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12mo. 5. Importance of Family Religion; with Prayers and Hymns, 1841, 12mo. See Sprague's Annals, iv., Presbyterian, 754.

Winchester, Thomas, D.D., Fellow of Magdalene College, 1747, became Rector of Appleton, Berkshire, 1761; d. 1780. Dissertation on the 17th Article of the Church of England, wherein the Sentiments of the Compilers and other Contemporary Reformers on the Subject of the Divine Decrees are deduced from their Own Writings, &c., Lon., 1773; new ed., with Emendations from the Author's Copy, and a Biographical Preface, (by Ralph Churton,) Lon., 1803, 8vo. Also in Churchman's Remembrancer, 8vo, vol. i., 1807. He pub. some letters in the Gentleman's Magazine on the Confessional controversy.

Winchester, William Powlett, Marquis of. The Lord Marques Idleness: conteining Manifold Matters of Acceptable Devise; as Sage Sentences, Prudent Precepts, Morall Examples, Sweete Similitudes, &c., 1586, 40, pp. 94. Bright, 4278, £26; Bliss, Pt. 1, 4758, £1 38.; Willis & Sotheran's Cat., 1859, 9406, dated 1587, £2 58. See Park's Walpole's R. and N. Authors, ii. 55; Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., i. 318, iii. 191, 1005, iv. 343. Winchilsea. See, also, WINCHELSEA. Winchilsea, George James Finch Hatton, eleventh Earl of, late Viscount Maidstone, b. in London, 1815; graduated at Christ Church, Oxford, Second Class in Classics, 1835; M.P. for Northamptonshire, 1837– 41; succeeded his father, 1858. See MAIDSTONE, VISCOUNT. He has also published: 2. The Deluge; a Poem, 1853, 8vo.

"It is simply an indiscriminate and very discreditable attack on all the parties to the late ministerial combination."-Lon. Athen., 1853, 288.

3. The Poem of the Book of Job done into English Verse, 1860, sq. 8vo. Warmly commended by Lon. Gent. Mag., 1860, ii. 419. The Lon. Athen., 1860, i. 616, disapproves of all such liberties with the sacred text. Winckworth, John. Treatise on the Teeth and Gums, Lon., 4to.

Wincler, Dr. Murrain in Switzerland, and its Cure; Phil. Trans., 1682.

Windebancke, Sir Francis, Secretary of State. The Articles or Charge exhibited against him in Parliament, 1641, 4to.

Windele, J. 1. Hand-Book to Killarney, 12mo. 2. Historical and Descriptive Notices of the City of Cork and its Vicinity, Cork, 1839, fp. 8vo.

"This volume appears to us an excellent guide."-Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1839, 629.

"The safest hand-book."-Court Gaz.

Winder, Henry, D.D., a Dissenter, b. in Cumberland, 1693, was pastor at Tunley, Lancashire, 1714-1718, and at Liverpool from 1718 until his death, 1752. Critical and Chronological History of the Rise, Progress, Declension, and Revival of Knowledge, chiefly Religious; in Two Periods: I., The Period of Tradition, from Adam to Moses; II., The Period of Letters, from Moses to Christ, Lon., 1745, 2 vols. 4to; 2d ed., with Memoirs of the Author, by George Benson, D.D., 1756,

2 vols. 4to.

"An ingenious and elaborate work."-Chalmers's Biog. Dict., xxxii. 186.

Windet, James, M.D. De Vita Functorum et Statu, &c., Lon., 1633, 4to; 1664, 4to; Rot., 1694, 8vo. Windham. See, also, WYNDHAM.

Windham, Major-General Sir Charles Ash, C.B., native of the co. of Norfolk, distinguished by his attack on the Redan, in the Crimea, in 1855, and his defence of Cawnpore, India, in 1857, entered the army as Lieutenant, 1826; became Captain, 1833; Major, Nov. 9, 1846; Lieutenant-Colonel, Dec. 29, 1846; Colonel, 1854; Major-General, 1855. The Army and Militia: a Letter to the Earl of Leicester, Lon., 1857, 8vo. To the Defence of Cawnpore, by Lieut.-Col. John Adyce, C.B., 1858, 8vo, he added a supplementary pamphlet in 1865. See, also, A Review of Col. Adyce's Defence of General Windham, by a Civilian, 1858, 12mo.

Windham, Joseph, an artist and antiquary, b. at Twickenham, 1739, d. in Norfolk, 1810, contributed plans, sections, and a portion of the letter-press to Cameron's Baths of the Romans; most of the letterpress to vol. ii. of the Ionian Antiquities, published by the Society of Dilettanti; and Observations on the Temple of Diana to Archæol., vi. (1782) 67; and assisted Stuart in his Athens, vol. ii. See Lon. Gent. Mag., lxxx., ii. 488; Chalmers's Biog. Dict., xxxii. 186; Eulogy on Sir H. C. Englefield, 1810, 4to.

Windham, W. G. 1. Up among the Arabs in 1860: Jottings-Sportive and Descriptive, Lon., 1860, sm. p. 8vo. Censured by Lon. Athen., 1860, ii. 665. 2. Notes on North Africa: a Guide to Sportsmen, new ed., 1862, er. 8vo.

Windham, Colonel William, of Felbrigg, Norfolk, father of the succeeding; d. 1761. Plan of Discipline composed for the Use of the Militia of the County of Norfolk, 1760, 4to. See, also, A Plan of Discipline for the Use of the Norfolk Militia, by William Windham, Esq., and the Rt. Hon. George, Lord Viscount Townshend, Lord-Lieut. of Ireland, Lon., 1768, 4to.

Windham, Rt. Hon. William, M.P., D.C.L., son of the preceding, b. in London, 1750, and educated at the University of Glasgow and at University College, Oxford, came into Parliament in 1782, and sat in that assembly, from time to time occupying important public offices, until his death, June 4, 1810. 1. The Substance of the Principal Speeches of the Rt. Hon. William Windham in the Late and Present Sessions of Parliament, on Measures connected with the Defence of this Country, Norwich, 1803, Svo. 2. Speech in the House of Commons, May 26, 1809, Lon., 1810, 8vo, pp. 43. Reviewed in Edin. Rev., Feb. 1811, (xvii.) 253-290. Parts of this article were repub. in Lord Jeffrey's Contrib. to Edin. Rev., ed. 1853, 764-76, and parts (in some cases the same language) in Lord Brougham's Contrib. to Edin. Rev., 1856, ii. 347-83. There is some gross carelessness here,-who is to blame we know not. Speeches in Parliament; to which is Prefixed Some Account of his Life, by Thomas Amyot, Esq., 1812, 3 vols. 8vo, with portrait. Mr. Amyot was for some years his private secretary, and a Life of Windham was expected from him. He died in 1850. See Lon. Gent. Mag., 1851, i. 3.

