ARBUTHNOT, JOHN (1667-1735).—Physician and satirist, wasb.in Kincardineshire, and after studying at Aberdeen and Oxford, took his degree of M.D. at St. Andrews. Settling in London, he taught mathematics. Being by a fortunate accident at Epsom, he was called in to prescribe for Prince George, who was suddenly taken ill there, and was so successful in his treatment that he wasappointed his regular physician. This circumstance made his professional fortune, for his ability enabled him to take full advantage of it, and in 1705 he became physician to the Queen. He became the cherished friend of Swift and Pope, and himself gained a high reputation as a wit and man of letters. His principal works are theMemoirs of Martinus Scriblerus, partly by Pope, but to which he was the chief contributor, theHistory of John Bull(1712), mainly against the Duke of Marlborough,A Treatise concerning the Altercation or Scolding of the Ancients, and theArt of Political Lying. He also wrote various medical treatises, and dissertations on ancient coins, weights, and measures. After the death of Queen Anne, A. lost his court appointments, but this, as well as more serious afflictions with which he was visited, he bore with serenity and dignity. He was an honourable and amiable man, one of the very few who seems to have retained the sincere regard of Swift, whose style he made the model of his own, with such success that writings by the one were sometimes attributed to the other: hisArt of Political Lyingis an example. He has, however, none of the ferocity of S.
ARGYLL, GEORGE JOHN DOUGLAS CAMPBELL, 8TH DUKE OF (1823-1900).—Statesman and writer on science, religion, and politics, succeeded hisf., the 7th duke, in 1847. His talents and eloquence soon raised him to distinction in public life. He acted with the Liberal party until its break-up under the Irish policy of Mr. Gladstone, after which he was one of the Unionist leaders. He held the offices of Lord Privy Seal, Postmaster-General, and Indian Secretary. His writings includeThe Reign of Law(1866),Primeval Man(1869),The Eastern Question(1879),The Unseen Foundations of Society(1893),Philosophy of Belief(1896),Organic Evolution Cross-examined(1898). He was a man of the highest character, honest, courageous, and clear-sighted, and, though regarded by some professional scientists as to a certain extent an amateur, his ability, knowledge, and dialectic power made him a formidable antagonist, and enabled him to exercise a useful, generally conservative, influence on scientific thought and progress.
ARMSTRONG, JOHN, M.D. (1709-1779).—Poet,s.of the minister of Castleton, Roxburghshire, studied medicine, which he practised in London. He is remembered as the friend of Thomson, Mallet, and other literary celebrities of the time, and as the author of a poem onThe Art of Preserving Health, which appeared in 1744, and in which a somewhat unpromising subject for poetic treatment is gracefully and ingeniously handled. His other works, consisting of some poems and prose essays, and a drama,The Forced Marriage, are forgotten, with the exception of the four stanzas at the end of the first part of Thomson'sCastle of Indolence, describing the diseases incident to sloth, which he contributed.
ARNOLD, SIR EDWIN (1832-1904).—Poet,s.of a Sussex magistrate, wasb.at Gravesend, anded.at King's School, Rochester, London, and Oxford. Thereafter he was an assistant master at King Edward's School, Birmingham, and was in 1856 appointed Principal of the Government Deccan College, Poona. Here hereceived the bias towards, and gathered material for, his future works. In 1861 he returned to England and became connected withThe Daily Telegraph, of which he was ultimately editor. The literary task which he set before him was the interpretation in English verse of the life and philosophy of the East. His chief work with this object isThe Light of Asia(1879), a poem on the life and teaching of Buddha, which had great popularity, but whose permanent place in literature must remain very uncertain. InThe Light of the World(1891), he attempted, less successfully, a similar treatment of the life and teaching of Jesus. Other works areThe Song of Songs of India(1875),With Saadi in the Garden, andThe Tenth Muse. He travelled widely in the East, and wrote books on his travels. He was made K.C.I.E. in 1888.
