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cation and melody of diction, and embodies his thoughts in the most musical, condensed, and enduring forms. He has at the same time the art to conceal art. Few English poets have given to their verse so much of that charm which seems independent of the thought, and to lie in the grace and appropriateness of the structure. At Farringford in the Isle of Wight, Tennyson has resided for many years, amid green undulating woodland, thick with apple-trees, and fringed with silver sand and rocks, on which the lightgreen summer sea and the black waves of winter flow with the changeful music of the seasons. Here in his quiet home he sees little society except that of a few chosen friends.

From the May Queen, p. 53.
Bugle Song, p. 60.
Welcome to Alexandra, p. 63.
Ring out, wild Bells, p. 117.

Charge of Light Brigade, p. 458. Independence on Fortune, p. 484. THACKERAY, WM. MAKEPEACE, novelist and essayist, was the son of a clergyman, and born in Calcutta in 1811. He studied at the university of Cambridge, in England, but left without taking a degree. His novel of "Vanity Fair," published in 1846, was the first work by which he rose to any great distinction, though he had previously written a number of satirical works for the Magazines. In 1855 he visited the United States, and delivered in the principal cities a series of lectures on the English humorists. One of his best novels, "The Newcomes," appeared in 1855, after his return to England. During his editorship of the London " Cornhill Magazine he wrote a series of articles under the title of "Roundabout Papers," which were deservedly popular. Thackeray had, during his life, his full share of abuse; but he manfully lived, or rather wrote it down. He died quite suddenly, in 1863.

A Plea for Dunces, p. 74. Irving and Macaulay, p. 351. THEATRE or THEATER. THEREFORE (ther fore

or thare'

fore; the former is the preferred mode). THOMSON, JAMES, author of "The Seasons," a poem, was born in 1700, at Ednam, in Roxburgshire, England, where his father was a clergy

man. James studied for several years at the University of Edinburgh, removed to London in 1726, and in 1730 published the whole of his celebrated poem, parts of which had previously appeared. It was remarkably successful. The style is in some parts pompous and inflated, but the closeness with which he has observed external nature has seldom been surpassed; and the poetic intuition with which he apprehends the features of a landscape, and the moral associations which clothe it with the finest part of its beauty, is keen and unerring. Thomson wrote tragedies, but they are now forgotten. His "Castle of Indolence," however, is a noble specimen of poetic art. It is Thomson's greatest poem, and on it he lavished the wealth of his ripened genius. Living in a cottage at Kew, the poet caught cold in sailing up the Thames, and died of fever in 1748. He was a friendly, shy, and indolent man.

Hymn of the Seasons, p. 331. THRALLDOM or THRALDOM. TI'ARA (ti-air'a).

TIN'CHEL, a circle of sportsmen, who, by surrounding a great space, and gradually narrowing, brought immense quantities of deer together. TINY (ti'ny or tin'y). To (generally pronounced too, the oo rather short).

TOBIN, JOHN, an English dramatist, born at Salisbury, England, 1770, died 1804. He wrote the " HoneyMoon," from which see an extract, p. 73. TOCQUEVILLE, ALEXIS DE (tokʼvil), a distinguished French statesman and writer, author of "Democracy in America," was born at Verneuil in France, July 29, 1805, died 1859. See an eloquent account of his life by his friend Beaumont, p. 132. Quotations from De Tocqueville, pp. 337, 338.

Democracy adverse to Socialism,

p. 299.

An American Wilderness, p. 358. TORTOISE (tor'tiz or tor'tis). TOWARD or TOWARDS, prep. (to'urd or to'urdz). TOWARD, adj. (to'wurd). TOULMAIN, DR., an English scientific

writer; quoted, p. 469. TRANSVERSE, adj. (trans-vers'), running or passing in a cross direction. TRANSITION (tran-sizh'un).

TRAVELER or TRAVELLER.
TRITON, in mythology, a marine
demi-god, half man, half fish, the
fabled trumpeter of Neptune.
TRO-CHEE (tro'ke), a certain metrical
foot; in English an accented and an
unaccented syllable.
TROPHY (tro'fy).

TULLY, the Anglicized name of Tul-
lius, and a name by which Cicero
(Marcus Tullius) is often called.
TYROL (tir'rol or te-rol').
UNION (yoon'yun).

This word is from the Latin unio, oneness, which is from unus, one.

UPPER BENJAMIN, the obsolete name
of a sort of overcoat.
VAL'OR. This word is from the Latin
valle-o, to be strong.

VANE, SIR HENRY, was born in Had-
low, in Kent, England, in 1612.
After the restoration of that royal
profligate, Charles II., Vane was
condemned for treason, and behead-
ed on Tower Hill, June 14, 1662.
He had been governor of Massachu-
setts in 1635. He was a zealous
republican, a man of sincere relig-
ious convictions, and courageously
opposed to the usurpations of Crom-
well. Honor to his memory!
VAUNT (Vawnt or vänt).
VEHEMENT (Ve'he-ment).
VERMEIL (ver'mil).

