A
Canadian
verse-
writer; born 1861.
writer; born 1861.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v29 - BIographical Dictionary
port on the Excavations at Troy? (1890);
Autobiography (1891).
Schlosser, Friedrich Christoph (shlos'er).
A German historian; born at Jever, Nov. 17,
1776; died at Heidelberg, Sept. 23, 1861. He
wrote: History of the Iconoclast Emperors
of the East) (1812); “History of the World in
Connected Narrative) (9 vols. , 1815-24); "Gen-
eral Historic View of the Ancient World and
its Civilization) (9 vols. , 1826-34); A Judg-
ment of Napoleon and his Latest Traducers
and Panegyrists) (3 vols. , 1892–35).
Schmid, Ferdinand von. See Dranmor.
Schmidt, Heinrich Julian (shmit). A
Prussian journalist and author ; born at Marien-
werder, Prussia, March 7, 1818; died in Berlin,
March 27, 1886. He is the author of History
of Romanticism in the Time of the Reforma.
tion and Revolution) (2 vols. , 1850); (History
of German Literature since Lessing's Death
(1858); History of Intellectual Life in Ger-
many from Leibnitz till Lessing's Death (1870);
and History of German Literature from Leib-
nitz to Our Time) (1886).
Schmidt, Maximilian.
A German story.
writer; born at Eschlkam in Bavaria, Feb. 25.
1832. He is the author of a series of tales of
Bavarian life, as : Popular Stories from the
Bavarian Forest) (4 vols. , 1863-68); (The Tenth
Commandment) (1879); (The Guardian Spirit
of Oberammergau) (1881); (The Good God's
Mantle); (The Golden Saturday) (1883); 'The
Emmet Witch) (1887); "On the Golden Stair!
(1893).
Schneckenburger, Max (shnek'en-bör'ger).
A German verse-writer, author of (The Watch
on the Rhine); born at Thalheim, Feb. 17,
1819; died at Burgdorf near Bern, May 3, 1849.
In the Franco-Prussian war (The Watch on the
Rhine) attained the rank of a national song
and melody; and when the war was over, an
annual pension of 3,000 marks ($750) was set.
tled on his surviving family, and also on the
composer of the melody, Karl Wilhelm.
Schneider, Louis (shni'der). A German actor
and author; born at Berlin, April 29, 1805; died
at Potsdam, Dec. 16, 1878. For almost 30 years
he was one of the foremost actors of comedy
on the German stage. Besides a number of
.
)
## p. 485 (#501) ############################################
SCHOMBURGK-SCHULZE-DELITZSCH
485
novels and tales of life on the stage, he wrote
many successful farces; among them (The
Student on his Travels, (The Offer of Mar-
riage in Helgoland,' (The Orchestra Leader
of Venice. He wrote also King William :
an Account of his Military Life) (1869); and
two other works, entitled Emperor William,
1867-71) (1875), and (From the Life of Em-
peror William, 1849-73' (3 vols. , 1888). He
accompanied William during the campaign in
France.
Schomburgk, Sir Robert Herman (shom'.
bėrk or shom'börk). An English geographical
explorer, whose name has been made familiar
through the recent Venezuela boundary contro-
versy ; born at Freiburg on the L'nstrut, June 5,
1804; died at Schöneberg near Berlin, March
II, 1865. He was commissioned by the British
government to explore British Guiana in 1835,
and after four years spent in that labor re-
turned to England; he revisited the country in
1840, and remained there till 1845. His writings
are: Description of British Guiana) (1840);
(Twelve Views of the Interior of Guiana)
(1841). His brother Richard (1811-91) accom-
panied him on his second voyage, and wrote
(Travels in Guiana and on the Orinoco) (1841).
Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe. An American
ethnologist and miscellaneous writer, noted as an
Indian authority; born in Albany County, N. Y. ,
March 28, 1793; died in Washington, D. C. ,
Dec. 10, 1864. Thirty years of his life he spent
among the Indians, and through him many
laws were enacted for their protection. Among
his numerous publications are: (Travels in the
Central Portions of the Mississippi Valley)
(1825); "Indian Melodies, a poem (1830); “The
Man of Bronze) (1834); (Algic Researches,' a
book of Indian allegories and legends (1839);
and (The Indian and his Wigwam (1848).
