83, 8vo. 4. Sketches of English Nonconformity, Lon., 1881, and in the latter year was elected professor of anatomy p. 8vo. 5. (Trans.) Poems of Madame Guyot: with Meat Harvard. 1. The Intracranial Circulation, (Boylston moir, Lon.. 1884. Prize Essay,) Cambridge, 1867, 8vo. 2. The Anatomy of the Head with Six Lithographic Plates representing Frozen Sections of the Head, Bost., 1876, 8vo. 3. Frozen Sections of a Child. Illust. N. York, 1881, 8vo. Dwight, Timothy, D D., grandson of Timothy Dwight, (ante, vol. i.,) b. 1828, at Norwich, Conn.; graduated at Yale College in 1849; studied theology at Yale 1851-55, and at Bonn and Berlin 1856-58; was chosen professor of sacred literature and New Testament Greek in the theological school at Yale in 1858, and president of Yale College in 1886. He was a member of the New Testament Revision Company. 1. The True Ideal of an American University, 1872. 2. (Trans.) Commentary on the Gospel of John: with an Historical and Critical Introduction: vol. i.; from the French of F. Godet: with Preface, Introductory Suggestions, and Additional Notes, N. York, 1886, 8vo.

Dwinelle, John W. 1. The Colonial History of San Francisco, San Fran., 1864, 8vo; 3d ed., 1866. 2.

Dyer, Mrs. Catherine Cornelia, (Joy,) wife of Rev. Heman Dyer, infra. 1. Henry and the Bird's Nest, Phila., 1852. 2. Sunny Days Abroad; or, The Old World seen with Young Eyes, N. York, 1871. 3. Brief History of the Joy Family, N. York, 1876. 4. Records of the Dyer Family, 1884. With HALL, MARCIA A., Christmas at Fern Lodge, 1860.

Dyer, David. 1. Tests of Truth: Replies to Letters of a Sceptical Friend, N. York, 1866, 12mo. 2. History of the Albany Penitentiary, Albany, 1867, 8vo. Dyer, E. P. Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, in Verse, Bost., 1869, 16mo.

Dyer, F.J. The Old Man of the Cliff; or, A Summer's Vacation, Bost., 1874.

Dyer, Frederick N., son of J. C. Dyer, infra. 1. The Slave-Girl: a Poetical Tale, Lon., 1848, 8vo. 2.

:

The Step-Son a Domestic Romance of the Present Day, Lon., 1854, 2 vols. 12mo.

Dyer, Gertrude P. 1. Stories of the Flowers. Illust. Lon., 1877, 12mo. 2. Elsie's Adventures in Insect-Land. Illust. Lon., 1882, sq. 16mo; new ed., 1883. 3. How Hettie caught the Sunbeam. Illust. Lon., 1886, 12mo. 4. Armour-Clad; or, Arthur's Victory, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo.

Dyer, Captain H. McNeile, R.N. 1. The West Coast of Africa, from the Deck of a Man-of-War, Lon., 1876, 8vo. 2. Light from H.M.S. "Torch," Lon., 1876, 8vo.

Dyer, Rev. Heman, D.D., b. 1810, at Shaftesbury, Vt.; graduated at Kenyon College 1833, and became a clergyman in the Protestant Episcopal Church; was president of the Western University of Pennsylvania, Pittsburg, from 1844 to 1849, when he removed to Philadelphia, where he became secretary and general manager of the Evangelical Knowledge Society. 1. The Voice of the Lord upon the Waters, N. York, 1870. 2. Records of an Active Life, N. York, 1886, 8vo.

Dyer, Henry. The Education of Civil and Mechanical Engineers, Lon., 1880, 8vo.

Dyer, Isaac W. Maine Statutes relating to Business Corporations organized under the General Law, except Banks, Railroad and Insurance Companies; 2d ed., Portland, 1884, 12mo.

Dyer, J. M. Exercises in Analytical Geometry, Lon., 1881, cr. 8vo. With SMITH, R. P., Mathematical Examples, Pure and Mixed, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.

Dyer, Joseph Chessborough, 1780-1871, b. at Stonington Point, Conn.; removed to England in 1811, and was active in introducing there several American inventions. He was associated with William Tudor in founding the North American Review in 1815, and aided in founding the Manchester Guardian in 1821. He published the following pamphlets: 1. Notes on the Legalized Reclamation of Fugitive Slaves from the Free States of America, 1859. 2. Democracy, 1859. 3. Notes on the Slaveholders' Mission to England, 1860. 4. Notes on Political Mistakes, Manchester, 1862, 8vo. 5. Letter to William H. Seward, 1862.

