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Greaves, Charles Sprengel, M.A., Q.C., 18021881; graduated at Queen's College, Oxford, 1823; called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn 1827. 1. The Act for Conviction of Juvenile Offenders, 11 Vict. c. 82, Lon., 1847, 12mo. 2. Lord Campbell's Acts for the further improving the Administration of Justice, Lon., 1851, r. 8vo. 3. The Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts, Lon., 1861, 8vo. 4. The Proper Time for the Publication of Banns of Matrimony in the Morning Service, Lon., 1867, 8vo. 5. A Review of the Statutes, Rubrics, and Canons relating to Clerical Vestments, Lon., 1867, 8vo.

Gray, Rev. Walter Augustus, M.A., graduated | Life, and Darwin's Hypothesis: Two Lectures, Lon., at Trinity College, Cambridge, 1853; ordained 1853; 1873, 12mo. vicar of Arksey since 1866. 1. The Symbolism of Churches and their Ornaments: a Lecture, Lon., 1857, 8vo. 2. The Christian's Plain Guide, Lon., 1868, 12mo. With PEARSE, REV. BEAUCHAMP KERR WARREN, M.A., The City of the Lost, and other Short Allegorical Sermons; 4th ed., rev., Oxf., 1876, 12mo; 6th ed., 1879. Gray, Walter T. 1. The Bad Boy's Diary, N. York, 1880, 16mo. 2. Blunders of a Bashful Man, N. York, 1881, 16mo. 3. Miss Slimmens' Boarding-House. Illust. N. York, 1882, 16mo. 4. The Bad Boy Abroad. Illust. N. York, 1883, 16mo. 5. The Naughty Girl's Diary. Illust. N. York, 1883, 16mo. 6. Abijah Beanpole in New York; [also] Tidbits for Tea. Illust. N. York, 1884, 12mo.

Gray, Rev. William, vicar of St. John, Wembley, Harrow. 1. Confirmation, Lon., 1874, 12mo. 2. God's Work, and how to do it: a Tale, Lon., 1874; new ed., 1875, 12mo. 3. The Lord's Supper, Lon., 1874, 12mo. Gray, Rev. William A. The Shadow of the Hand, and other Sermons, Edin., 1884, p. 8vo; new ed., 1885.

Gray, William C. Life of Lincoln, Cin., 1867, 16mo.

Gray, William H. Morning Seed; or, Bible Words for Young Disciples, Lon., 1862, 12mo.

Gray, William Henry, b. 1810. A History of Portland, Oregon, 1792-1849: drawn from Personal Observation and Authentic Information, Portland, 1870, Svo.

Gray-Wilson. See WILSON.

Graye, John. The Sneering Age, and other Essays, Lon., 1867, 12mo.

Grayl, D. Glamour and Gramarye: Six Sketches in Rose Colour and Black, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo. Grayling, W. I. The War in Taranaki during the Years 1860-61, New Plymouth, N.Z., 1862, 8vo. Grayson, James. Leaves of Law for Licensed Victuallers, Lon., 1874, 2 parts, 8vo.

Grayson, William J., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 17881863. 1. Letters of Curtius, Charleston, S.C., 1851. 2. James Louis Petigru: a Biographical Sketch, N. York, 1866, 12mo.

Grayson, William S. An Attempt to exhibit the True Theory of Christianity, N. York, 1853, 12mo. Grazebrook, Henry. 1. Songs and Ballads, Lon., 1853, 12mo. 2. Poems, Sacred and Miscellaneous, Lon., 1853, 8vo. 3. Sir Geoffrey, and other Poems, Lon., 1857, 16mo.

Grazebrook, Henry Sydney, F.R.H.S., b. 1836; called to the bar at the Inner Temple 1869; examiner of accounts in the county courts department of the treasury since 1877. 1. The Heraldry of Smith: being a Collection of the Arms borne by, or attributed to, Most Families of that Surname in Great Britain, Ireland, and Germany, Lon., 1870, 4to. 2. The Heraldry of Worcestershire with Genealogical Notes, Lon., 1873, 2 vols. fp. 4to. 3. (Ed.) The Heraldic Visitation of Staffordshire made by Sir Richard St. George, Norroy, in 1614, and by Sir W. Dugdale, Norroy, in 1664, Stafford, 1885, 8vo. Greatbach, John. Christmas: a Prize Poem,

Lon., 1860, r. 32mo.

Greathed, H. H. Letters written during the Siege of Delhi. Edited by his Widow, (Eliza F. Greathed.) Lon., 1858, p. 8vo.

Greatly, Spencer. Our Commercial Policy: with an Enquiry into the Present State of Trade, Norwich,

1881, 8vo.

Greatorex, Rev. Edward, M.A., graduated at Pembroke College, Oxford, 1845; ordained 1847; minor canon of Durham since 1849, rector of Croxdale since

1872.

A Book of Family Prayers: collected from the Publick Liturgy of the Church of England, Lon., 1853,

8vo.

Greatrex, Rev. Charles Butler, graduated at King's College, London, 1853; ordained 1855; rector of Hope Baggot since 1881. 1. Leisure Hours: Original Poems, Songs, and Miscellaneous Pieces, Lon., 1842, 16mo. 2. Don Fernando: a Bagatelle, [verse,] 1846, 12mo. Privately printed. 3. Whittlings from the West: with some Account of Butternut Castle. By Abel Log, [pseud.] Edin., 1854, fp. 8vo. 4. Esther, and other Sacred Pieces, Lon., 1861, sq. fp. 8vo. 5. Poems, Lon., 1870, p. 8vo. 6. Murby's Letters for Little Folks, Lon., 1870, p. 8vo.

Greaves, Charles Augustus. The Science of

Greaves, Capt. G. H. 1. Instruction Drill for Outlying Picquets and Outpost Duty, Lon., 1861, 12mo. 2. Reserve Force: Guide to Examination, for the Use of Captains and Subalterns, Liverpool, 1870, 8vo. 3. The "New Drill" Assistant, Lon., 1870, 16mo.