VERRES (věr'rēz). See Cicero's
speech, p. 456.

VINCENT, CHARLES, a French song-
writer, was born at Fontainebleau,
April 15, 1826. He has published
numerous poems and songs, which
have been popular. See p. 95.
VIRGIL (Publius Virgilius Maro), the
great epic poet of the Romans, was
born near Mantua, in Italy, B. C.
70, and died B. C. 19. The Æneid
is the work by which he won his
principal fame.
VIRGINIA, the beautiful daughter of
Lucius Virginius, a brave centurion
of ancient Rome, was seized as a
slave, and awarded by Appius Clau-
dius to his freedman Marcus. To
save his daughter from dishonor,
Virginius stabbed her, exclaiming,
"There is no way but this to keep
thee free." See Macaulay's ballad,
p. 442.

VISOR (viz'or).

WALLACE, SIR WILLIAM, the national hero of Scotland, is supposed to have been born about the year 1270. He gained several battles over the English,but was inhumanly

executed in London, in 1305. See
p. 166.

WAN (won, not wăn).
WAND (wond, not wănd, except some-
times in poetry).
WANDERING JEW, THE, an imaginary
personage, whose existence is de-
rived from a legend, that when our
Savior was on his way to execution,
he rested on a stone before the house
of a Jew, nained Ahasuerus, who
drove him away with curses; where-
upon Jesus replied, "Wander thou
upon the earth till I return." The

fable runs that the Jew, racked with
remorse, has ever since been wan-
dering over the earth.

WARE, HENRY, an American clergy-
man and writer, was born in Hing-
ham, Massachusetts, 1794; died
1843. He became pastor of the
Second Church in Boston in 1816.
Some thirteen years afterward he
accepted the professorship of pulpit
eloquence in the Divinity School of
Harvard University. His poetica!
writings are at once vigorous and
graceful in their style.
WARRIOR (wòrꞌre-ur).
WASHINGTON, GEORGE, the "first in
war," as well as "in peace," among
the Americans, was born February
22, 1732, near the banks of the Po-
tomac, in the county of Westmore-
land, Virginia. That he was dili-
gent and studious in his youth his
writings in mature years abun-
dantly testified. He entered the
military service of the colony in
1751; was in Braddock's expedition
in 1755, and had two horses shot
under him; was appointed com-
mander-in-chief of the American
army in 1775; was elected Presi-
dent of the Convention for forming
the Constitution in 1787; was elect-
ed President of the United States
in 1789, again in 1793, and died in
1799. For a further sketch of his
career, see p. 107; also Webster's
remarks, p. 197.

Counsels of Washington, p. 87.
WEARY (wēar'y).
WEBSTER, DANIEL, the great Ameri-
can lawyer, orator, and statesman,
was born in Salisbury, New Hamp-
shire, January 18, 1782; died at his
residence in Marshfield, Massachu-
setts, October 24, 1852. His parents
were poor; but he was enabled to
enter Dartmouth College in 1797.
He first practiced law in his native
State, and was in Congress in 1812.

He removed to Boston in 1816, was | sent to Congress from that city in 1822, and from that time up to the period of his death was in public life, distinguishing himself by many remarkable efforts of eloquence, which place him in the front rank of great orators, with Demosthenes, Chatham, Mirabeau, Grattan, and Patrick Henry.

Webster's style is distinguished at once for elegance, simplicity, and strength; rising at fitting times into the highest region of eloquence and beauty. Singularly clear and impressive as he is in argument, his sparing use of rhetorical embellishments render them all the more effective whenever they are introduced into his diction. Appealing generally to the reason only, he can also rouse the passions as by a thunder-peal when he would rise to the height of a great occasion, by enlisting the moral and emotional nature in sympathy with his cause. Of his political course it has been truly said, that the key to it is "the belief that when the Union is dissolved, the internal peace, the vigorous growth and prosperity of the States, and the welfare of their inhabitants, are blighted forever, and that, while the Union endures, all else of trial and calamity which can befall a nation may be remedied or borne."

Declaration of Independence,p.96. Washington and Union, p. 197. The Constitution, p. 342. WELLINGTON, ARTHUR WELLESLEY, duke of Wellington, was born in Ireland, May 1, 1769, died 1852. He is regarded as the greatest of English generals. In 1815 he won the battle of Waterloo against Napoleon. After retiring from active military service, he exercised great political influence in the cabinet. WILLFUL or WILFUL.

WIRT, Wм., an eminent American
advocate and writer, was born in
Bladensburg, Md., 1772, and was
admitted to the bar in 1792. The
part he took in the famous trial of
Aaron Burr gave him his greatest
distinction as an eloquent pleader.
His" Letters of a British Spy," the
"Old Bachelor," and a "Life of
Patrick Henry," enjoyed great pop-
ularity in their day. He died 1835.

