Imágenes de página
PDF
ePub

Waring, Thomas S., M.D., and Logan, Samuel, M.D., prepared for publication, Outlines of a Course of Lectures on the Principles and Practice of Surgery, by E. Geddings, M.D., Charleston, 1858, 8vo.

Waring, William. Three papers on Mills, in Trans. Amer. Soc., vol. iii. 144, 185, 319.

Waring, William. Complete Dictionary of Music, Lon., 1779, 8vo.

Warington, Robert. Chemical Tables, Lon., ob. 12mo. See PEREIRA, JONATHAN, M.D., No. 5.

Wark, Dr. David. 1. On Furze in Fencing; Phil. Trans., 1761. 2. Earthquakes; Ess. Phys. and Lit.,

1771.

Warkworth's Chronicle, from 1461 to 1474; Edited by J. O. Halliwell, Esq., F.R.S., &c., Lon., 1839-40, sm. 4to, (Camden Soc. Pub., x.)

"A good authority."-J. FOSTER KIRK: Hist. of Charles the Bold, ii. (1864) 101, n.

Warly, John. 1. The Reasoning Apostate, Lon., 1677, 8vo. 2. Treatise on Human Reason, 8vo.

Warmington, E. Railroad Mismanagement: its Evils and Remedy, Lon., 1858, 8vo.

Warmington, G. 1. Fall of Leicester; a Dramatic Poem, 2d ed., Lon., 1842, 8vo. 2. Contrast; a Tale, 1844, 18mo.

Warmington, William, a R. Catholic priest. Moderate Defence of the Oath of Allegiance, 1612, 4to. Warmstrey, Gervase. Virescit Vulnere Virtus: England's Wound and Cure; in Verse, 1628, 4to. Warmstry, Thomas, D.D. 1. Pax Vobis, Lon., 1641, 4to. 2. Speech, 1641, 4to. 3. Ramus Olivæ, Oxon., 1642, 4to. 4. Answer to W. Bridges, 1643, 4to. 5. Baptized Turk; or, Conversion of Signior Rijep Dandudo, Lon., 1658, sm. 8vo.

Warne, J. A. Phrenology in the Family, Lon., 1843, r. 8vo.

Warne, Jonathan. 1. The Babel of Quakerism thrown down; or, The Errors, &c. of R. Barclay's Apology, &c., Lon., 1739, 8vo. 2. The Church of England turned Dissenter at last, 2d ed., 1740, 8vo. Anon.

Warne, Rev. Joseph A., editor of the Baptist Edition of the Comprehensive Commentary, Phila., 6 vols. sup. roy. Svo. Commended by eight American Baptist divines.

4.

Warneford, Lieutenant, R.N. 1. Tales of the Coast Guard, Lon., 1856, 12mo; 1863, fp. 8vo. 2. Tales of the Slave Squadron, 1860, 12mo. 3. Cruise of the Blue Jacket, and other Sea-Stories, 1861, fp. Svo. Running the [American] Blockade, 1863, 12mo. These books are ascribed to RUSSELL, WILLIAM HOWARD, LL.D., (supra.)

Warneford, John, Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, Rector of Basingham, Lincolnshire, and in 1761 appointed Camden Professor of History, Oxford. Sermons on several Subjects and Occasions, Oxf., 1776, 2 vols. sm. Svo.

Warneford, Richard. Sermons, York, 1757, 2 vols.

8vo.

Warner. Defence of the Doctrine and Holy Relics

of the Roman Catholic Church.

Warner. Address to the University of Oxford, Lon., 1730, 8vo.

Warner, Anna B., a younger sister of Susan Warner, (infra.) 1. Dollars and Cents, by Amy Lothrop, N. York, 1852, &c., 2 vols. 12mo; last ed., 1863, 12mo; Lon., 1853, (3 edits.,) &c., 12mo. See Hart's Female Prose Writers of America, 432; N. Amer. Rev., lxxvi. 112. 2. My Brother's Keeper, by the Author of "Dollars and Cents," N. York, 1855, 12mo, and 2 vols. 12mo; Lon., 1855: cr. 8vo, (Nisbet: reprinted from " Excelsior;") 12mo, (Knight :) 12mo, (Routledge.) "The idea of 'My Brother's Keeper' is good, and it is to be regretted that it should have been spoiled in the handling."Lon. Athen., 1855, 618. "Excellent in its tone, and written in a simple and pleasant style."-Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1855, 345.

3. With WARNER, SUSAN, (infra,) Ellen Montgomery's Book-Shelf, by the Authors of "The Wide. Wide World,” "Dollars and Cents," &c. &c., N. York, 16mo vols., viz.: I., II. Mr. Rutherford's Children, 1853; last ed., 1864. Trans. into French. Commended by Lon. Gent. Mag., 1854, i. 61. III. Carl Krinken, 1853; last ed., 1864. Trans. into French. Commended by Lon. Athen., 1854, 117. IV. Casper, by Amy Lothrop, 1855; last ed., 1864. V. Hard Maple, by the Author of "Dollars and Cents," 1859; last ed., 1864. Last Lon. ed. of Ellen Montgomery's Book-Shelf, 18mo vols., 18. ea., 1864, (Routledge.)

4. With WARNER, SUSAN, Say and Seal, Lon., 1860 Mar., 12mo and p. 8vo, April, 12mo, May, 12mo: sale in a few weeks, over 30,000; Phila., Mar. 29, 1860, 2 vols. 12mo. Repub. in Germany.

"It is eminently readable. Nay, more,-it is greatly instructive."-DR. R. SHELTON MACKENZIE.

cable to the pages of this book:
"The reader will find two lines of an old pastoral very appli-

My banks they are furnished with bees,
Whose murmur invites one to sleep:

so the gentle purring dulness will not be entirely without its
use, though it may not be exactly in the way the author in-
opinions are advertised on p. 628 of same periodical.
tended."-Lon. Athen., 1860, i. 441. More favourable English

Warner, Biddulp. 1. The Coquette; a Novel, Lon., Blake, 1860, er. 8vo. 1858, p. 8vo. 2. Adrift; or, The Fortunes of Connor

Warner, D. C., M.D. Family Dentist, N. York, 12mo.

