were translations made by himself ous." p. 65. OUNCE, a carnivorous quadruped, a PARLIAMENT (par'li-ment). PARTHIAN. See p. 339. PEGASUS, in Greek mythology, a can poet, was born in Berlin, Conn., poetry, though exhibiting fine pow- PEREMPTORY (pěr'em-tòr-e). PHALANX (fǎl'angks or fa'-). ness. PLOW or PLOUGH. PLUTUS, in ancient mythology, the more, 1811. His parents belonged Literary Messenger, published at Richmond. After some subsequent editorial experience in Philadelphia, he removed in 1844 to New York. Here he produced his principal poem of The Raven, which, though full of defects and affectations, has the charm of an original and musical versification. The same remark is applicable to his poem of The Bells; but the constant recurrence of the word bells with its sibilant consonant mars the imitative effect intended. See extracts from these poems, pp. 58, 67. Poe has given flashes, here and there, of a true poetical genius, brilliant, original, and weird. He died in Baltimore, 1849, in consequence of his irregular and intemperate habits of life. POPE, ALEXANDER, the son of a London merchant, was born 1688. His life as an author may date from his 16th year, when he wrote his "Pastorals." The principal of his poetical writings which followed are: "Essay on Criticism," published when he was twenty-one; "Essay on Man," a singularly successful effort to weave ethical philosophy into poetry; Moral Essays"; "The Rape of the Lock," a mock heroic on the fraudulent abstraction of a ringlet of a lady's hair; "The Dunciad," which lashes with satire his literary enemies; with numerous miscellaneous and fugitive pieces. He also translated the "Iliad" and 'Odyssey' of Homer; of which Bentley, the great scholar, remarked, "It is a pretty poem, Mr. Pope; but you must not call it Homer." Pope was, if not the founder, the chief, of the artificial school of poetry, the influence of which terminated with the appearance of Cowper. Pope's descriptions of nature have a garden aspect, where everything is scrupulously elegant, regular, and beautiful. With the profits from his writings he bought a villa at Twickenham, on the Thames. Through all his life of fifty-six years, he was delicate and frail. The wonder is that soul and body kept together so long. His death took place 1744. See p. 356. PORTAL (pore'tal). POSSESS (poz-zes'). PRAED, WINTHROP MACKWORTH, was born in 1802 in London. an early age he was placed at Eton, where he became one of the editors At of "The Etonian," a college maga. zine, sparkling with promise of future excellence. From Eton he went to Cambridge, and was regarded as the peer of Macaulay in respect to ability. He was for a short time in Parliament, but died in 1839. See p. 345. PRACTICE (vb.) or PRACTISE. PRAGUE (prag), the capital of Bohemia, is celebrated for its cathedral, an ancient edifice, rich in Gothic ornament. PRAIRIE (pra're or prare're). PRECEDENT (pres'e-dent, n.; presed'ent, adj.). PRESCOTT, WM. HICKLING, born 1796 at Salem, Mass., attained a high rank among the historians of his century. Deprived by an accident of the free use of his eyes, he began a career of literary toil which resulted in the production of four great historical works, -The Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, The Conquest of Mexico, The Conquest of Peru, and the History of Philip II., all of which have been remarkably successful. He died 1859. See P. 163. PRETENSE or PRETENCE. PROTEST or PROTEST, n.; PROTEST', vb. PROWESS (proules). PRUSSIA (prush'a or proosh'a). PUTNAM, GEORGE, REV. DR., born in RACINE, JEAN (ră-seen' zhäng), the greatest among French tragic dramatists, was born in Picardy, 1639. The most important part of his education was received in the school of the Port-Royalists, whose earnest piety and severe morality received no discredit either from the writings or from the conduct of their pupil. He began his dramatic career in 1663, and his first two plays were unsuccessful; but his fine genius shone out with all its brightness in 1667, when his "Andromaque" (an'dro-mak) was played. For ten years more he continued to produce, almost annually, plays, constituting a series of masterpieces, and exhibiting so little inequality that critical opinions are still divided as to their comparative merit. Racine died in 1699. His last work was his sacred drama of "Nathalie," of which Voltaire said, that it comes nearer to perfection than any other literary work which ever issued from the hands of man. See a translation of a passage from this work, p. 168. RÂMPART (răm pärt). RAPHAEL (raf'a-el) SANZIO, the most celebrated of painters, was born at Urbino, in Italy, 1483; died 1520. In 1508 he was invited to Rome by Pope Julius II., who employed him to paint the "School of Athens " in the Vatican. In performing this commission, he gave such satisfaction that the Pope ordered all the pictures, already painted in the various rooms, to be obliterated, and the walls prepared for the productions of Raphael alone, who, with difficulty, succeeded in saving from destruction a ceiling, painted by his old master. Perugino. RAVINE (ră-veen'; but on p. 276, line 10, Coleridge puts the accent on the first syllable, thus: rav'veens). REAL (re'al, not reel). RECREANT (rec're-ant). REFORM BILL. Under the old parliamentary system in England, certain towns had an old right to send members to Parliament, irrespective of the number of voters in the place. The possession of certain ancient tenements conferred a right to vote. The reform bill which swept away this and many other antiquated abuses was passed by REQUI-EM (re'kwi-em or rek'wi-em). RISE (vb. rīze; n. rise, not rize; so ROTHSCHILD, MAYER ANSELM, founder of the banking-house by which the financial operations of Europe have been controlled since the commencement of the present century, was a native of Frankfort, Germany. He died 1812. His son, Nathan Mayer Rothschild, removed to England in 1800, and by the extent of his loan operations acquired immense influence. He died in 1836, and was succeeded by his eldest son, the present Baron Rothschild. The family is still celebrated for its enormous wealth. RUSSIA (roo'sha or rush'a). SABRE or SABER. SACRIFICE (vb. sak'ri-fīze; n. sak'ri, fise or sak'ri-fize). Smart says that the principle of distinguishing" from each other nouns and verbs that are the same, or almost the same, in form," by giving "certain consonant letters a sharp, hissing sound in the noun, and a vocalized sound in the verb," has, in the verbs to suffice and to sacrifice, "been allowed to communicate a most irregular sound to the letter c. This, if not altered in the verb, certainly ought not to be adopted in the noun sacrifice." SATRAP (sa'trap or satrap). SAUNTER (sän'ter or sawn'ter). 