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58, 63, 73. BLICKLING homilies (The) of the tenth century. Edited by R. Morris. Eng, and Anglo-Sax. 1880 ['74-80]. Eng. Lit. 1605 74. WYCLIFFE, J. de. English works hitherto unprinted. Edited by F. D. Matthew. 1880. Eng. Lit. 1672 Echtermeyer, (E.) T., and others, editors. Bibliothek der novellen, märchen und sagen. Herausgegeben von T. Echtermeyer, L. Henschel und K. Simrock. 4 theile. Berlin. 1831-32. 16o. 12424.28 Contents: i-iii. Quellen des Shakspeare in novellen, märchen und sagen. 3 theile. 1831. iv. Novellenschatz der Italiener. Herausgegeben von T. Echtermeyer und K. Simrock. jer theil. 1832.

Forbes, A. Glimpses through the cannon-smoke. Boston. 1881. 120. VII. 1028

Papers written in the intervals of campaigning; but not always embodying war experiences.

Giesebrecht, (F.) W. (B.) VON. De litterarvm stvdiis apvd Italos primis medii aevi saecvlis. Accedvnt nonnvlla Alphani carmina vel emendata vel inedita. Berolini. 1845. 4°. IV. 179 Goedeke, K., and Tittmann, J., editors. Deutsche dichter des sechzehnten jahrhunderts. ier, xiier bd. Leipzig. 1867-79. 16o. Namely :·

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i. GOEDEKE, K., and TITTMANN, J., editors. Liederbuch aus dem sechzehnten jahrhundert. 1867. 26284.9 xii. GOLDEKE, K., editor. Schwänke des sechzehnten jahrhunderts. 1879. 26287.29 Deutsche dichter des siebzehnten jahrhunderts. xiver bd. Leipzig. 1880. 160. Namely: GRYPHIUS, A. Lyrische gedichte. Herausgegeben von J. Tittmann. 17524.26

Goethe, J. W. VON. Hermann und Dorothea; mit einleitung und fortlaufender erklärung von Dr. Timm. Stuttgart, etc. 1856. 160. 17586.11

Gower, J. De | confessione | Aman- | tis. | [2d ed.] Eng. London, T. Berthelette. 1532. fo. ff. (8), 191. G. L. 12472.14

With the seal of Gualt. de Latton (?). The title is enclosed in a border.

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Herder, J. G. von: Sämmtliche werke. Herausgegeben von B. Suphan. xiier, xixer, xxijer bd. Berlin. 1880. 8o. 17561.8

Heywood, T. The hierarchie of the blessed angells. Their names, orders and offices. The fall of Lucifer with his angells. [1st ed.] London. 1635. fo. 14481.16

Hillebrand, K. Six lectures on the history of German thought from the seven years' war to Goethe's death. London. 1880. sm. 8o. 16573.33 Holmes, O. W. The iron gate, and other poems. Boston, etc. IV. 175 1880. 16o. Horn, F. W. Geschichte der literatur des skandinavischen Nordens von den aeltesten zeiten bis auf die gegenwart. Leipzig. 1880. 1. 80. IV. 168 [Hughes, T.]. Tom Brown at Oxford: a sequel to School days at Rugby. 2 pt. Boston. 1868.

I 20.

Also editions of 1861 and 1868.

21488.17

Hunterian club. [Publications.] No. i.-xxiv., xxix.-xxxiv, xxxvii.-xli., xlv., xlvi., 1., li. [Glasgow.] 1872-80. sm. 4o. Namely:

i.-iv., vii.-x., xiv., xv., xix.-xxiv., xxix., xxx., xxxiii., xxxiv., xxxvii.-xxxix., xlv., li. RowLANDS, S. Complete works. 15981628. 3 vol. 1880 ['72-80]. Eng. Lit. 1365

v., vi., xi.-xiii., xviii. CRAIG, or CRAIGE, A. Poetical works. 1604-1631.1873 ['72-73]. Eng. Lit. 1315 xvi., xxxii., xl., xlvi., 1. BANNATYNE, G., compiler. The Bannatyne manuscript, 1568. Pt. i.-v. 1873-79. 8.79 xvii. NICCOLS, or NICHOLS, R. Sir Thomas Overburies vision. 1616. 1873. Eng. Lit. 1350 xxxi. HANNAY, P. Poetical works. MDCXXII. 1875. Eng. Lit. 1330 xli. GARDEN, or GARDYNE, A. A theatre of Scottish worthies: a d The lyf, doings, and deathe of William Elphinston, bishop of Aberdeen. 1878. Eng. Lit. 1325 Irving, W. Works. New ed., revised. 15 vol. New York. 1857, '56-57. 120. Also edition of 1853.

