His
literary
works are: (That Boy:
Who Shall Have Him ?
Who Shall Have Him ?
Warner - World's Best Literature - v26 to v30 - Tur to Zor and Index
Her singular
gifts and her faculty for poetic imagery are
richly shown in Gonzalvo of Cordova' (1810);
a drama, Pedarias' (1811), a tragedy of ancient
Peruvian civilization; and the five-act master-
piece (Ina'; in addition to which a series of
" Translations from the Italian' are both spirited
and accurate.
Daems, Servaas Domien (dams). A Flem-
ish poet; born at Noorderwyk, about 1838.
His verse is seen at its best in the collection
called (Luit en Fluit' (1884).
Dahl, Konrad Neuman Hjelm (däl). A
Norwegian story-teller; born in the parish of
Drontheim, June 24, 1843. He is author of a
series of stories and novels of Norwegian and
Lapp life, with much insight into nature and
into the heart of the people. Most notable
among them are: “The Finnish Youth (1873);
* The Lion (1874); (Eda Mansika) (1875);
(The Voyager in the Icy Sea' (1878).
Dahl or Dal, Dalj, Vladimir Ivanovitch
(dal). A Russian story-writer and etymologist ;
born in Lugan, Nov. 22, 1801; died in Mos-
cow, Oct. 4, 1872. He wrote many powerful
realistic tales, besides an 'Expository Diction-
ary of High Russian Speech? (1861-68) and a
dictionary of proverbs.
Dahlgren, Fredrik August (dälgren). A
Swedish poet and dramatist; born at Nord-
mark, Aug. 20, 1816. He has written many
dialect songs and ballads, collections of which
were published in three volumes (1876). These
have attained an extraordinary degree of pop-
ularity. Of his dramas many have been very
successful; his 'Vermlandingarne, a musical
drama (1846), had more than 100 consecutive
representations. He has translated a great
many dramas from foreign languages, and has
written a history of the Swedish stage.
Dahlgren, Karl Fredrik. A Swedish poet
and humorist (1791-1844); born at Stensbruk
in East Gothland. He excelled in descriptions
of nature and in the idyllic burlesque. Many
of his songs and ballads have a permanent
place in the treasury of Swedish popular song,
For years he published a Muses’ Almanac, con-
taining his stories and comic sketches. His
novel (Nahum Fredrik Bergström's Chronicle )
(1831 ) is a work of distinguished merit.
Dahlgren, Madeleine Vinton. An Ameri-
can prose-writer and poet, wife of the late Ad.
miral Dahlgren; born in Gallipolis, O. , about
1835. Her works include: Idealities) (1859);
"South Sea Sketches) (1881); (Etiquette of
Social Life in Washington (1881); (Memoirs
of John A. Dahlgren' (1882); (The Lost Name);
and Lights and Shadows of a Life) (1886).
For her Spanish translation of Donoso Cortes's
(Catholicism, Liberalism, and Socialism,' she
received the thanks of Pius IX.
Dahlmann, Friedrich Christoph (däl'män).
A German historian and publicist; born in
Wismar, May 13, 1785; died in Bonn, Dec. 5,
1860. His attainments and popularity gave
him great influence in Hanoverian politics, but
he lost his professorship at Göttingen because
or his liberal opinions, and after many vicissi-
tudes devoted himself to historical writing.
His History of the English Revolution (1844)
and History of the French Revolution' (1845)
are magnificent studies; but it is in the (His-
tory of Denmark (1840-43) that his powers are
most brilliantly displayed.
Dahn, Felix (dän). A distinguished German
poet, novelist, and historian; born at Ham-
burg, Feb. 9, 1834. He was professor of juris-
prudence successively in the universities of
Munich, Würtzburg, Königsberg, and Breslau.
Among his historical works is (The Kings of
the Germans,' his masterpiece in this depart-
ment (6 vols. , 1861–71). He is author also of
many tractates on the jurisprudence of the
ancient Germans, and the civil and criminal
law and procedure of modern German States.
He has also written epic and lyric poems re-
markable for strong thought, wide horizon, and
verbal richness. Of the epics may be named
(Harald and Theano) (1856); of the lyrics,
(Ballads and Songs) (1878). He is author also
of several historical novels, uniting profound
scholarship with poetic fancy; foremost among
them (The Struggle for Rome) (1876), with
scene laid in the 6th century. He has written
stories of contemporary life as well; and dra-
mas, as (German Fidelity) and (King Rod-
eric. *
D'Alembert. See Alembert.
Dalin, Olof von (däl'in). A distinguished
Swedish poet and historian, “father of modern
Swedish literature”; born at Vinberga, in Hal-
land, August 1708; died Aug. 12, 1763. He
found Swedish poetry over-austere and melan-
choly; he infused into it a sense of the joy of
existence. He at the same time enriched the
Swedish mother tongue with elements of vocab-
ulary and forms of expression from foreign
languages and literatures, which to some ex-
tent modified the native speech. The influence
of the study of the French classical drama is
seen in his epic poem (Sweden's Liberties
(1742), his drama (Brynhilda) (1738), and his
comedy (The Jealous Man (1738). But in
his numerous songs and ballads he is a Swede,
with a rich fund of humor. His (History of
the Kingdom of Sweden' (4 vols. ), reaching
to the death of Charles IX. , holds an honorable
place in Swedish historical literature. *
Dall, Caroline Wells. An American prose-
writer; born in Boston, Mass. , June 22, 1822.
She has been an industrious literary worker,
and is the author of many books, in which
are included : (Essays and Sketches) (1849);
(Woman's Right to Labor) (1860); Egypt's
Place in History) (1868); Patty Gray's Jour-
ney to the Cotton Islands); and "What We
Really Know about Shakespeare' (1885).
Dall, William Healey. An American nat-
uralist and author; born in Boston, Mass. , Aug.
1
1
1
1
9
## p. 130 (#146) ############################################
130
DALLAS-DANA
a
21, 1845; is a member of many of the scien-
tific societies at home and abroad. His scien-
tific articles include about two hundred titles.
Among his published books are : (Alaska and
its Resources) (1870); (The Currents and Tem.
peratures of Bering Sea and the Adjacent
Waters) (1882); and Report on the Mollusca,
Brachypoda, and Pelecypoda) of the Blake
dredging expedition in the West Indies (1886).
He has further published (Pacific Coast Pilot)
and Coast Pilot of Alaska. '
Dallas, Robert Charles. An English poet,
novelist, and dramatist; born in Kingston,
Jamaica, 1754; died in Normandy, France, 1824.
His publications include : “Poems); Lucretia,
a tragedy); (Moral Essays) (1797); Aubrey,'
a novel; and (The Morlands, Tales Illustrat-
ive of the Simple and the Surprising (1805).
He was both friend and adviser of Lord Byron,
and in the last year of his life published Recol.
lections of the Life of Lord Byron from 1808
to the End of 1814.
Dall' Ongaro, Francesco (dal'ong-gär'o).
An Italian poet (1808–73); born at Mansue
in Treviso. He was a priest; being also an ar-
dent patriot, he came into disfavor with the
ecclesiastical and civil authorities at Padua,
and was suspended from priestly functions.
In 1848 he took part in the revolutionary move-
ment, and after its suppression was an exile
till 1859. His voluminous writings, both prose
and verse, are in part literary, in part politi-
cal, but all inspired by liberalism and patriotic
sentiment. His principal works are : Poems)
(2 vols. , 1840); several dramas - one of them,
(Bianca Capello,' written for Ristori; some
comedies; several novels; besides legendary
stories, hymns, and several popular ballads.