Greaves, George. 1. Observations on the Laws relating to Child-Murder and Criminal Abortion, Manchester, 1864, 8vo. 2. Hints to Certifying Surgeons under the Factory Acts, Lon., 1867, 16mo.

Greaves, John, M.A., Fellow and mathematical lecturer of Christ's College, Cambridge. A Treatise on Elementary Statics, Lon., 1886; 2d ed., 1888, p. 8vo.

Grece, Clair James. (Trans.) P. Maetzner's English Grammar: a Methodical, Analytical, and Historical Treatise on the Orthography, Prosody, Inflections, and Syntax, Lon., 1874, 3 vols. 8vo.

Greeley, Horace, [ante, vol. i., add.,] 1811-1872, was a candidate for the Presidency in 1872. 1. The American Conflict: a History of the Great Rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-64(-65:) with the Drift and Progress of American Opinion respecting Human Slavery, from 1776 to the Close of the War for the Union, Hartford, Conn., 1864-66, 2 vols. r. 8vo. 2. An Address on Success in Business, N. York, 1867, 8vo. 3. Recollections of a Busy Life, N. York, 1868, 12mo; new ed., with memoirs of his last years, 1873.

"It is much of it very readable, and what is not is readily skippable, so that it is fairly on a level with the capacities and convenience of all kinds of readers. . . . The personal narrative is well told and full of human inter

est."-Nation, vii. 370.

"The reader finds in these reminiscences not only a very distinct portrait of the man, but many graphic after allowing for all drawbacks, is inclined to think bet sketches of American life as it was and is, and altogether, ter of both than more elaborate but less simple and straightforward accounts might have induced him to do." -Sat. Rev., xxxiv. 320.

4. Essays designed to elucidate the Science of Political Economy, Bost., 1870, 12mo. 5. Letters from Texas and the Lower Mississippi: to which are added his Address to the Farmers of Texas, &c., N. York, 1871, 8vo. 6. What I know of Farming: a Series of Expositions of Practical Agriculture as an Art based upon Science, N. York, 1871, 8vo.

"Criticise him as sharply as we may, we shall be moved by his vigorous song of honest labor. intelligent ambition, and bursting barns."-Nation, xiii. 108.

With CLEVELAND, JOHN F., A Political Text-Book for tions and Elections, N. York, 1860, 8vo. 1860 comprising a Brief View of Presidential Nomina

war,

Greeley, Robert F. Violet, the Child of the City: a Story of New York Life, N. York, 1854, 12mo. Greely, Adolphus Washington, U.S.A., b. 1844, at Newburyport, Mass.; served through the civil the war he was connected with the signal service, and in and was brevetted major of volunteers in 1865. After chain of thirteen circumpolar stations for scientific pur1881 was sent to the Arctic regions to establish one of a poses, in accordance with a plan made by the Hamburg in 1883 sixteen of the party perished of starvation, and International Congress of 1879. On the return voyage the survivors were in an exhausted condition when reseral Hazen as chief of the Signal Service Corps, with the cued by a relief expedition. In 1887 he succeeded GenService: an Account of the Lady Franklin Bay Experank of brigadier-general. 1. Three Years of Arctic dition of 1881-84 and the Attainment of the Farthest North. Illust. N. York, 1886, 2 vols. 8vo.

"The style of the narrative is excellent, easy, and unpretentious. The story of the Two Seasons at Fort Conger' is only second in interest, among recent Arctic voyages, to Payer's admirable 'Voyage of the Tegethoff.'' Nation, xlii. 198.

"These volumes are . . . so full of valuable matter t it is difficult to make a selection of points for notice. account of travel produced this winter is comparable v

them; not one is so beautifully illustrated or treats of mat- | Boys, Lon., 1885, 12mo. 13. Her Husband's Home; or ters so important, and, though some of the maps have already appeared in Capt. Schley's Rescue,' they are, one and all, of pre-eminent excellence."-Ath, No. 3045. (For an account of the relief expedition, see SCHLEY, W. F.) 2. American Weather: a Popular Exposition of the Phenomena of the Weather. Illust. N. York, 1888,

8vo.

Green, Alexander Henry, professor in the Yorkshire College of Science, Leeds. Geology for Students and General Readers: Part I., Physical Geology, Lon., 1876, 8vo; 3d ed., enl., 1882. With RUSSELL, R., The Geology of the Yorkshire Coal-Field, Lon., 1879, r. 8vo. With others, Coal: its History and its Uses. Illust. Lon., 1878, 8vo.

Green, Mrs. Alice, (Stopford,) wife of J. R. Green, infra. Henry II., ("Twelve English Statesmen,") Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.

"Not since Mr. Green's death has any contribution to historical literature appeared in England which bears more unmistakably the stamp of genius than does this remarkable monograph.. . . . The real value of this book is to be sought not in the charm of a brilliant style, or the surprising width of the knowledge it exhibits, or the vividness of the portraiture, or the subtlety with which some legal and constitutional questions are handled, but in the masterly manner in which the main object has been kept in view from first to last, and, though nothing in the history of his reign has been slurred over, everything has been subordinated to the setting forth the statesmanship of the king."-Ath., No. 3171.

Green, Miss Anna Katharine. MRS. A. K., infra.

See ROHLFS,

Green, Arnold. 1. Index to Rhode Island Supreme Court Reports, A-T: Index to Decisions, Providence, 1874-84, 20 vols. 8vo. 2. Ohio Supreme Court Practice: containing the Law, Decisions, Forms, &c., Cleveland, O., 1877, 8vo; 2d ed., 1881. 3. Rhode Island Supreme Court Reports, vols. xi.-xiii., (1874-82,) Bost., 1878-83, 3 vols. 8vo.

Green, Arthur Octavius. A Practical Arabic Grammar; 2d ed., rev. and enl., Lon., 1887, p. 8vo. Green, Asa T. Eureka; or, The Golden Door Ajar: the Mysteries of the World mysteriously revealed, Cin., 1883, 12mo.

Green, Rev. B. Sermons, and other Discourses: with Brief Biographical Hints, 1860, 12mo.

