Going to India in the
service of the East India Company (1808), he
was employed in the Calcutta mint; was sec-
retary of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 180;
professor of Sanskrit at Oxford, 1832 ; libra.
service of the East India Company (1808), he
was employed in the Calcutta mint; was sec-
retary of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 180;
professor of Sanskrit at Oxford, 1832 ; libra.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v29 - BIographical Dictionary
, Feb.
23, 1787; died at Troy, N. Y. , April 15, 1870.
She did much for bettering the education of
women. Her books, educational and general,
include : (A Plan for Improving Female Edu-
cation) (1819); A History of the United
States) (1828); (Poems) (1830), containing the
popular song (Rocked in the Cradle of the
Deep); Journal and Letters from France
and Great Britain) (1833); Universal His-
tory) (1835); (Respiration and its Effects);
and Morals for the Young (1857).
Willard, Frances Elizabeth. An Ameri-
can educator, editor, and reformer; born near
Rochester, N. Y. , Sept. 28, 1839; died Feb. 18,
1898. She was been president of the Woman's
Christian Temperance Union since 1879, and
founded the World's Woman's Christian Tem-
perance Union in 1883. She was editor-in-chief
of the Union Signal, the official organ of the
woman's temperance movement. Besides con-
tributing to other leading periodicals, she has
published: (Nineteen Beautiful Years) (1864),
a life of her deceased sister; 'Glimpses of Fifty
Years) (1889); and (A Great Mother' (1894).
William of Malmesbury. A celebrated Eng.
lish monk and historian; born about 1095; died
at Malmesbury, about 1142. He was librarian
of the monastery at Malmesbury. He wrote:
History of the English Kings,' and its con-
tinuation Modern History, the two being the
source from which all subsequent histories of
England have drawn; History of the Prelates
of England”; (Lives) of St. Patrick, St. Dun-
stan, St. Wulfstan; several books of miracles;
etc.
William of Tyre. A Syrian historian; born
about 1137. He was archbishop of Tyre (1175).
He wrote History of the Sovereigns of the
East,' and History of Events in the Lands
across the Sea,' a fine record of the Crusades
from 1127 to 1184, first printed in 1549. There
are German and French translations of the
latter.
Williams, Alfred Mason. An American jour-
nalist, editor, and poet; born in Massachusetts,
1840; died in 1896. He was long editor of the
Providence Journal. He published: (The Poets
and Poetry of Ireland); (Studies in Folk Song
and Popular Poetry); 'Sam Houston and the
War of Independence in Texas.
Williams, Mrs. Annie (Bowles). An Ameri-
can juvenile-story writer; born in Connecticut,
1840. She has published: (Birchwood); (The
Fitch Club); Professor Johnny); Rolf and
his Friends); "Who Saved the Ship? ); 'The
Giant Dwarf); (The Riverside Museum. '
Williams, Mrs. Catharine R. (Arnold).
An American author; born in Providence,
R. I. , about 1790; died there, Oct. 11, 1872. She
was the author of (Original Poems) (1828);
(Religion at Home) (1829); (Tales, National
and Revolutionary) (1830–35); (Aristocracy, a
novel (1832); (Fall River) (1833); Biography
of Revolutionary Heroes) (1839); and (Annals
of the Aristocracy of Rhode Island (2 vols. ,
1843-45).
Williams, Francis Howard. An American
dramatic writer and poet, residing in Phila-
delphia; born in Pennsylvania, 1844. Among
his plays are: (The Princess Elizabeth : A
Lyric Drama); (The Higher Education': (A
Reformer in Ruffles); Master and Man.
He also wrote (Theodora : A Pastoral); (At-
man: A Story); (The Flute Plaver, and Other
Poems); Pennsylvania Poets of the Provincial
Period. '
Williams, George Washington. An Amer-
ican negro writer and soldier; born in Pennsyl.
vania, 1849. He served in the Northern army
(
>
(
## p. 577 (#593) ############################################
WILLIAMS – WILMER
577
3
(
in the Civil War, and subsequently as an offi-
cer in the army of Mexico (1865–67). He was
minister to Hayti, 1885-86. He wrote: (His-
tory of the Negro Race in America); (The
Negro Troops in the War of the Rebellion);
(History of Reconstruction. '
Williams, Isaac. A British clergyman and
religious poet; born at Cwmcynfelin, near
Aberystwith, Wales, Dec. 12, 1802; died at
Stinchcombe, England, May 1, 1865. With
Keble, Newman, and Pusey, he was active in
the Tractarian movement. He wrote: (The
Cathedral) (1838), in verse; (Hymns) (1839);
( Thoughts in Past Years) (1842); (The Christ-
ian Scholar) (1849); (Autobiography) (1892);
besides other purely religious works.
Williams, Jesse Lynch. An American writer
of stories for the young ; born in Illinois, 1871.
He has published: (Princeton Stories ); (The
Freshman.
Williams, John. [“Anthony Pasquin. ”] An
English writer, journalist, and dramatist ; born
in London about 1765; died in Brooklyn, N. Y. ,
Oct. 12, 1818. Because of his scurrilous political
writings he was declared in 1797 to be "a
common libeler, and soon after came to the
United States. He was connected with the
press, wrote several plays, also a volume of
poems (1789); Legislative Biography) (1795);
"Life of Alexander Hamilton (1804); and the
(Dramatic Censor) (1811).
Williams, John. An English missionary ;
born at Tottenham, June 29, 1796; killed and
eaten by cannibals, at Erromanga, New Heb-
rides, Nov. 20, 1839. His adventurous and gen-
erally successful life as a missionary extended
over a period of more than twenty years (1816-
39). He wrote that famous classic of mis-
sionary literature, (A Narrative of Missionary
Enterprises in the South Sea Islands) (Lon-
don and New York, 1837; 56th thousand,
1865).
Williams, Martha McCulloch. An Ameri-
can miscellaneous writer. Besides several sto-
ries and poems in Harper's Bazar and Monthly,
and a book on botany, she has published :
(Field-Farings) (1892), a collection of essays;
(Two of a Trade) (1894), a story.
Williams, Roger. An English-American
clergyman, and founder of the State of Rhode
Island; born about 1600; died about 1684.
His chief distinction is in his founding the
first State in which there is an absolute
guarantee of liberty of conscience to every
man,--the government having no authority in
matters of religion. He published: (Key into
the Language of America; or, An Help to the
Language of the Natives in that Part of Amer-
ica Called New England, etc. (1643; new
ed. 1820); Mr. Cotton's Letter, etc. (1644);
and (The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for
Cause of Conscience, Discussed in a Conference
between Truth and Peace, etc. (1644); (The
Bloody Tenent yet More Bloody, etc. (1652);
(The Hireling Ministry None of Christ's, etc.
(1652); (Experiments of Spiritual Life and
Health, etc. (1652); 'George Fox Digg’d Out
of his Burrowes, etc. (1676); and (A New
England Fire-Brand Quenched, etc. (1679).
Williams, Samuel Wells. An American
philologist and distinguished Chinese scholar;
born in Utica, N. Y. , 1812; died in New Haven,
Feb. 17, 1884. He assisted in preparing a
Chinese, and afterwards a Japanese, diction-
ary; was interpreter for Commodore Perry in
Japan, 1853-54; was secretary of legation in
China, 1855-57, and again 1862–76. He was
professor of Chinese at Yale, 1876-84, and was
president of the American Oriental Society.
