Character Sketches of Romance
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Chapter 70 : Scott, _Fair Maid of Perth_ (time, Henry IV.).CHARTIST CLERGYMAN _(The)_, Rev. Charles
Scott, _Fair Maid of Perth_ (time, Henry IV.).
CHARTIST CLERGYMAN _(The)_, Rev. Charles Kingsley (1809-1877).
CHARYLLIS, in Spenser's pastoral _Colin Clout's Come Home Again_, is lady Compton. Her name was Anne, and she was the fifth of the six daughters of sir John Spenser of Althorpe, Lancaster, of the n.o.ble houses of Spenser and Marlborough. Edmund Spenser dedicated to her his satirical fable called _Mother Hubbard's Tale_ (1591). She was thrice married; her first husband was lord Monteagle, and her third was Robert lord Buckhurst (son of the poet Sackville), who succeeded his father in 1608 as earl of Dorset.
No less praiseworthy are the sisters three, The honor of the n.o.ble family
Of which I meanest boast myself to be,...
Phyllis, Charyllis, and sweet Amaryllis: Phyllis the fair is eldest of the three, The next to her is bountiful Charyllis.
_Colin Clout's Come Home Again_ (1594).
CHASTE _(The)_, Alfonso II. of Asturias and Leon (758, 791-835 abdicated, died 842).
CHATOOKEE, an Indian bird, that never drinks at a stream, but catches the raindrops in falling.--_Account of the Baptist Missionaries_, ii.
309.
Less pure than these is that strange Indian bird, Who never dips in earthly streams her bill, But, when the sound of coming showers is heard, Looks up, and from the clouds receives her fill.
Southey, _Curse of Kehama_, xxi. 6 (1809).
CHAT'TANACH _(M'Gillie)_, chief of the clan Chattan.--Sir W. Scott, _Fair Maid of Perth_ (time, Henry IV.).
CHAT'TERLEY _(Rev. Simon_), "the man of religion" at the Spa, one of the managing committee.--Sir W. Scott, _St. Ronan's Well_ (time, George III.).
CHAUBERT _(Mons.)_, Master Chaffinch's cook.--Sir W. Scott, _Peveril of the Peak_ (time, George II.).
CHAUCER OF FRANCE, Clement Marot (1484-1544).
CHAU'NUS, Arrogance personified in _The Purple Island_, by Phineas Fletcher (1633). "Fondly himself with praising he dispraised." Fully described in canto viii. (Greek, _chaunos_, "vain".)
CHEAT'LY (2 _syl_.), a lewd, impudent debauchee of Alsatia (Whitefriars). He dares not leave the "refuge" by reason of debt; but in the precincts he fleeces young heirs of entail, helps them to money, and becomes bound for them.--Shadwell, _Squire of Alsatia_ (1688).
CHE'BAR, the tutelar angel of Mary, sister of Martha and Lazarus of Bethany.--Klopstock, _The Messiah_, xii. (1771).
Ched'eraza'de (5 _syl_.), mother of Hem'junah and wife of Zebene'zer, sultan of Ca.s.simir. Her daughter having run away to prevent a forced marriage with the prince of Georgia, whom she had never seen, the sultana pined away and died.--Sir C. Morell [J. Ridley], _Tales of the Genii_ ("Princess of Ca.s.simir," tale vii., 1751).
CHEDER'LES (3 _syl_.), a Moslem hero, who, like St. George, saved a virgin exposed to the tender mercies of a huge dragon. He also drank of the waters of immortality, and lives to render aid in war to any who invoke it.
When Chederles conies To aid the Moslem on his deathless horse, ... as _[if]_ he had newly quaffed The hidden waters of eternal youth.
Southey, _Joan of Arc_, vi. 302, etc. (1837).
CHEENEY _(Frank)_, an outspoken bachelor. He marries Kate Tyson.--Wybert Reeve, _Parted_.
CHEERLY' _(Mrs.)_, daughter of colonel Woodley. After being married three years, she was left a widow, young, handsome, rich, lively, and gay. She came to London, and was seen in the opera by Frank Heartall, an open-hearted, impulsive young merchant, who fell in love with her, and followed her to her lodging. Ferret, the villain of the story, misinterpreted all the kind actions of Frank, attributing his gifts to hush-money; but his character was amply vindicated, and "the soldier's daughter" became his blooming wife.--Cherry, _The Soldier's Daughter_ (1804).
Miss O'Neill, at the age of nineteen, made her _debut_ at the Theatre Royal, Crow Street, in 1811, as "The Widow Cheerly."--W. Donaldson.