IV. 905

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Kingsley, C. Miscellanies. 2d ed. 2 vol. London. 1860. sm. 80. 22493.17 Contents:i. Sir Walter Raleigh and his time. A mad world, my masters.'- My winter-garden. -Chalk-stream studies. -Tennyson. The poetry of sacred and legendary art. - Alexander Smith and Alexander Pope. Thoughts on Shelley and Byron. [Vaughan's] Hours with the mystics. - Burns and his school. ii. Mansfield's Paraguay, Brazil, and the Plate. — Froude's History of England. - Plays and puritans. The agricultural crisis. The water supply of London. - North Devon: a prose idyl. — Speech in behalf of the ladies' sanitary association, 1859. Great cities, and their influence for good and evil. On the study of natural history. Thoughts in a gravel-pit.

Also editions of 1859 (entitled "Sir Walter Raleigh and his time, with other papers)" and 1860 ("New miscellanies"). Klemming, G. E. Sveriges dramatiska litteratur till 1863. Bibliografi. [i. häftet. Stockholm. 1863.] 1. 80. IV. 181

Lang, A. XXII ballades in blue china. London. 1880. 160. 23458.8 Lathrop, G. P. A study of Hawthorne. Boston. IV. 913 1876. 240.

Lee, V. Studies of the eighteenth century in Italy. London. 1880. 8°. IV. 907

Contents: The Arcadian academy. The musical life. — Metastasio and the opera. - The comedy of masks. - Goldoni and the realistic comedy. - Carlo Gozzi and the Venetian fairy comedy. Litauische literarische gesellschaft. Mittheilungen. ies, ijes heft. Heidelberg. 1880. 1. 80. II. 1751 [Locke, D. R.]. The struggles of P. V. Nasby; likewise his views of men and things. Embracing the period of American history from 1860 to 1870. Illustrated by T. Nast. Toledo, Ohio. 1880 1. 8o. IV. 21

Macaulay, T. B., 1st baron. Critical and histori20432.11 cal essays. London. 1869. sm. 8o. Also American editions of 1840, vol. i., ii., 1841-43, 1844 and 1862.

Main, D. M., editor. A treasury of nets. With notes and illustrations. 1881. 80.

English son

New York. 11426.32

Manaraki, A., editor and translator. Neugriechischer Parnass, oder Sammlung der ausgezeichneteren werke der neueren dichter Griechenlands. Original und uebersetzung. Heft i.-vi. Athen. 1877-79. 80. IV. 900 Marlowe, C., and Chapman, G. Hero and Leander. London. 1637. sm. 4o. pp. (80). Front. and 2 plates. 14484.18

The dedication to Sir Thomas Walsingham is signed "E. B.," probably Edward Blount, the person for whom it was first printed in 1598. The two plates, by Faithorne, are inserted. - See Allibone's Crit. dict, ii. 1221, and the references there cited; also Arber's Transcript of the stationers' registers, iii. 31; Collier's Bibliog, acct. of early Eng. lit., ii. 312-315.

Also edition of 1821.

14484.20 Milton, J. Comus. Uebersetzt und mit einer erläuternden abhandlung begleitet von I. Schmidt. Berlin. 1860. 4o. 14421.32

Möbius, T. Verzeichniss der auf dem gebiete der altnordischen (altisländischen und altnorwegischen) sprache und literatur von 1855 bis 1879 erschienenen schriften. Leipzig. 1880. 80. B46.22 Also his "Catalogus librorum islandicorum et norvegicorum ætatis mediæ," 1856. B46.21 Montaigne, M. (E.) DE. Essayes, or Morall, politike and millitarie discourses. Done into English by I. Florio. [1st ed.] London. 1603. fo. 8571.3 On the title-page is the signature "Ja. Foulis."