Schopenhauer, Arthur (sho'pen-hou''er). A
celebrated German philosopher; born at Dant-
zic, Feb. 22, 1788; died at Frankfort on the
Main, September 1860. The first great work in
his system of philosophical doctrine, (The
World as Will and Representation (1819; 8th
ed. 1891), was in great part written while he
was still a student at Jena. His other princi-
pal writings are : (The Fourfold Root of the
Principle of the Sufficient Cause) (1813; 5th
ed. 1891); (On Vision and Colors) (1816; 3d
ed. 1870); (The Two Fundamental Problems of
Ethic) (1841 ; 4th ed. 1894); (Parerga and Para-
lipomena) (1851 ; 7th ed. 1891), a collection of
his minor writings; and (posthumously) his
(MS. Remains) and his (Correspondence with
Johann August Becker) (1883). *
Schouler, James (sköʻler). An American
historian; born at Arlington, Mass. , March 20,
1839. He graduated at Harvard; practiced
law, and served in the army during the Civil
War. He is author of legal text-books on
Domestic Relations); Personal Property);
( Bailments); Wills); (Executors and Admin-
istrators. His best-known works are (His-
tory of the United States under the Constitution)
(5 vols. , 1880-91), and Constitutional Studies)
(1896).
Schreiner, olive (shri'ner). A South-African
novelist; born in Cape To 1863. She is
the daughter of a Lutheran minister, and was
married in 1890 to Mr. Cronwright, an Eng-
lishman of the colony. She published her first
and most noted book, (The Story of an African
Farm,' under the pseudonym «Ralph Iron,"
at the age of twenty; Dreams) (1890); Dream
Life and Real Life) (1893); and (Trooper Peter
Halket) (1897). *
Schubart, Christian Friedrich Daniel
(sho'bart). A German poet; born at Ober-
sontheim, March 24, 1739; died at Stuttgart,
Oct. 10, 1791. Among his lyrics are: (Witch-
eries) ( 1766 ); Death Songs) ( 1767 ); (The
Grave of the Princes); “Ode on Frederick the
Great.
Schubert, Gotthilf Heinrich von (shö'bert).
A German philosopher; born at Hohenstein,
Saxony, April 26, 1780; died at Munich, July
I, 1860. Among his works are: Inklings of
a General History of Life) (1806); Views of
the Night Side of Natural Science) (1808);
(Symbolism of Dreams) (1814); "The Primor-
dial World and the Fixed Stars) (1822); (His-
tory of the Soul) (1830); (Old and New con-
cerning the Inner Life of the Soul (5 vols. ,
1817-44); Ailings and Perturbations of the
Human Soul) (1845).
Schücking, Christoph Bernhard Levin
(shük'ing). A German novelist; born at Clem-
enswerth, Sept. 6, 1814; died at Pyrmont, Aug.
31, 1883. Among his numerous works are: (A
Castle by the Sea) (1843); a volume of (Po-
ems) (1846); (A Son of the People) (1849);
(The Peasants' Prince? (1851); Luther at
Rome) (1870); (Saints and Knights) (1873);
(Life Recollections) (1886).
Schücking, Luise. A German novelist and
dramatist, wife of Levin; born (Von Gall )
1815; died 1855. She wrote the comedy (A
Bad Conscience) (1842); (Stories for Ladies)
(1845); Against the Current) (1851); ( The New
Crusader Knight! (1853).
Schulz, Eduard. See Ferrand.
Schulz, Johann Abraham Peter (shölts).
A German musical composer and song-writer;
born at Lüneburg, March 30, 1747 ; died at
Schwedt, June 10, 1800. Among the most pop-
ular of his songs are: (On the Rhine, On the
Rhine); Lo, the Heavens, How Clear); "Last
Hour of the Year. His oratorios and choruses,
his songs from Racine's Athalie,' and his operas
(Minona) and Aline, rank among the best
productions of his time.
Schulze, Ernst (shöits'é). A German poet ;
born at Celle, March 22, 1789; died there, June
29, 1817. He wrote an epic romance, Cecilia)
(1818); “The Magic Rose) (1818), a romantic
narrative poem, his best work; “Miscellaneous
Poems) (1820).