Green, Mrs. B. R. Lord Castleton's Ward: a Novel, Lon., 1874, 3 vols. p. 8vo.

Green, Benjamin E. The Irrepressible Conflict between Labor and Capital, Phila., 1871, 8vo.

Green, Burton. Belgium Maritime Guide, Lon., 1878, 8vo.

Green, Charles Ewing. New Jersey Court of Chancery Reports, vols. xvi.-xxvii., (1863–77,) Trenton, N.J., 1864-78, 12 vols. 8vo.

Green, Charles Frederick. Shakespeare's Crab Tree, with its Legend, and a Descriptive Account, showing its Relation to the Poet's Traditional History, Lon., 1862, 4to.

Green, Charles M. (Ed.) The Friend of All: a Cyclopædia of Practical Information. Illust. and Maps. N. York, 1884, 4to.

Green, Duff, 1780-1875, b. in Georgia; a lawyer and journalist. 1. Facts and Suggestions, Biographical, Historical, Financial, and Political, N. York, 1867, Svo. 2. How to pay off the National Debt, regulate the Value of Money, and maintain Stability in the Values of Property and of Labor, Phila., 1872, 12mo. Green, Elizabeth H. Lessons on the Life and Epistles of St. Paul, Lon., 1880, 8vo.

Green, Emanuel. (Ed.) The Survey and Rental of the Chantries, Colleges, and Free Chapels, Guilds, Fraternities, Lamps, Lights, and Obits in the County of Somerset as returned in the Second Year of King Edward II., A.D. 1548, (Somerset Record Soc.,) Lon., 1888, 8vo. Green, Evelyn Everett. 1. His Mother's Book. By H. F. E. Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 2. Lady Temple's Grandchildren, Lon., 1883, 8vo. 3. Cuthbert Conningsby: a Sequel to "Maud Kinglake's Collect," Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 4. Lenore Annadale's Story. Illust. Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 5. Torwood's Trust: a Novel, Lon., 1884, 3 vols. cr. 8vo. 6. Two London Homes; or, Marjorie and Muriel, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo. 7. Winning the Victory; or, Di Pennington's Reward, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 8. Uncle Roger; or, A Summer of Surprises, Lon., 1885, sq. 16mo. 9. The College and the Grange, Lon., 1885, 12mo. 10. True to Himself; or, My Boyhood's Hero, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 11. The Mistress of Lydgate Priory: the Story of a Long Life, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 12. Mr. Hatherley's

"When

The Durleys of Linley Castle, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 14.
The Heiress of Wylmington, Lon., 1885, p. 8vo. 15.
The Eversley Secrets. Illust. Lon., 1886, p. 8vo. 16.
The Head of the House: the Story of a Victory over
Passion and Pride, Lon., 1886, p. 8vo. 17. The Last of the
Dacres, Lon., 1886, 12mo. 18. Our Winnie; or,
the Swallows go." Lon., 1886, p. 8vo.
19. Temple's
Trial; or, For Life and Death, Lon., 1886, p. 8vo. 20.
Illust. Lon., 1887, sq. 16mo.
A Child without a Name.
21. Dulcie's Little Brother, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo. 22.
Joint Guardians, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo. 23. Ruthven of
Ruthven, Lon., 1888, cr. 8vo. 24. Little Lady Clare.
Illust. Lon., 1888, p. 8vo. 25. Barbara's Brothers. Illust.
26. Dodo, an Ugly Little Boy; or,
Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.
Handsome Is that Handsome Does, Lon., 1888. p. 8vo.
27. Dulsie and Tottie: the Story of an Old-Fashioned
Pair, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo. 28. Two Enthusiasts. Illust.
Lon., 1888, p. 8vo. 29. Vera's Trust: a Tale, Lon., 1888,
p.
Svo.
Green, Everard. 1. Pedigree of Archdeacon John-
son, Lon., 1874, 4to. Privately printed. 2. Johnson of
3. Lincolnshire
Wytham-on-the-Hill, Lon., 1875, 8vo.
Pedigrees, Lon., 1879, 8vo. And see JESSOpp, Augustus,
infra.

Green, F. M. 1. The Christian Minister's Manual
2. Christian
for Church Officers, St. Louis, 1883, 12mo.
Missions, St. Louis, 1884, 12mo.
Green, F. W. Edridge-, M.D. Memory: its
Logical Relations and Cultivation, Lon., 1888, p. 8vo.

Green, Commander Francis Matthews, U.S.N., b. 1835, in Boston; served in the volunteer navy during the civil war; commissioned as lieutenant-commander in the regular navy 1868, and commander 1883. 1. The Navigation of the Caribbean Sea, Wash., 1877, 8vo. 2. Telegraphic Determination of Differences of Longitude in the West Indies and Central America, Wash., 1883, 4to. 3. List of Geographical Positions, Wash., 1883, 4to. With DAVIS, LIEUT.-COMMANDER C. H., and NORRIS, LIEUT. J. A., Telegraphic Determination of Differences of Longitude in the East Indies, China, and Japan, in 1881-82, Wash., 1883, 4to.

Green, George. See FERRERS, N. M., supra. Green, Rev. George Clark, M.A., graduated at King's College, Cambridge, 1852, and elected Fellow; ordained 1854; vicar of Modbury, Devonshire, since 1859. Collections and Recollections of Natural History and Sport in the Life of a Country Vicar. Illust. Lon., 1885, cr. 8vo.

Green, George Walton, graduated at Harvard 1876; a lawyer in New York. Repudiation, (“ Economic Tracts,") N. York, 1883, 12mo.

Green, H., superintendent of government schools in Gujerat, India. 1. The Deccan Ryots and their Land Tenure, Bombay, 1852, 8vo. 2. A Collection of English Phrases, with their Idiomatic Gujrati Equivalents; 3d ed., Bombay, 1858, 8vo; 6th ed., 1869. 3. A Collection of English Phrases, with their Idiomatic Marathi Equivalents, Bombay, 1868, 8vo.