ARNOLD, MATTHEW (1822-1888).—Poet and critic,s.ofDr. A., of Rugby (q.v.), wasb.at Laleham anded.at Rugby, Winchester, and Balliol Coll., Oxford, becoming a Fellow of Oriel in 1845. Thereafter he was private secretary to Lord Lansdowne, Lord President of the Council, through whose influence he was in 1851 appointed an inspector of schools. Two years before this he hadpub.his first book of poetry,The Strayed Reveller, which he soon withdrew: some of the poems, however, including "Mycerinus" and "The Forsaken Merman," were afterwards republished, and the same applies to his next book,Empedocles on Etna(1852), with "Tristram and Iseult." In 1857 he was appointed to the Professorship of Poetry at Oxford, which he held for ten years. After this he produced little poetry and devoted himself to criticism and theology. His principal writings are, in poetry,Poems(1853), containing "Sohrab and Rustum," and "The Scholar Gipsy;"Poems, 2nd Series(1855), containing "Balder Dead;"Merope(1858);New Poems(1867), containing "Thyrsis," an elegy onA.H. Clough(q.v.), "A Southern Night," "Rugby Chapel," and "The Weary Titan"; in prose he wroteOn Translating Homer(1861 and 1862),On the Study of Celtic Literature(1867),Essays in Celtic Literature(1868),2nd Series(1888),Culture and Anarchy(1869),St. Paul and Protestantism(1870),Friendship's Garland(1871),Literature and Dogma(1873),God and the Bible(1875),Last Essays on Church and Religion(1877),Mixed Essays(1879),Irish Essays(1882), andDiscourses in America(1885). He also wrote some works on the state of education on the Continent. In 1883 he received a pension of £250. The rationalistic tendency of certain of his writings gave offence to many readers, and the sufficiency of his equipment in scholarship for dealing with some of the subjects which he handled was called in question; but he undoubtedly exercised a stimulating influence on his time; his writings are characterised by the finest culture, high purpose, sincerity, and a style of great distinction, and much of his poetry has an exquisite and subtle beauty, though here also it has been doubted whether high culture and wide knowledge of poetry did not sometimes take the place of the true poetic fire.
There is a bibliography of A.'s works by T.B. Smart (1892), and books upon him have been written by Prof. Saintsbury (1899), H. Paul (1902), and G.W.E. Russell (1904), also papers by Sir L. Stephen, F. Harrison, and others.
ARNOLD, THOMAS (1795-1842).—Historian,s.of an inland revenue officer in the Isle of Wight, wased.at Winchester and Oxford, and after some years as a tutor, was, in 1828, appointed Head Master of Rugby. His learning, earnestness, and force of character enabled him not only to raise his own school to the front rank of public schools, but to exercise an unprecedented reforming influence on the whole educational system of the country. A liberal in politics, and a zealous church reformer, he was involved in many controversies, educational and religious. As a churchman he was a decided Erastian, and strongly opposed to the High Church party. In 1841 he was appointed Professor of Modern History at Oxford. His chief literary works are his unfinishedHistory of Rome(three vols. 1838-42), and hisLectures on Modern History. Hed.suddenly of angina pectoris in the midst of his usefulness and growing influence. His life, byDean Stanley(q.v.), is one of the best works of its class in the language.
ASCHAM, ROGER (1515-1568).—Didactic writer and scholar,s.of John A., house-steward in the family of Lord Scrope, wasb.at Kirby Wiske, Yorkshire, anded.first by Sir Humphrey Wingfield, and then at St. John's Coll., Cambridge, where he devoted himself specially to the study of Greek, then newly revived, and of which, having taken a fellowship, he became a teacher. He was likewise noted for his skill in penmanship, music, and archery, the last of which is the subject of his first work,Toxophilus,pub.in 1545, and which, dedicated to Henry VIII., gained him the favour of the King, who bestowed a pension upon him. The objects of the book are twofold, to commend the practice of shooting with the long bow as a manly sport and an aid to national defence, and to set the example of a higher style of composition than had yet been attempted in English. Soon afterwards he was made university orator, and master of languages to the Lady (afterwards Queen) Elizabeth. He then went abroad in various positions of trust, returning on being appointed Latin Secretary to Edward VI. This office he likewise discharged to Mary and then to Elizabeth—a testimony to his tact and caution in these changeful times. His principal work,The Schoolmaster, a treatise on education, was printed by his widow in 1570. He alsopub.a book on the political state of Germany.
Editions: ofToxophilus, Arber;Schoolmaster, Arber, also Mayer (1883); English works, Bennet (1767), with life by Dr. Johnson; whole works, Giles (1864-5).
ASGILL, JOHN (1659-1738).—Eccentric writer, student at the Middle Temple, 1686, and called to the Bar 1692. In 1699 hepub.in an unlucky hour a pamphlet to prove that death was not obligatory upon Christians, which, much to his surprise, aroused the public wrath and led to his expulsion from the Irish and English House of Commons successively. A. thereafter fell on evil days, and passed the rest of his life between the Fleet and the King's Bench, where, strange to say, his zeal as a pamphleteer continued unabated. Hed.in 1738.