Schulze-Delitzsch, Hermann (shölts'ė.
dāl'ich). A German social economist; born
(
## p. 486 (#502) ############################################
486
SCHUMANN-SCOTT
at
at Delitzsch, Aug. 29, 1808; died at Potsdam,
April 29, 1883. He wrote: (Chapters of a
German Workingman's Catechism (1863), an
anti-socialist tract; (The Laboring Classes
and Associationism in Germany) (2d ed. 1863);
(Money-Advance and Credit Associations as
People's Banks) (5th ed. 1876).
Schumann, Robert (shö' män). A noted
German songwright, composer, and musical
critic; born at Zwickau, Saxony, July 8, 1810;
died at Endenich near Bonn, July 29, 1856. He
was educated at Heidelberg; in 1843 became
professor of composition in the conservatory
of Leipsic; and in 1850 musical director at
Düsseldorf. While engaged in that place he
became insane. His works include almost
every art form except oratorio. He wrote four
symphonies, several cantatas, an opera, a mass,
sonatas, concertos, quartets for strings and also
for voices, pieces for the piano, the organ, and
a number of songs. His Collected Writings
on Music and Musicians) appeared in 1854.
Schurman, Jacob Gould. President of Cor-
nell University ; born in Freetown, Prince Ed-
ward's Island, May 22, 1854. He won the Gil-
chist Dominion scholarship, 1875; graduated
at London University, 1877; was professor of
philosophy in Acadia College, 1880-82; in
Dalhousie College, Halifax, 1882-86. He be-
came professor of philosophy at Cornell Uni-
versity, and has been president since 1892. He
has published: (Kantian Ethics) (1881), (The
Ethical Import of Darwinism' (1887), and
(Agnosticism and Religion'; and contributed
to many reviews, essays on important subjects.
Schurz, Carl (shorts). A German-American
journalist and statesman of eminence; born
near Cologne, Prussia, March 2, 1829. His
most famous speeches are : (The Irrepressible
Conflict) (1858); (The Doom of Slavery) (1860);
" (The Abolition of Slavery as a War Measure)
(1862); and (Eulogy on Charles Sumner) (1874).
He has published a volume of speeches (1865);
a "Life of Henry Clay) (1887); and an essay,
(Abraham Lincoln. *
Schuyler, Eugene. An American writer of
note; born in Ithaca, N. Y. , Feb. 26, 1840; died
in Cairo, Egypt, July 18, 1890. He was United
States secretary of legation at St. Petersburg
(1870–76); secretary of legation and consul-
general at Constantinople (1876-78); and min-
ister to Greece (1882-84). His works include:
(Turkestan: Notes of a Journey in Russian
Turkestan, Khokand, Bokhara, and Kuldja)
(1876); Peter the Great, Emperor of Russia)
(2 vols. , 1884); and American Diplomacy and
the Furtherance of Commerce (1886).
Schwab, Gustav (shväb). A German poet
and philosophical writer ; born in Stuttgart, June
19, 1792; died Nov. 4, 1850. His poems exhibit
purity and feeling. Many of his ballads be-
came very popular. His Poems) appeared in
2 vols. , 1828-29; a second revised edition, New
Collection, in 1838. The best of his prose
works is the Life of Schiller) (1840).
Schwartz, Marie Sophie (shvärtz). A Swed-
ish novelist; born at Borås, July 4, 1819; died
at Stockholm, May 7, 1894. Her stories deal
for the most part with the problems of labor;
among them are: Labor Ennobles) (1859);
(The Nobleman's Daughter (1860); Birth and
Breeding' (1861); 'Changing Fortunes) (1871);
A Child of the Time) (1873).
Schwatka, Frederick (shwät kä). An Amer-
ican geographical explorer; born at Galena,
II. , Sept. 29, 1849; died at Portland, Or. , Nov.
2, 1892. He graduated from West Point in
1871; commanded an expedition in search of
relics of Sir John Franklin's party, 1878–80 ;
made two tours of exploration in Alaska (1883
and 1886). Among his writings are : Along
Alaska's Great River) (1885); Nimrod in the
North) (1885); (The Children of the Cold)
(1886).
Schwegler, Albert (shveg'ler). A German
philosopher and theologian; born at Michel-
bach, Würtemberg, Feb. 10, 1819; died
Tübingen, Jan. 5, 1857. His best-known work
is his History of Philosophy) (1848; IIth ed.
