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Barker, Walter Goodyer, M.D. 1. On the Climate of Worthing: its Remedial Influence, Lon., 1860, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1867. 2. On Diseases of the Re spiratory Passages and Lungs, Sporadic and Epidemic, Lon., 1866, p. 8vo.

Barker, William. 1. Modern Atheism and the Bible, Lon., 1862, 12mo. 2. Civic and Ecclesiastical Government: Two Lectures, Lon., 1876, Svo. 3. The "False Christs:" a Lecture, Lon., 1880, 12mo.

Barker, William Burckhardt. 1. Lares and Penates; or, Cilicia and its Governors, Lon., 1853, 8vo. 2. Turkish Reading-Book, 1854, Svo. 3. A Short Historical Account of the Crimea, Hertford, 1855, 12mo. 4. Odessa and its Inhabitants. By an English Prisoner in Russia. Lon., 1855. Anon. With BLEECK, ARTHUR HENRY, A Practical Grammar of the Turkish Language: with Dialogues and Vocabulary, Lon., 1854, 12mo.

Barker, William Gideon Michael Jones, 1817-1855. 1. The Three Days of Wensleydale. By the Wensleydale Poet. Lon., 1854. 2. Historical Notices of Wensleydale; 3d ed., Lon., 1856, 8vo.

Barkley, Henry C., Civil Engineer. 1. Between the Danube and the Black Sea; or, Five Years in Bulgaria, Lon., 1876, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1877.

"An honest and very readable transcript of the writer's experiences and impressions... The whole is described in a bright, cheerful, and genial manner, which is much more attractive than the laboured style of many a practised man of letters."-Sat. Rev., xlii. 639.

2. Bulgaria before the War: being Seven Years' Experience of European Turkey and its Inhabitants, Lon., 1877, p. 8vo.

"His unpretending little work is only indirectly political, but he necessarily saw a great deal of the natives in the discharge of his duties as a railway engineer."-Sat. Rev., xliv. 687.

3. My Boyhood: a Story-Book. Illust. Lon., 1877,

12mo.

Barkley, John Trevor. Report on the Purchase and Occupation of Landed Property in Connaught: with Estimates of Present Value, Lon., 1850, 8vo.

Barkly, A. M. Revised List of the Ferns of South Africa. By A. M. B. Cape Town, 1875. Barksdale, W. H., b. 1827, in Tennessee, became a Baptist minister. Pedobaptist Concessions to Baptist Principles, Memphis, Tenn., 18mo.

Barland, Katherine. 1. Poems, Lon., 1845, 8vo. 2. Songs of Consolation, Lon., 1851, 18mo.

Barlee, Ellen. 1. Individual Exertion: a Christmas Call to Action, Lon., 1861, 8vo. 2. Friendless and Helpless, Lon., 1863, 12mo. 3. A Visit to Lancashire in December, 1863, 12mo. 4. Helen Lindsay; or, The Trial of Faith; 2d ed., Lon., 1863, 12mo. 5. Homeward; or, The Rest that Remaineth: a Memoir, Lon., 1867, p. 8vo. 6. Sketches of Working-Women, Lon., 1870, p. Svo. 7. Effie's Prayer; or, "Thy Will be Done:" a Tale, Lon., 1871, p. 8vo. 8. Three Paths in Life: a Tale for Girls, Lon., 1872, 12mo. 9. Locked Out: a Tale of the Strike, Lon., 1874, sq. 16mo. 10. Good and Bad Managers, &c.: Three Stories, Lon., 1874, 12mo. 11. The Bible in Rome: with a Record of Protestant Missions since 1873, Lon., 1876, 12mo. 12. Life of Napoleon, Prince Imperial of France, Lon., 1880, p. 8vo.

Barling, F. H. Leonidas; The Bridal of Thanatos: a Dramatic Poem, Lon., 1885, fp. 8vo.

Barling, John, 1804-1883, b. at Weymouth, Eng., was educated for the ministry as a Congregationalist, but became a Unitarian and subsequently a preacher of that persuasion. In addition to his published writings he left manuscript essays on Idealism and Scepticism, and on Final Causes. 1. A Review of Trinitarianism, chiefly as it appears in the Writings of Bull, Waterland, Sherlock, Howe, Newman, Coleridge, Wallis, and Wardlaw, Lon., 1847. 2. Leaves from my Writing-Desk; being Tracts on the Question, What do we Know? By an Old Student. 1872. Anon.

Barlow, Alfred. The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power. Illust. Lon., 1879, r. 8vo.

"Reprinted, with considerable additions, from the periodical Engineering, and showing a thorough knowledge of his theme in its historical, mechanical, and economical aspects."-Sat. Rev., xlvii. 749.

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Patents; or, Hints and Suggestions to Inventors and Patentees, Lon., 1870, 12mo; 6th ed., 1880, 8vo.

Barlow, George, b. 1847, in London; educated at Harrow School, and at Exeter College, Oxford. Some of his lyrics have been set to music, and he wrote the English version of the libretto of Gounod's Ave Maria at the request of the composer. He has published: 1. Poems and Sonnets, Lon., 1871, p. 8vo. 2. A Life's Love, Lon., 1873; new ed., 1882, 8vo. 3. Under the Dawn, Lon., 1875, p. 8vo. 4. The Two Marriages: a Drama, Lon., 1878, p. 8vo. 5. Through Death to Life, Lon., 1878, 12mo. 6. The Marriage before Death, a Tragedy; and other Poems, Lon., 1878. p 8vo. 7. LoveSongs, Lon., 1880, p. 8vo. 8. Time's Whisperings: Sonnets and Songs, Lon., 1880, 12mo. 9. Song-Bloom, Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 10. Song-Spray, 1882. 11. An Actor's Reminiscences, and other Poems, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 12. Love's Offering. By James Hinton, (pseud.) Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 13. Poems, Real and Ideal, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 14. An English Madonna. By James Hinton. Lon., 1884, sq. 16mo. 15. Love beyond Words, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 16. The Pageant of Life: an Epic Poem in Five Books, Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo; 2d ed., 1889.