Green, H. Favorite Prescriptions of Living American Practitioners, N. York, 1858, 8vo. Green, H. W. Walter Lee: a Story of Marlborough College, Lon., 1876, 2 vols. p. 8vo.

Green, Rev. Henry, M. A., 1801-1873, b. near Penshurst, Kent; educated at the University of Glasgow; was minister of a Presbyterian church at Knutsford, Cheshire, 1827-72, and also kept a private school. He was one of the founders and a member of the council of the Holbein Society. 1. Sir I. Newton's Views on Points of Trinitarian Doctrine, Lon., 1856, 12mo. 2. The Cat in Chancery, [satirical verses,] Manchester, 1858. Anon. 3. Knutsford, and its Traditions and History: with Reminiscences, Anecdotes, and Notices of the Neighbourhood, Lon., 1859, 8vo; new ed., 1887. "Accurate and interesting."-Dict. of Nat. Biog., xxiii. 44. 4. Whitney's Choice of Emblems: reprinted in FacSimile: with Notes and Dissertations, 1866, 4to. Shakespeare and the Emblem Writers: an Exposition of their Similarities of Thought and Expression, preceded by a View of Emblem Literature down to A.D. 1616: with Numerous Illustrative Devices from the Origi nal Authors, Lon., 1869, r. 8vo; also a large-paper edition. 6. Alciat's Emblems in their Full Stream, 1870. 7. Grimaldi's Funeral Oration upon Andrea Alciat: with Translation, 1871. 8. A Ramble to Ludchurch, a Romantic Spot, &c., [verse,] Manchester, 1871, Svo. With CROSTON, JAMES, The Mirrovr of Maiestie: with an Intro

5.

duction and Annotations, 1870. (He edited for the Hol- [ and with such an arrangement, in many points new as bein Society: Holbein's Dance of Death, with a Sketch Well as ingenious, that it may be readily grasped and retained."-Ath., No. 2471. of Holbein's Life and Works, &c.. 1869; Holbein's Bible Figures, 1869; The Four Fountains of the Emblems of Alciat, with a Sketch of Alciat's Life, 1870.) Green, Sir Henry. The Defence of the Northwest Frontier of India: with Reference to the Advance of Russia in Central Asia, Lon., 1873, 8vo.

Chron

Green, Henry, and Wigram, Robert. icles of Blackwall Yard. Part I. Lon., 1881, 4to. Green, Henry Martin. 1. A Digest of the Elementary Education Act, 1876. 2. The Summary Jurisdiction Act, 1879: with Introduction, Notes, &c., Lon., 1880, 8vo.

Green, Horace, M.D., [ante, vol. i., add.,] 18021866. A Practical Treatise on Pulmonary Tuberculosis: embracing its History, Pathology, and Treatment. Illust. N. York, 1864, 8vo.

Green, J. F. Ocean Birds: with a Preface by A. G. Guillemard, and a Treatise on Skinning Birds, by F. H. H. Guillemard. Illust. Lon., 1887, fol.

Green, Capt. J. H. The Life, Trial, and Confessions of Samuel H. Calhoun, for the Murder of Win. Sutherland, of Bardstown, Kentucky, Cin., 1862, 12mo. Green, Very Rev. James, M.A., graduated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge; ordained 1844; rector of Maritzburg 1849-57, and since then dean of Maritzburg. 1. Suggestions for a Code of Canons for a Province deriving its Origin from the Church of England, Lon., 1868, 8vo. 2. The Principles which should regulate the Selection of a Word to denote God in a Heathen Language, Lon., 12mo.

Green, Rev. James, vicar of St. John's, Weardale. Poems and Sonnets on Weardale and Teesdale, Weardale, 1885, p. 8vo.

A

Green, Rev. John, B.D., vicar of St. Neots. Concordance to the Liturgy, or Book of Common Prayer, Lon., 1851, 12mo.

Green, Rev. John. Discourses preached in the Unitarian Church, Newhall Hill, Birmingham, Lon., 1862, 12mo.

Green, John. Tales and Ballads of Wearside, Sunderland, 1879, p. 8vo; 4th ed., enl., Lon., 1885.

Green, John Orne, M.D.' (Trans.) The Pathological Anatomy of the Ear, by Hermann Schwartze. Illust. Bost., 1878, 8vo.

Green, John Richard, M.A., LL.D., 1837-1883, b. at Oxford, Eng. ; educated at Magdalen College School and at Jesus College, Oxford, and while an undergraduate published some papers in a local journal on Oxford in the eighteenth century.. In 1860 he took his degree and was ordained. He became curate of St. Barnabas, King's Square, E.C., London, and was afterwards vicar of St. Philip's, Stepney. His health, always delicate, was seriously impaired by the labors of an East London parish, and particularly by his exertions during the cholera outbreak of 1867, and this fact, together with intellectual difficulties in regard to his position, led him to resign his parish for literary occupation. In 1868 he was made librarian to the Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth. For some years he wrote regularly for the Saturday Review, and contributed to other periodicals. His two latest works were written in the midst of a hopeless struggle with consumption. 1. A Short History of the English People: with Maps and Tables, Lon., 1874, p. 8vo. (Over thirty thousand copies were sold in the first year.)

"The secret of this extraordinary success it is not difficult to divine. Mr. Green's style is eminently readable and attractive. A lively imagination, not always under the most rigid control, imparts its own colours to the dry details of history, where a more scrupulous or conscientious writer would have wearied himself, and fatigued his readers, unwilling to venture beyond the arid region of facts. If in some parts of his work we trace the conscientious study and examination of original authorities, in others he has trusted exclusively to secondary sources, attempting little more than a reproduction, after his own fashion, without exercising much independent judgment, and not always with rigid accuracy, of the opinions and conclusions of his predecessors."-J. S. BREWER: Quarterly Review, cxli. 285.

New edition, 130th-135th thousand, thoroughly revised, (by the author's widow,) 1888, er. Svo.

