Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 13.djvu/412

 Godly and Spiritual Sangs,’ 12mo, 1765. 9. ‘Memorials and Letters relating to the History of Britain in the reign of Charles I, published from the originals, 1766. 10. ‘An Account of the Preservation of Charles II after the Battle of Worcester, drawn up by himself; to which are added his Letters to several Persons,’ 1766. 11. ‘The Secret Correspondence between Sir Robert Cecil and James VI,’ 1766. 12. ‘A Catalogue of the Lords of Session, from the Institution of the College of Justice in the year 1532.’ 13. ‘The Private Correspondence of Dr. Francis Atterbury, bishop of Rochester, and his friends in 1725, never before published,’ 1768, 4to. 14. ‘An Examination of some of the Arguments for the High Antiquity of Regiam Majestatem, and an Inquiry into the authenticity of the Leges Malcolmi,’ 1769. 15. ‘Historical Memoirs concerning the Provincial Councils of the Scottish Clergy from the earliest accounts to the era of the Reformation,’ 1769. 16. ‘Ancient Scottish Poems, published from the manuscript of George Bannatyne, 1568,’ 1770. 17. ‘The additional case of Elizabeth, claiming the Title and Dignity of Countess of Sutherland, now Marchioness of Stafford, by her guardians.’ 18. ‘Remarks on the History of Scotland, by Sir David Dalrymple,’ 1773. 19. ‘Huberti Langueti Galli Epistolæ ad Philippum Sydneium Equitem Anglum, accurante D. Dalrymple, de Hailes, equite,’ 1776. 20. ‘Annals of Scotland, from the Accession of Malcolm III, surnamed Canmore, to the Accession of Robert I.’ 21. ‘Annals of Scotland, from the Accession of Robert I, sirnamed Bruce, to the Accession of the House of Stuart.’ 22. ‘Account of the Martyrs of Smyrna and Lyons in the Second Century,’ 12mo, with explanatory notes, 1776. 23. ‘Remains of Christian Antiquity, with explanatory notes,’ vol. ii. 1778, 12mo. 24. ‘Remains of Christian Antiquity,’ vol. iii. 1780. 25. ‘Sermons by that Eminent Divine, Jacobus a Voragine, archbishop of Genoa. Translated from the originals,’ 1779. 26. ‘Octavius, a dialogue by Marcus Minucius Felix,’ 1781. 27. ‘Of the manner in which the Persecutors died; a Treatise by L. C. F. Lactantius,’ 1782. 28. ‘L. C. F. Lactantii Divinarum Institutionum Liber Quintus seu de Justitia.’ 29. ‘Disquisitions concerning the Antiquities of the Christian Church,’ Glasgow, 1783. 30. ‘An Inquiry into the secondary causes which Mr. Gibbon has assigned to the rapid growth of Christianity,’ 1786. 31. ‘Sketch of the Life of John Barclay,’ 1786. 32. ‘Sketch of the Life of John Hamilton, a secular priest, one of the most savage and bigotted adherents of Popery, who lived about A.D. 1600,’ 1786. 33. ‘Sketch of the Life of Sir James Ramsay, a General Officer in the Armies of Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, with a head,’ 1787. 34. ‘Life of George Lesley, an eminent Capuchin Friar in the early part of the seventeenth century,’ 1787. 35. ‘Sketch of the Life of Mark Alexander Boyd,’ 1787. These sketches were early essays towards a Scottish biographical dictionary. 36. ‘The Opinions of Sarah, Duchess Dowager of Marlborough, published from her original manuscripts,’ 1788. 37. ‘The Address of Q. Sept. Tertullian to Scapula Tertullus, Proconsul of Africa, translated,’ 1790. Besides these Hailes printed privately in very few copies: 38. ‘British Songs sacred to Love and Virtue,’ 1756. 39. ‘A Specimen of Notes on the Statute Law of Scotland, James I to James VI,’ 1768. 40. ‘A Specimen of similar Notes during the Reign of Queen Mary,’ n.d. 41. ‘A Specimen of a Glossary of the Scottish Language,’ n.d. 42. ‘Davidis Humii Scoti, summi apud suos philosophi, de vita sua acta liber singularis nunc primum Latine redditus,’ 1787. 43. ‘Adami Smithi ad Gulielmum Strahanum armigerum de rebus novissimis Davidis Humii epistola nunc primum Latine reddita,’ 1788.

[Memoirs prefixed to the later editions of The Inquiry; Scots Magazine; Boswell's Johnson; Brunton and Haig's College of Justice.]  DALRYMPLE, HEW (1652–1737), lord president of session, was the third son of James Dalrymple, first viscount Stair [q. v.], by his wife Margaret, eldest daughter of James Ross of Balniel, Wigtownshire. He was admitted a member of the Faculty of Advocates on 23 Feb. 1677, and on the resignation of his elder brother, Sir James, was appointed one of the commissaries of Edinburgh. Sir John Lauder relates that on 12 Feb. 1684, ‘at privy counsell, Mr. Hew Dalrymple and Mr. Æneas Macferson, advocats, ware conveined for challenging one another to a combat: the occasion was Mr. Hew, as one of the comisars of Edinburgh, was receaving some witnesses for the Earle of Monteith against his ladie, in the divorce, and repelling some objections Mr. Æneas was making against them, wheiron followed some heat, with some approbrious words, calling the comisar partiall. Some thought one sitting in judgment might have sent any reviling him to prison; but he challenged Mr. Æneas to a combat; and the counsell fand him as guilty in accepting it, and ordained him to crave the comisar's pardon, and confyned them both some tyme’ (Hist. Notices of Scottish Affairs, 1848, ii. 496). In August 1690, Dalrymple was elected to the Scotch parliament for the burgh of New