He published: Easy Lessons in Chinese)
(1842), followed by (Chinese and English Vo-
cabulary) (1843), and (Tonic Dictionary of
the Chinese) (1874). His greatest work is
(The Middle Kingdom (2 vols. , 1883), which
has done excellent service in making Chinese
history and conditions known to the public.
Williamson, Julia May. An American writer,
living at Augusta, Me. ; born 1859. She has
written the volumes of poetry Echoes of
Time and Tide,' and (The Choir of the
Year. )
Willis, Nathaniel Parker. An American
poet and journalist; born at Portland, Me. ,
Jan. 20, 1806; died at Idlewild on the Hud-
son, N. Y. , Jan. 20, 1867. His chief journal.
istic work was with the New York Mirror
(1823-42). Among his numerous writings are :
Inklings of Adventure) (3 vols. , 1836); Loi-
terings of Travel (3 vols. , 1840); (Letters from
Under a Bridge) (1840); (Poems) (1846); Peo-
ple I Have Met' (1850); “Hurrygraphs) (1851);
(A Health Trip to the Tropics) (1854); Fa-
mous Persons and Places) (1854); and (The
Convalescent, his Rambles and Adventures)
(1859). *
Willoughby, Eliza Maria, Baroness Mid-
dleton. An English poet. She is daughter of
Sir A. P. Gordon-Cumming; married D. W. B.
Willoughby (1869), who became Baron Middle-
ton in 1877. She has published : "On the North
Wind, Thistledown! (1874), and "Ballads)
(1878).
Wills, W. R. An Australian poet; born 1837.
He has published: (A Bunch of Wild Pansies)
(1885); “Blossoms of Early Life); (Songs for
the Weary.
Wills, William Gorman. An Irish painter
and dramatist ; born in County Kilkenny, 1830;
died in London, Dec. 14, 1891. He is the author
of Notice to Quit) (3 vols. , 1861); «The Life's
Evidence) (3 vols. , 1863); and the dramas
(Charles the First) (1872), Eugene Aram
(1873), Marie Stuart) (1874), Jane Shore)
(1876), (Olivia Sedgemoore) (1881), Claudian)
(1885), (A Royal Divorce) (1891), and, in con-
junction with Sidney Grundy, Madam Pompa-
dour. )
Wilmer, Lambert A. An American editor
and author; born about 1805; died in Brooklyn,
N. Y. , Dec. 21, 1863. He was editor of several
)
37
## p. 578 (#594) ############################################
578
WILMSHURST – WILSON
newspapers, and author of : A New System of
Grammar! (1851); (The Quacks of Helicon'
(1851); (The Life of De Soto) (1858); (Our
Press Gang; or, An Exposition of the Corrup-
tions of American Newspapers) (1859).
Wilmshurst, Zavarr. A journalist and
author; born in England, Nov. 25, 1824; died
in Brooklyn, Jan. 27, 1887. He came to the
United States and was editorially connected
with several journals in New York city. His
plays include a drama on Hawthorne's (Scarlet
Letter); and (Nitocria,' a tragedy. His other
writings are: (The Viking,' an epic (1849);
(The Winter of the Heart, etc. (1874); (The
Siren) (1876); and (Ralph and Rose (1879).
Wilson, Alexander. A Scotch-American
ornithologist; born at Paisley, Scotlana, July 6,
1766; died in Philadelphia, Aug. 23, 1813.
In early life he was a weaver and teacher. He
published a volume of poems in 1790, but be-
ing sentenced for a lampoon in 1793, emigrated
to America. He was employed as editor of
the American edition of Rees's Cyclopædia);
but in his wanderings as peddler, he learned
to love birds, and set about writing an orni-
thology. At his death seven volumes of this work
had been published; the eighth and ninth vol-
umes were edited by George Ord, and a con-
tinuation by Charles Lucien Bonaparte (4 vols. ,
1825-33). Volumes of his poems were published
at Paisley in 1816, and at Belfast in 1857. *
Wilson, Mrs. Augusta Jane (Evans). An
American novelist; born near Columbus, Ga. ,
about 1838. She lived some years in Texas;
afterwards at Mobile, Ala. Her works at one
time had great popularity. They include:
(Inez' (1856); (Beulah) (1859); Macaria)
(1864); (St. Elmo) (1866); Vashti? (1869);
Infelice); and At the Mercy of Tiberius. '
Wilson, Sir Daniel. A Canadian educator
and archæologist; born at Edinburgh, 1816;
died at Toronto, Aug. 7, 1892. He was presi-
dent of Toronto University from 1881. He
wrote: (Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden
Time) (1846-49); (Oliver Cromwell and the
Protectorate) (1848); Prehistoric Man) (1862);
(Archäology and Prehistoric Annals of Scot-
land) (revised ed. 1863); (Chatterton) (1869);
(Reminiscences of Old Edinburgh (1878); “The
Lost Atlantis) (1892), poems; etc.
Wilson, Henry. (Original name Jeremiah
Jones Colbath. ] A distinguished American
statesman; born at Farmington, N. H. , Feb.
16, 1812; died at Washington, Nov. 22, 1875.
He was elected to the Vice-Presidency of the
United States in 1872, and died while holding
this office. His works are: (History of the
Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America)
(3 vols. , 1872-75); (History of the Anti-Slavery
Measures of the 37th and 38th Congresses)
(1864); and History of the Reconstruction
Measures of the 39th and 10th Congresses)
(1868); besides many addresses and speeches.
Wilson, Henry Bristow. An English clergy-
man and educator; born in London, 1803; died
at Lee, Kent, Aug. 10, 1888. He was professor
of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. He was one of
the seven authors of the famous volume of
Essays and Reviews (1860); his contribution
being 'The National Church. He wrote: (The
Communion of Saints: An Attempt to Illustrate
the Principles of Church Union' (1851), the
Bampton lecture contributed to "Oxford Es-
says'; etc.
Wilson, Horace Hayman. An English Ori-
entalist; born in London, Sept. 26, 1786; died
there, May 8, 1860.
Going to India in the
service of the East India Company (1808), he
was employed in the Calcutta mint; was sec-
retary of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 180;
professor of Sanskrit at Oxford, 1832 ; libra.
rian at the East India House, 1836; and
director of the Royal Asiatic Society. Besides
a Sanskrit dictionary and grammar, transla-
tions of the Meghaduta,' the Vishnu Purana,
part of the Rig Veda, etc. , he published:
(Select Specimens of the Theatre of the Hin-
dus) (2d ed. 1835); Religious Sects of the
Hindus) (1828–32); History of British India!
(1844-48); etc.
Wilson, James Grant. An American author
editor, and soldier, who served with distinction
in the Civil War; born in Edinburgh, Scotland,
about 1835. Besides numerous addresses, es-
says, and articles in periodicals, he has pub-
lished: (Biographical Sketches of Illinois Offi-
cers) (1862–63); Love in Letters, Illustrated
in the Correspondence of Eminent Persons)
(1867); Life of General Grant' (1868-85); Life
of Fitz-Greene Halleck) (1869); (Sketches of
Illustrious Soldiers) (1874); Poets and Poetry
of Scotland) (1876); Centennial History of
the Diocese of New York, 1775-1885' (1886);
(Bryant and his Friends (1886); “Commodore
Isaac Hull and the Frigate Constitution (1889).