Barlow, George. 1. The Gospel of Humanity; or, The Connection between Spiritualism and Modern Thought, Lon., 1876, 8vo. 2. Homiletical Commentary on the Book of Kings, Lon., 1885, r. 8vo.

Barlow, George Hilaro, M.D. Manual of the Practice of Medicine, Lon., 1855, 12mo; 2d ed., 1861.

3. In

Barlow, Henry Clark, M.D., 1806-1876, studied architecture in his youth, but being obliged, in consequence of an accident to his hand, to give up that profession, adopted that of medicine, took his degree at Edinburgh, and studied medicine and science at Paris. He then went to Italy, where the poetry of Dante took such hold upon him that he consecrated his whole subsequent life to its study, collecting the works of his favorite poet, and publishing many commentaries on the different readings. 1. A Dissertation on the Causes and Effects of Disease, considered in Reference to the Moral Constitution of Man, Edin., 1837, 8vo. 2. La Divina Commedia : Remarks on the Reading of the 59th Verse of the 5th Canto of the Inferno, Lon., 1850, 4to. dustry on Christian Principles, Lon., 1851, 8vo. 4. God's Temple-Throne: a Hymn. By H. C. B. Roma, 1855. 5. Letteratura Dantesca: Remarks on the Reading of the 114th Verse of the 7th Canto of the Paradise of the Divina Commedia, Lon., 1857, 8vo. 6. Francesca da Rimini: her Lament and Vindication. With a Brief Notice of the Malatesti. Lon., 1859; 2d ed., 1875, 8vo. 7. Il Gran Rifiuto: what it was, who made it, and how 63 of the 3d Canto of the Inferno, Lon., 1862, 8vo. fatal to Dante Allighieri: a Dissertation on Verses 58 to 8. Il Conte Ugolino e l'Arcivescovo Ruggieri: a Sketch from the Pisan Chronicles, Lon., 1862, 4to. Young King and Bertrand de Born, Lon., 1862, 8vo. 10. Critical, Historical, and Philosophical Contributions to the Study of the Divina Commedia, Lon., 1864, 8vo. 12. The 11. Essays on Symbolism, Lon., 1866, p. 8vo. Sixth Centenary Festivals of Dante Alighieri in Florence and at Ravenna. By a Representative. Lon., 1866. 13. On the Vernon Dante: with other Dissertations, Lon., 1870, 8vo. 14. Lezioni della Divina Commedia, Lon., 1875, 4to.

9. The

fessor in the University of Dublin. 1. Eternal PunishBarlow, James William, Erasmus Smith proment and Eternal Death: an Essay, Lon., 1864, 8vo. 2. The Ultimatum of Pessimism: an Ethical Study, Lon., 1882, 8vo. (An argument to prove the worthlessness of the present life without the prospect of a future and happier one.)

"The book is well worth reading."-Acad., xxiii. 182. 3. A Short History of the Normans in South Europe, Lon., 1886, 8vo.

"He should have called his production 'Bald Translations of Various Passages in the Chronicles of the Eleventh Century, down to the Year 1085, with Discursive Comments."-Acad., xxx. 68.

Barlow, John Evelyn, b. 1860, in Perthshire. 1. Poems, Lyrical and Dramatic. By Evelyn Douglas, (pseud.) Lon., 1885, fp. 8vo. 2. The Queen of the Hid Isle: an Allegory of Life and Art. And Love's Perversity; or, Eros and Anteros. By Evelyn Douglas. Lon., 1885, fp. 8vo.

Barlow, John W., b. 1838, in New York, graduated at West Point 1861; lieut.-col. of U.S. engineers. With HEAP, DAVID P., Report of a Reconnaissance of

the Basin of the Upper Yellowstone in 1871, (pub. by U.S. Gov't,) Wash., 1872, Svo.

Barlow, Joseph Lorenzo, b. 1818, at Kent, Conn., became a Baptist minister in 1853. Endless Being; or, Man made for Eternity: with an Introduction by Rev. P. S. Henson, N. York and Chic., 1888, 12mo. Barlow, P. W. Kaipara; or, Experiences of a Settler in North New Zealand. Illust. Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo; 2d ed. same year.

Barlow, Peter, [ante, vol. i., add.,] Encyclopædia of British Arts, Manufactures, &c., Lon., 1855, 4to. Barlow, Peter William, C.E., F.R.S., d. 1885, aged 76. 1. Observations on the Niagara Railway Suspension Bridge, made during a Recent Tour in America, Lon., 1860, 8vo. 2. On the Relief of London Street Traffic: with a Description of the Tower Subway, now shortly to be executed, Lon., 1867, 8vo.

Barlow, Samuel. Relief for Sufferers; or, Directions for the Cure of Tic-Doloreux, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Toothache, &c., Darlington, 1859, 12ino.

Barlow, Samuel Latham Mitchell, b. 1826, at Granville, Me., is a practising lawyer in New York City, who has made a large collection of rare and curious books, especially Americana. (Ed.) Letters of Christopher Columbus describing his First Voyage. Edited by S. L. M. B. Lon., 1875. With HARRISSE, HENRY, Notes on Columbus, N. York, 1866. Privately printed. Barlow, T. Astronomy Simplified, Lon., 1855, 12mo; 2d ed., 1865, 18mo.

Barlow, T. Disney. Sermons: Rays from the Sun of Righteousness, Lon., 1863, 12mo.

Barlow, Thomas Worthington, d. in Africa; ed. of Cheshire and Lancaster Historical Collector. 1. Cheshire: its Historical and Literary Associations, illustrated in Biographical Sketches, Lon., 1852, 8vo; new ed, 1855. 2. The Mystic Number: a Glance at the System of Nature, Lon., 1852, cr. 8vo. 3. Memoir of W. Broome: with Selections from his Works, Lon., 1855, 8vo.

Barlow, W. H. Normal Phonography: adapted to all Styles of Reporting, Phila., 1886, 12mo.