"Many interpolations have been made in Mr. Green's

text without any mark to distinguish them from his own the opinions he expressed, have been modified or comwork, many of his statements of fact, and even some of pletely altered, and several alterations have been made in arrangement. In almost every case the book has been improved by this revision."-Sat. Rev., lxv. 143.

2. (Ed.) History Primers, Lon., 1875–84, 6 vols. 16mo. 3. (Ed.) Literature Primers, Lon., 1875-79, 6 vols. 12mo. 4. Stray Studies from England and Italy, Lon., 1876, p. Svo. 5. History of the English People: with Maps, Lon., 1877-80, 4 vols. 8vo. Vol. i., Early England, 449-1071; England under Foreign Kings, 1071-1214; The Charter, 1204-1291; The Parliament, 1307-1461. Vol. ii., The Monarchy, 1461-1540; The Reformation, 1540-1603. Vol. iii., Puritan England, 1603-1660: The Revolution, 1660-1688. Vol. iv., The Revolution, 16881760; Modern England, 1760-1815.

"Though the materials of the earlier book [the "Short History of the English People"] have been woven into it, and though we recognize many of the most brilliant passages as old friends, still the arrangement is so altered, and the amount of fresh matter is so large, that it is substanAlmost the whole of the constitially a new work. views of Professor Stubbs. ... Moreover, he has to some tutional part has been rewritten in accordance with the extent clipped the wings of his imagination. which in the earlier work sometimes took rather lofty flights In short, the new book, while retaining the life and sparkle of its altogether a more ripe and complete piece of work. predecessor, is better proportioned, calmer in tone, and Mr. Green's belief in the rights of conscience is so strong that he can give due meed of admiration alike to the Protestant martyrs and confessors under Elizabeth; but it that his own sympathies lie. His heart is with the men is at the same time neither with Protestant nor Romanist who may be looked upon as the spiritual ancestors of the advanced thinkers' of our own day,-with the group of scholars of the New Learning,' among whom Colet, Eraswith which Mr. Green has traced the various currents of mus, and More stand pre-eminent. The care and pains religious thought can hardly be too highly praised. Taking a general survey of the four volumes, we should be inclined to say that Mr. Green is at his best as an historian of medieval times.. . No man can be equally in sympathy with all centuries, and, on the whole, the with which Mr. Green has least in common."-Sut. Rev., eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries form the period xliv. 44, 745, 813; xlv. 661; 1. 214.

"Mr. Green has recovered the lost art of historical narration. This is his peculiar title to fame, and it is one which no contemporary English or American writer shares with him. . Impartial critics must, in estimating the causes of Mr. Green's success, add that he exhibits a boldness and originality in the judgment of historical characters which, if it increase the attractiveness of his work, is not always calculated to gain the confidence of cautious

readers."-Nation, xxvii. 227.

6. (Ed.) Readings from English History, Lon., 1879, 3 parts, fp. 8vo. 7. (Ed.) Classical Writers, Lon., 187982, 7 vols. cr. 8vo. (The separate volumes are entered under the names of their respective writers.) 8. (Ed.) Essays of Joseph Addison, ("Golden Treasury" Ser.,) Lon., 1880, 18mo. 9. The Making of England. Maps. Lon., 1881, 8vo.

"Though this book cannot be expected to be as popular as the 'Short History,'-for the average man is likely to shrink from a whole volume on what Canon Stubbs still permits him to call the Heptarchy, we believe that students will rate it as high as, if not indeed higher than, any of Mr. Green's former works."-Sat. Rev., liii. 396.

"A single volume of the modest dimensions and unpretending appearance of a school-book; but the wealth of material, of learning, thought, and fancy which the author has lavished upon it might easily have supplied a stately library work of some eight or ten volumes. Some previous knowledge, some time and attention, may be required rightly to appreciate the extent of Mr. Green's historical scholarship, or the depth and thoughtfulness of his comments on historical events; but the most indolent reader can hardly take it up without finding that he has lighted upon a book which is never commonplace and never dull. . . If Mr. Green's style has a fault, it is the rather unusual one of excess of brilliancy. At times we are carried away with its passionate earnestness or fascinated by its poetry and tender feeling, but at other times we begin to wish for repose, and that the author would take things coolly. . . . The value of his book lies above all in the power it shows of conceiving a period as a whole, of tracing the causes and results of events, and of follow-scientific work just published, which deals with much the ing the great currents of thought."-Sat. Rev., xxxix. 51. "What he seems to profess, and what we think he makes good, is to have acquired all the newest knowledge upon a very large section of history, and to tell what he knows in such a style that every one may read it with little effort,

"His present book is a piece of real original research. We do not say that it probes very deep into the fundamental question. As far as scholarship goes, it cannot compare with Mr. Elton's profoundly learned and broadly same period; but looking at it as an essay written wholly within the narrow bounds of Mr. Freeman's Teutonic school, and based almost entirely upon the documentary evidence, it deserves high praise for its thoroughness and its general ability. . . . Indeed, two-thirds of the book

may be accepted gratefully, without any reservation, by historians of every school, as a valuable contribution to the clearing up of perhaps the darkest period in our whole annals."-GRANT ALLEN: Acad., xxi. 111.

10. The Conquest of England: with Portrait and Maps, Lon., 1883, 8vo. (Left unfinished; edited by Mrs. Green.)

"It is difficult to criticise a book which we have no op: portunity of judging as a whole. It follows as a matter of course that this volume cannot be placed upon the same level with The Making of England.' But we can see that there were materials here that might have made it as successful, and would probably have made it even more popular than the previous one. As it stands, it is necessarily open to criticism upon many points."-Sat. Rev., lvi.

803.

With GREEN, ALICE STOPFORD, A Short Geography of the British Islands: with Maps, Lon., 1879, 18mo. Green, Joseph. The Tritone: a Method of Harmony and Modulation, founded on a System of Inversion of Numbers, Lon., 1870, 4to.

Green, Joseph Henry, D.C.L., 1791-1863, b. in London; became a surgeon; acquired a large private practice, and held positions as professor, &c., in the College of Surgeons, King's College Hospital, &c.