3.

"We could offer no better model; and we sincerely think that, at the present day particularly, the study of such a model would be eminently useful as a direction to public taste, and a corrective of the exaggerated language we have had occasion freely to censure."-Amer. Quar. Rev., Sept. 1833, (xiv.) 24–54.

See, also, Lon. Mon. Rev., 1812, iii. 225-40; Select Speeches of Windham and Huskisson, with Biographical Sketches; Edited by Robert Walsh, Phila., 1837, 8vo. We must quote some opinions on Windham :

"Mr. Windham has been here to see me. . . . Such conversation I shall not have again till I come back to the regions of literature; and there Windham is inter stellas Luna minores."Dr. Johnson to Dr. Brocklesby, Ashbourne, Sept. 2, 1784: Croker's Boswell's Johnson, ed. 1848, r. 8vo, 784. See 837 for Windham's memoranda of the conversation during this visit, and Index.

"He was a man of great, original, and commanding genius,with a mind cultivated with the richest stores of intellectual wealth, and a fancy winged to the highest flights of a most captivating imagery; of sound and spotless integrity, with a warm spirit, but a generous heart; and of courage and determination so characteristic as to hold him forward as the strong example of what the old English heart could effect or endure."-EARL GREY: Speech on the Catholic Question.

The finest gentleman of the age."-LORD MACAULAY: Warren Hastings. See, also, his Life of William Pitt.

LORD JEFFREY: Contrib. to Edin. Rev., ed. 1853, 764. "The most high-minded and incorruptible of living men."

"Windham's mind was in the last degree copious; the soil was so fertile, scratch where you pleased, up came white clover. He had many of the true characteristics of a hero, but he had one great fault as a statesman-he hated the popular side of any question."-WILLIAM WILBERFORCE: Life.

"He was an indiscreet debater, who sacrificed his interest as a statesman to his momentary feelings as an orator. For the sake of a new subtlety, or a forcible phrase, he was content to utter what loaded him with permanent unpopularity: his logical propensity led him always to extreme consequences."SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH: Memoirs, ii. ch. i. See, also, i. ch. iii., vi.

"He was too often the dupe of his own ingenuity; which made him doubt and balance, and gave an oscitancy fatal to vigour in council, as well as most prejudicial to the effects of eloquence, by breaking the force of his blows as they fell."LORD BROUGHAM: States. of the Time of Geo. III., ed. 1855, 299, and his Contrib. to Edin. Rev., 1856, i. 310.

See, also, Edin. Rev., xlvi. 279, n., and his Men of Letters of the Time of Geo. III., ed. 1855, 372: Johnson. "Windham,-never dignified in his eloquence, never pathetic. He despised the people, and talked up the Aristocracy."-HENRY GRATTAN: Recollec. by S. Rogers, 1859, 93. See, also, 34, 35, 86.

Consult, further, Works of Edmund Burke, ed. 1852, ii. 226, 231, 233, 252, 357, 365, 371, 374, 384; Trotter's Memoirs of C. J. Fox; Hardy's Memoirs of the Earl of Charlemont; L. Simond's Journal of a Tour, &c. in Great Britain; Blackw. Mag., xviii. 600, xxix. 907, xxxi. 431, xxxix. 322. And see, especially, A Biographical Memoir of the Life of the Rt. Hon. William Windham, by Edmund Malone, 1819, 8vo. Originally pub.

in Lon. Gent. Mag., 1810, i. 588. See, also, 1810, ii. 24, 166; Mad. D'Arblay's Diary; The Rt. Hon. William Windham's Diary from 1784 to 1810, Edited by Mrs. Henry Baring, 1866, Svo.

Windle, Rev. A. Follow Me; or, The Voice of Jesus to his People, 4th ed., Lon., 1858, pp. 32.

Windle, H. E., Curate of Iver, Bucks co., England. A Course of Ten Lectures on the Epistles to the Seven Churches of Asia, Lon., 1870, sm. cr. 8vo.

Windle, Miss Mary Jane, b. at Wilmington, Delaware, 1825, has been for some years a contributor to periodicals. Legend of the Waldenses, and other Tales, Phila., 1850, 12mo; 3d ed., Dec. 1852, 12mo. See Hart's Female Prose Writers of America, 463; Mary Forrest's Women of the South Distinguished in Literature, 1860, sm. 4to.

Windle, Rev. S. A. The Greater than Solomon: Twelve Lectures, Lon., 1869, 8q.

Windle, W. The Apostolic Decision the Apostolic Precedent; a Sermon, Lon., 1859, 12mo.

Windsor, Arthur Lloyd. Ethica; or, Characteristics of Men, Manners, and Books, Lon., 1860, demy 8vo.

There are few single volumes in our language which contain so much to instruct and elevate."-Brit. Quar. Rev.

Also commended by Lon. Lit. Gaz., Exam., Press, and Illust. Lon. News.

"These essays seem to be the result of more reading than thought."-Lon. Athen., 1860, ii. 353.

Windsor, Rev. Lloyd, b. in the city of New York, 1812, graduated at Columbia College, 1836. An Inquiry into the Nature of the Ministerial Commission, Clermont, N.H., 1843, 8vo, and 2d ed. Also, single sermons, tracts, addresses, &c.

Windsor, Samuel B. Sermons for Soldiers, preached at Home and Abroad, Lon., 1859, 12mo.

Windsor, T., and Lawrence, J. L., Editors of the Ophthalmic Review: a Quarterly Journal of Ophthalmic Surgery and Science, Lon., Hardwicke. Commended by Lon. Reader, 1864, ii. 103.

Windsore, Miles, educated at Oxford, d. 1624. Academiarum quæ aliquando fuere et hodie sunt in Europa, Catalogus et Enumeratio breuis, Lon., excud. G. Bishop & R. Newberis, 1590, 4to. Heber, Pt. 6, 3908, £1. See Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., ii. 358.