Also translation by C. Cotton, 7th ed., 1759 [8574.8], 1776 [8574.12], and French editions of 1739, by Coste[8572.4), 1754 [8572.8), 1779, (8572.10], 1820-24, by Amaury-Duval [8573.3), 1844, by Le Clerc [38.178), 1872-75, by Courbet and Royer, tom. i.-iii. [8573.5], and 1873-75, by Motheau and Jouaust, tom. i.-iii. [8573.9].

More, Sir T. VVorkes, wrytten by him in the En-glysh tonge. | [Edited by W. Rastall.] London, at the costes and charges of I. Cawod, I. VValy, and R. Tottell. 1557. fo. ff. (17), pp. 1458. 12471.30 G. L.

The title-page is mounted, the title enclosed in ar illustrated border. The dedication is a MS fac-simile, and the leaf between pp. 1138 and 1139, containing the letter "to the christen reader," if not genuine, is printed from old type. The last leaf is inlaid.

Morley, H., editor. Library of English literature. [Vol. i.-iii.] London, etc. [1876-80.]

Namely:

i. Shorter English poems. [1876.]

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4o.

10461.8 10461.10 10461.11

160.

Life and songs,

ii. Illustrations of English religion. [1877.] iii. English plays. [1880]

Nairne, C. (O.), Baroness.

1881. sq. 13482.49

Shelley, P. B. Prose works. Edited by H. B. Forman. 4 vol. London. 1880. 80. 18451.7 Simpson-Baikie, E. The dramatic unities. IV. 901 3d ed. London. 1878. 16o. IV. 171

with a Memoir and Poems of Caroline Oliphant the younger. Edited by C. Rogers. 3d ed. London. 1872. 160.

Also second edition, 1869.

Nasby, Petroleum Vesuvius, pseudon. See [Locke, D. R.].

Nyerup, R., editor. Hertha. En samling af digte. Kjøbenhavn. 1817. sq. 24°. IV. 180

O'Brien, F. J. Poems and stories. Collected and edited by W. Winter. Boston. 1881. 16o. IV. 912

Planché, J. R. Songs and poems from 1819 to 1879. [Edited by Mrs. M. A. Mackarness.] London. 1881. sm. 8o. 23472.6 Poe, E. A. Works. [With Memoir by J. H. Ingram.] 4 vol. New York. 1880. 120. ÍV. 182 Also editions of 1853, vol. iii., iv. and 1863, 4 vol.

Rada, G. DE. Poesie albanesi. 5 vol. in 4. Corigliano Calabro, etc. 1873, '72-77. 32°. IV. 910

Contents:i. Canti di Milosao figlio del despota di Scutari. 3a ed. [1873.]—ii.-v. Scanderbeccu i pa faan. Storie del secolo XV. 4 vol. 1872-77.

Ramsay, A., editor. The tea-table miscellany: or, A collection of Scots sangs. 9th ed. 3 vol. in 1. London. 1733. 120.

Also 12th edition, 1763.

25262.16

25262.17

Ruskin, J. Works. Vol. x., xi. Orpington, Kent. 1878-80. 8°.

28.8 Contents:-x. The two paths. 1878. xi. "A joy for ever."

1880.

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Stock, E., publisher. Three seventeenth century rarities. 3 vol. London. [1880?] 16o and sm. 120. Namely:

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Also editions of 1849, Thoreau, H. D. Early spring in Massachusetts. From [his] journal. [Edited by H. G. O. Blake.] Boston, etc. 1881. 160. IV. 15

Tilsit, Germ. - Litauische literarische gesellschaft. See Litauische literarische gesellschaft. Timrod, H. Poems. Edited by P. H. Hayne. New revised ed. New York. [cop. 1872.] 120. IV. 12 Also editions of 1859 and 1860.

Todhunter, J. A study of Shelley. London. sm. 80. 18453.10

1880.

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I. Is there any good reason to doubt whether Shakespeare wrote the principal plays that bear his name?