Warner, Miss Eliza A., of Northampton, Mass. 1. Tom Tracy, Phila., 1862, 18mo. 2. The Young Wife, 1863, 18mo. 3. The Red House, 1864, 18mo. 4. The Old Flag, 1864, 18mo. 5. The Little Sunbeam, and other Stories, 1866, 18mo. 6. Eleanor; an Autobiogra7. Ben Boland's Garden, 1868, 18mo. phy. 1866, 18mo. Warner, Ferdinando, LL.D., b. 1703, became Michael Queenhithe, London, 1746, to which last preferVicar of Ronde, Wiltshire, 1730, and Rector of St. ment was added the rectory of Barnes, Surrey, in 1758; d. of gout (see No. 8, infra) in or soon after 1767. 1. System of Divinity and Morality; in a Series of [135] Discourses, &c., Lon., 1750, (some 1751,) 5 vols. 12mo; 2d ed., 1756, 4 vols. 8vo; 1758, 4 vols. 8vo; 1767, 4 vols. 8vo.

"The finest miscellany of its kind that was ever published." -Lon. Mon. Rev.

2. Rational Defence of the English Reformation, &c., 1752, 12mo. 3. An Illustration of the Book of Common Prayer, &c., 1754, fol. From Nichols, Wheatley, Burnet, Comber, &c. Valuable. 4. Ecclesiastical History of England from the Earliest Accounts to the Eighteenth Century, 1756-57, 2 vols. fol.

"This history deserves the highest applause on account of that noble spirit of liberty, candour, and moderation that seems to have guided the pen of the judicious author."-MOSHEIM. 5. Memoirs of the Life of Sir Thomas More, &c.; with his History of Utopia, trans. into English, with Notes, 1758, 8vo. 6. The History of Ireland, (from the earliest Records to the English Conquest,) 4to: vol. i., 1763. See No. 7. 7. History of the Rebellion and Civil War in Ireland, (1641-60,) 1767, 4to; 2d ed., 1768, 4to; Dubl., candour by Plowden and others: but see Ireland Vin1768, 2 vols. 8vo. This and No. 6 are praised for their dicated, by Mathew Carey, (p. 340, supra,) Phila., 1819,

Svo. 8. Full and Plain Account of the Gout, Lon., 1768, 8vo: 1772, 8vo. This elicited Remarks, &c., 1769, 8vo. Other publications. See Nichols's Lit. Anec., ii. 415, 416, ix. 783; Chalmers's Biog. Dict., xxxi. 155. Warner, Harriot W. Autobiography of Charles W. Caldwell, M.D., with a Preface, Notes, and Appendix, Phila., 1855, r. 8vo, pp. 454.

"A pure example of prosy, old-fashioned American style."-Lon. Athen., 1855, 1080.

Warner, Henry W.

1. Discourse on Legal Science, N. York, 1833, 8vo. 2. Liberties of America, 1853, 8vo; Lon., 1853, p. 8vo. See, also, SWANSTON, CLEMENT TUDWAY, No. 1.

Warner, J. L. Utrum Augustus bene de Populo Romano meruerit, Lon., 1861, 12mo.

Warner, J. S. Isabel de Cordova, N. York and Lon., 1862, 12mo, (Beadle's Amer. Lib.)

Warner, J. W. Emigrant's Guide and Citizen's Manual, N. York, 1848.

Warner, James F. 1. Primary Note Reader; or, First Steps in Singing at Sight, N. York, 12mo. 2. Universal Dictionary of Musical Terms, Bost., 1842, 8vo. 3. Rudimental Lessons on Music, N. York, 1845, 18mo. 4. Godfrey Weber's General Music-Teacher; from 3d German ed., with Notes and Additions, Bost., 1841, 2 vols. 8vo. 5. Theory of Musical Composition; Trans. from the German of Von Weber; with Additions and Notes, N. York, 1842, 8vo.

Warner, John, was elected demy of Magdalene College, Oxford, 1599; made Perpetual Fellow, 1605; Dean of Lichfield, 1633; Bishop of Rochester, Jan. 14, 1637-8; and d., 1666. He was a loyalist, and suffered during the usurpation. 1. Church Lands not to be Sold, Lon., 1646, 1648, 4to. 2. Letter to Dr. Jeremy Taylor concerning the Chapter of Original Sin in the Usum Necessarium, 1656, 8vo. Repub. in Taylor's Works:

see TAYLOR, JEREMY, D.D.: Editions of Jeremy Taylor's | St. James's Church, Bath, and subsequently Rector of Works, vii. He also published several sermons. See Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., iii. 731; Burnet's Own Times; Biog. Brit.; Fuller's Worthies; Barwick's Life; Lysons's Environs; Chalmers's Hist. of Oxford; Bonney's Life of Jeremy Taylor; Nichols's Illust. of Lit., vi. 616, 628. Warner, John. Discourse on Faith, Oxon., 1657,

8vo.

Warner, John, a native of Warwickshire, Professor of Divinity at Douay College, in 1663 became a Jesuit, and taught divinity at the College of Liege; on the accession of James II. was made his confessor; after his fall accompanied him to Ireland, and finally to St. Germain, and d. there, 1692.

1. Stillingfleet still against Stillingfleet, &c., 1675, 8vo. 2. Ecclesiæ Primitiva Clericus, cujus Gradus Educatio, Tonsura, Chorus, Vita Communis, Vota, Hierarchia, exponuntur, Per sup., sine loco aut typ., 1686, 4to. Privately printed. Liber rarissimus.

Warner, John, D.D., son of Ferdinando Warner, LL.D., Rector of Hockliffe and Chalgrave, Bedfordshire, 1771; d. 1800, aged 64.

Metronariston; or, A New Pleasure, Recommended in a Dissertation upon a Part of Greek and Latin Prosody, Lon., 1797, 8vo.

"A curious, rational, and convincing treatise on the pronunciation of the Greek and Latin languages."-DR. VALPY. "This work is teasingly written; but it convinces me."Green's Diary of a Lwer of Lit., 1810, 4to, 209.

He was the author of the Memoirs of Mekerchus in the Gentleman's Magazine. See Nichols's Lit. Anec., ii. 416, 417, 644, ix. 198, 199-201, 283, 286.