Dalrymple, Sir David, Lord Halles. A
Scotch jurist and historian; born in Edinburgh,
Oct. 28, 1726; died Nov. 29, 1792. He was on
the bench for many years. His writings include
(Annals of Scotland, a valuable work, embra-
cing the period from Malcolm Canmore to the
accession of the house of Stuart.
Dalsème, Achille (däl-sām'). A French
journalist, topical writer, and novelist; born in
Nice, Sept. 4, 1840. He connected himself with
various political sheets in the capital, and
wrote: (Claude's Folly) (1884), «The Sins of
Themis) (1889), and other studies of contem-
porary manners; ( The Bazaine Affair' (1873);
and (The Art of War) (1883), a collection of
light sketches.
Daly, Charles Patrick. An American jurist
and author; born in New York city, Oct. 31,
1816. He had a distinguished judicial career
in his native city, becoming justice of the court
of common pleas in 1844, first judge of the
court in 1857, and chief justice in 1871, retiring
on account of age in 1886. He is now presi-
dent of the American Geographical Society.
His works include: (First Settlement of Jews
in North America'; 'What We Know of Maps
and Map Drawing before Mercator); and simi-
lar investigations.
Daly, (John) Augustin. An American dram-
atist, and proprietor of Daly's Theatre, New
York; born in Plymouth, N. C. , July 20, 1838.
Included in his original plays are: Divorce's
(Pique); Horizon'; Under the Gaslight);
and a story called “Peg Woffington, a Tribute
to the Actress and the Woman.
Dana, Charles Anderson. An eminent
American journalist and man of letters; born
at Hinsdale, N. H. , Aug. 8, 1819; died at
Dosoris, Long Island, Oct. 17, 1897. Studied
at Harvard. In 1842 he was a member of the
Brook Farm Association. His first journalistic
experience was in Boston. From 1847 until
1862 he was managing editor of the New York
Tribune; he was Assistant Secretary of War
in 1863 and until the close of the war. The
New York Sun was reorganized in 1868, from
which year until his death he was its editor.
With George Ripley he edited (The American
Cyclopædia) (1857-63; revised edition was pub-
lished in 1873-76); he also edited (The House-
hold Book of Poetry) (1857), of which many
editions have been printed. His war remi-
niscences are now (1897) being published.
Dana, James Dwight. An American scien-
tist and writer; born in New York, 1813; died
1895. His researches into geology made him
famous, and his professorship at Yale proved
epoch-making in the history of that seat of
learning. He published: (System of Miner-
alogy); (Manual of Mineralogy); (Text-Book
of Geology); “Corals and Coral Islands); (The
Geological Story Briefly Told"; etc.
Dana, Mrs. Mary. See Shindler.
Dana, Richard Henry, the Elder. An
American poet and essayist; born at Cam-
bridge, Mass. , Nov. 15, 1787; died Feb. 2, 1879.
His lectures on Shakespeare's characters, de-
livered in the principal cities of the Atlantic
coast (1839-40), awakened a deep public inter-
est. His principal poems are: (The Change
of Home (1824); (The Dying Raven' (1825);
(The Buccaneers) (1827), specially noteworthy
for its magnificent descriptions of the vicissi.
tudes of ocean scenery. To a periodical pub-
lication, The Idle Man (N. Y. , 1821-22), of which
he was editor, he contributed critical papers
and several short stories; among them Paul
Fenton,' and (Edward and Mary. *
Dana, Richard Henry, the Younger. A dis.
tinguished American publicist, son of R. H.
the Elder; born at Cambridge, Mass. , Aug. 1,
1815; died Jan. 6, 1882. Obliged to suspend col-
lege studies because of an affection of the eyes,
he shipped as a seaman on board a whaling
vessel. His observations during the two years
of his life as a common sailor are contained
in his celebrated narrative "Two Years Before
the Mast! (1837). Returning to Boston, he
studied law and was admitted to the bar. In
1841 he published " The Seaman's Friend, often
afterward republished under the title (The Sea-
man's Manual. ? He details his experiences and
observations during a visit to Cuba, in the little
:
## p. 131 (#147) ############################################
DANA - DARLEY
131
volume (To Cuba and Back) (1859). He edited
Wheaton's Elements of International Law)
(1806), and wrote a series of Letters on Ital-
ian Unity) (1871). *
Dana, Mrs. William Starr. See Parsons,
Mrs. Frances Theodora.
Dancourt (dän-kör), properly Florent Car-
ton. A French playwright and dramatic artist
(1661-1725); born at Fontainebleau. His best
low comedies or farces are : 'The Fashionable
Chevalier); (The Winsome Gardener. He pre-
sents village life with perfect truth, and is mas-
ter of village patois. Voltaire ranks him next
after Molière for low comedy.
Dändliker, Karl (den'dlik-er). A Swiss his-
torian; born in Rorbas, Zürich, May 6, 1849.
Among his works are : (Manual of the History
of the Swiss People (1875), and “Smaller His-
tory of Switzerland) (1889).
Daneo, Giovanni (dän'ā-7). An Italian
dramatist; born at St. Remy in Piedmont, May
16, 1824. He wrote some dramas of very con-
siderable merit: "Suleika'; 'Elisa di Montal-
pino); also novels : (Memoirs of a Gentleman
and (The Castle of Bardespina. His poetical
works consist of two volumes of miscellaneous
(Poems) and (Verses, with (Gotama) and
Rafaello Sanzio Temosfero.
Danforth, Samuel. An American clergyman
of learning and influence. He was born in
Roxbury, Mass. , Dec. 18, 1666, and died in
Taunton, Mass. , Nov. 14, 1727. For a long
period he was pastor of the Congregational
Church at Taunton, Mass. , and during a reli-
gious awakening wrote three famous descript-
ive letters. He published a Eulogy on
Thomas Leonard' (1713); (Essay Concerning
the Singing of Psalms) (1723); and prepared
an Indian dictionary now the property of the
Massachusetts Historical Society,
Dangeau, Philippe de Courcillon, Marquis
de (dän-go'). A French writer of memoirs ;
born in 1638; died in Paris (? ) in 1720. He
was one of the courtiers about Louis XIV. ;
his Memoirs) and Journal,' particularly as re-
gards the period between 1684 and 1720, being
a rich mine from which much history has been
quarried.
Daniel, Samuel. An English poet, historian,
and rhyming chronicler; born near Taunton,
Somersetshire, 1562 ; died near Beckington,
Wiltshire, October 1619. He was conspicuous
at the courts of Elizabeth and James I. , writing
a rhymed History of the Civil Wars between
the Houses of York and Lancaster) (1595),
and a prose History of England” (to Edward
111. : 1613-18). His style as a sonneteer and
lyrist appears in the collection named Delia)
(1592).
Daniels, Mrs. Cora (Linn). An American
novelist ; born in 1852. She resides at Frank-
lin, Mass. , and has written : “Sardia, a Story of
Love); As It Is to Be. )
Daniels, William Haven. An American
prose-writer; born in Franklin, Mass. , May
18, 1836.
His literary works are: (That Boy:
Who Shall Have Him ? ) (1878); “The Tem-
perance Reform and its Great Reformers)
(1878); Moody, his Words, Work, and Work-
ers) (1879); and (A Short History of the People
Called Methodist) (1882).
Danilevskij, Grigorij Petrovich (dän-ēl.
ef'ske). A Russian story-teller (1829-90); born
at Danilovka in the government of Charkof.