Burr and Blennerhassett, p. 321.
Oratory of Patrick Henry, p. 401.

WILSON, JOHN, a poet and magazine writer, was born in Paisley, Scotland, 1785. Educated at Oxford, he put forth, in 1812, the "Isle of Palms," and soon afterward the

City of the Plague," and "Unimore," the principal contributions of his fanciful and capricious muse. There is a soft, liquid flow of musical expression in these poems, with a vague, dreamy wildness and pathos, in combination with an exuberant fancy. It is as a prosewriter, however, that Wilson takes rank among the literary Titans of his native land. In 1820 he became connected with Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, where he wrote, under the name of Christopher North, a series of political and literary papers which attracted great attention. He died 1854.

Address to a Wild Deer, p. 162. WILSON, HENRY, Senator of the United States, was born in Farmington, N. H., 1812, of poor parents. He was elected to the U. S. Senate from Massachusetts, as successor of Edward Everett, in 1855.

WILSON, ALEXANDER, the celebrated
ornithologist, was born at Paisley,
Scotland, and came to Delaware in
1794. Removing to Philadelphia,
he devoted himself to natural his
tory. He possessed considerable
taste for literature, and wrote some
of merit.
poems
He died in 1813.
WOEFUL or WOFUL.
WORDSWORTH, WILLIAM, born at
Cockermouth, in Cumberland, Eng-
land, April 7, 1770, was sent to St.
John's college, Cambridge, in 1787.
He took his degree in 1791, without
any great distinction as a scholar.
For several years after the outbreak
of the French revolution he was an
ardent republican; but the excesses
of the extreme party in France
altered his political views.
friends wished him to enter the
Church. Without attaching himself
to any profession, he wandered
about, gradually satisfying himself
that he was justified in regarding
poetry as his true vocation.

His

In 1797 he had conceived a plan for the regeneration of English poetry. In 1798 he published, in conjunction with Coleridge, a collection of "Lyrical Ballads." Most of these were from his own pen; but the book, so far from making converts to his way of thinking, was

very generally abused and ridiculed by the critics. Still, many of his readers sympathized with his views, and through their encouragement, he was induced to publish, in 1807, two other volumes of poetry. In 1814 was published his great work, "The Excursion." On its appearance, Jeffrey, the great Edinburgh critic, wrote of it, "This will never do." And yet it has been doing ever since, more and more every year. Coleridge describes it as being characterized by "an austere purity of language, both graminatically and logically."

In 1813 Wordsworth removed to Rydal Mount, among the lakes of Cumberland, which was his home for the rest of his life. From him and his companions, Southey and Coleridge, who resided near him for a time, the Lake School of poetry derived its name. Originally applied in contempt, it gradually grew to be the recognized title of Wordsworth and his disciples. Choosing the simplest forms of speech as the vehicle of their thoughts, the poets of this school took their subjects often from among the commonest things.

really the greatest English poet of his time, but was regarded with a reverence due to him as one of the purest and most blameless of the poets who have enriched and enlarged the domain of English literature. In his poetry the soul of man is made to animate nature, as, in the Platonic philosophy, the Deity was the innate spirit of the universe. Nature inhabits him, and he inhabits nature, with a reciprocity of life-giving influence. He has widened the glance of faith, and hope, and charity, and has given to thehumblest daisy on the mountain-side " a voice "to bid the doubting sons of men be still."

In 1843, on the death of Southey, Wordsworth became poet-laureate. He died on the 23d of April, 1850, a few days after the completion of his 80th year.

From the Ode to Immortality, pp. 61, 62, 77.

The Sonnet, p. 122.

The Happy Warrior, p. 170.
Ode to Duty, p. 405.

WOUND (woond or wownd).
WRACK, synonymous with wreck, and
an ancient form of that word; also,
a kind of sea-weed.
Y-CLEPED (1-klept').
YEA (ya or yē).

The chief remaining works of this great writer are "The White Doe of Rylstone"; "Ode on Immortali-YEARN (yern). ty"; "Memorials of a Tour on the Continent"; "Yarrow Revisited, and other Poems"; and "The Prelude," a fragment of autobiography, describing the growth of a poet's mind, and which was not published till the author was dead. In the composition of sonnets, a poetic form of which he was remarkably fond, he has not been excelled by the finest of the old masters.

Before his death, Wordsworth, who on his appearance as a poet had been laughed at and abused by the leading critics, was not only acknowledged, and justly, to be

His

YOUNG, EDWARD, a poet and clergyman, was born near Winchester, England, in 1684; died 1765. poem of the "Night Thoughts," by which he is now chiefly known, was not completed till 1746, when he was 62 years old. It has many beauties and many defects. In its epigrammatic style, its frequent antitheses, and its perpetual ingenuity of strained analogies, it often invites criticism; but no one can dispute the compressed power of the language, and the appropriateness and elevation of much of the thought.

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