Windus, John. Journey to Mequinez, the Residence of the Present Emperor of Morocco, on the Occasion of Commodore Stewart's Embassy for the Redemption of the British Captives, in the Year 1721, Lon., 1725, 8vo; 1. p., r. 8vo. Also in Collec. of Voy., 1767, 7 vols. 8vo, vol. vi., and in Pinkerton's Collec. of Voy., &c., vol. xv.

"Curious."-Stevenson's Cat. of Voy. and Trav., No. 598. See, also, Blackw. Mag., xxxi. 205. Windus, Thomas. See WEDGWOOD, JOSIAH, No. 3. Winecoff, J., Lutheran pastor, Oakland, Md. Discourse on Modern Dancing, 1850, pp. 12.

Wines, Abijah, b. at Southold. L.I., 1766, ordained minister of a church at Newport, R.I., 1796, d. 1833, published several single sermons, 1804 et seq., and An Inquiry. 1812. See Sprague's Annals, ii., Trin. Con

greg., 373.

Wines, Enoch C., D.D., b. in Hanover, New Jersey, 1806, and educated at Middlebury College, was for several years connected with the United States Navy as Professor of Mathematics, and has also been Principal of the Edgehill School, Princeton, New Jersey, Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy in the Central High School of Philadelphia, and Professor of Ancient Languages in Washington College, Penna.

1. Two Years and a Half in the Navy; or, A Journal of a Cruise in the Mediterranean and Levant, (1829-31,) Phila., 1832, 2 vols. 12mo; Lon., 1833, 2 vols. 12mo. Censured by Lon. Athen., 1833, 51; rather more favourably noticed by Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1833, 39. 2. A Trip to Boston, Bost., 1838, 12mo. 3. Hints on a System of Popular Education, Phila., 1838, 12mo. 4. How shall

Binney, R. C. Winthrop, Robert Walsh, &c., and many periodicals. 7. Adam and Christ; or, The Doctrine of Representation Stated and Explained, 1855, 18mo, pp. 71. Commended. 8. Prelacy and Parity Discussed, N. York, 12mo. 9. The True Penitent Pourtrayed, &c., Phila., pp. 119. 10. Treatise on Regeneration, N. York, 1863, 12mo, pp. 119. 11. Essay on Temptation, Phila., 1865, 12mo, pp. 144. 12. The Promises of God, 1868, 18mo. He has also published a number of addresses, &c., and contributed to Amer. Quar. Rev., N. Amer. Rev., N. York Rev., Bibl. Repos., Bibl. Sacra, Knickerbocker, &c.

Wines, Frederick Howard, late Chaplain in the Army of the United States. Children in Paradise, Phila., 1865, pp. iv., 72.

Winfield, Rev. A. B. 1. Two Sermons on Infant Baptism, Auburn, 1849, 8vo. 2. Sermon; with History of the Reformed Dutch Church, Paramus, N.J., N. York, 1853, 8vo.

Winfield, James. Progressive Exercises, Lon.,

12mo.

Winfrid. See BONIFACE, SAINT. See, also, Winfrid, afterwards called Boniface, by the Rev. W. Selwyn. Wing, Charles. Evils of the Factory System demonstrated by Parliamentary Evidence, Lon., 1837, r. 8vo.

"A sufficiently able advocate."-Lon. Athen., 1837, 214. Wing, Conway Phelps, D.D., b. near Marietta, Ohio, 1809; graduated at Hamilton College, 1828, and at Auburn Theological Seminary, 1832. With BLUMENTHAL, CHARLES F., A History of the Christian Church, by Dr. Charles Hase: trans. from the Seventh German edition, N. York, 1855, 8vo, pp. 758.

"It is an honour to America to have been the first country to put forth a translation into English of the highly valuable work of Dr. Hase."-Lom. Athen.

"The translator has been most happy in producing a version which has the highest freedom and vivacity."-Nonconformist. See, also, POOR, DANIEL W., D.D., No. 2.

Dr. Wing has published some single sermons and addresses, and contributed to Presby. Quar. Rev.

Wing, J. U. Mercantile Book-Keeping, Sheffield, 1866, sm. 4to.

Wing, John, pastor of the English Congregation at Flushing, Zeeland. 1. The Crowne Conjugall; or, The Spouse Royall, Middleburgh, 1620, 4to. 2. Jacob's Staffe to beare up the Faithfull, and to beate down the Profane, Flushing, 1621, 4to. 3. The Best Merchandize,

1622.

Wing, John, Philomath. 1. Heptarchia Mathematica; or, An Epitome of Arithmetic, Geometry, &c., Lon., 1693, 8vo. 2. Scientia Stellarum; or, The Starry Science, 1699, fol. See WING, VINCENT, No. 10.

Wing, Vincent, an astronomer of the 17th century. 1. With LEYBOURN, WILLIAM, Urania Practica, Lon., 1649, 8vo. 2. With LEYBOURN, WILLIAM, Ens Fictum Shakerlæi, 1649, 4to. 3. A Dreadful Prognostication, 1649, 12mo. 4. Harmonicon Celeste, 1651, fol. In English. 5. Ephemerides from 1652 to 1658, 1652, 4to. 6. Astronomia Britannica, 1652, fol.; 1669, fol. In Latin. 7. Ephemerides for Twenty Years, 1652-1674, 1658, 4to. 8. Examen Astronomiæ Carolina T. S., &c., 1665, 12mo. Streete replied in, Wing's Examination Examined, &c., 1667, 4to. 9. Ephemeris for Thirty Years, with Computatio Catholica, 1669, 12mo. 10. Art of Surveying, &c., as also Scientia Stellarum, by John Wing, 1700, fol. He published annually for the Stationers' Company a book and a sheet almanac, the latter of which is still continued under his name. See A Brief Relation of the Life and Death of the Late Famous Mathematician and Astrologer, Vincent Wing, by J. G., 1670, 4to.

Wingate. Considerations touching the Excise of Native and Foreign Commodities, fol.

Wingate, Captain. 1. True Copie of his Letter, Lon., 1642, 4to. 2. Relation of Hard Usage, &c., 1642, 4to. 3. Relation of his Escape, 1643, 4to.

Wingate, David, a Scotch collier. 1. Poems and

I Govern my School? addressed to Young Teachers, Songs, Edin., 1862, fp. 8vo. &c., 1838, 12mo, pp. 309.