He is the editor - with John Fiske -- of Apple-
ton's Cyclopædia of American Biography) (6
vols. , 1886-89).
Wilson, James Harrison. An American au-
thor, and soldier of distinction; born near
Shawneetown, Ill. , Sept. 2, 1837. He is the
author of 'China: Travels and Investigations in
the Middle Kingdom (1887). Life of Andrew
J. Alexander) (1887); and, in conjunction with
C. A. Dana, Life of General U. S. Grant)
(1868).
Wilson, John. (“Christopher North. ”] A
Scotch essayist, poet, novelist, and editor; born
at Paisley, May 18, 1785; died in Edinburgh,
April 3, 1854. The son of a rich manufacturer,
he was educated at Glasgow University and
at Magdalen College, Oxford; noted as a scholar
and athlete; settled in Cumberland, and became
one of the Lake Group) with Wordsworth,
De Quincey, Southey, and Coleridge. Losing
most of his inherited fortune, he removed to
Edinburgh and studied law. From the starting
of Blackwood's Magazine in 1817 he was a
chief contributor, and was for many years its
generally accredited head. For it he wrote
(with Maginn and others, but largely alone)
:
## p. 579 (#595) ############################################
WILSON – WINSLOW
572
the (Noctes Ambrosianæ,' by which he is best
remembered, - imaginary dialogues at Am-
brose's tavern in Edinburgh, between the lead-
ing contributors to the magazine; a selection
from these was published in 1876. He also
wrote, among other things : (The Isle of Palms)
(1812), and (The City of the Plague) (1816),
poems; Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life)
(1822); (The Trials of Margaret Lindsay)
(1823); (The Foresters) (1825); and (Essay on
the Genius and Character of Burns) (1841).
He was professor of moral philosophy at Edin.
burgh University from 1820 to near the end of
his life.
. Wilson, John Mackay. A Scottish story-
writer; born at Tweedmouth, 1804; died at
Berwick-on-Tweed, Oct. 2, 1835. He edited
for several years the Berwick Advertiser. He
was the editor and principal author of (Tales
of the Borders) (1835-40; last ed. , enlarged
and revised, 24 vols. , 1869), of which 150,000
copies have been sold.
Wilson, Robert Burns. An American poet
and artist; born in Pennsylvania, Oct. 30, 1850.
He resides in Frankfort, Ky. He has pub-
lished a volume called Life and Love. "
and others. Many of his verses have been set
to music.
Winchell, Alexander. An American geolo-
gist, author, and educator; born in Dutchess
County, N. Y. , Dec. 31, 1824; died in Ann
Arbor, Mich. , Feb. 19, 1891. He lectured ex-
tensively and contributed to many journals.
His writings include : (Sketches of Creation)
(1870); (Geological Chart) (1870); (The Doc-
trine of Evolution) (1874); "Science and Re-
ligion (1877); Preadamites) (1880); 'Sparks
from a Geologist's Hammer) (1881); (World
Life) (1883); (Geological Studies) (1886); and
(Walks and Talks in the Geological Field)
(1886).
Winckelmann, Johann Joachim (vink'el-
män). A German critic and archæologist, the
founder of scientific archæology and of classic
art history as a critical science; born in Sten-
dal, Dec. 9, 1717; died at Trieste, June 8, 1768.
He was the first to consider the masterpieces
of classical antiquity as representative of a
stage in the development of taste, and to form-
ulate the theory of evolution in art. He seems
to have obtained his first clue from some ob-
servations of Velleius Paterculus and Quin-
tilian. His greatest work is a History of the
Art of Antiquity) (1764), afterwards supple-
mented by (Observations on the History of
Art' (1767). He also published: (Thoughts
on the Imitation of Greek Works in Painting
and Sculpture) (1755); (Architecture of the
Ancients) (1762); Unknown Memorials for
Monuments) of Antiquity) (1767); and many
essays and pamphlets.
Wines, Enoch Cobb. An American clergy-
man and philanthropist; born in Hanover,
N. J. , Feb. 17, 1806; died in Cambridge, Mass. ,
Dec. 10, 1879. He was noted as secretary of
the N. Y. State Prison Association in 1862, and
afterwards devoted his life to the promotion of
reform in the administration of criminal law
and treatment of criminals. His writings in-
clude: (Two Years and a Half in the Navy)
(1832); (A Trip to China) (1832); (Hints on
Popular Education (1838); Commentaries on
Laws of Ancient Hebrews) (1852); (Adam
and Christ) (1855); Prisons and Reforma-
tories in the United States and Canada' (1867);
State of Prisons and Child-Saving Institu-
tions) (1880. )
Winslow, Mrs. Catherine Mary (Reignolds).
An American actress and public reader; born
in 183-. She has written (Yesterdays with
Actors); (Readings (with notes) from the Old
English Dramatists.
Winslow, Edward. A Mayflower emigrant
and governor of Plymouth Colony; born at
Droitwich, England, Oct. 19, 1595; died at sea,
between San Domingo and Jamaica, May 8,
1655. He was a hostage to Massasoit, his ac-
count of which was in George Morton's (Re.
lation) (1622). He was the author of (Good
Newes from New England,' etc. (1624), printed
in full in Young's Chronicles of the Pilgrim
Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas. An English
soldier and military writer; born in London,
1777 ; died there, May 9, 1849. He served in
the Peninsular war; was British military com-
missioner at the Russian and allied headquar-
ters, 1812-14; Member of Parliament and
governor of Gibraltar, 1842-49. He wrote:
(History of the British Expedition to Egypt)
(1802); "Sketch of the Campaigns in Poland)
(1810); Military and Political Power of Rus-
sia' (1817); Narrative of Events During the
Invasion of Russia, 1812) (1860); Diary)
(1861); etc.
Wilson, William. A Scotch-American jour-
nalist, publisher, and poet; born in Perthshire,
Dec. 25, 1801; died in Poughkeepsie, N. Y. ,
Aug. 25, 1860. He edited the (Scottish Songs,
Ballads, and Poems) of Hew Ainslie (1855),
and several other volumes. His (Poems,' edited
by Benson J. Lossing, appeared in 1870, revised
and enlarged editions in 1875 and 1884.
Wilson, Woodrow. An American educator
and author; born at Staunton, Va. , 1856. He
has written much on political and literary top-
ics for the magazines and reviews. His books
are : Congressional Government: A Study of
American Politics) (1885), a work popular at
home and much used by foreign publicists;
( The State : Elements of Historical and Prac-
tical Politics (1889); Division and Reunion,
in Epochs of American History) (1893); and
(An Old Master, and Other Political Essays)
(1894). *
Wilton, Richard. An English clergyman;
born at Doncaster, Dec. 25. 1827. He was
educated at Cambridge, and took orders in 1852.
He published: (Wood-Notes and Church-Bells)
(1873); (Lyrics, Sylvan and Sacred) (1878);
(
## p. 580 (#596) ############################################
580
WINSLOW - WISE
:
Fathers' (1841); (Brief Narration; or, Hypoc-
risie Unmasked, etc. (1646), reissued as “The
Danger of Tolerating Levellers in a Civill
State, etc. (1649, printed in part in Young's
(Chronicles'); New England's Salamander,
etc. (1647); (The Glorious Progress of the
Gospel amongst the Indians of New England)
(1649); and (A Platform of Church Discipline
in New England) (1653).