1882). It has been translated into most Euro-
pean languages; into English by J. H. Seelye
in America (1856), and by J. H. Stirling in Eng-
land (1867). His History of Greek Philoso-
phy) was published in 1859.
Schweinfurth, Georg August (shvin'fört).
A Russian explorer; born at Riga, Dec. 29,
1836. He studied at Heidelberg, Munich, and
Berlin. He investigated the fora and fauna
of the valley of the Nile (1864-66), and is the
author of Nile Vegetation (1862); (Contri-
bution to the Flora of Ethiopia) (1867); (Re-
liquiæ Kotschyaræ) (1868); (In the Heart of
Africa) (2 vols. , 1874).
Scollard, Clinton. An American poet; born
in Clinton, N. Y. , Sept. 18, 1861. In 1888 he
was made assistant professor of rhetoric at
Hamilton College, and later professor of Eng-
lish literature. Among his publications are :
(Pictures in Song) (1884); (With Reed and
Lyre) (1886); (Old and New World Lyrics)
(1888); (Giovio and Gilulia' (1891); (Songs of
Sunrise Lands) (1892); and an edition of Ford's
Broken Heart) (1895).
Scott, Alexander. A Scotch poet; born
about 1525; died about 1584; "the Anacreon
of old Scotch poetry. ” Of his writings thirty-
six short poems remain; the most important of
these are (A New Yeir Gift to Quene Mary)
and (The Justing at the Drum.
Scott, Andrew. A Scottish poet; born in
Bowden, Roxburghshire, 1757; died there, May
22, 1839. He served in the British army in
this country during the Revolution, and was
with Cornwallis at the surrender of Yorktown.
While he was encamped on Staten Island he
wrote his noted verses (Betsey Roscoe) and
(The Oak-Tree. After the war he returned
to his native land, and published Poems,
Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect) (1811), and
(Poems on Various Subjects) ( 1826).
.
(
## p. 487 (#503) ############################################
SCOTT-SCRIBE
487
ness
)
Scott, Clement William. An English dram-
atist and critic; born at London, 1841. He
wrote: (Lays of a Londoner) (1882); (Lays
and Legends) (1888); the dramas (The Cape
Mail, (Odette,' and “Sister Mary?
Scott, Duncan Campbell. A Canadian poet;
born at Ottawa, Ont. , 1862. He is author of
(The Magic House) (1893).
Scott, Frederick George.
A Canadian verse-
writer; born 1861. He wrote: (The Soul's
Quest) (1888); (My Lattice, and Other Poems)
(1894).
Scott, Lydia, Lady. An English miscella-
neous writer. Besides stories, as (Flirtation,
Marriage in High Life,' and 'The Henpecked
Husband' (1848), she wrote: Exposition of
the Types and Antitypes of the Old and New
Testament) (1856); (Incentives to Bible Study)
(1860); “The Dream of a Life) (1862).
Scott, Michael. A Scottish philosopher of
the 13th century. Of his life little is known.
His nationality even is in doubt: the Italians
and the Spaniards claimed him as their coun-
tryman as well as the Scots. His great learn-
ing won for him the reputation of being a
magician. His acquaintance with Arabic en-
abled him to translate into Latin the works of
Avicenna and Averroes, and the Arabic ver-
sions of Aristotle with the commentaries of
Averroes. His own writings treat of astrology,
alchemy, and the occult sciences in general;
among them are treatises (On the Sun and
Moon, (On Palmistry, (On Physiognomy and
Human Procreation.
Scott, Patrick. A British poet, author of
(Oriental Musings, and Other Poems) (1840);
Love in the Moon, a poem (1852); (Thomas
à Becket, and Other Poems) (1853); (Foot-
paths between Two Worlds, and Other Poems
(1859).
Scott, Sir Walter. The celebrated Scotch
novelist and poet; born in Edinburgh, Aug.
15, 1771; died at Abbotsford, Sept. 21, 1832.
