Page:Initials and pseudonyms, first series (Cushing).djvu/17

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AL,


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tion of four unpleasant characters ; viz., a very exalted subject in his majesty's dominions [George, prince of Wales], the mos"t unpatriotic man alive [C. J. Pox], the most artful man alive [R B. Sheridan], and Second Childhood [E. Burke] L 1780

Alcseus. Samuel Boyse, in the " Gent. Mag." 1741-43

Alcseus. James Montgomery, in the "Poetical Register," 1801. Byron notices him in "English bards and Scotch re- viewers " :

" "With broken lyre and cheek serenely pale, Lo ' sad Alcseus wanders down the vale."

AlciMad.es. James Andei son. See "Agricola."

Alcibiades. Alfred Tennyson, in "Punch." Feb. and March, 1846.

Alcofribas, le magicien. Jean Bap- tiste Alfred Assolant. The fantastic his- tory of the celebrated Du Pierrot . . . L. 1875.

Alderani, Lorenzo. Niccolb Ugo Fos- colo" Ultimo lettere di Jacopo Ortis. Edited by L. A. L 1814

Alderman, The. John Barber. The city jilt: or. the A. turn'd beau. etc. L. 1740.

Aldlborontiphoscophornio. James JBallantyne. A nickname given him by Sir Walter Scott, in allusion to his pom- pous and dignified manner.

Aleph. Humphry Fitzroy Woolrych. Aleph v Colenso. Maidstone, 1866.

Aleph, William Harvey. The old city, and its highways and byways . . . L. 1865.

Alethes Thomas H. Baird, in the Pittsburgh " Commercial Journal." 1851.

Alethes, Clerophilus. John Constable (?). A specimen of amendments candidly proposed to the compiler [Charles Dodd, pseud., i.e*, Hugh Tootell] of a work which he calls " The church history of England from the year 1500 to the year 1688." L 1741.

Alethinos. Rev Harding Furenzo Ivers. The audibleness of thought dem- onstrated, and its use explained* 1866.

Alethitheras L. Osborn. Travels by sea and land. N.Y. 1868

Alethphilos. Mrs. Mary Anne Wool- frey. letters of . , . Newport, Isle of 'Wight, 1839.

Aletor, Esq. Robert E. Strahorn.

Alex. Eliza A. White. As she would have it. P. 187S.

Alexander, Mrs. - Mrs. Annie F. Hec- tor. Her dearest-foe, 1876; The Vooing o't, 1873. L.


Alexander the Coppersmith. FT.

Boles. Milk for babes, meat for strong men, and wine for petitioners . . . trans- lated from the Arabic by ... Cork. 1731.

Alexander the Coppersmith, LL.D Thomas Erslcine, Baton Eislcme. The speech of , . . spoken at the meeting of the friends to the abuse of the freedom of the press. Jan. 19, 1793. [A satire upon T. Erskine, Baron Erskine ] L. 1793.

Alexander the Corrector. Alexan- der Cruden. The adventures of . . L. 1754. [He entitles himself corrector, from the nature of his office, which was to correct the press ]

Alexander, Sir Drawcanstr. Tobias George Smollett. A faithful narrative of the base and inhuman arts that were lately practised upon the brain of Hab- bakkuk Hilding \ie, Henry Fielding], justice, dealer, and chapman, who now lies at his house in Covent Garden, in a deplorable state of lunacy, a dreadful monument of false friendship and delu- sion. By D. A, fencing-master and philomath L. 1762. See "Brit. Mus. Cat."

Alexander, J. H., B.A. Alexander H. Japp. Lights on the way. Some tales within a tale, by the late J. H. A., B. A , with an explanatory note by H. A. Page [also a pseud, of the author]. L. 1878.

Alexander, John, a Joyner. John Taylor, the Water-poet. Love one an- other: a tub lecture preached at Watford in Hartf ordshire, at a conventicle on the 25th of December last [1642]. L. 1642,

Alexandra. Alexandre Davy Dumas* La cour du roi PStaud. Paris, 1829.

Alexis or the Worthy Unfortunate. Rev. Humphrey Sydenham. Being a true narrative of the affecting case of a young gentleman whose ruin was caused by the- late rebellion. L. 1747.

Alexis, Willibald. Georg Wilhelm Heinrich Haering. Cabams, 1832; Haus Busterweg, 1836 ; die zwolf Nachte, 1838; Novellen, 1830-31 ; Neue Novellen, 1836.

Alfred. Samuel Adams, in the "Bos- ton Gazette" (Oct 2, 1769).

Allted. Dr. Girardin. One of the writers, under this signature, of the essays in Wirt's "Old Bachelor" (1812).

Alfred. Sir James Bland Surges Lamb, Bart,D.G.L.,in "The Sun ^Newspaper." A series of letters under this signature, "in which he took a comprehensive view of the several states, political objects, and relative interests of all European