"Take it for all in all, the book is one of the best in the whole range of the literature of education."-N. Amer. Rev., xlvii. (Oct. 1838) 499.

"The earnestness with which he has cherished his sense of beauty through a life of severe and perilous toil, demands from us sympathy and respect."-Lon. Athen., 1862, ii. 755.

Commended by Blackw. Mag., July, 1862. 2. Anne Weir, and other Poems, 1866, 12mo.

5. Letters to School-Children, Bost., 16mo. 6. Commentaries on the Laws of the Ancient Hebrews; with an Wingate, Edmund, b. in Yorkshire, 1593, and Introductory Essay on Civil Society and Government, educated at Queen's College, Oxford, removed to Gray's N. York, 1852, 8vo; 1853, 8vo; 3d ed., Phila., 1859, Inn, of which, after a visit to France, where he taught 8vo; 5th ed., 1860, 8vo; new ed., 1869, 8vo. Com- mathematics at court, he was a bencher; during the Remended by Judges McLean and Kent, Messrs. Horacebellion became a Justice, M.P., and Commissioner; d.

672.

Wingrove, John. Narrative of Cruelties inflicted by Elizabeth Brownrigg on Mary Clifford, &c., Lon., 1768, 8vo.

Winkelmann, Rev. Frederick T., Ph.D., Professor of Latin, French, and German in the Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn, New York, and in a PolyCourse of Exercises technic School, New York; d. 1865. in all Parts of French Syntax, N. York, 1860, 12mo. Winkie, Willie. See SILSBEE, MRS., No. 2. Winkler, E. T. Notes and Questions for the Oral Instruction of Coloured People, N. York, 1858, 18mo. Winkler, J. A. E. Hints to Piano-Forte Players, Richmond, 12mo.

1656. 1. The Use of Proportional Rules in Arithmetic | hand to read, without being frivolous."-Lon. Athen., 1859, L. and Geometry, &c.; in French, Paris, 1624, 8vo; in English, Lon., 1626; 1628, 12mo; with Additions, 1645, Wingrove, Anne. Letters, Moral and Entertain8vo; with an Appendix, 1658, 8vo. 2. Arithmétique ing, 1795, 12mo. Logarithmétique, Paris, 1626: in English, Construction and Use of the Logarithmetical Tables, &c., Lon., 1635, 8vo. 3. Arithmetic Made Easy, &c., 1630, 8vo; many edits. best ed., by J. Dodson, 1753, 8vo. 4. Tables of Logarithms, &c. of the Quadrant, 1633, 8vo. 5. The Ancient Pleas of the Crown, by John Britton, in French, 2d ed., 1640, 12mo. 6. Statua Pacis, 1641, 12mo; 1644, 12mo. 7. Exact Abridgment of all Statutes to 1641, 1642, 8vo; 1655, 8vo; 1663, 8vo; 1675, 8vo; 1680, 8vo; 1681, 8vo; 1684, 8vo; brought down to 1689, 1694, 8vo; 1703, 8vo; 1704, 8vo; 1708, 8vo. 8. Justice Revived, by E. W., 1644, 12mo; 1661, 12mo. Ascribed to Wingate. 9. Body of the Common Law of England, 2d ed., 1655, 8vo; 3d ed., 1658, 8vo; 1662, 8vo; 1678, 8vo. 10. Ludus Mathematicus, 1654, 8vo. 11. Construction and Use of the Line of Proportion, 8vo. 12. The Exact Surveyor of Land, Svo. 13. Maximes of Reason; or, The Reason of the Common Law of England, 1658, fol. Recommended to the law-student by Richard Preston: see Warren's Law Stu., 2d ed., 579. 14. The Exact Constable, by E. W., 12mo. Ascribed to E. W. 15. The Clerk's Tutor, 1671, 8vo; 2d ed., Wingate's Remains, 1676, 8vo. See Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., iii. 423i. 193, 299, 413. The copyright, stereotypes, and 187 Hutton's Dict. Hutton styles him one of the clearest writers on arithmetic, &c. in the English language. Wingate, J. See WELLS, JOHN. Wingate, John. Illustrations of the Coinage of Scotland, Lon., 1869, 4to, £3 38. See, also, RUDING, ROGERS; SNELLING, THOMAS.

Wingate, W. H. Parallel Arithmetic; a Collection of Examples, Lon., 1865, 12mo.

Wingfeld, Henry. A Compendious or Short Treatise gathered out of the chief Authors of Physic, Lon.,

1551, 8vo; also s. a., 8vo.

Wingfield, Aug. Carmen Panegyricum Dom. Protectori, cum Notis R. Creswelli, Lon., 1656, 4to.

Wingfield, Edwin Maria, a merchant of London, a member of a distinguished family, was first President of the Colony of Virginia under the patent granted to Bartholomew Gosnold and others, April 10, 1606. In consequence of disagreements, he returned to England in 1608. Captain John Smith gives him a very bad character; but, by the care of a diligent antiquary, his own story has recently been given to the world:" A Discourse of Virginia," by Edwin Maria Wingfield, the First President of the Colony: now first printed from the Original Manuscript in the Lambeth Library; Edited, with Notes and an Introduction, by Charles Deane, &c., (from American Antiquarian Society's Transactions, vol. iv.,) Bost., Privately Printed, 1860, r. 8vo, pp. 45: 100 copies: Fowle, Dec. 1864, 789, $45. A few copies, dated 1859, 8vo, pp. 44, in consequence of typographical errors, were called in and cancelled. Favourably noticed in N. Amer. Rev., Oct. 1861, 561. See SMITH, CAPTAIN JOHN, No. 5; Hist. Mag., Oct. 1860, 295, n.

Wingfield, G. A. Solitude; a Poem, Lon., 1842, p. 8vo.

Wingfield, Mrs. J. Digby. Condensed Roman History, Lon., 1857.

Wingfield, John. Modest Defence of the Charity

Children, &c., Lon., 1772, 8vo.

1810.

Wingfield, John. Electrical Jars; Nic. Jour.,
Wingfield, L. Under the Palms in Algeria and

Tunis, Lon., 1868, 2 vols. 12mo.

Wingfield, Robert. Nobilissima Disceptatio super Dignitate et Magnitudine Regnorum Britannici et Gallici, habita ab utriusque Oratoribus et Legatis in Concilio Constantiensi, Lovanii, 1517, 4to. In the Grenville Collection.