He was

an early disciple of Coleridge, was his literary executor, and devoted himself mainly during the last twenty-seven years of his life to the preparation of a work based on his recollections of the oral teaching and on fragmentary notes and marginalia of Coleridge, and designed to embody these in a philosophical system. It was published after his death, under the title of Spiritual Philosophy, founded on the Teaching of S. T. Coleridge, Lon., 1865,

2 vols. 8vo.

"The first volume, of which the first chapter was dictated to Green by Coleridge himself, is occupied with a groundwork of principles; the second volume is wholly theological."-Dict. of Nat. Biog., xxiii. 51.

Green, M. The Story of my Heart Disease: Experiences of a Dyspeptic, Lon., 1885, 12mo.

Green, Mrs. Mary Anne Everett, (Wood,) [ante, vol. i., add.,] b. 1818, at Sheffield, Eng.; removed to London with her parents in 1841, and in 1845 was married to G. P. Green, an artist. 1. (Ed.) Diary of John Rous, Incumbent of Santon Downham, Suffolk, from 1625 to 1642, (Camden Soc. Pub.,) Lon., 1856, 4to. 2. (Ed.) Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reigns of Edward VI., Mary, Elizabeth, and James I., preserved in Her Majesty's Public Record Office: vols. iii.-xii., Lon., 1857-72, 8vo. 3. (Ed.) Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II., Lon., 1860-66, 7 vols. 8vo. 4. (Ed.) Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, during the Commonwealth, Lon., 1875-85, 13 vols. 8vo. (Vols. xiv. and xv. in the press, 1888.).

Green, Mason Arnold. 1. Springfield Memories. Illust. Springfield, Mass., 1876, 8vo. 2. Springfield, 1636-1886: History of Town and City, &c., Springfield, 1888, 8vo.

Green, N. E. Hints on Sketching from Nature. Illust. Lon., 1871-73, 3 parts, 12mo.

Green, N. St. John. Criminal Law Reports: being Reports of Cases determined in the Federal and State Courts of the United States, and in the Courts of England, Ireland, Canada, &c.: with Notes, N. York, 1874-75, 2 vols. 8vo.

Green, Nathan. The Tall Man of Winton and his Wife. By Over Forty. Nashville, Tenn., 1872. Green, Nelson Winch. Mormonism: its Rise, Progress, and Present Condition: embracing the Narrative of Mrs. M. E. V. Smith, and other Startling Facts, Hartford, Conn., 1870, 12mo. And see SMITH, MRS. MARY ETTIE V., ante, vol. ii.

Green, Rev. Richard, Wesleyan minister. John Wesley, Lon., 1881, p. 8vo.

Green, Rev. Rufus S., D.D. Both Sides; or, Jonathan and Absalom, Phila., 1888, 16mo. Green, S. W. A Complete History of the New York and Brooklyn Bridge. Illust. N. York, 1883, 8vo. Green, Samuel Abbott, M.D., b. 1830, at Groton, Mass.; graduated at Harvard College 1851, and at the Medical School 1854; served as a surgeon in the volunteer army during the civil war; was city physician of Boston 1871-80; mayor of Boston 1882; librarian of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 1. (Trans.) My Campaigns in America: a Journal kept by Count William de Deux-Ponts, 1780-81: with an Introduction and Notes, Bost., 1868, 8vo. 2. An Account of Percival and Ellen Green, and of some of their Descendants,

Groton, 1876, 8vo. Privately printed. 3. Epitaphs from the Old Burying-Ground in Groton, Massachusetts: with Notes, &c. Illust. Bost., 1878, 8vo. 4. (Ed.) The Town 5. (Ed.) The Records of Groton, Groton, 1879, 8vo. Early Records of Groton, Massachusetts, 1662-1707. Illust. Bost., 1880, 8vo. 6. History of Medicine in Massachusetts: a Centennial Address delivered before the Massachusetts Medical Society, Bost., 1881, 8vo. 7. Groton in the Witchcraft Times, Groton, 1883, 8vo. 8. Groton during the Indian Wars, Bost., 1883, 8vo. 9. (Ed.) Groton Historical Series: a Collection of l'apers relating to the History of the Town of Groton, Massachusetts: vol. i., Groton, 1887, 8vo.

Green, Rev. Samuel Gosnell, D.D., b. 1822, at Falmouth, Eng., and educated at Stepney College; graduated at the University of London 1843; classical tutor at the Yorkshire Baptist College 1851-63, and its president 1863-76; since that date secretary of the Religious Tract Society, London. 1. Addresses to Children, Lon., 1849, 18mo. 2. Sabbath with my Class, Lon., 1849, 18mo. 3. The Working-Classes of Great Britain their Present Condition, and the Means of their Improvement and Elevation, Lon., 1850, 8vo. 4. Lectures to Children on the Bible, Lon., 1856, 12mo. 5. Lectures to Children on Scripture Doctrines, Lon., 1856, 18mo. 6. Bible Sketches and their Teachings, Lon., 1865-70, 2 vols. 12mo; new ed., 1888, p. 8vo. 7. Hand-Book to the Grammar of the Greek Testament, Lon., 1870, p. 8vo; new ed., rev., 1885. S. The Written Word; or, The Contents and Interpretation of Holy Scripture briefly considered, Lon., 1871, 12mo. 9. The Apostle Peter his Life and Letters: with Maps, Lon., 1873, p. 8vo; 3d ed., 1883. 10. The Kingdoms of Israel and Judah after the Disruption, Lon., 1876-77, 2 vols. cr. 8vo. 11. French Pictures drawn with Pen and Pencil. Illust. Lon., 1878, r. 8vo. 12. Pictures from Bible Lands, drawn with Pen and Pencil. Illust. Lon., 1879, r. 8vo. 13. Notes on the Sermon on the Mount, Lon., 1880, 12mo. 14. Pictures from the German Fatherland, drawn with Pen and Pencil, Lon., 1880, r. 8vo. 15. What do I Believe? or, Outlines of Practical Theology, Lon., 1880, 12mo. 16. Notes for Lessons on Gospel History for Teachers, Lon., 1880-81, 2 parts, p. 8vo. 17. The Best of Books: Lectures to Children on the Bible; new ed., Lon., 1881, 18mo. 18. David's Bible, and other Addresses to Children, Lon., 1882, 18mo. 19. Christian Ministry to the Young: a Book for Parents, Pastors, and Teachers, Lon., 1883, p. 8vo. 20. Scottish Pictures, drawn with Pen and Pencil. Illust. Lon., 1883, r. 8vo. 21. Wyclif Anecdotes; or, Incidents and Characteristics from the Life of the Great English Reformer, Lon., 1884, p. 8vo.