The partial authorship by Shakespeare of some of the least important of the plays commonly ascribed to him, where he had perhaps worked upon foundations laid by others has long been recognized, but a sweeping doubt was first suggested in a paper, "Who wrote Shakespeare?" in Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, August 7, 1852, but no substitute name was determinately fixed upon. In Putnam's Magazine for January, 1856, Miss Delia Bacon first offered her doubts in "William Shakespeare and his plays," and in 1857, in her Philosophy of Shakespeare's Plays Unfolded, (reviewed in National Review, vol. v.), she assigned their authorship to Bacon, Raleigh, and a club of wits. Hawthorne wrote an introduction to her volume, and in the Atlantic Monthly, January, 1863, (also in his Our Old Home,) he has given his views of the way in which this belief possessed her. In September, 1856, Mr. William H. Smith, an Englishman, published a little tract Was Lord Bacon the Author of Shakespeare's Plays, and, in 1857, he more fully presented the affirmative in his Bacon and Shakespeare. The same year George Townshend (?) published in London a statement on the other side, Shakespeare not an Impostor. Nine years later the affirmative proposition gained a strong and skillful adherent in Judge Holmes of St. Louis, who had known Miss Bacon's book, but not Mr. Smith's, and who published his Authorship of Shakespeare in 1866, which appeared in a second edition in 1875, with an appendix of additional proof, and a correspondence between Judge Holmes and Spedding, the editor of Bacon, who utterly discredits the theory.

Late discussions of the question have been Fraser's Magazine, 1874, copied in Living Age, No. 1584; Scribner's Monthly, April, 1875, by E. O. Vaille, a summary of the question; Thomas King's Bacon vs. Shakespeare, A Plea for the Defendant, Montreal and New York, 1875; C. M. Ingleby's Shakespeare-the Man and the Book, 1877, part i. p. 38, in the negative; George Wilkes's Shakespeare from an American Point of View, London, 1877, parts of which originally appeared in the Spirit of the Times, New York, takes the negative side, and there is an essay appended by J. W. Taverner, in which a rhetorical test is applied to prove that Bacon's prose and Shakespeare's verse could not have been written by the same person; Appleton's Journal, February, June, 1879, and June, July, 1880, "The Shakespeare Myth," by Appleton Morgan, an elaborate presentation of the views in the affirmative, reciting the various theories growing out of the anti-Shakespeare belief; North American Review, February, 1881, "Did Shakespeare write Bacon's works," by James Freeman Clarke, an essay to show the fallacy of the affirmative by maintaining the converse of the usual theory. II. Ought the study of the Greek and Latin languages io be regarded as essential to a liberal education?

A review of the controversy in this country about classical studies is given in the introduction of S. H. Taylor's Classical Study, with brief citations from arguments and testimony on both sides, while in the body of the work are given longer essays, wholly in favor of the classics, written by Professor Joshua Jones, Professor Thiersch, Hugh S. Legaré, Dr. Whewell (from his Principles of English University Education), John Stuart Mill (from his Inaugural Address at St. Andrew's), President Noah Porter,

Joseph Payne, Professor B. B. Edwards (from Bibliotheca Sacra, January, 1851), Professor John Conington, William H. Gardiner, Professor James Pillans (a paper re-enforced by Sir William Hamilton in his "Conditions of Classical Learning," in Edinburgh Review, October, 1836, and also in his Discussions, p. 328), George B. Loring, Professor Sellar, President McCosh, E. D. Sanborn, Professor Masson, Philip H. Sears, President Felton, President S. G. Brown, D'Arcy W. Thompson, Goldwin Smith, and L. Campbell.

A brief synopsis of the later stage of the controversy will be found in Kiddle's Cyclopædia of Education, and in successive volumes of the Year Book of Education. The scientific side of the question is enforced strongly in the collection of essays and excerpts made and edited by E. L. Youmans in his Culture Demanded by Modern Life. In W. P. Atkinson's Classical and Scientific Studies there is an examination of both sides of the question, with a strong leaning in favor of science, and with numerous references to authorities, particularly in the voluminous government report (1864) about the great schools of England, which the author looks upon as representing a "one-sided and obsolete system of education." The government commission was instigated by strictures which appeared in the Cornhill Magazine, i. 608, ii. 641, iii. 257, and in the National Review, 1861. Dr. Whewell's views of the misuse of classical training are given in his book of a liberal education in his Lectures on Education, 1854, and as cited in Professor Atkinson's monograph, p. 44.