His stories are either descriptive of ethnograph-
ical peculiarities, and on that account specially
valuable, or they are historical novels. To the
former class belong: (The Refugees); (The
Refugees' Return); Liberty. His principal
historical novels are : (Mirowitsh); (The Burn-
ing of Moscow); 'The Black Year.
Dannelly, Mrs. Elizabeth Otis (Marshall).
An American Southern verse-writer. She was
born in Georgia in 1838. She has written :
(Cactus, or Thorns and Blossoms); “Wayside
Flowers.
Dante Alighieri (dän'te äl-e-gyā're). The
greatest of Italian poets; born in Florence,
1265; died in Ravenna, Sept. 14, 1321. * (See
Charles Eliot Norton's biography, and the bib-
liographical notes following, in the Library. )
Da Ponte, Lorenzo. An Italian dramatist
and author; born in Venice, March 10, 1749;
died in New York, Aug. 17, 1838. He wrote
the libretti for Mozart's operas (Don Giovanni)
and Figaro. He came to America in 1805,
and in 1828 was professor of Italian in Colum-
bia College. He wrote many plays, sonnets,
and translations, and published several works
of instruction in the Italian language; also his
own (Life) (1823); (History of the Florentine
Republic and the Medici? (1833).
D'Arblay, Madame. See Burney.
Dargan, Clara Victoria. (Mrs. Maclean. )
An American poet and prose-writer; born near
Winnsboro, S. C. , about 1840. Her writings in-
clude the poem Forever Thine) (1859), under
the pseudonym of “Claudia," and stories signed
« Esther Chesney » (1860). She was literary
editor of the Edgefield Advertiser (1863); and
is author of Riverlands, a story of life on
the Ashley River.
Darimon, Alfred (där-e-môn'). A French
journalist and writer; born in Lille, Dec. 17,
1819. An aptitude for politics and political
writing occasioned his most telling work with
the pen, especially (The History of Twelve
Years, 1857–69, Notes and Recollections) (1883);
(Through a Revolution (1884); (The Agony
of the Empire) (2d ed. 1891); and others
equally popular.
Darley, Felix Octavius Carr. An American
artist; born in Philadelphia, June 23, 1822; died
in Claymont, Del. , March 27, 1888. His illus-
trations of literary masterpieces gave pleasure
to thousands, and made him famous. His best
work comprises his drawings to accompany
the text of Rip Van Winkle); (Sleepy Hol-
low); (Courtship of Miles Standish); “Scarlet
## p. 132 (#148) ############################################
132
DARLEY
DASENT
Letter'; Evangeline); the novels of Cooper,
Dickens, and others, besides many special pict-
ures. His book (Sketches Abroad with Pen
and Pencil' (1868) is well known.
Darley, George. An Irish poet and critic;
born in Dublin, 1795; died near Rome (? ), Nov.
23, 1846. He wrote valuable studies of other
men's work, and was a mathematician of pro-
fundity; in addition to which claims to atten-
tion, he is the author of "Sylvia, or the May
Queen (1827), a fine dramatic poem ; 'Errors
of Extasie and Other Poems); and Nepenthe,
a weird self-revelation in morbid verse.
Darling, Mrs. Flora (Adams). An Ameri-
can novelist; born in New Hampshire in 1840.
Among her works are: Mrs. Darling's Letters)
(1884); (A Wayward Winning Woman; (The
Bourbon Lily); A Social Diplomat); (The
Senator's Daughter. '
Darlington, William. An American scien-
tist, well-known botanist, and author. He was
born in Birmingham, Pa. , April 28, 1782; died
in Westchester, Pa. , April 23, 1863. He was
a soldier in the War of 1812, and a Mem-
ber of Congress from 1815 to 1817 and 1819 to
1823. He published a descriptive catalogue of
plants in Pennsylvania : Flora Cestrica) (1837
and 1853); (Mutual Influence of Habits and
Disease (1804); (Agricultural Botany) (1847);
and in 1853 a genus of pitcher plant found in
California was named in his honor, (Darling-
tonia.
Darmesteter, Agnes Mary Frances (Robin-
son). An English poet; born in Leamington,
1857. She has attained great proficiency in
Greek studies, her verse showing the influence
of Hellenic literature. In 1888 she married
James Darmesteter, the Orientalist. Her writ-
ings include: A Handful of Honeysuckle)
(1878); (An Italian Garden (1886); (Lyrics)
(1891); and (Retrospect) (1893), - volumes of
verse. * See “Robinson” in Library. ?
Darmesteter, James (där-me-ste-tår'). A
distinguished French Orientalist; born at Châ-
teau-Salins, March 28, 1849; died Oct. 19, 1894.
Besides works of strict scholarship on the
Oriental literatures, as (Ormazd and Ahriman);
(Iranian Studies) ; (Origins of Persian Poetry,'
he wrote many essays on miscellaneous sub-
jects. There is an English translation of
some of his Selected Essays. He translated
with Mills the (Zend-Avesta) for the "Sacred
Books of the East) series, published by the
University of Oxford and edited by Max Mül-
ler. *
Daru, Count Pierre Antoine (dä-rü). A
French historian and poet; born in Mont-
pellier, Jan. 12, 1767 ; died on his estate near
Meulan, Sept. 5, 1829. A translation of Horace
into French verse (1800) was greatly admired ;
but his masterpiece is a History of the Re-
public of Venice) (1819), although his (Cléopé-
die, or Theory of Literary Reputations) (1800)
is a poem containing much to recommend it.
D'Arusmont, Madame Frances (da-rüs-món).
(Maiden name Fanny Wright. ) An American
philanthropist and author; born in Dundee,
Scotland, Sept. 6, 1795; died in Cincinnati, (. ,
Dec. 2, 1852. She visited this country sev-
eral times, and in 1825 made an unsuccessful
attempt to establish a settlement for the ele.
vation of the negro at Memphis, Tenn. In
later years she lectured on social, religious,
and political questions. Among her works are :
(Views on Society and Manners in America);
(Altorf,' a tragedy (1819); "Lectures on Free
Inquiry) (1836).
Darwin, Charles Robert. A celebrated Eng.
Tish naturalist and philosopher; born at Shrews-
bury, Feb. 12, 1809; died April 19, 1882. His
life work as a naturalist began in 1831, when
he sailed with Captain Fitzroy in the Beagle
for a surveying expedition round the globe.
From this expedition Darwin returned toward
the end of 1836; in 1839 appeared his Jour-
nal of Researches, afterward revised and pub-
lished under the better known title (A Natur-
alist's Voyage. Several monographs followed
on various points of land and marine zoology;
but not until 1859 did the work appear which
brought to Darwin world-wide and enduring
fame -- (On the Origin of Species by Means
of Natural Selection. (The Descent of Man
and Selection in Relation to Sex appeared in
1871, and “The Expression of the Emotions in
Men and Animals) in 1872. In 1868 he pub.
lished (The Variation of Animals and Plants
under Domestication. He is buried in West-
minster Abbey. *
Darwin, Erasmus. An English naturalist
and poet, grandfather of Charles R. ; born in.
Elton, Nottingham, Dec. 12, 1731; died at
Breadwall, near Derby, April 18, 1802. «The
permanent interest in his writings depends
upon his exposition of the form of evolution-
ism afterwards expounded by Lamarck. He
caught a glimpse of many observations and
principles afterwards turned to account by his
grandson, Charles Darwin; but though a great
observer and an acute thinker, he missed the
characteristic doctrine which made the success
of his grandson's scheme. His literary works
are : (The Botanic Garden (1781); a descript-
ive poem, "The Temple of Nature, or the
Origin of Society) (1803), a specimen of highly
didactic versification; and (Zoonomia' (1794-
98), a prose work on organic life. As a poet
he is lofty and instructive.