Winslow, Miron. An American missionary ;
born at Williston, Vt. , Dec. II, 1789; died at the
Cape of Good Hope, Oct. 22, 1864. He went
as a missionary to Ceylon, 1819; founded the
Madras mission, 1836; was president of the
native college at Madras, 1840; translated the
Bible into Tamil, 1835. He wrote: Memoir
of Mrs. Harriet Winslow) (1835), his wife, re-
published in England, and translated into French
and Turkish; and (A Tamil and English Dic-
tionary) (1862), his great work, containing over
67,000 Tamil words.
Winslow, William Copley. An American
archæologist and journalist; born at Boston,
Jan. 13, 1840. He is an Episcopal clergyman;
assisted in founding the University Quarterly,
1861 ; edited the Hamiltonian, 1862; was as-
sistant editor of the New York World 1862–63,
and editor of the Christian Times 1863-65;
vice-president, secretary, and treasurer for
many years of the Egypt exploration fund for
the U. S. ; lecturer on archæological subjects
and colonial history. He has written : (Israel
in Egypt'; 'The Store City of Pithom (1885);
(A Greek City in Egypt) (1887); (The Egyp-
tian Collection in Boston' (1890); (The Pilgrim
Fathers in Holland) (1891); etc.
Winsor, Justin. An American historian and
librarian; born at Boston, 1831 ; died 1897.
He was superintendent of the Boston Public
Library, 1868-77, and librarian of Harvard
University, 1877-97. He has published: (Bib-
liography of Original Quartos and Folios of
Shakespeare) (1875); (Reader's Handbook of
the American Revolution) (1880); (Memorial
History of Boston) (edited : 4 vols. , 1880–82);
(Narrative and Critical History of America)
(edited: 8 vols. , 1884-89); (Christopher Columbus)
(1891); From Cartier to Frontenac) (1894);
(The Mississippi Basin); and (The Struggle in
America between England and France) (1895).
He was the highest authority on the early
history of North America.
Winter, John Strange. See Stannard.
Winter, William. An American journalist
and dramatic critic; born at Gloucester, Mass. ,
July 15, 1836. He has done journalistic work
on the Saturday Press, Vanity Fair, the Albion,
Weekly Review; and has been dramatic critic
for the New York Tribune since 1865. He has
written (The Convent, and Other Poems) (1854);
(The Queen's Domain) (1858), and (My Wit-
ness) (1871), poems; Life of Edwin Booth)
(1872); “Thistledown) (1878), poems; ( Poems,
complete edition (1881);(The Jeffersons) (1881);
(English Rambles) (1883); Life of Henry Ir-
ving' (1885); (Shakspere's England (1886);
(Stage Life of Mary Anderson (1886); and
“The Wanderers' (1888). *
Winther, Rasmus Villads Christian Ferdi-
nand (vin'ter). A Danish poet; born in Fens-
mark, July 29, 1796; died in Paris, Dec. 30,
1876. While not the greatest Danish poet, he
is one of the truest interpreters of the Danish
national character. Some of his numerous pub-
lications are : (Song and Legend) (1841); 'Lyr-
ical Poems) (1849); New Poems) (1850); (The
Flight of the Hart) (1856), a lyric romance of
the Danish Middle Ages, his greatest work.
Winthrop, John, Governor.
Born near
Groton, Suffolk, England, Jan 12, 1587; died at
Boston, March 26, 1619. He was the first
colonial governor of Massachusetts, after the
government was transferred to America, hold-
ing the office, with but slight interruption, from
1629 to 1649. He wrote a History of New
England from 1630 to 1649) (2d ed. Boston,
1853), the MS. of which was left by him in
the form of a journal correspondence to be
found in his Life and Letters) (2 vols. , 1864-
67), by Robert C. Winthrop; (A Modell of
Christian Charity); (Arbitrary Government De-
scribed.
Winthrop, Theodore. An American soldier,
poet, and novelist; born at New Haven, Conn. ,
Sept. 22, 1828; killed at the head of an assault-
ing column of Northern troops at Big Bethel,
Va. , June 10, 1861. The 1861 Atlantic Monthly
contained sketches from him of early War
scenes. He left completed material for five
volumes of novels and essays : (Cecil Dreeme)
(1861); John Brent) (1862); Edwin Brother.
croft (1862); «The Canoe and the Saddle )
(1862); and Life in the Open Air, and Other
Papers) (1863). His sister published 'Life and
Poems of Theodore Winthrop (1884). *
Wirt, William. An American lawyer and
author; born at Bladensburg, Md. , Nov. 8,
1772; died at Washington, D. C. , Feb. 18, 1834.
His writings are: (Letters of a British Spy,
which first appeared in the Virginia Argus
(1803) ; (The Rainbow) (1804), which was writ-
ten for the Richmond Enquirer; and his chief
work, (Sketches of the Life and Character of
Patrick Henry) (1817). *
Wise, Daniel. An editor, Methodist clergy.
man, and author; born in Portsmouth, Eng.
land, Jan, 10, 1813. He was editor of the Lion's
Herald at Boston, Mass. , and various Sunday.
school publications, and has published a great
number of works on varied subjects, mostly
under the pen-names of "Francis Forrester
and “Laurence Lancewood. " Among these
are: Personal Effort) (1841); (Life of Ulric
Zwingli (1850); My Uncle Toby's Library)
(12 vols. , 1853); (Vanquished Victors) (1870);
(Heroic Methodists) (1882); "Boy Travelers in
Arabia) (1885); (Men of Renown' (1886); and
"Some Remarkable Women' (1887).
Wise, Henry Augustus. An American naval
officer and author; born at Brooklyn, N. Y. ,
3
## p. 581 (#597) ############################################
WISE - WITWICKIE
581
May 12, 1819; died at Naples, Italy, April 2,
1869. Under the pseudonym of Harry Gringo,"
he wrote Los Gringos; or, An Interior View
of Mexico and California, with Wanderings in
Peru, Chili, and Polynesia) (1849); “Tales for
the Marines) (1855); “Scampavias, from Gibel-
Tasek to Stamboul) (1857); (The Story of the
Gray African Parrot) (1856), a book for child-
ren; and (Captain Brand of the Centipede)
(1860).
Wise, Isaac Mayer. A Jewish rabbi and
author; born in Bohemia, April 3, 1819; settled
in New York city in 1846. He has resided in
Cincinnati, O. , since 1854, and is president of
the Hebrew Union College. He is a leader
of the reform movement in American Judaism;
and besides editing the Israelite, a weekly
journal, he has written extensively. Among
his works are: History of the Israelitish
Nation' (1854); (Essence of Judaism (1860);
Judaism: Its Doctrines and Duties) (1862);
( The Martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth (1874);
( The Cosmic God" (1876); History of the
Hebrews' Second Commonwealth) (1880).
Wiseman, Nicholas Patrick Stephen. An
English cardinal and archbishop; born at Se-
ville, Spain, Aug. 3, 1802; died in London,
Feb. 15, 1865. Among his books are: (Hora
Syriacæ) (1828); "Lectures on the Connection
between Science and Revealed Religion (2
vols. , 1836); ( The Real Presence) (1836); "Lect-
ures on the Doctrines and Practices of the
Catholic Church) (2 vols. , 1836); (Three Lect-
ures on the Catholic Hierarchy'(1850); ' Essays
on Various Subjects) (3 vols. , 1853); (Fabiola;
or, The Church of the Catacombs) (1855); “Rec-
ollections of the Last Four Popes) (1858);
(Sermons) (2 vols.