ASHMOLE, ELIAS (1617-1692).—Antiquary, wased.at Lichfield, and became a solicitor in 1638. On the breaking out ofthe Civil War he sided with the royalists; went to Oxford and studied science, including astrology. The result of his studies in this region of mystery was hisTheatrum Chymicum Britannicum, which gained him great repute and the friendship of John Selden. His last astrological treatise wasThe Way to Bliss, which dealt with the subject of "the philosopher's stone." He also wrote various works on antiquarian subjects, and aHistory of the Order of the Garter. A. held various posts under government, and presented to the University of Oxford a valuable collection of curiosities now known as the Ashmolean Museum. He also bequeathed his library to the University. His wife was adau.of Sir W. Dugdale, the antiquary.
ASSER (d.909?).—Chronicler, a monk of St. David's, afterwards Bishop of Sherborne, was the friend, helper, and biographer of Ælfred. In addition to his life of Ælfred he wrote a chronicle of England from 849 to 887.
ATHERSTONE, EDWIN (1788-1872).—Poet and novelist. His works, which were planned on an imposing scale, attracted some temporary attention and applause, but are now forgotten. His chief poem,The Fall of Nineveh, consisting of thirty books, appeared at intervals from 1828 to 1868. He also produced two novels,The Sea Kings in EnglandandThe Handwriting on the Wall.
ATTERBURY, FRANCIS (1662-1732).—Controversialist and preacher, wasb.near Newport Pagnel, Bucks, anded.at Westminster School and Oxford. He became the leading protagonist on the High Church side in the ecclesiastical controversies of his time, and is believed to have been the chief author of the famous defence of Dr. Sacheverell in 1712. He also wrote most of Boyle'sExamination of Dr. Bentley's Dissertations on the Epistles of Phalaris, andpub.sermons, which, with his letters to Swift, Pope, and other friends, constitute the foundation of his literary reputation. During the reign of the Tories he enjoyed much preferment, having been successively Canon of Exeter, Dean of Christ Church, Dean of Westminster, and Bishop of Rochester. His Jacobite principles, however, and his participation in various plots got him into trouble, and in 1722 he was confined in the Tower, deprived of all his offices, and ultimately banished. Hed.at Paris, Feb. 15, 1732, and was buried privately in Westminster Abbey.
AUBREY, JOHN (1626-1697).—Antiquary, was a country gentleman who inherited estates in several counties in England, which he lost by litigation and otherwise. He devoted himself to the collection of antiquarian and miscellaneous observations, and gave assistance to Dugdale and Anthony à-Wood in their researches. His own investigations were extensive and minute, but their value is much diminished by his credulity, and want of capacity to weigh evidence. His only publication is hisMiscellanies, a collection of popular superstitions, etc., but he left various collections, which were edited andpubl.in the 19th century.
AUSTEN, JANE (1775-1817).—Novelist,dau.of a clergyman, wasb.at the rectory of Steventon near Basingstoke. Shereceived an education superior to that generally given to girls of her time, and took early to writing, her first tale being begun in 1798. Her life was a singularly uneventful one, and, but for a disappointment in love, tranquil and happy. In 1801 the family went to Bath, the scene of many episodes in her writings, and after the death of herf.in 1805 to Southampton, and later to Chawton, a village in Hants, where most of her novels were written. A tendency to consumption having manifested itself, she removed in May, 1817, to Winchester for the advantage of skilled medical attendance, but so rapid was the progress of her malady that she died there two months later. Of her six novels, four—Sense and Sensibility(1811),Pride and Prejudice(1813),Mansfield Park(1814) andEmma(1816)—werepub.anonymously during her life-time; and the others,Northanger Abbey—written in 1798—andPersuasion, finished in 1816, appeared a few months after her death, when the name of the authoress was divulged. Although her novels were from the first well received, it is only of comparatively late years that her genius has gained the wide appreciation which it deserves. Her strength lies in the delineation of character, especially of persons of her own sex, by a number of minute and delicate touches arising out of the most natural and everyday incidents in the life of the middle and upper classes, from which her subjects are generally taken. Her characters, though of quite ordinary types, are drawn with such wonderful firmness and precision, and with such significant detail as to retain their individuality absolutely intact through their entire development, and they are never coloured by her own personality. Her view of life is genial in the main, with a strong dash of gentle but keen satire: she appeals rarely and slightly to the deeper feelings; and the enforcement of the excellent lessons she teaches is left altogether to the story, without a word of formal moralising. Among her admirers was Sir W. Scott, who said, "That young lady has a talent for describing the involvements of feelings and characters of ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with;" others were Macaulay (who thought that in the world there were no compositions which approached nearer to perfection), Coleridge, Southey, Sydney Smith, and E. FitzGerald.