Dasent, Sir George. An English philologist
and novelist; born in the island of St. Vincent,
1818. He was for a while one of the editors
of the London Times, and was one of the
Civil Service Commissioners. He is eminent
as a scholar in the Norse languages, particu-
larly Icelandic, and has translated the (Younger
Edda,' besides many other ancient stories and
legends of Iceland, and written (The Norse-
man in Iceland) (1858). Among his original
stories are: Annals of an Eventful Life):
( Three to One); (Half a Life. )
## p. 133 (#149) ############################################
DASH -DAVIDS
133
1
Dash, Countess (däsh), pseudonym of Ga-
brielle Anne Cisterne de Courtiras, Vicomtesse
de Saint-Mars. A French novelist (1804-72);
born at Poitiers. She was a very prolific
writer, producing often five or six stories in the
course of a year. Life in high society is her
theme, and especially wayward love in high
society, as the very titles of most of her novels
indicate : “Bussy-Rabutin's Amours); "Gallant-
ries of the Court of Louis XV. ? ; (Last Amours
of Mme. du Barry); Adventures of a Young
Married Woman.
Dassoucy or d'Assoucy, Charles Coippeau,
called (dä-sö-se'). A French burlesque poet;
born in Paris, Oct. 16, 1605; died there (? ),
1679. He acquired notoriety as the writer of
(Ovid in a Good Humor,' and of a burlesque
of Claudian's "Rape of Proserpine); but he is
remembered mainly because of a contemptuous
allusion to him by Boileau. He seems to have
possessed some talent for musical composition,
but called himself “the emperor of burlesque. ”
Daubenton, Lonis Jean Marie (do-ban-
tôn'). A French botanist and naturalist; born
in Montbar, Burgundy, May 29, 1716; died in
Paris, Dec. 31, 1799. He contributed to the
first five volumes of Buffon's Natural His-
tory) anatomical supplements which form, from
a scientific point of view, the most important
part of that work.
D'Aubigné, Jean Henri Merle (do-bēn-yā').
A celebrated Swiss Protestant church historian;
born near Geneva, Aug. 16, 1794; died at
Geneva, Oct. 24, 1872. He was professor of
historical theology at Geneva (1831-72). His
great work was History of the Reformation)
(1835-53; new ed. 1877-78), with its continu-
ation History of the Reformation in the Time
of Calvin (1863-76).
Daudet, Alphonse (do-dā). A distinguished
French novelist; born at Nîmes, May 13, 1840;
died Dec. 16, 1897. He sought fortune in Paris
in 1857: two booklets of poems were failures;
two plays -(The Last Idol (1862) and (The
White Daisy) (1865)- had more success; after
some years he discovered his true field. His
charming little stories, ( The Little Thing : Story
of a Child (1868); Letters from my Mill
(1869); Monday Tales) (1873), established his
reputation; and his next novel – (Fromont Jr.
and Risler Sr. (1874)- wa
was translated into all
the European languages. Not less celebrated
are : (The Nabob) (1878); (Kings in Exile)
(1880); Numa Roumestan (1882); «The Gos-
peller) (1883); (Sappho) (1884). He struck a
new and a happier vein in the (Tartarin)
series : Prodigious Adventures of Tartarin);
(Tartarin in the Alps); 'Port Tarascon. He
writes reminiscences of his early years in the
French capital in (Thirty Years of Paris )
(1888), and in Recollections of a Man of
Letters) (1889). *
Daudet, Ernest. A French novelist, brother
of Alphonse D. ; born at Nîmes, May 31, 1837.
His most notable novels are: (The Venus of
Gordes); ( The Bloom of Sin); (Martha. ' He
is author of an autobiographical sketch, My
Brother and Myself (1882); and has written
some historical sketches, as a "History of the
Royalist Conspiracies in the South during the
Revolution); History of the Emigration. '
Daumer, Georg Friedrich (dou'mer). A
German poet and philosophical writer (1800-75);
born in Nuremberg. He underwent some re-
markable revolutions of thought concerning
religion : in his student days he leaned strongly
to Pietism ; next he was the declared foe of
the Christian religion; about 1859 he embraced
Catholicism and became one of its foremost
champions. He wrote among many other phil-
osophical tractates : (Hints toward a System
of Speculative Philosophy) (1831); to his sec-
ond period belongs : The Fire and Moloch
Worship of the Hebrews) (1842); to his third :
My Conversion (1859). Of his poetical works,
the Flowers of Song from Hafiz) may be
named,-a very beautiful transcription of the
Oriental poet, with free variations in the very
spirit of Hafiz himself. He wrote also (Beau-
tiful Souls: a Little Wreath of Legends and
Poems) (1862); Legends and Poems of St.
Mary.
Davenant, William. An English poet and
playwright; born at Oxford in February 1606;
died April 7, 1668. A story was current in
his lifetime that he was an illegitimate son
of Shakespeare, and he seemed contented
enough to be thought his son. ! ) He wrote
many plays and poems, but none possessing
any distinguished merit; he succeeded Ben
Jonson as poet laureate of England, however.
He attempted epic composition in (Gondibert,'
and an opera, «The Siege of Rhodes.
Davenport, John. An American divine;
born in Coventry, England, 1597 ; died in Bos-
ton, March 15, 1670. Author of "The Knowl.
edge of Christ) (1653); (The Saint's Anchor
Hold' (1701). He was one of the founders of
New Haven, Conn. In 1660 he hid the regi.
cides Goffe and Whalley from their pursuers.
Davenport, Robert. An English poet and
dramatist, who flourished about 1623 and died
after 1640, but whom we know only through
his (A Crowne for a Conquerour and Too
Late to Call Backe Yesterday. Two Poems, the
One Divine, the Other Morall (1623); King
John and Matilda' (1655), a tragedy; and two
comedies : (A New Trick to Cheat the Divell)
(1639), and “The City Night Cap' (printed
1661). That he was associated with Shakes.
peare in producing (Henry I. and Henry II. ?
seems established, and it is almost certain that
he is the author of a play called (The Pirate.
Davids, Thomas William Rhys. An Eng-
lish publicist, lawyer, and scholar; born at Col-
chester, England, May 12, 1843. He was edu-
cated at the University of Breslau; from 1866
on, filled judicial places in Ceylon and acted
as Archäological Commissioner. In 1877 he
was called to the London bar, and is now
1
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.
134
DAVIDSON - DAVIS
1
professor of Pali and Buddhist literature in
University College, London. Among his works
are : (Buddhism (1877); translations of (Bud-
dhist Birth Stories) (1880); (Buddhist Suttas)
and “Vinaya Texts) (1881), published in (The
Sacred Books of the East. '
Davidson, John. A Scotch poet, novelist,
and miscellaneous writer; born at Barrhead,
Renfrewshire, 1857. He was at first a teacher,
but in 1890 went to London and adopted the
literary career, writing for the Speaker and
other journals. He has written : (Fleet Street
Eclogues) (1893); (A Random Itinerary)
(1894); "Ballads and Songs) (1894); (Plays)
(1894); (Earl Lavender) (1895); and two noy-
els : (Perſervidand Baptist Lake) (1894).