Barlow, Warren Sumner. 1. Three Voices, Bost., 1868, 12mo. 2. Immortality inherent in Nature, N. York, 1885, 12mo.

Barlow, William. New Theories of Matter and of Force, Lon., 1885, 8vo.

Barlow, William Frederick, M.D. Treatise on Fatty Degeneration, Lon., 1853, p. 8vo.

Barlow, William H. On Regressive Paralysis, Infantile Paralysis, and Spinal Paralysis of Adults, Manchester, 1879, 8vo.

Barlow, William Henry. (Ed.) An Analytical Investigation of the Board of Trade Returns of the Capital and Revenue of Railways in the United Kingdom, Lon., 1868, 8vo.

Barlow, William Ruxton. Notes on Ammunition, Lon., 1872, 8vo; 4th ed., 1877.

Barmby, Rev. James, M.A., B.D., graduated at University College, Oxford, 1845; ordained 1846; Fellow and mathematical lecturer of Magdalen College, Oxford, 1816-60; principal of Hatfield Hall, and tutor and divinity lecturer in the University of Durham, 1859-76; vicar of Pittington since 1875. 1. Plays for Young People: with Songs and Choruses, Lon., 1878, 8vo; new eds., 1880-88. 2. Gregory the Great, ("The Fathers for English Readers,") Lon., 1879, p. 8vo.

Barmby, John Goodwyn, 1820-1881, b. at Yoxford, Suffolk; a Unitarian preacher and Christian socialist. He founded in 1841 the Communist Propaganda Society, and subsequently a socialistic home, known as the Morville Communitorium, at Hanwell. Barmby claimed to have originated the word "communism" in conversation with a French socialist about 1840. 1. Poetry of Children and Poetry of Home, Lon., 1852-53, 2 vols. 12mo. 2. Poetry of Spring: a Poem, 1860, 12mo. 3. Aids to Devotion; or, Religious Readings in the Order of the Natural and the Christian Year, Lon., 1864, p. 8vo. 4. The Return of the Swallow, and other Poems, Lon., 1864, 12mo.

Barnaby, Sir Nathaniel, K.C.B., b. 1829; director of naval construction 1876-85. The Naval Review of British, French, Italian, German, and Russian WarShips: with Diagrams, Lon., 1886, 8vo.

Barnaby, Sydney W. Marine Propellers: Lectures at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo.

Barnard, Mrs. A Day at the Sea-Side, Lon., 1868,

18mo.

Barnard, Charles, b. 1835, at Boston, Mass., became a florist, and afterwards a journalist, and has also devoted much attention to music. He has been assistant editor of the Boston Journal of Commerce, editor of Vox Humana, musical critic of the Boston Post, editor of the "World's Work Department" in the Century Magazine, and superintendent of instruction to the Chautauqua Town and Country Club. 1. The Soprano: a Musical Story, Bost., 1869, 12mo. 2. My Ten-Rod Farm, Bost., 1869, 12mo; new ed., entitled "Gardening for Money: How it was done," 1871. 3. Farming by Inches; or, With Brains, Sir, Bost., 1869, 12mo. 4. Simple Flower-Garden for Country Houses, Bost., 1870, 8vo. 5. The Tone-Masters: a Musical Series for Young People, 1870, 3 vols. 16mo. 6. Money and Music: an Art Story, Bost., 12mo. 7. Camilla: a Tale of a Violin: being the Artist Life of Camilla Urso, Bost., 1875, 18mo. 8. Co-Operation as a Business, N. York, 1881, 12mo. 9. Knights of To-Day; or, Love and Science, N. York, 1881, 12mo. 10. A Dead Town: a Romance of the Old Country, Lon., 1885, 12mo. 11. Talks about the Weather in its Relation to Plants and Animals, Bost., 1885, 16mo. 12. The Whistling Buoy : a Novel, Phila., 1887.

Barnard, Mrs. Charlotte Alington, 18301869, was the author and composer of a great number of songs, published under the pseudonyme of " Claribel," which were very popular in their day. 1. Fireside Thoughts: Ballads, Lon., 1865. 2. Thoughts: Verses and Songs, Lon., 1877, p. 8vo.

Barnard, Edna A. Maple Range: a Frontier Romance, Chic., 1882, 12mo.

Barnard, F. E. A. Education and Schools in the District of Columbia, Wash., 1869, 8vo.

Barnard, Francis Pierrepont. Strongbow's Conquest of Ireland. Illust. and Map. ("English History from Contemporary Writers.") Lon., 1888, 18mo. Barnard, Rev. Frederick Augustus Porter, LL.D., D.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] d. 1889. In 1854 he took orders in the Episcopal Church, and in 1864 was elected president of Columbia College, New York; was United States commissioner to the Paris Exposition of 1867. and assistant commissioner general to that of 1878; besides filling various other offices in connection with scientific institutions and enterprises. His publications have been chiefly Reports, and papers contributed to scientific journals. 1. History of the American Coast Survey, 1857. 2. University Education, 1858. 3. The Undulatory Theory of Light, 1862. 4. Recent Progress of Science, N. York, 1869, 8vo. 5. Report on Machinery and Processes in the Industrial Arts and Apparatus of the Exact Sciences at the Paris Exposition, 1867. Illust. N. York, 1869, 8vo. 6. Metric System of Weights and Measures, N. York, 1872, 8vo; 3d ed., 1879. 7. Imaginary Metrological System of the Great Pyramid of Gizeh, N. York, 1884, 8vo. With GUYOT, ARNOLD HENRY, (ed.) Johnson's (revised) Universal Cyclopædia, N. York, 1888, 8 vols. r. 8vo.

Barnard, George. 1. Drawing from Nature: a Series of Progressive Instructions in Sketching: to which are appended Lectures on Art delivered at Rugby. Illust. Lon., 1865, 3 parts, 8vo; new ed., 1877. 2. Hand-Book of Foliage and Foreground Drawing, Lon., 1853; new eds., 1870-84, p. 8vo. 3. Theory and Practice of Landscape Painting in Water Colours. Illust. Lon., 1855; new ed., 1870, r. 8vo. 4. Trees: Studies from Nature, 1868, 3 parts.

