A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 822 pages of information about A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature.

A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 822 pages of information about A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature.

DANA, RICHARD HENRY (1787-1879).—­Novelist and critic, b. at Camb., Mass., was called to the Bar in 1817.  Among his novels are Tom Thornton and Paul Felton, both somewhat violent and improbable tales, and his poems, which are better, include The Buccaneer (1827), and The Dying Raven.  He is, however, stronger as a critic than as a writer.  He wrote largely in The North American Review, and for a time conducted a paper, The Idle Man, which contains some of his best work.

DANA, RICHARD HENRY, JR. (1815-1882).—­Miscellaneous writer, s. of the above, ed. at Harvard, but on his eyesight giving way shipped as a common sailor, and gave his experiences in Two Years before the Mast (1840).  Called to the Bar in 1840, he became an authority on maritime law.  Other books by him are The Seaman’s Friend (1841), and Vacation Voyage to Cuba (1859).

DANIEL, SAMUEL (1562-1619).—­Poet, s. of a music master, was b. near Taunton, and ed. at Oxf., but did not graduate.  He attached himself to the Court as a kind of voluntary laureate, and in the reign of James I. was appointed “Inspector of the children of the Queen’s revels,” and a groom of the Queen’s chamber.  He is said to have enjoyed the friendship of Shakespeare and Marlowe, but was “at jealousies” with Ben Jonson.  In his later years he retired to a farm which he owned in Somerset, where he d. D. bears the title of the “well-languaged,” his style is clear and flowing, with a remarkably modern note, but is lacking in energy and fire, and is thus apt to become tedious.  His works include sonnets, epistles, masques, and dramas.  The most important of them is The History of the Civil Wars between York and Lancaster in 8 books, pub. in 1604.  His Epistles are generally considered his best work, and his sonnets have had some modern admirers.  Among his poems may be mentioned the Complaynt of Rosamund, Tethys Festival (1610), and Hymen’s Triumph (1615), a masque, and Musophilus, a defence of learning, Defence of Rhyme (1602).

DARLEY, GEORGE (1795-1846).—­Poet, novelist, and critic, b. at Dublin, and ed. at Trinity Coll. there, he early decided to follow a literary career, and went to London, where he brought out his first poem, Errors of Ecstasie (1822).  He also wrote for the London Magazine, under the pseudonym of John Lacy.  In it appeared his best story, Lilian of the Vale.  Various other books followed, including Sylvia, or The May Queen, a poem (1827).  Thereafter he joined the Athenaeum, in which he showed himself a severe critic.  He was also a dramatist and a profound student of old English plays, editing those of Beaumont and Fletcher in 1840.  So deeply was he imbued with the spirit of the 17th century that his poem, “It is not beauty I desire,” was included by F.T.  Palgrave in the first ed. of his Golden Treasury as an anonymous lyric of that age.  He was also a mathematician of considerable talent, and pub. some treatises on the subject.  D. fell into nervous depression and d. in 1846.

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A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.