878 TROLLOPE lowed by a novel entitled "The Refugee in America "(1832), and in 1836 by "The Ad- ventures of Jonathan Jefferson Whitlaw." About 1844 she went to Florence, where she resided till her death. Among her books of travel are : " Belgium and Western Germany in 1833 " (2 vols., 1834) ; " Paris and the Pari- sians in 1885 "(3 vols., 1836); "Vienna and the Austrians " (2 vols., 1838) ; " A Visit to Italy " (2 vols., 1842) ; and " Travels and Travel- lers" (2 vols., 1846). Some of her best novels are: "The Vicar of Wrexhill" (1837); "The Romance of Vienna" (1838); "The Widow Barnaby" (1839); "Life and Adventures of Michael Armstrong, a Factory Boy" (1840); "The Widow Married," a sequel to "The Wid- ow Barnaby" (1840); "One Fault" (1840); " Charles Chesterfield, or the Adventures of a Youth of Genius" (1841); "Town and Coun- try" (1847); "Lottery of Marriage" (1849); "Petticoat Government" (1850); "Young Heiress" (1853); "Life and Adventures of a Clever Woman" (1854); and "Fashionable Life" (1856). II. Thomas Adolphns, an English author, son of the preceding, born April 29, 1810. He has resided for many years in Flor- ence and Rome, an<J has published "A Sum- mer in Brittany " (2 vols. 8vo, 1840) ; " A Sum- mer in Western France" (1841); "Impres- sions of a Wanderer in Italy " (1852) ; " The Girlhood of Catharine de' Medici" (1856); "A Decade of Italian Women " (1859); "Tus- cany in 1849 and 1859" (1859); " Filippo Strozzi " (1860) ; " Paul V. the Pope and Paul the Friar "(1860); "LaBeata" (1861); "Mari- etta " (1862) ; " A Lenten Journey in Umbria and the Marches of Ancona" (1862); "Giulio Malatesta" (1863); "Beppo the Conscript" (1864-); "Lindisfarn Chase" (1864); "A His- tory of the Commonwealth of Florence, from the Earliest Independence of the Commune to the Fall of the Republic in 1531 " (4 vols. 8vo, 1865); "Gemma" (1866); "Artingdale Cas- tle" (1867); "Dream Numbers" (1868); "Leo- nora Casaloni " (1869) ; " The Garstangs of Garstang Grange " (1869) ; " A Siren " (1870) ; and " Durnton Abbey " (1871). III. Anthony, an English novelist, brother of the preceding, born in 1815. From 1834 to November, 1867, he was connected with the British postal ser- vice, and he has been frequently sent abroad to establish postal conventions. He has visited the United States several times, the West In- dies, Australia in 1871 and again in 1875, and other countries. In 1869 he was an unsuccess- ful liberal candidate for parliament for Bev- erly. For some time he was editor of the " St. Paul's" magazine, in which and in other pe- riodicals several of his stories originally ap- peared serially. His Avorks are: "Tho-Mac- dermots of Ballydoran" (1847); " The Kellys and the O'Kellys" (1848); "La Vended " (1850); "The Warden" (1855); "Barchester Towers," "The Three Clerks" (1857); "Doc- tor Thome" (1858); "The Bertrams," "The West Indies and the Spanish Main" (1859); " Castle Richmond " (1860) ; " Framley Parson- age" (1861) ; " Tales of All Countries " (1861 ; 2d series, 1863) ; " Orley Farm," " The Strug- gles of Brown, Jones, and Robinson," " North America "(1862); "Rachel Ray "(1863); "The Small House at Allington," "The Belton Es- tate," " Hunting Sketches " (1864) ; " Can You Forgive Her?" "Miss Mackenzie" (1865); " Clergymen of the Church -of England," "Travelling Sketches" (1866); "The Claver- ings," "The Last Chronicle of Barset," "Lotta Schmidt, and other Stories " (1867) ; " Phineas Finn, the Irish Member," "He Knew lu- was Right" (1869); "Sir Harry Hotspur of^Hum- blethwaite," "The Vicar of Bullhampton " (1870) ; " Ralph the Heir " (1871) ; " The Gold- en Lion of Granpere" (1872); "Phineas Re- dux," "Australia and New Zealand" (1873); "The Way we Live now," "Lady Anna"' (1874) ; and " The Prime Minister " (1875). END OF VOLUME FIFTEENTH.