23, 1787; died at Troy, N. Y. , April 15, 1870.
She did much for bettering the education of
women. Her books, educational and general,
include : (A Plan for Improving Female Edu-
cation) (1819); A History of the United
States) (1828); (Poems) (1830), containing the
popular song (Rocked in the Cradle of the
Deep); Journal and Letters from France
and Great Britain) (1833); Universal His-
tory) (1835); (Respiration and its Effects);
and Morals for the Young (1857).
Willard, Frances Elizabeth. An Ameri-
can educator, editor, and reformer; born near
Rochester, N. Y. , Sept. 28, 1839; died Feb. 18,
1898. She was been president of the Woman's
Christian Temperance Union since 1879, and
founded the World's Woman's Christian Tem-
perance Union in 1883. She was editor-in-chief
of the Union Signal, the official organ of the
woman's temperance movement. Besides con-
tributing to other leading periodicals, she has
published: (Nineteen Beautiful Years) (1864),
a life of her deceased sister; 'Glimpses of Fifty
Years) (1889); and (A Great Mother' (1894).
William of Malmesbury. A celebrated Eng.
lish monk and historian; born about 1095; died
at Malmesbury, about 1142. He was librarian
of the monastery at Malmesbury. He wrote:
History of the English Kings,' and its con-
tinuation Modern History, the two being the
source from which all subsequent histories of
England have drawn; History of the Prelates
of England”; (Lives) of St. Patrick, St. Dun-
stan, St. Wulfstan; several books of miracles;
etc.
William of Tyre. A Syrian historian; born
about 1137. He was archbishop of Tyre (1175).
He wrote History of the Sovereigns of the
East,' and History of Events in the Lands
across the Sea,' a fine record of the Crusades
from 1127 to 1184, first printed in 1549. There
are German and French translations of the
latter.
Williams, Alfred Mason. An American jour-
nalist, editor, and poet; born in Massachusetts,
1840; died in 1896. He was long editor of the
Providence Journal. He published: (The Poets
and Poetry of Ireland); (Studies in Folk Song
and Popular Poetry); 'Sam Houston and the
War of Independence in Texas.
Williams, Mrs. Annie (Bowles). An Ameri-
can juvenile-story writer; born in Connecticut,
1840. She has published: (Birchwood); (The
Fitch Club); Professor Johnny); Rolf and
his Friends); "Who Saved the Ship? ); 'The
Giant Dwarf); (The Riverside Museum. '
Williams, Mrs. Catharine R. (Arnold).
An American author; born in Providence,
R. I. , about 1790; died there, Oct. 11, 1872. She
was the author of (Original Poems) (1828);
(Religion at Home) (1829); (Tales, National
and Revolutionary) (1830–35); (Aristocracy, a
novel (1832); (Fall River) (1833); Biography
of Revolutionary Heroes) (1839); and (Annals
of the Aristocracy of Rhode Island (2 vols. ,
1843-45).
Williams, Francis Howard. An American
dramatic writer and poet, residing in Phila-
delphia; born in Pennsylvania, 1844. Among
his plays are: (The Princess Elizabeth : A
Lyric Drama); (The Higher Education': (A
Reformer in Ruffles); Master and Man.
He also wrote (Theodora : A Pastoral); (At-
man: A Story); (The Flute Plaver, and Other
Poems); Pennsylvania Poets of the Provincial
Period. '
Williams, George Washington. An Amer-
ican negro writer and soldier; born in Pennsyl.
vania, 1849. He served in the Northern army
(
>
(
## p. 577 (#593) ############################################
WILLIAMS – WILMER
577
3
(
in the Civil War, and subsequently as an offi-
cer in the army of Mexico (1865–67). He was
minister to Hayti, 1885-86. He wrote: (His-
tory of the Negro Race in America); (The
Negro Troops in the War of the Rebellion);
(History of Reconstruction. '
Williams, Isaac. A British clergyman and
religious poet; born at Cwmcynfelin, near
Aberystwith, Wales, Dec. 12, 1802; died at
Stinchcombe, England, May 1, 1865. With
Keble, Newman, and Pusey, he was active in
the Tractarian movement. He wrote: (The
Cathedral) (1838), in verse; (Hymns) (1839);
( Thoughts in Past Years) (1842); (The Christ-
ian Scholar) (1849); (Autobiography) (1892);
besides other purely religious works.
Williams, Jesse Lynch. An American writer
of stories for the young ; born in Illinois, 1871.
He has published: (Princeton Stories ); (The
Freshman.
Williams, John. [“Anthony Pasquin. ”] An
English writer, journalist, and dramatist ; born
in London about 1765; died in Brooklyn, N. Y. ,
Oct. 12, 1818. Because of his scurrilous political
writings he was declared in 1797 to be "a
common libeler, and soon after came to the
United States. He was connected with the
press, wrote several plays, also a volume of
poems (1789); Legislative Biography) (1795);
"Life of Alexander Hamilton (1804); and the
(Dramatic Censor) (1811).
Williams, John. An English missionary ;
born at Tottenham, June 29, 1796; killed and
eaten by cannibals, at Erromanga, New Heb-
rides, Nov. 20, 1839. His adventurous and gen-
erally successful life as a missionary extended
over a period of more than twenty years (1816-
39). He wrote that famous classic of mis-
sionary literature, (A Narrative of Missionary
Enterprises in the South Sea Islands) (Lon-
don and New York, 1837; 56th thousand,
1865).
Williams, Martha McCulloch. An Ameri-
can miscellaneous writer. Besides several sto-
ries and poems in Harper's Bazar and Monthly,
and a book on botany, she has published :
(Field-Farings) (1892), a collection of essays;
(Two of a Trade) (1894), a story.
Williams, Roger. An English-American
clergyman, and founder of the State of Rhode
Island; born about 1600; died about 1684.
His chief distinction is in his founding the
first State in which there is an absolute
guarantee of liberty of conscience to every
man,--the government having no authority in
matters of religion. He published: (Key into
the Language of America; or, An Help to the
Language of the Natives in that Part of Amer-
ica Called New England, etc. (1643; new
ed. 1820); Mr. Cotton's Letter, etc. (1644);
and (The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for
Cause of Conscience, Discussed in a Conference
between Truth and Peace, etc. (1644); (The
Bloody Tenent yet More Bloody, etc. (1652);
(The Hireling Ministry None of Christ's, etc.
(1652); (Experiments of Spiritual Life and
Health, etc. (1652); 'George Fox Digg’d Out
of his Burrowes, etc. (1676); and (A New
England Fire-Brand Quenched, etc. (1679).
Williams, Samuel Wells. An American
philologist and distinguished Chinese scholar;
born in Utica, N. Y. , 1812; died in New Haven,
Feb. 17, 1884. He assisted in preparing a
Chinese, and afterwards a Japanese, diction-
ary; was interpreter for Commodore Perry in
Japan, 1853-54; was secretary of legation in
China, 1855-57, and again 1862–76. He was
professor of Chinese at Yale, 1876-84, and was
president of the American Oriental Society.
He published: Easy Lessons in Chinese)
(1842), followed by (Chinese and English Vo-
cabulary) (1843), and (Tonic Dictionary of
the Chinese) (1874). His greatest work is
(The Middle Kingdom (2 vols. , 1883), which
has done excellent service in making Chinese
history and conditions known to the public.