Barnard, Henry, LL.D., [ante, vol. i., add.] In 1856 he was elected chancellor of the University of Wisconsin, but soon resigned this position on account of ill health; was president of St. John's College, Annapolis, Md., 1865-66, and United States commissioner of education from 1867 till 1870. His contributions to the Journal of Education, founded by him in 1855, have been very numerous, and, in a revised form, are to be included in a complete edition of his writings, now in preparation, which will comprise 800 treatises, published separately and in 52 vols. under the title of The American Library of Schools and Education. 1. ObjectTeaching, and Oral Lessons on Social Science and Common Things, N. York, 1861. 2. German Experience in the Organization, Instruction, and Discipline of Public Schools, N. York, 1861. 3. Pestalozzi and Pestalozzianism, N. York, 1861. 4. Military Schools, and Courses of Instruction on the Science and Art

of War in France, Prussia, Austria, Russia, Sweden,
Switzerland, Sardinia, England, and the United States,
Phila., 1862, 8vo. 5. German Educational Reformers,
N. York, 1862, 8vo.

Barnard, Mrs. Henry. Dick's First School-
Days: a Story, Lon., 1875, 18mo.

July, 1863: The Metropolitan Police: their Services during Riot Week, &c., N. York, 1863, 8vo.

Barnes, Demas, 1827-1888; b. at Canandaigua, N.Y.; was a merchant in New York City from 1849 till 1870; member of Congress from 1867 to 1869; took an active part in the promotion of many public undertakings, including the construction of the Brooklyn bridge. He was the founder and editor of the Brooklyn Argus, and contributed to other papers. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, N. York, 1865.

Barnes, Miss E. W. What will come of it? By E. W. B. Phila., 1877.

Barnes, Edgar G. How to arrest Infectious Diseases, Lon., 1883, 12mo.

A Tramp Actor. Illust. N.

Barnard, John Gross, 1815-1882, colonel of engineers and brevet major-general U.S.A., brother of F. A. P. Barnard, [ante, vol. i., and supra,] b. at Sheffield, Mass.; graduated at West Point in 1833; obtained a commission in the corps of engineers, and was employed many years on the defences of the coast; became a captain in 1838, and served as engineer in the Mexican war, 1846-47. In the spring of 1861 he planned and superintended the fortifications of Wash- Barnes, Rev. Edward John, ordained 1862; ington, and in the same year was appointed chief of en- chaplain of the Islington Infirmary since 1878. The Peogineers of the Army of the Potomac. He was chief en-ple's Bible Finger- Post: a Guide to Bible Subjects: with gineer of the armies in the field, on the staff of General Notes and Anecdotes in Parallel Columns, Lon., 1883, 8vo. Grant, from June 5, 1864, to April 9, 1865. His publi- Barnes, Edwin C. A Wild Bouquet. By Claire. cations consist chiefly of military and scientific reports Syracuse, N.Y., 1874. and memoirs: 1. Rotary Motion as applied to the Barnes, Elliot. Phenomena of the Gyroscope, N. York, 1858; new ed., York and Chic., 1886, 12mo. 1887, 24mo. 2. Notes on Sea-Coast Defence: Sea-Coast Barnes, Mrs. Emily Ripley. Narratives conFortifications, the Fifteen-Inch Gun, and Casemate Em- nected with the Early History of the Bellows Family, brasure. Plates. 1861, Svo. 3. The "C. S. A." and Bost., 1888, 8vo. the Battle of Bull Run: a Letter to an English Friend. Maps. N. York, 1862, 8vo. 4. The Peninsular Campaign and its Antecedents, as developed by the Report of Gen. McClellan and other Documents, N. York, 1864, 8vo. 5. Problems of Rotary Motion, Wash., 1872, 4to. 6. Report on the North Sea Canal of Holland, and on Navigation, Wash., 1874, 4to. 7. Report on the Defences of Washington, (Papers on Practical Engineering, pub. by U.S. Gov't.) With BARRY, BRIG. GEN. WILLIAM FARQUHAR, Report of the Engineer and Artillery Operations of the Army of the Potomac, from its Organization to the Close of the Peninsular Campaign, 1863, 8vo.

Barnard, Joseph. Among the Girls, and other Poems, Lon., 1874, p. 8vo.

Barnard, Rev. Mordaunt Roger, graduated at Christ's College, Cambridge, 1851; ordained 1851; chap. lain of the British consulate at Christiania; vicar of Margaretting, Essex, since 1863. 1. Sport in Norway, and where to find it, Lon., 1864, p. 8vo.

"Very few persons will visit Norway henceforth without possessing themselves of the practical information conveyed in his pages."-Sat. Rev., xvii. 264.

2. (Trans.) The Life of Thorwaldsen; from the Danish of J. M. Thiele, Lon., 1865, 12mo. 3. (Trans.) Signe's History: a Norwegian Tale, by A. M. Thoresen, Lon., 1865, 12mo. 4. (Trans.) Private Life of the Old Northmen, by J. R. Keyser, Lon., 1868, p. 8vo. 5. (Trans.) Summer in Iceland, by C. W. Paijkull. Illust. Lon., 1868, 8vo. 6. Sketches of Life, Scenery, and Sport in Norway, Lon., 1871, p. 8vo. 7. (Trans.) Homer's Odyssey, in English Blank Verse, Lon., 1876, p. 8vo. 8. (Trans.) Master of his Fate: a Swedish Tale, by A. Blanche. Illust. Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. "Barnaval, Louis," (Pseud.) See DE KAY,

CHARLES.

Barneby, W. Henry. Life and Labour in the Far, Far West: Notes of a Tour. Map. Lon.. 1884. "Everything that he hears or sees or does is stated with painstaking accuracy."-Acad., xxvi. 4.

