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White, F. A. Disappointed Aspirations: a Satire on the Present State of Literature, and other Poems, Lon., Dec. 1865, fp. 8vo.

"Never do we remember to have met with a more incoherent, impious, and apparently purposeless rodomontade.”—Lon. Reader, 1866, i. 87.

White, F. C. P., D.D. 1. Catechetical Exercises on the Acts of the Apostles, Lon., 1861, fp. 8vo. 2. Books of Kings and Chronicles: Notes and Questions, 1863, fp. Svo.

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1. The Christian Memorial: containing God's Abundant Grace and Providential Kindness to the Author, particularly shewing how he has been brought into the Ministry, &c. &c., Lon., 1809, 8vo. 2. Samuel's Message to Eli. 3. Declaration of War. 4. War in Heaven between Michael and his Angels, &c.; a Sermon, 1808, Svo. 5. Progress of Religion: containing a Scourge of Small Cords, &c. 6. Restoration of the Jews. 7. Memoir of Samuel Slater, the Father of American Manufactures; connected with a History of the Rise and Progress of the Cotton Manufacture in England and America, &c., 2d ed., Phila., 1846, Svo, pp. 448.

"The Life of Slater contains an immense mass of facts relating to the early history of manufactures in Rhode Island and New England.”—Elisha R. Potter to S. Austin Allibome, Aug. 17, 1865.

It was reviewed in N. Amer. Rev., lii. 46, (by II. A.

White, F. Gilbert. True Nature of the Church; Miles.) A Life of Slater (by Rev. John L. Blake, D.D.)

Six Sermons, Lon., 1857, 12mo.

White, F. Meadows. Report of the Cases R. v. Goodchild, R. v. Lamb, R. v. Goodchild and Lamb, R. v. Hawkins, decided by the Court of Q. Bench, Lon., 1858, 8vo.

White, Francis, D.D., of the University of Cambridge, became Dean of Carlisle, 1622; Bishop of Carlisle, 1626; Bishop of Norwich, 1629; Bishop of Ely, 1631; d. Feb. 1637-8.

1. Orthodox Faith and the Way to the Church Explained and Justified against T. W.. Lon., 1617, 4to. For answers, see Lowndes's Brit. Lib.. 1064. It was repub. in No. 2. See, also, WHITE, JOHN, D.D., No. 3. 2. Replie to Jesuit Fisher's Answer to Certain Questions propounded by James I., &c., (see FISHER, JOHN,) 1624, fol.; Dubl., 1818, 8vo. Appendix to, by Andrew Staunton, 1824, 2 vols. 8vo. See Lowndes's Brit. Lib., 1067. 3. Treatise of the Sabbath Day against Sabbatarian Novelty, 1636, 4to. 4. Answer to a Pamphlet against No. 3, 1637, 4to. See, also, Watt's Bibl. Brit.

White, Francis, of Oxford. Serm., Micah vi. 9,

Lon.. 1619, 4to.

White, Francis, a lawyer. For the Sacred Law of the Land, Lon., 1652, 8vo.

White, Francis Sellon. History of Inventions and Discoveries, Lon., 1827, 8vo. See JOHNSTON, WIL

LIAM.

White, Frederick Thomas, of the Middle Temple, Barrister-at-Law. See TUDOR, OWEN DAVIES, No. 1; add: 3d ed., by F. T. White, 1866, 2 vols. r. 8vo.

White, G. P. Tour through Connamara, Lon., 1849, 12mo.

White, George. 1. Reflections on The Answer of the East India Company, 1689, fol. 2. Account of the Trade in the East Indies, 1691, fol.

White, George. The Stone laid before Joshua; the Substance of a Sermon, Zech. iii. 9, Lon., 1806, 8vo. White, George. Rambles of Redbury Rook, Lon., 12mo.

White, George. 1. Practical Treatise on Weaving, Glasg., 1846, (some 1847,) 8vo; Manches., 1851, 8vo. 2. Glasgow and Manchester, 1848. See Lon. Athen., 1848, 267.

White, Rev. George. 1. Statistics of the State of Georgia, Savannah, 1849, (some 1850,) r. 8vo. pp. 701. 2. Historical Collections of Georgia, N. York, 1854, (some 1855,) r. 8vo, pp. 704.

White, George, Head- Master of the Abbey Street Schools, London, N.E. 1. Five Thousand French Words at a Glance, Lon., 1858, sq. 2. Constructive Geography, 1859, sq. 3. Simultaneous Method of Teaching to Read, 1862, cr. 8vo.

White, George, late Tutor of St. Edmund's College, and Principal of Bellevue Academy, Kentish Town. Queens and Princesses of France, Lon., 1860; Balt., sq. 18mo. Contains sketches of 24 females.

"Unfair,—and, as such, not good reading, whether for Lutheran or for Romanist."-Lon. Athen., 1860, ii. 194.

White, Lieutenant George Francis, 31st Regiment. 1. Considerations on British India, Lon., 8vo. 2. Views in India; chiefly among the Himalaya Mountains, 38 plates; with Descriptions by Emma Roberts, 1838, r. 4to; 1. p.. with India proofs, imp. 4to. Commended by Lon. Quar. Rev. and Eclec. Rev. For notices of the scenery of this region, see Captain Skinner's Journal of a Tour in the Himalaya Mountains.

White, George Savage, an Episcopal divine, who for some time preached in Rhode Island, was b. at Bath, England, 1784, studied at Cheshunt College, and was ordained at Lady Huntingdon's Chapel, at Brighton, 1809.

will be found in Hunt's Amer. Merchants, vol. i. Baines's History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, Lon., 1835, 8vo, should accompany White's volume.

White, George Towry. Treatise on Proceedings in Equity by Way of Supplement and Revivor; with an Appendix of Precedents, Lon., 1843, 8vo.

"It is a practical and carefully-executed book."-7 Jurist, 300. White, Gilbert, one of the comparatively few authors for whom literary immortality may be safely predicted, was b. in the lovely village (county of Hants, four miles S.S.E. of Alton) which he has made forever famous, July 18, 1720; admitted of Oriel College, Oxford, Dec. 1739: took his degree of B.A., 1743; elected a Fellow of Oriel, (which he remained all his life,) March, 1744: became M.A., Oct. 1746; one of the Senior Proctors of Oxford, April, 1752; d. at Selborne, where he had chiefly resided since his youth, June 26, 1793. He declined all Church preferment, but in his latter years served as curate at Selborne, and had previously acted in the same capacity in the adjoining parish of Faringdon.

I. Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne, in the County of Southampton; with Engravings and an Appendix, Lon., 1789, 4to, pp. 468. Anon.

"This elegant and pleasing work, in short, abounds with information."-Lon. Mon. Rev., 1789, ii. 40.

II. Naturalist's Calendar, with Observations in Various Branches of Natural History; extracted from the Papers of the Late Rev. Gilbert White, M.A., 1795, 8vo, pp. 146; 1. p., 4to. Puh. by Dr. John Aikin. See Lon. Mon. Rev., 1796, ii. 89: Lon. Quar. Rev., xxxix. 406, n.

III. The Works in Natural History of the Late Rev. Gilbert White, A.M., Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford; comprising the Natural History of Selborne, the Naturalist's Calendar, and Miscellaneous Observations, extracted from his Papers: to which are added A Calendar and Observations, by W. Marekwick, Esq., 1802, 2 vols. Svo: 1813, 2 vols. 8vo. See Lon. Mon. Rev., 1802, iii. 186.

IV. Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne, a new Edition; to which are added the Naturalist's Calendar, Observations on Various Parts of Nature, and Poems, 1813. 4to, pp. 587; 1. p., 2 vols. r. 4to. Of the

1. p., in which the hybrid bird and the outline drawing at p. 314, are coloured, 50 copies were taken off, at £5 58. New ed., 1822, 2 vols. 8vo. Ed., with Notes and Illustrations, by Sir W. Jardine. Edin., 1833, &c., 18mo.

V. Natural History of Selborne, with the Naturalist's Calendar and Observations in Various Parts of Nature; Ed., with Notes, by Captain Thomas Brown, 1835, 18mo; 1857, 12mo. With Notes by several Eminent Naturalists, and an Enlargement of the Naturalist's Calendar, by J. Rennie, Lon., 1833. 8vo. Ed., with Notcs, by Edward Turner Bennett, Esq., and others, 1837, Svo. Fowle, Dec. 1864, 778, calf by Hayday, $22.

VI. Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne, with The Naturalist's Calendar; with Notes by Sir W. Jardine, Bart., 1853, p. 8vo.

VII. Natural History of Selborne, with the Naturalist's Calendar: Ed. by E. Blyth; with Descriptions by R. R. Mudie, 1850, cr. 8vo.

VIII. Natural History of Selborne, with Observations on Various Parts of Nature, and the Naturalist's Calendar, with the Additions and Notes of Sir W. Jardine, &c.; Ed., with further Illustrations, and a Biographical Memoir, by Ed. Jesse, Esq.: To which is added a Complete Index; with 40 wood-cuts, (Bohn's Illust. Lib., xii.,) p. 8vo, 1850, '51, '53, '54, '57, '61. See, also, Jesso's Gleanings in Natural History, Series Second.

IX. Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne, (Routledge's Illust. Lib.,) cr. 8vo, 1854, &c.

X. Natural History of Selborne, with Additions by Sir W. Jardine, Edin., 1829, sm. 8vo; Phila., 1832, 12mno. XI. Natural History of Selborne, with Notes by Rev. Leonhard Jenyns, Lon., 1843, fp. 8vo.

XII. Natural History of Selborne, with Additional Notes by the Rev. J. G. Wood, 1854, p. 8vo; 1857, p. Svo; 1864, p. 8vo.

XIII. Natural History of Selborne, 1862, 18mo, (Bell & Daldy.)

XIV. Natural History of Selborne, Arranged for Young Persons, by a Lady, 1840, 12mo.

XV. Natural History of Selborne, Arranged for Young Persons, (Soc. P. C. K..) p. Svo, 1842, '60, '63. See Lon. Quar. Rev., June, 1844, 22; Lon. Gent. Mag., June, 1860, i. 617. We quote a few opinions on The Natural History of Selborne:

"This most delightful work . . . is an admirable specimen of topography, both as to matter and style, and proves in how laudable and useful a manner a parish priest may employ his leisure time, and how serviceable he may be to the natural history and antiquities of his country." ."-Stevenson's Cat, of Voy. and Trav., No. 496.

Who ever read without the most exquisite delight White's History of Selborne? It is indeed a Sabbath-Book, worth a whole library of sermons, nine-tenths of the Bampton Lectures included, and will make a Deist of an Atheist, of a Deist a Christian."-Blackw. Mag., xxiii. 872. See, also, xxix. 698, xxx. 9, and xlviii, 316–324, (A Visit to Selborne.)

She [Mrs. Hillyar] talked to him [Mr. Compton] about a book she had taken a great fancy to, White's History of Selborne,' which Rouhen had introduced to the boy, and the boy to his mother."-The Hillyars and The Burtons, by Henry Kingsley, ch. Ixi.

"White's Selborne,' a rich quarry in all that relates to the habits of birds."-G. C. CHILD, M.D.: Benedicite, (1866, 2 vols. 12mo:) Fowls of the Air. Benedicite we heartily recommend. "A man the power of whose writings has immortalized an obscure village and a tortoise-for who has not heard of Timo thy'?--as long as the English language lives."-Lon. Quar. Rer., lxxi. 8, n.

See, also, xxxix. 406, 409, Ixxii. 512: Westm. Rev., xix. 39: Lon. Retrospec. Rev.. xiv. 3: Lon. Athen., 1845, 857: BRODerip, William JOHN; KIRBY, WILLIAM, No. 5: JESSE, EDWARD, No. 7.

To the volumes which we have recommended as companions to the Natural History of Selborne, we add, A. de Quatrefages's Rambles of a Naturalist, trans. by E. C. Otté, 1857, 2 vols. p. 8vo, and F. T. Buckland's Curiosities of Natural History, 1858-60, 2 vols. fp. 8vo,and might add many more, did space permit.

White contributed to Phil. Trans., 1774, an Account of a House-Martin or Martlet, and to Phil. Trans., 1775, a notice Of the House-Swallow, Swift, and Sand-Martin. A brief notice of his family will be found in Nichols's Illust. of Lit., viii., 1858, 466. The only sermon he left behind him, written in 1748 and preached seemingly for the last time in 1792, (the text is 1 John iv. 20,) was published for the first time in the Journal of Sacred Literature in 1863. It was communicated by the author's grand-nephew, the Rev. F. Gilbert White, of BarngillHouse, Whitehaven, "who, if we may judge from his photograph, as, glass in hand, he examines a flower, is a worthy descendant, in temper and pursuits, of his ancestor of Selborne."

