BIBLIOGRAPHY
541
Flick’s Loyalism in New York, Columbia Univ. Studies, XIV., gives a good account of the loyalist minority.
14. Biographies—
Life of Sir W. Raleigh, with his letters, by E. Edwards, 2 vols., 1868. Cromwells Letters and Speeches, ed. by T. Carlyle.
Life of Lord Clarendon, by T. H. Lister.
Life of Lord Shaftesbury, by W. D. Christie.
Life ofj. Locke, by H. R. Fox Bourne, 1876.
Other lives are mentioned elsewhere.
Dr von Ruville’s Life of William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, English translation, 3 vols., 1907, is not very full on the colonial side of his work.
Life of Lord Rockingham, by Lord Albemarle, 2 vols.
Life of Lord Shelburne, by Lord E. Fitzmaurice, 3 vols.
Life ofj. Otis, by W. Tudor, 1823.
B . Books relating to British Canada, Australasia, and Cape Colony
I. Bibliography
Larned, op. at., contains an excellent bibliography of Canada, but for the British Colonies generally the most practically useful bibliography is the Catalogue of the Royal Colonial Institute Library, 1895 ; supplementary volume, 1901. Review of Historical Publications relating to Canada, ed. by Professor Wrong and Mr H. Langton, of which the twelfth annual volume appeared in 1908, contains a most useful bibliography of recent books.
II. Contemporary Authorities i. British North America—
The publications of the Dominion Archives are of especial value. Mr D. Brymner brought out volumes calendaring the Public Papers relating to British North America to the time of the union of the Canadas. His successor, Dr A. G. Doughty, amongst other publications, has issued with Professor Shortt a very valuable collection of Constitutional Documents, 1759-1791.
The Evolution of Canadian Self-Government, 1907, contains contemporary matter of constitutional importance, ed. by H. E. Egerton and W. L. Grant.