Chelwood, Somerset, and Great Chalfield, Wilts, d. 1857.
1. Hampshire: extracted from Domesday Book; with an
Accurate English Translation, a Preface, and an Introduc-
tion, &c., and Glossary, Lon., 1789, 4to. Repub. in some
copies of No. 7. 2. Companion in a Tour round Lymington,
1789, 8vo. 3. Antiquitates Culinaria, or Curious Tracts re-
lating to the Culinary Affairs of the Old English, 1791, r.
4to: Beckford, 56, £3 58. ; l. p., imp. 4to, Roxburghe, 1958,
£3 108. Privately printed. 4. Attempt to ascertain the
Situation of the Ancient Clausentum, 1792, 4to. 5. Topo-
graphical Remarks relating to the South-Western Parts
of Hampshire, 1793, 2 vols. 8vo. 6. History of the Isle of
Wight, Southamp., 1795, 8vo. 7. Collections for the His-
tory of Hampshire and the Bishopric of Winchester, in-
cluding the Isles of Wight, Jersey, Guernsey, and Sarke,
by D. Y., with the original Domesday of the County, and an
Accurate English Translation, Preface and Introduction,
and Glossary, Lon., (1795,) 5 vols. in 6, 4to: 225 copies
on small paper, and 25 on 1. p. The Domesday (see No.
1) which occurs in vol. ii. is not included in all sets. 8.
Illustration of the Roman Antiquities discovered at
Bath, Bath, 1797, 4to. 9. Walk through Wales, 1798,
8vo. 10. Second Walk through Wales, Lon., 1799, 8vo.
11. Walk through some of the Western Counties of Eng-
land, 1800, Svo. 12. History of Bath, Bath, 1801, imp.
4to; some 1. p. 13. Excursions from Bath, 1801, 8vo.
14. Historical and Descriptive Account of Bath and its
Environs, Lon., 1802, 12mo. 15. Tour through the
land, 1802, 2 vols. 8vo.
Northern Counties of England and the Borders of Scot-
16. Practical Discourses, Bath,
1803-4, 2 vols. 8vo. 17. English Diatessaron; or, The
History of Christ, from the Compounded Texts of the
See No. 27. 18. Book of
Lon., 1806, 8vo.
Common Prayer; with the Psalter, and an Introduction,
19. Companion to the Holy Sacrament,
12mo. 20. Six Occasional Sermons, 1808, 8vo.
Characters; in a Series of Sermons, Lon., 1810-11, 2 vols.
Tour through Cornwall, Bath, 1809, 8vo. 22. Scripture
12mo. 23. New Guide through Bath, 1812, 8vo.
Sermons, Tracts, and Notes on the New Testament, 1813,
3 vols. 8vo. 25. Sermons [57] on the Epistles or Gospels
4th ed., 1819, 2 vols. 12mo.
for the Sundays throughout the Year, 1816, 2 vols. 12mo;
26. Old Church of England
Principles; in a Series of Sermons, 1818, 3 vols. 12mo;
3d ed., 1823, 3 vols. 12mo. Commended by Lon. Mon.
Rev. 27. Chronological History of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ, from the Compounded Texts of the Four
Holy Evangelists; or, The English Diatessaron, Bath
and Lon., 1819, 8vo. See No. 17. 28. Miscellanies,
Bath, 1819, (some 1820,) 2 vols. 12mo. 29. Illustrations,
by the Author of Waverley, &c., Lon., 1823, 12mo. Com-
Historical, Biographical, and Miscellaneous, of the Novels
mended by Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1823, 386. 30. History of
the Abbey of Glaston and the Town of Glastonbury, with
20 plates, Bath, 1826, 4to, £8 88.; 1. p., £12 128. Pri-
few copies were sold, ut supra.
vately printed for subscribers: 250 copies, at £6 68. A
See Lon. Gent. Mag.,
(some 1829,) 2 vols. 12mo.
1827, ii. 114. 31. Sunday Evening Discourses, 1828,
32. The Psalter; or, Psalms
of David according to the Version of the Book of Com-
mon Prayer; Illustrated, &c., Lon., 1828, Svo. 33. Lite-
rary Recollections, 1830, 2 vols. 8vo.

Warner, John, of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Four Evangelists, 1805, 8vo.
Law. See SAUNDERS, FRANCIS WILLIAMS, No. 1.
Warner, John. 1. Studies in Organic Morphology,
Phila., 1857. 2. New Theorems, Tables, and Diagrams
for the Computation of Earthworks, 1863, 8vo.
Warner, Joseph, b. in the island of Antigua, 1717,
was for some years Lecturer on Anatomy at St. Thomas's
Hospital; in 1746 joined the royal army in Scotland,
and was subsequently for 44 years Surgeon to Guy's
Hospital; d. 1801.

1. Cases in Surgery; with Introductions, Operations, and Remarks, &c., Lon., 1754, 8vo; 3d ed., 1760, 8vo; 4th ed., 1784, 8vo. See Lon. Gent. Mag., xxiv. 389. 2. Description of the Human Eye and its Adjacent Parts, 1773, 8vo; 2d ed., 1776, 8vo. 3. Account of the Testicles, 1774, 8vo; 1779, 8vo. See Lon. Gent. Mag., xliv. 181. Also, eleven medical papers in Phil. Trans., 1750-70. See Chalmers's Biog. Dict., xxxi. 162.

Warner, or Warnerus, Levinus. 1. De Vitæ Termino, ex Arabum et Persarum Scriptis, Amst., 1642, 8vo. 2. Compendium Historicum eorum quæ Mohammedani de Christo, &c., Lugd. Bat., 1643, 4to. 3. Epis

tola Valedictoria, &c., 1644, 4to. 4. Proverbiorum Persicorum Centuria, cum Versione et Notis, 1644. 5. Dissertatio de Karais: in Ugolinus, Thesaurus Antiquitatum, (Venet., 1744-69, 34 vols. fol.,) xxii. 487.

Warner, Mansion. Three single sermons, 1745

46, ea. 8vo.

Warner, Rebecca. 1. Letters from Baxter, Prior, &c.; with Notes, 8vo. 2. Epistolary Curiosities, consisting of Unpublished Letters of 17th Cent., illust. of the Herbert Family, Bath, 1818, 8vo.

Warner, Richard, b. 1711, and educated at Wadham College, Oxford, had law-chambers in Lincoln's Inn, but resided chiefly on his estate at Woodford Green, Essex, where he d. 1775. 1. Letter to David Garrick, Esq., concerning a Glossary to the Plays of Shakspeare &c., Lon., 1768, 8vo. The original MS. of this Glossary, (never pub.,) in 71 vols. 4to, is in the British Museum, (MS. Addit., 10,452–10,542,) where also are the MS. of the Letter and an interleaved copy of Tonson's ed. of Shakspeare with MS. notes by Warner.

He left many

of his interleaved editions of Shakspeare, (of whom he projected a new edition, but resigned in favour of Steevens,) with other books, to Wadham College.