Williamson, Julia May. An American writer,
living at Augusta, Me. ; born 1859. She has
written the volumes of poetry Echoes of
Time and Tide,' and (The Choir of the
Year. )
Willis, Nathaniel Parker. An American
poet and journalist; born at Portland, Me. ,
Jan. 20, 1806; died at Idlewild on the Hud-
son, N. Y. , Jan. 20, 1867. His chief journal.
istic work was with the New York Mirror
(1823-42). Among his numerous writings are :
Inklings of Adventure) (3 vols. , 1836); Loi-
terings of Travel (3 vols. , 1840); (Letters from
Under a Bridge) (1840); (Poems) (1846); Peo-
ple I Have Met' (1850); “Hurrygraphs) (1851);
(A Health Trip to the Tropics) (1854); Fa-
mous Persons and Places) (1854); and (The
Convalescent, his Rambles and Adventures)
(1859). *
Willoughby, Eliza Maria, Baroness Mid-
dleton. An English poet. She is daughter of
Sir A. P. Gordon-Cumming; married D. W. B.
Willoughby (1869), who became Baron Middle-
ton in 1877. She has published : "On the North
Wind, Thistledown! (1874), and "Ballads)
(1878).
Wills, W. R. An Australian poet; born 1837.
He has published: (A Bunch of Wild Pansies)
(1885); “Blossoms of Early Life); (Songs for
the Weary.
Wills, William Gorman. An Irish painter
and dramatist ; born in County Kilkenny, 1830;
died in London, Dec. 14, 1891. He is the author
of Notice to Quit) (3 vols. , 1861); «The Life's
Evidence) (3 vols. , 1863); and the dramas
(Charles the First) (1872), Eugene Aram
(1873), Marie Stuart) (1874), Jane Shore)
(1876), (Olivia Sedgemoore) (1881), Claudian)
(1885), (A Royal Divorce) (1891), and, in con-
junction with Sidney Grundy, Madam Pompa-
dour. )
Wilmer, Lambert A. An American editor
and author; born about 1805; died in Brooklyn,
N. Y. , Dec. 21, 1863. He was editor of several
)
37
## p. 578 (#594) ############################################
578
WILMSHURST – WILSON
newspapers, and author of : A New System of
Grammar! (1851); (The Quacks of Helicon'
(1851); (The Life of De Soto) (1858); (Our
Press Gang; or, An Exposition of the Corrup-
tions of American Newspapers) (1859).
Wilmshurst, Zavarr. A journalist and
author; born in England, Nov. 25, 1824; died
in Brooklyn, Jan. 27, 1887. He came to the
United States and was editorially connected
with several journals in New York city. His
plays include a drama on Hawthorne's (Scarlet
Letter); and (Nitocria,' a tragedy. His other
writings are: (The Viking,' an epic (1849);
(The Winter of the Heart, etc. (1874); (The
Siren) (1876); and (Ralph and Rose (1879).
Wilson, Alexander. A Scotch-American
ornithologist; born at Paisley, Scotlana, July 6,
1766; died in Philadelphia, Aug. 23, 1813.
In early life he was a weaver and teacher. He
published a volume of poems in 1790, but be-
ing sentenced for a lampoon in 1793, emigrated
to America. He was employed as editor of
the American edition of Rees's Cyclopædia);
but in his wanderings as peddler, he learned
to love birds, and set about writing an orni-
thology. At his death seven volumes of this work
had been published; the eighth and ninth vol-
umes were edited by George Ord, and a con-
tinuation by Charles Lucien Bonaparte (4 vols. ,
1825-33). Volumes of his poems were published
at Paisley in 1816, and at Belfast in 1857. *
Wilson, Mrs. Augusta Jane (Evans). An
American novelist; born near Columbus, Ga. ,
about 1838. She lived some years in Texas;
afterwards at Mobile, Ala. Her works at one
time had great popularity. They include:
(Inez' (1856); (Beulah) (1859); Macaria)
(1864); (St. Elmo) (1866); Vashti? (1869);
Infelice); and At the Mercy of Tiberius. '
Wilson, Sir Daniel. A Canadian educator
and archæologist; born at Edinburgh, 1816;
died at Toronto, Aug. 7, 1892. He was presi-
dent of Toronto University from 1881. He
wrote: (Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden
Time) (1846-49); (Oliver Cromwell and the
Protectorate) (1848); Prehistoric Man) (1862);
(Archäology and Prehistoric Annals of Scot-
land) (revised ed. 1863); (Chatterton) (1869);
(Reminiscences of Old Edinburgh (1878); “The
Lost Atlantis) (1892), poems; etc.
Wilson, Henry. (Original name Jeremiah
Jones Colbath. ] A distinguished American
statesman; born at Farmington, N. H. , Feb.
16, 1812; died at Washington, Nov. 22, 1875.
He was elected to the Vice-Presidency of the
United States in 1872, and died while holding
this office. His works are: (History of the
Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America)
(3 vols. , 1872-75); (History of the Anti-Slavery
Measures of the 37th and 38th Congresses)
(1864); and History of the Reconstruction
Measures of the 39th and 10th Congresses)
(1868); besides many addresses and speeches.
Wilson, Henry Bristow. An English clergy-
man and educator; born in London, 1803; died
at Lee, Kent, Aug. 10, 1888. He was professor
of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. He was one of
the seven authors of the famous volume of
Essays and Reviews (1860); his contribution
being 'The National Church. He wrote: (The
Communion of Saints: An Attempt to Illustrate
the Principles of Church Union' (1851), the
Bampton lecture contributed to "Oxford Es-
says'; etc.
Wilson, Horace Hayman. An English Ori-
entalist; born in London, Sept. 26, 1786; died
there, May 8, 1860.
Going to India in the
service of the East India Company (1808), he
was employed in the Calcutta mint; was sec-
retary of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 180;
professor of Sanskrit at Oxford, 1832 ; libra.
rian at the East India House, 1836; and
director of the Royal Asiatic Society. Besides
a Sanskrit dictionary and grammar, transla-
tions of the Meghaduta,' the Vishnu Purana,
part of the Rig Veda, etc. , he published:
(Select Specimens of the Theatre of the Hin-
dus) (2d ed. 1835); Religious Sects of the
Hindus) (1828–32); History of British India!
(1844-48); etc.
Wilson, James Grant. An American author
editor, and soldier, who served with distinction
in the Civil War; born in Edinburgh, Scotland,
about 1835. Besides numerous addresses, es-
says, and articles in periodicals, he has pub-
lished: (Biographical Sketches of Illinois Offi-
cers) (1862–63); Love in Letters, Illustrated
in the Correspondence of Eminent Persons)
(1867); Life of General Grant' (1868-85); Life
of Fitz-Greene Halleck) (1869); (Sketches of
Illustrious Soldiers) (1874); Poets and Poetry
of Scotland) (1876); Centennial History of
the Diocese of New York, 1775-1885' (1886);
(Bryant and his Friends (1886); “Commodore
Isaac Hull and the Frigate Constitution (1889).
He is the editor - with John Fiske -- of Apple-
ton's Cyclopædia of American Biography) (6
vols. , 1886-89).