Dyer, Lewis. The Greek Question and Answer, Bost., 1884, 8vo.

Dyer, Rev. Sidney, Ph.D., b. 1814, at Cambridge, N.Y.; served in the Black Hawk War in 1832; studied theology; was ordained as a Baptist minister in 1842; became a missionary among the Choctaws, and soon afterwards secretary of the Indian Mission Board at Louisville, Ky., and since 1859 has resided in Philadelphia as district secretary of the American Baptist Publication Society. 1. Voices of Nature and Thoughts in Rhyme, Louisville, 1849, 12mo. 2. Psalmist for the Use of Baptist Churches, 1854. 3. Songs and Ballads, N. York, 1857, 12mo. 4. The Drunkard's Child, 1866. 5. Great Wonders in Little Things, Phila., 1871, 16mo. 6. Black Diamonds; or, Curiosities of Coal, Phila., 1873, 16mo. 7. Home and Abroad, 1874, 12mo. 8. Hoofs and Claws, Phila., 1875, 16mo. 9. Ocean Gardens and Palaces; or, The Tent on the Beach, Phila., 1877, 16mo. 10. Elmdale Lyceum; or, God's Mighty Workers, 1879, 16mo. 11. The Beautiful Ladder; or, The Two Students, Phila., 1881, 16mo.

Dyer, Rev. Thomas Firminger Thiselton-, b. 1848, in London; graduated at Pemberton College, Oxford, 1869; ordained 1872; vicar of St. Paul's, Penzance, 1877-78; rector of Bayfield, Dereham, since 1884. 1. British Popular Customs, Present and Past: an Account of the Various Games and Customs associated with the Different Days of the Year in the British Isles, Lon., 1875, p. 8vo; new ed., 1878. 2. English Folk-Lore, Lon., 1878, p. 8vo; 2d ed., rev., 1879.

"The book contains a quantity of miscellaneous material for other writers to sift and arrange."-Sat. Rev., xlvi. 562.

3. Domestic Folk-Lore, Lon., 1881, 18mo. 4. FolkLore of Shakespeare, Lon., 1884, r. 8vo. "As far as we remember, this is the first time that the folk-lore of the great dramatist has been treated as a whole. The amount of well-arranged knowledge is great."-Ath., No. 2961.

5. The Folk-Lore of Plants, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo. 6. Great Men at Play, Lon., 1889, 2 vols. p. 8vo.

Dyer, Thomas Henry, LL.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1804-1888, b. in London; was for some time a clerk in the West India House, and on the cessation of his duties consequent upon the Emancipation he devoted himself to literature. He travelled extensively in Europe,

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made a special study of the topography and antiquities of Greece and Italy, and contributed largely to Dr. Smith's dictionaries. 1. The History of Modern Europe, from the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the War in the Crimea in 1857, Lon., 1861-64, 4 vols. 8vo; new ed., with continuation to 1871, 1877, 5 vols. 8vo. "Mr. Dyer means his work not as a book of reference, but as a book to be read. And in this point of view, as it is not a book of the highest order, it turns out almost of necessity a tiresome and not very profitable one."-Sat. Rev., xiii. 360.

2. Ancient Rome: reprinted from Dr. W. Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, Lon., 1864, r. 8vo. 3. A History of the City of Rome, its Structures and Monuments, from its Foundation to the End of the Middle Age, Lon., 1865, 8vo; 2d ed., 1883. 4. The Ruins of Pompeii: Photographic Views: with an Account of the Destruction of the City, and a Description of its Most Interesting Remains, Lon., 1866, 4to. 5. The History of the Kings of Rome: with a Prefatory Dissertation on its Sources and Evidence, Lon., 1867, 8vo. "He seems to have no notion whatever of the Comparative method of dealing with any subject... It does not seem to come into his head that Roman history is part of the general history of the world, and that light may be thrown upon it by other branches of history. We can hardly think that Dr. Dyer is likely to win back many scholars to the ancient faith."-Sat. Rev., xxv. 657.

For a controversy between the author and Professor Seeley, who had criticised this work in his edition of Livy, see Ath., No. 2307, &c.