2. Planta Woodfordienses, Lon., 1771, sm. 8vo. pendix, 1784, sm. 8vo, pp. 12.

21.

24.

"We sincerely recommend this occasionally curious and always entertaining book."-Lon. Gent. Mag., 1830, ii. 154. See, also, 1830, i. 612.

"The style is remarkably forcible, chaste, and elegant.”—Lon. Mon. Rev., 1830, ii. 190.

34. Twelve Sermons on Practical Religion, 1837, 8vo. 35. Four Sermons on the Simplicity of Christianity, 1839, Svo. 36. Five Discourses on the Sermon on the Mount, 1840, 8vo. 37. Specimens of Biblical Exposition on the Book of Genesis, 1842, 12mo. 38. The Diary of an Aged Parson, (Sept. 1, 1848,) 4to. Poetical. Privately printed. He was the author of other poetical pieces, issued Omnium Gatherum, (a periodical, praised by Dr. Parr,) and pub

lished a number of occasional sermons. See Lon. Gent. Mag., 1858, i. 101, (Obituary ;) Watt's Bibl. Brit.; DarAp-ling's Cyc. Bibl., i. 3109.

"This book was never published, but a few copies were given to the author's friends."-GOUGH.

Additions to Warner's Planta Woodfordienses were pub. by Mr. Forster in 1784.

See, also, THORNTON, BONNELL, No. 2. See Pulteney's Botany; Lysons's Environs; Nichols's Lit. Anec., iii. 74, 75, viii. 596, ix. 642.

Warner, Richard, b. 1763, for 23 years Curate of

Warner, S. A. Narrative of Circumstances connected with my Mode of National Defence, Lon., 1849, 8vo.

Warner, Susan, elder sister of Anna B. Warner, (supra,) is a daughter of Henry Warner, a member of the Bar of the city of New York. 1. The Wide, Wide World, by Elizabeth Wetherell, N. York, 1850, 2 vols. 12mo: last ed., 1864, 12mo; Lon., 1851, 2 vols. 12mo; 1853, 13 edits.; last ed., 1864, fp. 8vo. It was asserted

that the sale to April, 1860, had been 500,000 copies. 6th ed. in French, 1864. Also translated into German and Swedish. See No. 2. See, also, Lyrics from "The Wide, Wide World;" The Poetry by W. H. Bellamy, Music by C. W. Glover, N. York, 1853, sq. 8vo. This vol. contains six lyrical pieces founded on passages in The Wide, Wide World.

2. Queechy, by Elizabeth Wetherell, 1852, 2 vols. 12mo; last ed., 1864, 12mo; Lon., 1852, 2 vols. p. 8vo; 1853, 7 edits.; last ed., 1864, cr. 8vo. Many thousands sold in America and G. Britain. Trans. into French, German, and Swedish. Notices of Nos. 1 and 2 will be found in N. Brit. Rev.,Westm. Rev., N. Amer. Rev., Ixxvi., Lon. Athen., 1856, 1163; Hart's Female Prose Writers, 421; Trübner's Bibl. Guide to Amer. Lit., ed. 1859, liv. See, also, notices of No. 1 in Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1852, 157, and Lon. Athen., 1860, i. 441; and notice of No. 2 in Lon. Athen., 1852, 574. 3. American Female Patriotism; a Prize Essay, by Elizabeth Wetherell, N. York, 1852, 32mo. 4. The Law and the Testimony, by the Author of "The Wide, Wide World," 1853, 8vo; Lon., 1853, 8vo. This is a collection of "passages in the Bible having a bearing upon particular specified subjects or points of doctrine; such as the Divine Nature, Divinity of the Saviour, God's Omniscience," &c. Upon the value of such a work it is not necessary to expatiate. 5. The Hills of the Shatemuc, by the Author of "The Wide, Wide World," N. York, 1856, 12mo, (10,000 sold on the day of publication;) Lon., 1856, fp. 8vo, and 8vo; Paris, 1856. Commended by many American newspapers.

"We regret to say that all the promise contained in the earlier works of this writer appears to have evaporated."-Lon. Athen., 1856, 1163.

6. The Golden Ladder: Stories illustrative of the Eight Beatitudes, by the Author of "The Wide, Wide World," &c., Lon., Nov. 1862, fp. 8vo; 5th 1000, Dec. 1863, fp. 8vo. 7. The Old Helmet, by the Author of "The Wide, Wide World," Lon., Nov. 1863, 2 vols. p. 8vo; last ed., 1864, cr. 8vo; Leipsic, 1863; N. York, Dec. 4, 1863, 2 vols. 12mo; 2d ed., Dec. 23, 2 vols. 12mo; last ed., 1864, 2 vols. 12mo. See, also, WARNER, ANNA B., Nos. 3 and 4.

Warner, Thomas. Bible Soc. Sermon, Hudson,

1817.

Warner, Warren. Experiences of a Barrister, N. York, 1852, 8vo.

Warner, William, b. in Oxfordshire, probably about 1558, and educated at Magdalene College, Oxford, became an Attorney of the Common Pleas; d. Mar. 9 or 10, 1608-9.

1. Pan his Syrinx or Pipe, compact of Seuen Reedes, including in one, Seven Tragicall and Comicall Arguments, Lon., (1584,) 4to. Heber, Part 8, 2930, £10 58. Again, Syrinx, &c., 1597, 4to. White Knight's, 4604, £6; Roxburghe, 6375, £16 58. 6d.

"A novel, or rather a suite of stories, much in the style of the adventures of Heliodorus's Ethiopic romance."-WARTON: Hist. of Eng. Poet., ed. 1840, iii. 381.

2. Albion's England: a Continued History of the same Kingdome, from the Originals of the First Inhabitants thereof unto the Raigne of Queen Elizabeth, 1586, 4to: Mitford, April, 1860, £5 58.; 2d ed., 1589, 4to; 3d ed., 1592, 4to; 4th ed., 1596, 4to: Bibl. Anglo-Poet., 841, £6 68.; 5th ed., 1597, 4to: Bibl. Anglo-Poet., 842, £4 48.; 6th ed., with an Epitome of the Whole Historie of England, &c., 1602, 4to: Bibl. Anglo-Poet., 843, (q. v.,) £5 58.; again, 1606, 4to; 1612, 4to: Heber, Part 4, 2865, £3 48.; Crawford, in 1854, £1 138. Also repub. in Chalmers's Brit. Poets, 1810, 21 vols. r. 8vo. This poem was at once interdicted, it is supposed on the ground of its indelicacy, by the Star Chamber.