Green, Samuel S., librarian of the Public Library, Worcester, Mass. 1. Special Report of the Free Public Library of the City of Worcester: prepared for Use at the International Exhibition of 1876, Worcester, 1876, 8vo. 2. Sensational Fiction in Public Libraries, and Personal Relations between Librarians and Readers: two papers, Worcester, 1879, 8vo. 3. Library Aids, Wash., 1881, 16mo; rev. ed., enl., N. York, 1883. Libraries and Schools, N. York, 1883, 16mo.

4.

Green, Sanford M. 1. Law Practice, Richmond, 1860. 2. A Treatise on the Practice of the Court of Common Law in the State of Michigan: with an Appendix of Precedents; 2d ed., Chic., 1884, 2 vols. 8vo.

Green, Seth, 1817-1888, b. at Rochester, N.Y.; superintendent of fisheries in the State of New York. He received two gold medals from the Société d'Acclimatation of Paris for improvements in pisciculture. 1. Trout-Culture, Rochester, 1870, 16mo. 2. Home FishCulture, N. York, 1887, 12mo. ing and Home Waters: a Practical Treatise on Fish

Green, T. A. General Treatise on Pleading and Practice in Civil Proceedings at Law and in Equity under the Code System, &c. Compiled by W. G. Myer. St. Louis, Mo., 1881, 8vo.

Green, Thomas. 1. Porches of the Temple, Manchester, 1884. 2. John Woolman: a Study for Young Men, Lon., 1885, 18mo.

Green, Thomas Bowden. 1. Fragments of Thought: being Wayside Notes and Fireside Scraps, Lon., 1875, p. 8vo. 2. The Chessboard of Life, Lon., 1876, 4to.

Green, Rev. Thomas E. The Man-Traps of the City, Chic., 1884, 12mo.

Green, Thomas Henry. 1. An Introduction to Pathology and Morbid Anatomy. Illust. Lon., 1871,

12mo; 6th ed., enl., 1884. 2. The Pathology of Pul- | 84, and since then rector of Hepworth. 1. (Trans.) monary Consumption: Three Lectures. Illust. Lon., 1878, cr. 8vo.

Green, Thomas Hill, M.A.. 1836-1882, educated at Rugby, and at Balliol College, Oxford, where he graduated, first class Lit. Hum., 1859; Fellow 1860-82; elected lecturer and tutor in ethics 1867, and Whyte's professor of moral philosophy 1877. His influence as a teacher was very remarkable, owing both to the profundity of his speculations and the force and attractiveness of his character. He contributed philosophical articles to the North British Review and other periodicals, which are included in volumes published since his death. 1. Liberal Legislation and Freedom of Contract: a Lecture, Lon., 1881, 8vo. 2. The Witness of God and Faith: Two Lay Sermons: with an Introductory Notice by the Late Arnold Toynbee, Lon., 1883, 18mo.

"Readers will here find the most characteristic evidences both of the late Professor Green's intellectual power and of the means by which that power influenced his pupils."Acad., xxiv. 127.

3. Prolegomena to Ethics. Edited by A. C. Bradley, M.A., Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford. Oxf., 1883, 8vo. "The most able and remarkable contribution to ethical science which has appeared in our country since the publication of Professor Sidgwick's Methods of Ethics.' It is the work of a mind of great power, although difficult to read in a measure far exceeding what is rendered necessary by the views of the writer and the subjects of which he treats."-Spectator, lvi. 1283, 1316. "The simplicity and lucidity of the style are especially admirable when the complexity of much of the subjectmatter is considered; the stream of argument is almost everywhere as clear as it is deep. From the entangled confusion, the Germanized jargon, the epigrammatic paradox, which render some metaphysical works insufferable, this treatise is entirely free. No one interested in the analysis of the capacities of the human soul is likely to read this book without genuine intellectual delight."ERNEST MYERS: Acad., xxiv. 205.

Homer's Iliad, Books One and Two: with the Prometheus of Eschylus, Lon., 1865, p. 8vo. 2. (Trans.) The Oration of Cicero for Cluentius, Cambridge, 1871, p. 8vo; 2d ed., 1881. 3. (Ed.) The Peace of Aristophanes, 1873, p. 8vo. 4. (Ed.) The Birds of Aristophanes, 1875, p. 8vo. 5. (Ed.) The Frogs of Aristophanes, 1875, p. 8vo. 6. (Trans.) The Similes of Homer's Iliad: with Notes, Lon., 1877, 4to. 7. (Trans.) Plato's Apology of Socrates and Crito, Lon., 1879, 12mo. 8. The Iliad of Homer: the Greek Text, with a Verse Translation: vol. i., Books I.-XII., Lon., 1884, cr. 8vo. 9. (Trans.) The Plutus of Aristophanes, Lon., 1887, p. 8vo.

Green, Rev. William Henry, D.D., b. 1825, at Groveville, N. J.; graduated at Lafayette 1840, and at Princeton Theological Seminary 1846; became professor of Biblical and Oriental literature at Princeton 1851. He was chairman of the American Old-Testament Revision Company of the Anglo-American Bible-Revision Committee. 1. A Grammar of the Hebrew Language, N. York, 1861, 8vo; 4th ed., 1885. 2. The Pentateuch vindicated from the Aspersions of Bishop Colenso, N. York, 1863, 12mo. 3. A'Hebrew Chrestomathy, N. York, 1865, 8vo. York, 1866, 12mo; 2d ed., 1871. 4. An Elementary Hebrew Grammar, N. 5. (Trans.) The Song of Solomon, by O. Zöcekler: with Additions, ("Lange's Commentary,") N. York, 1870, 8vo. 6. The Argument of the Book of Job Unfolded, N. York, 1874, 8vo. 7. 8. The Moses and the Prophets, N. York, 1883, 8vo. Newton Lectures for 1885: The Hebrew Feasts in Relation to Recent Critical Hypotheses concerning the Pentateuch, N. York, 1885, 8vo.