Davidson, Lucretia Maria An American
poet; born in Plattsburg, N. Y. , Sept. 27, 1808;
died there, Aug. 27, 1825.
gifts and her faculty for poetic imagery are
richly shown in Gonzalvo of Cordova' (1810);
a drama, Pedarias' (1811), a tragedy of ancient
Peruvian civilization; and the five-act master-
piece (Ina'; in addition to which a series of
" Translations from the Italian' are both spirited
and accurate.
Daems, Servaas Domien (dams). A Flem-
ish poet; born at Noorderwyk, about 1838.
His verse is seen at its best in the collection
called (Luit en Fluit' (1884).
Dahl, Konrad Neuman Hjelm (däl). A
Norwegian story-teller; born in the parish of
Drontheim, June 24, 1843. He is author of a
series of stories and novels of Norwegian and
Lapp life, with much insight into nature and
into the heart of the people. Most notable
among them are: “The Finnish Youth (1873);
* The Lion (1874); (Eda Mansika) (1875);
(The Voyager in the Icy Sea' (1878).
Dahl or Dal, Dalj, Vladimir Ivanovitch
(dal). A Russian story-writer and etymologist ;
born in Lugan, Nov. 22, 1801; died in Mos-
cow, Oct. 4, 1872. He wrote many powerful
realistic tales, besides an 'Expository Diction-
ary of High Russian Speech? (1861-68) and a
dictionary of proverbs.
Dahlgren, Fredrik August (dälgren). A
Swedish poet and dramatist; born at Nord-
mark, Aug. 20, 1816. He has written many
dialect songs and ballads, collections of which
were published in three volumes (1876). These
have attained an extraordinary degree of pop-
ularity. Of his dramas many have been very
successful; his 'Vermlandingarne, a musical
drama (1846), had more than 100 consecutive
representations. He has translated a great
many dramas from foreign languages, and has
written a history of the Swedish stage.
Dahlgren, Karl Fredrik. A Swedish poet
and humorist (1791-1844); born at Stensbruk
in East Gothland. He excelled in descriptions
of nature and in the idyllic burlesque. Many
of his songs and ballads have a permanent
place in the treasury of Swedish popular song,
For years he published a Muses’ Almanac, con-
taining his stories and comic sketches. His
novel (Nahum Fredrik Bergström's Chronicle )
(1831 ) is a work of distinguished merit.
Dahlgren, Madeleine Vinton. An Ameri-
can prose-writer and poet, wife of the late Ad.
miral Dahlgren; born in Gallipolis, O. , about
1835. Her works include: Idealities) (1859);
"South Sea Sketches) (1881); (Etiquette of
Social Life in Washington (1881); (Memoirs
of John A. Dahlgren' (1882); (The Lost Name);
and Lights and Shadows of a Life) (1886).
For her Spanish translation of Donoso Cortes's
(Catholicism, Liberalism, and Socialism,' she
received the thanks of Pius IX.
Dahlmann, Friedrich Christoph (däl'män).
A German historian and publicist; born in
Wismar, May 13, 1785; died in Bonn, Dec. 5,
1860. His attainments and popularity gave
him great influence in Hanoverian politics, but
he lost his professorship at Göttingen because
or his liberal opinions, and after many vicissi-
tudes devoted himself to historical writing.
His History of the English Revolution (1844)
and History of the French Revolution' (1845)
are magnificent studies; but it is in the (His-
tory of Denmark (1840-43) that his powers are
most brilliantly displayed.
Dahn, Felix (dän). A distinguished German
poet, novelist, and historian; born at Ham-
burg, Feb. 9, 1834. He was professor of juris-
prudence successively in the universities of
Munich, Würtzburg, Königsberg, and Breslau.
Among his historical works is (The Kings of
the Germans,' his masterpiece in this depart-
ment (6 vols. , 1861–71). He is author also of
many tractates on the jurisprudence of the
ancient Germans, and the civil and criminal
law and procedure of modern German States.
He has also written epic and lyric poems re-
markable for strong thought, wide horizon, and
verbal richness. Of the epics may be named
(Harald and Theano) (1856); of the lyrics,
(Ballads and Songs) (1878). He is author also
of several historical novels, uniting profound
scholarship with poetic fancy; foremost among
them (The Struggle for Rome) (1876), with
scene laid in the 6th century. He has written
stories of contemporary life as well; and dra-
mas, as (German Fidelity) and (King Rod-
eric. *
D'Alembert. See Alembert.
Dalin, Olof von (däl'in). A distinguished
Swedish poet and historian, “father of modern
Swedish literature”; born at Vinberga, in Hal-
land, August 1708; died Aug. 12, 1763. He
found Swedish poetry over-austere and melan-
choly; he infused into it a sense of the joy of
existence. He at the same time enriched the
Swedish mother tongue with elements of vocab-
ulary and forms of expression from foreign
languages and literatures, which to some ex-
tent modified the native speech. The influence
of the study of the French classical drama is
seen in his epic poem (Sweden's Liberties
(1742), his drama (Brynhilda) (1738), and his
comedy (The Jealous Man (1738). But in
his numerous songs and ballads he is a Swede,
with a rich fund of humor. His (History of
the Kingdom of Sweden' (4 vols. ), reaching
to the death of Charles IX. , holds an honorable
place in Swedish historical literature. *
Dall, Caroline Wells. An American prose-
writer; born in Boston, Mass. , June 22, 1822.
She has been an industrious literary worker,
and is the author of many books, in which
are included : (Essays and Sketches) (1849);
(Woman's Right to Labor) (1860); Egypt's
Place in History) (1868); Patty Gray's Jour-
ney to the Cotton Islands); and "What We
Really Know about Shakespeare' (1885).
Dall, William Healey. An American nat-
uralist and author; born in Boston, Mass. , Aug.
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130
DALLAS-DANA
a
21, 1845; is a member of many of the scien-
tific societies at home and abroad. His scien-
tific articles include about two hundred titles.
Among his published books are : (Alaska and
its Resources) (1870); (The Currents and Tem.
peratures of Bering Sea and the Adjacent
Waters) (1882); and Report on the Mollusca,
Brachypoda, and Pelecypoda) of the Blake
dredging expedition in the West Indies (1886).
He has further published (Pacific Coast Pilot)
and Coast Pilot of Alaska. '
Dallas, Robert Charles. An English poet,
novelist, and dramatist; born in Kingston,
Jamaica, 1754; died in Normandy, France, 1824.
His publications include : “Poems); Lucretia,
a tragedy); (Moral Essays) (1797); Aubrey,'
a novel; and (The Morlands, Tales Illustrat-
ive of the Simple and the Surprising (1805).
He was both friend and adviser of Lord Byron,
and in the last year of his life published Recol.
lections of the Life of Lord Byron from 1808
to the End of 1814.
Dall' Ongaro, Francesco (dal'ong-gär'o).
An Italian poet (1808–73); born at Mansue
in Treviso. He was a priest; being also an ar-
dent patriot, he came into disfavor with the
ecclesiastical and civil authorities at Padua,
and was suspended from priestly functions.
In 1848 he took part in the revolutionary move-
ment, and after its suppression was an exile
till 1859. His voluminous writings, both prose
and verse, are in part literary, in part politi-
cal, but all inspired by liberalism and patriotic
sentiment. His principal works are : Poems)
(2 vols. , 1840); several dramas - one of them,
(Bianca Capello,' written for Ristori; some
comedies; several novels; besides legendary
stories, hymns, and several popular ballads.