Wingfield, Thomas, Vicar of Yalmeton, &c., published The Lord's Supper not a Sacrifice, 2d ed., Lon., 1739, 8vo, and four single sermons, 1745-49.

Wingfield, Rev. W., and Johnson, O. W. The Poultry-Book; with 22 plates, by H. Weir, Lon., 1855, r. 8vo; N. York, 1856, r. 8vo.

"To delight the informed and startle the ignorant."-Lon. Athen., 1853, 1355.

Wingfield, W. F., late of Oxford University, graduated M.D. at Pisa. A Tour in Dalmatia, Albania, and Montenegro; with a Historical Sketch of the Rise and Fall of the Republic of Ragusa, Lon., 1859, p. 8vo. "This book is well timed. It is pleasantly written, light in

Winkles, R. B. 1. Architectural and Picturesque Illustrations of the Cathedral Churches of England and Wales, with Historical and Descriptive Accounts by Thomas Moule, with 178 plates, Lon., 1835-42, 56 parts, in 3 vols. imp. 8vo, £3 38.; India proofs, r. 4to, £6: vol. i., Fowle, Dec. 1864, 788, $60. New ed., with Manchester Cathedral, (sep., 28. 6d.,) with 186 plates, 1851, 3 vols. imp. 8vo, £2 8s. Contains 29 Cathedrals. Britton's work illustrates only 14. See Lon. Gent. Mag., 1835,

steel plates were sold in 1860 for £240. Add to it Ruined Abbeys and Castles of Great Britain, by William and Mary Howitt, First Series, with Photographic Illustrations by Bedford, Sedgfield, Wilson, and Fenton, fp. 4to. Second Series,-Great Britain and Ireland,-by William Howitt, with Photographic Illustrations by Thompson, Sedgfield, Ogle, and Hemphill, fp. 4to. 2. French Cathedrals: Illustrations of the Cathedrals of Amiens, Notre-Dame, Chartres, Beauvais, Evreux, and Rouen, from Drawings by R. Garland, with an Historical and Descriptive Account, with 50 plates, 1836, (some 1837,) 12 parts, demy 4to, £1 68., (red., 1839, £1 18.; red., 1860, 18. ;) 1. p., India proofs, r. 4to, £2 128.

18mo.

Winks, Joseph Foulkes, a Baptist, of Leicester, England, labours assiduously for the benefit of the young. 1. British Reading-Book, 18mo. 2. British School-Book, 18mo. 3. Twenty-Four Tracts on Infant Baptism, 1844, 12mo. 4. Sacred Sketch-Book, 1847, 5. Sacred Speaker, 1847, 18mo. 6. Large Lessons on sheets for Sunday-Schools, 1860. 7. New Reward-Books, in packets, 1860. Editor of The Christian Pioneer, British Baptist Reporter, Baptist Youth's Magazine, Children's Magazine, (vol. xxv., 1863,) and Pictorial Magazine for Little Children, (vol. ix., 1863.)

Winkworth, Catharine. 1. Lyra Germanica; trans. from the German, Lon., 1855, fp. 8vo; 5th ed., 1857, fp. 8vo; N. York, Dec. 1858, 4to; Illust. by John Leighton, Lon., Dec. 1860, fp. 4to. Second Series, 1858, A Selection of Hymns fp. 8vo; new ed., 1862, fp. 8vo. from the Lyra Germanica, by C. Winkworth, 1859, 18mo, 92. PP. Add to these The Chorale Book for England: the Hymns translated from the German, by C. Winkworth; the Tunes for 4 Voices, compiled, &c. by W. S. Bennett and by Otto Goldschmidt, 1862, fp. 4to; Congregational edition, 1863, fp. 8vo. Supplement to the Chorale Book for England: containing English Hymns, Selected by Miss Winkworth, with Appropriate Tunes by Prof. W. S. Bennett and Otto Goldschmidt, 1865, fp. 8vo. Add, also, Lyra Domestica, Christian Songs and Hymns, trans. from C. J. P. Spitta, by Massie, 1864, 12mo, 2 Series; SCHAFF, PHILIP, Ph.D., D.D., No. 20; WHITMARSH, MISS CAROLINE SNOWDEN, No. 15; Nos. 3, 4, infra.

The translations of Miss Winkworth are now in every one's hands."-Lon. Quar. Rev., July, 1862, (q. v.)

2. Life of Amelia Wilhelmina Sieveking; from the German; edited with the Author's Sanction, 1863, p. 8vo. In unnamed; and the latter published a companion volume, this translation Miss Winkworth was assisted by a lady viz.: The Principles of Charitable Work-Love, Truth, helmina Sieveking, Foundress of the Female Society for and Order-as set forth in the Writings of Amelia Wilthe Care of the Sick and Poor in Hamburg, 1863, p. 8vo. "Of the two volumes in our hands it is hardly possible to speak too highly."-Lon. Reader, 1863, i. 472.

3. Christian Singers of Germany, 1866, cr. 8vo, (Maomillan's Sunday Lib., vi.) 4. Palm-Leaves: Sacred Poems Selected and Translated from the German of Karl Gerok: in prep., 1870.

Winkworth, Miss Susanna. 1. Life and Letters of B. G. Niebuhr, with Essays by Bunsen, Brandis, and

Loebell; trans. from the German, Lon., 3 vols. 8vo: i., ii., Dec. 1851; 2d ed., 1852; iii., Dec. 1852.

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Nov. 21, 1839. The True Catholic Churchman, in his
Life and in his Death: The Sermons [22] and Poetical
Remains of the Rev. Benjamin Davis Winslow, A.M.,
&c.; with a Sermon, Notes, &c., by the Rt. Rev. G. W.
1842, 12mo; red. to 48., 1846.
Doane, D.D., LL.D., &c., N. York, 1841, r. 8vo; Oxf.,

"The sermons are earnest doctrinal compositions, written
with ease and elegance."-Duyckinck's Cyc. of Amer. Lit., ii. 612.
"The poems are the productions of an accomplished mind,
and are elegantly and correctly written."-Lon. Gent. Mag.,
See Sprague's Annals, v., Episcopalian, 750.
Winslow, Mrs. Catherine.
JARED BELL, D.D., No. 16.