White, H. M. Is the Gospel duly preached to the Poor in England? a Sermon, Lon., 1861, 8vo. White, Henry. 1. Times Considered, Lon., 1802, 8vo. 2. Appeal to Consciences of Bank Directors, 1805, 8vo. White, Henry, D.D., b. in Durham, N. York, 1800; graduated at Union College, 1824; Professor of Theology in the Union Theological Seminary, N. York, from 1836 until his death, Aug. 25, 1850. 1. Sermon on the Death of J. Nithie, 1838. 2. Sermon on the Abrahamic Covenant, 1846. See Sprague's Annals, iv., Presbyterian, 691.

tory from the Creation, 1851, 12mo; 5th ed.. 12mo. 8. Outlines of the History of Rome, Edited, 1857, 12mo; 2d ed., Dec. 1860, 12mo. 9. Guide to the Civil Service Examination, 2d ed., Lon., 1858, 12mo; 8th ed., 1867, 12mo; 10th ed., by C. Ewald, 1868, 12mo.

"A very useful little work."-Lon. Gent. Mag., 1860, i. 167. "The first and best of its class."-Lon. Atlas.

10. The Massacre of St. Bartholomew; preceded by a History of the Religious Wars in the Reign of Charles IX., 1867, 8vo; N. York, 1868, 12mo.

"The facts are woven into a narrative exceedingly graphic and full of interest."-Erangel. Quar. Rev., Gettys., Jan. 1869. White, Henry. The Church in the Colonies and the Church at Home; Ramsden Sermon, Oxf., 1858, 8vo.

White, Henry, P.L., Surveyor, Toronto, Canada West. Geology, Oil Fields, and Minerals of Canada West: How and Where to Find Them, &c., Toronto, 1865.

White, Rev. Henry G. Letters from a Father to his Son in an Office under Government, Lon., 1819, Svo.

White, Henry Gostling, of Allhallows, Barking. Sermons, Doctrinal and Practical, Lon., 1822, 2 vols. Svo.

White, Henry Hopley, Barrister-at-Law, Middle Temple. See CRUISE, WM.; ROPER, S. DENISON, No. 1; WATKINS, CHARLES, No. 3.

White, Henry Kirke, the son of a butcher of Nottingham, and b. in that town, March 21, 1785, after some experience as a butcher's boy, stocking-loom labourer, and attorney's apprentice, became, late in 1804, a sizar of St. John's College, Cambridge, where he studied (chiefly with a view to the ministry) with such injudicious zeal that he paid the forfeit with his life, October 19, 1806, in his 22d year. He was so enfeebled as to be unable to stand an examination in 1805 for a University scholarship, for which he had been striving; but at the general college examinations in 1805 and 1806 he was pronounced the first man in each year, and was one of the three best theme-writers of 1806. He contributed to The Monthly Preceptor, or Juvenile Library, The Monthly Visitor, The Monthly Mirror, and The Globe, and published the following volume:

1. Clifton Grove; a Sketch in Verse, with other Poems, Lon., 1803, er. Svo. A very mild and courteously-worded critique on this volume in Lon. Mon. Rev., Feb. 1804, 218, was censured by Southey as "most cruel and insulting." (see Southey's Life and Corresp., chaps. xiii., xiv., his Memoir of White prefixed to his Remains, and his article in Lon. Quar. Rev., vi. 413, and Lon. Mon. Rev., 1810, i. 74;) and this libel was repeated by Talfourd (see his paper on Modern Periodical Literature, in New Month. Mag., repub. in his Miscell. Writings) and others, who it is hard to believe could have ever read the lines so berated. White himself was so injudicious as to send a written complaint to the reviewers; and this they answered, in the same tone of gentlemanly consideration which characterized the critique which elicited it, in the number for March, 1804, 335.

After White's death his papers were placed in the hands of Robert Southey, who had encouraged his youthful muse, and the latter gave to the world: 2. The Remains of Henry Kirke White, &c., with an Account of his Life, Lon., 1807, 2 vols. 8vo, (750 copies were sold in less than three months :) 3d ed., 1808, 2 vols. 8vo; 4th ed., 1808, 2 vols. 8vo, (reviewed in Lon. Mon. Rev., 1810, i. 71;) 5th ed., 1811, 2 vols. 8vo; 6th ed., 1813, 2 vols. 8vo; 8th ed., 1819, 2 vols. 8vo; vol. iii., 1822, 8vo; 10th ed., 1823, 2 vols. 8vo, and vol. iii., 8vo. Frequently republished. See SOUTHEY, ROBERT, LL.D., No. 14.

I. Remains, Lon., Longman, 1825, 24mo. II. Poems and Remains, Dove, 1826, 24mo; Scott & Webster, 1836, 24mo. III. Poems, with Memoir by Sir N. H. Nicolas, Pickering, (Aldine Poets,) 1837, fp. 8vo; Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1854, 16mo; 1859, 16mo; Lon., Bell & Daldy, 1860, fp. 8vo. IV. Remains, Wash

White, Rev. Henry. Early History of New England, Illustrated with numerous Interesting Incidents, 4th ed., Concord, 1841, 12mo; 9th ed., 1845. 12mo. White, Henry, of Trinity College, Cambridge, and Ph.D. Heidelberg. 1. Elements of Universal History, Edin., 1843, 12mo, 3 Parts, or in 1 vol.: 7th ed., 12mo; with Continuation by John S. Hart, LL.D., 6th Amer. ed., Phila., r. 12mo. Commended. 2. Outlines of Uni-bourne, 1836, 12mo; 1841, fp. Svo, some 1. p. V. Poems versal History, 5th ed., Edin., 12mo; with Questions by Rev. F. Knighton, Phila., 12mo. 3. History of Great Britain and Ireland, Edin., 1849, 12mo; 15th ed., 1862, 12mo. 4. History of France, 1850, 12mo; 5th ed., 12mo. 5. History of Scotland for Junior Classes, 1850. 12mo; 10th ed., 12mo. 6. History of England for Junior Classes, 1851, 12mo; 12th ed., Dec. 1860, 12mo. 7. Sacred His-spondence, Seeley, 1856, 12mo.