He wrote : Disputatio Juridica) (1792), a legal
thesis; (The Chase) (1796), comprising trans-
lations from the German; (Goetz of Berlich-
ingen' (1799), a translation from Goethe ;
Apology for Tales of Terror) (1799); “The
Eve of St. John: A Border Ballad) (1800);
(Ballads) (1801); Minstrelsy of the Scottish
Border) (1802-3); Lay of the Last Minstrel)
(1805); Ballads and Lyrical Pieces) (1806),
reprints of various poems; (Marmion) (1808);
"Life of Dryden) (no date); (The Lady of
the Lake) (1810); “Vision of Don Roderick)
(1811); (Rokeby) (1813); “The Bridal of Trier.
main) (1813); Abstract of Eyrbiggia Saga)
(1814); (Waverley) (1814); "Life of Swift)
(1814), prefixed to Works; (The Lord of the
Isles) (1815); (Guy Mannering) (1815); (The
Field of Waterloo (1815); Paul's Letters to
his Kinsfolk) (1815); “The Antiquary) (1816);
(Tales of my Landlord, Collected and Arranged
by Jedediah Cleishbotham : Black Dwarf,
Old Mortality) (1817, really 1816); (Harold the
Dauntless) (1817); (The Search after Happi-
(1817); (Rob Roy) (1818); (Tales of
my Landlord, 2d series : Heart of Midlothian)
( 1818 ); (Tales of my Landlord, 3d series :
The Bride of Lammermoor, A Legend of
Montrose) (1819); “Description of the Regalia
of Scotland) (1819); (Ivanhoe) (1820); (The
Monastery) (1820); (The Abbot) (1820); (Ken-
ilworth) (1821); Account of George III. 's
Coronation (1821); (The Pirate) (1822); "Hal-
idon Hill (1822); (The Fortunes of Nigel
(1822); (Peveril of the Peak) (1822); "Quentin
Durward) (1823); (St. Ronan's Well (1824);
(Redgauntlet) (1824); (Tales of the Crusa-
ders: The Betrothed, The Talisman (1825);
“Thoughts on the Proposed Change of Cur-
rency) (1826); (Woodstock) (1826); Life of
Napoleon Buonaparte, Emperor of the French,
with a Preliminary View of the French Rev-
olution) (1827); (Chronicles of the Canon-
gate : The Two Drovers, The Highland Widow,
The Surgeon's Daughter' (1827); (Tales of
a Grandfather) (1st series, 1828; 2d series,
1829; 3d series, Scotland, 1830; 4th series,
France, 1830); Chronicles of the Canongate,
2d series: St. Valentine's Day; or, The Fair
Maid of Perth) (1828); My Aunt Margaret's
Mirror, (The Tapestried Chamber,' and (The
Laird's Jock,' in the Keepsake (1828); (Reli-
gious Discourses, by a Layman) (1828); (Anne
of Geierstein) (1829); History of Scotland”
(1830); Demonology and Witchcraft) (1830);
(House of Aspen,' in the Keepsake (1830);
Doom of Devorgoil : Auchindrane, or the Ayr-
shire Tragedy) (1830); Essays on Ballad
Poetry) (1830); (Tales of my Landlord, 4th
series : Count Robert of Paris, Castle Danger-
ous) (1832); and many articles for the Edin-
burgh and Quarterly reviews, historical essays,
etc. *
Scott, William Bell. A Scottish poet; born
near Edinburgh, Sept. 12, 1811; died Nov. 22,
1890. He was a distinguished painter and ar-
chæologist. He published: Hades, and Other
Poems) (1839); (The Year of the World: A
Philosophical Poem (1846); a Memoir of his
brother David (1850); antiquarian (Gleanings
in the North of England (1849-51); (Chorea
Sancti Viti? (1851); Poems) (1854); another
volume of Poems) (1875).
Scotus Erigena, Joannes (skö'tus e-rij'en-ä).
A renowned mediæval philosopher of the 9th
century. He was an Irishman, as indicated by
the surnames Scotus (which in that age meant
Irish) and Erigena (of Irish extraction). His
life seems
to have been passed mostly in
France. He was a Platonist rather than an
Aristotelian, His greatest work is (Of the
Division of Nature, in which he holds for
the identity of philosophy and religion, and
repels the claim of authority in matters of re-
ligious belief.
Scribe, Augustin Eugène (skrēb). A French
dramatist; born in Paris, Dec. 24, 1791 ; died Feb.