6. (Ed.) Pompeii: its History, Buildings, and Antiquities, &c.; 2d ed., Lon., 1868, p. 8vo.

written for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowl"The book in its present form is based on one originally edge between thirty and forty years ago. But so great has been the progress effected since in the excavation of Pompeii that the present compilation may be regarded as almost a new and independent work."-Sat. Rev., xxiii. 826. 7. Roma Regalis; or, The Newest Phase of an Old Story, Lon., 1872, 8vo. 8. A Plea for Livy: with Critical Notes on his First Book, Lon., 1873, 8vo. 9. Ancient Athens: its History, Topography, and Remains, Lon., 1873, r. 8vo. 10. Imitative Art: Remarks on Beauty, Sublimity, and Taste, Lon., 1882, 8vo.

Dyer, Rev. William Henry. 1. The Sudden Summons: Two Sermons, Lon., 1858, 8vo. 2. The Question of the Irish Church calmly considered: a Book of Facts, Lon., 1868, 8vo.

Dyke, Thomas Jones. 1. On Downward Intermittent Filtration of Sewage as it is now in Practical Operation at Troedyrhiew, near Merthyr-Tydfil, MerthyrTydfil, 1872, 8vo. 2. On the Work of a Medical Officer of Health, and how to do it: an Address, Merthyr-Tydfil, 1873, 8vo. 3. Diary of a Medical Officer of Health, Lon., 1873, 4to.

Dykes, Rev. James Oswald, D.D., b. 1835, at Point Glasgow, near Greenock, Scotland; graduated at Edinburgh University and studied theology at New College, Edinburgh, and in Germany; was ordained minister of the Free Church 1859, and in 1869 became minister of the Regent Square Presbyterian Church, London. 1. The Written Word, and other Essays, Lon., 1868, p. 8vo. 2. The Beatitudes of the Kingdom, Lon., 1872, 8vo. 3. The Office of the Eldership in Primitive and Present Times, Lon., 1872, 16mo. 4. The Laws of the Kingdom, Lon., 1873, 12mo. 5. From Jerusalem to Antioch: Sketches of the Primitive Church, Lon., 1874, 8vo. 6. The Relations of the Kingdom to the World, Lon., 1874, p. Svo. 7. Abraham the Friend of God: a Study from Old Testament History, Lon., 1877, 8vo. 8. Daily Prayers for the Household, for a Month, Lon., 1881, cr. 8vo. 9. Sermons, Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 10. The Law of the Ten Words, Lon., 1884, 12mo. 11. The Gospel according to St. Paul: Studies in the Epistle to the Romans, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.

Dykes, James William Ballantine. Salem: an Indian Collectorate, Lon., 1853, 8vo. Dykes, Thomas. 1. Stories of Scottish Sports. "Rockwood." By' Glasgow, 1881, 8vo. 2. All Round Sport with Fish, Fur, and Feathers, 1887, p. 8vo. Dymond, Alfred Hutchinson, b. at Croydon, Surrey, Eng., in 1827; was at first engaged in mercantile pursuits, but afterwards adopted the profession of journalist, and was for some time managing editor of the London Morning Star; emigrated to Canada in 1869 and became one of the editorial writers on the Toronto Globe; was a member of the Dominion Parliament from 1874 till 1878, appointed executive officer of the Ontario Agricultural Commission in 1880, and

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in 1881 principal of the Institution for the Education of the Blind at Brantford. The Law on its Trial; or, Personal Recollections of the Death-Penalty and its Opponents, Lon., 1865, 12mo.

Dymond, Henry. Memoir of Mary Dymond, of Lewes compiled chiefly from her Letters and Memoranda, Lon., 1857, 12mo.

Dymond, Robert. (Ed.) "Things New and Old" concerning the Parish of Widecombe-in-the-Moor and its Neighbourhood, Torquay, 1876, 8vo.

Dyson, Mrs. 1. Apples and Oranges: Talks with Children on Fruits. Illust. Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 2. Christian Discipleship: Words to Young Disciples, Lon., 1886, 12mo.

Dyson, C. E. Bird-Keeping: a Practical Guide for the Management of Singing and Cage Birds, Lon., 1878; enl. ed., 1884, 12mo.

Dyson, John B. 1. The History of Wesleyan Methodism in the Congleton District, Lon., 1856, 12mo. 2. Methodism in the Isle of Wight: its Origin and Progress down to the Present Times, Ventnor, 1865, 8vo.