"As Euripides was the most sententious among the Greek poets, so was this Warner among the English poets; and as Homer and Virgil among the Greek and Latins were the chief heroic poets, so Edm. Spencer and this our Warner were esteemed by scholars living in the reign of qu. Elizabeth our chief heroical makers."-MERES: Athen. Oron., Bliss's ed., i. 766. "Spencer and Warner be our chief heroical makers. I have heard Warner termed of ye best wits of both our Universities Our English Homer."-MERES: Wits Treasurie, 1598, 12mo. See, also, Meres's Witts Academy, 1634, 12mo.

"There is in Warner occasionally a pathetic simplicity that never fails of engaging the heart. His tales, though often tedious, and not unfrequently indelicate, abound with all the unaffected incident and artless ease of the best old ballads, without their cant and puerility. The pastoral pieces that occur are superior to all the eclogues in our language, those of Collins only excepted."-HEADLEY: Select Beauties of Anc. Eng. Poets.

"His poem is, in fact, an enormous ballad on the history, or rather on the fables appendant to the history, of England; heterogeneous, indeed, like the Metamorphoses, [of Ovid,] but

[ocr errors]

written with an almost doggrel simplicity. Headley has rashly preferred his works to our ancient ballads; but with the best has indeed some beautiful touches, yet that episode requires to of them they will bear no comparison. Argentile and Curan be weeded of many lines to be read with unqualified pleasure; and through the rest of his stories we shall search in vain for the familiar magic of such ballads as Chevy Chase' or 'Gil Morrice.'"-CAMPBELL: Essay on Eng. Poetry, ed. 1848, 172.

"Many parts of Warner's Albion's England are extremely worthy of preservation, but the following episode, [Argentile and Curan,] although it has been reprinted, is so very beautiful

that I cannot consent to omit it."-DR. BLISS: Wood's Athen. Oxon., i. 768.

"I have read Warner with great pleasure. What an elaborate labour far above the most difficult versification. There is a fine piece of alliteration and antithesis! Why, it must have been a simile or picture of Semiramis arming to repel a siege."CHARLES LAMB.

"Albion's England, 1586, has at least the equivocal merit of great length. It is rather legendary than historical; some pasthough natural, seldom rises above prose."-HALLAM: Lit. Hist. sages are pleasing, but it is not a work of genius, and the style, of Eng., 4th ed., 1854, ii. 127.

See, also, Brydges's Phillips's Theat. Poet. Anglie., 215; Cooper's Muses' Lib.; Percy's Reliques: Ellis's Spec.; Ritson's Bibl. Poet.; Collier's Bibl. Acet. of Early Eng. Lit., 1865.

3. Menæchmi, [from Plautus,] a pleasant and fineconceited Comedie, written in English by W. W., 1595, 4to. From this play Shakspeare derived his plot of the Comedy of Errors. Inglis's Old Plays, 115, £8 158. It is reprinted in Nichols's (Steevens's) Six Old Plays, 1779, 2 vols. sm. 8vo. See, also, Warton's Hist. of Eng. Poet., iii. 381; ALLOT, ROBERT: England's Parnassus, No. 39; WEBSTER, WILLIAM.

Warnes, John. On the Cultivation of Flax, the Fattening of Cattle, &c., Lon., 1846, 8vo; 2d ed., 1847, 8vo. See Donaldson's Agr. Biog., 134.

Warnor, Miss. Herbert Lodge, 1810, 3 vols. 12mo. Warr, Daniel, Independent minister at St. Leonard's, near Hastings. Course of XX. Lectures illustrative of John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, Lon., (1825,) 8vo; 1836, Svo.

Warr, G. Finden. Dynamics, the Construction of Machinery, &c., Lon., 1851, Svo, (Lib. of U. K.) "To be commended not less for the lucidity of its language than for its correctness in practical detail."-The Artisan, Feb. 1, 1852.

See, also, NICHOLSON, JOHN, No. 3. Warr, G. W. Canada as it is; or, The Emigrant's Friend, Lon., 1847, 18mo. Warr, John. Privileges of the People, Lon., 1649, 4to.

Warrand, A. R. 1. New Bankrupt Act, 6 Geo. 2. New Insolvent IV. c. 16, &c., Lon., 1826, 12mo. Act, 7 Geo. IV., &c., 1827, 12mo.

Warre, Colonel Henry J. 1. Sketches in the Oregon Territory and the North-West Coast of North America; 20 views on stone, Lon., 1848, fol., tinted, £2 28.; col'd, £3 138. 6d. 2. Illustrations of the Seat of War, 1856, fol., tinted, £1 58.; col'd, £2 28. Warre, James.

Svo.

Touchstone of Truth, Lon., 1621,

Warre, James. The Past, Present, and probably the Future State of the Wine Trade, &c., 2d ed., Lon., 1824, 8vo.

2. Short

Warre, Lord De la. 1. Relation concerning the Colonie planted in Virginia, Lon., 1611, 4to. Relation made by him to the Lords of the Council of Virginia touching his Unexpected Return Home, 1611,

4to.

Warrell, J. Catalogue of Oil Paintings, Charleston, 8vo.

Warren. Catches and Glees. Very rare. Warren. Farmer's Account Book, 20th ed., Royston, 1862, 4to, and fol.

Warren. Yachtman's and Amateur Sailor's Primer, N. York, 1863, 12mo.

Warren, Miss. Aunt Jane's Grammar, Lon., 1850,

18mo.

Warren, Mrs. 1. Point Lace Collar Crochet-Book, Lon., 1846, 3 series, ea. 32mo. 2. Irish Point CrochetBook Collars, 1854, sq. 3. Timethrift; or, All Hours turned to Good Account, 1651, r. Svo; 1854, r. 8vo. 4. With PULLAN, MRS., Treasures in Needlework, 1855, cr. 8vo; 3d ed., 1863, er. 8vo. 5. Economical CookeryBook, 1858, 12mo. 6. How I Managed my House on Two Hundred Pounds a Year, 1864, cr. 8vo.

Warren, Albert H. 1. Guide to Beginners in the Art of Illumination, Lon., 1860, 12mo. 2. The Promises of Jesus Christ: Outlines for Illuminating, in packet,

1860. 3. The Promises of Jesus Christ, Illuminated, Dec. 1860, 4to; 2d ed., 1861.