20, 1861. For nearly forty years he was the
most conspicuous playwright living. His works
:
## p. 488 (#504) ############################################
488
SCUDDER-SEELY
are seldom placed upon the stage now. His
collected ((Euvres) (70 vols. , issued 1874-85)
contain all his works, which include novels as
well as plays. *
Scudder, Horace Elisha. An American man
of letters and historian; born in Boston, 1838.
Since 1890 he has been editor of the Atlan-
tic Monthly. He has published: (Seven Little
People and their Friends); Dream Children);
(Stories from my Attic); ( The Dwellers in
Five Sisters' Court); (Stories and Romances);
Boston Town); Life of Noah Webster); (A
Short History of the United States); A His-
tory of the United States); The Book of Fa.
bles); (The Book of Folk Stories); Fables
and Folk Stories); (George Washington : An
Historical Biography); Men and Letters);
(Childhood in Literature and Art); (The Bod-
ley Books'; etc.
Scudéry, Georges de (skü-der-e'). A French
poet, brother of Madeleine; born at Havre,
1001; died at Paris, May 14, 1667. He wrote
many dramas, all now forgotten with the pos-
sible exception of 'Tyrannic Love. His epic
of Alaric (1654) was severely scored by Boi.
leau for its bombastic style.
Scudéry, Madeleine. A French novelist;
born at Havre, 1607; died at Paris, June 2, 1701.
Her stories were greatly admired in their day;
but they are now found monotonous and bom-
bastic. This new Sappho's most celebrated
work is (Artamenes; or, The Great Cyrus
(10 vols. , 1649-58), in which the author's con-
temporaries figure under ancient names. She
also wrote (Ibrahim) and (Clélie, romances.
Besides novels she wrote Conversations);
(Fabies); Light Verses. '
Sealsfield, Charles, alias of Karl Anton
Postl. An Austrian novelist and miscellaneous
writer; born at Poppitz in Moravia, March 3,
1793; died near Soleure, May 26, 1864. He
lived in the United States under the name of
Charles Sealsfield, 1822-26, and again 1827-30.
He wrote: (Sketches of Transatlantic Travel
(1834); (Life Pictures from Both Hemispheres!
(1835). Among his novels are: (Tokeah; or,
The White Rose) (1828); “Virey and the Aris-
tocrats) (1834); (German-American Elective
Affinities) (1839).
Seawell, Molly Elliot. An American jour-
nalist and novelist; born in Virginia, 18—.
She has published : (The Sprightly Romance
of Marsac); Hale Weston); (Twelve Naval
Captains) (1897); and others.
Secundus, Johannes (sā-kön'dös). A Dutch
poet; born at The Hague, November 1511; died
at Utrecht, probably 1536. His best-known
work is (Kisses) (1539), consisting of amatory
poems. His “Poetical Works) were published
by his brother in 1541.
Secundus, Publius Pomponius. A Roman
poet, who lived in the first century of our era.
Tacitus speaks of his tragedies in the highest
terms, as does also Quintilian. The elder Pliny
wrote his "Life) in two books. Only frag-
ments of Secundus's works remain.
Sedaine, Michel Jean (sed-ān'). A French
playwright; born at Paris, July 4, 1719; died
there, May 17, 1797. He is regarded as the
originator of comic opera. Among his works
are the comic operas: Playing the Deuce);
(The King and the Farmer); Richard Cæur
de Lion'; Aline, Queen of Golconda. His
comedies (The Philosopher without Knowing
It) (1765) and (The Unexpected Wager' (1768)
won for him membership of the Academy;
they have still a place in the repertoire of
French theatres.
Sedgwick, Catherine Maria. An Ameri-
can novelist ; born at Stockbridge, Mass. , Dec.
28, 1789; died near Roxbury, Mass. , July 31,
1867. She wrote: A New England Tale)
(1822); Redwood) (1824); (The Traveler
(1825); Hope Leslie; or, Early Times in Mas-
sachusetts) (1827); (The Linwoods; or, Sixty
Years Since in America) (1835); (The Poor
Rich Man and the Rich Poor Man' (1830);
(Letters from Abroad' (1841); Historical
Sketches of the Old Painters) (1841); (Morals
of Manners) (1846); Married or Single' (1857).
