Frocecdings of the Royal Irish Academy. 



friendship, and whose name and fame will for ever add to the 

 renown of this Academy. 



Ingram married, on July 23rd, 1862, Madeline, daughter of 

 James Johnston Clark, d.l,, of Largantogher, JVTaghera, County 

 Londonderry, the lady in whose honour several of the remarkable 

 sonnets, published in 1901, in Sonnets and Other Poems, were 

 written. By her, who died on October 7th, 1889, he had four 

 sons and two daughters. 



Appended is a list of Ingram's contributions to the Proceedings 

 of the Academy, and also what is believed to be a complete list of hi.< 

 published writings.*' 



APPENDIX : 



Being a List of De. Ingram's Publications. 



April 26th, 1847. 



May 24th, 1847. 



Jan. 25th, 1858. 

 Jan. 26th, 1880. 



April 10th, 1882. 

 May 22nd, 1882. 



Contrihdions to " Proceedings^ 



A Note on Certain Properties of the Surfaces of 



the Second Degree. 

 A Note on Certain Properties of Curves and 



Surfaces of the Second Degree. 

 On the Opus Majus of Eoger Bacon. 

 Note on a Fragment of an Aute-Hieronymian 



Version of the Gospels in the Library of 



Trinity College, Dublin. 

 On Two Collections of Medieval Moralised Tales. 

 On the Earliest English Translation of the 



" De Imitatione Christi." 



II. PxMisJied Worh. 



1 . The Weak Endings of Shakespeare : in The New Shakespeare 

 Society's Transactions, 1874. 



2. A History of Political Economy. London, 1888.f 



^•' The list appended is not in any sense a scientific bibliography. A 

 " Chronological list of the Books, Tracts, and Various Writings of John Kells 

 Ingram," by T. W. Lyster, Librarian of the National Library of Ireland, is in 

 course of preparation. 



t This "Work, like the History of Slavery, is an expansion of an article on 

 Political Economy in the Ninth Edition of the " Encyclopajdia Biitannica," for 



C 6 ] 



