H A R 
H A R 
Dryden. 
which he attributes to M. Leibnitz ; and two years af- When the father is too fondly kind 
terwards another volume, by way of fequel to it, which Such feed he fows, fuch harvejl Ihall he find, 
in 1722 was followed by a colleftion of feveral feparate The produft of labour : 
pieces on the fame fubjefts. Upon the death of the ^ ^ th t harvejl oi our labour eat; 
el eft or palatine in 1716, he quitted the palatine court, > Xis labour makes the coarfeft diet fweet. Dryden. 
a mo^^tnUife^nd . HAR'VEST-FLY, / A large four-winged fly, of the 
C, HAR/VEST-HOME / The fong which the reaper, 
about fixty-nine years of age. After his death, in 1730, Ting at the feaft made for having inned the harveft : 
his Courfe'of Natural Philofophy was.*publilhed at the Come, my boys, come, 
Hague, in quarto, accompanied with feveral feparate And merrily roar out harvejl-home. Dryden. 
treatifes in phyfics, and a critical extra ft of the molt The time of gathering harvefi : 
curious and ufeful obligations from the Letters of A( and on tlle ftearing . daf , 
HART'ZEIN' (Jofeph), a learned Jefuit, born at When he ffiould thanks to Pan and Pales pay. Dryden. 
Cologne, in 1,694- After having taught the belles-lettres The opportunity of gathering freafure.—His wife I will 
in the feminafies of his order, he went to Milan, to ftudy u f e a s the key of the cuckoldy rogue’s coffer; and there’s 
theology, anci filled the chair of profeflor of the Greek m y harvejl-home. Shakcfpcare. 
and Hebrew languages in that univerfitv. From Milan HAR'VEST-LORD,/The head reaper at the harveft: 
he went to Rome, and the other principal cities of Italy, Grant karvcjl-lord more by a penny or two, 
.where he contrafted an intimacy with the men molt emi- To caU 0( - hJs telIows the better t0 do . ■ 
- 11'ent for their talents and learning. Father Schannat, a u , B „,r. CT T oncif r a » ^ r r u ■ r a. 
learned ecclefiaftic, having formed the defign of ptiblifli- HAR'VEST-LOUSE, / An exceeding fm.all infeft 
a r- 11 n- r u ^ tlip Phurrh of Ger- very troublefome in harveft-tnhe. 
mg A Collection of the Councils ot the t-nuren or uu- uiDA/rcT ujm r a 1 u 1 - a rr 
many, and having procured materials for that work, HAk VEST-MAN, /. A labourer in harveft.—Hai- 
fromthe fourth to the thirteenth century, was cut off vftl-men may be licenled by juft.ces of peace to go into 
by death before he was enabled to prepare them for/he other count.es to work. See. by flat. 13 and 14 Car. II. 
prefs. This laborious talk Hartzein was perfuaded 
undertake; and he publiflied the fifft four volumes at 
HAR'VEST-MOON,/. That lunation which hap- 
Cologne, in folio. He had alfo prepared the fifth vo- pens about harveft; in which the moon at full rifes 
lume for publication, when his labours were terminated much about the fame time for feveral nights together. 
lume for publication, - 
by a ftroke of apoplexy, in 1763. This work was after- 
■wards continued by father Herman Scholl, who pub¬ 
lished the fifth, fixth, feventh, and eighth, volumes, 
but fell a facrifice to his exertions in 176S. The fimlli- 
ir.g hand was given to it by father Giles NeilTen, who 
publifhed the ninth and tenth volumes, and added ail 
index to the whole, in 1774. In the fifth volume we are 
prefented with a lift of the other works of father Hart¬ 
zein, of which the principal are, 1. Summa Hijloriee omnis 
ab Exordio Rerum ad Annum a Chrijlo Nato, 1718, 18mo. 
2. De Initio Metropolcos Colonies, (3c. DiJijuiJitio, 1732, 4 t0 - 
3. Infcriptionis Herfetlenfn Urbis Romanes, 1745, 8vo, 
HAR' VEST-TIME,/. The feafon of harveft. 
HAR'VEST-WORK, /. The labour of gathering in 
the fruits of the harveft. 
HARVESTER,/ One who works at the harveft. 