Grave doubt has been thrown upon the value of classical study as pursued in England in the collections, edited by F. W. Farrar, of Essays on a Liberal Education, whose substance is mostly stated in Fortnightly Review, new series, vol. iii., p. 95, and in the same volume, p. 233, Professor Farrar reiterates the opinions he holds. The system thus set forth is also examined by John Fiske in the North American Review, 1868, p. 117. In the Contemporary Review, ix. 37, Mr. I. Gregory Smith examines the arguments against the classics as adduced by Lowe and Huxley. W. E. Gladstone, who has advocated the classical side, has been answered in the National Review, November, 1864, and in the Edinburgh Review, July, 1864. This side is also supported in J. W. Donaldson's Classical Scholarship and Classical Learning, Cambridge, England, 1856; in T. W. Higginson's Atlantic Essays, 327; International Review, i. 780, by Charles Elliott, D.D.

Dr. Jacob Bigelow read at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences a paper on Classical and Utilitarian Studies (also contained in his Modern Inquiries), in which he took ground against "classical studies as an organ of education," and was answered, at a later meeting, by Francis Bowen in his Classical Studies, Cambridge, 1867, also contained in his Gleanings from a Literary Life. Dr. Peabody restates the argument in favor of the classics in his Address at Dartmouth College in 1843, and Address at Phillips Exeter Academy in 1872.

Modern languages, as well as science, have been urged as a substitute for classical studies for their disciplinary value, and this view is urged in National Review, November, 1864, p. 296, and Westminster Review, October, 1853; and in this connection see "Classical studies as information or as training," and an abridgment of it in Popular Science Monthly, i.. p. 707; also " English in Schools" by Professor Seeley, Macmillan's Magazine, November, 1867.

The insects are contained in vol. 2, ii., pp. 1191-95, tab. 37 (1868).

Elrod, M. N., and McIntire, E. S. Report of a geological survey of Orange county. Ann. rep. geol. surv. Ind., 7: 203-239. 80. Indianapolis. 1876.

The geological position of Paolia vetusta is shown on pp. 206, 221.

Erichson, Wilhelm Ferdinand. Zur abbildung der libelle von Solenhofen. Buch, Jura in Deutschl. p. 135, pl. (3.) Abhandl. kön. akad. wiss. Berlin, 1837, phys. abhandl. 4o. Berlin. 1839.

Considers the insect figured by von Buch as partaking of the characters of the genera Aeschna and Libellula. It was afterwards named Anax Buchi by Hagen.

Eser, Anton Friedrich. Das petrefactenlager bei Ober-und Unter-Kirchberg an der Iller im oberamt Laupheim. Jahresh. ver. vaterl. naturk. Württ., 4: 258-267. 8°. Stuttgart. 1849.

Records, pp. 264-265, the discovery of two insects in the miocene fish beds of Unterkirchberg.

Esper, Eugen Johann Christoph. Ad avdiendam orationem pro capessendo munere philosophiae professoris pvblici extraordinarii a rectore academiæ... Christiano Friderico Carolo Alexandro . . . gratiosissime sibi collato d. martii, 1783 recitandam omni qva decet observantia invitat simvlqve de animalibus oviparis et sanie frigida praeditis in cataclysmo qvem svbiit orbis terrarum plerisqve salvis disserit Evgen. Joann. Christoph. Esper. 4o. Erlangae. 1783. pp. 20.

Refers in a general way to fossil insects, pp. 18-19.

Evans, C. E. Insect remains in the Paludina beds at Peckham (with note concerning them by F. Smith, as recorded in a letter from H. Woodward). Geologist, 4: 39-40, fig. 80. London. 1861. Figures an elytron and mentions others.

Fairmaire, Léon. See Millière, P. Faujas-de-Saint-Fond, Barthélemy. Nouvelle notice sur les plantes fossiles renfermées dans un schiste marneux des environs de Chaumerac et de Roche Sauve, département de l'Ardèche. Mém. mus. hist. nat., 2: 444-459, pl. 15. 4o. Paris. 1815. Gives the opinion of Latreille on a species of "Polistes" figured on the plate.

Feistmantel, Karl. Die steinkohlen becken in der umbegung von Radnic. Archiv, naturw. landesdurchf. Böhmen, bd. 1, sect. 2, at end, pp. 1-120, pl. I-2. 80. Prag. 1869.