AUSTIN, JOHN (1790-1859).—Jurist, served in the army in Sicily and Malta, but, selling his commission, studied law, and was called to the Bar 1818. He did not long continue to practise, but devoted himself to the study of law as a science, and became Professor of Jurisprudence in London University 1826-32. Thereafter he served on various Royal Commissions. By his works he exercised a profound influence on the views of jurisprudence held in England. These includeThe Province of Jurisprudence Determined(1832), and hisLectures on Jurisprudence.
AYTON, SIR ROBERT (1570-1638).—Poet,s.of A. of Kinaldie in Fife. Aftergrad.at St. Andrews, he studied law at Paris, became ambassador to the Emperor, and held other court offices. He appears to have been well-known to his literary contemporaries in England. He wrote poems in Latin, Greek, and English, and was one of the first Scotsmen to write in the last. His chief poem isDiophantus and Charidora; Inconstancy Upbraidedis perhaps the best of his short poems. He is credited with a little poem,Old Long Syne, which probably suggested Burns's famousAuld Lang Syne.
AYTOUN, WILLIAM EDMONSTONE (1813-1865).—Poet and humorist,s.of Roger A., a Writer to the Signet, wasb.in Edinburgh anded.there, and was brought up to the law, which, however, as he said, he "followed but could never overtake." He became a contributor toBlackwood's Magazinein 1836, and continued his connection with it until his death. In it appeared most of his humorous prose pieces, such asThe Glenmutchkin Railway,How I Became a Yeoman, andHow I Stood for the Dreepdaily Burghs, all full of vigorous fun. In the same pages began to appear his chief poetical work, theLays of the Scottish Cavaliers, and a novel, partly autobiographical,Norman Sinclair. Other works wereThe Bon Gaultier Ballads, jointly with Theodore Martin, andFirmilian, a Spasmodic Tragedy, under thenom-de-plumeof T. Percy Jones, intended to satirise a group of poets and critics, including Gilfillan, Dobell, Bailey, and Alexander Smith. In 1845 A. obtained the Chair of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres in Edinburgh University, which he filled with great success, raising the attendance from 30 to 150, and in 1852 he was appointed sheriff of Orkney and Shetland. He was married to adau.of Professor Wilson (Christopher North).
BACON, FRANCIS, LORD VERULAM, AND VISCOUNT ST. ALBAN'S (1561-1626).—Philosopher and statesman, was the youngests.of Sir Nicholas B., Lord Keeper, by his second wife, adau.of Sir Anthony Cooke, whose sister married William Cecil, Lord Burghley, the great minister of Queen Elizabeth. He wasb.at York House in the Strand on Jan. 22, 1561, and in his 13th year was sent with his elder brother Anthony to Trinity Coll., Cambridge. Here he first met the Queen, who was impressed by his precocious intellect, and was accustomed to call him "the young Lord Keeper." Here also he became dissatisfied with the Aristotelian philosophy as being unfruitful and leading only to resultless disputation. In 1576 he entered Gray's Inn, and in the same year joined the embassy of Sir Amyas Paulet to France, where he remained until 1579. The death of hisf.in that year, before he had completed an intended provision for him, gave an adverse turn to his fortunes, and rendered it necessary that he should decide upon a profession. He accordingly returned to Gray's Inn, and, after an unsuccessful attempt to induce Burghley to give him a post at court, and thus enable him to devote himself to a life of learning, he gave himself seriously to the study of law, and was called to the Bar in 1582. He did not, however, desert philosophy, andpub.a Latin tract,Temporis Partus Maximus(the Greatest Birth of Time), the first rough draft of his own system. Two years later, in 1584, he entered the House of Commons as member for Melcombe, sitting subsequently for Taunton (1586), Liverpool (1589), Middlesex (1593), and Southampton (1597). In the Parliament of 1586 he took a prominent part in urging the execution of Mary Queen of Scots. About this time he seems again to have approached his powerful uncle, the result of which may possibly be traced in his rapid progress at the Bar, and in his receiving, in 1589, the reversion to the Clerkship ofthe Star Chamber, a valuable appointment, into the enjoyment of which, however, he did not enter until 1608. About 1591 he formed a friendship with the Earl of Essex, from whom he received many tokens of kindness ill requited. In 1593 the offices of Attorney-general, and subsequently of Solicitor-general became vacant, and Essex used his influence on B.'s behalf, but unsuccessfully, the former being given to Coke, the famous lawyer. These disappointments may have been owing to a speech made by B. on a question of subsidies. To console him for them Essex presented him with a property at Twickenham, which he subsequently sold for £1800, equivalent to a much larger sum now. In 1596 he was made a Queen's Counsel, but missed the appointment of Master of the Rolls, and in the next year (1597), hepub.the first edition of hisEssays, ten in number, combined withSacred Meditationsand theColours of Good and Evil. By 1601 Essex had lost the Queen's favour, and had raised his rebellion, and B. was