Dyson, Rev. Samuel, D.D., graduated at the Church Missionary College, Islington, 1852; ordained 1854; missionary at Krishnagur, Bengal, 1856–64; Fellow and examiner of the University of Calcutta 186978; senior tutor of Church Missionary College, Islington, since 1879. 1. Brahmic Intuition, Calcutta, 1867, 8vo. 2. Brahmic Dogmas, Calcutta, 1873, 4 parts, 8vo.

Eade, Sir Peter, M.D., F.R.C.P., b. 1825; mayor of Norwich 1883; knighted 1885; senior physician to the Norwich and Norfolk Hospital. 1. Medical Notes and Essays: vol. i., Lon., 1883, 8vo. 2. Some Account of the Parish of St. Giles, Norwich. Maps, Illust., &c. Lon., 1887.

Eades, Christopher. England and France: a Prize Essay: Adjudicators, the Press and the People, Dublin. 1861, 8vo; 2d ed., 1862.

Eadie, Rev. John, D.D., LL.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1810-1876, b. at Alva, Stirlingshire, Scotland; was professor of Biblical literature in the United Secession Divinity Hall, Glasgow, from 1843 until his death, and combined with his professorial duties those of pastor of a large congregation in Glasgow. 1. A Commentary on the Greek Text of the Epistle to the Colossians, Lon., 1856, 8vo; 2d ed., 1884. 2. Life of John Kitto, D.D., Edin., 1857, 8vo; new ed., rev. by A. G. Haygood, 1872. 3. A Commentary on the Greek Text of the Epistle to the Philippians, Lon., 1859, 8vo; new ed., 1884. 4. Paul the Preacher; or, A Popular and Practical Exposition of his Discourses and Speeches, Lon., 1859, p. 8vo. 5. The Ecclesiastical Cyclopædia; or, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities and Sects, &c., Lon., 1861, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1862. 6. The Classified Bible: an Analysis of the Sacred Scriptures, Lon., 1861, cr. 8vo. 7. A Commentary on the Greek Text of the Epistle to the Galatians, Lon., 1869, 8vo. 8. The English Bible: an External and Critical History of the Various English Translations of the Scripture: with Remarks on the Need of revising the English New Testament, Lon., 1876, 2 vols. 8vo.

E.

"As the work before us was the latest, so it was the most considerable and enduring product of John Eadie's fruitful pen. It manifestly embodies the results of many years of quiet study, in the course of which he must have found not a few of his own researches anticipated with the public by more brilliant or less patient writers. Indeed, we may safely conjecture that our modest author would scarcely have taken up the subject at all had Canon Westcott's masterly sketch of the self-same history appeared a few years earlier. But what the Scottish divine lacks of his rival's vigour and originality is amply compensated by minuteness of detail and rigid impartiality."-Sat. Rev., xliii. 770.

9. A Commentary on the Greek Text of the Epistle to the Thessalonians. Edited by W. Young. Lon., 1877, 8vo. 10. Scripture Illustrations from the Domestic Life of the Jews and other Eastern Nations. Edited by J. C. Jackson. Lon., 1877, 8vo.

Eadon, A. Poems and Ballads, Lon., 1871, 8vo. Eadon, Edward. The Guide to Jersey: with a Description of the Island in Verse, St. Helier, 1881, 8vo. Eadon, Samuel. 1. An Appeal to the August and Multitudinous Majority, the People, in Favour of Homoopathy: a Lecture, Lon., 1862, 12mo. 2. Homœopathy triumphant over Every Other Mode of Treatment, Lon., 1863, 8vo.

Eads, H. L. Shaker Sermons, Scripto-Rational: containing the Substance of Shaker Theology, Cin., 1879, 8vo.

Eads, James Buchanan, LL.D., 1820-1887, b. at Lawrenceburg, Ind.; became an engineer, and, among other works, constructed a steel arch bridge across the Mississippi at St. Louis. 1. System of Naval Defence: Report to the Hon. G. Welles. Plates. N. York, 1868, 4to. 2. Mouth of the Mississippi: Jetty System explained, St. Louis, 1874, 8vo. 3. Discussion on Up

| right Arched Bridges, N. York, 1874-75, 2 vols. 8vo. 4. Humphrey's and Abbot's Report on the Physics and Hydraulics of the Mississippi River reviewed, N. York, 1878, cr. 8vo.