HAR'VEY (William), an eminent phyfician, who firft 
difeovered the circulation of the blood, born at Folk- 
Itone in Kent, April a, 1578. At ten.years of,age he 
was-fent to a grammar-fchool at Canterbury, and at 
fourteen removed thence to Caius-college, in Cam¬ 
bridge. At nineteen he travelled through France and 
Germany, to Padua in Italy ; where, having ftudied 
phyfic under Euftachius Radius, John Minacious, and 
Hieron. Fabricius, he was admitted to the degree of 
jiotkeca Scriptorulin Colonienjium, b 7 47 , -folio. .5 . Difertationes Hieron. habncii.s, he was admitted to the degree ot 
X Hi fiorico-critic es in Sacram Scripturam, folio. do£t ° r A ° f P h >' f ' c al ? d fllr ° er >', th j*! 10 xf I° 2 * 
._ . He had a particular regard for his laft matter; often 
quotes him in terms of the higheft refpeft ; and declares, 
s the more willing to publilli his book, De 
HART'ZEROTH, a town of Germany, in the circle 
of the Lower Rhine, and electorate of Treves: eight 
miles north-eaft of Treves. 
HART'ZGERODE, a town of Germany, in the circle 
ef Upper Saxony, and principality of Anhalt Bernburg, 
fituaied near the Harz mountain; the hbufes and walls 
are built of a motley kind of marble ; it has a mine-office alone untouched Soon after returning to England, 
and a caftle : twenty-four miles fouth-weft of Bernburg, was incorporated doftor of medicine at Cambridge, hi 
and forty-four weft-fouth-weft of Deffau. Lat. 51.46.N. 
Ion. 28. 48. E. Ferro. 
II ARTZIGRO'DA, a town of Germany, in the circle 
Motu Cordis, becaufe Fabricius, who had learnedly and 
accurately delineated in a particular treatife almoft all 
the parts of animals, had left the theory of the heart 
’, he 
rpm 
thence he went to London to praftife, and married the 
daughter of Lancelot Browne, M. D. but by whom he 
had no iflue. In 1604, he was admitted candidate of the 
of Upper Baxon?, and cou^y* of Mansfefd: two miles college of phyficians in London ; and 
weft of Hefftadt.’ ’ ' made a fellow. In 1615, he was appe 
three years after 
01 tierit-at -- ppointed lefturer of 
HAR^VA?a r town of Sweden, in the province of Weft anatomy and furgery in'that college ; and the year after 
othland: fifteen miles eait of Gotheborg. began a courfe of leftures, in which lie firft opened lus 
. p difeovery relating to the circulation of the blood. The 
Gothl; , ... 
HAR'VARD, a townfliip of the American States, in 
the eaftern part of Worcefter county, Maffachufetts, 
original manuferipts of tliefe leftures is extant in the 
it we n t y-Vh reednil es n o rth-eaft of Worcefter, and thirty'- valuable mufeum of the late fir Hans Sloane, which was 
five north-eafterly of Bofton. It was incorporated in parchaled by parliament and is intituled, PMones 
1732 by this name, in honour of the founder of Har- a J atom - ™nverfal per me Guhdmum Harveaum mediae,n Lon. 
yard Univeriity in Cambridge. By the ccnfus of 1796 dinenjan anat.& chirurg. projejjorumAn Dam. 1616. In 
it had 1400 inhabitants, 
1628, he publiflied this molt valuable difeovery, under 
HAR'VEST,/ ' [hypers, Sax.] The feafon of the title of Exercitatio anatoemcade motu cordis CSJanguinis ; 
,„a n lrin . and dedicated it to Charles 1. There follows alio another 
reaping and gathering the corn : 
As it ebbs, the feedfman 
Upon the dime and ooze fcatters his grain, 
And ffiortly comes to harvejl. Shakefpcare. 
The corn ripened, gathered, and inned : 
and dedicated it to Charles I. There follows alio another 
dedication to the college of phyficians, in which he ob¬ 
serves, that he had frequently before, in his Anatomical 
Leftures, declared his new opinion concerning the mo¬ 
tion and ufe of the heart, and the circulation of the 
blood; and for above nine years had confirmed and il- 
luftrated 