one of those appointed to investigate the charges against him, and examine witnesses, in connection with which he showed an ungrateful and indecent eagerness in pressing the case against his former friend and benefactor, who was executed on Feb. 25, 1601. This act B. endeavoured to justify inA Declaration of the Practices and Treasons, etc., of ... the Earl of Essex, etc.His circumstances had for some time been bad, and he had been arrested for debt: he had, however, received a gift of a fine of £1200 on one of Essex's accomplices. The accession of James VI. in 1603 gave a favourable turn to his fortunes: he was knighted, and endeavoured to set himself right with the new powers by writing hisApologie(defence) of his proceedings in the case of Essex, who had favoured the succession of James. In the first Parliament of the new king he sat for St. Alban's, and was appointed a Commissioner for Union with Scotland. In 1605 hepub.The Advancement of Learning, dedicated, with fulsome flattery, to the king. The following year he married Alice Barnham, thedau.of a London merchant, and in 1607 he was made Solicitor-General, and wroteCogita et Visa, a first sketch of theNovum Organum, followed in 1609 byThe Wisdom of the Ancients. Meanwhile (in 1608), he had entered upon the Clerkship of the Star Chamber, and was in the enjoyment of a large income; but old debts and present extravagance kept him embarrassed, and he endeavoured to obtain further promotion and wealth by supporting the king in his arbitrary policy. In 1613 he became Attorney-General, and in this capacity prosecuted Somerset in 1616. The year 1618 saw him Lord Keeper, and the next Lord Chancellor and Baron Verulam, a title which, in 1621, he exchanged for that of Viscount St. Albans. Meanwhile he had written theNew Atlantis, a political romance, and in 1620 he presented to the king theNovum Organum, on which he had been engaged for 30 years, and which ultimately formed the main part of theInstauratio Magna. In his great office B. showed a failure of character in striking contrast with the majesty of his intellect. He was corrupt alike politically and judicially, and now the hour of retribution arrived. In 1621 a Parliamentary Committee on the administration of the law charged him with corruption under 23 counts; and so clear was the evidence that he made no attempt at defence. To the lords, who sent acommittee to inquire whether the confession was really his, he replied, "My lords, it is my act, my hand, and my heart; I beseech your lordships to be merciful to a broken reed." He was sentenced to a fine of £40,000, remitted by the king, to be committed to the Tower during the king's pleasure (which was that he should be released in a few days), and to be incapable of holding office or sitting in parliament. He narrowly escaped being deprived of his titles. Thenceforth he devoted himself to study and writing. In 1622 appeared hisHistory of Henry VII., and the 3rd part of theInstauratio; in 1623,History of Life and Death, theDe Augmentis Scientarum, a Latin translation of theAdvancement, and in 1625 the 3rd edition of theEssays, now 58 in number. He alsopub.Apophthegms, and a translation of some of thePsalms. His life was now approaching its close. In March, 1626, he came to London, and shortly after, when driving on a snowy day, the idea struck him of making an experiment as to the antiseptic properties of snow, in consequence of which he caught a chill, which ended in his death on 9th April 1626. He left debts to the amount of £22,000. At the time of his death he was engaged uponSylva Sylvarum. The intellect of B. was one of the most powerful and searching ever possessed by man, and his developments of the inductive philosophy revolutionised the future thought of the human race. The most popular of his works is theEssays, which convey profound and condensed thought in a style that is at once clear and rich. His moral character was singularly mixed and complex, and bears no comparison with his intellect. It exhibits a singular coldness and lack of enthusiasm, and indeed a bluntness of moral perception and an absence of attractiveness rarely combined with such extraordinary mental endowments. All that was possible to be done in defence of his character and public conduct has been done by his accomplished biographer and editor,Mr. Spedding(q.v.). Singular, though of course futile, attempts, supported sometimes with much ingenuity, have been made to claim for B. the authorship of Shakespeare's plays, and have indeed been extended so as to include those of Marlowe, and even theEssaysof Montaigne.
SUMMARY.—B.London 1561,ed.Trinity Coll., Cambridge, dissatisfied with Aristotelean philosophy, entered Gray's Inn 1576, in France 1576-79, called to Bar 1582, enters Parliament 1584, became friend of Essex 1591, who presents him with estate 1593,pub.1st ed. ofEssays1597, prosecutes Essex 1601,pub.Advancement of Learning1605, Solicitor-Gen. 1607,pub.Wisdom of the Ancients1609, Attorney-Gen. 1613, prosecuted Somerset 1616, Lord Keeper 1618, Lord Chancellor with title of Verulam 1619, Visc. St. Albans 1621,pub.Novum Organum1620, charged with corruption, and retires from public life 1621,pub.Henry VII.and 3rd part ofInstauratio1622,d.1626.
