The International Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3, June, 1851
Transcriber's Note: Minor typos have been corrected and footnotes moved to the end of the article. Table of contents has been created for the HTML version.
We doubt whether the wood-engravers of this country have ever produced a finer portrait than the above of the author of The Brothers, Cromwell, Marmaduke Wyvil, The Roman Traitor, The Warwick Woodlands, Field Sports, Fish and Fishing, &c., &c. It is from one of the most successful daguerreotypes of Brady.
Henry William Herbert is the eldest son of the late Hon. and Rev. William Herbert, Dean of Manchester, and of the Hon. Letitia Allen. His father was the second son of the second Earl of Carnarvon, who was of the nearest younger branch of the house of Pembroke. He was a member of Parliament in the earlier part of his life, and being a lawyer in Doctors' Commons was largely employed on the part of American shipmasters previous to the war of 1812. At a later period he took orders, became Dean of Manchester, was distinguished as a botanist, and as the author of many eminent works, especially Attila, an epic poem of great power and learning. He died about three years ago. His mother was the second daughter of Joshua, second Viscount Allen, of Kildare, Ireland,—closely connected with the house of Leinster.
Mr. Herbert was born in London on the seventh of April, 1807; he was educated at home under a private tutor till 1819, and then sent to a private school near Brighton, kept by the Rev. Dr. Hooker, at which he remained one year he was then transferred to Eton, and was at that school from April, 1820, till the summer of 1825, when he left for the university, and entered Caius College, Cambridge, in October. Here he obtained two scholarships and several prizes,—though not a hard-reading man, and spending much of his time in field sports—and he graduated in the winter of 1829-30, with a distinguished reputation for talents and scholarship. In November, 1831, he sailed from Liverpool for New York, and for the last twenty years he has resided nearly all the time in this city and at his place near Newark in New Jersey, called the Cedars.
Various
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THE INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE
Of Literature, Art, and Science.
Vol. III. NEW-YORK, JUNE 1, 1851. No. III.
Contents
FOOTNOTES:
THE MEETING OF THE NATIONS IN HYDE PARK.
FOOTNOTES:
WRITTEN FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MONTHLY MAGAZINE.
WRITTEN FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MONTHLY MAGAZINE.
CHAPTER XXVII.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
CHAPTER XXIX.
FOOTNOTES:
TRANSLATED FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MONTHLY MAGAZINE FROM THE FRENCH OF H. DE ST. GEORGES.
FOOTNOTES:
TRANSLATED FOR THE INTERNATIONAL MONTHLY MAGAZINE FROM THE FRENCH OF KAUFMANN.
II.
From Fraser's Magazine.
From Sharpe's London Magazine.
From the "Revue des Deux Mondes."
AN INCIDENT OF TRAVEL IN THE LIMOUSIN.
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
From Chambers's Edinburgh Journal.
From the London Examiner.
FOOTNOTES:
From the London Examiner.
From Leigh Hunt's Journal.
FOOTNOTES:
GREAT MEN'S WIVES.
From Chambers's Edinburgh Journal.
FROM RECOLLECTIONS OF A POLICE-OFFICER.
THE UNITED STATES.
EUROPE.