Sedley, Charles, Sir. An English dramatist;
born at Aylesford in Kent, 1639; died Aug.
20, 1701.
He is author of the favorite song
Phyllis. He wrote four comedies, among
them «The Mulberry Garden (1608) and two
tragedies.
Sedley, Henry. An American author; born
in Boston, April 4, 1835. He was a journalist,
at one time one of the editors of the New
York Evening Post, Times, and Commercial
Advertiser; founder and for a time editor of
the Round Table, which was later changed
to the Nation. He published : Dangerfield's
Rest: Romance (1804), and Marion Rooke;
or, the Quest for Fortune) (1865).
Seeley, John Robert, Sir. An English his-
torical scholar; born in London, 1834; died at
Cambridge (where he was professor of Modern
History), 1895. He first came into notice
through the striking book (Ecce Homol (a
life of Christ), in 1865, which made a great
sensation and was reviewed by Mr. Gladstone;
he published Natural Religion) in 1882; and
in "Lectures and Essays) (1870) he wrote on
art, ethics, and education. But his really im.
portant work was historical : (Roman Imperi-
alism, in the last-mentioned volume; his mas-
terpiece, Life and Times of Stein) (3 vols. ,
1878), a history of the regeneration of Prussia
in the Napoleonic period; (The Expansion of
England (1883: a series of lectures), and
cognate works; and (A Short History of Na-
poleon the First) (1886: reprinted from the
(Encyclopædia Britannica').
Seely, (Edward] Howard. An American
writer of fiction ; born in 1856; died in 1894.
He published many volumes, among them : A
Lone Star, Bo-Peep, and Other Stories); 'Texan
Ranch Life); A Nymph of the West); (The
## p. 489 (#505) ############################################
SEELYE-SERRES
489
Jonah of Lucky Valley, and Other Stories);
(A Border Leander. )
Seelye, Mrs. Elizabeth (Eggleston). An
American author, daughter of Edward Eggles.
ton; born in Minnesota, 1858. She has written:
(The Story of Columbus); Montezuma';
Brant and Red Jacket); "Pocahontas ); (Te.
cumseh); and (The Story of Washington.
Seelye, Julius Hawtry. An American edu-
cator; born in Bethel, Conn. , Sept. 14, 1824;
died in 1895. He was president of Amherst
College (1876-90), and inaugurated the “Am-
herst system of self-government, which was
productive of good results. His publications
include : (The Way, the Truth, and the Life)
(1873), translated into Hindustani, Japanese, and
German ; (Christian Missions) (1875); and his
revised edition of Hickok's Moral Science)
(1880).
Seemann, Berthold. A German traveler, nat-
uralist, and author; born in Hanover, Feb. 28,
1825; died in Nicaragua, Oct. 10, 1871. He was
naturalist to three exploring expeditions (1846-
51), and wrote: “Voyage of the Herald, and
(Three Cruises to Arctic Regions in Search of
Sir John Franklin (1852); Popular History of
Palms) (1855); Account of Mission to Fiji
Islands) (1862); Popular Nomenclature of the
American Flora'; and “Dottings on the Road-
side in Panama, Nicaragua, and Mosquito.
Seemuller, Mrs. Annie Moncure (Crane).
An American novelist; born in Maryland, 1838 ;
died in 1872. Her works were at one time very
popular, and include the novels (Emily Ches-
ter'; “Reginald Archer); Opportunity. '
Ségur, Louis Philippe, Comte de (sā-gür').
A French historian; born in Paris, Dec. 10,
1753; died there, Aug. 27, 1830. He received
a military education ; served in America under
Rochambeau; later he was appointed ambas-
sador to Russia. During the Reign of Terror
he left public life and devoted himself to liter-
ary labor. Among his works are: Théâtre de
l'Hermitage) (1798); "Tales, Fables, Songs,
and Verses) (1801); Memoirs, or Souvenirs
and Anecdotes) (1825).
Ségur, Philippe Paul, Comte de. A French
writer of history, son of L. P. ; born at Paris,
Nov. 4, 1780; died Feb. 25, 1873. He wrote:
History of Napoleon and the Grand Army
in 1812) (2 vols. , 1824); History of Russia
and Peter the Great! (2 vols. , 1829); (History
and Memoirs, 1789-1848) (8 vols. , 1873).