and Letters Complete, 1849, 12mo. VI. Life and Remains, Nelson, 1851, 12mo; Kendrick, 1852, 12mo. VII. Poetical Works and Remains, with Life by Southey, Routledge, 1852, fp. 8vo; also with Illust. by B. Foster, 1853, 12mo; 1858, 12mo. VIII. Poetical and Prose Works, Houlston, 1855, 12mo. IX. Life, with Corre

Of American editions we notice:

X. Complete Works, with Life by Southey, Bost., 1829. 8vo. XI. Complete Works, with Life by Southey, N. York, Carter, 1849. XII. Poetical Works, with Memoir by Southey, and Introduction by Rev. John Todd, D.D., Bost., Phillips, S. & Co., 1853, 12mo. XIII. Poetical Works, with Memoir and Remains, Phillips, S. & Co., 12mo. XIV. Poetical Works and Remains, with 10 engravings, Phila., E. H. Butler & Co., morocco. XV. Works, with steel plates, J. B. Smith & Co., 1855, 18mo. XVI. Poems, N. York, Leavitt & Co., r. 24mo. XVII. Poems, Phila., Hunt & Son, 32mo. XVIII. Poetical Works and Remains, Globe Edition, N. York, D. Appleton & Co., 1869, 16mo.

His Poetical Works were published with those of Campbell, Lon., Nelson, 1853, 12mo; with those of J. Graham, Edin., J. Nichol, 1856, demy 8vo; and with those of Rogers, Campbell, Montgomery, and Lamb, Phila., J. B. Lippincott & Co., 12ino. See, also, ROBERTS, MARY, No. 6.

We quote some opinions on White's poetry:

"These poems abound in such beauties as must impress the reader with the liveliest regret that so short a period was allotted to talents which would have dignified even the sacred functions the author was destined to assume."-LORD BYRON.

These lines naturally remind us of the poetical tribute of the same pen, the more significant and emphatic from the company in which it is found,-in one of the most pungent of satires:

"Unhappy White! when life was in its spring.

And thy young Muse just waved her joyous wing,
The spoiler swept that soaring lyre away

Which else had sounded an immortal lay!

Oh! what a noble heart was here undone,

When Science' self destroy'd her favourite son!" &c.

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, But, contrasting the two men,-their principles, their aims, and their ends,-" Unhappy Byron," rather than "Unhappy White," seems to be the appropriate lament. "It is not possible to conceive a human being more amiable in all the relations of life. . . . He possessed as pure a heart as ever it pleased the Almighty to warm with life. Chatterton

is the only youthful poet whom he does not leave far behind him.... I have inspected all the existing manuscripts of Chatterton, and they excited less wonder than these."-ROBERT SOUTHEY Account of White.

"What an amazing reach of genius appears in the 'Remains of Kirke White'! How unfortunate that he should have been lost to the world almost as soon as known! I greatly lament the circumstances that forced him to studies so contrary to his natural talent."-SIR S. E. BRYDGFS: Cens. Lit., ix. 393.

"There are, I think, among these 'Remains' a few of the most exquisite pieces in the whole body of English poetry. Conjoined with an easy and flowing fancy, they possess the charin of a peculiar moral delicacy, often conveyed in a happy and inimitable simplicity of language."-SIR S. E. BRYDGES.

"His poetry is pleasing and his subjects are moral: he is tender and tonching, and seldom wants thoughts, and never Jacks language; but there is an absence of energy and origi nality: he is truly sincere, yet seldom fervent. His life has its lesson, and his early death its moral:-let all young poets read and tremble."-ALLAN CUNNINGHAM: Biog. and Crit. Hist. of the

Lit, of the Last Fifty Years,

"There is no great infusion, in his most finished pieces, of fine fancy, romantic feeling, or fervid eloquence."-JAMES MONTGOMERY: Lects, on Genl. Lit., Poet, dc., Lect. VI.

"Few writers of verses have been more over-rated than Henry Kirke White, and it is a shame that, while there has never appeared in this country [America) a single edition of the poetical writings of Landon, Kenyon, Milnes, Miss Barrett, and others of similar merit, there have been more impressions of White than there have been of Milton, or Pope, or Coleridge.. I doubt whether if he had lived to the maturest age he would have produced any thing in poetry above elegant mediocrity."R. W. GRISWOLD: Poets and Poetry of England, 1844. "During late years an attempt has been made to underrate the young poet, apparently from the feeling that he has received more than his due modicum of praise. This is, in my opinion, alike ungenerons and unjust; and it is a depreciation in which I cannot conscientiously concur; for, depend upon it, the poetry which has commanded the sympathies of a very large circle of readers through half a century cannot be destitute of some rare merit. No such permanent temple of fame as that which Kirke White has reared was ever built on sand.”—D. M. MOIR: Sketches of the Poet. Lit. of the Past Half-Century, 3d ed., 1856, 23.

"Kirke White's poetry is popular because it describes feelings, passions, and associations which all have felt and with which all can sympathise. It is by no means rich in metaphor, nor does it evince great powers of imagination; but it is pathetic, plaintive, and agreeable; and, emanating directly from his own heart, it appeals irresistibly to that of his reader."-SIR N. H. NICOLAS: Memoir of White.

See, also, Southey's Life and Corresp., chaps. xiii., xiv., xv., xviii., xx., xxi., xxix., xxxii.; Chalmers's Biog. Dict., xxxi. 397; Life and Letters of Sir J. Mackintosh, vol. i. ch. v.; Rogers's Lyra Brit., 2d ed., 1868, 627; Blackw. Mag., xxiv. 694, (Noctes Ambros., Dec. 1828;) Chris. Disc., iv. 363; ScOTT, THOMAS, D.D., the

Commentator; WORGAN, JOHN DAWES, No. 1. Among White's best-known pieces are The Star of Bethlehem, To an Early Primrose, The Herb Rosemary, Hymn for Family Worship, The Churchyard, Song of the Consumptives, The Savoyard's Return. Ode to Disappointment, Sonnet to Consumption, Solitude, I am Pleased and yet I'm Sad, and The Shipwrecked Solitary's Song.

It does not become an American to omit to notice that a tablet to White's memory, with a medallion by Chantrey, was placed in All Saints' Church, Cambridge, by Mr. Francis Boot, of Boston, Massachusetts. The poetical inscription was furnished by Professor William Smyth, of Cambridge.