Dalrymple, Sir David, Lord Halles. A
Scotch jurist and historian; born in Edinburgh,
Oct. 28, 1726; died Nov. 29, 1792. He was on
the bench for many years. His writings include
(Annals of Scotland, a valuable work, embra-
cing the period from Malcolm Canmore to the
accession of the house of Stuart.
Dalsème, Achille (däl-sām'). A French
journalist, topical writer, and novelist; born in
Nice, Sept. 4, 1840. He connected himself with
various political sheets in the capital, and
wrote: (Claude's Folly) (1884), «The Sins of
Themis) (1889), and other studies of contem-
porary manners; ( The Bazaine Affair' (1873);
and (The Art of War) (1883), a collection of
light sketches.
Daly, Charles Patrick. An American jurist
and author; born in New York city, Oct. 31,
1816. He had a distinguished judicial career
in his native city, becoming justice of the court
of common pleas in 1844, first judge of the
court in 1857, and chief justice in 1871, retiring
on account of age in 1886. He is now presi-
dent of the American Geographical Society.
His works include: (First Settlement of Jews
in North America'; 'What We Know of Maps
and Map Drawing before Mercator); and simi-
lar investigations.
Daly, (John) Augustin. An American dram-
atist, and proprietor of Daly's Theatre, New
York; born in Plymouth, N. C. , July 20, 1838.
Included in his original plays are: Divorce's
(Pique); Horizon'; Under the Gaslight);
and a story called “Peg Woffington, a Tribute
to the Actress and the Woman.
Dana, Charles Anderson. An eminent
American journalist and man of letters; born
at Hinsdale, N. H. , Aug. 8, 1819; died at
Dosoris, Long Island, Oct. 17, 1897. Studied
at Harvard. In 1842 he was a member of the
Brook Farm Association. His first journalistic
experience was in Boston. From 1847 until
1862 he was managing editor of the New York
Tribune; he was Assistant Secretary of War
in 1863 and until the close of the war. The
New York Sun was reorganized in 1868, from
which year until his death he was its editor.
With George Ripley he edited (The American
Cyclopædia) (1857-63; revised edition was pub-
lished in 1873-76); he also edited (The House-
hold Book of Poetry) (1857), of which many
editions have been printed. His war remi-
niscences are now (1897) being published.
Dana, James Dwight. An American scien-
tist and writer; born in New York, 1813; died
1895. His researches into geology made him
famous, and his professorship at Yale proved
epoch-making in the history of that seat of
learning. He published: (System of Miner-
alogy); (Manual of Mineralogy); (Text-Book
of Geology); “Corals and Coral Islands); (The
Geological Story Briefly Told"; etc.
Dana, Mrs. Mary. See Shindler.
Dana, Richard Henry, the Elder. An
American poet and essayist; born at Cam-
bridge, Mass. , Nov. 15, 1787; died Feb. 2, 1879.
His lectures on Shakespeare's characters, de-
livered in the principal cities of the Atlantic
coast (1839-40), awakened a deep public inter-
est. His principal poems are: (The Change
of Home (1824); (The Dying Raven' (1825);
(The Buccaneers) (1827), specially noteworthy
for its magnificent descriptions of the vicissi.
tudes of ocean scenery. To a periodical pub-
lication, The Idle Man (N. Y. , 1821-22), of which
he was editor, he contributed critical papers
and several short stories; among them Paul
Fenton,' and (Edward and Mary. *
Dana, Richard Henry, the Younger. A dis.
tinguished American publicist, son of R. H.
the Elder; born at Cambridge, Mass. , Aug. 1,
1815; died Jan. 6, 1882. Obliged to suspend col-
lege studies because of an affection of the eyes,
he shipped as a seaman on board a whaling
vessel. His observations during the two years
of his life as a common sailor are contained
in his celebrated narrative "Two Years Before
the Mast! (1837). Returning to Boston, he
studied law and was admitted to the bar. In
1841 he published " The Seaman's Friend, often
afterward republished under the title (The Sea-
man's Manual. ? He details his experiences and
observations during a visit to Cuba, in the little
:
## p. 131 (#147) ############################################
DANA - DARLEY
131
volume (To Cuba and Back) (1859). He edited
Wheaton's Elements of International Law)
(1806), and wrote a series of Letters on Ital-
ian Unity) (1871). *
Dana, Mrs. William Starr. See Parsons,
Mrs. Frances Theodora.
Dancourt (dän-kör), properly Florent Car-
ton. A French playwright and dramatic artist
(1661-1725); born at Fontainebleau. His best
low comedies or farces are : 'The Fashionable
Chevalier); (The Winsome Gardener. He pre-
sents village life with perfect truth, and is mas-
ter of village patois. Voltaire ranks him next
after Molière for low comedy.
Dändliker, Karl (den'dlik-er). A Swiss his-
torian; born in Rorbas, Zürich, May 6, 1849.
Among his works are : (Manual of the History
of the Swiss People (1875), and “Smaller His-
tory of Switzerland) (1889).
Daneo, Giovanni (dän'ā-7). An Italian
dramatist; born at St. Remy in Piedmont, May
16, 1824. He wrote some dramas of very con-
siderable merit: "Suleika'; 'Elisa di Montal-
pino); also novels : (Memoirs of a Gentleman
and (The Castle of Bardespina. His poetical
works consist of two volumes of miscellaneous
(Poems) and (Verses, with (Gotama) and
Rafaello Sanzio Temosfero.
Danforth, Samuel. An American clergyman
of learning and influence. He was born in
Roxbury, Mass. , Dec. 18, 1666, and died in
Taunton, Mass. , Nov. 14, 1727. For a long
period he was pastor of the Congregational
Church at Taunton, Mass. , and during a reli-
gious awakening wrote three famous descript-
ive letters. He published a Eulogy on
Thomas Leonard' (1713); (Essay Concerning
the Singing of Psalms) (1723); and prepared
an Indian dictionary now the property of the
Massachusetts Historical Society,
Dangeau, Philippe de Courcillon, Marquis
de (dän-go'). A French writer of memoirs ;
born in 1638; died in Paris (? ) in 1720. He
was one of the courtiers about Louis XIV. ;
his Memoirs) and Journal,' particularly as re-
gards the period between 1684 and 1720, being
a rich mine from which much history has been
quarried.
Daniel, Samuel. An English poet, historian,
and rhyming chronicler; born near Taunton,
Somersetshire, 1562 ; died near Beckington,
Wiltshire, October 1619. He was conspicuous
at the courts of Elizabeth and James I. , writing
a rhymed History of the Civil Wars between
the Houses of York and Lancaster) (1595),
and a prose History of England” (to Edward
111. : 1613-18). His style as a sonneteer and
lyrist appears in the collection named Delia)
(1592).
Daniels, Mrs. Cora (Linn). An American
novelist ; born in 1852. She resides at Frank-
lin, Mass. , and has written : “Sardia, a Story of
Love); As It Is to Be. )
Daniels, William Haven. An American
prose-writer; born in Franklin, Mass. , May
18, 1836.
His literary works are: (That Boy:
Who Shall Have Him ? ) (1878); “The Tem-
perance Reform and its Great Reformers)
(1878); Moody, his Words, Work, and Work-
ers) (1879); and (A Short History of the People
Called Methodist) (1882).
Danilevskij, Grigorij Petrovich (dän-ēl.
ef'ske). A Russian story-teller (1829-90); born
at Danilovka in the government of Charkof.