Warren, Albertus. See CLIFFORD, MARTIN. Warren, Mrs. Ann. See WARREN, SAMUEL, LL.D., No. 2.

Warren, Arthur. The Poore Mans Passions and Pouerties Patience, Lon., 1605, 4to, pp. 70. Bibl. Anglo-Poet., 845, £10 108. See Collier's Bibl. Acct. of Early Eng. Lit., 1865.

Warren, C. Missouri Harmony, Cin. Warren, Caroline Matilda. Conrade; or, The Gamesters, 1806, 2 vols. 12mo.

Warren, Charles. My Scrapes and Escapes, N.

York.

Warren, Charles. 1. Sermon, 1 Cor. vii. 14, Tottenham, 1837, 8vo. 2. Indeterminateness of Unauthorized Baptism, Camb., 1841, 8vo, pp. 30. 3. Edited Synodalia: a Journal of Convocation, Lon., 1853, 8vo. Warren, D. Synopsis of the Genealogical Descent of Queen Victoria, Lon., 1849, fp. 8vo.

Warren, David M., a native of Worcester, Mass., for some years a member of the firm of H. Cowperthwait & Co., publishers, of Philadelphia, d. in Baltimore, 1861, aged 41. Warren's Geographical Series, Phila., (J. B. Cowperthwait,) viz. :

1. Primary Geography, with 19 col'd electrotyped Maps, and Engravings, sm. 4to, pp. 88; last ed., 1864. 2. Common School Geography, with 27 col'd copperplate and electrotyped Maps, drawn by James H. Young, and Wood Engravings, r. 4to, pp. 100, 1857; last ed., 1864. Most of the text is by Arthur Sumner, who likewise aided in No. 3.

3. System of Physical Geography, with 20 copperplate and electrotyped Maps, Charts, and Engravings, r. 4to, pp. 92, 1857; new ed., 1869. See No. 2. Commended by Prof. Agassiz, Lon. Athen., Lon. Lit. Gaz., Lon. Literarium, &c.

"All the volumes [Nos. 1, 2, and 3] are excellent, both as respects matter and mechanical execution, and they richly merit the favour with which they have been received."-Amer. Lit. Gaz, and Pub. Circ., Sept. 15, 1864, 279. See, also, 314.

4. Geographical Question-Book, last ed., 1864. Warren, Rev. Dawson. 1. The Parish Priest; a Poem, from the Latin of Benton, 1800, 4to. 2. Letter to William Mellish on Christ's Hospital, &c., Lon., 1808,

8vo.

Warren, E. The Poet's Day; or, Imagination's Ramble, 1804, 8vo.

Warren, E. T., an English musician, published Reliques of Ancient Music, and a monthly collection, and also an annual collection, of Catches and Glees.

Warren, Edward. Caleb's Inheritance in Canaan by Grace, not Works; in answer to a Book of the Doctrine of Baptism and Distinction of the Covenants, by Thomas Patient, Lon., 1656, 4to.

Warren, Edward, M.D., a brother of John Collins Warren, M.D., (q. v.,) graduated at Harvard College, 1804. 1. Sketch of the Progress of the Cholera in America, Bost., 1832, 8vo. 2. Boylston Prize Dissertations for 1838 and 1839: on Scrofula, Rheumatism, and Erysipelatous Inflammation, 1840, 8vo, (Dunglison's Amer. Med. Lib.) Contributed to Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., 1830 et seq., Amer. Jour. of Med. Sci., N. Eng. Quar. Jour. Med. and Surg., N. Amer. Rev., Chris. Exam., and Boston Daily Traveller.

Warren, Edward, M.D., of Edenton, North Carolina, author of No. 2, and LEE, EDWIN, author of No. 1. 1. The Effects of Climate on Tuberculous Disease; 2. The Influence of Pregnancy on the Development of Tubercles, Phila., 1857, imp. 8vo, pp. 73, 42, (Fiske Fund Prize Essays.)

Warren, Edward, a native of Palmyra, Maine, is the author of Some Account of the Letheon; or, Who is the Discoverer? Bost., 1847, 8vo, and other pamphlets (also articles in Bost. Med. Jour., &c.) in defence of the claims of Dr. Morton (see MORTON, W. G. T.; WELLS, HORACE) to the ether discovery; and has contributed to Amer. Theolog. Rev., N. Amer. Rev., &c.

Warren, Erasmus, D.D. Single sermons, &c., 1684-93, q. v. in Watt's Bibl. Brit.

Warren, George. Impartial Description of Surinam, Lon., 1667, 4to. Repub. in Osborne's Voy. and Trav., ii. 919.

Warren, George. 1. Venereal Disease, 3d ed., Lon., 1734, 8vo. 2. Dissection of an Ostrich; Phil. Trans., 1726.

Warren, George. 1. Commentary on Disorders

| of the Head, Lon., 8vo. 2. Disquis. on Nature of Animals, 8vo.

Warren, George John, fifth Lord Vernon, See VERNON.

Warren, Major-General Gouverneur Kemble, b. at Cold Spring, N. York, 1830; graduated at West Point Military Academy, 1850. 1. Report on Improvement of Des Moines and Rock Island Rapids of the Mississippi River in 1853; in U.S. Congress. Doc., Washington, D.C., 1854, 8vo. 2. Explorations in the Dacota Country in 1855; Ex. Doc. No. 76, 1st Sess., 34th Congress. 3. Exploration of the Country between the Missouri and Platte Rivers, &c. ; in a Topographical Survey, 1857, 8vo. Reviewed in N. Amer. Rev., lxxxvii. 66. 4. Explorations in Nebraska and Dacota in 185657; published with the Ann. Rep. of the Sec'y of War in 1858. 5. Pacific Rail Road Reports, part of vol. i., all of vol. ii., with maps. 6. Battle of Five Forks, Virginia, N. York, 1866, 8vo.

Warren, H., M.D. Treatise concerning the Malignant Fever of Barbadoes, Lon., 1740, Svo.

2.

Warren, Henry, President of the Institute of Painters in Water-Colours. 1. Notes upon Notes; with Cuts upon Copper, and Music, Lon., 1832, 12mo. Artistic Anatomy of the Human Figure, Lon., 1852, 12mo. 3. Painting in Water-Colours, 1856-57, 2 Parts, 12mo. 4. With JONES, OWEN, (supra,) The History of Joseph and his Brethren, from Genesis, Chapters 37 to 50, Illuminated, 52 plates in 1 vol., 1866, 4to, £2 28.; 1. p., 250 copies, £5 58. 5. Drawing: a Series of Sixteen Studies for Students and Teachers, 4 Parts, 4to, 1866-67.

