313
[Additions.]
His Son. William Entwisle. Memoirs
■of the Rev. J. Entwisle, fifty-four years
a Wesleyan minister. By . . . Bristol,
1848.
His Widow. 2/rs. Harriet Finleij. A short memoir of Rev. J. Fiiiley . . . bv . . . L. 185C. ^
Inhabitant, An. S. Richards. Sketches of Farniington, Connecticut ... By . . . Windsor, Xt., 1832.
Inquirer, An. H. P. Happer. Part I. Is the Shang-Ti of the Chinese Classics the same being as the Jehovah of the Sa- cred Scriptures? Part II. What being is designated by Shang-Ti in the Chi- nese Classics, etc. ? By . . . Shanahai. 1877.
John the Dipper. Benjamin Francis, of Bristol. The Salopian zealot ; or, the good vicar in a bad mood. By ... L. 1778.
Judklns, Juke, Esq. Charles Lamb. Reminiscences of Juke Judkins, Esci., of Birmingham. In the " New Monthly Mag.," 1826.
Julian. Augustine Joseph Sickeu. — See "Publius."
Juncker, E. Else /Schmieden. Mar- garethe ; or, life's problems. P. 1878.
L., C Capel^Lofft, in the "Morning Chronicle." By jfigning these initials, as he had a right to do, he sometimes half- vexed Charles Lamb.
L., C. Mrs. Frederick Eg Pirkis, an English novelist.
li., J. John Leyden, who contributed -a series of pieces in verse, — chiefly translations from the Greek, Latin, and Northern languages, — to the " ISdin- burgh Mag."
Lady, A. Anne Steele Bobinson. Poetic reveries. By . . . Bait. 1848.
Liate Right Honourable Com- moner, A. William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. An inquiry into the con- By H. Cotes. L. 1776. Miss Louisa Beckwith. — See
Joseph Henri Flacon. Les
par . . . Paris,
duct of . .
liouisa. " Publius.'
M. R.
fureurs de 1 'Amour 1861.
Other pseudonyms of Flacon are : " Phili- dor," " B. PhiUdor," " E***," " Phllidor
R . . . ," " Philidor E " " Philidor
K***."
M., T. Thomas Morell. Exempla Minora ; or, new English etiquette, to be rendered into Latin . . revised by . . . Eton, 1765.
Member of Lincoln's Inn, A. Sir William Fitzherbert, Bart. Three letters .to Dr. Price ... By . . . L. 1776.
Member of the Dakota Mission, A.
Mrs. Mary Ann C. Riggs. An English and Dakota Vocabulary, by . . N.Y. 1852.
Member of the Society of Uni- versal Goodwill, in London and
Norwich. Murray. An inquiry
into the origin, progress, and present state of slavery . . . By ... L. 1789.
Member of the Unitas Fratrum, A. J. F. Fridleziiis. The touchstone applied to the age . . . By . . . Dublin, 1854.
Montanus. Thomas Addis Emmet, in the " Press " (Dublin), 1797-98.
Munden, Joseph. Charles Lamb. Autobiography of Mr. Munden. In the " London Mag.," February, 1825.
Officer of the Porpoise, An.
Fitz-Daniel. Interesting narrative of the loss of the Porpoise and Cato . . . upon Wreck Reef . . . by . . . L. 1808.
One of the Members of the Col- lege. Charles Coote. Sketches of the lives and characters of eminent English civilians . . . By ... L. 1804.
One of themselves. Salmond.
Glimpses of evangelical Europe ; or, notes for Christian laymen, compiled by . . . Edinb. 1879.
P., F. E. Mrs. Frederick E. Perkis, an English novelist.
Peachum, Polly, or the Irish Polly. Lavinia Fenton-Paulet, Duchess of Bolton. An excellent new ballad inscribed to . . . L. 1728.
Pensills. Charles Lamb. On the in- conveniencesresultingfrorabeinghanged. In the "Reflector."
President of the Branch of the Bank of the State of Alabama at Decatur, The. James Fennel. Re- port of . . Tuscaloosa, 1841.
Publius. Henry C. Whitman, in the Fitchburg (Mass.) " Sentinel," 1838, etc. " During the first two or three years the col- umns of the • Sentinel ' were enlivened by fre- quent contributions, both of prose and poetry, from a coterie of local contributors, some of whom developed decided literary talent. Among the more prominent of these writers were : Henry C. Whitman, then a law student with Torrey & Wood, afterwards judge of the Su- preme Court of Ohio, who wrote a series of arti- cles on education, over the nom de plume of ' Publius * ; Franklin Reed, a brother of the editor, who wrote on moral, historical, and soci- ety matters, over the initials * Y. N. T.' ; Miss Louisa Bechwith, later Mrs. Leander P. Co- Tnee, whose poetical contributions were signed ' Louisa * : William C. Elleclc, a harness maker, later editor of the 'Cold Water Cup,' who wrote under the nom de plume of ' Con- rad'; one Patterson, an operative at the Fitch- burg woollen mill, whose articles, both poetry and prose, were over the signature of ' Sy- phax ' ; and a young man by the name of