1908. Henry Chichester Hart. 253 



and encouragement he could always rely with confidence. 

 More s personality greatly attracted him, especially the gentle, 

 persuasive, cheer}- and sanguine manner, and the enthusiasm 

 with which a new plant-locality was greeted. After More's 

 death, he said '' half the pleasure of a discovery had vanished," 

 and less interest was certainly taken by him in botany. 



His garden at Carrablagh was a source of delight, and 

 nothing gave more pleasure than to show a friend, one bj- 

 one, the many rarities therein. No more delightful walking 

 companion could be imagined. Botany, zoology, and natural 

 histor}^ in its widest sense, folklore, local songs, habits, and 

 expressions were all discussed in turn. He left a great deal 

 of MS., chiefl}' relating to Ben Jonson and Shakespeare, as 

 well as collections of Ulster and other proverbs, songs, etc. 



He was buried at Glen alia, in a spot chosen by himself, 

 amidst the beautiful scenery and surroundings of his ancestral 

 home, and' in the count}^ which he loved so -well, and among 

 whose wild glens and valleys he had spent the happiest days 

 of his life. 



Richard M. Bakkington. 



H. C. Hart's Papkrs and Notes on Zooi^ogy. 



A. — Ornithology. 



(i.) Ill the Zoologist, 



1878 " Wood-Wren in Ireland.'" p. 34S. 



„ "The Grey Wagtail gregarious at roosting time." p. 390. 



,, '•'■ Tree-Pipit in Ireland.' p. 454. 



1879. ''Wood-Wren in Co. Wicklow."' p. 341. 



18S0. '■' Notes on the Ornithology of the British Polar t^xpedition 

 1875-6." pp. 121, 129, 204, 214. 



,, "vSupposed occurrence of the Tawny Owl in Ireland." p. 255. 



,, •' Blackcap in Ireland." p. 512. 



1881, " Birds roosting in Reeds." p. 63. 



,, " Supposed occurrence of the Crane at Howth." pp. 259, 307. 



„ •'• Occurrence of the Blackcap in Donegal.'' p. 336. 



1883. " The Note of the Manx Shearwater." p. 81. 



,, *' Birds of Lanibay Island." pp. 155, 225. 



„ " Cormorants resorting to Presbwater Lake in Summer.' p. 257. 



1889. " Woodcock can-3ing its Young." p. 454- 



1891. '• Notes on the Birds of Donegal." pp. 297, 334, 377, 421, 459, 