Eagar, Alexander R. Prometheus, and other Poems, Dublin, 1877, 12mo.

Eagar, Frederick John. A Genealogical History of the Eagar Family, and their Maternal Connections in the County of Kerry, Dublin, 1861, 12mo.

Eagle, John. A Note-Book of Solubilities, Lon., 1880, fp. 8vo.

Eagles, Thomas Henry, M.A., instructor in geometrical drawing and lecturer in architecture at the Royal Indian Engineering College, Cooper's Hill. Constructive Geometry of Plane Curves: with Examples, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo.

Eagleston, J. H. Early California Voyages, Salem, Mass., 1874, 8vo.

Eaglestone, C. R. 1. The Siege of Constantinople, 1453: an Historical Romance, Lon., 1878, cr. 8vo. 2. A Girl Artist, [a tale,] Lon., 1885, p. 8vo.

Eales, Rev. Samuel John, M.A., graduated at Chichester Theological College 1862; ordained 1862; head-master of Halstead Grammar-School 1863-76; curate of Warminster and principal of St. Boniface Missionary College 1876-84. 1. Notitia Historica: a Manual for Learning English History by Heart. Part I. Lon., 1872, p. 8vo. 2. Via Crucis: Fourteen Sermons on the Passion, Lon., 1880, sq. 16mo; 2d ed., enl., illust., 1886. 3. The Voice from the Cross: Seven Brief Meditations, Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 4. Sermons, Ancient and Modern: the Church Services illustrated. Lon., 1882, p. 8vo. 5. A Plain Catechism on some Chief Points of Christian Doctrine, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 6. Via Lucis: Nine Meditations on the Exaltation of Christ. Illust. Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo.

Eames, Jane, (Anthony,) [ante, vol. i., add.,] b. 1816, at Wellington, Mass. 1. A Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Grace Church, Providence, Providence, 1857. 2. The Budget closed, N. York, 1860, 12mo. 3. Letters from Bermuda, Concord, N.H., 1875, 12mo. 4. (Ed.) Memorials of the Rev. Dr. Eames, 1878. 5. (Ed.) Memorials of Hezekiah Anthony, 1885.

Eames, Richard. Miscellaneous Poems. Edited by Henry Eames. Southampton, 1874, p. 8vo. Eames, Roscoe L. Text-Book of Light-Line Short-Hand, N. York, 1883, 12mo.

Eames, T. W. Gerald Boyne: a Novel, Lon., 1876, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

Eardley-Wilmot. See WILMOT. Earée, Robert Brisco. Album Weeds; or, How to detect Forged Stamps, Lon., 1883, 8vo.

Earl, Henry H. Fall River: its Rise and Progress, 1803-73, Fall River, Mass., 1873; 2d ed., continued to 1876, 1876. And see PECK, F. M.

Earl, Herbert P. His Sisters: a Novel, Lon., 1887, 2 vols. cr. 8vo.

Earle, A. B. 1. Bringing in Sheaves, Bost., 1868, 8vo. 2. Bringing in Sheaves: a Record of Evangelistic Labours in the United States, Lon., 1871, 12mo. 3. The Rest of Faith, Bost., 1872, 24mo. 4. The Morning Hour: for Family Worship, Bost., 1877. 5. The Work of an Evangelist: Review of Fifty Years' Labour, Lon., 1881, 32mo. 6. The Human Will, Bost., 1882, 18mo.