His stories are either descriptive of ethnograph-
ical peculiarities, and on that account specially
valuable, or they are historical novels. To the
former class belong: (The Refugees); (The
Refugees' Return); Liberty. His principal
historical novels are : (Mirowitsh); (The Burn-
ing of Moscow); 'The Black Year.
Dannelly, Mrs. Elizabeth Otis (Marshall).
An American Southern verse-writer. She was
born in Georgia in 1838. She has written :
(Cactus, or Thorns and Blossoms); “Wayside
Flowers.
Dante Alighieri (dän'te äl-e-gyā're). The
greatest of Italian poets; born in Florence,
1265; died in Ravenna, Sept. 14, 1321. * (See
Charles Eliot Norton's biography, and the bib-
liographical notes following, in the Library. )
Da Ponte, Lorenzo. An Italian dramatist
and author; born in Venice, March 10, 1749;
died in New York, Aug. 17, 1838. He wrote
the libretti for Mozart's operas (Don Giovanni)
and Figaro. He came to America in 1805,
and in 1828 was professor of Italian in Colum-
bia College. He wrote many plays, sonnets,
and translations, and published several works
of instruction in the Italian language; also his
own (Life) (1823); (History of the Florentine
Republic and the Medici? (1833).
D'Arblay, Madame. See Burney.
Dargan, Clara Victoria. (Mrs. Maclean. )
An American poet and prose-writer; born near
Winnsboro, S. C. , about 1840. Her writings in-
clude the poem Forever Thine) (1859), under
the pseudonym of “Claudia," and stories signed
« Esther Chesney » (1860). She was literary
editor of the Edgefield Advertiser (1863); and
is author of Riverlands, a story of life on
the Ashley River.
Darimon, Alfred (där-e-môn'). A French
journalist and writer; born in Lille, Dec. 17,
1819. An aptitude for politics and political
writing occasioned his most telling work with
the pen, especially (The History of Twelve
Years, 1857–69, Notes and Recollections) (1883);
(Through a Revolution (1884); (The Agony
of the Empire) (2d ed. 1891); and others
equally popular.
Darley, Felix Octavius Carr. An American
artist; born in Philadelphia, June 23, 1822; died
in Claymont, Del. , March 27, 1888. His illus-
trations of literary masterpieces gave pleasure
to thousands, and made him famous. His best
work comprises his drawings to accompany
the text of Rip Van Winkle); (Sleepy Hol-
low); (Courtship of Miles Standish); “Scarlet
## p. 132 (#148) ############################################
132
DARLEY
DASENT
Letter'; Evangeline); the novels of Cooper,
Dickens, and others, besides many special pict-
ures. His book (Sketches Abroad with Pen
and Pencil' (1868) is well known.
Darley, George. An Irish poet and critic;
born in Dublin, 1795; died near Rome (? ), Nov.
23, 1846. He wrote valuable studies of other
men's work, and was a mathematician of pro-
fundity; in addition to which claims to atten-
tion, he is the author of "Sylvia, or the May
Queen (1827), a fine dramatic poem ; 'Errors
of Extasie and Other Poems); and Nepenthe,
a weird self-revelation in morbid verse.
Darling, Mrs. Flora (Adams). An Ameri-
can novelist; born in New Hampshire in 1840.
Among her works are: Mrs. Darling's Letters)
(1884); (A Wayward Winning Woman; (The
Bourbon Lily); A Social Diplomat); (The
Senator's Daughter. '
Darlington, William. An American scien-
tist, well-known botanist, and author. He was
born in Birmingham, Pa. , April 28, 1782; died
in Westchester, Pa. , April 23, 1863. He was
a soldier in the War of 1812, and a Mem-
ber of Congress from 1815 to 1817 and 1819 to
1823. He published a descriptive catalogue of
plants in Pennsylvania : Flora Cestrica) (1837
and 1853); (Mutual Influence of Habits and
Disease (1804); (Agricultural Botany) (1847);
and in 1853 a genus of pitcher plant found in
California was named in his honor, (Darling-
tonia.
Darmesteter, Agnes Mary Frances (Robin-
son). An English poet; born in Leamington,
1857. She has attained great proficiency in
Greek studies, her verse showing the influence
of Hellenic literature. In 1888 she married
James Darmesteter, the Orientalist. Her writ-
ings include: A Handful of Honeysuckle)
(1878); (An Italian Garden (1886); (Lyrics)
(1891); and (Retrospect) (1893), - volumes of
verse. * See “Robinson” in Library. ?
Darmesteter, James (där-me-ste-tår'). A
distinguished French Orientalist; born at Châ-
teau-Salins, March 28, 1849; died Oct. 19, 1894.
Besides works of strict scholarship on the
Oriental literatures, as (Ormazd and Ahriman);
(Iranian Studies) ; (Origins of Persian Poetry,'
he wrote many essays on miscellaneous sub-
jects. There is an English translation of
some of his Selected Essays. He translated
with Mills the (Zend-Avesta) for the "Sacred
Books of the East) series, published by the
University of Oxford and edited by Max Mül-
ler. *
Daru, Count Pierre Antoine (dä-rü). A
French historian and poet; born in Mont-
pellier, Jan. 12, 1767 ; died on his estate near
Meulan, Sept. 5, 1829. A translation of Horace
into French verse (1800) was greatly admired ;
but his masterpiece is a History of the Re-
public of Venice) (1819), although his (Cléopé-
die, or Theory of Literary Reputations) (1800)
is a poem containing much to recommend it.
D'Arusmont, Madame Frances (da-rüs-món).
(Maiden name Fanny Wright. ) An American
philanthropist and author; born in Dundee,
Scotland, Sept. 6, 1795; died in Cincinnati, (. ,
Dec. 2, 1852. She visited this country sev-
eral times, and in 1825 made an unsuccessful
attempt to establish a settlement for the ele.
vation of the negro at Memphis, Tenn. In
later years she lectured on social, religious,
and political questions. Among her works are :
(Views on Society and Manners in America);
(Altorf,' a tragedy (1819); "Lectures on Free
Inquiry) (1836).
Darwin, Charles Robert. A celebrated Eng.
Tish naturalist and philosopher; born at Shrews-
bury, Feb. 12, 1809; died April 19, 1882. His
life work as a naturalist began in 1831, when
he sailed with Captain Fitzroy in the Beagle
for a surveying expedition round the globe.
From this expedition Darwin returned toward
the end of 1836; in 1839 appeared his Jour-
nal of Researches, afterward revised and pub-
lished under the better known title (A Natur-
alist's Voyage. Several monographs followed
on various points of land and marine zoology;
but not until 1859 did the work appear which
brought to Darwin world-wide and enduring
fame -- (On the Origin of Species by Means
of Natural Selection. (The Descent of Man
and Selection in Relation to Sex appeared in
1871, and “The Expression of the Emotions in
Men and Animals) in 1872. In 1868 he pub.
lished (The Variation of Animals and Plants
under Domestication. He is buried in West-
minster Abbey. *
Darwin, Erasmus. An English naturalist
and poet, grandfather of Charles R. ; born in.
Elton, Nottingham, Dec. 12, 1731; died at
Breadwall, near Derby, April 18, 1802. «The
permanent interest in his writings depends
upon his exposition of the form of evolution-
ism afterwards expounded by Lamarck. He
caught a glimpse of many observations and
principles afterwards turned to account by his
grandson, Charles Darwin; but though a great
observer and an acute thinker, he missed the
characteristic doctrine which made the success
of his grandson's scheme. His literary works
are : (The Botanic Garden (1781); a descript-
ive poem, "The Temple of Nature, or the
Origin of Society) (1803), a specimen of highly
didactic versification; and (Zoonomia' (1794-
98), a prose work on organic life. As a poet
he is lofty and instructive.
