of Buckingham’s ill-fated expedition in 1627. The Life and Laigne of King Henry VIII. (1649), in pithy English, is called by Walpole “Sa masterpiece of historic biography,” but is ill-proportioned and is digested into annals, It abounds in picturesque but prolix ac- counts of sieges and pageants at home and abroad ; the sketch of the 2eformation history is so dispassionate as to suggest a lack of keen sympathy with cither party. Henry’s character is very leniently judged. The Life of Herbert by Himself (first published by Horace Walpole in 1764) gives a vivacious and interesting account of his carly life down to the return from his embassy, dwelling mainly, with something of an old man’s garrulity and a famous man’s vanity, on the romantic and chivalrous incidents in his career. Herbert’s poems, Latin and English, are of small value.
There are sketches of Herbert in Leland’s Deistical Writers, Lechler’s Geschiehte des Englischen Deismus, and elsewhere ; but the only adequate work is M. Charles de Rémusat’s Lord Herbert de Cherbury, sa Vie ct ses Giuvres (Paris, 1874).
HERCULANEUM. The ruins of the buried city of Herculineum are situated about two-thirds of a mile from the Portici station of the railway from Naples to Pompeii. They are less frequently visited than the ruins of the latter city, not only because they are smaller in extent and of less obvious interest, but also because they are more difficult of access. The history of their discovery and exploration, and the artistic and literary relics which they have yielded, are worthy, however, of particular notice. The small part of the city which has been restored to the light of day in the spot called Gli scavi nuovi (the new excavations) was discovered in the present century. But the more important works were executed in the last century ; and of the buildings then explored at a great depth, by means of tunnels, none are visible except the theatre, the orchestra of which lies 85 feet below the surface of the soil.
- ↑ A fragment of L. Sisenna calls it ‘‘ Oppidum tumulo in excelso loco propter mare, parvis moenibus, inter duas fluvias, infra Vesuvium collocatum”’ (lib. iv., fragm. 58, Peters). Of one of these rivers this historian again makes mention in the passage where probably he related the capture of Herculaneum by Minatius Magius and T. Didius (Velleius Paterculus, ii. 16). Further topographical details are supplied by Strabo, who, after speaking about Naples, continues— éxduevov 5& dpovpiov eorw Hpardreiov exkeiméevny eis thy OddAarray uxpav Exov, Karanveduevoy AtBl Oavpaotas sO bytewhy motety thy katoixtay. Dionysius of Halicarnassus relates that Hercules, in the place where he stopped with his fleet on the return voyage from Iberia, founded a little city (woAiyyqv), to which he gave his own name; and he adds that this city was in his time inhabited by the Romans, and that, situated between Neapolis and Pompeii, it had Agévas év way7) xaipm BeBatous (i. 44).
- ↑ Disputed by Niebuhr, Hist. of Rome, vol. i. p. 76, and by Mominsen, Die Unteritalischen Dialelte, 1850, p. 314.