Earle, Abraham L. Our Revenue System and

the Civil Service: Shall they be reformed? ("Economic as the most important contribution to this department of Monographs,") N. York, 1878, 16mo. English history since the publication of Mr. Seebohm's Earle, Rt. Rev. Alfred, D.D., graduated at Hert-treatise in 1883. Like Mr. Seebohm, Mr. Earle has advanced the discussion by a distinct step towards the solution of ford College, Oxford, 1854; ordained 1858; vicar of West the problem; possibly he has solved it, but there still reAlvington 1877-87; archdeacon of Totnes 1872-88; rec- main some considerations which he does not appear to tor of St. Michael, Cornhill, London, and Bishop Suffra- have taken fully into account."-Nation, xlvii. 523. gan of Marlborough, 1888. 1. Consecutive Church Edu- Earle, John Charles, b. 1850; graduated at cation, Lon., 1872. 2. Some Pressing Duties of Church- Exeter College, Oxford; called to the bar at Lincoln's Wardens, 1874. 3. Charges delivered at his Primary Inn 1867. 1. Maximilian, and other Poems, Lon., 1868, Visitation of the Archdeaconry of Totnes in 1874, Lon., 8vo. 2. English Premiers from Sir Robert Walpole to 1874, 8vo. 4. God's Seventh-Day Rest, 1881, 16mo. Sir Robert Peel, Lon., 1871, 2 vols. p. 8vo. Earle, G. W. 1. Hand-Book for Colonists in Tropical Australia, Lon., 1863, 8vo. 2. Native Races of the Indian Archipelago, Lon., 1870, cr. 8vo. Earle, Horace. Ups and Downs; or, Incidents of Australian Life, Lon., 1861, cr. 8vo.

Earle, J. C. Manual of the Lives of the Popes, from St. Peter to Pius IX., Balt., 1867, 12mo; new ed., 1878.

Earle, J. Lumley. 1. Mammary Signs of Pregnancy and of Recent Delivery, Lon., 1862, 8vo. 2. On Flooding after Delivery, and its Scientific Treatment, Lon., 1865, 8vo.

Earle, Rev. John, M.A., graduated, first class Lit. Hum., at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, 1845; Fellow of Oriel College 1848-58; ordained 1849; Anglo-Saxon professor at Oxford 1849-54; tutor at Oriel College 1852-56; rector of Swanswick since 1857; prebendary of Wells since 1871; rural dean of Bath 1873-77; professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford since 1876. 1. (Ed.) Gloucester Fragments: (1) Fac-Simile of some Leaves in Saxon Handwriting on Saint Swithun: with Elucidations and an Essay. (2) Leaves from an Anglo-Saxon Translation of the Life of S. Maria Ægyptiaca: with a Translation and Notes, &c., Lon., 1861, 4to. 2. (Ed.) The Most Excellent Historie of the Merchant of Venice, 1862, 4to. 3. A Guide to the Knowledge of Bath, Ancient and Modern, Lon., 1864, p. 8vo. 4. (Ed.) Two of the Saxon Chronicles Parallel, with Supplementary Extracts from the Others: with Introduction, Notes, and a Glossarial Index, Oxf., 1865, 8vo. 5. A Book for the Beginner in Anglo-Saxon: comprising a Short Grammar and some Selections from the Gospels, Oxf., 1866, 12mo; 3d ed., 1884. 6. The Philology of the English Tongue, Oxf., 1866, 12mo; 2d ed., enl., 1868; new ed., 1871.

"We have gone carefully through the present work, and we can find no evidence that Mr. Earle has properly equipped himself for his undertaking."-Ath., No. 2295.

His whole performance has more of an excursive than an analytical character, and comprises a great variety of interesting etymological topics which are in general lightly and agreeably handled."-Spectator, xlv. 951.

The merits of the book, and they are great and many, lie in the details. . . . What Mr. Earle has to tell us about the history and usages of particular words and idioms is in almost every case happy. He constantly shows the surest sign of a thinker who has gone to the bottom of his subject, that of saying things which, as soon as we hear them, make us wonder that we had never thought of them ourselves."-Sat. Rev., xxxii. 756.

7. A Word for the Mother-Tongue: an Inaugural Lecture, Oxf., 1876, 8vo. 8. The Peace of Wedmore, and how it touches the History of the English Language: a Lecture, Lon., 1878, 8vo. 9. English PlantNames from the Tenth to the Fifteenth Century, Oxf., 1880, fp. 8vo.

"We are not sure whether the botanist or the student of language will find it the more useful, but we are sure that to many who are neither the one nor the other it will give an additional zest to their summer wanderings to be enabled, under Mr. Earle's guidance, to peer back through the long vista of the past and learn what our fathers thought concerning trees and wayside flowers."-Ath.,

No. 2759.

10. Anglo-Saxon Literature, ("The Dawn of European Literature,") Lon., 1884, 12mo.

"Within the narrow limits of space allotted to one of the Christian Knowledge Society's Hand-Books, Prof. Earle has succeeded in writing an account of Anglo-Saxon literature which is not only thoroughly readable, but also better fitted than any other single work to convey to the ordinary reader a correct notion of the extent and character of that literature, of its historical relations, and of the causes to which its special peculiarities are to be assigned."-HENRY BRADLEY: Acad., XXV. 405.