Wilson, James Harrison. An American au-
thor, and soldier of distinction; born near
Shawneetown, Ill. , Sept. 2, 1837. He is the
author of 'China: Travels and Investigations in
the Middle Kingdom (1887). Life of Andrew
J. Alexander) (1887); and, in conjunction with
C. A. Dana, Life of General U. S. Grant)
(1868).
Wilson, John. (“Christopher North. ”] A
Scotch essayist, poet, novelist, and editor; born
at Paisley, May 18, 1785; died in Edinburgh,
April 3, 1854. The son of a rich manufacturer,
he was educated at Glasgow University and
at Magdalen College, Oxford; noted as a scholar
and athlete; settled in Cumberland, and became
one of the Lake Group) with Wordsworth,
De Quincey, Southey, and Coleridge. Losing
most of his inherited fortune, he removed to
Edinburgh and studied law. From the starting
of Blackwood's Magazine in 1817 he was a
chief contributor, and was for many years its
generally accredited head. For it he wrote
(with Maginn and others, but largely alone)
:
## p. 579 (#595) ############################################
WILSON – WINSLOW
572
the (Noctes Ambrosianæ,' by which he is best
remembered, - imaginary dialogues at Am-
brose's tavern in Edinburgh, between the lead-
ing contributors to the magazine; a selection
from these was published in 1876. He also
wrote, among other things : (The Isle of Palms)
(1812), and (The City of the Plague) (1816),
poems; Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life)
(1822); (The Trials of Margaret Lindsay)
(1823); (The Foresters) (1825); and (Essay on
the Genius and Character of Burns) (1841).
He was professor of moral philosophy at Edin.
burgh University from 1820 to near the end of
his life.
. Wilson, John Mackay. A Scottish story-
writer; born at Tweedmouth, 1804; died at
Berwick-on-Tweed, Oct. 2, 1835. He edited
for several years the Berwick Advertiser. He
was the editor and principal author of (Tales
of the Borders) (1835-40; last ed. , enlarged
and revised, 24 vols. , 1869), of which 150,000
copies have been sold.
Wilson, Robert Burns. An American poet
and artist; born in Pennsylvania, Oct. 30, 1850.
He resides in Frankfort, Ky. He has pub-
lished a volume called Life and Love. "
and others. Many of his verses have been set
to music.
Winchell, Alexander. An American geolo-
gist, author, and educator; born in Dutchess
County, N. Y. , Dec. 31, 1824; died in Ann
Arbor, Mich. , Feb. 19, 1891. He lectured ex-
tensively and contributed to many journals.
His writings include : (Sketches of Creation)
(1870); (Geological Chart) (1870); (The Doc-
trine of Evolution) (1874); "Science and Re-
ligion (1877); Preadamites) (1880); 'Sparks
from a Geologist's Hammer) (1881); (World
Life) (1883); (Geological Studies) (1886); and
(Walks and Talks in the Geological Field)
(1886).
Winckelmann, Johann Joachim (vink'el-
män). A German critic and archæologist, the
founder of scientific archæology and of classic
art history as a critical science; born in Sten-
dal, Dec. 9, 1717; died at Trieste, June 8, 1768.
He was the first to consider the masterpieces
of classical antiquity as representative of a
stage in the development of taste, and to form-
ulate the theory of evolution in art. He seems
to have obtained his first clue from some ob-
servations of Velleius Paterculus and Quin-
tilian. His greatest work is a History of the
Art of Antiquity) (1764), afterwards supple-
mented by (Observations on the History of
Art' (1767). He also published: (Thoughts
on the Imitation of Greek Works in Painting
and Sculpture) (1755); (Architecture of the
Ancients) (1762); Unknown Memorials for
Monuments) of Antiquity) (1767); and many
essays and pamphlets.
Wines, Enoch Cobb. An American clergy-
man and philanthropist; born in Hanover,
N. J. , Feb. 17, 1806; died in Cambridge, Mass. ,
Dec. 10, 1879. He was noted as secretary of
the N. Y. State Prison Association in 1862, and
afterwards devoted his life to the promotion of
reform in the administration of criminal law
and treatment of criminals. His writings in-
clude: (Two Years and a Half in the Navy)
(1832); (A Trip to China) (1832); (Hints on
Popular Education (1838); Commentaries on
Laws of Ancient Hebrews) (1852); (Adam
and Christ) (1855); Prisons and Reforma-
tories in the United States and Canada' (1867);
State of Prisons and Child-Saving Institu-
tions) (1880. )
Winslow, Mrs. Catherine Mary (Reignolds).
An American actress and public reader; born
in 183-. She has written (Yesterdays with
Actors); (Readings (with notes) from the Old
English Dramatists.
Winslow, Edward. A Mayflower emigrant
and governor of Plymouth Colony; born at
Droitwich, England, Oct. 19, 1595; died at sea,
between San Domingo and Jamaica, May 8,
1655. He was a hostage to Massasoit, his ac-
count of which was in George Morton's (Re.
lation) (1622). He was the author of (Good
Newes from New England,' etc. (1624), printed
in full in Young's Chronicles of the Pilgrim
Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas. An English
soldier and military writer; born in London,
1777 ; died there, May 9, 1849. He served in
the Peninsular war; was British military com-
missioner at the Russian and allied headquar-
ters, 1812-14; Member of Parliament and
governor of Gibraltar, 1842-49. He wrote:
(History of the British Expedition to Egypt)
(1802); "Sketch of the Campaigns in Poland)
(1810); Military and Political Power of Rus-
sia' (1817); Narrative of Events During the
Invasion of Russia, 1812) (1860); Diary)
(1861); etc.
Wilson, William. A Scotch-American jour-
nalist, publisher, and poet; born in Perthshire,
Dec. 25, 1801; died in Poughkeepsie, N. Y. ,
Aug. 25, 1860. He edited the (Scottish Songs,
Ballads, and Poems) of Hew Ainslie (1855),
and several other volumes. His (Poems,' edited
by Benson J. Lossing, appeared in 1870, revised
and enlarged editions in 1875 and 1884.
Wilson, Woodrow. An American educator
and author; born at Staunton, Va. , 1856. He
has written much on political and literary top-
ics for the magazines and reviews. His books
are : Congressional Government: A Study of
American Politics) (1885), a work popular at
home and much used by foreign publicists;
( The State : Elements of Historical and Prac-
tical Politics (1889); Division and Reunion,
in Epochs of American History) (1893); and
(An Old Master, and Other Political Essays)
(1894). *
Wilton, Richard. An English clergyman;
born at Doncaster, Dec. 25. 1827. He was
educated at Cambridge, and took orders in 1852.
He published: (Wood-Notes and Church-Bells)
(1873); (Lyrics, Sylvan and Sacred) (1878);
(
## p. 580 (#596) ############################################
580
WINSLOW - WISE
:
Fathers' (1841); (Brief Narration; or, Hypoc-
risie Unmasked, etc. (1646), reissued as “The
Danger of Tolerating Levellers in a Civill
State, etc. (1649, printed in part in Young's
(Chronicles'); New England's Salamander,
etc. (1647); (The Glorious Progress of the
Gospel amongst the Indians of New England)
(1649); and (A Platform of Church Discipline
in New England) (1653).