White, Hugh, Curate of St. Mary's, Dublin. 1. Twenty Sermons preached in St. Mary's Chapel of Ease, Dubl., 1834, 8vo: 7th ed., 1842, 12mo: N. York, 18mo. "Very instructive and devout."-Bickersteth's C. S., 4th ed., 496.

"Fitted at once to rouse the thoughtless sinner and to animate and refresh the devout believer."-Presby. Rev.

2. Practical Reflections on the Second Advent, Dubl., 1836, sm. 8vo; 7th ed., 1846, (some 1847,) fp. 8vo; N. York, 18mo.

"A very profitable and edifying work."-BICKERSTETH. 3. Meditations and Addresses, chiefly on the Subject of Prayer, Dubl., 1838, 12mo; 13th ed., 1845, fp. 8vo; 15th 1000, 1850, fp. 8vo; N. York, 1849, 18mo.

"These are truly excellent, simple, devotional, and scriptural.” -Lowndes's Brit. Lib., 1245.

4. Two Sermons on the Office of the Holy Spirit, Dubl., 1839, 32mo. 5. Profession and Practice, 1839, fp. 8vo; 1840, 12mo: Phila., 1849, 18mo. 6. Remonstrance on the Use of Carriages on the Lord's Day, Dubl., 1840, 32mo. 7. Invalid's Hymn-Book, 4th ed., 1843, 18mo. 8. Gospel promotive of True Happiness, 2d 1000, 1843, fp. 8vo; 5th 1000, 1850, 12mo: Phila., 1848, 12mo. "All his works very devout and edifying."-Bickersteth's C. S., 503.

9. The Family of Bethany, by L. Bonnet: with Introductory Essay by the Late Rev. Hugh White, 14th ed., Lon., 1859, 12mo: N. York, 18mo.

"The most enchanting volume of the kind that we ever opened."-Christian Lady's Mag.

White, Hugh Lawson, b. in N. Carolina, 1773, was a U.S. Senator from Tennessee, 1825 to 1839, when he resigned; d. April 10, 1840. Speeches, Letters, &c. See SCOTT, NANCY N.; Nat. Port.-Gall., ed. 1836, vol. iv. White, J., M.D. De Recta Sanguinis Miesione: or, New and Exact Observation of Fevers, Lon., 1712, 8vo. White, J. Lessons on Housewifery, Lon., 1849, 18mo.

White, J. On Health, as Depending on the Condition of the Air; and on a Patent Process for the Purification of the Air, Lon., 1859, 8vo.

White, J. Vikings, Lon., 1861, 12mo. White, J. B. Linen and Linen - Yarn Trades' Ready Reckoner. Lon., 1865, 8vo.

White, J. De Haven, of Philadelphia. Mary Blane and Hazel Dell, and Miscellaneous Poems, Phila., 1870, 12mo, pp. 318.

White, J. E. History of Ann Moor, of Tutbury; with the Evidence of her Long Abstinence, Savannah, 1812, 8vo.

White, J. H. John Saville; a Tragedy, Lon., 1847,

8vo.

White, J. Meriton. The Austrian Dungeons in Italy, by Felice Orsini; trans., new ed., Lon., 1859, 12mo.

White, J. P., M.D., contributed chapter vi. to Beck's Elements of Jurisprudence, vol. ii., 11th ed., Phila., 1860, 2 vols. 8vo; 12th ed., 1863, 2 vols. 8vo.

White, J. W. 1. Constitutions of Otho, Lon., 8vo. 2. Constitutions of Othobon, Svo.

White, James. The Clouds of Aristophanes; now first entirely Translated into English, with the Principal Scholia, and Notes Critical and Explanatory, Lon., 1759, 12mo. Highly commended.

White, James. 1. The Orations of Cicero against Verres; trans., with Annotations, Lon., 1787, 4to. Commended as "nervous and elegant and generally faithful." 2. Speeches of M. Mirabeau the Elder, with his Life; from the French of M. Mejan, 1792, 2 vols. 8vo. 3. History of the Revolutions in France; from the French of P. Rabaut, 1792, 8vo; 2d ed., 1793, Svo; N. York, 1794, 2 vols. 12mo.

White, James. 1. Earl Strongbow; or, The History of Richard de Clare and the Beautiful Geralda, 1789, 2 vols. 12mo. 2. The Adventures of John of Gaunt, Duke

of Lancaster, 1790, 3 vols. 12mo. 3. The Adventures of Richard Coeur de Lion, Lon., 1791, 3 vols. 12mo.

White, James, Veterinary Surgeon to the First or Royal Dragoons. 1. Anatomy and Physiology of the Horse's Foot, Lon., 1801, 18mo. 2. Compendium of the Veterinary Art, 1802, 2 vols. 12mo; 17th ed., by W. C. Spooner, 1842, 8vo; 19th ed., by W. C. S., 1861, 8vo. See No. 3. 3. System of Veterinary Medicine, 1804, 2 vols. 12mo. This and No. 2 were combined into one, and formed the 4 vols. 12mo, called White's Farriery, of which there are editions 1815, 1820, 1825, (Treatise on Veterinary Medicine,) &c.

"He [Arthur Pendennis] devoured all the books at home, from Inchbald's Theatre to White's Farriery."-Thackeray's Pendennis, chap. iii.

There is also The Improved Art of Farriery, &c., Compiled from the Works of White, Percival, and others, &c., by W. H. Rosser, 1847, 8vo; new edits., 1857, 1863. 4. Address to Yeoman Cavalry respecting the Management of their Horses, 1804, 8vo. 4. Compendious Dic

tionary of Veterinary Medicine, 1817, 12mo; 2d ed., 1843, 12mo. 5. Compendium of Cattle Medicine, 6th ed.. by W. C. Spooner, 1842, 8vo.

White, James, C.E. New Century of Inventions, 2d ed., Manches., 1822, 4to.

White, James, b. near Edinburgh, 1806, and edu cated at Glasgow and Oxford, was presented by Lord Brougham with a living in Suffolk, which he resigned for the vicarage of Doxley, Warwickshire; on receiving his patrimony, retired to private life, and devoted himself to literary pursuits; d. at his residence at Bonchurch, Isle of Wight, March 26, 1862. 1. Village PoorHouse; by a Country Curate, Lon., 1832, 12mo. 2. Church and School; a Dialogue in Verse, 1834, 12mo. 3. Miscellaneous Poems, p. 8vo. 4. The Earl of Gowrie; a Tragedy; 1846, 8vo.