Mr. Warren has contributed Illustrations to The Parables, 1858, sq. 16mo, Lockhart's Ancient Spanish Bal lads, new ed., 1858, 4to, Davis's Memorials of Knightbridge, 1859, &c.

Warren, Ira, M.D., a native of Hawkesburg, Canada; studied at Brown University and at Kenyon College. 1. Causes and Cure of Puseyism, Bost., 1847, 8vo. 2. The Household Physician, 1859, sup. r. 8vo; 2d ed., 1863. Sale to 1864, 30,000. Contributor to The Christian Witness, Mon. Epis. Observer, and subsequently editor of The Christian Alliance, and The Family Visitor.

Warren, Israel Perkins, Secretary of the American Tract Society, instituted in Boston, 1814, and editor of its publications, was b. in Boston, 1814, and graduated at Yale College, 1838. 1. The Sisters; a Memoir of E. H., A. A., and S. F. Dickerman, Bost., 1859, &c., 12mo. 2. Sadduceeism; a Refutation of the Doctrine of the Annihilation of the Wicked, 1860, &c., 16mo. 3. The Snow-Flakes; a Chapter from the Book of Nature, 1863, sq. 8vo. 4. The New Testament, with Notes, Pictorial Illustrations, and References: vol. i., The Four Gospels, 1868. Also, many tracts and pamphlets. Editor of (monthly papers of the Amer. Tract Soc.): I. Tract Journal; II. Child at Home; III. Christian Banner; IV. The Freedman: aggregate monthly circulation of the four, 400,000 copies.

Warren, Lieut.-Col. J. Collection of Memoirs on the Various Modes according to which the Natives of the Southern Part of India divide Time, &c., Madras, 1825, 2 Parts, in 1 vol. 4to.

Warren, Hon. J. Leicester. Essay on Greek Federal Coinage, Lon. and Camb., 1863, 8vo. See, also, History of Federal Government, by Edward A. Freeman, (p. 636, supra,) 8vo: vol. i., 1863: noticed in Lon. Reader, 1863, i. 209.

Warren, J. R. See SOYER, ALEXIS; VOLANT, F. Warren, Mrs. Jane S. The Morning Star: History of the Children's Missionary Vessel, &c., Bost., 1860, 18mo.

Warren, John. Sermon, Esay xxxviii. 1, Lon., 1618, 4to.

2.

Warren, John, D.D., b. 1670; Preb. of Exeter, 1709; d. 1736. 1. Sermon, Heb. iii. 17, 1716, 8vo. Sermons, with Account of the Author, by R. Warren, Lon., 1739, 2 vols. 8vo. Commended.

Warren, John, LL.D., Archdeacon of Worcester, 1775; Bishop of St. David's, 1779; trans. to Bangor, 1783; d. 1800. He published six single sermons, 1777 -92.

Warren, John, M.D., of Taunton. Two Cases of Painful Constipation; Med. Com., x. 255, 1786.

Warren, John, M.D., brother of General Joseph Warren, (infra,) was b. in Roxbury, 1753; graduated at Harvard College, 1771, and was Professor of Anatomy

and Surgery there from 1783 until his death, in 1815. | He published several orations, addresses, &c., and contributed to Med. Com., Mass. Med. Soc., New Eng. Jour. of Med. and Surg., and Mem. of Amer. Acad. of Arts and Sciences. See Thacher's Amer. Med. Biog., ii. 254– 271; Amer. Quar. Reg., xiii. 85; Cat. of the Lib. of the Mass. Hist. Soc., ii. 566. See BARTLETT, Josiah.

"Dr. Warren has just claims to be ranked among the distinguished men of our country for his spirit as a patriot, his virtues as a man, and his pre-eminent surgical skill."-JOSIAH QUINCY: Hist. of Harvard Univ., ii. 307.

"Dr. John Warren, who is believed to have had but one equal and no superior among the American surgeons of his day."-A. P. PEABODY, D.D.: N. Amer. Rev., April, 1860, 461, (q. v.)

Warren, John. The Conchologist, Bost., 1834, sq.

8vo.

Warren, Rt. Hon. Sir John Borlase, Bart., G.C.B., M.P., Rear-Admiral of the Blue, b. 1754, d. 1822, is understood to have been the author of A View of the Naval Force of Great Britain, Lon., 1791, 8vo. Anon. See Knight's Eng. Cyc., Biog., vi., 530.

Warren, John Collins, M.D., son of John Warren, M.D., of Roxbury, was b. in Boston, Aug. 1778; graduated at Harvard College, 1797; became Adjunct Professor, 1806, Hersey Professor, 1815, and Emeritus Professor, 1847, of Anatomy and Surgery in Harvard College; Surgeon of the Massachusetts General Hospital, 182153; President of the Massachusetts Medical Society, 183236; President of the Massachusetts Temperance Society, and also President of the Boston Society of Natural History; d. May 4, 1856. 1. Cases of Organic Diseases of the Heart, Bost., 1809, 8vo; 1811, 8vo. 2. Description of an Egyptian Mummy, 1821, 8vo. 3. Comparative View of the Sensorial and Nervous Systems in Man and Animals, 1822, 8vo. 4. Some Account of the Medical School in Boston and of the Massachusetts General

6.

Hospital, 1824, 8vo. 5. Letter to Hon. I. Parker on the Dislocation of the Hip Joint, &c., Camb., 1826, Svo. Description of the Siamese Twins, Bost., 1829, 8vo. 7: Surgical Observations on Tumours; with Cases and Observations, 1837, 8vo; Lon., 1839, 8vo. Commended by N. Amer. Rev., xlv. 230, and Trübner's Bibl. Guide to Amer. Lit., ed. 1859, lxix. 8. Physical Education and the Preservation of Health, Bost., 1846, 18mo; 3d ed., 18mo. 9. Etherization; with Surgical Remarks, 1848, 8vo. 10. Effects of Chloroform and of Strong Chloric Ether as Narcotic Agents, 1849, 8vo. 11. Remarks on the Use of Alcohol in the Preparation of Medicines, 1849, Svo. See No. 16. 12. On the Prevention of Constipation, 1850, 8vo. See No. 16. 13. Address before the American Medical Association at Cincinnati, 1850, 8vo. 14. Description of a Skeleton of the Mastodon Giganteus of North America, 1852, 4to, pl. 27, pp. 219. Privately printed and gratuitously distributed (chiefly through the Smithsonian Institution) to universities and learned societies; 2d ed., published, 1855, (some 1856,) 4to, pl. 30, pp. 270, $7.50.

