Page:History of the Literature of the Scandinavian North.djvu/458

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SCANDINAVIA.

Hamel (Leopold, translator) see Tegnér (Esaias). Frithiof's saga. 1875.

Hamilton (Andrew). Sixteen months in the Danish Isles. 2 v. 12°. London, R: Bentley, 1852. (202)

Hardy (J: F:) The glaciers of Norway. A visit to the Jökuls glacier. In "Peaks, passes, and glaciers." v. 2. 12° London, 1862, pp. 427-441. (203)

Harold Hardrada, king of Norway. 1863-4. See Dasent (Sir G: Webbe).

Harrison (James Albert). Glimpses of Sweden. In "Lippincott's magazine." v. 21. 8°. Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott & co., no. 122, Feb. 1878, pp. 147-158, 12 ills.: no. 123, March 1878, pp. 289-298, 12 ills. (204)

——— The same. In "On the Rhine, and other sketches of European travel." 8° Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott & co., 1881 [i.e. 1880], pp. 208-229. (204a)

——— A group of poets and their haunts. 12°. New York, Hurd & Houghton, 1875. (205)
Contains: A Venice of the Vikings, pp. 155-184: A Swedish improvisatore [Carl Michael Bellmann], pp. 185-209.

Harte (Rev. Walter). The history of the life of Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, surnamed the great. 2d ed., corrected, with alterations and enlargements. 2 v. 8° London, printed for J. Hinton & R. Baldwin, 1767. (206)

Head (Sir Edmund Walker, translator). See Viga Glúm's saga. 1866.

Headley (Phineas Camp). The island of fire [Iceland]; or, a thousand years of the old Northmen's home. 874-1874. 8 pl. 12°. Boston, Lee & Shepard, 1875.(207)

Heber (Amelia Shipley, mrs. Reginald). The life of Reginald Heber, lord bishop of Calcutta. By his widow. With selections from his correspondence, unpublished poems, and private papers; together with a journal of his tour in Norway, Sweden, Russia, Hungary, and Germany [etc.] 2 v. 1 portrait. 8° New-York, Protestant episcopal press, 1830. (208)
Note. — The Journal of his tour in Norway and Sweden, is given in vol. 1, pp. 40-98.

Heckethorn (C: W:, translator) See Tegnér (Esaias). The Frithjof saga. 1856.

Helfenstein (James). A comparative grammar of the Teutonic languages. Being at the same time a historical grammar of the English language. And comprising Gothic, Anglo-saxon, Early English, Modern English, Icelandic (Old Norse), Danish, Swe-