The standard edition of B.'s works is that of Spedding, Ellis, and Heath (14 vols. 1857-74), includingLife and Lettersby Spedding. See also Macaulay'sEssays; Dean Church inMen of Letters Series; Dr. Abbott'sLife(1885), etc. For philosophy Fowler'sNovum Organum(1878).
BACON, ROGER (1214?-1294).—Philosopher, studied at Oxford and Paris. His scientific acquirements, regarded in thatage as savouring of witchcraft, and doubtless also his protests against the ignorance and immorality of the clergy, excited the jealousy and hatred of the Franciscans, and he was in consequence imprisoned at Paris for ten years. Clement IV., who had been a sympathiser, desired on his accession to see his works, and in response B. sent himOpus Majus, a treatise on the sciences (grammar, logic, mathematics, physics, and philosophy), followed byOpus SecundumandOpus Tertium. Clement, however, was near death when they arrived. B. was comparatively free from persecution for the next ten years. But in 1278 he was again imprisoned for upwards of ten years. At the intercession of some English noblemen he was at last released, and spent his remaining years at Oxford. He possessed one of the most commanding intellects of his own, or perhaps of any, age, and, notwithstanding all the disadvantages and discouragements to which he was subjected, made many discoveries, and came near to many more. There is still preserved at Oxford a rectified calendar in which he approximates closely to the truth. He received the sobriquet of the "Doctor Mirabilis."
BAGE, ROBERT (1728-1801).—Novelist,b.in Derbyshire, was thes.of a paper-maker. It was not until he was 53 that he took to literature; but in the 15 years following he produced 6 novels, of which Sir Walter Scott says that "strong mind, playful fancy, and extensive knowledge are everywhere apparent." B., though brought up as a Quaker, imbibed the principles of the French Revolution. He was an amiable and benevolent man, and highly esteemed.Hermsprong; or, Man as He is Not(1796) is considered the best of his novels, of which it was the last. The names of the others areMount Kenneth(1781),Barham Downs(1784),The Fair Syrian(1787),James Wallace(1788), andMan as He is(1792).
BAGEHOT, WALTER (1826-1877).—Economist,s.of a banker,b.at Langport, Somerset,ed.at University Coll., London, and called to the Bar, but did not practise, and joined hisf.in business. He wrote for various periodicals, and from 1860 was editor ofThe Economist. He was the author ofThe English Constitution(1867), a standard work which was translated into several languages;Physics and Politics(1872), andLombard Street(1873), a valuable financial work. A collection of essays, biographical and economic, waspub.after his death.
BAILEY, PHILIP JAMES (1816-1902).—Poet,s.of a journalist,b.at Nottingham, anded.there and at Glasgow, of which he was made an LL.D. in 1891. His life was a singularly uneventful one. He lived at Nottingham, Jersey, Ilfracombe, London, and again at Nottingham, where hed.He travelled a good deal on the Continent. He was by profession a barrister, but never practised, and devoted his whole energies to poetry. His first poem,Festus(1839), is, for the daring of its theme and the imaginative power and moral altitude which it displays, one of the most notable of the century; as the work of one little past boyhood it is a prodigy of intellectual precocity. Along with its great qualities it has many faults in execution, and its final place in literatureremains to be determined. It waspub.anonymously, and had great success, but has fallen into unmerited, but perhaps temporary, neglect. Among its greatest admirers was Tennyson. The subsequent poems of B.,The Angel World(1850),The Mystic(1855),The Age(1858), andThe Universal Hymn(1867), were failures, and the author adopted the unfortunate expedient of endeavouring to buoy them up by incorporating large extracts in the later editions ofFestus, with the effect only of sinking the latter, which ultimately extended to over 40,000 lines. B. was a man of strikingly handsome appearance, and gentle and amiable character.
BAILLIE, JOANNA (1762-1851).—Dramatist and poetess,dau.of the minister of Bothwell, afterwards Professor of Divinity at Glasgow. Her mother was a sister of the great anatomists, William and John Hunter, and her brother was the celebrated physician, Matthew B., of London. She received a thorough education at Glasgow, and at an early age went to London, where the remainder of her long, happy, and honoured, though uneventful, life was passed. In 1798, when she was 36, the first vol. of herPlays on the Passionsappeared, and was received with much favour, other two vols. followed in 1802 and 1812, and she also producedMiscellaneous Playsin 1804, and 3 vols. ofDramatic Poetryin 1836. In all her works there are many passages of true and impressive poetry, but the idea underlying herPlays on the Passions, that, namely, of exhibiting the principal character as acting under the exclusive influence of one passion, is artificial and untrue to nature.