11. A Hand-Book to the Land Charters and other Saxonic Documents, Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo.

"An introduction of one hundred and eleven pages treats, first, of the forms of the charters, secondly, of social and land relations, and, thirdly, of the language of the documents. The second of these divisions possesses special interest for students of social history, and must be regarded

"The greater part of these two volumes is devoted to Walpole, the Pelhams, Chatham, Bute, Grenville, Rockingham, North, Fox, Pitt, Addington, Perceval, Liverpool, and Canning, and contains nothing on these subjects in the shape either of information or comment which may not be found in a much more readable and trustworthy form in various familiar and easily accessible works.”—Sat. Rev.,

xxxi. 343.

3. The Spiritual Body: an Essay in Prose and Verse; new ed., Lon., 1876, 8vo. 4. The Forty Days; or, Christ between his Resurrection and Ascension, Lon., 1877, cr. 8vo.

5. The Master's Field: a Series of Son

nets, Lon., 1882, cr. 8vo. Earle, Mrs. L. B. 1879, 16mo.

Earle, Lisette. Lon., 1879, p. 8vo.

Lessons of Trust, N. York,

Between the Lights, [stories,]

Earle, Pliny, M.D., b. 1809, at Leicester, Mass.; graduated at the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania in 1837; studied in the hospitals of Paris, and having adopted as his specialty the treatment of the insane, and investigated the systems pursued at various European institutions, has held the position of resident physican in several of the principal hospitals for this class of patients in America, including the Bloomingdale Asylum, New York, (1844-49,) and the Massachusetts State Hospital for the Insane, at Northampton, (1865-85.) 1. A Visit to Thirteen Asylums for the Insane in Europe, Phila., 1839, 8vo; new ed., enl., 1841. 2. Marathon, and other Poems, Phila., 1841, 12mo. 3. History, Description, and Statistics of the Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane, N. York, 1848, 8vo. 4. An Examination of the Practice of Blood-Letting in Mental Disorders, N. York, 1854, 8vo. 5. Institutions for the Insane in Prussia, Austria, and Germany, N. York, 1854, 8vo. 6. The Curability of Insanity: a Series of Studies, Phila., 1887, 12mo. 7. The Earle Family: Ralph Earle and his Descendants, Worcester, Mass., 1888, 8vo.

Earle, Sullivan. Passages in the Life of Gilbert Arnold; or, The Tale of the Four Sermons, Lon., 1852,

12mo.

Earle, Thomas. Life, Travels, and Opinions of Benjamin Lundy, Phila., 1874.

Earle, Thomas, and Congdon, Charles T. (Ed.) The General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York: Annals, 1785-1880. Illust. N. York, 1882, 4to.

Earle, Waring. Love and Marriage: with Quotations from many of the Leading Writers, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo.

Earley, William. 1. How to grow Mushrooms, Lon., 1869, 12mo. 2. How to grow Asparagus: a Popular Explanation, Lon., 1873, 12mo. 3. High-Class Kitchen-Gardening, Lon., 1875, 12mo. 4. The Garden Farmer: Profitable Market-Gardening, Lon., 1882, p. 8vo. Earlie, Miss M. A. Nathalie Marsh; or, Redmon's Heiress, N. York, 1867, 8vo.

Early, Jubal Anderson, b. in Franklin Co., Va.; graduated at the Military Academy at West Point in 1837; served in the Florida war in 1837-38; resigned his commission and became a lawyer, but served as a volunteer in the Mexican war, 1847-48, and in the Confederate army during the civil war, attaining the rank of major-general. I. A Memoir of the Last Year of the War for Independence in the Confederate States, Lynchburg, 1867, 8vo. 2. Campaigns of General Lee, Balt., 1872, 8vo. 3. Jackson's Campaign against Pope, 1883, Svo.

Earnshaw, L. Partial Differential Equations, Lon., 1871, p. 8vo.

Earnshaw, Rev. Samuel, M.A., graduated at St. John's College, Cambridge, (senior wrangler and first Smith's prizeman,) 1831; ordained 1834; chaplain on Queen Mary's Foundation at Sheffield 1847. 1. Dynamics; or, An Elementary Treatise on Motion, Cambridge, 1832, p. 8vo; 3d ed., rev., 1844. 2. On the No

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