Page:The New International Encyclopædia 1st ed. v. 09.djvu/840

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HENRY IV. HENRY. his greatest failing. He was without doubt the most imposing figure in Fiance of his day, and has taken his place in history as the greatest of Bourbon kings. Bibliography. For the history of Henry IV., consult the memoirs of the time, particularly those of the Duke de Sully (Amsterdam, 1725) ; also Poirson, Histoire de Henri IV. (3d ed., Paris, 1865) ; Jung, Eenri IV. (icrivain (ib., 1885) ; Guadet, Henri IV., sa vie, son ceiivre et ses Merits (ib., 1879) ; Lescure, Vie de Henri IV. (ib., 1876) ; Barre-Duparcq, Histoire de Eenri IV. (ib., 1884); Rambault, Henri IV. et son cciivre (ib., 1884); Zeller, Eenri IV. et Marie de Medici (ib., 1877) ; Lacombe, Eenri IV. et sa politique (ib., 1878). In English the following works may be consulted: Gurney, "Henry IV.," in Chapters from French History (London, 1870) ; Baird, The Eugiienots and Henry of Kavnrre (New York, 1886) ; Jackson, The First of the Bourbons (London, 1890) ; Willert, Henry of yavarre and the Huguenots in France (New York, 1893). HENRY V. OF FRANCE. See Chambord, Duke of. HENRY IV. An historical play by William Shakespeare, in two parts, produced in 1597 and 1598, printed in 1598 and 1600. The sources are Holinshed's Chronicles and a popular old play (produced in 1588), The Famous Victories of Henry V. In it the royal hero, who had ap- peared as a spirited youth in Richard II., is represented as a care-worn monarch, who has passed down his boyish fire to his son. Prince Hal. The plot deals with Hotspur's rebellion and the sobering of the Prince's character through the tempering process of his nation's trial. See Falst.fp. HENRY V. An historical drama by William Shakespeare, a continuation of Henry IV., and derived from the same sources. It deals with the adventures of Prince Hal after he ascended the throne, especially with his invasion of France, and tells of the death of Henry's former boon companion, FalstaflF. It was performed in 1599, and was printed in 1600, imperfectly, by Thomas Creede. HENRY VI. An historical drama in three parts, produced in 1592-94, and printed in 1594- 95, in which Shakespeare's genius can be traced, working over the cruder stuff of possibly Mar- lowe, Peele, Lodge, Kyd, and Greene or some un- known dramatists. It deals with the early years of Henjy VI.'s reign, his misfortunes during the Wars of the Roses, and his tragic death. The first part was produced in 1592, and called forth Greene's charge of plagiarism in his Groat's Worth of Wit. The second part, founded on an old play. The First Part of the Contention Be- tween the Two Famous Houses of Yorfce and Lancaster, and the third part, founded on The True Trngedie of Richard, Duke of Yorke, were evidently elaborated and adapted by Shakespeare from works by unknown writers. HENRY Vm. An historical drama, pro- duced in 1613, begun by William Shakespeare and completed by Fletcher and Massingcr. It is founded on Holinshed's Chronicles and Fox's Christian Martyrs, and was first printed in the folio of 1623. Only Act I., Scene 1; Ac{ II., Scenes 3 and 4 : Act III., Scene 2 ; Act IV., Scene 1, can be ascribed to Shakespeare; the rest was written by Fletcher, with possibly some help from Jlassinger. HENRY, Alexander (1739-1824). An Ameri- can fur-trader, born in New Brunswick, N. J. He was with General Amherst in the expedition against the French in Canada (1760). After the peace he went to Michillimackinac to engage in the fur trade, and was one of the few survivors when the English garrison of the fort was massacred by the Indians at the time of Pontiae's uprising (1763). Henry remained for a year a captive among the Ojibways at Sault Ste. llarie. whence he came with an Indian contingent to join Gen- eral Bradstreet's army on the lakes and by the desertion of his battalion regained his liberty. He resumed the fur trade, voyaging between Jlon- treal and the Rocky Mountains, and from 1770 to 1774 made an unsuccessful attempt to lloat a company for working the copper-mines on Lake Superior. His book, Travels and Adtwntures in Canada and the Indian Territory Beticeen the ■ Years 1760 and 1776 (1809), is quoted at length in Parkman, Conspiracy of Pontiao (London, 1S6S). HENRY, Caleb Spbagxje (1804-84). An American Protestant Episcopal clergyman and author. He was born in Rutland. Mass., gradu- ated at Dartmouth in 1825, and studied theology at Andover and New Haven. In 1828 he became a Congregational minister at Greenfield, Mass., and in 1833 removed to Hartford. Conn. In 1834 he started the American Advocate of Peace, the organ of the American Peace Society. He then entered the ministry of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and was professor of moral and intel- lectual philosophy in Bristol College, Pennsyl- vania (1835-38). In 1837. with the aid of Rev. Francis L. Hawks, he established the New York Review. He was professor of history and phi- losophy in the New York University from 1839 to 1852. Later he held other pastorates, but was chiefly engaged in literary work. He translated Guizot's History of Civilization, and other works from the French, and was the author of several works, including Compendium of Christian An- tiquities (1837), and Satan as a Moral Philoso- pher (1877). HENRY, Cape. See Cape Henry. HENRY, ilN're', Charles ( 1 859— ) . A French librarian and editor. He was born at Bollwiller, Haut-Ihin, and was educated in Paris, where, in 1881, he became assistant and afterwards libra- rian in the Sorbonne. As a specialist in the his- tory of mathematics he was sent to Italy to seek some manuscripts of that nature which the Gov- erament wished to publish. He edited several works upon kindred subjects, as well as memoirs, letters, and other volumes, and wrote critiques upon the musical theories of Ranieau and Wron- ski. C. Huet's correspondence he published under the title Un crudit, homme du mondc. homme d'cglise, homme de coiir (1880), and he issued also Problcmes de geometric pratique (1884); and Lcttrcs 'incditcs de Mile, de Lespinasse a Condorcet et a D'Alcmlert (1887). HENRY, Edward L.mson (1841 — 1. An American historical and genre painter. He was born in Charleston, S. C. January 12, 1841, and studied at the Philadelphia Academy with Peter Weber, and from 1860 to 1863 with Suisse and Courbet in Paris. He returned to the United States during the Civil War. and sketched on