"One of the most valuable contributions to our biographical literature which have been made in modern times."--Edin. Rev. 2. Theologia Germanica; edited by Dr. Pfeiffer; trans. from the German; with a Preface by Rev. Charles Kingsley, 1854, fp. 8vo; 3d ed., 1859, fp. 8vo; with Introduction by Prof. C. E. Stowe, Andover, 1856. See Milman's Hist. of Lat. Chris., vol. viii. b. xiv. ch. vii. 3. The Life of Luther, in Forty-Eight Historical Engravings by Gustav Koenig; with Explanations, by Arch-1843, ii. 167. deacon Hare; Continued [after section xiv.] by Susanna Winkworth, Lon., 1855, fp. 4to; 2d ed., 1858, fp. 4to; N. York, Dec. 1856, r. 4to. 4. Signs of the Times: being Letters on the Dangers to Religious Liberty in the Present Day, by the Chevalier Bunsen, Lon., 1856, 8vo; N. York, 1856, 12mo. 5. History and Life of the Rev. John Tauler, with Twenty-Five of his Sermons, (temp. 1340) trans. from the German; with a Preface by Rev. Charles Kingsley, Lon., 1857, sm. 4to; with Introduction by Prof. R. D. Hitchcock, N. York, 1858, 8vo.

"Miss Winkworth has well chosen, and rendered well, some

of his best Sermons, 1857."-H. H. MILMAN: Hist. of Lat. Chris.,

vol. viii. b. xiv. ch. vii., (q. v.)

See, also, Westm. Rev., April, 1857: Contemp. Lit.; N. Amer. Rev., Jan. 1858, 280.

6. German Love; from the Papers of an Alien; trans. from the German, Lon., 1857, 12mo, pp. 150. 7. God in History; or, The Progress of Man's Faith; Translated from the German of Chevalier Bunsen, 1868-70, 3 vols. 8vo. Winn, Captain J. L. Papers on Lightning and the Aurora Borealis, in Phil. Trans., 1770, '74.

Winn, T. S. Speedy End to Slavery in West India Colonies, Lon., 8vo.

Winnard, Jane M. Recollections of Mrs. Anderson's School, Lon., 1851, fp. 8vo.

Winne, Cadwallader. Antidote against Sorrow, &c., from the French of N. Videlius, Lon., 1650, 8vo. Winne, J. H. History of Ireland from the Earliest Accounts to the Present Time, Lon., 1774, 2 vols. 8vo. Winner, Sep. 1. Popular Methods for the Flute. 2. New School for the Violin, N. York and Bost., 1870, pp. 80. Winney, Rev. Samuel, "the best Grammarian in the West of England," ejected for Nonconformity, 1662. God a Christian's Choice, completed by Particular Covenanting with God, 1675. Written in pursuance of a design proposed in Alleine's Vindication of Godliness. Winning, Rev. W. B. 1. Essays [12] on the Antediluvian Age, Lon., 1834, 8vo. "Clear in their style and elegant in their diction."-Lon. Gent. Mag., 1835, ii. 618.

2. Manual of Comparative Philology, 1838, 8vo. Should accompany the treatises of Bopp and Pott. Winnock, George. Modern Greek Grammar, Lon.,

8vo.

Winram, John, an early Scotch Reformer, Superintendent of Fife and Stratherne, d. 1582, was the author of a Catechism, of which no copies are to be found. See Chambers's and Thomson's Biog. Dict. of Em. Scotsmen, ed. 1855, iv. 478.

See WATERBURY,

Winslow, Charles Frederick, b. at Nantucket, Mass., 1811, graduated M.D. at Harvard University, 1834. 1. Cosmography; or, Philosophical Views of the Universe, Bost., 1853, 12mo. 2. Preparation of the Earth for the Intellectual Races; a Lecture, 1854, 8vo. 3. The Cooling Globe; or, The Mechanics of Geology, 1865, 8vo, pp. 63. 4. Force and Nature: Attraction phically Discussed in their Relation to Physical and and Repulsion: The Radical Principles of Energy GraMorphological Development, Phila. and Lon., 1869, 8vo. Contributions to Sandwich Island Friend, California Farmer, Christian Advocate, &c.

Winslow, Charles Lathrop, son of Myron Winslow, D.D., LL.D. See Memoirs of, Bost., 1834; repub. in Europe.

Winslow, E. S. The Computist's Manual of Facts and Merchant's and Mechanic's Calculator and Guide, 5th ed., 1855, 12mo, pp. 308. This embraces the substance of the author's Foreign and Domestic Calculator, and his Machinist's and Mechanic's Practical Calculator and Guide.

Winslow, Edward, b. in Worcestershire, 1595; emigrated to New England, 1620, and was elected Governor of Plymouth Colony, 1633, 1636, and 1644; d. in the passage between Hispaniola and Jamaica, May 8, 1655. 1. Good News from New England; or, A True Relation of Things very Remarkable at the Plantation of Plimouth, in N. England; together with a Relation of Customes among the Indians, by E. W., Lon., 1624, 4to: Gordonstoun, 2405, 158. Partially repub. in Purchas's Pilgrimes; repub. in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., vol. viii., 1st Ser., and vol. ix., 2d Ser., and in Young's Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers, 1602-1625, Bost., 1841, Svo. It brings down the history from the close of Mourt's Relation, (see MOURT, GEORGE,) Dec. 11, 1621, to Sept. 10, 1623. Mr. Young supposes Mourt (whose Journal or Relation he also republishes in his Chronicles) to be George Morton, father of Nathaniel Morton, author of the Memoriall; and the Journal he considers to be the work of Governors Bradford and Winslow, principally the former, transmitted by them to George Morton, brother-in-law of Bradford. In Young's Chronicles Winslow's Good Newes is followed by a Briefe Narration of the True Grounds or Cause of the First Planting of New England. This is taken from the appendix to Winslow's Hypocrisie Unmasked. 2. Hypocrisie Unmasked: a True Relation of the Proceedings of the Governeur and Company of the Massachusetts against Samvel Gorton, (and his Accomplices,) a notorious Disturber of the Peace, &c.; with a particular Answer to, &c. Simplicities Defence, &c., Lon., 1646, 4to, pp. 103: Sotheby's, Mar. 1862, £6 108. For full title, see J. R. Bartlett's Bibliog. of R. Island, 1864, 282. Hypocrisie Unmasked was reissued under the title of The Danger of tolerating Levellers in a Civill State, &c., (see Bibliog. of R. Island, 284,) 1649, 4to, pp. 103: Sotheby's, May, 1860, £5 158. 3. New England's Salamander, discovered by an irreligious and scornful pamphlet, called New England's Jonas cast up at London, &c., owned by Major John Childe, &c.; with a Briefe Reply to what is written in Answer to certaine Passages in a Late Booke called Hypocrisie Unmasked, 1647, 4to, pp. 29. Repub. in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., vol. ii., 3d Ser. 4. The Glorious Progress of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New England; with Appendix, 1649, 4to, pp. 28: T. H. Morrell, Jan. 1869, 194, LIEU-polished calf, $30. Repub. in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., vol. iv., 3d Ser. 5. A Platform of Church Discipline in New England, 1653, 4to. For notices of Winslow, see Belknap's Amer. Biog., ii., (see MORTON, NATHANIEL, p. 1376;) Mary Clark's Biog. Sketch of the Founders of New England, Concord, 1836, 16mo; Proceed. Mass. Hist. Soc., 1860-1862, 1862, 8vo, 131.