Barnes, Rev. Albert, [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1798

1870. He underwent a trial for heresy founded on passages in his Notes on the New Testament, but was acquitted, though advised to make certain changes in the phraseology, which he accordingly did, becoming, however, a leader of the "New-School" Presbyterians on the subsequent division in the denomination. 1. Closet Companion, N. York, 1851. 2. How shall Man be just with God? 1855, 12mo. 3. Life at Threescore and Ten: a Sermon, Phila., 1858, 12mo. 4. Notes on the Psalms, N. York, 1868-69, 3 vols. 12mo. 5. Lectures on the Evidences of Christianity in the Nineteenth Century, N. York, 1868, 12mo. 6. Life of the Apostle Paul, Lon., 1869, p. 8vo.

Barnes, C. L., M.A., late scholar of Balliol College, Oxford; science master at Bromsgrove School. Rock History: a Concise Note-Book of Geology, having Special Reference to English and Welsh Formations. Maps and Illust. Lon., 1884, p. 8vo.

Barnes, Charles R. Hand-Book of Bible Biography. Illust. N. York, 1885, 8vo.

Barnes, David M. The Draft Riots in New York,

Barnes, Emma J. 1. Faithful and True; or, The Mother's Legacy, Lon., 1871, 8vo. 2. A Needle and Thread: a Tale for Girls, Lon., 1873, 12mo.

Barnes, Rev. Francis, M.A., graduated at Jesus College, Cambridge, 1847; ordained 1848; vicar of Holy Trinity, Plymouth, since 1851. Twelve Sermons preached at Plymouth, Lon., 1860, fp. 8vo.

Barnes, G. A. George and Joseph Maud of Ditchling, [poems,] Lon., 1888, r. 18mo.

Barnes, J., and Robinson, W. Asparagus Culture: the Best Methods, Lon., 1881, 12mo.

Barnes, John Hindmarsh. Notes on Surgical Nursing: being a Short Course of Lectures, Lon., 1874, 8vo.

Barnes, Lieut. John S. Submarine Warfare, Defensive and Offensive: comprising a History of the Invention of the Torpedo, &c., N. York, 1869, 8vo.

Barnes, Josiah. Wonderful Adventures by Land and Sea of the Seven Queer Travellers who met at an Inn, Phila., 1865, 12mo.

Barnes, M. L. Happy Memories of R. Barnes,
Lon., 1875, 8vo.

physician to the Chelsea Hospital for Women; obstetric
Barnes, R. S. Fancourt, M.D., M.R.C.P.,
physician to the Great Northern Hospital. 1. A Man-
ual of Midwifery for Midwives. Illust. Lon., 1879; 2d
ed., 1883, p. Svo.
Words and Terms in Medicine and its Cognate Sciences,
2. German-English Dictionary of
Lon., 1881, sq. 12mo.

Barnes, Rev. Reginald Henry, M.A., graduated at Christ Church College, Oxford, 1852; ordained 1854; vicar of Heavitree 1869-87. General Charles George Gordon: a Sketch: with Fac-Simile Letter,

Lon, 1885, cr. 8vo.

Barnes, Rev. Richard William, M.A., b. at Comercally, Bengal, graduated at Queen's College, Oxford, 1834; perpetual curate of East and West Looe 1845-49; vicar of Probus 1849; prebendary of Exeter 1853. 1. The Last Three Sermons preached in the Church and West Looe, Truro, 1850, 8vo. 2. Public Opinion of Looe, Cornwall, by the late Perpetual Curate of East considered, in Letters between one of his Friends and R. W. Barnes, Lon., 1855, 8vo. 3. Let Well Alone; or, Alazon. Lon., 1860, 8vo. 4. Confirmation, &c.: Four Removal of Blemishes from Church and State. By Sermons, Lon., 1860. 5. Appendix and Imaginary Criticisms, Lon., 1865, Svo. Anon. 6. Christmas-Day Sermons preached in the Parish Church of Probus, Lon., 1865, 8vo. 7. New-Year's Day Sermons, Lon., 1865, 8. Three Sermons preached in Exeter Cathedral,

8vo.
Lon., 1869

Also, single sermons. sulting obstetric surgeon to St. George's Hospital. 1. Barnes, Robert, M.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] con

Clinical and Critical Contributions to Obstetric Science

and Practice: I., On Uterine Polypus, Lon., 1854, 12mo. 2. The Physiology and Treatment of Placenta Prævia: being the Lettsomian Lectures on Midwifery for 1857, Lon., 1858, 8vo. 3. Lectures on Obstetric Operations, including the Treatment of Hæmorrhage, and forming a Guide to the Management of Difficult Labour, Lon., 1869, 8vo; 4th ed., 1886. 4. A Clinical History of the Medical and Surgical Diseases of Women.

Illust. Lon., 1873; 2d ed., 1878, Svo. 5. A Synoptical
Guide to the Study of Obstetrics: Class-Room Study,
&c., Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. With BARNES, R. S. FANCOURT,
M.D., A System of Obstetric Medicine and Surgery,
Lon., 1884-85, 2 vols. 8vo.

Barnes, Thurlow Weed, a grandson of Thurlow
Weed, infra, b. 1853, at Albany, N.Y.; graduated at
Harvard in 1876. Memoir of Thurlow Weed. By his
Grandson. Bost., 1884.

"It seems to be the object of this memoir to fill up ... gaps in the autobiography; and the work is done quite as satisfactorily as it could have been done by any second hand."-Nation, xxxviii. 325.