66 His whatever speaks to the immortal part of man. The boon she bestows is truth; truth not merely physical, but truth of moral feeling, truth of taste. The treasures of literature are thus celestial, imperishable, beyond all price. Genius, even in its faintest scintillations, is the inspired gift of God; a solemn mandate to its owner to go forth and labor in his sphere to keep alive among his brethren the sacred fire which the heavy and polluted atmosphere of this world is forever threatening to extinguish. Woe to him if he turn this gift into the servant of his evil or ignoble passions; if he offer it on the altar of vanity, if he sell it for a piece of money! SCIPIO (sip'e-o), the name of several illustrious citizens of ancient Rome. The most celebrated of the name, Scipio Africanus the elder, overcame the great Carthaginian general, Hannibal, in a decisive battle, fought B. C. 202. SCOTT, WALTER, was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Aug. 15, 1771, of respectable though not wealthy parents. Some of his earliest years were, on account of the delicacy of his health, arising from a malady that caused his lameness, passed with his paternal grandfather on a farm in Roxburghshire. Here he acquired that taste for border lore and chivalric tradition which was so strongly developed in after life. He entered the High School of Edinburgh in 1779, and passed to the University in 1783: he did not in either sphere display any shining ability; his Latin was little, and his Greek less. During these years, however, his health was precarious; and, besides, his favorite studies lay out of the province of schoolmasters and professors. Before his sixteenth year he had run through a vast circle of fiction and miscellaneous reading, which contributed to rear the splendid mass of materials from which he struck the rich coinages of his future poetry and novels. For a short period, during which he attended the law lectures of the University, he was initiated in his -father's office into the practice of the legal profession; and in 1792 he was admitted to practice as advocate. But in this profession he was not calculated to rise; he says of it himself, in the language of Slender to Anne Page, "There was little love between us at first, and it pleased God to decrease it on better acquaintance." The affluence of his family secured him the means of indulging his favorite tastes; his studies were now incessant and various; he succeeded in acquiring a general, if not critical, knowledge of the modern languages. His first serious efforts in composition were some translations from the German ballads of Burger. In 1797 he married Miss Charlotte Carpenter, a young French refugee of great beauty. In 1804 he established himself at a farm on the river Tweed, not far from the Yarrow, and became a literary man by profession. It was here that his first great poem, "The Lay of the Last Minstrel," was completed. Its publication, in 1805, attracted universal and enthusiastic admiration. This tale was but the first of a series of picturesque romances from his pen, couched in flowing verse of eight syllables, and colored with the brightest hues of Highland and knightly life. In 1808" Marmion" appeared; in 1810, the "Lady of the Lake," illustrating the scenery and chivalry of the Highlands in the reign of James V.; these were followed by the "Vision of Don Roderic," "Rokeby," and in 1814, "The Lord of the Isles." But Scott had reached his culminating point in his poetry. Byron's reputation was fast paling every other fire. Scott now struck into a new vein. He began to penetrate that rich mine in prose fiction the treasures of which astonished the world. In 1814 he wrote "Waverley," and, for nearly fifteen years, continued anonymously in rapid succession the series of his novels. The secret of the authorship was faithfully kept, till commercial misfortune forced its surrender. Scott's early wish to connect himself by proprietorship "to his mother-earthi," betrayed him into the purchase, piece by piece, of the bare territory that swelled into the estate of Abbotsford. His contemplated cottage expanded into a 66 romance in stone and lime," as his celebrated mansion has been termed; and thither he removed in 1812. In 1820 he was created a baronet by the king. But Scott's wealth was illusory; his estate had cost him sums immensely above its worth; he became entangled in the responsibilities of the ill-conducted publishing house of Ballantyne & Co.; and the failure of Constable & Co. in 1826 completed his financial ruin. The poet's liabilities amounted to upward of £100,000. After a life so splendidly laborious he found himself, at fifty-five years of age, without a foot of property he could call his own, and burdened with an enormous debt. But nothing could be more noble than the attitude in which his adversity exhibited him. He sat down in his old age, and in the midst of ruin and of family misfortune, to redeem his fair fame, and to right all whom his imprudence had unintentionally wronged. He would not listen to the offers of compromise generously made to him; he determined to pay his creditors the last farthing. "Woodstock" was the first novel he wrote after his great misfortune; and its sale for £8,228-it was the work of only three months-gave strength to the hopes of the brave old man, that a few years would clear him from his gigantic debt. But his toil was killing him. Before he could reach the goal he sank in the struggle. A paralytic attack in 1831 prostrated the faculties of his overwrought brain. In vain a voyage to Italy was tried for the restoration of his shattered constitution; returning with haste, that he might die beneath the shade of his own trees, and within hearing of his own Tweed, he expired in unconsciousness, Sept. 21, 1832. See the account of his last moments, p. 71. The character of Scott's genius was more constructive than creative. The language of his poetry is sometimes careless and diffuse; though some of his minor poems and songs, his "Lochinvar," his "Coronach,' &c., show that when he chose to give the proportionate labor and care, he could reach as near to perfection as any poet of the age. His chief work of actual history was a life of Napoleon. He was eminently a painter in words. The picturesque is his forte. But his brilliant |