268 
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 
[HARRIS 
Collation — 1 vol. 8vo ; pp. xxvi + pp. 174 + 2 11. Appendix, with 
14 pi. 
Also reissued separately. London and Newcastle-upon-Tyne : 
1874. 
1885. Sabine’s Gull shot at Seaham Harbour, Durham. {Trans. N.H. 
Soc. Northumb. and Durham , 1884, pp. 27-8.) 
1886. Tacts in the History of the Cuckoo. (Zoologist, pp. 203-7.) 
Hakewood (Harry), 6 b . ? 
According to the British Museum Catalogue, this author’s 
name is probably a pseudonym. He is described as of 
“ Springfield, in the county of York, Esq.” 
Although his work is entitled A Dictionary of Sport , it 
is entitled to a place here, not only as containing falconry, 
but also on account of its giving descriptions and figures of a 
large percentage of the birds of the British Islands. 
1835. A | Dictionary of Sports ; | or, | Companion | to | the Field, the 
Forest, and the River Side. | Containing | explanations of 
every term | applicable to | Racing, Shooting, Hunting, Fishing, 
Hawking, Archery, | etc. etc. | with | Essays upon’ all national 
amusements. | By Harry Harewood, | of Springfield, in the 
county of York, Esq. | [vignette] | London : | Printed for 
Thomas Tegg and Son. [&c.] | 1835. 
Collation — 1 vol. post 8vo, pp. vi + pp. 365, numerous cuts. 
Very many British birds are figured and described. 
Harmer (R. F.). See Emerson (P. H.) 
Harris (Walter), 1686-1761 
This Irish historian, who was born in 1686, was the son of 
Hopton Harris of Mount Mellick in Queen’s County, Ireland. 
He entered Kilkenny School in 1701, and was admitted to 
Trinity College, Dublin, in 1704, where he gained a Scholarship 
in 1707. He was expelled soon after for joining in a dis- 
turbance. In 1748 he received a pension of £100 from the 
Irish Government to enable him to continue his historical 
researches. He published an English edition of the Latin 
works of Sir James Ware relating to Ireland, a design which 
originated in the circumstance of his having married as his 
second wife a great-grand-daughter of Sir James. 