BAR

17. An Outline of Rede-Craft (Logic) with English
Wording, Lon., 1880, p. 8vo.
Dorset Dialect: with a Grammar of its Word Shapening
18. A Glossary of the
and Wording. Dorchester, 1886.
"Students who belong to a more vigorous school may,
no doubt, often find reason to smile at his ingenious and
erratic speculations; but. his quaintly-worded writings
original and valuable suggestion to which even scientific
on speech-lore' nevertheless contain an abundance of
philologists may sometimes do well to take heed. . . . It is
himself to revise his book for the press. . . .
to be regretted that the venerable author has been unable
however, this glossary appears in so fragmentary and un-
Although,
finished a shape, there are few books of the kind that
greatly surpass it in interest. The Dorset dialect is in
itself exceptionally worthy of attention. It is probably
of Alfred."-HENRY BRADLEY: Acad., xxix. 214.
the purest existing descendant of the West-Saxon speech

Barnes, William. 1. The Settlement and Early
History of Albany, Albany, 1864, 8vo; new ed., 1871.
2. General Statute Laws of the State of New York re-
Companies, &c.; 3d ed., Albany, 1868, Svo.
He pub-lating to Fire, Marine, Life, and Casualty Insurance

Barnes, Rev. William, D.D., 1820-1886, b. in the vale of Blackmore, Dorset, Eng., kept a school at Dorchester for a time, but in 1847 was ordained and became curate of Whitcombe, and in 1862 rector of Winterbourne-Came. He made a close study of the Dorsetshire dialect and early English history and language. He was also an Oriental linguist. lished several important philological works, his philological grammar being formed by a comparison of more than sixty languages, but he is best known as the poet of Dorsetshire rural life. For biog. see BAXTER, LUCY, infra. 1. Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect, Lon., 1844, 12mo; 3d ed., 1862. 2. Hwomeley Rhymes: a Second Collection of Poems in the Dorset Dialect, Lon., 1847, 12mo; 2d ed., 1863.

"It may be doubted whether any English pastoral poet is so true to nature and to rustic character."-Sal. Rev.,

vii. 307.

4.

3. Anglo-Saxon Delectus, Lon., 1849, 12mo. Philological Grammar: Help to all Languages, Lon., 1854, 8vo. 5. Notes on Ancient Britain and the Britons, Lon., 1858, 12mo. 6. Evidences of the Truth of the Christian Religion, Lon., 1858, p. 8vo. 7. (Ed.) A Glossary with some Pieces of Verse of the Old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County Wexford, Ireland, formerly collected by Jacob Poole of Growton: with Notes and Introduction, Lon., 1859, 8vo. 8. Views of Labour and Gold, Lon., 1859, 12mo. 9. Tiw; or, A View of the Roots and Stems of English as a Teutonic Tongue, Lon., 1861, fp. 8vo. 10. Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect: Third Collection, Lon., 1862, 12mo. The author says in his preface, "To write in what some may deem a fast-outwearing speech-form may seem as idle as the writing of one's name in snow of a spring day. I cannot help it. It is my mother-tongue, and is to my mind the only true speech of the life I draw."

"If it be an achievement worth performing to write of simple and self-evident delights, not only well, but in such a way that educated readers feel that a new pleasure has been given them, while the poor laugh with delight as they listen, Mr. Barnes has merited, and will occupy, a lasting place in the ranks of our native poets."-Sal. Rev., XV. 123.

11. A Grammar and Glossary of the Dorset Dialect, Lon., 1864, 8vo. 12. Se Gefylsta, (the Helper:) an Anglo-Saxon Delectus; 2d ed., Lon., 1866, 12mo. 13. Poems of Rural Life in Common English, Lon., 1868, p. 12mo.

"One of the most original, and within his own range one of the most faultless, of English poets. . . . Mr. Barnes is perfectly master of his new vehicle of composition, and, although some raciness is necessarily lost in transplantation from his native soil, his new poems possess all the chief characteristics of his pleasant Devonshire idyls."Sat. Rev., xxv. 556.

14. Early England and the Saxon-English: with some Notes on the Father-Stock of the Saxon-English, the Frisians, Lon.. 1869, 12mo.

"He should have lived at the same time as Chaucer, and he might perhaps have acted as an opposing influence to Chaucer. . . . We do not know how far Mr. Barnes would really use his ultra-Teutonic style in writing upon all subjects, or whether he does it simply as a kind of show on this particular subject."-Sat. Rev., xxvii. 620. 15. An Outline of English Speech-Craft, Lon., 1878, p. 8vo.

"It may deal a blow at some of the blunders and absurdities of modern English speech. . . . We may commend Mr. Barnes's book to the reader as one in which he will find much to instruct, much to irritate, and not a little to amuse him."-Sat. Rev., xlvi. 285.

itic: a Book for Americans, Cin., 1866, 12mo. 2. His-
Barnes, William Horatio. 1. The Body Pol-
tory of the Thirty-Ninth Congress of the United States,
Indianapolis, 1867, 8vo; N. York, 1868.
Congress of the United States: Historical and Biograph-
ical, N. York, 1870, 2 vols. 8vo.

3. Fortieth

Lon., 1872, 12mo. 2. The Canary: its Management,
Barnesby, George J. 1. Our Native Song-Birds,
Habits, Breeding, and Training: with Directions for Pre-
paring Show Birds, Lon., 1877, 12mo.

Barnet, James. 1. Coast Pilot for the Lakes, Chic, 1859; 7th ed., 1874, 8vo. 2. (Ed.) The Martyrs and Heroes of Illinois in the Great Rebellion, Chic., 1865, 8vo.

Barnett, Ann. 1. Late, but not Too Late, Edin., 1865, p. 8vo. 2. Peter Parish; or, The Query, Lon., 1873, p. 8vo.

3. Ladies'

Barnett, Edith A. 1. The Cookery Instructor, for Teachers of Cookery, &c., Lon., 1881, p. 8vo. 2. Common-Serse Clothing, Lon., 1882, p. 8vo. Dress-Book: What to Wear, and How to Wear it, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo; illust. ed., Lon., 1887, p. 8vo.

Barnett, Edward. The West India Pilot, Lon., 1859-61, 2 vols. 8vo; 2d ed., 1866. Barnett, F. S. A. Sprott: the Autobiography of a Dog. Illust. Lon., 1884, sq. er. 8vo.

Barnett, Mrs. Henrietta O., wife of Rev. Samuel A. Barnett, infra. The Making of the Home: a Book of Domestic Economy, Lon., 1885, 12mo.

rials of John Barnett of Blaby. By his Son. Lon., Barnett, John. "Faithful unto Death :" Memo1878, 8vo.