Gives, p. 66, a brief account of the Chomle scorpions described by Corda, and notices the discovery of Palaranea borassifolia without description.

Fischer, Leopold Heinrich. Orthoptera europaea. 4o. Lipsiae. 1853. pp. 20, 454, tab. 18. Species fossiles, pp. 55-57, contains a bibliography of fossil orthoptera and a list of the species.

Fisher, Osmond. On the brick-pit at Lexden, near Colchester. Quart. journ. geol. soc. Lond., 19: 393-400. 8°. London. 1863.

Under the head of Organic remains, pp. 398-400, a letter is printed from T. V. Wollaston concerning Coleoptera found in the pit, and deductions are drawn concerning the climate of the time in which they lived.

Fischer von Waldheim, Gotthelf. Prodromus petromatognosiae animalium systematicae continens bibliographiam animalium fossilium. 4°. Mosquae.

1826.

Nouv. mem. soc. imp. nat. Mosc., 1: 301-374; 2:95-277, 447-458. 4o. Moscou. 1829-32. Notices a few articles on fossil insects, tom. ii. pp. 219-20,

458.

Fischer von Waldheim, G. Bibliographia palaeonthologica animalium systematica editio altera aucta. 8. Mosquae. 1834. t.p., pp. 8, 414.

Contains slight additions to the preceding, with the notices on pp. 305, 372.

Fleck, Hugo. See Geinitz, H. B., Fleck, H., und Hartig, E.

Fletcher, John. A dreadful phenomenon described and improved; being a particular account of the sudden stoppage of the river Severn, and of the terrible desolation that happened to the birches between Coalbrook Dale and Buildwas Bridge in Shropshire on Thursday morning, May 27, 1773. Works of John Fletcher, Vicar of Madeley, 1: 229246. 129. London. [1773?)

On p. 237 a great many [fossils] were found bearing the impression of a flying insect, not unlike the butterfly into which silk-worms are changed."

Fliche, P. Sur les lignites quaternaires de Jarville près de Nancy. Comptes rendus, 80: 1233-1236. 4o. Paris. 1875.

Records, p. 1234, seven kinds of beetles, northern species affecting moist localities, p. 1236.

Fliche, P. Faune et flore des tourbières de la champagne. Comptes rendus, 82: 979-982. 4o. Paris. 1876.

Notices the occurrence, p. 979, of four species of beetles from Vannes.

Fologne, Egide. See de Borre, A. P.

Fontaine, William Morris and White, J. C. The permian or upper carboniferous flora of West Virginia and S. W. Pennsylvania. 8°. Harrisburg. 1880. Rep. progr. second geol. surv. Penn., PP, pp. 10, 143, map, pl. 38.

Contains a description, p 104, and a figure, pl. 38, figs. 5, 5a, of Gerablattına balteata by S. H. S[cudder].

Fothergill, John. An extract of John Fothergill... his essay upon the origin of amber. Phil. trans., 43: 21-25. 4°. London. 1746.

Mentions the occurrence in amber, of "ants, spiders, &c."
Frič, Anton. See Fritsch, A.

Fritsch, Anton. Palaeontologische untersuchungen der einzelnen schichten in der böhmischen kreideformation. Archiv. naturw. landesdurchf. Böhmen, bd. 1, sect. 2, pp. 181–256, pl. 3. 8o. Prag. 1869.

Refers on p. 187 to the discovery of an elytron of a beetle, and a tube of a phryganid larva in clay-schists at Kounic.

Fritsch, A. Notiz über eine heuschrecke aus der braunkohle von Freudenhain. Archiv. naturw. landesdurchf. Böhmen, bd. 1, sect. 2, p. 276, fig. 8o. Prag. 1869.

Describes and figures Decticus umbraceus.

Fritsch, A. Fauna der steinkohlen formation Böhmens. Archiv naturw. landesdurchf. Böhmen, bd. 2, ab h. 2, th. 1, pp. 1–16, pl. 1-4. 8°. Prag. 1874. Describes Palaranea borassifoliae for the first time, and gives new figures and descriptions of four previously known insects, including the famous scorpions described by Corda.