Molten Globe as exhibited in the Figure of the Earth, Green, William Lowthian. Vestiges of the &c., Lon., 1875, 8vo.

Green, Rt. Rev. William Mercer, D.D., 17981887, b. at Wilmington, N.C.; graduated at the Uni4. Works. Edited by R. L. Nettleship. Lon., 1886-versity of North Carolina 1818; ordained in the Protes88, 3 vols. 8vo. (Vols. i. and ii., Philosophical Works; vol. iii., Miscellanies and Memoir.)

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"It is enough to say of the whole book [vol. iii.] that it will be a treasure to those especially who knew him, because the Memoir fairly finds him out, and to those who have only heard of him from afar."-Sat. Rev., 1xvii. 51.

"To Professor Green philosophy was not a study of the words of men that are gone, but a life transmitted from them to him,-a life expressing itself with that power and authority which belongs to one who speaks from his own experience, and never to the scribes,' who speak from tradition."-PROF. CAIRD: Preface to "Essays in Philosophical Criticism," edited by A. Seth and R. B. Haldane.

With CROSS, T. H., (ed.) The Philosophical Works of David Hume, Lon., 1874-75, 2 vols. 8vo. (The Introductions, by Prof. Green, are included in vol. i. of his Works.)

Green, Rev. Thomas Louis, D.D., 1799-1883, a Roman Catholic clergyman. 1. Rome, Purgatory, Indulgences, Idolatry, &c.: a Letter, Bridgnorth, 1863, 12mo. 2. Indulgences, Sacramental Absolutions, and the Tax Tables of the Roman Chancery and Penitentiary considered, in Reply to the Charge of Venality, Lon., 1872; new ed., 1880, cr. 8vo.

Green, Thomas Sheldon. 1. A Treatise on the Grammar of the New Testament Dialect, Lon., 1842, p. Svo; new ed., 1862. 2. A Course of Developed Criticism on Passages in the New Testament Materially Affected by Various Readings, Lon., 1856, 8vo. 3. The Twofold New Testament; being a New Translation accompanying a Newly-Formed Text, Lon., 1865, 4to. 4. Critical Notes on the New Testament Dialect, Lon., 1866, p. 8vo; new ed., 1881. 5. A Critical Greek and English Concordance of the New Testament; new ed., Lon., 1885, 8vo.

Green, Upfield. (Trans.) The Sewing-Machine: its History, Construction, and Application, by R. Herzberg, Lon., 1864, r. 8vo.

Green, W. The Curious History of Pumpkin and Terrapin, Louisville, 1870, 2 parts, 8vo. Green, W. H. Walter Lee: a Novel, Lon., 1876, 2 vols. cr. 8vo.

Green, Rev. William Charles, M.A., graduated at King's College, Cambridge, 1855, and elected Fellow; ordained 1858; assistant master at Rugby School 1870

tant Episcopal Church 1822; elected first Bishop of Mississippi 1849; chancellor of the University of the South at Suwanee, Tenn., 1867. Life of the Right Reverend Bishop Otey, of Tennessee, N. York, 1887.

Green, Rev. William Spotswood, M.A., graduated at Trinity College, Dublin, 1871; ordained 1872; incumbent of Carrigaline, Cork, since 1880; a member of the Alpine Club. The High Alps of New Zealand; or, A Trip to the Glaciers of the Antipodes, with an Ascent of Mount Cook. Illust. Lon., 1883, p. 8vo.

"As interesting as any record of difficulties overcome by courage and skill that Australian travel has yet produced. It tells how the writer, with two Swiss guides, made the ascent of Mount Cook. The book must necessarily be one of primary interest to the mountaineer. As a contribution to our knowledge of New Zealand as a home for the superfluous population of the Old World, its value is necessarily slight."-Sat. Rev., lvii. 457.

Greenaway, Lieut.-Gen. Thomas, b. 1819. Farming in India considered as a Pursuit for European Settlers of a Superior Class, Lon., 1864, p. 8vo.

Greenbury, Rev. Thomas. The StandardBearer Fallen: being a Brief Sketch of the Life and Labours of H. Campbell, Lon., 1862, 8vo.

Greene, Aella, b. 1838, at Chester, Mass. ; a journalist in Springfield. 1. Rhymes of Yankee-Land, Springfield, Mass., 12mo. 2. Into the Sunshine, and other Poems, Bost., 1881, 12mo. 3. Stanza and Sequel, and other Poems, Springfield, Mass., 1884, 16mo.

Greene, Batchelder. Reflections and Modern Maxims, N. York, 1886, obl. 24mo.

Greene, Charles, clerk to the burial board of St. Pancras. The Burial Acts: a Complete Compilation of the Acts of Parliament from 1852 to 1857 with Regard to the Management of Burial-Grounds, Lon., 1857, 8vo.

Greene, Charles Ezra, b. 1842, at Cambridge, Mass.; graduated at Harvard 1862, and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1868; professor of civil engineering in the University of Michigan since 1872. 1. Graphical Method for the Analysis of Bridge-Trusses, extended to Continuous Girders and Draw-Spans. Plates. N. York, 1875, 8vo. 2. Trusses and Arches analyzed and discussed by Graphical Methods, N. York, 1879, 3 parts, 8vo.

Greene, Charles Harwood. Random Readings in Racy Rhyme, Hanley, 1865, 8vo.

Greene, Charles Warren, M.D., b. 1840, at Belchertown, Mass.; graduated at Brown University 1863; has contributed largely to various encyclopædias on topics connected with natural science, and edited re

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