"This is a very clever piece of writing,-clever as an historical exposition, clever as a drama."-Lon. Athen., 1846, 10. "His play of Feudal Times' was in some respects a remarkable production, the high promise of which The King of the Commons' and 'The Earl of Gowrie' failed to sustain.". Lon. Athen., 1862, i. 467, q. v. for a notice of Mr. White. See No. 5.

5. The King of the Commons; a Play, 1846, 8vo. This and No. 4 are noticed by Edin. Rev., lxxxiv. 223. 6. Landmarks of the History of England, 2d ed., 1855, fp. 8vo; 40th 1000 by Jan. 1862. Questions to, by Francis Young. 1857, fp. 8vo.

"Of the Landmarks' we feel obliged to speak in terms of unqualified condemnation."-Lon. Gent. Mag., 1859, i. 602. 7. Landmarks of the History of Greece, Dec. 1856, fp. 8vo. 8. The Eighteen Christian Centuries, Edin., Dec. 1857, p. 8vo; 4th ed., 1864, p. 8vo; Phila., 1859, 12mo; N. York, 1860, 8vo. Commended by Lon. Athen., 1858, i. 48, (with qualifications,) Lon. Times, Feb. 5, 1859, Amer. Theolog. Rev., Feb. 1860, 178, N. Amer. Rev., April, 1860, 572, &c.

"While written in a lively manner, it will be found to be not at all deficient in grave and philosophical reflections."-Blackw. Mag., Aug. 1858.

Com

9. Robert Burns; a Memoir, Lon., 1859, 12mo. 10. History of France from the Earliest Times to 1848, Edin., 1859, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1860, p. 8vo; N. York, 1859. mended by Lon. Athen., 1859, i. 805, and N. Amer. Rev., Jan. 1860, 280. 11. History of England from the Earliest Times to 1858, Lon., 1860, p. 8vo; 1864, p. 8vo; 1868, p. 8vo. Some translations from Schiller by Mr. White will be found in Blackw. Mag., xliii. 267, 684, 725. White, James W., of Philadelphia. Dental Materia Medica, Compiled, Phila., 1868, 18mo, pp. 108.

White, Jason. Young Minstrel a Collection of Music, by Artemas M. Johnson and Jason White, Boston. White, Jenny C. See WHITE, RHODA E. White, Jeremiah, a Nonconformist divine, became Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and Chaplain to Oliver Cromwell; d. 1707, aged 78. 1. Funeral Sermon on F. Fuller, Lon., 1702, sm. Svo. 2. Restoration of All Things, 1712, 8vo; new ed., 1851, 12mo, (Universalist's Lib.) See THOM, DAVID, D.D.

White, or Whyte, John, D.D., b. at Farnham, Surrey, 1511, became Perpetual Fellow of New College, Oxford, 1527; Rector of Cheyton, 1551; Bishop of Lincoln, 1554; Bishop of Winchester, 1557; deprived after the accession of Elizabeth on account of his attachment to Romanism and disrespect to the Queen; imprisoned for a short time in the Tower, 1559; d. Jan. 11, 1560.

Diacosio-Martyrion, id est, ducentorum Virorum Testimonium, de Veritate Corporis et Sanguinis Christi in

Eucharistia, ante Triennium, adversus Petrum Martyrem, ex Professo conscriptum, Londini in ædibus Rob. Cali, 1553, 4to: Saville, Feb. 1860, £1 118.; 1554, 4to. In Latin verse. See, also, his Epigrammatum, in Strype's Memorials, and his Orations, in Foxe's Acts and Monuments. For notices of White, see Tanner; Bale; Pits; Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., i. 311; Strype's Cranmer; Milner's Winchester: Warton's Life of Sir T. Pope.

White, John, D.D., Vicar of Eccles, and subsequently Chaplain-in-Ordinary to James I., d. 1615. 1. The Way to the True Church, Lon., 1610, 4to; 3d ed., 1612, 4to. 2. Defence of the Way to the True Church, 1614, 4to. 3. Workes, together with a Defence of the Way to the True Church" in answer to "White died Blacke," by T. W. P.: edited by his brother, Bishop Francis White, D.D., 1624, fo!. Contents: I. The Propositions of a Jesuit, with Answers; I. Defence of the Way to the True Church; III. Two Sermons at Paules Crosse and at the Spittle; IV. Orthodox Faith Explained, by Francis White.

Much information on the principles of Popery."-Bickerweth's C. S., 4th ed., 478.

He was buried.. without any other monument save what his learned works have left to posterity, which all who have either learning, piety, or ingenuity do, yea, must, most highly commend "-FULLER: Worthies, ed. 1840, ii. 103.

See, also, Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., iii. 238. White, John, known as "Century White," was b. in Pembrokeshire, 1590; entered of Jesus College, Oxford, 1607; became M.P. for Southwark, 1640, and was actively engaged against the Royalists; d. Jan. 29, 1644-45.

1. Speech concerning the Tryal of the Twelve Bishops, 1641, 4to. 2. Speech concerning Episcopacy, 1641, 4to. 3. The First Century of Scandalous Malignant Priests, made and admitted into Benefices by the Prelates, &c., Lon., 1643, 4to. Hollis, 1538, mor., £1 2. 4. The Looking-Glass, 1643 or 1644. See Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., iii. 144; Neal's Puritans, and Grey's Exam. of Neal; Walker's Sufferings of the Clergy.

White, John, a Puritan divine, known as "The Patriarch of Dorchester," was b. at Stanton St. John, Oxfordshire, 1574; admitted Perpetual Fellow of New College, Oxford, 1595; became a frequent preacher in Oxford; Rector of Trinity Church, Dorchester, 1606; one of the Assembly of Divines, 1643; Rector of Lambeth, 1645; d. at Dorchester, 1648. 1. The Planter's Plea; or, The Grounds of Plantations Examined, and Vsuall Objections Answered, Lon., 1630, 4to, pp. 84. See Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 4th Ser., vol. ii.; Young's Chron. of Mass. This work is of the highest authority:

"Yet, strange to say, his little book was not used or mentioned

by either Mather, Prince, Hutchinson, Bancroft, or Grahame." -G. E. ELLIS: N. Amer. Rev., 1xiii. 242.