BAILLIE, LADY GRIZEL (1665-1746).—Poetess,dau.of Sir Patrick Home or Hume, afterwards Earl of Marchmont, was married to George Baillie of Jerviswoode. In her childhood she showed remarkable courage and address in the services she rendered to her father and his friend, Robert Baillie of Jerviswoode, the eminent Scottish patriot, when under persecution. She left many pieces both prose and verse in MS., some of which werepub.The best known is the beautiful song,Were na my heart licht I wad die.
BAILLIE, ROBERT (1599-1662).—Historical writer,s.of B. of Jerviston,ed.at Glasgow, he entered the Church of Scotland and became minister of Kilwinning in Ayrshire. His abilities soon made him a leading man. He was a member of the historic Assembly of 1638, when Presbyterianism was re-established in Scotland, and also of the Westminster Assembly, 1643. In 1651 he was made Professor of Divinity in Glasgow, and 10 years later Principal. HisLetters and Journals, edited for the Bannatyne Club byD. Laing(q.v.), are of the greatest value for the interesting light they throw on a period of great importance in Scottish history. He was one of the wisest and most temperate churchmen of his time.
BAIN, ALEXANDER (1818-1903).—Philosopher,b.at Aberdeen, and graduated at Marischal Coll. there, became in 1860 Professor of Logic in his university, and wrote a number of works on philosophy and psychology, includingThe Senses and the Intellect(1855),The Emotions and the Will,Mental and Moral Science(1868),Logic(1870), andEducation as a Science(1879). In 1881 he was elected Lord Rector of Aberdeen University.
BAKER, SIR RICHARD (1568-1645).—Historian and religious writer, studied law, was knighted in 1603, and was High Sheriff of Oxfordshire 1620. B. was the author ofThe Chronicle of the Kings of England(1643), which was for long held as a great authority among the country gentlemen. It has, however, many errors. B. fell on evil days, was thrown into the Fleet for debt incurred by others, for which he had made himself responsible, andd.there. It was during his durance that theChronicleand some religious treatises were composed. TheChroniclewas continued by Edward Phillips, Milton's nephew, who became a strong Royalist.
BAKER, SIR SAMUEL WHITE (1821-1893).—Traveller,b.in London, and after being a planter in Ceylon, and superintending the construction of a railway between the Danube and the Black Sea, went with his wife, a Hungarian lady, in search of the sources of the Nile, and discovered the great lake, Albert Nyanza. B. was knighted in 1866, and was for 4 years Governor-General of the Equatorial Nile Basin. His books, which are all on travel and sport, are well written and includeAlbert Nyanza(1866),Nile Tributaries of Abyssinia(1867).
BALE, JOHN (1495-1563).—Historian and controversialist,b.at Cove, Suffolk, anded.as a Carmelite friar, but becoming a Protestant, engaged in violent controversy with the Roman Catholics. After undergoing persecution and flying to Flanders, he was brought back by Edward VI. and made Bishop of Ossory. On the death of Edward he was again persecuted, and had to escape from Ireland to Holland, but returned on the accession of Elizabeth, who made him a Prebendary of Canterbury. His chief work is a LatinAccount of the Lives of Eminent Writers of Great Britain. Besides this he wrote some dramas on scriptural subjects, and an account of the trial and death of Sir John Oldcastle. He wrote in all 22 plays, of which only 5 have come down, the names of certain of which give some idea of their nature,e.g.,The Three Leaves of Nature,Moses and Christ, andThe Temptacyon of Our Lord.
BALLANTINE, JAMES (1808-1877).—Artist and author,b.in Edinburgh, began life as a house painter. He studied art, and became one of the first to revive the art of glass-painting, on which subject he wrote a treatise. He was the author ofThe Gaberlunzie's Wallet(1843),Miller of Deanhaugh(1845),Poems(1856),100 Songs with Music(1865), and aLife of David Roberts, R.A.(1866).