Helps to Faith and a Holy

Tontine, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo.
Police Sergeant C 21: the

Barnett, John Pyer.
Life, Lon., 1870, 8vo.
Barnett, Matilda J.
Barnett, Reginald.
Story of a Crime, Lon., 1888, 12mo.
Barnett, Robert W. The Practical Hand-Book
to the Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, Lon., 1883, 8vo.

Barnett, Rev. Samuel Augustus, M.A., grndunted at Wadham College, Oxford, 1865; ordained 1867; vicar of St. Jude's, Whitechapel, London, since 1873. With BARNETT, MRS. HENRIETTA O., Practical Socialism: Essays on Social Reform, Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo.

Barney, Miss A. M. The Star in the East an Northern India; with Sketches of the Country and the Account of the Church Missionary Society's Work in People, Lon., 1860, 8vo.

Barney, Captain C. Recollections of Field Service in the 20th Iowa Infantry Volunteers, Davenport, Iowa, 1866, 12mo.

Barnhill, James. A Plea for the Advancement of Hebrew Literature in Scotland to the Position claimed for it by the First Scottish Reformers, Glasgow, 1867, 16mo.

Missouri: a Centennial Record, St. Louis, 1877, 8vo.
Barns, Chancy R. (Ed.) The Commonwealth of
Barns, W. E. (Ed.) The Labor Problem: Plain

16. Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect, (First-Questions and Practical Answers. With an Introduction Third Collection,) Lon., 1879, p. 8vo.

"Mr. Barnes is unquestionably the greatest English pastoral poet; for Wordsworth comes under a different category. Such a power of painting Dorsetshire scenery as he commands can only come of a deep love of it. Hence the sweet air of Southern England blows through every

Mr. Barnes is a master of rustic

stanza he writes. dialogue."- Ath., No. 2700. IV.-7

by R. T. Ely, and Special Contributions by James A. Waterworth and Fred. Woodrow. N. York, 1886, 16mo. Barnum, H. L. The Spy Unmasked, N. York, 1864, 16mo.

d. 1891; was proprietor of Barnum's Museum and of Barnum, Phineas Taylor, [ante, vol. i., add.,] "P. T. Barnum's Greatest Show on Earth;" resided at

Bridgeport, Conn., of which he was for a time mayor. 1. Incidents in the Life of a Birmingham Man, Lon., 1863, The Humbugs of the World, N. York, 1865, 12mo. 2. 12mo. Struggles and Triumphs; or, Forty Years' Recollections, Barr, Miss Lillie E., daughter of Mrs. A. E. Hartford, 1869, 8vo. 3. Lion Jack; or, How Menageries Barr, supra. 1. Dot and Dime: Two Characters in are made, N. York, 1876, 12mo. 4. The Art of Money- Ebony. By One who knows all about them. Bost., Getting, N. York, 1883. Pamph. 5. How I made Mil- 1877. 2. Coral and Christian; or, The Children's Pillions, N. York, 1888, 12mo. 6. Life, written by Himself, grim's Progress, 1878, 16mo. including his Golden Rules for Money-Making. Illust. Buffalo, N.Y., 1888, 12mo.

Barr, Matthias, b. 1831, in Edinburgh, of German parents, is a popular writer of poetry for young people, Barnum, Samuel W. 1. Romanism as it is: Ex- and has hence been called "The Children's Laureate." position of the Roman Catholic System, Hartford, Conn... Poems, Lon., 1865, 12mo; new eds., 1870, 1879. 1871, 8vo; new ed., 1876. 2. Vocabulary of English 2. Child's Garland of Little Poems, Lon., 1866, 8vo. Rhymes, N. York, 1876, 18mo. Little Willie, and other Poems on Children, Lon., 1867, Barnwell, Charles H. (Ed.) Anecdotes of Ce- 12mo; 4th ed., 1879. 4. Hours of Sunshine, Lon., 1869, lebrities, Historical, Biographical, and Humorous, Lon., 16mo. 1878, 8vo.

Barnwell, Edward Lowry. Perrot Notes; or, Some Account of the Various Branches of the Perrot Family, Lon., 1867, 8vo.

"The historian of wider views looks through a volume

of this sort with a kind of languid interest, here and there
spotting some detail which illustrates some point of lan-
guage, manners, or politics, fully recognizing the honest
labour of the author, feeling thankful that such men exist
to smooth his own path, not feeling the least temptation
himself to intrude upon theirs."-Sat. Rev., xxiii. 506.
Barnwell, R. G. The Russo-Turkish War. Maps,
Plans, and Illustrations. Phila., 1879, 12mo.
Baron, David. Rays of Messiah's Glory; or,
Christ in the Old Testament, Lon., 1886, p. 8vo.

Baron, Rev. John, D.D., F.S.A., d. 1885; graduated at Queen's College, Oxford, 1838; ordained 1840; rector of Upton Scudamore, Wiltshire, from 1850. 1. (Ed.) Johnson's English Canons, translated from the Anglo-Saxon, Lon., 1850. 2. Scudamore Organs; or, Practical Hints respecting Organs for Village Churches and Small Chancels on Improved Principles, Lon., 1858; 2d ed., rev. and enl., 1868, 8vo; new ed., 1888. 3. Anglo-Saxon Witnesses on Four Alleged Requisites for Holy Communion: Fasting, Water, Altar Lights, and Incense, Lon., 1869, 8vo. 4. The Greek Origin of the Apostles' Creed. Illustrated by Ancient Documents and Recent Research. Oxford, 1885, 8vo.

3.

