——— The same. Map and ills. 2 v. 8°. London, J: Murray, 1882. (140a)
Dufferin (Earl of). See Blackwood (Sir F: Temple Hamilton Temple, earl of Dufferin).
Dunbar (C: Franklin). The Danish Sound dues. [Anon.] In "The North American review." v. 84. 8° Boston, Crosby, Nichols & co., no. 174, Jan. 1857, pp. 48-70. (141)
Dunham (S: Astley). History of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. 3 v. 16°. London, Longmans [etc.], 1839-40. (142)
Edda Sæmundar. Icelandic poetry, or the Edda of Sæmund translated into English verse, by A. S. Cottle. 8° Bristol, N. Briggs for J. Cottle, 1797 (143)
——— Edda Sæmundar hinns froda. The Edda of Sæmund the learned. From the Old Norse or Icelandic, with a mythological index [and] an index of persons and places [by Benjamin Thorpe.] 2 v. 12°. London, Trübner & co., 1866. (143a)
——— See also Larned (Augusta). Tales from the Norse grandmother, 1881.—Mabie (Hamilton Wright). Norse stories. 1882.—Magnússon (Eirikr) and Morris (W:) Völsunga saga. 1870.—Zimmern (H..) Tales from the Edda. [1882.]
Note. — Professor Rasmus B. Anderson has been for some time preparing a translation of the Elder Edda which is now nearly completed and may soon be looked for in print.
Edda Snorra Sturlusonar. The Edda, or ancient Icelandic mythology. [Translated into French by Paul Henri Mallet, and from the French into English by T: Percy.] In Mallet (P. H.) Northern antiquities. 8° London, T. Carnan & co., 1770, v. 2, pp. 1-199. (144)
——— The same. In Mallet (P. H.) Northern antiquities. 8° Edinburgh, C. Stewart, 1809, v. 2, pp. 1-149. (144a)
——— The Prose or Younger Edda commonly ascribed to Snorri Sturluson, translated from the Old Norse by G: Webbe Dasent. 8°. Stockholm, Norstedt & sons, 1842. (144b)
——— The Prose Edda. [Translated from the Icelandic by I. A. Blackwell.] In Mallet (P. H.) Northern antiquities. 12°. London, H: G. Bohn, 1847, pp. 397-463: 508-516: 541-570. (144c)
——— The Younger Edda: also called Snorre's Edda, or the Prose Edda. An English version of the foreword: the fooling of Gylfe, the afterword; Brage's talk, the afterword to Brage's talk, and the important passages in the poetical diction (Skaldskaparmal). With an introduction, notes, vocabulary and index. By Rasmus B. Anderson. 8°. Chicago, S. C. Griggs & co., 1880. [1879.] (144d)
——— See also Mabie (Hamilton Wright). Norse stories. 1882. Edda; or, the tales of a grandmother. 1875. See Hambro (C. J.)