Winscom, Jane Anne. 1. Vineyard Labourers; a Tale for those who long to be Useful, Lon., 1857, fp. 8vo; 8th 1000, 1861, fp. 8vo; new ed., 1864, fp. 8vo. 2. Our Father in Heaven: The Lord's Prayer Explained to Little Boys and Girls, 1858, 12mo; 1860, 18mo. 3. Onward; or, The Mountain Clamberers, 1858, fp. 8vo; N. York, 1859, 12mo; 6th 1000, Lon., 1870, fp. 8vo. 4. Rest and Resurrection; or, The Sabbath and The Sunday, 1859, fp. 8vo; 1860, fp. 8vo. 5. Dear Old England; a Description of our Father-Land, 1861, cr. 8vo. 6. I Believe: The Apostles' Creed Explained, 1863, 18mo; 1869, 18mo. 7. The Mainspring; or, "For My Sake," 1868, er. 8vo. Contributor to Every-Day Life, 1858, 12mo. Winser, C. Alberto della Scala; an Historical Tragedy, Lon., 1839. Winship, Amos, M.D., of Boston. History of a Case of Encysted Dropsy; Mem. Med., ii. (1789)

368.

Winship, Oscar Fingal, a native of New York, cadet at West Point, 1836. See MACLEAN, E. E.,

TENANT.

Winslett, David. See ROBERTSON, W. S. Winslow, Benjamin Davis, b. in Boston, 1815, graduated at Harvard College, 1835, and at the Episcopal General Theological Seminary, 1838, and in the same year became Assistant to the Rector of St. Mary's Church, Burlington, New Jersey, (Bishop Doane ;) d.

Winslow, Forbes, M.D., D.C.L., Oxon., son of

Captain Thomas Winslow, 47th Regiment, was b. in London, 1810, and studied medicine in New York and London; became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in England, 1835, and is also a graduate in medicine of King's College, Aberdeen, and a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh.

1. Essay on the Application of the Principles of Phrenology to the Elucidation and the Cure of Insanity, Lon., 1831. 2. Manual of Osteology. 3. Manual of Practical Midwifery. 4. Student's Pocket Guide to the College of Surgeons. 5. Physic and Physicians; a Medical Sketch-Book, &c.: with Memoirs of Eminent Living Physicians and Surgeons, 1839, 2 vols. fp. 8vo; new ed., 1842, p. 8vo; Phila., 1845, 2 vols. 18mo. Anon. Condemned by Lon. Athen., 1839, 521. 6. The Anatomy of Suicide, Lon., 1840, 8vo.

"Must be regarded rather as a book of anecdotes thrown together without regard to method, or even to authenticity, than as a philosophical and logical treatise."-Lon. Athen., 1840,

607.

"The whole is arranged with great care and precision. . . . Altogether, the book is highly valuable."-Lon. Times.

See, also, Dubl. Univ. Mag., xviii. 277.

7. On the Preservation of the Health of the Body and Mind, 1842, 8vo, pp. 202. See Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1843, 132. 8. The Plea of Insanity in Criminal Cases, 1843, 12mo, pp. 78; Phila., 1843, 8vo, and in vol. xlii. of Phila. Law Lib. See Lon. Athen., 1843, 253; Lon. Lit. Gaz., 1843, 133, 145; N. Amer. Rev., lx. 1, (by Francis Bowen.) 9. Lunacy Act, 8 & 9 Vict. c. 100, for the Regulation of the Care and Treatment of Lunatics, with Explanatory Notes, &c., Lon., 1845, 12mo.

10. A Synopsis of the Law of Lunacy, as far as it relates to the Organization and Management of Private Asylums for the Care and Treatment of the Insane. On a chart.

11. On Softening of the Brain arising from Anxiety and Undue Mental Exercise and resulting in Impairment of Mind, 1849, 8vo. 12. The Lettsomian Lectures on Insanity, (1837,) 1854, 8vo. Contents: I. The Psychological Vocation of the Physician; II. The Medical Treatment of Insanity; III. Medico-Legal Evidence in Cases of Insanity.

Med. Sci.

"Highly interesting and suggestive.”—Dubl. Quar. Jour. of See, also, Wharton and Stille's Med. Jurisp., 2d ed., 1860, 37, 85, 183. 13. On Obscure Diseases of the Brain and Disorders of the Mind: their Incipient Symptoms, Pathology, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prophylaxis, May, 1860, 8vo; Phila., June, 1860, 8vo; 2d ed., Lon., April, 1861, 8vo; 3d ed., Oct. 1863, p. 8vo; Phila., (Dec. 1865,) 1866, 8vo; 4th ed., Lon., 1868, p. 8vo. This volume is designed as an Introduction to the author's promised Treatise on Softening of the Brain, and other Organic Diseases of the Cerebro-Spinal System.

The future British text-book on mental and cerebral pathology.... What an amount of bodily suffering and hopeless mental imbecility might be prevented if the practical and scientific views propounded in Dr. Winslow's book were generally

diffused!"-Lon. Lancet.