CHEERYBLE BROTHERS _(The)_, brother Ned and brother Charles, the incarnations of all that is warm-hearted, generous, benevolent, and kind. They were once homeless boys running about the streets barefooted, and when they grew to be wealthy London merchants were ever ready to stretch forth a helping hand to those struggling against the buffets of fortune.
_Frank Cheeryble_, nephew of the brothers Cheeryble. He married Kate Nickleby.--C. d.i.c.kens, _Nicholas Nickleby_ (1838).
CHEESE _(Dr.)_, an English translation of the Latin _Dr. Caseus_, that is, Dr. John Chase, a noted quack, who was born in the reign of Charles II., and died in that of queen Anne.
CHEMISTRY _(The Father of_, Arnaud do Villeneuve (1238-1314)).
CHE'MOS _(ch = k)_, G.o.d of the Moabites; also called Baal-Pe'or; the Pria'pus or idol of turpitude and obscenity. Solomon built a temple to this obscene idol "in the hill that is before Jerusalem" (1 _Kings_ xi. 7). In the hierarchy of h.e.l.l Milton gives Chemos the fourth rank: (1) Satan, (2) Beelzebub, (3) Moloch, (4) Chemos.
Next Chemos, the obscene dread of Moab's sons, Peor his other name.
_Paradise Lost_, 406, 412 (1665).
CHENEY, a mighty hunter in the northern woods, whose story is told in _The Adirondack_, by Joel Tyler Headley (1849).
CHERONE'AN _(The)_ or THE CHERONE'AN SAGE _(ch = k)_, Plutarch, who was born at Chaerone'a, in Boeo'tia (A.D. 46-120).
This praise, O Cheronean sage, is thine.
Beattie, _Minstrel_ (1773).
CHER'RY, the lively daughter of Boniface, landlord of the inn at Lichfield.--Geo.
Farquhar, _The Beaux' Stratagem_ (1705). (See CHERY.)
_Cherry (Andrew)_, comic actor and dramatist (1762-1812), author of _The Soldier's Daughter. All for Fame, Two Strings to Your Bow.
The Village, Spanish Dollars_, etc. He was specially noted for his excellent wigs.
Shall sapient managers new scenes produce From Cherry, Skeffington, and _Mother Goose?_ Byron, _English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_ (1809).
[Ill.u.s.tration] _Mother Goose_ is a pantomime by C. Dibdin.
CHER'UBIM (_Don_), the "bachelor of Salamanca," who is placed in a vast number of different situations of life, and made to a.s.sociate with all cla.s.ses of society, that the author may sprinkle his satire and wit in every direction.--Lesage, _The Bachelor of Salamanca_ (1737).
CHER'Y, the son of Brunetta (who was the wife of a king's brother), married his cousin Fairstar, daughter of the king. He obtained for his cousin the three wonderful things: _The dancing water_, which had the power of imparting beauty; _the singing apple_, which had the power of imparting wit; and _the little green bird_, which had the power of telling secrets.--Comtesse D'Aunoy, _Fairy Tales_ ("The Princess Fairstar," 1682).
CHES'TER (_Sir John_), a plausible, foppish villain, the sworn enemy of Geoffrey Haredale, by whom he is killed in a duel. Sir John is the father of Hugh, the gigantic servant at the Maypole inn.
_Edward Chester_, son of sir John, and the lover of Emma Haredale.--C.
d.i.c.kens, _Barnaby Rudge_ (1841).
CHESTERFIELD (_Charles_), a young man of genius, the hero and t.i.tle of a novel by Mrs. Trollope (1841). The object of this novel is to satirize the state of literature in England, and to hold up to censure authors, editors, and publishers as profligate, selfish, and corrupt.
CHESTERTON (_Paul_), nephew to Mr. Percy Chaffington, stock-broker and M.P.--T.M. Morton, _If I had a Thousand a Year_ (1764-1838).
CHEVALIER D'INDUSTRIE, a man who lives by his wits and calls himself a "gentleman."
Denicheur de fauvettes, chevalier de l'ordre de l'industrie, qui va chercher quelque bon nid, quelque femme qui lui fa.s.se sa fortune.--_Gongam_ ou _L'Homme Prodigieux_ (1713).
CHEVALIER MALFET (_Le_), so sir Launcelot calls himself after he was cured of his madness. The meaning of the phrase is "The knight who has done ill," or "The knight who has trespa.s.sed."--Sir T. Malory, _History of Prince Arthur_, iii. 20 (1470).