Winslow, Miron. An American missionary ;
born at Williston, Vt. , Dec. II, 1789; died at the
Cape of Good Hope, Oct. 22, 1864. He went
as a missionary to Ceylon, 1819; founded the
Madras mission, 1836; was president of the
native college at Madras, 1840; translated the
Bible into Tamil, 1835. He wrote: Memoir
of Mrs. Harriet Winslow) (1835), his wife, re-
published in England, and translated into French
and Turkish; and (A Tamil and English Dic-
tionary) (1862), his great work, containing over
67,000 Tamil words.
Winslow, William Copley. An American
archæologist and journalist; born at Boston,
Jan. 13, 1840. He is an Episcopal clergyman;
assisted in founding the University Quarterly,
1861 ; edited the Hamiltonian, 1862; was as-
sistant editor of the New York World 1862–63,
and editor of the Christian Times 1863-65;
vice-president, secretary, and treasurer for
many years of the Egypt exploration fund for
the U. S. ; lecturer on archæological subjects
and colonial history. He has written : (Israel
in Egypt'; 'The Store City of Pithom (1885);
(A Greek City in Egypt) (1887); (The Egyp-
tian Collection in Boston' (1890); (The Pilgrim
Fathers in Holland) (1891); etc.
Winsor, Justin. An American historian and
librarian; born at Boston, 1831 ; died 1897.
He was superintendent of the Boston Public
Library, 1868-77, and librarian of Harvard
University, 1877-97. He has published: (Bib-
liography of Original Quartos and Folios of
Shakespeare) (1875); (Reader's Handbook of
the American Revolution) (1880); (Memorial
History of Boston) (edited : 4 vols. , 1880–82);
(Narrative and Critical History of America)
(edited: 8 vols. , 1884-89); (Christopher Columbus)
(1891); From Cartier to Frontenac) (1894);
(The Mississippi Basin); and (The Struggle in
America between England and France) (1895).
He was the highest authority on the early
history of North America.
Winter, John Strange. See Stannard.
Winter, William. An American journalist
and dramatic critic; born at Gloucester, Mass. ,
July 15, 1836. He has done journalistic work
on the Saturday Press, Vanity Fair, the Albion,
Weekly Review; and has been dramatic critic
for the New York Tribune since 1865. He has
written (The Convent, and Other Poems) (1854);
(The Queen's Domain) (1858), and (My Wit-
ness) (1871), poems; Life of Edwin Booth)
(1872); “Thistledown) (1878), poems; ( Poems,
complete edition (1881);(The Jeffersons) (1881);
(English Rambles) (1883); Life of Henry Ir-
ving' (1885); (Shakspere's England (1886);
(Stage Life of Mary Anderson (1886); and
“The Wanderers' (1888). *
Winther, Rasmus Villads Christian Ferdi-
nand (vin'ter). A Danish poet; born in Fens-
mark, July 29, 1796; died in Paris, Dec. 30,
1876. While not the greatest Danish poet, he
is one of the truest interpreters of the Danish
national character. Some of his numerous pub-
lications are : (Song and Legend) (1841); 'Lyr-
ical Poems) (1849); New Poems) (1850); (The
Flight of the Hart) (1856), a lyric romance of
the Danish Middle Ages, his greatest work.
Winthrop, John, Governor.
Born near
Groton, Suffolk, England, Jan 12, 1587; died at
Boston, March 26, 1619. He was the first
colonial governor of Massachusetts, after the
government was transferred to America, hold-
ing the office, with but slight interruption, from
1629 to 1649. He wrote a History of New
England from 1630 to 1649) (2d ed. Boston,
1853), the MS. of which was left by him in
the form of a journal correspondence to be
found in his Life and Letters) (2 vols. , 1864-
67), by Robert C. Winthrop; (A Modell of
Christian Charity); (Arbitrary Government De-
scribed.
Winthrop, Theodore. An American soldier,
poet, and novelist; born at New Haven, Conn. ,
Sept. 22, 1828; killed at the head of an assault-
ing column of Northern troops at Big Bethel,
Va. , June 10, 1861. The 1861 Atlantic Monthly
contained sketches from him of early War
scenes. He left completed material for five
volumes of novels and essays : (Cecil Dreeme)
(1861); John Brent) (1862); Edwin Brother.
croft (1862); «The Canoe and the Saddle )
(1862); and Life in the Open Air, and Other
Papers) (1863). His sister published 'Life and
Poems of Theodore Winthrop (1884). *
Wirt, William. An American lawyer and
author; born at Bladensburg, Md. , Nov. 8,
1772; died at Washington, D. C. , Feb. 18, 1834.
His writings are: (Letters of a British Spy,
which first appeared in the Virginia Argus
(1803) ; (The Rainbow) (1804), which was writ-
ten for the Richmond Enquirer; and his chief
work, (Sketches of the Life and Character of
Patrick Henry) (1817). *
Wise, Daniel. An editor, Methodist clergy.
man, and author; born in Portsmouth, Eng.
land, Jan, 10, 1813. He was editor of the Lion's
Herald at Boston, Mass. , and various Sunday.
school publications, and has published a great
number of works on varied subjects, mostly
under the pen-names of "Francis Forrester
and “Laurence Lancewood. " Among these
are: Personal Effort) (1841); (Life of Ulric
Zwingli (1850); My Uncle Toby's Library)
(12 vols. , 1853); (Vanquished Victors) (1870);
(Heroic Methodists) (1882); "Boy Travelers in
Arabia) (1885); (Men of Renown' (1886); and
"Some Remarkable Women' (1887).
Wise, Henry Augustus. An American naval
officer and author; born at Brooklyn, N. Y. ,
3
## p. 581 (#597) ############################################
WISE - WITWICKIE
581
May 12, 1819; died at Naples, Italy, April 2,
1869. Under the pseudonym of Harry Gringo,"
he wrote Los Gringos; or, An Interior View
of Mexico and California, with Wanderings in
Peru, Chili, and Polynesia) (1849); “Tales for
the Marines) (1855); “Scampavias, from Gibel-
Tasek to Stamboul) (1857); (The Story of the
Gray African Parrot) (1856), a book for child-
ren; and (Captain Brand of the Centipede)
(1860).
Wise, Isaac Mayer. A Jewish rabbi and
author; born in Bohemia, April 3, 1819; settled
in New York city in 1846. He has resided in
Cincinnati, O. , since 1854, and is president of
the Hebrew Union College. He is a leader
of the reform movement in American Judaism;
and besides editing the Israelite, a weekly
journal, he has written extensively. Among
his works are: History of the Israelitish
Nation' (1854); (Essence of Judaism (1860);
Judaism: Its Doctrines and Duties) (1862);
( The Martyrdom of Jesus of Nazareth (1874);
( The Cosmic God" (1876); History of the
Hebrews' Second Commonwealth) (1880).
Wiseman, Nicholas Patrick Stephen. An
English cardinal and archbishop; born at Se-
ville, Spain, Aug. 3, 1802; died in London,
Feb. 15, 1865. Among his books are: (Hora
Syriacæ) (1828); "Lectures on the Connection
between Science and Revealed Religion (2
vols. , 1836); ( The Real Presence) (1836); "Lect-
ures on the Doctrines and Practices of the
Catholic Church) (2 vols. , 1836); (Three Lect-
ures on the Catholic Hierarchy'(1850); ' Essays
on Various Subjects) (3 vols. , 1853); (Fabiola;
or, The Church of the Catacombs) (1855); “Rec-
ollections of the Last Four Popes) (1858);
(Sermons) (2 vols.