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Also commended by Lon. Med. Rev., Dubl. Med. Press, Amer. Jour. of Med. Sci., Madras Quar. Jour. of Med. Sci., Edin. Rev., Oct. 1860, N. Amer. Rev., Oct. 1860, &c. See, also, The Physiology and Pathology of the Mind, by Henry Maudsey, Lon., 1867, 8vo; N. York, 1867, 8vo; The Mind and the Brain, by Thomas Laycock, 2d ed., Lon., 1869, 2 vols. p. 8vo; N. York, 1869, 2 vols. 12mo. We read No. 13 with great interest.

About 1847 Dr. Winslow established Sussex House, Hammersmith, a private asylum for the insane; and to this institution he long devoted himself, in the capacity of resident superintendent. See Lon. Quar. Rev., April, 1857, art. iii.: Lunatic Asylums. In 1848 he founded (being both proprietor and editor) The Quarterly Journal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology, which enjoys a high reputation and large circulation; and in January, 1861, he commenced the editorship of The Medical Critic. He has contributed to The London Times, The Gazette of Practical Medicine, Lancet, and other medical periodicals. In 1853 he was elected President of the London Medical Society; and he has also been President of the Association of the Medical Officers of Hospitals and Asylums for the Insane. See Photog. Portraits of Men of Eminence, vol. ii., and Men of the Time, 1868, 826.

Winslow, George Erving, M.D. Essay on the Nature, Symptoms, and Treatment of Cholera, N. York, 1832, 8vo.

Winslow, Rev. George Erving, Rector of Alexton. 1. Israel in the Apocalypse; or, An Examination of the Revelation, with a View to Discover in Israel and her Enemies the Key to Interpretation, Lon., 1857, 12mo. 2. Our Covenant God, 1860, cr. 8vo. Commended by

Lon. Lit. Gaz.

Winslow, Gordon, M.D., D.D., a brother of Drs. Hubbard and Myron Winslow, and b. at Williston, Vt., was rector of Episcopal churches at Troy, Annapolis, and Staten Island; Chaplain of the Duryee Zouaves, 1861; Inspector of the Army of the Potomac for the Sanitary Commission, 1863; drowned in the Potomac, June 7, 1864, aged 60. He published some pamphlets, and contributed to periodicals.

Winslow, Harriet L. See Memoir of, N. York, 18mo: American Missionary Memorial, by H. W. Pierson, N. York, 1853, 8vo.

Winslow, Harriet Wadsworth, wife of Myron Winslow, D.D., formerly Miss Lathrop, arrived at Jaffna, Feb. 1820, and d. at Oodooville, Ceylon, Jan. 14, 1833. See WINSLOW, MYRON, D.D., LL.D., No. 2.

Winslow, Hubbard, D.D., a Presbyterian divine, brother of Drs. Gordon and Myron Winslow, was b. at Williston, Vt., Oct. 30, 1800, and graduated at Yale College, 1825; was pastor of the First Congregational Church at Dover, N.H., 1828-32, and of the Bowdoin Street Church, Boston, 1832-44; Principal of the Mount Vernon Institute for Young Ladies, Boston, 1844-53; pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Geneva, N. York, 1857-59; d. at Williston, Vt., Aug. 13, 1864. 1. Controversial Theology, Bost., 1832, 8vo. 2. Discourses on the Nature, Evidence, and Moral Value of the Doctrine of the Trinity, Dover, N.H., 1831, 12mo; Bost., 1834. Reviewed in Chris. Quar. Spec., vi. 259, (by E. G. Smith.) Highly commended by Dr. Chalmers. 3. Christianity applied to our Social and Civil Duties, 1835, 12mo. 4. Young Man's Aid to Knowledge, 1836, 24mo; Lon., 1838, 18mo, and pub. in Scotland. Sale in Great Britain, over 100,000 copies. New ed., Bost., 1860. Trans. into several languages on the Continent. You a Christian? an Aid to Self-Examination, Bost.,

5. Are

1836; 16th ed., 1860. Also pub. at Marietta, Ohio; in Scotland; by the Amer. Tract Soc., N. York, 1861. 6. Woman as she should be, &c., Bost., 1838, 12mo. Other edits. elsewhere. 7. Address before the Boston Society of Natural History, 1837, 8vo. See N. Amer. Rev., xlv. 488. 8. Oration before the Municipal Authorities of Boston, July 4, 1838, 1838, 8vo.

"A liberal and enlightened performance.”—Loring's Hundred Boston Orators, 576.

9. Mental Cultivation, 1839. 10. Design and Mode of Baptism, 1842. Several edits. in America and England. 11. The Christian Doctrines, Bost., 1844, 8vo. Reviewed in Chris. Exam., xxxvii. 400. 12. Elements of Intellectual Philosophy, 1851, Svo; 10th ed., 1863, 12mo. Commended by Rev. Drs. Jared Sparks, Mark Hopkins, and Simeon North. 13. Elements of Moral Philosophy, Analytical, Synthetical, N. York, 1856, 12mo; 3d ed., 1859, 12mo; 8th ed., 1862. Commended by Rev. Drs. T. H. Skinner, H. B. Smith, and (in N. Amer. Rev., lxxxiii. 559) A. P. Peabody. 14. History of the First Presbyterian Church, Geneva, New York, Bost., 1859. 15. The Hidden Life, and the Life of Glory, Amer. Tract Soc., N. York, 1862, 16mo. Several edits. He also published a number of educational addresses, eulogies, &c.; edited The Religious Journal; contributed an introductory Essay to Rev. J. A. James's Church Member's Guide, Choules's ed., Boston, (see, also, MOORE, REV. E. D.;) and papers to Presby. Quar. Rev., N. Amer. Rev., N. York Observer, Boston Recorder, and educational journals, &c.

Winslow, J. Practical Instructions to Candidates for Holy Orders, Licences, Institutions, &c., with Forms, &c., Lon., 1827, 12mo.

Winslow, J. S. Theseus and the Minotaur; a Metrical Legend, Lon., 1859. Unfavourably noticed by Lon. Athen., 1859, ii. 462.

Winslow, Josiah, Governor of Plymouth Colony, 1673-80, d. at Marshfield, Dec. 18, 1680, aged 51, celebrated the memory of Governor William Bradford in a poem which will be found in Morton's Memoriall and in Duyckinek's Cyc. of Amer. Lit., i. 45. Winslow, Mrs. Mary. See WINSLOW, OCTAVIUS,

No. 18.

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