2. A Way to the Tree of Life discovered in Sundry Directions for the Profitable Reading of the Scriptures, &c., Lon., 1647, Svo. 3. Commentary on the Three First Chapters of Genesis, 1656, fol.

"In opening these chapters our author has his peculiar excellency deducting apt and pertinent observations with fit and proper reasons for each point."-DR. THOMAS MANTON: Pref, q. v. for Rev. Stephen Marshall's commendation.

He also published some single sermons. See Bliss's Wood's Athen. Oxon., iii. 236; Brook's Puritans; Fuller's Worthies, ed. 1840, iii. 24.

"Like Robinson in reference to Plymouth, John White never set foot upon the soil of Massachusetts, but he was the most efficient promoter of the undertaking which resulted in the settlement not merely of our ancient town, but of the colony." -EDWARD EVERETT: Dorchester in 1630, 1776, and 1855: Everett's Orations and Speeches, iii. (1858) 306, (q. v.)

White, John, a native of Wiltshire, became a servitor of St. Alban's Hall, Oxford, 1600; was ejected from the vicarage of Cherton, but restored in 1660; d. 1671. 1. Miscellanea Variegata Anagrammata, Epigrammata, Disticha, &c., Lon., 1663-4-5, 3 vols. 8vo.

"Three volumes full of fooleries and impertinencies."-WOOD: Athen. Oren., Bliss's ed., iii. 943, (q. v.)

2. Rich Cabinet with a Variety of Inventions, 1677, 12mo. 3. Arts' Treasury; or, A Profitable Pleasing Invitation to the Lover's Ingenuity, 1688, 12mo.

1.

White, John, minister of Gloucester, Mass., graduated at Harvard College, 1698, and d. 1760, aged 83. The Gospel Treasure in Earthen Vessels: a Funeral Sermon on John Wise, Bost., 1725, 12mo. Recommended by Thacher, Sewall, Prince, Webb, and Cooper. 2. New England's Lamentations for the Decay of Godliness, the Danger of Arminian Principles, the Declining State of their Church Order, &c., 1734, 16mo; Lon., 1735.

White, John, Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge; became Vicar of Nayland, Suffolk: d. about

1760. 1. Letter to a Gentleman dissenting from the Church of England, Lon., 1743, 8vo; 2d ed., 1745, 8vo. | 2. Second Letter ditto, 2d ed., 1745, 8vo. 3. Third Letter ditto, 2d ed., 1745, 8vo. 4. Defence of the Three Letters, 2d ed., 1748, 8vo. 5. Second Defence of ditto, 1748, 8vo.

6. Letter to S. Chandler on the Three Letters and Appendix, &c., 1749, 8vo. 7. Appendix to the Controversy, 1750, 8vo. See TowGOOD, MICAIAH, No. 2; Remarks on White's Second Defence, 1748, 8vo. 8. Sermon, Joel ii. 15-17, 1746, 8vo. 9. Protestant Englishman guarded against the Arts and Arguments of Romish Priests, 1753, 8vo.

White, John, Surgeon-General to the Settlement of New South Wales. Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales, with 65 Plates, Lon., 1790, 4to; l. p., r. 4to; some with cold plates. In French, with Notes by C. Pougens, Paris, 1795, Svo.

"Contains much that is useful and interesting regarding the Ornithology of the region of which it treats."- Wood's Ornithologist's Text-Book.

Many matters omitted by Governor Arthur Phillip

and others will be found in White's Journal.

White, John, M.D. Papers in Med. Com., 1795. White, John. Narrative of Particulars, Lon., 1798, 8vo.

White, John. 1. Brief Remarks on the Proposed Regent's Canal, Lon., 1812. 2. Some Account of the Proposed Improvements of the Western Part of London, 2d ed., 1815, 8vo.

White, John, a teacher at Edinburgh, d. there, 1857, aged 71. 1. Mental Arithmetic, Edin., 12mo; Phila., 1818, 8vo: new ed., Edin., 1849, 12mo; 4th ed., 1856, 12mo. See No. 3. 2. Self-Instruction, 12mo; Phila., 1818, 8vo. See No. 3. 3. Key to 1 and 2, 1818, 8vo. 4. Tutor's Assistant, Edin., 12mo; Key, 12mo. 5. Cyphering Book, 4to. 6. Elementary Elocutionist, 12mo. 7. Abstract of General Geography, 44th ed., 1844, 12mo; 173d ed.. 1861, 12mo. 8. System of Modern Geography, 2d ed., 1846, 12mo; 24th ed., 1862, 12mo. 9. New School Atlas, Modern Geography, 1841, 4to: new ed., 1862, 4to. 10. System of English Grammar, 1850, 12mo. 11. Third Book for Children, 1851, 18mo. White, John. Essay on Formation of Harbours of Refuge, Lon., 8vo. White, John. 1841, 12mo.

Popular Lectures on Man, Lon.,

White, John. Rural Architecture: Designs for Cottages and Villas, Glasg., 1845, fol. White, John, Lieutenant U. S. Navy. History of a Voyage to the China Sea, Bost., 1823, 8vo; Lon.,

1824, 8vo.

1439.

"Relation curieuse."- Brunet's Manuel, 5th ed., v. (1864) "We know the author to be a respectable man, and worthy of credit."-Lon. Quar. Rev., xxx. 351.

See, also, xxxiii. 127, 131, 132; U.S. Lit. Gaz., iv. 47. White, John. Restoration of the Holy Scriptures to their Ancient Reading, &c., Lon., 1841, 8vo.

White, John Blake. 1. Mysteries of the Castle; a Drama, Charleston, S.C., 1807, 12mo. 2. Modern Honour; a Tragedy, 1812, 12mo. 3. Triumph of Liberty; or, Louisiana Preserved; a National Drama, 1819,

12mo.

White, John J. 1. Exposition of the Church of Christ and its Doctrine; forming a Supplement to "The End of Controversy Controverted," Phila., 1855, 12mo, pp. 233. 2. Peace, and other Poems, 1867, 16mo.

White, John Meadows. 1. Some Remarks on the Statute Law of Parish Apprentices, Halesworth, 1829, 8vo. 2. Tithe Commutation Acts, 2d ed., 1836, 12mo; new ed., 1838, 12mo. 3. Tithe Amendment Act, 1840, 12mo. 4. Copyhold Enfranchisement Act, 1841, 12mo.