Sejour, Victor (sė-zhör'). A French dram-
atist; born at Paris, 1816; died Sept. 21, 1874.
He was a mulatto. His plays are in the high
romantic vein, and call for gorgeous scenery ;
among them are : « The Fall of Sejanus) (1849);
(Richard III. (1852); (The Devil's Money);
(The Son of Night) (1856); Mysteries of the
Temple); (The Madonna of the Roses) (1869).
Selden, John. A celebrated English jurist ;
born at Salvington in Surrey, 1584; died at
London, Nov. 30, 1654. He wrote many very
learned treatises on law-municipal, interna-
tional, natural, etc. — and on the legislation of
the ancient Hebrews; but he is best remem-
bered for his (Table Talk,' recorded by his
secretary, Richard Milward : of it Coleridge de-
clares that it contains « more weighty bullion
sense )) than he could find in the same number
of pages of any uninspired writer. *
Selous, Frederick Courtenay. A well-known
English explorer and sportsman; born in the
island of Jersey, in 1852. He made a name
as a gold-prospector, explorer, and elephant.
hunter in South Africa, where he has spent
many years; and during the Matabele cam-
paign, fought with great gallantry on the side
of the colonists. His publications, (A Hunt-
er's Wanderings in Africa) (1881), and (Travel
and Adventure in Southeast Africa) (1893),
have been widely read.
Sénancour, Étienne Pivert de (sen-än-kör').
A French writer of the school of Rousseau ;
born at Paris, 1770; died at St. Cloud, 1846.
Under the direct influence of Rousseau he
wrote: (Reveries on the Primitive State of
Man) (1799); his most notable work, (Ober-
mann) (2 vols. , 1804), is in the same vein; then
followed "Love according to Primordial Laws,
and according to the Conventions of Society)
(2 vols. , 1805); (Free Meditations of an Un-
known Solitary on Detachment from the World)
(1819); (Sum of the Traditions of Morality and
Religion (2 vols. , 1827), which brought on
him legal prosecution for impiety; Isabella,
a novel (1833). *
Seneca, Lucius Annæus (sen'e-ka). A
celebrated Roman philosopher; born at Cor-
duba, in Spain, about the year 4 B. C. ; died
65 A. D. He was Nero's preceptor, and his
confidant and adviser in the beginning of his
reign. Many of his writings have come down
to us, among them 124 (Epistles to Lucilius,
containing admirable counsels and exhorta-
tions to the practice of virtue : "On Providence);
(Anger); “Of Benefits); Natural-History Ques-
tions); several tragedies, among them (Thyes-
tes, Phædra,' and (Medea. *
Senior, William. An English miscellaneous
writer; author of "Notable Shipwrecks) (1873);
(Waterside Sketches: A Book for Wanderers
and Anglers) (1875); (By Stream and Sea)
(1877); (Travel and Trout in the Antipodes)
(1879).
Serao, Matilde (ser-ä'o). An Italian novel.
ist; born at Patras in Greece, March 7, 1856.
Her best stories are those descriptive of Nea-
politan life: as "Faint Heart) (1881); (Fantasy)
(1883); “ Neapolitan Legends) (1886); (Opal);
Little Minds); etc.
Serres, Olivia Wilmot. An English story.
writer; born 1772; died 1834. She claimed to
be a daughter of the Duke of Cumberland,
brother of George III. , but failed to make the
claim good before a Parliamentary committee.
She wrote: (St. Julian,' a novel (1805); (Flights
of Fancy,' poems (1806); “Olivia's Advice to her
:
*
## p. 490 (#506) ############################################
490
SERVETUS-SEWRIN
>
Daughters); (The True Messiah; or, St. Ath-
anasius's Creed Explained (1814).
Servetus, Michael (Miguel Serveto y
Reves) (ser-vē'tūs). A Spanish physician and
theological writer; born at Tudela in Navarre,
1511; died at the stake in Geneva, Oct. 27,
1553. He accompanied Charles V. to Ger-
many, as physician to the emperor's confessor
Quintana. His work (On the Errors about
the Trinity) was published at Hagenau, 1531,
and it was soon afterward ordered to be burnt
by the authorities at Basel : the reformer Bucer
denounced the writer as deserving of the ex-
tremest punishment.