62 
HALIDAY AND LOEW 
The list of Haliday’s publications, up to 1857, will be found in 
Hagen’s “ Bibliotheca Entomologica,” Vol. I, p. 334-336. A paper 
which I possess has been omitted in this list: — 
“ Recent Works on the Diptera of Northern Europe” ( Natural 
History Review , Vol. II, p. 49-61, July, 1855). 
Haliday seems to have published very little after 1857. I gather 
from the “Obituary Notice” (in the Ent. Monthly Mag., London, 
1870, p. 91) that Haliday’s health compelled him, about 1860, to 
“seek the more genial climate of Italy,” that he settled in Lucca, 
and that, although he continued to show the liveliest interest in 
entomology, “ his contributions to entomological literature have 
been few.” Of Haliday’s publications after 1857, I possess: — 
“ Relazione sul Baco dell’ Oliva. — Estratta dall’ Agricoltore, peri¬ 
odic© mensile del Comizio Agrario Lucchese.” Lucca, 1868. (The 
subject is, of course, JDacus oleae.') 
In 1869 Haliday translated into Italian Loew’s paper on Blepha- 
roceridae , which appeared in the Bull. Soc. Ent. Ital., Vol. I, April, 
1869. He added to it a postscript, entitled “ Note sulla prece- 
dente memoria del Prof. Loew ” (p. 99-101). 
The portrait of A. II. Haliday is taken from an old photograph, 
kindly supplied by Prof. E. P. Wright of Dublin University. A 
block was made and a cliche forwarded to me. For this generosity 
I feel bound to express to Professor Wright my most heartfelt 
thanks! Mr. G. H. Carpenter (Science and Art Museum, Kildare 
Street, Dublin), to whose friendly mediation I owe this privilege, 
informs me at the same time that a large collection of letters to 
Haliday from Loew, Rondani, and other entomologists are also in 
the possession of Professor Wright! This will be good news for 
future workers on the same subject, but it comes too late for me to 
profit by it. 