Fritsch, A. Fauna der gaskohle und der kalksteine der permformation Böhmens. Bd. I. heft 1. 4o. Prag. 1879. pp. 92, taf. 12.

Contains pp. 26-31: "Vorläufige uebersicht der in der gaskohle und den kalksteinen der permformation in Böhmen vorgefundenen thierreste." On p. 31 appears a list of five insects, to three of which (myriapoda) names are given, from Nyřan and Kounová.

Fritsch, A. Dva noví členovci z útvaru kamenouhelného v Čechách. Vesmir, 9: 241-242, figs.

A, B. 4o. Praha. 1880.

Popular account of interesting remains of Ephemeridae from the carboniferous schists of Votvovic.

Fromont, [Louis]. [Empreintes sur une plaque de pierre lithographique.] Ann. soc. ent. belg., 23, comtes rendus, p. 35. 8°. Bruxelles. 1880.

Mention of impressions considered to resemble the antennae of an insect.

de la Fruglaye. Extrait d'une lettre de M. de la Fruglaye à M. Gillet-Laumont, sur une forêt sousmarine qu'il a découverte près Morlaix (Finistère) en 1811. Journ. des mines, 30: 389-91. 8°. Paris. 1811.

Notices a fossil chrysalis and a fly.

Gadd, Pehr Adrian. Rön och undersökning, i hvad mån insecter och zoophyter bidraga til stenhärdningar. Kongl. vet. acad. nya handl. 8: 98–106. 160. Stockholm. 1787.

Refers pp. 103-104 to "globuli arenacei" which he considers apparently as eggs of insects.

Gaudin, Charles Théophile. See Heer, O. Geikie, James. Prehistoric Europe; a geological sketch. 80. London and Philadelphia. 1881. pp. 18, 592, pl. 5.

Refers to notices of pleistocene insects on pp. 54, 256, 299, 440, 480, 494.

Geinitz, F. Eugen. Versteinerungen aus dem brandschiefer der unteren dyas von Weissig bei Pillnitz in Sachsen. 8°. Stuttgart. 1873. pp. 14, pl. Neues jahrb. f. miner., 1873: 691-704. taf. 3. 80. Stuttgart. 1873.

Describes two Blattinae and a Fulgorina.

Geinitz, F. E. Ueber neue aufschlüsse im brandschiefer der unteren dyas von Weissig bei Pillnitz in Sachsen. 80. Stuttgart. 1875. pp. 14, pl. Neues jahrb. f. miner., 1875, 1-14, taf. 1. 80. Stuttgart. 1875.

II. Insecten, pp. 4-6; describes four species of Blattina, one of them as new.

Geinitz, F. E. Die blattinen aus der unteren dyas von Weissig bei Pillnitz. 4o. Halle. 1880. pp. 22, pl. 1. Nova acta k. Leop-carol.-deutschen akad. naturf., 41, ii. no. 7. 4o. Halle. 1880.

Gives a full description, with figures of the diversity in neuration in opposite wings, of a species of cockroach, together with criticisms of Scudder's Palaeozoic cockroaches, and notes and figures of seven other forms.

Geinitz, F. E. Der jura von Dobbertin in Mecklenburg und seine versteinerungen. Zeitschr. deutsch. geol. gesellsch., 1880, 510-535, taf. 22. 80. Berlin. 1880.

Contains, pp. 519-531, Insectenfauna des dobbertiner unteren jura, in which seventeen insects are described, the greater part of them new. The plate is wholly devoted to insects.

Geinitz, Hanns Bruno. Charakteristik der schichten und petrefacten des sächsischen kreidegebirges. 40. 1839-42. Dresden und Leipzig. pp. 4, 116, 26, pl. A, 24.

Under the head of Insecten, pp. 12-13, taf. 3-6, are described and figured borings of insects which the author, supported by Rechenbach and Germar, refers to Cerambycidae, and describes under the generic appellation Cerambycites. Dr. Geinitz informs me that these belong to Gastrochaena amphisbaena Goldf., a burrowing mollusk.

Geinitz, H. B. Grundriss der versteinerungskunde. 80. Dresden und Leipzig. 1845 [also dated 1846]. pp. 10, 815, pl. 8, tabelle 1.