"One of the most complete and beautifully-executed monographs we have ever seen.... The plates, thirty in number, are worthy the pencil of Dinkel or Scharf."-Lon. Athen., 1858,

i. 495.

15. Address to the Boston Society of Natural History, 1853, 8vo. 16. The Preservation of Health; with Remarks on Constipation, Old Age, Use of Alcohol in the Preparation of Medicines, 1854, 16mo.

"The counsel of Dr. Warren is sound and practical."-Med. Rep.

"Much useful instruction."-Family Journal.

17. Remarks on some Fossil Impressions in the Sand

stone Rocks of Connecticut River, 1854, 8vo. 18. Genealogy of Warren, with some Historical Sketches, 1854, 4to, pp. 113. Privately printed.

"In respect to its typographical execution, this book is by far the most elegant genealogy yet issued in this country."-Whitmore's Hand-Book of Amer. Genealog., 1862, 101, (q. r.)

See, also, N. Amer. Rev., xcvii. 70, (by C. H. Hill.) 19. The Great Tree on Boston Common, 1855, 8vo. He contributed many papers to Med. Com., Mass. Med. Soc., N. Eng. Med. Jour., Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., Amer Jour. of Med. Sci., Proceed. Bost. Soc. of Nat. Hist., Proceed. Amer. Acad. of Arts and Sci., Med.-Chir. Trans., (London,) Amer. Traveller, &c.; and was coeditor of The Month. Anthol. and Bost. Rev., 1804, and of The Gospel Advocate, 1821-22. See New Jersey Med. Reporter. Aug. 1854; Tryon's List of Amer. Writers on Recent Conchology, 1861, 67; Lon. Quar. Rev., lxxxvi. 23, (same art. in N. York Eclec. Mag., xix. 500, and Bost. Liv. Age, xxiv. 290;) Lon. Athen., 1837, 751, (also Prescott's Mexico, 23d ed., iii. 401, n.;) E. Everett's Orations, ii. 11, iii. 528; Quincy's Hist. of Harvard

Univ., ii. 305, 308, 586. See, also, The Life of John Collins Warren, M.D.; Compiled, chiefly from his Autobiography and Journals, by his brother, Edward Warren, M.D., Bost., 1860, 2 vols. 8vo, pp. 420, 382. "These volumes contain medical and surgical papers and notes on a very wide diversity of subjects. The memoir is compiled with eminent skill and felicity, ... conveying, with the fewest technicalities possible, a large amount of valuable knowledge on a wide range of subjects seldom presented in a form so simple, intelligible, and attractive."-A. P. PEABODY, D.D.: N. Amer. Rev., xc. 473.

Warren, John Esaias. 1. Para; or, Scenes and Adventures on the Banks of the Amazon, N. York, 1851, 12mo. 2. Vagamundo; or, The Attaché in Spain, 1851, 12mo.

Warren, Jonathan Mason, M.D., a son of John Collins Warren, M.D., and a Surgeon of the Massachusetts General Hospital, born in Boston, Mass., d. in that city, 1867.

1. Rhinoplastic Operations, or the Restoration of Parts lost by Accident or Disease, Bost., 1840, 8vo. Also, Jour., March, 1837, May, 1840, and March, 1843. papers upon the same subject in Bost. Med. and Surg.

2. An Account of Two Remarkable Indian Dwarfs, known as the "Aztec Children," Boston, 1851, 8vo. Published also in part in the Amer. Jour. of Med. Sci., Phila., April, 1851.

3. Recent Progress in Surgery: The Annual Address delivered before the Massachusetts Medical Society, Bost., May 25, 1864, Bost., 1864, 8vo.

Illustrated, 1867, 8vo. $10. 4. Surgical Observations, with Cases and Operations;

Papers communicated to Medical Journals and Transactions, most of which have been published also as separate pamphlets:

5. On Enlargement of the Tonsils, attended with Deformity of the Chest; Phila. Med. Exam., 1839.

6. Division of the Sterno-Mastoid Musole for WryNeck; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., Sept. 29, 1841. 7. Cases of Strangulated Hernia; New Eng. Quar. Jour. of Med. and Surg., Bost., July, 1842.

8. Fissure of the Soft and Hard Palate, with an AcQuar. Jour. of Med. and Surg., Bost., April, 1843, and count of a New Operation, and Reports of Cases; N. E. Amer. Jour. of Med. Sciences, Phila., April, 1848, and

October, 1863.

9. Ligature of both Carotid Arteries for a Remarkable Erectile Tumour; Am. Jour. of Med. Sciences, Phila., April, 1846.

10. On the Inhalation of Ether; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., March, 1847.

11. Foreign Bodies in the Air-Passages; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., 1847.

12. Operation for Artificial Anus; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., 1848.

13. Ligature of the Left Subclavian Artery for Subclavian Aneurism; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., 1849.

14. Lithotrity and Lithotomy, with Remarks on the Use of Ether in those Operations; Am. Jour. Med. Sci.,

Phila., 1849.

15. Cases of Occlusion of the Vagina relieved by an Operation; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., 1853.

16. Facts and Observations on Cancer; Transactions of the Am. Med. Assoc., vol. vi., 1853.

17. Tumours in the Parotid Region; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., May 14, 1857.

Jour., June, 1857. 18. Dislocation of both Thighs; Bost. Med. and Surg.

19. Excision of the Knee-Joint; also, Cases illustrative of Dr. Barton's Operation for Straightening a Bent Limb by the Excision of a Wedge-shaped Piece of Bone from the Femur; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., June, 1858. 20. Supposed Encephaloid Testicle: a Case of Hermaphrodism; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., 1859.

21. Amputation at the Hip-Joint for a Large OsteoSarcomatous Tumour of the Femur; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., April, 1859.

22. On Perineal Section; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., April, 1861.

23. Cases in Surgery: Gun-Shot Wounds; Plural Births; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., 1862.

24. Two Cases of Lithotomy in Young Persons, with Remarks on Operations for Stone in the Bladder; Bost. Med. and Surg. Jour., March 10, 1864.

25. Hypertrophic Elongation of the Cervix Uteri; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., Jan. 1864.

26. On Neuralgic Affections following Injuries of the Nerves; Am. Jour. Med. Sci., Phila., April, 1864.

« AnteriorContinuar »