Dasent, Sir George. An English philologist
and novelist; born in the island of St. Vincent,
1818. He was for a while one of the editors
of the London Times, and was one of the
Civil Service Commissioners. He is eminent
as a scholar in the Norse languages, particu-
larly Icelandic, and has translated the (Younger
Edda,' besides many other ancient stories and
legends of Iceland, and written (The Norse-
man in Iceland) (1858). Among his original
stories are: Annals of an Eventful Life):
( Three to One); (Half a Life. )
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DASH -DAVIDS
133
1
Dash, Countess (däsh), pseudonym of Ga-
brielle Anne Cisterne de Courtiras, Vicomtesse
de Saint-Mars. A French novelist (1804-72);
born at Poitiers. She was a very prolific
writer, producing often five or six stories in the
course of a year. Life in high society is her
theme, and especially wayward love in high
society, as the very titles of most of her novels
indicate : “Bussy-Rabutin's Amours); "Gallant-
ries of the Court of Louis XV. ? ; (Last Amours
of Mme. du Barry); Adventures of a Young
Married Woman.
Dassoucy or d'Assoucy, Charles Coippeau,
called (dä-sö-se'). A French burlesque poet;
born in Paris, Oct. 16, 1605; died there (? ),
1679. He acquired notoriety as the writer of
(Ovid in a Good Humor,' and of a burlesque
of Claudian's "Rape of Proserpine); but he is
remembered mainly because of a contemptuous
allusion to him by Boileau. He seems to have
possessed some talent for musical composition,
but called himself “the emperor of burlesque. ”
Daubenton, Lonis Jean Marie (do-ban-
tôn'). A French botanist and naturalist; born
in Montbar, Burgundy, May 29, 1716; died in
Paris, Dec. 31, 1799. He contributed to the
first five volumes of Buffon's Natural His-
tory) anatomical supplements which form, from
a scientific point of view, the most important
part of that work.
D'Aubigné, Jean Henri Merle (do-bēn-yā').
A celebrated Swiss Protestant church historian;
born near Geneva, Aug. 16, 1794; died at
Geneva, Oct. 24, 1872. He was professor of
historical theology at Geneva (1831-72). His
great work was History of the Reformation)
(1835-53; new ed. 1877-78), with its continu-
ation History of the Reformation in the Time
of Calvin (1863-76).
Daudet, Alphonse (do-dā). A distinguished
French novelist; born at Nîmes, May 13, 1840;
died Dec. 16, 1897. He sought fortune in Paris
in 1857: two booklets of poems were failures;
two plays -(The Last Idol (1862) and (The
White Daisy) (1865)- had more success; after
some years he discovered his true field. His
charming little stories, ( The Little Thing : Story
of a Child (1868); Letters from my Mill
(1869); Monday Tales) (1873), established his
reputation; and his next novel – (Fromont Jr.
and Risler Sr. (1874)- wa
was translated into all
the European languages. Not less celebrated
are : (The Nabob) (1878); (Kings in Exile)
(1880); Numa Roumestan (1882); «The Gos-
peller) (1883); (Sappho) (1884). He struck a
new and a happier vein in the (Tartarin)
series : Prodigious Adventures of Tartarin);
(Tartarin in the Alps); 'Port Tarascon. He
writes reminiscences of his early years in the
French capital in (Thirty Years of Paris )
(1888), and in Recollections of a Man of
Letters) (1889). *
Daudet, Ernest. A French novelist, brother
of Alphonse D. ; born at Nîmes, May 31, 1837.
His most notable novels are: (The Venus of
Gordes); ( The Bloom of Sin); (Martha. ' He
is author of an autobiographical sketch, My
Brother and Myself (1882); and has written
some historical sketches, as a "History of the
Royalist Conspiracies in the South during the
Revolution); History of the Emigration. '
Daumer, Georg Friedrich (dou'mer). A
German poet and philosophical writer (1800-75);
born in Nuremberg. He underwent some re-
markable revolutions of thought concerning
religion : in his student days he leaned strongly
to Pietism ; next he was the declared foe of
the Christian religion; about 1859 he embraced
Catholicism and became one of its foremost
champions. He wrote among many other phil-
osophical tractates : (Hints toward a System
of Speculative Philosophy) (1831); to his sec-
ond period belongs : The Fire and Moloch
Worship of the Hebrews) (1842); to his third :
My Conversion (1859). Of his poetical works,
the Flowers of Song from Hafiz) may be
named,-a very beautiful transcription of the
Oriental poet, with free variations in the very
spirit of Hafiz himself. He wrote also (Beau-
tiful Souls: a Little Wreath of Legends and
Poems) (1862); Legends and Poems of St.
Mary.
Davenant, William. An English poet and
playwright; born at Oxford in February 1606;
died April 7, 1668. A story was current in
his lifetime that he was an illegitimate son
of Shakespeare, and he seemed contented
enough to be thought his son. ! ) He wrote
many plays and poems, but none possessing
any distinguished merit; he succeeded Ben
Jonson as poet laureate of England, however.
He attempted epic composition in (Gondibert,'
and an opera, «The Siege of Rhodes.
Davenport, John. An American divine;
born in Coventry, England, 1597 ; died in Bos-
ton, March 15, 1670. Author of "The Knowl.
edge of Christ) (1653); (The Saint's Anchor
Hold' (1701). He was one of the founders of
New Haven, Conn. In 1660 he hid the regi.
cides Goffe and Whalley from their pursuers.
Davenport, Robert. An English poet and
dramatist, who flourished about 1623 and died
after 1640, but whom we know only through
his (A Crowne for a Conquerour and Too
Late to Call Backe Yesterday. Two Poems, the
One Divine, the Other Morall (1623); King
John and Matilda' (1655), a tragedy; and two
comedies : (A New Trick to Cheat the Divell)
(1639), and “The City Night Cap' (printed
1661). That he was associated with Shakes.
peare in producing (Henry I. and Henry II. ?
seems established, and it is almost certain that
he is the author of a play called (The Pirate.
Davids, Thomas William Rhys. An Eng-
lish publicist, lawyer, and scholar; born at Col-
chester, England, May 12, 1843. He was edu-
cated at the University of Breslau; from 1866
on, filled judicial places in Ceylon and acted
as Archäological Commissioner. In 1877 he
was called to the London bar, and is now
1
1
1
1
4
)
1
(
## p. 134 (#150) ############################################
.
134
DAVIDSON - DAVIS
1
professor of Pali and Buddhist literature in
University College, London. Among his works
are : (Buddhism (1877); translations of (Bud-
dhist Birth Stories) (1880); (Buddhist Suttas)
and “Vinaya Texts) (1881), published in (The
Sacred Books of the East. '
Davidson, John. A Scotch poet, novelist,
and miscellaneous writer; born at Barrhead,
Renfrewshire, 1857. He was at first a teacher,
but in 1890 went to London and adopted the
literary career, writing for the Speaker and
other journals. He has written : (Fleet Street
Eclogues) (1893); (A Random Itinerary)
(1894); "Ballads and Songs) (1894); (Plays)
(1894); (Earl Lavender) (1895); and two noy-
els : (Perſervidand Baptist Lake) (1894).
Davidson, Lucretia Maria An American
poet; born in Plattsburg, N. Y. , Sept. 27, 1808;
died there, Aug. 27, 1825.