BALLANTYNE, ROBERT MICHAEL (1825-1894).—Writer of tales for boys,b.in Edinburgh, was a connection of the well-known printers. As a youth he spent some years in the service of the Hudson's Bay Co., and was then a member of Constable's printing firm. In 1856 he took to literature as a profession, andpub.about 80 tales, which, abounding in interesting adventure and information, and characterised by a thoroughly healthy tone, hadgreat popularity. Among them areThe Young Fur Traders(1856),The Coral Island,Fighting the Flames,Martin Rattler,The World of Ice,The Dog Crusoe,Erling the Bold, andBlack Ivory. B. was also an accomplished water-colour artist, and in all respects lived up to the ideals he sought to instil into his readers. Hed.at Rome.
BANCROFT, GEORGE (1800-1891).—American historian,b.at Worcester, Massachusetts, and aftergrad.at Harvard, studied in Germany, where he became acquainted and corresponded with Goethe, Hegel, and other leaders of German thought. Returning to America he began hisHistory of the United States(1834-74). The work covers the period from the discovery of the Continent to the conclusion of the Revolutionary War in 1782. His other great work isThe History of the Formation of the Constitution of the United States(1882). B. filled various political offices, and was in 1846 Minister Plenipotentiary to England, and in 1867 Minister to Prussia. His writing is clear and vigorous, and his facts generally accurate, but he is a good deal of a partisan.
BANIM, JOHN (1798-1842).—Novelist, began life as a miniature painter, but was led by the success of his first book,Tales of the O'Hara Family, to devote himself to literature. The object which he set before himself was to become to Ireland what Scott has been to Scotland, and the influence of his model is distinctly traceable in his writings. His strength lies in the delineation of the characters of the Irish lower classes, and the impulses, often misguided and criminal, by which they are influenced, and in this he has shown remarkable power. The first series of theO'Hara Talesappeared in 1825, the second in 1826. Other works areThe Croppy(1828),The Denounced(1830),The Smuggler(1831),The Mayor of Windgap, and his last,Father Connell. Most of these deal with the darker and more painful phases of life, but the feeling shown in the last-named is brighter and tenderer. B. latterly suffered from illness and consequent poverty, which were alleviated by a pension from Government. He also wrote some poems, includingThe Celt's Paradise, and one or two plays. In theO'Hara Tales, he was assisted by his brother, MICHAEL BANIM (1796-1874), and there is difficulty in allocating their respective contributions. After the death of John, Michael wroteClough Fionn(1852), andThe Town of the Cascades(1864).
BANNATYNE, RICHARD (d.1605).—Secretary to John Knox, compiledMemorials of Transactions in Scotland from 1569 to 1573.
BARBAULD, ANNA LETITIA (1743-1825).—Poetess, etc.,dau.ofDr. John Aikin(q.v.), wasb.at Kibworth-Hencourt, Leicestershire. Herf.kept an academy for boys, whose education she shared, and thus became acquainted with the classics. In 1773 shepub.a collection of miscellaneous poems, which was well received, and in the following year she married the Rev. R. Barbauld, a French Protestant and dissenting minister, who also conducted a school near Palgrave in Suffolk. Into this enterprise Mrs. B. threw herself with great energy, and, mainly owing to her talents and reputation, it proved a success and was afterwardscarried on at Hampstead and Newington Green. Meantime, she continued her literary occupations, and brought out various devotional works, including herHymns in Prose for Children. These were followed byEvenings at Home,Selections from the English Essayists,The Letters of Samuel Richardson, with a life prefixed, and a selection from the British novelists with introductory essay.
BARBOUR, JOHN (1316?-1395).—Poet. Of B.'s youth nothing is certainly known, but it is believed that he wasb.near Aberdeen, and studied at Oxford and Paris. He entered the Church, and rose to ecclesiastical preferment and Royal favour. He is known to have been Archdeacon of Aberdeen in 1357, when, and again in 1364, he went with some young scholars to Oxford, and he also held various civil offices in connection with the exchequer and the King's household. His principal poem,The Bruce, was in progress in 1376. It consists of 14,000 octosyllabic lines, and celebrates the praises of Robert the Bruce and James Douglas, the flowers of Scottish chivalry. This poem is almost the sole authority on the history it deals with, but is much more than a rhyming chronicle; it contains many fine descriptive passages, and sings the praises of freedom. Its style is somewhat bald and severe. Other poems ascribed to B. areThe Legend of Troy, andLegends of the Saints, probably translations. B. devoted a perpetual annuity of 20 shillings, bestowed upon him by the King, to provide for a mass to be sung for himself and his parents, and this was duly done in the church of St. Machar until the Reformation.
The Bruce, edited by C. Innes for Spalding Club (1856), and for Early Engl. Text Soc. by W.W. Skeat, 1870-77; and for Scott. Text Soc. (1894);The WallaceandThe Brucere-studied, J.T.T. Brown, 1900; G. Neilson in Chambers' Cyc. Eng. Lit. (1903).