B. Arthrozoa, pp. 179-93, pl. 8; gives a brief general systematic account of fossil insects, with descriptions of a few forms and figures of Aeschna longiolata and Oed pola melanosticta. The second edition, 8o, Leipzig, 1856, not seen; according to Hagen the insects are upon pp. 179–90.

Geinitz, H. B. Die versteinerungen der steinkohlenformation in Sachsen. fo. Leipzig. 1855. pp. 7, 61, pl. 35.

Insecta, pp. 1-2, pl. 8, figs. 1, 4, are represented only by borings of supposed coleoptera.

Geinitz, H. B. Ueber einige seltene versteinerungen aus der unteren dyas und der steinkohlenformation. Neues jahrb. f. miner., 1865, 385–394, taf. 2, 3.

Describes Ephemerites Rückerti and contains a letter upon the same from Dr. Hagen.

Geinitz (H. B.). Paläontologische mittheilungen aus dem mineralogischen museum in Dresden. Sitzungsh. naturw. gesellsch. Isis, 1872, 125-131, taf. 1. 80. Dresden. 1872.

Contains, pp. 128-31, taf. 1, fig. 4-7: iii. Fossile myriapoden in dem rothliegenden bei Chemnitz. Palaeojuius dyadicus is

described.

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In response to Sterzel, defends the myriapodan character of Palaeojulus. The identity of his Palaeojulus with Scolecopter is elegans Zenk. is acknowledged by the author in 1880. Nachtraege zur Dyas, I. Mitth. k. min. geol. praehist, mus. Dresden. Heft. 3, 1-4. 4°. Cassel. 1880.

Geinitz, H. B. Bericht über die . . . auf dem reviere des carlschachtes der Lugau-Niederwürschnitzer steinkohlenwerke gesammelten steinkohlenpflanzen. Sitzungsb. naturw. gesellsch. Isis, 1879, 7-13, taf. 1. 80. Dresden. 1879.

Describes, with Deichmüller, p. 12-13 (two figures in text), Blattina dresdensis from the coal-beds near Klein-Opitz, Saxony.

Geinitz, H. B., Fleck, H., und Hartig, E. Die steinkohlen Deutschland's und anderer länder Europa's, ihre natur, lagerungs-verhältnisse, verbreitung, geschichte, statistik und technische verwendung. 2 bd. 4o. München. 1865. Bd. 1 (also entitled: Geologie der steinkohlen Deutschland's und anderer länder Europa's, mit hinblick auf ihre technische verwendung; von Geinitz). pp. 10, 420, atlas, ff. 3, pl. 28. Bd. 2 (also entitled: Geschichte, statistik und technik der steinkohlen Deutschland's und anderer länder Europa's; von Fleck u. Hartig). pp. 8, 423, (4), map.

Contains (bd. 1, pp. 146-50) Organische ueberreste der steinkohlenformation des Saarbrückenschen, in which, pp. 149, 150, appear lists of the carboniferous and dyas insects of the basin of the Saar.

Geinitz, H. B. und Gutbier A. von. Die versteinerungen von Obersachsen und der Lausitz. Gein., Gaa von Sachsen. 8°. Dresden and Leipzig. 1843, pp. 61-142.

Insects at pp. 66, 115, 140; nothing new.

George, Hector. See Brongniart, C.

Germar, Ernst Friedrich. Insecten in bernstein eingeschlossen, beschrieben aus dem academischen mineralien-cabinet zu Halle. Germar, Mag. d. entom. 1:11-18. 8°. Halle, 1813.

Describes seven insects of various suborders.

Germar, (E. F.). Fauna insectorum Europæ. Fasciculus undecimus. Insectorum protogeae specimen, sistens insecta carbonum fossilium. Long, minute fol. Halæ. 1837. 2 t. p., 1 f., index, pl. 1-25. Each plate contains one page of descriptive text, unpaged. The insects are all from the tertiaries.

Germar, E F. Ueber die versteinerten insecten des juraschiefers von Solenhofen aus der sammlung des grafen zu Münster. Oken, Isis. 1837, 421424. 40. Leipzig. 1837.

Germar compares the few insects then known from Solenhofen with the tertiary insects, and concludes that: 19, none of the jurassic species are identical with the living; 20, there are no strikingly strange forms; 3°, the general facies of the fauna is that of middle Europe and the United States, and indicates a

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