DLE, REV. JOSEPH ESMOND, A Latin-English Dictionary, April 15, 1862, imp. 8vo, pp. 2128.

"This Dictionary is founded on Andrews's translation of Dr. Freund's Wörterbuch der Lateinischen Sprache,' but is no mere revision of it. Almost every article has been rewritten and reconstructed on a uniform plan; while entirely new matter to the extent of nearly 500 pages has been added. . . . An inconvenient thickness has been prevented by its being printed on a peculiar paper made expressly for the work."-Publishers' (Longmans') Adver!,, Lon. Athen., 1862, i. 272, 517. But see Lon. Reader, 1865, ii. 173, 234.

We may, therefore, safely say that whatever can be effected by time, labour, scholarship, care, and expense has been done to render this dictionary a new and complete thesaurus of the language, worthy of the great originals by Forcellini and Freund from which it is derived."-Lom. Athen., 1862, i. 657.

It is also highly commended by The Guardian, Spec tator. John Bull, Parthenon, Museum, Critic, and Educat. Times, and by the three last-named styled the best Latin Dictionary in existence: see Lon. Reader, 1864, i. 501. The London Bookseller of May 31, 1862, finds Latin-English Dictionary we possess." serious defects, yet pronounces it "the most complete

"A work which deserves the highest credit for the careful and thoughtful manner in which the meanings of each word are arranged and built up architecturally, story on story.”— PROF. MAX MULLER: Lects, on Language, Second Series, 290, n.

theory of what was needed in Latin lexicography; and in carry

"He [Mr. White] has started with no elevated or well-defined

ing out his plan, such as it was, he has groped his way along mechanically, amidst the darkness of corrupt texts and secondor third-hand citations. We sincerely hope that this may be the last of the manufactured lexicons. . . . The most convenient Latin Dictionary in English."-G. M. LANE, Prof. of Latin in Harvard Univ.: N. Amer. Rev., April, 1863, 502.

7. A New Latin-English Dictionary, Abridged from the Larger Work of White and Riddle, Feb. 1865, med. 8vo. pp. 1048, 188.

"The book is nearly perfect in its kind."-Lon. Spec.

Commended by Rev. Drs. Major and Collis, Dr. L. Schmitz, and Rev. E. St. John Parry, &c. See Lon. Reader, 1865, i. 212, ii. 173, 194, 234. 8. The Junior Scholar's Latin-English Dictionary, for the Use of Schools, Jan. 1866, sq. 12mo, pp. 662, 78. 6d. 9. The Junior Student's Complete Latin-English and EnglishLatin Dictionary, Jan. 19, 1869, sq. 12mo, pp. 1058, 128. or separately, English-Latin Dictionary, 58. 6d., Latin-English Dictionary, 7s. 6d.

"It occupies a very useful middle position between the formidable octavos and quartos which belong to the sixth form and under-graduates' lecture-room on the one hand, and the

lesser elementary dictionaries which are suited to beginners.”— Lon. Guardian, May 12, 1869.

We recapitulate the titles by which White's Dictionaries are known, (1870) I. White and Riddle's founded on the larger Dictionary of Freund, as last Large Latin-English Dictionary, (the parent work,) revised by himself, 3d ed., 2 vols. 4to, pp. 2128, 42s. II. White's College Latin-English Dictionary, (intermediate size :) abridged, for the Use of University Students, from No. I., med. 8vo. pp. 1048, 18. III. White's Junior Student's Complete Latin-English and EnglishLatin Dictionary, (in which the formation of words, which forms one prominent feature of the Public-School Latin Primer, is exhibited to the eye at a glance ;) Revised edition, sq. 12mo, pp. 1058, 128.; or separately, 58. 6d. and 78. 6d. To which add: 10. White's First Latin Parsing-Book, 1867, 12mo, 28. 11. White's Latin Exercise-Book, 1867, 12mo, 2s. 6d.

Mr. White edited Rev. Robert Lynam's History of the Roman Emperors, from Augustus to the Death of Antoninus, 1850, 2 vols. 8vo, and improved impressions of Rev. C. Bradley's Cornelius Nepos, Eutropius, Selections from Phædrus, and Ovid's Metamorphoses, in all 4 vols. 12mo. See, also, DALZEL, ANDREW; LIDDELL, HENRY GEORGE, NO. 1, 6th ed., 1870, cr. 8vo, pp. 1865: Riddle, JOSEPH EDMOND, No. 21, (Passow's Greek Lexicon;) VALPY, REV. F. E. J., Nos. 3, 6.

White, John T., D.D., of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, First Master of the Latin School, Christ's Hos- White, Joseph, D.D., an eminent Oriental scholar, pital, Rector of St. Martin, Ludgate, London, is a the son of a weaver, who designed him for the same great-nephew of the Rev. Gilbert White the naturalist. calling, was b. at Gloucester, 1746; educated at, and in 1. Xenophon's Expedition of Cyrus into Upper Asia, 1774 became Fellow of, Wadham College, Oxford: Laudprincipally from the Text of Schneider: with English| ian Professor of Arabic, Oxford, 1774; Preb. of GlouNotes, Lon., 1848, 12mo; 6th ed., 1865, 12mo. Com-cester, 1788; Preb. of Oxford, 1802; Regius Professor mended by Lon. Guardian. See, also, Lon. Critic, June of Hebrew, Oxford, 1802; d. 1814. 1. De Utilitate 5, 1858, 272. 2. Germany and Agricola of Tacitus, 1850, 12mo. 3. Latin Grammar, in three Parts 12mo, 1853, (sold sep., or all in 1 vol. :) 1, Latin Accidence; 2, Eton Latin Grammar; 3, Second or Larger Latin Grammar. 4. Latin Suffixes, 1858, p. 8vo. Commended by Lon. Critic. 5. Progressive Latin Reader; with Engligh Notes, Vocabulary, &c., 1861, 12mo. 6. With RiD-pographeo Clarendoniano, 1779-1803, 4 vols. 4to.

Linguæ Arabicæ in Studiis Theologicis Oratio, Oxon., 1776, 4to. Masterly. 2. Testamenti Novi Libri Historici et Epistolæ tam Catholicæ quam Paulinæ, Versio Syriaca Philoxeniana, ex Codd. MSS. Ridleianis in Bibl. Coll. Novi Oxonii repositis, nunc primum edita, cum Interpretatione et Annotationibus, Josephi White, Oxonii, è Ty

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