Barr, Mrs. Amelia Edith, daughter of Rev. William Huddleston, b. in Ulverston, Lancashire, Eng., in 1831; educated at the Glasgow High School; married, 1850, to Robert Barr, (son of a Scottish Free-Kirk minister,) d. 1867; was a resident of Texas from 1854 to 1869, since which year she has lived in New York City. Her literary productions include many contributions to Harper's New Monthly Magazine and other periodicals. 1. Romances and Realities: Tales, Sketches, and Papers, N. York, 1872, 12mo. 2. Young People of Shakespeare's Drama, for Youthful Readers, N. York, 1882, 12mo. Cluny MacPherson: a Tale of Brotherly Love, 1883; new ed., 1887. 4. Scottish Sketches, 1883. 5. The Hallam Succession: a Tale of Methodist Life in Two Countries, 1884. 6. Jan Vedder's Wife, N. York, 1885, 12mo. "A story of the Shetland Norsemen, homely and simple, but full of picturesqueness and vigor."-Nation, xli. 17. 7. The Lost Silver of Briffault, N. York, 1885, 12mo. 8. A Daughter of Fife, N. York, 1886, 12mo. 9. The Harvest of the Winds, and other Stories, Lon., 1886, p. 8vo. 10. The Last of the Macallisters: a Novel, N. York, 1886, 16mo.

"Though her semi-barbarous MacAllisters and roving Romanys are highly colored, they are full of nature and of life, and the plot in which they move is well knit together."-Nation, xlii, 532.

11. Between Two Loves: a Tale of the West Riding. N. York, 1886, 16mo. 12. The Bow of Orange Ribbon a Picture of Colonial Knickerbocker Life, N. York, 1886, 12mo. 13. A Border Shepherdess: a Romance of Eskdale, N. York, 1887, 16mo. 14. Paul and Christina, N. York, 1887, 16mo. 15. The Squire of Sandal-Side: a Pastoral Romance, N. York, 1887, 12mo. 16. Master of his Fate, N. York, 1888, 16mo. (Same as In Spite of Himself: a Tale of the West Riding, Lon., 1888.) 17. Christopher, and other Stories, N. York, 1888, 12mo. 18. Remember the Alamo, N. York, 1888, 16mo.

Barr, Rev. J. T. The Merchant's Daughter, and other Narratives, Cin., 16mo.

Barr, Rev. James. Pronouncing Dictionary of the Holy Bible: a Concordance of Subjects, and Index to the Scriptures, Lon., 1868; 2d ed., 1875, 12mo. Barr, Rev. John. Early Religious History, [autobiography:] with Sketch of his Character by a Grandson, Phila., 18mo.

Barr, Rev. John T. The Cottage of Content; or,

3.

Barr, Thomas, M.D., lecturer on aural surgery, Anderson's College, Glasgow. A Manual of Diseases of the Ear, for Students and Practitioners of Medicine. Illust. Glasgow, 1884, p. 8vo.

Barr, Rev. Thomas E. The Gist of it: a Philosophy of Human Life: with an Introductory Note by Rev. D. S. Gregory, M.D., N. York, 1887, 12mo.

Barr, William M. A Practical Treatise on the
Combustion of Coal, Indianapolis, 1879, 8vo.
Barrack, William. Lexicon to Xenophon's An-
abasis, Lon., 1872, p. 8vo.

1. India and

Barras, Lieut.-Col. Julius. Tiger-Hunting, Lon., 1885. 2 vols. p. 8vo. 2. The New Shikari at our Indian Stations. Lon., 1885, 2 vols. p. 8vo. "The Colonel has had a happy idea when he thought of supplementing his amusing book on tigerhunting by a description of the various Indian stations, some of them very remote, to which a young officer is likely to be sent, and of the different kinds of sport in which he may indulge."-Spectator, lix. 392.

3. Rama: a Sensational Story of Indian Village Life, Lon., 1886, 12mo. 4. Under Two Shillings, Lon., 1888,

12mo.

Barratt, Alfred, 1844-1881, b. at Manchester, and educated at Rugby and Oxford. He was distinguished for his extraordinary precocity and powers of study. He studied law and was admitted to the bar, but continued his philosophical pursuits, and died of paralysis brought on by overwork. 1. Physical Ethics: an Essay, Lon., 1869, 8vo. 2. Physical Metempiric: with Memoir by his Widow, and an Appendix containing Three Articles reprinted from "Mind," Lon., 1883, 8vo.

"It is a paradise of paradox, laid out in the English taste by a powerful intellect sibi permissus.--that is to say, unhampered by the exigencies of the analytical method. It marshals a host of consequences flowing from the assumption that consciousness is immediately known as agency. Its value is the value inherent in the systematic and conscientious labour of a logical mind, employed upon the highest and largest problems of thought.”SHADWORTH H. HODGSON: Acad., xxiii. 404.

"This is the work of an ingenious but somewhat fanciful mind. It professes to deal with what philosophers call the noumenal' world--the unknown cause of the phenomenal--upon principles analogous to the atomic theory of physics. The only noumenon,' or 'thing-in-itself,' with which we are acquainted is our own consciousness, and so the author supposes every atom which is, physically considered, a centre of force and movement, to be 'noumenally'--that is, in itself, or metempirically,' as he calls it-a centre of consciousness."-Spectator, Ivii. 161.

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Barratt, Mrs. F. Layland. Doubts are Traitors: Story of a Cornish Family, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.

Barratt, George. Recollections of Methodism and Methodists in the City of Lincoln, Lincoln, 1866,

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Barratt, Joseph. The Indians of New England. By a Citizen of Middletown, Connecticut. Middletown, 1851.

Barratt, Robert C. "Long Life and Peace: " Memorials of Mrs. Elizabeth Shaw, Lon., 1875. 12mo. Barre, Uttere. Avondale of Avondale: a Political Romance, Lon., 1877, 3 vols. 8vo.

Barre, W. L., b. 1830, in Warren Co., Ky.; educated at Franklin College. 1. Lives of Illustrious Americans, 8vo; 11 eds. 2. Life and Public Services of Millard Fillmore, 1856. 3. (Ed.) Speeches and Writings of Hon. Thos. F. Marshall, Cin., 1858; many later eds.

Barrère, Albert, Officier de l'Instruction Publique, professor at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. 1. Argot and Slang: a New French-and-English Dictionary of the Cant Words, Quaint Expressions, Slang Terms, and Flash Phrases used in the High and Low Life of Old and New Paris, Lon., 1887, fp. 4to. Privately printed at the Chiswick Press. The ordinary edi.

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